“He indeed was
foreordained before the foundation of the world”
I’ve
contemplated these ten words for the longest time. They’ve been with me ever
since I first read them many, many years ago, and they are a source of much
comfort in my life.
Within
these ten words we see clearly that God did not scramble, He didn’t send Jesus
on a whim to try and save face because His creation went off the rails, the
coming of the Son, His being raised from the dead, and being given glory was all
foreordained before the foundation of the world.
That
sort of throws a wrench into the whole ‘God’s
just as surprised as you or I about what’s happening in the world’
mentality that a certain segment of the church has embraced, seeing as before
the foundation of the world the coming of the Christ was foreordained.
My
faith and my hope are in God through Christ because I know that He knows the
end from the beginning, and has seen to my protection, my safety, and my
provision, long before there was need of these things.
I
do not fear for tomorrow, nor do I fear for today, because the God who
foreordained the coming of the Christ from the foundation of the world also
promised that not a hair from my head would fall without Him making note of it.
Because
we have faith in what Jesus did on the cross, because we believe God raised Him
from the dead and gave Him glory, we also have hope. It is not a false hope, it
is not a vain hope, it is a hope rooted in the reality of who Jesus is, and the
love God manifested for mankind in the person of the Christ.
If
our hope and faith are not through Christ in God, then they are vain, and void
of substance. Being positive, having self-esteem, or having some quirky mantra
you tell yourself in the mirror every morning, all these things are illusions
of hope that implode upon gentle prodding. They are the means the world employs
to keep trudging along, and not fall into despair altogether, and sadly in recent
years much of the church has been employing the selfsame means.
Why
would I need anything more to get me through the day when I retain the
knowledge of God through Christ? Why would I need a band aid, a distraction, a
diversion, or even medication to get me through the day when I know that my
redeemer lives, and that I will live with Him?
Is
it possible that those who claim to know Christ yet live lives of quiet
desperation, utterly joyless and absent of peace don’t really know Him at all?
Christ
transforms us. Our faith in Christ gives us hope, it gives us peace, it gives
us joy, it tethers us to the Kingdom and allows us to see the plan of God for
our lives even when in the present we endure hardships and tribulations.
There
is nothing in the world that compares with the freedom we have when we possess
true faith and hope in God through Christ, and it is something that the world
cannot take away, that persecution cannot take away, that lack, need, or
hardship cannot take away, but that we often times willingly abandon for the
promise of faux liberty to pursue the lusts of the flesh, that never truly
materializes as we had hoped.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea Jr.