Author Archives: jmcconnell

The Raven & the Dove
Genesis 7-8

Years passed, and many generations of people lived and died, until a time came when people had forgotten God. They did not resist evil but allowed it room in their hearts. They began to hate, and hurt, and cause each other misery and pain. God looked at what had become of the people he made—made to be like him—and was filled with sorrow. “Enough!” he cried. “It’s time to start again. Creation is ruined. I’ll wash it all away.”

            But there was one person who did not join in with the evildoers. His name was Noah and he had not forgotten about God. So, God made him the center of his plan to put everything right.

            “You know how bad things are—the world is full of violence and hatred,” God said to Noah. “This is what I’m going to do. I’m going to send rain and floods to destroy the earth. You must build a boat. Build it out of the finest timber, coated inside and out with tar so it will be watertight. It needs to be huge—wider and longer and taller than any boat you have ever seen. Gather your whole family together—your wife, your sons, and your daughters-in-law. Then bring the animals into the ark—a male and female of every kind. You will also need food for them all.”

            “Now I make you a solemn promise—a covenant. I will keep you and your family, and all the creatures that sail in your ark, safe. So, get to work!”

            Noah did just as he was told. He built the huge ark on the dusty earth far from the sea. When he finished, he stepped back. It towered above him. Then, as he was looking up, he saw the bright sky filling with thick, black, swirling clouds. Noah hurried to gather a male and female of every creature in creation. He led the animals into the ark two by two, through grey stinging rain. It fell day and night, night and day. The streams and springs became bubbling, muddy fountains pouring out water from the deep. The blue sky was blotted out.   

            The rains swamped valleys and plains, and crept up the sides of the mountains, until all was swallowed up in black, endless water.  As they drifted helplessly over it, Noah and his family knew that all living things left behind on the land had been drowned.  They were alone on the ark. When, after 40 days, the rain finally stopped, the silence was as cold as the waters.

            Noah’s family loved their precious cargo of animals: the only other living, breathing creatures left on the earth.  They fed them and cared for them.  As they did so, a wind blew, and the waters began to sink slowly down.  Then, one day, they heard the keel of the ark beneath them scraping and shuddering.  The ark juddered to a halt, for it had struck the top of a mountain.

            Every day they scanned the horizon, longing for land, and after many weeks they saw distant purple mountains breaking free of the water.  Noah waited 40 more days, then set a raven free.  It crisscrossed over the waves, looking for somewhere to perch.  But there was nowhere.

            A week later Noah tried again, sending out a dove.  It came back with an olive twig.  Noah held the bird tenderly in his hand, hope rising within him.     

            A week later he sent the dove out again.  This time, it did not come back.  It must have found somewhere to perch.  At last, the flood was drying up!  Noah’s face broke into a wide smile as glistening land slowly emerged and dried.

            Still they waited and waited. Then, at last, the flood had gone, and they opened the ark; and out tumbled the people and all the animals, the birds, and all manners of tiny creatures. Noah’s family danced and laughed as the animals leaped and stretched, and the birds soared in the sky. How good it was to feel ground under their feet again. To have space to run and breath freely. It was over, and time to give thanks. So, Noah piled up rocks to form and altar and made an offering to God. Then the sun broke through the clouds and a perfect, shimmering rainbow appeared.

            God said, “Remember this great promise, this covenant, I am making with the whole earth. Never again will the waters become a flood that destroys all life. When you see a rainbow, remember this promise!” So, the people smiled again, blessed by God, who told them there was to be no more killing. God said that they should live, grow, and prosper. It was to be a new beginning under God’s bright promise.

In her brilliant book, The Bible Story Retold in Twelve Chapters, British author and poet, Andrea Skevington, presents this creative retelling of the Noah and the ark narrative. With artistic imagination and vivid detail, she cleverly captures the essence of one of the most famous stories in the whole Bible.

            The story of Noah’s Ark has been told in myriads of children’s Sunday School classrooms. It has appeared in multiple movie versions and animated films. It has been painted as murals on many nursery walls. And a full-sized ark has even been replicated as a tourist attraction in Kentucky. But unfortunately, the theological significance of this extraordinary story is often overlooked.

            Today, I would like for us to consider the two central theological themes of this story. First, we will examine Genesis 7 where God destroys the wicked world but redeems it through the obedience of one man. Second, we will consider Genesis 8 where God recreates the world after the judgment and forms a covenant with his people. Both of these themes foreshadow God’s judgment, redemption, and recreation through his Son Jesus Christ in the New Testament era! I want us to see how Noah’s Ark still applies to our lives today!

 1.) God destroys the wicked world, but he redeems humanity through the obedience of one man. (Gen. 7)

Back in Genesis 6 we learned that Noah was a righteous man, blameless in his generation. While the rest of the world walked in wickedness, seeking to gratify their selfish desires, Noah walked with God—and he found favor in the eyes of the Lord. God gave him the unconventional command to build a massive multi-tiered ark because he was going to pour out his judgment and destroy the earth with a great flood. But God told Noah to take his family and two of every kind of animal onto the ark. And notice the last line of Genesis 6—“Noah did this; he did all that God commanded him.” Unlike Adam and the rest of the human race, Noah obeyed God’s command.

Look at Genesis 7! After Noah built the ark, God told him that it was now time to board the boat because the great flood would begin in seven days. Have you ever wondered why God gave Noah seven days to get on the ark? That’s right! Like most trips, God knew that it would take Noah’s wife at least six days to pack her suitcase!! Nah, the real reason was that it would take considerable time to get all of the animals on the ark. Notice verses 5 and 9, where the author of Genesis reiterates, “And Noah did all that the Lord commanded him” and “as God had commanded Noah.”

The rest of chapter 7 describes the flood that arose because God burst the fountains of the great deep and opened the windows of the sky, pouring rain upon the earth for forty days and forty nights. The waters rose above the mountains for 150 days and blotted out every living thing: the birds of the air, the beasts of the field, and every human being that God had created. Apart from those who were safe in the ark, every living creature was washed away!

