What Brings Comfort?
Comfort
One Another With These Words…
(First
Thessalonians 4:18)
We did it all—burial, funeral, luncheons, dinners,
remembrances. It was all good—very good. Yet, it still haunts. It hangs over us—Gary
died. It’s not just Gary; it’s the pilling up of mortality signals:
contemporaries dying as all must die, purchase of our own cemetery plot (close
to parents and Kinsers), finishing up our estate trust (such as it is);
thinning out, or trying to thin out, our earthly belongings—that sort of thing.
“The dead in Christ shall rise” (1Thess
4:16);
those are the words the Apostle tells us will bring comfort. Maybe it’s that
word “dead” that messes with our sense of comfort. What does it mean to be
“dead in Christ”? Elsewhere, the Apostle speaks again of “those who have died
in Christ” (1Cor 15:13-26):
If there is no
resurrection of the dead,
then Christ has not been raised;
If Christ has not
been raised,
then your faith has been in vain…
For if the dead
are not raised,
then Christ has not been raised.
If Christ has not
been raised,
your faith is futile and you are still
in your sins.
Then those also
who have died in Christ
have perished.
If for this life
only we have hoped in Christ,
we are of all people most to be pitied.
But
in fact Christ has been raised from the dead,
the first fruits of those who have died.
For
since death came through a human being,
the resurrection of the dead has also
come through a human being;
for
as all die in Adam,
so all will be made alive in Christ.
But
each in his own order:
Christ the first fruits,
then at his coming those who belong to
Christ.
Then
comes the end,
when he hands over the kingdom to God
the Father,
after he has destroyed every ruler and
every authority and power.
For
Christ must reign
until he has put all his enemies under
his feet.
The last enemy to be destroyed is death.
Wow! Does that help? Or,
is it still too dense and wild to bring comfort? The Gospel is always bigger and
more rambunctious than we imagine. It has to do with creation itself, with Adam
and with Christ. To be “dead in Christ” means we die within the sphere of
Christ’s big Gospel Story:
Our help is in the name of the Lord,
who created the heavens and the earth;
and
in our Savior, Christ Jesus,
who abolished death,
and
now brings life and immortality to light
through the Gospel” (Ps 124:8 & 2Tm
1:10).
That’s it. That’s our hope. That’s our only comfort.
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