Chapter Fifty-one:
What do you think of when you think about heaven? Do you see it as simply the place where you will end
up when you die if you are a believer and have accepted Christ's atonement for
your sins? Or do you find yourself
yearning to be there, in the presence of Almighty God. Unfortunately, for many, the former is the
case.
We have allowed ourselves to become so focused on earthly
things to the detriment of losing our focus on heavenly things. Our families, our work, our hobbies, our
earthly possessions hold more of our interest and enthusiasm than does the hope
and joy of knowing we are heaven bound.
My
father recently went to his sister's funeral and for that short period of time
I dare say that many who were in attendance thought of their own mortality. But after the funeral, they probably shook
off those morbid thoughts and returned to their daily lives...after all, as the
saying goes, "life must go on".
Even those of us who call ourselves Christians tend to think of heaven
as just the place we will be going to when we die...it is only reassurance, if
you will, that we will have a nice, happy afterlife.
Why do we not earnestly look forward to being there with our Lord, counting the days until we are by His side? This is not to say that we do not do the Lord's work while we are still here. Paul, who is known as being a great Apostle and laborer for the Gospel, said in Philippians 1:21-23 "For to me to live is Christ, and to die is gain. If I am to live in the flesh, that means fruitful labor for me. Yet which I shall choose I cannot tell. I am hard pressed between the two. My desire is to depart and be with Christ, for that is far better."
Unfortunately many of us, even those who are dedicated to doing the Lord's work, have
become too comfortable here in this world, to the detriment that we hardly
ever stop and yearn for heaven. We are not as torn as Paul was between being here
and being with the Lord. Sadly, Heaven no longer beckons as it once did.
Philippians 3:20-21 reminds us, "But our citizenship is in heaven, and from it
we await a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, who will transform our lowly body to
be like his glorious body, by the power that enables him even to subject all things
to himself."
If that is true, why do we find that we are not sick and tired of living in this world. Is it because we have allowed ourselves to become comfortable living here? If we are honest with ourselves, would we say that we actually enjoy it here? Jesus warned those of His day that they lived in a wicked and adulterous generation. Can we say that our day is any less wicked and adulterous, and if not, why would we want to stay here?
If that is true, why do we find that we are not sick and tired of living in this world. Is it because we have allowed ourselves to become comfortable living here? If we are honest with ourselves, would we say that we actually enjoy it here? Jesus warned those of His day that they lived in a wicked and adulterous generation. Can we say that our day is any less wicked and adulterous, and if not, why would we want to stay here?
Many churches seem to have lost the emphasis on
preaching the need to be ready for heaven and to watch for the signs of our
Lord's return so that we are ready. They, too, have become
guilty of becoming complacent and fitting into this world too well. When the
church talks about the future, it tends to talk about how to live a fuller, more
blessed life or how to be more tolerant and loving so we will live in a better world rather than on the need for
us to be a people who are set apart.
Believers are endeavoring to save the world by being more like it, but Scripture plainly tells us that the true power of the church comes when it is unlike it. And the modern church is doing its best to make church such a "fun" place in order to attract new members, so why would anyone want to leave here?
Believers are endeavoring to save the world by being more like it, but Scripture plainly tells us that the true power of the church comes when it is unlike it. And the modern church is doing its best to make church such a "fun" place in order to attract new members, so why would anyone want to leave here?
A. W. Tozer said, "The Christian has a homeland, and
the fact that we are not anticipating it and looking forward to it with any
pleasure is a serious mark of something that is wrong with us....Once more I
repeat that Christians are living too much in the 'present now'--and the
anticipation of better things to come has almost died out of the Church of
Christ." He goes on to say, " Actually, it is true, that all of the
Christians I meet who are amounting to anything for God are Christians who are
very much out of key with their
age--very, very much out of tune with their generation."
Following
the example of how Christ lived is to be our example, but we have allowed the
world to shape us, and to our shame we often enjoy it. As a believer we are to be changed day by day
into the likeness of Christ, but if we are so focused on enjoying living in this
temporary world we become less able to hear from our Lord when He wants to
pinpoint something in our lives that needs to be changed. To the degree that we
are walking and being changed to be more like Christ, to that degree we will be
out of sync with the world.
Rather than jeopardize our friendships
or our standing in the world we go along with their expectations. Ask yourself, how do you portray yourself to
others? Do they know you are a believer
or are they just presuming you are a good, moral person? If others cannot tell or if they do not know
that you are a true Christian then you may have allowed yourself to become
conformed to this world, even though in your heart that is the last thing you may
want to happen. This, my friend, is a
result of not being set apart as a foreigner in this world. We are nicely settled in this world and our anticipation of better things to come has become but a shadow.
As
believers we cannot and should not close our eyes to what is going on around
us. We have allowed ourselves to become complacent about Christ's return. We have become like the young virgins who did not have oil for their lamps (Book of Matthew, Chapter 25). While
many of us do believe that Christ will return some day, we do not yearn for it
to happen. Our longing to see Christ has become a weak flame and is no longer
the burning desire it once was. Our lamps collect dust while we live our lives.
An example
I heard once was about a man who was waiting the return of his betrothed. At first he sits up night after night by the
window, waiting for her return. But as the days go by, he begins to go about
doing other things and no longer waits expectantly. This, I am afraid to say, is how many of us act about heaven. And in so doing, the "other things" of this world
replace the expectancy of heaven. Many Christians are so
comfortable that they have little desire to leave. In fact, I have heard several say they are not ready
to go to heaven yet because there are still many things they want to do here on
earth...unfortunately, I do not believe they were referring to doing more of the Lord's work. It is a sure sign of comfortableness, if there is such a word.
C. S. Lewis said, "If you read history you will find that the Christians who did most for the present world were precisely those who thought most of the next. It is since Christians have largely ceased to think of the other world that they have become so ineffective in this."
C. S. Lewis said, "If you read history you will find that the Christians who did most for the present world were precisely those who thought most of the next. It is since Christians have largely ceased to think of the other world that they have become so ineffective in this."
What
needs to happen to us to change our focus? Unless as believers we are separated from the world (we are in the world but not of it), we will succumb to spiritual lethargy.
History shows us that it is during times of suffering that the Church
begins to look upwards. Times of tribulation have always sobered God's people
and gotten their attention off the world and its comforts. My prayer is that we will return to being a more
heavenly-focused people who are set apart from this world while having to live
in it, and that it does not take a time of trouble to bring this about.
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