The epic story of Noah’s ark highlights God’s justice and grace! When the people whom God had created for his own glory turned their backs on him and wanted nothing to do with him anymore, it was his divine prerogative to bring judgment against them. In keeping with his attribute of justice, God judged the wicked world with equity and fairness. After all, what is the proper punishment for sin against a holy and eternal Creator? Death! The wicked world, which had embraced a life of independence, arrogance, violence, sexual exploitation, and murder, deserved eternal death!

            But even in the midst of his just judgment, God displays his mercy and grace! He was extremely patient with his people; he announced his judgment beforehand and gave them a long time to repent from their sins. And when he could have wiped out the whole world forever, he chose to redeem humanity through the obedience of one man.

            Does this theme sound familiar? Noah’s ark is a foreshadowing of what God has done for us in the giving of his Son Jesus Christ! Every one of us is guilty of sin against our holy and eternal Creator! We have all contributed to the wickedness in this world by lying, stealing, cheating, and manipulating to get what we want. Many of us are also guilty of violence, anger, bitterness, laziness, workaholism, and various forms of sexual sin. We all deserve death! But God is so patient with us! He has given us so many opportunities to repent from our sin. He has given us the hope of redemption through the obedience of one man, Jesus Christ. Jesus suffered on the cross to pay the penalty for all of our sins and to rescue us from God’s wrath during the final judgment! But like Noah’s family, we must put our faith in God’s plan of redemption!

 

2.) God recreates the world and he forms a covenant with his people. (Gen. 8)

After God destroys the wicked world through the great flood but redeemed the human race through Noah’s obedience, Genesis 8 shows us how God recreated the world and formed a covenant with his people. The author of Genesis drops another hint of God’s grace in 8:1, when he says, “But God remembered Noah and all the beasts and all the livestock that were with him in the ark. And God made a wind blow over the earth, and the waters subsided.” After 150 days afloat, the ark landed somewhere on the Mountains of Ararat, at the intersection of modern-day Turkey, Armenia, and Iran. Thus, God faithfully kept his promise to Noah.

But before the water fully receded and the ark rested, Noah opened the window of the ark and sent out a raven and then a dove to see if the earth was ready for habitation. The raven went out and never returned, as the mountain tops and the carcasses floating upon the water afforded both resting-places and food. After that, Noah let a dove fly out three times, at intervals of seven days. The first time it returned quickly, signifying that the water was still high. The second time it returned in the evening, having remained out longer than before, and brought a fresh olive-leaf in its mouth. Noah perceived from this that the water must be almost gone, though the ground might not be perfectly dry, as the olive-tree will put out leaves even under water. The fresh olive-leaf was the first sign of the resurrection of the earth to new life after the flood, and the dove with the olive-leaf a herald of salvation. The third time, the dove did not return; a sign that the waters had completely receded, and the earth was ready to be recreated. Thus, the raven and dove has become a symbol for restoration. The dove and the olive branch have become symbols of peace.

When Noah and his family left the ark, God told Noah to release the animals so that they may swarm the earth and be fruitful and multiply. Noah worshipped God by building an altar and making sacrifices. And God blessed Noah and his family and told them to be fruitful and multiply the human race across the face of the earth once again. Thus, after God judged the earth, he embarked upon his own mission of recreating it.

The author of Genesis highlights this recreation theme by selecting remarkable parallels between Adam and Noah, between the first creation and the second creation. First, Adam is the father of humanity before the flood; Noah is the father of humanity after the flood. Second, both worlds are created out of a watery chaos. Third, they both walked with God. Fourth, they both ruled over the animals. Fourth, they were both commissioned by God to “be fruitful and multiply.” Fifth, they both have three named sons. Among their three sons is judgment and hope—we saw judgment with Cain and hope with Seth—we will soon see judgment with Noah’s son Ham and hope through Noah’s son Shem. It was time for the Creator to recreate!

Just as the story of Noah’s Ark foreshadows God’s plan of redemption through the obedience of his Son Jesus Christ, so the story of the flood foreshadows the final judgment and recreation of the earth at Jesus’ Second Coming. In Matthew 24:37, Jesus himself made this connection when he said, “As it was in the days of Noah, so it will be at the coming of the Son of Man.” The great flood reminds us that Jesus will one day return and judge the wickedness of the world once and for all.

            Every human being will stand before the judgment seat of Christ and give an account of their deeds on earth. As a shepherd separates the goats from the sheep, Jesus will separate the elect who put their faith in him from the non-elect who refused his free offer of grace. The non-elect will be sentenced to eternal punishment in hell and the elect will live forever in the new heavens and earth—the recreated world—the new Garden of Eden—where there is nor more sin or death or disease or pain or suffering or tears of any kind. God will walk wit his people once again in a perfect paradise forever.   

As we see how God judged the world through the great flood, may our souls be prepared for God’s final judgment day! As we see how God saved the human race through Noah’s obedience, may we respond to God’s offer of salvation and redemption through the obedience of his son Jesus Christ. And as we see how God recreated the world after the flood, may we look forward to the day the God recreates the heavens and the earth sets our weary souls to rest in his perfect paradise!

 

            I began this sermon by reading Andrea Skevington’s retelling of the Noah’s ark narrative; let me conclude by reading her poem titled “Like Noah’s raven, and the dove.”

 

 

Can I let hope fly, send out birds
to brood and hover
over the chaos,
like Noah, with the raven,
and the dove?

For too long, there
has been nothing
on the horizon,
no fixed point
on the Earth’s
endless circle.
How would you ever know
if the water was falling,
or rising?

So can I now find courage to
cup birds in unsteady hands –
raven-black,
dove-white –
and throw them upwards
one by one?

