I’ve never understood believers who are terrified of dying. I understand not wanting to die because you’d be leaving something unfinished, because your kids aren’t all grown and out of the house, or because you know your spouse would be lonely without you, so for their sake, you want to abide for a little while longer.
Fear though, terror at the thought of catching something
randomly that may endanger your life somehow and thereby isolating yourself
from everyone, living like a hermit, and dipping the nuggets the Uber Eats kid
delivered in disinfectant before eating them, that I don’t understand. If you
knew what that kid did to your nuggets before ringing the doorbell, you’d be
doing shots of the sanitizer, but let’s pretend they’re all wholesome, well-adjusted
teenagers that are just trying to earn their way through college by delivering
fast food to people too lazy or fearful of getting out of their homes.
The promise of eternal life eliminates the fear of death. It
doesn’t just tamp it down or diminish it; it eliminates it. We have a genuine
and abiding hope in Christ and His promise that we would be where He went to
prepare a place for us.
The fear of death no longer holds sway; it has lost its
sting, and dread no longer has a place in the believer’s life. You’re not
stepping into the unknown full of terror and misgivings about what will come.
You’re going home into the arms of the one who loves you to the point of
already having given His life for you.
Had they not had the hope and the promise of eternal life, do
you believe men and women would have gone to their deaths while being burned
alive singing hymns and songs of praise to God? If you want an eye-opening
history lesson as to what the primary church went through as far as persecution
is concerned and what some believers go through today, grab a copy of Foxe’s
Book of Martyrs and give it a read.
In order not to love your life unto death, you must possess
hope and assurance in something beyond this life. If I have the promise of
eternal life, what does it matter to me what men do to this flesh? If I know
that to be absent from the body is to be one with Christ, what have I to fear?
This is why believers were so negatively impacted by certain
pastors and elders when they were given the ultimatum to either put something
into their bodies they didn’t want or be shunned and no longer be considered
among the fellowship of the brethren. I get that Franklin Graham’s a big deal
in certain circles, but I can’t just take his word that Jesus would have rolled
up His sleeve for the likes of this administration or the man tasked with
ensuring everyone got one.
As I explained to a friend recently, I don’t want to die, but
I’m not afraid of death. I’ll be here for as long as God will have me, and not
a minute longer, no matter how much I may try to extend my time here by eating
seaweed and kale or whatever atrocious thing is en vogue this week.
I’m not about to dedicate more time than necessary to
something I have no control over. It’s just ironic that a guy who subsists on a
diet of black coffee and gas station grilled cheeses is outliving professional
athletes half his age.
God made me a promise. The same promise He made you, and
because I know Him and trust Him, there is not a flicker of doubt in my mind as
to His ability to keep it. It’s good enough because He said it. I am not
entitled to any special proof regarding God’s sincerity, nor would I require
it.
The promise of eternal life is undeniable, as is its
originator. No more need be debated on the topic because God’s promises are
ironclad, and His ability to carry them out is indisputable.
If you are His sheep and know His voice and follow after Him,
you trust Him without equivocation because you know His character, you know His
nature, and you know His compassion. It’s those who do not hear, who do not
follow, and who do not call Him Lord that need constant reassurance about
something God said.
There is a three-year age gap between my daughters. Recently
we were swimming at a pool when the youngest walked up to the edge of the pool,
and I reached out my arms and said, “jump; daddy will catch you.”
“Are you sure?” she asked, “promise?”
“I promise, baby bear, I’ll catch you.”
She stood there biting her lip when her older sister said,
“jump, he’ll catch you; he catches me all the time. Daddy will keep his word.”
Then she jumped, and I caught her because, as the older one
pointed out, I am her dad, and I keep my word.
God is not a stranger trying to offer you candy to get you
into his van. He is a loving Father who promised eternal life to those who
abide in the truth. He doesn’t need to trick you, beguile you, or charm you.
You’re not a child; you’re His child. If you are His child, then you already
know you can trust Him and that eternal life is yours to lay hold of.
1 John 2:24-25, “Therefore let that abide in you which you
heard from the beginning. If what you heard from the beginning abides in you,
you also will abide in the Son and in the Father. And this is the promise that
He has promised us – eternal life.”
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
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