Eternity:
We ourselves groan.
(Romans 8:23)
Funny
how though we can speak of God’s mercy in Gary’s death—though we rejoice in
Easter Morning and life everlasting; we still groan. Or, maybe I should speak
for myself, or ourselves—our household. We keep moping around, and bemoaning how
it can be that Gary is no longer with us. Even with Alzheimer’s, there was something
about him still being there even when he wasn’t all there.
Gary
was 73 years old when he “breathed his last.” Abraham was 175. Doesn’t seem
fair. Those Patriarchs got an extra hundred years or so on us. The Psalmist
laments that God has set our mortality clock back:
The
length of our days is seventy years,
maybe
eighty, if we have the strength;
We
finish our years with a moan.
our days quickly
pass…
(Ps
90:9-10).
So
it is to this day. Our life expectancy has been whittled down to our 70s or
80s. As things go, Gary did all right. He got his three-score and ten plus a
few. He out lived King David who died at 70. Yet, we sorrow—too young.
Death
always comes too soon. We were hoping for more days on God’s beautiful green
earth—days to take a few more leisurely drives together on Eastside road
winding our way through the vineyards. “God has placed eternity into our
hearts,” observes King Solomon; “yet so,” he goes on, “we cannot fathom what
God has done from beginning to end” (Ecc 3). That’s our predicament. We long for
eternity; yet, we, of ourselves, can’t get there. Only the One who “placed
eternity into our hearts,” can get us to eternity. We need, as our Lord says, “someone
greater than Solomon” to get us to life everlasting.
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