I don’t know about you, but I am not a fan of long lines.
When I am at the supermarket, I will even go to the 12-items-or-less
line, so I don’t have to wait. The problem is that I usually need to get
more than 12 items, but I do it anyway, just so I don’t have to wait in
another line!
Of course, I will still count the number of items the person in front of me is buying!
And when a new lane opens and they say, “Next in line,” I’m a happy camper.
Imagine that you are standing in the hot blistering sun, waiting for
Disneyland to open. You are far back in line, and it seems to be taking
forever. Suddenly, a man comes to you and identifies himself as the CEO
of Disney. He invites you to step ahead of the line and get in the park
before everyone else.
Would you be happy about that? Of course you would, though I’m sure the other people waiting might resent that a bit.
That’s how it is when a Christian dies young or unexpectedly. They
get to go ahead of the rest of us—not to Disneyland, but to heaven!
Getting into heaven early is a privilege, not a punishment. It’s a
promotion, not a termination. An early death means an early crown.
Our deepest regret is we didn’t get to go with them. We should not
think of our loved ones in heaven as being gone. That word is taken from
the vocabulary of death, and it implies that the loved one no longer
exists, which could not be more false. The Bible says that they have
departed to be with Christ, which is far better (see Philippians 1:23).
If you must use the word “gone,” then you should say, “They are gone
from me now, but I will see them again.” This is the great hope of the
Christian!
“Jesus said to her, ‘I am the resurrection and the life. He who
believes in Me, though he may die, he shall live. And whoever lives and
believes in Me shall never die. Do you believe this?’” (John 11:25–26
nkjv).
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