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Conquest Of The World Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 26, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Jesus said that we would have tribulation in the world, but He also said to be of good cheer because He has overcome the world. His overcoming is already a fact that we can celebrate right now.
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Long ago an Eastern King, who was plagued by many troubles
and worries, called his wise men together and asked them to
compose a brief motto that would help him to face times of distress.
He required them to make it brief enough to be engraved on his
ring, and yet so profound and true that it would be appropriate to
every situation. It must be such a universal and enduring truth that
it would be a guide both in prosperity and adversity. This was no
small order, and so the wise men were hard put to come up with
anything that could fit every circumstance. At last, however, the
arrived at a motto of 5 words they felt would meet the need. Those 5
words were, "This too shall pass away." They felt that the
recognition that the circumstances of life are also temporary would
be a great source of comfort.
This story and the motto have been passed down for centuries.
Many poet and philosophers have picked it up and spread its
influence. One day over a century ago and American editor by the
name of Paul Hamilton Hayne came across the legend and published
a story about it. It created such an interest that he wrote a poem
that was widely distributed. It was carried around in pockets and
purses for comfort in times of trial. Since then many have put the
theme into poetry, and one of the best I have read is that by Grace
Noll Crowell. It goes like this:
This, too, will pass. O heart, say it over and over,
Out of your deepest sorrow, out of your deepest grief,
No hurt can hurt can last forever-
perhaps tomorrow will bring relief.
This, too, will pass. It will spend itself-its fury
Will die as the wind dies down with the setting sun;
Assuaged and calm, you will rest again, forgetting a thing that is done.
Repeated again and again, O heart, for your comfort;
This, too will pass as surely as passed before
The old forgotten pain, and the other sorrows that once you bore.
As certain as stars at night, or dawn after darkness,
Inherent as the lift of the blowing grass,
Whatever your despair or your frustration-this, too, will pass.
William Cowper who wrote many hymns sums it all up briefly
in two lines.
Beware of desperate steps; the darkness day,
Live till tomorrow, will have passed away.
Ordinarily the Christian does not gain comfort from a
philosophy growing out of a legend, but in this case the truth of it
happens to be biblical. In Job 11:16 we read of one of his
comforters saying, "Thou shalt forget thy misery, and remember it
as the waters that pass away." We know he was right, and Jobs
misery did pass. There is no doubt of it that life is filled with its
trials and miseries, yet there is also no doubt that they pass away.
There is great comfort in knowing that negative circumstances can
change, and sometimes very quickly. This is helpful, but it is still far
from being the best news that God has for the believer. John says
that the world and its lusts are going to pass away, and elsewhere
the New Testament says heaven and earth will pass away, and tears,
trials and temptations will pass away. But John goes on to improve
on the motto that bad things will pass away. In 5:4 he says that
those born of God can overcome the world while it is still here. We
do not have to just grin and bear it and wait for all evil to pass away
before we can live a victorious life. We can be victorious right now
in the midst of it all.
It is true that it will all pass away, but why not go one better and
make your motto that faith is the victory today. Many Christians
are traveling through life second and third class when God has
made first class provisions through Jesus Christ. Jesus said that we
would have tribulation in the world, but He also said to be of good
cheer because He has overcome the world. His overcoming is
already a fact that we can celebrate right now. John does not say
that the Christian can be victorious over the world, he says that the
Christian already is victorious. Those born of God have a faith that
is victorious over the world, and in verse 5 John implies that no one
but the true person of faith in Christ can overcome the world. By
the world he means all of the forces that oppose God and His
kingdom.
If Christians only believed half of what the Bible says about the
victorious Christian life, the world would be in perpetual revival,