So Long for Now, but I’ll See You Soon

Death is an enemy. In the Christian worldview, it’s called “the last enemy.” Paul wrote, “The last enemy to be destroyed is death” (1 Cor 15:26).

This piece has two points: 1) Death is inevitable and 2) For all who are in Christ, death ushers Christians into the very presence of God. Death is, therefore, to be understood as a transition into God’s presence. Why? Because of the person and work of Christ.

This past week, I ‘lost’ a friend, Mr. David, to death. Leukemia ravaged his body. Physically, his white blood cells were eating the healthy blood cells. He had to have injections of platelets–again and again. But eventually, even that was insufficient.

First, like you, I feel the deep pain of loss. But I do not grieve as those without hope. God is bigger than death. Through Christ, God has conquered death for his people. And God is omnipresent; he is as near you as the person to your left and right. Near to us in our time of sorrow. Know that in your bones. God is near. 

     Let us acknowledge the sorrow of this time. We know that God understands sorrow. Jesus wept at the loss of a friend. In John 11, the apostle John records that when Jesus lost his friend Lazarus, Jesus “was deeply moved in his spirit and greatly troubled” (Jn 11:33) and in verse 35, the apostle John records that Jesus wept. 

     Mr. David worked in the IT field for much of his career, then Disney in his later years, and was a “fixer” of almost anything. Prior to his civilian career, he was a U.S. Marine, and worked on helicopters. I knew him after he’d retired. He was a faithful churchman, businessman, and an avid traveler. He and his wife and their friends traveled across the country many times and have set foot in all 50 states. And their stories of RVing with friends made for many sweet conversations I had with them both. 

     When I was Mr. David’s Sunday school teacher and pastor, he was undergoing medical treatments, I’d always go to him and ask how his week was. He’d never complain. He’d answer my question but always end with, “I’m blessed. I’ve had  a good life.” I could tell he was in pain, but true to his nature, he didn’t complain. He eschewed the temptation lesser men might’ve had to feel sorry for themselves. And he’d invariably encourage me by saying kind words about my teaching and ministry, and we’d laugh and embrace. He was an encourager. 

     When I reflect on Mr. David’s legacy, I always remember him telling me of his peace. His supernatural peace. He did not fear death. Because he knew he’d open his eyes not in judgment but in benediction in God’s presence. Let me say this lovingly: Mr. David died well. Like Job, he knew that his redeemer lives, and he (Mr. David) also lives, because Jesus had prepared a place for him. So, yes, we grieve, but not as those outside of the gospel. 

     For all who are in Christ, death is not the end, life is. It’s a transition into the presence of God. Jesus, who cannot lie, promised resurrection and heaven to his people. 2 Cor 5:8 says that the believer, when away from the body, is at home with the Lord. 

     In his last letter he penned, the apostle Paul wrote in 2 Timothy 4, “I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. Henceforth there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, will award to me on that Day, and not only to me but also to all who have loved his appearing” (2 Tim 4:7-8). 

     So, to the extended family, friends, and all who loved him, we love you and we loved Mr. David. We acknowledge our sorrow, but we also have the ultimate victory through Christ the Lord. 

     Let me leave you with this: If you are in Christ, dear ones, you will see Mr. David again. All will have been made well. But there’s one condition: be in Christ. Be in Christ and be made whole, be made well. I will see you again, dear brother. Well done. See you soon. 

Tree of Life

Text: “The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life, and whoever captures souls is wise” (Pr 11:30).

Question: Who would not want to be such a person?

Reflections: The idea here is one of blessing other people by being a blessing, to speak the words of life to another soul, to point others to fruitfulness and bounty rather than tearing others down and leaving them devoid of rescue and the hope of redemption.

A similar thought occurs in Daniel 12:3: “And those who are wise shall shine like the brightness of the sky above; and those who turn many to righteousness, like the stars forever and ever.”

In the picture above, the tree is in bloom. It shouts life. It shouts health. It trumpets beauty and vitality. Who would not want to be a vessel of such a message? That is, who would not long to be part of God’s plan to rescue and restore people to spiritual health? Those who hate God and hate redemption. Those who are anti-life.

This is why the Christian is outward-focused. He has tasted the water of life; therefore, he longs to pay that forward. As the old cliche goes, it’s one beggar telling another beggar where to find bread. The bread of life (Jesus) has come down as the manna from heaven to feed the hungry souls of men.