 

To let fly a dark hope
even though there is
nowhere for it to rest,
even though it returns
like a gift
that comes back unopened.

Can I try again
and again,
in case something
living and growing has
pierced this water,
until finally a gentle bird
does not return.
Until, at last,
there is somewhere
other than this poor boat
for it to land.

May I have such birds to release.
May I let them fly, like Noah,
with the raven, and the dove.

What a Wonderful World
Genesis 6:1-8

I see trees of green, red roses too
I see them bloom for me and you
And I think to myself what a wonderful world

I see skies of blue and clouds of white
The bright blessed day, the dark sacred night
And I think to myself what a wonderful world

The colors of the rainbow so pretty in the sky
Are also on the faces of people going by
I see friends shaking hands saying how do you do
They’re really saying I love you

I hear babies crying, I watch them grow
They’ll learn much more than I’ll never know
And I think to myself what a wonderful world
Yes I think to myself what a wonderful world

Jazz master Louis Armstrong’s hit “What a Wonderful World” reached the charts in the winter of 1968, which turned out to be a very turbulent year in the United States, with racial and political tension reaching a fever pitch. It was a presidential election year. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert Kennedy were both assassinated that spring and summer, and there was growing civil and racial unrest with urban riots and Viet Nam War protests. In the midst of all this, songwriter Bob Thiele saw Armstrong as “the perfect ambassador to restore race relations” during America’s tumultuous summer. 

            Yet since the 1950s, Armstrong had been charged by some as being an “Uncle Tom,” catering to white America with his music. But Armstrong’s appeal at the time extended to all races, and the hope was that a 66-year-old singing a tune of goodwill on the airwaves might make a difference. Armstrong also felt the song needed to be heard to promote a sense of hope and optimism. At one performance, he reportedly introduced the song with this explanation:

“Some of you young folks been saying to me: ‘Hey, Pops – what do you mean, what a wonderful world? How about all them wars all over the place, you call them wonderful?’ …But how about listening to old Pops for a minute?  Seems to me it ain’t the world that’s so bad but what we’re doing to it, and all I’m saying is: see what a wonderful world it would be if only we’d give it a chance…”

When we read Genesis 1-2, we see that God really did create a wonderful world! But when we get to Genesis 3, we see what people started doing to it. Adam and Eve disobeyed God’s command by eating from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. Sin entered the world and brought suffering and death to the human race.

            And in Genesis 4-5, we see how sin infiltrated the human family and decimated Adam and Eve’s descendants. Can you imagine the parental agony they must have felt when they found out that their firstborn son, Cain, killed his own brother in cold blood? Can you imagine their angst as they watched Cain defy God’s grace and completely abandon God by turning to his own egotistical endeavors? Can you image their aguish as they watched all of their descendants in Cain’s line drift further and further away from God and rely on their own human inventions and ingenuity? Can you imagine how their hearts must have broken when they heard the news that their great-grandson Lamech had embraced a life of bigamy and bloodshed? Can you imagine the guilt that weighed on their souls as they watched the world become more wicked with every generation?   

            When we read the beginning of the Bible, it causes us to wonder: How could such a wonderful world become such wicked world so quickly? How could such a wonderful world become so wicked that God actually regretted creating it? How could such a wonderful world become so wicked that God would decide to wash it away in a great flood? This is what the world has come to in Genesis 6!

1.) God’s View of the Wicked World (1-5)

Genesis 6 begins with the ominous report, “When men began to increase in number on the earth and daughters were born to them, the sons of God saw that the daughters of men were beautiful, and they married any of them they chose.” This implies that, as the population of the world increased, so did its wickedness. Sin multiplied as the human race expanded across the face of the earth. This is evidenced by the fact that the Sons of God married any of the daughters of men they wanted. But what does this statement mean? Who are the Sons of God? Who are the daughters of men? And what was so wrong about them marrying each other?

This is one of the most perplexing verses in the whole Bible. Over the centuries, three predominant interpretations have been proposed. The early church fathers believed that “the Sons of God referred to fallen angels who overstepped their boundaries by copulating with human women, thus producing a race of giants called the Nephilim. The medieval church believed that the Sons of God referred to the men in the godly line of Seth and the daughters of men referred to the women in the sinful line of Cain, thus polluting the pure line of Seth. Most modern interpreters believe that the Sons of God refers to a dynasty of royal tyrants who succeed Lamach in the line of Cain. All three interpretations have merit and can be supported by the Hebrew grammar.

Without getting bogged down in the weeds of biblical interpretation, let me just say that I believe that the third view is most likely correct—that “the Sons of God” refers to the wicked royal successors of Lamach in the corrupt line of Cain. They were men of great power and influence—nobles, aristocrats, and princes—who married girls outside their social status and took great numbers of them in their harems. These “divine kings” were supposed to administer justice, but instead they claimed for themselves to be deity, and violated the divine order by forming royal harems. They twisted God’s marriage pattern of one man and one woman in a one flesh relationship by taking multiple women for their wives—as many as they wanted. These powerful men preyed on vulnerable women and sexually exploited them for their own selfish purposes.

The offspring of these marriages, the Nephilim, may have become famous and powerful, but they were not god-kings. They were human flesh, and they would die in due time, like the rest of the human race. Once again, human beings had overstepped their boundaries, trying to become gods unto themselves, trying to achieve immortality on their own. Thus, humanity took another step away from God and delved even deeper into wickedness. (Ross 183) In response to the increasing wickedness in the world, God reduced the human lifespan to 120 years.

Verse 5 sums up just how wicked the world had become: “The LORD saw how great man’s wickedness on the earth had become, and that every inclination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil all the time.”

            As we consider how wickedness increased as the population multiplied before the great flood, we should not be surprised by the increasing wickedness that we see in our world today. As time goes on, do you think our world is getting better or worse? Most people think it is getting worse. In America, we don’t have to look any further than the rise of terrorism, school shootings, the opioid epidemic, relentless racism, human trafficking, economic corruption, and political dissension. What a national disgrace when our politicians refuse s to shake each other’s hands and tear up each other’s speeches.

