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Comfort One Another With These WordsBack in the summer of 2003, I plugged a few pieces of information into the website Deathclock.com, and it soon spit out that I had 575,122,423 seconds left to live, providing my projected day of death: Thursday, September 9, 2021. The website gave me three options: 1. Delay the date of my death through proper nutrition. 2. Freeze my body for possible future reanimation (to be brought back as a vegetable, no doubt). 3. Pre-plan my funeral arrangements. I must have done something right! We can rarely predict when death will occur. Many factors affect a person's longevity—some we have control over and some we do not. There are positive effects—God's will, righteousness, and nutrition—and on the flip side, negative ones: carelessness, war, and destructive behaviors like inactivity, smoking, and gluttony. We experience death on television or in movies as an overwhelming flood that numbs us into emotionless absorption. A second or third death anesthetizes us against sympathy and compassion for the victims. Even the deaths of real individuals on the nightly news can result in a reaction of remote, unreal indifference. Death at a distance may fascinate us, but we do not like it up close and personal. Upon the death of a close friend or family member, we experience emotions that catch us off guard. It rattles our feelings like nothing else we face. Unprepared for such a shock, uncomfortable feelings settle deep down into the pit of our stomachs, sickening us and making us feel helpless. During his life, King David of Israel experienced a great deal of death, and he desired to fly from its terrors. He expressed his emotions with words of despair:
Most people experience similar times of despair from time to time, and for the average non-Christian, this empty, helpless feeling receives little or no comfort from the Scriptures and Jesus Christ's reassuring teachings since they have no faith in these things. Most people view even Jesus' death casually at best. In contrast, those who obey and truly love God receive a true understanding of death's function in human existence and Christ's good news of what is to come after it. We know that all who have died are still dead and buried in their graves, awaiting a future resurrection. Jesus asserts, "No one has ascended to heaven but He who came down from heaven, that is, the Son of Man who is in heaven" (John 3:13). Peter affirms that not even David has ascended into the heavens but awaits resurrection from his grave like all the faithful (Acts 2:29, 34; see Hebrews 11:39-40). The apostle Paul explains that the dead in Christ will rise first:
True Christians live and die as others do, but we are never alone—especially in times of despair. Does God really notice whether those who follow Him live or die? David answers this question with simplicity, "Precious in the sight of the LORD is the death of His saints" (Psalm 116:15). God the Father is forever merciful in His care for us and in providing comfort:
Many times, He provides that comfort through members of His church. All Christians have a responsibility to comfort others with words of hope regarding God's promise of resurrection to eternal life and the benefits of overcoming sin. Death, the end of the human life cycle, is only the beginning of a future joyous time for those who have an intimate relationship with their Creator:
Let us comfort one another with these words. Martin G. Collins |
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