We are wise when we do this, when we are diligent to sow the seeds of the gospel. Pray that God tills the soil of the heart. May we long to see trees of life because of the great work of the triune God. The author of life died upon a tree in Jerusalem and was raised imperishable and undefiled three days later to show us that death for the believer is to meet God face to face and not be condemned. May we speak the words of life to all and pray for God to grant eyes and ears to see that eternal life awaits.

Friday Evening Scenes

After work today I came home, talked with CJ for a while, played with Ladybug, ate an early supper of sandwiches and chips, watched the only television show I have liked in decades, and finally said, “I’m going to go wet a hook.”

“Okay, love. Have fun,” my wife said.

I gathered up four rods, some tackle, and loaded my car. I drove down to the lake. When I walked down to it, deer pellets were common in the grassy path down. Then as I got closer to the banks, goose turds lay black and fresh near the reeds by the water. I could smell the fish.

The wind was minimal and it was hot–still in the 80s. I was sweating already. When I reached my spot, I laid the four rods down and put on the lures I prefer and began casting. A few strikes but I failed to land any. Turtles were mating in the lake about 20 meters out, two mounted brown shells copulating at the water’s surface. A few doves flew overhead regularly.

Catching no fish in this spot, I walked to another but still no luck. Just the smell of them and the sounds of the water and an occasional pontoon boat far out in the lake.

I walked down to the rocks and cast some more. A mallard was alarmed at my presence and eventually paddled out farther and joined his partner.

The slight breeze felt so good coming across the water. An old man with a bulldog walked the edge of the lake farther down. The dog played at the edges of the lake.

I drove to a small pond after that and cast my favorite topwater torpedo, and lost a bass in the reeds. He popped my line. I laughed and cursed inside simultaneously. That is the way fishing goes.

When I returned home, a pregnant doe lay near the bottom of the driveway. She’ll birth soon, her belly so big now with her fawn(s).

‘Twas a simple evening, but peaceful. Thankful for such times. Now to shower and read and study more for Sunday’s sermon.

Reflections on ‘Distraction’

“The only thing that consoles us for our miseries is distraction, yet that is the greatest of our wretchednesses. Becuase that is what mainly prevents us from thinking about ourselves and leads us imperceptibly to damnation. Without it we should be bored, and boredom would force us to search for a firmer way out, but distraction entertains us and leads us imperceptibly to death” (Pascal, Pensees, 10).

In Luke 10, Luke tells the story of Martha and Mary and what happened when Jesus entered a village:

38 Now as they went on their way, Jesus entered a village. And a woman named Martha welcomed him into her house. 39 And she had a sister called Mary, who sat at the Lord’s feet and listened to his teaching. 40 But Martha was distracted with much serving. And she went up to him and said, “Lord, do you not care that my sister has left me to serve alone? Tell her then to help me.” 41 But the Lord answered her, “Martha, Martha, you are anxious and troubled about many things, 42 but one thing is necessary. Mary has chosen the good portion, which will not be taken away from her.” (Lk 10:38-42).

Martha was busy, busy, busy. She thought she was being helpful by being busy. But the Lord Jesus rebuked her. He told her she was “anxious and troubled about many things” (v. 41). On the other hand, Mary received the commendation from God. And what was that? That she (Mary) had chosen “the good portion” (v. 42). Mary, unlike Martha, rested in God. She didn’t get entangled with busyness for the sake of being busy. She cultivated fellowship with God. She quieted her soul in God. She didn’t fall prey to the web of endless distractions.

Encouragement: I do not think there has ever been a time in history when a culture can so easily drown in distraction as we have in our day. There’s simply no end of it. If you turn on the electronic device of your choice, the algorithms will send you down endless rivers of distraction. Literally, they’re endless. It’s the story of Martha and Mary amplified. Nothing has changed in that regard. We can either distract ourselves via endless media and entertainment or we can switch off and seek depth of mind and soul in God, in rest, in wisdom.

Recommended Reading

There are a few non-fiction writers and thinkers whose works I always read. Carl Trueman is one of those. Why? Several things set Trueman apart:

  • His grasp of the history of thought
  • His grasp of alternatives: “If not that, then this.”
  • His pattern recognition. He’s gifted at seeing and explaining the consequences of ideas. What begins in the academy ends up as a t-shirt slogan. And many people advertise a worldview whose underpinnings they’re often unaware of. They don’t see the connections. Trueman does.
  • His fidelity to Christianity as man’s only hope for redemption and restoration
  • His intellectual depth but his humble spirit

I know of very few people who are readers. And of those who do read, depth of content is often absent in their choices. Most folks doomscroll and entertain themselves into further imbecility and distraction. On the other hand, I do know of those who read deep, important books. And for those few, here’s another volume from which you will profit. It will likely sharpen your thinking and enrich your soul. Because like in all of Trueman’s books, he shows the genesis of good ideas and bad ones, and then traces the history of those ideas in how they play out in actual history. And as always, he calls the wisest among us to Scripture, to Christ, and to life.

