-
Our Eternal Reward Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 31, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: It is the reward of heaven, however, that motivates us to add these values to life, and to apply them so that we bare fruit, and become profitable servants of Christ.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- Next
Among the Kamba people of East Africa there persists an
ancient legend. The story goes that the people of that region long
ago were very embittered by death's merciless destruction. They
sent messengers to all countries of the world to seek a place where
death did not reign so they could all move there. The messengers
traveled over the face of the earth for years wondering from country
to country. Finally they returned with the tragic report. "We must
stay here and die as our fathers died, for a kingdom where death is
not master does not exist in all the world."
All people have longed to find a kingdom where death is
excluded, and this has led to the belief in the immortality of the soul.
Men have an inherent conviction that somewhere there is a kingdom
where death is no more, and since it has not been found on earth,
they believe it is in a land beyond the grave. The fact that this
longing for such a kingdom is universal demonstrates that man
recognizes death to be an intruder into the universe. It does not
belong, and life will never be fully as God intended it to be until
death itself is dead.
The Bible clearly reveals that such a kingdom is the goal in God's
plan when the last enemy is destroyed, which is death. Before
immortality was brought to light in Jesus Christ there were many
who, by means of reason, came to the same conclusion that would be
given by revelation. Socrates over 300 years before Christ said, "If
this be a dream, let me dream on, and awake to disappointment
rather than suffer from the haunting fear that death ends all! But
this is no dream, since there is no appetite without provision made
for supplying it, how then, will you explain this thirst of mine, unless
there be water somewhere to quench it." He was right, and water
does exist in Jesus Christ, and if we drink of this water of life we
shall never thirst again.
Cicero a hundred years before Christ said, "I am well convinced
then, that my dear departed friends are so far from having ceased to
live that the state they now enjoy can alone with propriety be called
life." We cannot say if this was true for his friends, but he was right
in his conviction that such an abundant life is possible beyond the
grave. Until modern times men have made heaven a major concern,
and they have sought to understand, by means of reason and
revelation, all they can about this kingdom where death does not
reign. This is not longer a pursuit of the majority of men.
Lewis Whittemore in his study of immortality says, "Modern
man is, for the most part, concerned with neither the hope nor the
fear of immortality." People often say little is heard about the
flames of hell from the modern pulpit, but they seldom complain
that the joys and rewards of heaven are not expounded. It is not
only hell, but heaven also that is neglected in our day, and this is due
to the powerful influence of secularism and materialism that keeps
us nearsighted with our focus limited to the here and now. We are
unaware that our greatest enemies are those who rob us of the vision
of heaven.
The hell deniers are not bosom friends, but they are not the foes
to be feared. Those who attack hell and seek to eliminate it often do
so just because they believe in heaven. The universalist wants
everyone in heaven, and the annihilationist wants heaven to be the
only kingdom of eternal existence. We disagree with these hell
opposers, but we can recognize they are friends of heaven. It is the
foes of heaven that are the real danger. The attack on heaven came
in full force during the French Revolution when atheism went wild,
and was determined to destroy God, and topple the monarchy of
heaven.
Communism picked up the challenge and labored also for the
overthrow of heaven. Heaven has got to go if men are to give their
all to the state on earth. Marx wrote, "The people cannot be really
happy until it has been deprived of illusory happiness by the
abolition of religion.....Thus it is the mission of history, after the
other-worldly truth has disappeared, to establish the truth of this
world." Lenin wrote, "Religion teaches those who toil in poverty all
their lives to be resigned and patient in this world, and consoles
them with the hope of reward in heaven. As for those who live upon
the labors of others, religion teaches them to be charitable in earthly
life, thus providing a cheap justification for their whole exploiting
existence and selling them at a reasonable price tickets to heavenly