            And what about sexual exploitation? When I read this passage and see how these wealthy and powerful men exploited vulnerable women to satisfy their own perverted passions, I think to myself: “I sure am glad this doesn’t happen anymore!” I hope you catch my sarcasm! Harvey Weinstein, Jeffery Epstein, Prince Andrew are just the most recent figures to get caught, but they are just the tip of the iceberg. This type of exploitation happens all over the world every day—it happens right here in our own community! But just as he did before the flood, God sees all of this wickedness in his wonderful world.     

 

2.) God’s Judgment of the Wicked World (6-7)

In verses 6-7, we find one of the most tragic statements in the whole Bible: “And the LORD was sorry that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart.” So, the LORD said, “I will blot out man whom I have created, from the face of the land—man and animals and creeping things and birds of heavens, for I am sorry that I have made them.” The author of Genesis portrays God’s sorrow in anthropomorphic terms, using human emotions to describe God’s remorse over the world he created. God’s heart was so grieved by all the evil in the world that he regretted creating it in the first place. And to uphold his attribute of justice, he decides to bring judgement upon the people who were defiling his wonderful world. He decrees to wipe them from the face of the earth.

It’s like a great artist who creates a beautiful painting and hangs it high for everyone to enjoy, but then a gang of vandals breaks in, rips it off the wall, smashes it with mallets, mutilates it with machetes. Then artist walks in and finds her masterpiece defaced on the floor. It’s still a painting—there are still remnants of beauty—but it is unrecognizable compared to what it once was. As she sobs, she thinks about all of the creative energy, all the hours of labor, and the fact that she put all of her heart and soul into that piece of art. Now it lies before her desecrated, bludgeoned by the very people it was meant to bless. And she is so overwhelmed with sorrow that she regrets ever creating the masterpiece.   

            Put yourself in the artist’s place for a moment—imagine the pain you would feel if someone pointlessly decimated your greatest masterpiece. This is exactly how God felt! After he created the wonderful world, he created the human race in his own image—it was his greatest work! But the creation rebelled against the creator—human beings turned away from God and began destroying God’s image in each other through various forms of wickedness—deception, murder, independence, sexual exploitation, and the list goes on.

            As in the days of Noah, God is grieved by all of the wickedness in the world today! God’s heart breaks every time he sees us lying, coercing, bullying, manipulating, defrauding, and abusing—physical abuse, emotional abuse, verbal abuse, financial abuse, and sexual abuse. God himself is afflicted every time we afflict one another.   

            We must remember that God’s declaration of judgment prior to the Great Flood was a precursor to the Great Judgment that will take place when Jesus returns. The Bible tells us that we will all stand before the judgment seat of Christ and answer for our wicked deeds! We are all guilty of sin against God and against our fellow human beings—we are all guilty of turning God’s wonderful world into a wicked world. If it wasn’t for God’s grace revealed through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, we would all be doomed! But thank God for his grace, both then and now!

 

3.) God’s Grace in the Midst of the Wicked World (8)

Speaking of God’s grace, notice how this passage ends—not in doom, but in hope. In the midst of divine judgment, verse 8 arrests our attention with the word “but.” Thank God for this little word that shines a ray of light amid the darkness. As God decreed a just and fair punishment for the wickedness of the world, he extended his grace to the human race through a man named Noah, who found favor in God’s eyes. Neither Noah nor anyone else deserved God’s favor, but he gave it to them anyway. As we will soon learn in the rest of Genesis 6 and 7, although God judged the world through the Great Flood, he had a plan to save the human race through Noah and his family.

Just as God extended grace to the human race in the Old Testament, so he has offered his grace to all of us through his Son Jesus Christ. The truth is that we all have wicked hearts—we have all done wicked deeds—we have to contributed to the wickedness in the world. Our sinful attitudes and actions have caused God so much pain and grief. Like the people in Noah’s day, we all deserve God’s righteous judgment! We deserve to be wiped off the face of the earth! But thanks be to God for his grace that he has offered us through his Son Jesus Christ, who suffered on the cross and died in our place. Jesus endured God’s judgment for our sin so that we wouldn’t have to!

 

Back in 1968, people asked Louis Armstrong how he could sing “What a Wonderful World” with so much racism, civil unrest, and war raging. When we look around our world today, many of us would ask the same question. But may we always remember that Jesus died on the cross so that this wicked world can one day be restored to the wonderful world it was meant to be! 

Walking Through a Cemetery
Genesis 5

 

           Have you ever walked through a cemetery? People go to cemeteries to visit the gravestones of their deceased loved ones. They do this to feel some connection with the person who is gone and to help us remember the times they shared together.

            When I was growing up, I went to the cemetery to visit my mother’s gravestone at least once a month. Sometimes I would plant flowers or hang a wreath, but mostly I would just stare at the granite stone and remember my mother’s face. I would reflect on her life and death and the brief time that I got to spend with her before she was gone.

            After I visited my mother’s gravestone, I would often go for a walk through the cemetery. As I wandered through the maze of mortuous monuments, I would stop and read other people’s gravestones—mostly of people whom I’d never met. Even though gravestones come in all sorts of shapes and sizes, they almost always had the same information written on them—the person’s name, birthdate, and date of death.  

            But have you ever noticed the little horizontal line between the birthdate and death-date? There is usually a dash between the birth date and death date—a one-inch dash that represents the person’s whole life. Have you ever thought about the fact that someday your who life will be summed up by a one-inch dash etched in a piece of granite? It won’t tell anyone where we lived or what kind of work we did. It won’t tell anyone who we loved or what kind of impact we had on the world. What a sobering thought!

