After Death What?
A
Bible answer to this most vital question.
Can anyone think of a more relevant question? All of
us pass through the narrow passageway leading from thins
life to the next-- the passageway we call death. We
shall all experience the transition into a new realm,
another existence beyond this life and world we know
today.
Let us for a moment consider the personal experience
we shall have with death. One day our hands will be
folded across our lifeless breast and our eyes will
be closed as our body takes its last ride to the cemetery.
The purple curtains will be drawn. "The black camel
of death," said one, "will kneel for each of us at our
door, and we shall have no choice but to mount and ride
off into the desert of darkness." Death is no respecter
of persons.
Beyond life what?
We
may only speculate on certain aspects of the future,
not knowing much that it holds, bet we do know the One
who holds the future in His hands. And it is He who
has revealed much of the future to us. He who knows
the end from the beginning, the future as well as the
past. Reveals in His Word that at death the body returns
to the earth, while the soul goes to a temporary destination
to await final judgment. Each of us determines in this
life what our destiny will be; it will depend upon our
response to redemptive plan that God designed for the
sinner's deliverance from eternal doom.
We may ascend to a place of peace in the presence of
God, as Paul declared in II Corinthians 5:8. It is possible
for us to dwell eternally in a place of happiness, bliss
and contentment, knowing that our redemption has been
completed, that we have finished our course in faith,
and that we are being rewarded. Or we may descent into
a place of suffering, there to be detained until the
final judgment and then to be sentenced to the everlasting
punishment of the lake of fire. (See Matthew 25:46;
Luke 16:22-26; Revelation 20:11-15).
Both places are, in a sense, temporary, for we shall
wait until our souls are reunited with our bodies in
the resurrection. Jesus described the resurrection in
John 5:28-29, and Paul spoke in detail of the first
resurrection in I Thessalonians 4:16-17.
The resurrection of the just and the resurrection of
the ungodly are separated by one thousand years of peace
on earth (Revelation 20:2-7). The just of the present
age will be those who have been redeemed by the blood
of the Lamb-baptized in His name and filled with His
Spirit; the ungodly will be those who have reused to
surrender to the terms of the gospel.
Final Reward of the Righteous For those who are saved,
there will be the city not made with hands- the new
Jerusalem. This city is described in Revelation 21 as
the eternal home of the redeemed.
Missing in this city will be the evil things that are
found in every large earthly city. Gone will be all
crime an violence. God's people will walk the golden
streets without fear of molestation.
Revelation 21:18 describes the wall of this city as
jasper and the city itself as pure gold. There will
be no need for the sun or moon there, for the Lamb will
be the light of the city (Revelation 21:23).
And, wonder of wonders, the redeemed will enjoy the
blessings of this city eternally. The poet exulted:
When we've been there ten thousand years, Bright shining
as the sun, We've no less days to sing God's praise
Than when we'd first begun.
The Fate of the Wicked In contradistinction, for unbelievers
there is 'the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone"
(Revelation 21:8). The only emotions there will be agony
and regret, and from that place there will be no escape.
The Present Determines the Future Eternity-never-ending
ages! A person's state there is totally dependent upon
the present-what he does during time. His eternal destiny
will be decided by whether or not he trusts in the redeeming
blood of Christ and avails himself of its merits through
faith and obedience.
Let us consider today the nearness of our souls to the
rendezvous with death. David solemnly declared, "There
is but a step between me and death" (I Samuel 20:3).
Death is a certain step, and yet it is an uncertain
step as to time, place, and manner. It is, further,
a solitary step so far as other human beings are concerned.
Only Christ can go with us through that dark valley.
Are you ready for that moment and for the eternity to
follow?
The Bible proclaims how to prepare for eternity and
enjoy eternal life with Christ: "Repent and be baptized
every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the
remission of sins, and ye shall received the gift of
the Holy Ghost" (Acts 2:38).
JRE
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