Thoughts on Covenant Faithfulness

Recently I completed another reading of the 150 psalms in Scripture. Psalms come in myriad genres. Below are some of those types:

  • Prophetic
  • Royal
  • Messianic
  • Celebration
  • Lament
  • Wisdom
  • Worship

There are other types, too, but those are some of the most common.

I was struck particularly by some verses from Psalm 145 recently:

17 The Lord is righteous in all his ways
    and kind in all his works.
18 The Lord is near to all who call on him,
    to all who call on him in truth.
19 He fulfills the desire of those who fear him;
    he also hears their cry and saves them.
20 The Lord preserves all who love him,
    but all the wicked he will destroy
. (Ps 145:17-20)

Several thinks stood out from these lines from David’s pen:

  • The righteousness of God (v. 17)
  • The fellowship with God (v. 18)
  • The covenant faithfulness of God (v. 19)
  • The salvation of God (v. 20)

Because I’m burdened for those who remain hostile to God, because I want to reach them with the good news of the gospel, I try to always understand their worldview. I think, for example, of how a person who rejects God deals with the reality of cancer or loss or divorce. As a person who believes God and believes these biblical attributes of God described above, I am promised the righteousness of God, fellowship with God, God’s fidelity to his covenant promises, and the salvation of God.

But the unbeliever who rejects these truths, where does he find hope? In psychological pep-talks? In bubblegum bromides? In horoscopes? In sundry forms of escape and endless distraction?

God’s nature is characterized by covenant faithfulness. God cannot lie. Unlike sinners, God cannot lie. That is crucial to understand. And it is a truth that brings the believer solace of soul. In a world drowning in deceptions, the balm from Gilead is covenant faithfulness found only in God, a salve for the pilgrim’s soul.

Bringing the Sheaves

Text: “He who goes out weeping, bearing the seed for sowing, shall come home with shouts of joy, bringing his sheaves with him” (Psalm 126:6). 

Questions: Ever felt defeated? Ever felt like you left it all on the field but it wasn’t enough? Ever felt like your labors were in vain? Ever felt like, “Why bother? No one even cares”?

Possible responses: I think we’ve all felt some variation on that theme, at least sometimes. If we are honest, if we’ve labored at something with passion, with diligence, with love and concern, it is possible that at times we failed to see what we envisioned–at least in the timeframe we desired for it. I think, for example, of all the years Edison spent inventing–trying and failing, trying and failing. But eventually . . . success! 

About verse 6 quoted above, the great Reformed preacher and evangelist George Whitefield wrote, “This, my dear brothers, is the greatest charity possible, to save a soul from death.” 

Encouragement: In my favorite book of the Bible, Ecclesiastes, Solomon wrote this: “Cast your bread upon the waters, for you will find it after many days” (Eccl 11:1). Yes and amen. Let us labor in love, in truth, and trust the Lord for the results. He will not fail. 

The Beauty of Coherence and Correspondence

Coherence is an important word and idea. It denotes the degree to which something holds together. Is something logical? Does it hold together? Is it internally consistent? Does it correspond to the way things actually are? For example, if I say, “It’s sunny today in Atlanta,” but then you open your door and look outside and there’s a thunderstorm, the sky is darkened by ominous clouds, and there’s nothing but rain as far as you can see, well, then my statement does not cohere. It does not accurately reflect the way things are in reality. It does not correspond to reality.

Coherence is one of the tests for the trustworthiness of Scripture. God is holy; God cannot, therefore, lie. When God speaks, his Word is true. So when God said that all men everywhere are to repent and flee to the gospel of Christ Jesus to escape holy judgment, that word from God is true: “The times of ignorance God overlooked, but now he commands all people everywhere to repent, because he has fixed a day on which he will judge the world in righteousness by a man [Jesus] whom he has appointed; and of this he has given assurance to all by raising him from the dead” (Acts 17:30-31). 

God’s Word coheres. It holds together. It accurately expresses the way God is, the way we creatures are, and the way the world is. God does not say one thing and do another. He is internally consistent. His nature, his Word, and his covenants are trustworthy. This is why the resurrection of Jesus from the dead welcomes investigation. No one has produced the body of Jesus, and no one will, until God’s promise is fulfilled. You can count on Christianity, dear ones, because God is coherent. And in an age that is as intellectually vapid as our day, coherence is a beautiful treasure.