Reading Genesis 5 is like walking through a cemetery. As we trace the line of Adam through his son Seth all the way to Noah, it’s like reading a row of tombstones. The author of Genesis only tells us the name, whom the father was, that he had other sons and daughters, how long he lived, and that he died. Hardly any other information is given about these 10 men.

Walking through this biblical cemetery helps us reflect on the history of the human race. Remembering our ancient history helps us keep our modern history in perspective. Just as walking through physical cemeteries and looking at tombstones reminds us of days gone by, the author of Genesis walks us through this cemetery to remind us of four spiritual realities.


1.) Walking through this cemetery reminds us that we are all created in God’s image. (1-3)

            Before we even get into the cemetery, the author of Genesis already wants us to be reflecting on a spiritual reality. Verses 1-3 are like a sign on the cemetery gate that reminds us that we are walking on holy ground. He prepares our hearts for a walk through this cemetery by taking us back to Genesis 1 and 2 and reminds us that God created humans in the image of God.

We remember that after God created the heavens and the earth, he scooped up some dust, formed the first human, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life. We also remember that God caused Adam to fall into a deep sleep and removed one of his ribs and created Eve, the first woman. He made them male and female and blessed the human race as the pinnacle of his creation.

What does it mean to be created in the image of God? It means that we bear a likeness or resemblance to God. We bear a resemblance to God in ways that animals and plants don’t. We bear a resemblance to God mentally, socially, spiritually, morally and even in some sense physically.

God gives us a good illustration of this in verse 3 when he says that Seth bore Adam’s likeness and image. Whenever someone has a child, relatives and friends make all sorts of remarks about the child’s likeness. They say things like, “Wow, junior is the spitting image of his father.” or “Mary has her mother’s eyes!” Sometimes comments like this backfire. “Laura, it looks like you got your daddy’s stiff chin!” What self-respecting girl wants her father’s chin? Well, you know what I mean! Children bear the image and likeness of their parents.

In the same way, we all bear the likeness of God. When we walk through a cemetery, we should remember that everyone buried there was created in the image of God. Since all human beings have a little bit of our heavenly father in them, we should treat all people with dignity and respect! Remember that every person is precious to God! Remember that you have inherent value and worth because you are created in the image of God! Remember that you matter because God made you!

 

2.) Walking through this cemetery reminds us of the consequences of sin. (4-30)

As you walk through the gates of the cemetery and glance across the rows of tombstones, you can’t help but be reminded of the consequences of sin. Likewise, the author of Genesis takes us through this cemetery to remind us of the effects of sin. He highlights two effects—shorter lifespans and the inevitability of death.


Shorter Life Spans
(6:3)

When most of us walk through this cemetery and read the tombstones, we are perplexed by the people’s ages. The life spans appear to be beyond the realm of possibility. Did Adam really live to be 930 years old? Did Methuselah really live to be 969? This account seems to contradict the sensibilities of modern science. If the average lifespan in America today is 76, how could someone really live to be 900 years old back then?

Before the great flood people lived much longer. It was common for people to live for hundreds of years. Even the non-biblical literature from the ancient Near East attests to this. But as the number of people on earth began to increase, so did its wickedness. Remember, all of humanity had been affected by Adam and Eve’s sin in the Garden of Eden. This sinfulness was passed down from generation to generation. The world became so wicked that God said, “My spirit will not contend with man forever, for he is mortal; his days will be 120 years.” (6:3) After the great flood, God reduced the life expectancy of man to 120 years to minimize the amount of wickedness that would accumulate on the earth.

If it wasn’t for the consequences of sin, our ancestors would still be alive today and we could have a firsthand account of the way things were back then. But sin has greatly reduced our life expectancy. Today very few people even live to see 100 years. Most of us are fortunate to live into our eighties. I hope that we appreciate all the time God gives us on the earth and that we use our years to serve the Lord.

 

The Inevitability of Death

When we walk through this cemetery, we not only see how sin reduced our life spans, but we also see that sin caused the inevitability of death.   The author of Genesis purposefully highlights this by repeating the refrain “and then he died” over and over again. It is truly a grave refrain!

These words are repeated over and over again to remind us that one day we too will die. I don’t think you can walk through a cemetery without meditating on your own mortality. The rows of stones, the names, the dates, and those little dashes all remind us that our bodies will return to dust from whence it came. As we ponder the inevitability of our death, what will that little dash on your gravestone represent?

            None of us knows when we will die, but since we know that we will die, let’s maximize the days that God has given us. Let’s love the Lord with all of our heart, soul, mind, and strength! Let’s love our neighbors as ourselves, even the ones who are really difficult to love! Let’s serve the Lord by sharing the good news that Jesus died and rose again to offer us forgiveness from all of our sins and the hope of everlasting life!


3.) Walking through this cemetery reminds us that the only way to overcome death is by 
 walking with God. (21-24)

As we walk through this cemetery and read this tragic list of names and hear the repeated phrase “and then he died” there is one name that stands out as a shocking exception. Verses 21-24 tell us that Enoch did not die. The author tells us the Enoch walked with God for 300 years and then he was no more—that is, God took him to heaven without experiencing death.

The author emphasizes the reason why Enoch did not die by repeating the phrase “walked with God.”  Enoch is an example of one who found life amid the curse of death. In Enoch, the author of Genesis shows us that the pronouncement of death is not the last word. He holds Enoch up as a way to overcome death. “Walking with God” is the way to overcome death and experience life the way God meant it to be.

The whole message of the Bible is essentially summed up in this cemetery passage: We have brought death on ourselves through sin, but God offers us hope by walking with him! “Walking with God” is Genesis’ equivalent to the New Testament’s “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only son that whoever believes in him will not perish but have everlasting life.” Enoch overcame death through a relationship with God.

The only way to overcome death and inherit eternal life is by walking with God through faith in Jesus Christ. Jesus suffered and died on the cross so that we could have forgiveness for our sins. Even though we will all taste physical death like Jesus did, we can overcome death through Jesus’ resurrection.

