Today I did the funeral for a young man. He had been sick and disabled for most of his
life. He left behind a widowed mother
who had spent many years taking care of him.
Now the focus of her life was gone.
She was going to have to move as his income had helped meet expenses in
the home. It seemed the whole situation
was a tragedy on many levels. She was
overwhelmed with sorrow upon sorrow. I
couldn’t raise her son from the dead and return him to her full of life and
strength. I gave her what I had. I gave her words of hope about Jesus.
In I Timothy 1:1 says, “Paul an apostle of Jesus Christ, by
the commandment of God our Savior and the Lord Jesus Christ, our hope.” That is a wonderful name for Jesus, our
hope. That is what He is. Without Jesus there is no hope. Paul wrote in First Thessalonians 4:13, “But
I do not want you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning those who have fallen asleep,
lest you sorrow as others who have no HOPE.”
Those would be people who don’t have Jesus. Then Paul talked about the certain return of
the Lord and concluded with this admonition, “Therefore comfort one another
with these words.” The words about Jesus
are words of hope.
I said the death for a child of God is like playing
peek-a-boo. We smile at our baby and
then cover our face. The baby is
mystified at the separation. But then we
pull away the cover, say peek-a-boo and smile at him again. The baby laughs and smiles and is happy. Then we cover our face again and repeat the
process. Every time the baby sees us
come back he smiles with joy again. For
those in heaven the time of being apart from us is without meaning for there is
no time there. For a moment we are gone
and then we are there and there is joy in the reunion. For us who remain the time is longer, but the
joy of seeing that smiling face again of the one we love will likewise fill our
hearts with joy. This is the hope of the
Gospel of Jesus Christ. Death is
defeated. Life is assured. Joy will come. Friends and loved ones will be reunited.
Charles Wesley sums up the whole thought in his hymn “If
Death My Friend and Me Divide”. “(1) If
death my friend and me divide, Thou dost not, Lord, my sorrow chide,
or frown my tears to see; restrained from passionate excess, Thou bidst me mourn in calm distress for them that rest in Thee. (2) Pass a few fleeting moments more and death the blessing shall restore which death has snatched away; for me Thou wilt the summons send, and give me back my parted friend in that eternal day.” Death is not the end. With those who have hope in Jesus Christ it is just a game of peek-a-boo that will bring joy when Christ’s face we clearly see.
or frown my tears to see; restrained from passionate excess, Thou bidst me mourn in calm distress for them that rest in Thee. (2) Pass a few fleeting moments more and death the blessing shall restore which death has snatched away; for me Thou wilt the summons send, and give me back my parted friend in that eternal day.” Death is not the end. With those who have hope in Jesus Christ it is just a game of peek-a-boo that will bring joy when Christ’s face we clearly see.
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