            Do you have the hope of eternal life today? Have you put your faith in Jesus Christ? Do you have a relationship with him? Are you walking with God as Enoch walked with God? This is the only way to overcome death!

 

4.) Walking through a cemetery reminds us of our family heritage.

Let me briefly point out the contrast between the family heritage of Cain in Genesis 4 and the family heritage of Seth in Genesis 5. Ironically, both lines contain a man named Enoch. The Enoch in Cain’s line carried on his father’s defiance and independence from God. The Enoch in Seth’s line lived such a holy life that God took him. Both lines also contain a man named Lamach. In Cain’s line, Lamech marries multiple wives and ends up murdering a man. (Gen. 4:19, 23-24). He perpetuated the same spirit of revenge and became a murderer like his great-grandfather Cain. The Lamech in the line of Seth became the father of Noah, whom God used to save the human race from the flood. These are not accidental details. The author of Genesis wants us to see the difference between these family heritages.

            Do you see the difference between these two heritages? One honored God and the other defied him! One walked in relationship with God and the other turned to their own human ingenuity and developed technologies to replace God!

            Some of us have inherited a godly heritage from our parents and grandparents. They brought us to church, read us the Scriptures, taught us how to pray, and led us to faith in Jesus Christ. If this is you, praise God and honor your heritage!

            Others of us inherited a sinful heritage from our parents and grandparents. They modeled a life of sin and destruction, and they have passed on ton of spiritual and emotional baggage. If this is you, I want you to know that your heritage does not have to determine your legacy. Walk with God and pass that walk on to your children and grandchildren!

            Someday we will all die, and our family will bury our body in the ground. When our spouse or children or grandchildren or friend comes to the cemetery to look at our gravestone, what will they say? When they look at the little dash between our birthdate and date of death, how will they remember us? When we die, what type of spiritual legacy will we leave behind?

The Fall of the Human Family
Genesis 4

 

Listen to this poem titled “Highway Patrolman.”

My name is Joe Roberts I work for the state
I’m a sergeant out of Perrineville barracks number 8
I always done an honest job as honest as I could
I got a brother named Franky and Franky ain’t no good
 
Now ever since we was young kids it’s been the same come down
I get a call on the shortwave, Franky’s in trouble downtown
Well if it was any other man, I’d put him straight away
But when it’s your brother sometimes you look the other way
 
Yeah, me and Franky laughin’ and drinkin’, nothin’ feels better than blood on blood
Takin’ turns dancin’ with Maria as the band played “Night of the Johnstown Flood”
I catch him when he’s strayin’ like any brother would
Man turns his back on his family well he just ain’t no good
 
Well Franky went in the army back in 1965
I got a farm deferment settled down took Maria for my wife
But them wheat prices kept on droppin’ ’til it was like we were gettin’ robbed
Franky came home in ’68 and me I took this job
 
Well, the night was like any other, I got a call ’bout quarter to nine
There was trouble in a roadhouse out on the Michigan line
There was a kid lyin’ on the floor lookin’ bad, bleedin’ hard from his head
There was a girl cryin’ at a table, and it was Frank they said
Well I went out and I jumped in my car and I hit the lights
Well, I must’ve done 110 through Michigan County that night
 
It was out at the crossroads down round Willow Bank
Seen a Buick with Ohio plates behind the wheel was Frank
Well I chased him through them county roads ’til a sign said Canadian border 5 miles from here
I pulled over the side of the highway and watched his taillights disappear
 
Yeah we’re laughin’ and drinkin’ nothin’ feels better than blood on blood
Takin’ turns dancin’ with Maria as the band played “Night of the Johnstown Flood”
I catch him when he’s strayin’, teach him how to walk that line
Man turns his back on his family he ain’t no friend of mine

Isn’t it interesting how two children can be raised by the same parents in the same home, and yet turn out so differently? One child can be so humble and gentle, while the other one is arrogant and aggressive! One kid can be sacrificial toward people and the other one can be greedy and selfish! One child always seems to find the road to success; the other child always follows the trail to trouble! One child may become a highway patrolman, while the other child spends his whole life running from the cops! Some children follow the path of the Lord and enjoy all of the blessings thereof; other children resist the way of the Lord and wind up suffering the consequences of their sin.
We’ve all watched families face this unfortunate phenomenon. Some of us have experienced this painful reality in our own family. Even the best parental efforts don’t always produce perfect results. The truth of the matter is that every human family is affected by sin! Sometimes sin is manifested in families through “minor” misdeeds like materialism, parental favoritism, or sibling rivalry. And sometimes sin affects families in more severe forms like alcoholism, drug addiction, domestic violence, sexual abuse, or even homicide! And it’s interesting to see how these sins often affect families for generations.

The Fall of the First Family (Genesis 4:1-16)
In Genesis 3, we saw how Adam and Eve marred God’s majestic masterpiece by disobeying his command not to eat the tree of knowledge of good and evil. Beauty was broken! The beauty of childbirth would now be marked by pain. The beauty of abundant produce was replaced by the toil of thorns and thistles And Adam and Eve were banished from God’s beautiful Garden of Eden. They could no longer eat from the tree of life that would preserve their youth and prevent eventual death. The human race fell and the whole created world would suffer the consequences of sin. Genesis 3 tells us the story of the fall of the human race; Genesis 4 goes on to show us the fall of the human family. Adam and Eve would have to watch how sin infected their offspring and wreaked havoc on the first human family.
Genesis 4:1 tells us that Adam knew his wife Eve, and she conceived and bore a son. They named him Cain because it sounds like the Hebrew word for “gotten.” Eve had apparently learned her lesson from her sin in the garden; here she did not rely on her own volition, but she acknowledged God’s rule in her life by saying, “I have gotten a man with the help of the Lord.”
Perhaps Adam and Eve hoped that their firstborn child would be the promised heir that would crush Satan’s head once and for all. (Genesis 3:15) Unfortunately, as we will soon learn, the only head this child would crush was his own brothers’.
Sometime after Cain was born, his younger brother Abel came along. We don’t know anything about their relationship. Were they buddies? Did they like to hunt and fish together? Was there any sort of sibling rivalry between them? They only thing we know is that they both went into agricultural. Cain became a crop farmer; Abel went into the livestock business.
At some point, each of them brought an offering to the Lord. The text says that “Cain brought to the Lord an offering of the fruit of the ground. But Abel brought the firstborn of his flock and fat portions. The Lord had regard for Abel and his offering, but for Cain and his offering he had no regard.” (4:4-5)
The author of Genesis gives us a clue as to why Abel’s offering was accepted but Cain’s offering was rejected. Both offerings were appropriate for their occupations, but author is explicit about the fact that Abel’s offering came from the “firstborn” of his flock. Presumably, Abel offered his best to the Lord, but Cain kept his best crops for himself. Abel did what was right in God’s sight; Cain did not.
Isn’t this the way sin usually works. How often do we find ourselves in Cain’s position—we know the right thing to do, yet we don’t do it. We know what God expects from us, but we just don’t follow through—we only do “some” of what God wants us to do. In our hearts, we become selfish and want to preserve our possessions for ourselves.
Do you ever do this? Do you ever withhold your best from God? Like Cain then, we should not be surprised when our half-hearted attempts to honor God are rejected today!
When God rejected Cain’s offering, he became angry. His countenance dropped and his demeanor became downcast. But who was Cain mad at? God? Abel? Himself? Maybe he was angry with everyone!
But even in the midst of Cain’s failure, God showed grace and mercy. Instead of punishing him, God responded with compassion, “Why are you angry and why has your face fallen? If you do well, will you not be accepted?” (4:6) God acknowledged Cain’s failure, but he gave him a second chance to do the right thing. God showed his grace by warning him that sin is a slippery slope. If sin is not confessed and repented of quickly, it often leads to other sins. God knows the treachery of the human heart, so he warned, “And if you do not do well, sin is crouching at the door. It’s desire is for you, but you must rule over it.” (4:7)
Has this ever happened to you? Have you ever gotten angry with someone because they did the right thing and you didn’t? Has anyone ever gotten angry with you because you did the right thing and they didn’t? Have you ever been angry with God for how he blessed someone else’s faithfulness?
Sin is a slippery slope! Anger leads to hostility; hostility leads to malice; malice leads to murder. Envy leads to greed; greed leads to stealing. Most heroin addicts I know did not start with heroin. They started with smoking marijuana or popping pain killers. How have you experienced sin’s slippery slope?
Thankfully, as he did for Cain, God deals with us graciously. He gives us a way to get off the slippery slope. If we repent from our sin—if we openly confess it, agree with God that it is wrong, and make a commitment not to do it again, God wipes our slate clean. If we take the second chance and do what is right, we will be accepted.
I wonder if there is anyone here today who has been sliding down the slippery slope of sin. If so, I hope you realize that deeper sin is crouching at your door! It seeks to destroy your life. It wants to destroy your family! Don’t let it! Repent now! Turn from your sin today! Let God’s grace help you to overcome!
Unfortunately, Cain didn’t listen to God’s warning or accept God’s grace. Instead, he continued to spiral down the slippery slope of sin. He hardened his heart toward God and became jealous of his brother. His jealousy turned into anger, anger into malice, and malice led to murder. Just as the serpent deceived Cain’s mother, Cain deceived his brother. He put on the face of affection to hide his heart of hostility and invited Abel to join him for a walk in the field. And there, he murdered his unsuspecting brother in cold blood! He desecrated God’s greatest artistic masterpiece—human life that was created in his own image!
Sometime later, God confronted Cain and asked him where his brother was. In one of the most chilling statements in the whole Bible, Cain lied to God’s face and showed a complete lack of respect for human life when he replied, “I do not know, am I my brother’s keeper?” He refused to take any responsibility for his brother’s life or death.
Even though most people aren’t murderers, I wonder how many of us have harbored Cain’s hatred in our hearts. It is so easy to ignore our responsibility to be our brother’s keeper. Who is our brother? Our family members? Yes, even the ones that we don’t get along with! Our fellow church members? Yes, even the ones that drive us crazy! Our neighbors, community members, coworkers, and classmates…yes, even the ones we don’t like!
God calls all of us to be our brother’s keeper! We care about one another! We look out for one another! We provide for one another! We go out of our way to help each other! We love each other! Cain sacrificed his brother for his own benefit; God wants us to sacrifice ourselves for each other’s benefit.
Therefore, we should never think or say things like, “Well, those people aren’t my problem!” or “It’s none of my business!” When it comes to people, it is our problem and it is our business! We are our brother’s keeper!

The Fall of Cain’s Family (Genesis 4:17-26)
But even as God punished Cain for his sin, he was still gracious. God could have taken Cain’s life, but he showed mercy by banishing him to be a restless wanderer on the earth. He even put a special mark on Cain to protect him.
But notice verse 16, “Then Cain went away from the presence of the Lord and settled in the land of Nod, east of Eden.” Don’t miss the significance of this verse. To go out from the presence of the Lord means that Cain completely turned his back on God! Cain was supposed be a wanderer, but what do we see him doing? He defies God again by settling down. “East of Eden”, away from God’s presence and the memory of the paradise, Cain would make his own life. He would secure himself, and escape from his wanderings by starting his own family and building the world’s first city. Even though God promised to protect him, he takes matters into his own hands and builds a city for his own safety and security.
By naming the city after his son Enoch, it’s likely that Cain was defying God again. Cain was trusting in his own ingenuity rather than relying on God. He was not creating for the glory of God or the benefit of others; he was building a city and establishing a kingdom to his own glory!
So, the name of the world’s first city, is named “Enoch”, or “initiation.” Cain was initiating a new (godless) way of life, as well as a new (godless) security, and a completely new (godless) sense of rootedness. Here, the God estranged wanderer could settle in, take root and consider himself ‘at home’.
Then, in Genesis 4:18-26, we see Cain’s descendants carrying on his artistic advances and getting caught up in progress without God. In verse 20, we see Jabal developing the art of tentmaking and domesticating livestock. In verse 21, we see Jabal’s brother Jubal making music with instruments like the lyre and pipe. And in verse 22, their half-brother Tubal-Cain infatuated with forging of all instruments of bronze and iron. There is nothing inherently wrong with any of these artistic achievements, but Cain’s descendants were using them to promote independence from God and progress without God. As we see in other places in the Scriptures, tentmaking, metalworks, and musical instruments can all means of glorifying God and blessing other human beings, but they can also become idols that try to replace God.
And notice Cain’s descendant Lamech! He defied God’s marriage pattern by taking two wives rather than just one and then he brags to his wives about murdering a young man for striking him.
This is where we start to depths of depravity in the human family. Sin began with Adam and Eve breaking God’s simple command in the Garden of Eden. Then their boy Cain murdered his brother Abel and inaugurated a legacy of defiance and independence against God. Then we see Cain’s great-grandson Lamech engaging in polygamy and perpetuating a family line that fell further away from God by getting caught up in their own artistic inventions. And finally, we see Lamech boasting about murdering a boy for merely wounding him!
Do you see how far the human family had fallen, and how quickly? This tragic tale should cause all of us to stop and think about our families! It should cause all of us to think about how our sin affects our children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and the generations that follow! It should cause us to consider whether we are establishing a legacy of faith and godliness or a legacy of independence and defiance against God! Like Cain, we all have the choice to repent from our sins and embrace God’s grace and experience his blessing, or we can choose to rebel against God and follow our own path. Which will you choose: repentance or rebellion?

Sculpting the Human Race
Genesis 2

 

 

In 1505, the Italian artist Michelangelo was invited back to Rome by the newly elected Pope Julius II. He was commissioned to build the Pope’s tomb, which was to include forty statues and be finished in five years. But under the Pope’s patronage, he experienced constant interruptions to his work to pursue other projects. Although Michelangelo worked on the tomb for 40 years, it was never finished to his satisfaction.

            During this same period, Michelangelo painted the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, which took four years to complete (1508–1512). The architect Bramante, who was building St. Peter’s Basilica, resented Michelangelo’s commission for the Pope’s tomb and convinced the Pope to hire him in a medium with which he was unfamiliar, in order that he might fail at the task; for Michelangelo was a master sculptor, not a painter. He was originally commissioned to paint the Twelve Apostles on the curved walls that supported the ceiling, but he persuaded the Pope to let him paint a fresco on the whole ceiling, representing the Creation, the Fall of Man, the Promise of Salvation through the prophets, and the genealogy of Jesus Christ.

            Michelangelo’s most prestigious panel, “The Creation of Adam”, illustrates the creation narrative from Genesis 2, where God gives life to Adam, the first man. God is depicted as an elderly white-bearded man wrapped in a swirling cloak, while Adam, on the lower left, is completely nude. God’s right arm is outstretched to impart the spark of life from his own finger into that of Adam, whose left arm is extended in a pose mirroring God’s, a reminder that man is created in the image and likeness of God (Gen. 1:26). Another point is that Adam’s finger and God’s finger aren’t touching. It gives the impression that God, the giver of life, is reaching out to Adam who has yet to receive it. The image of the near-touching hands of God and Adam has become iconic of humanity. This painting has been reproduced in countless imitations and parodies and is considered to be one of the greatest paintings of all time.

            “The Creation of Adam” is the perfect piece of artwork to help us transition from Genesis 1 to Genesis 2. Genesis 1 presents God as the transcendent creator of the entire cosmos (heaven and earth). With majestic imagination and omnipotent power, the divine artist designed a magnificent universe and spoke it into existence in six days.

            Genesis 2 zooms in telescopically and gives us a close-up view of the three divinely artistic roles that God plays in the creation of the human race. God is the divine sculptor who created human beings in his own image. God is the divine gardener who planted the perfect habitat for humans to flourish. God is the divine wedding planner who established the institution of marriage for humans to share relational companionship, enjoy sexual pleasure, and perpetuate the human race. Let’s take a look at each of these artistic roles.

 

God, the Divine Sculptor (2:7)

Genesis 1:26-27 already revealed that God created human beings in his own image and likeness and mandated them to rule over the birds of the air and the fish of the sea and all the creatures that move along the ground. The same verses told us that God created human beings with two distinct genders, male and female, thus giving them the ability to rule over the earth by perpetuating the human race through procreation.

Genesis 2 focuses on the process of how God sculpted human beings. Verse 7 shows us that God formed the first man from the dust of the ground. The word “formed” signifies that this act of creation was by design and is often used to describe a potter who shapes clay into pots, which is fitting because God molded the man from the dust of the ground. The Hebrew word for man is “adam” which is a wordplay since the Hebrew word for ground is “adama.” This is where we get the proper name Adam for the first human being that God created. Since the first man came from the ground, he and all human beings are inseparably bound to it.

After God sculpted Adam from the dust, he breathed into his nostrils the breath of life. This word for breath is used in the Bible exclusively for God and the life imparted to humans—never for animals. This distinctive inbreathing not only produced animated life, but it also constituted humankind in the image of God, with spiritual understanding and a functioning conscience. By this verse, then, the nation of Israel would see that humankind was created with great care and planning, so that it would have the capacity to serve the Lord God. (Ross 122-123)

Since God uniquely sculpted human beings in his image and likeness, every person has value and worth, and therefore, should be treated with dignity and respect. This is why all forms of racism, classism, sexism, assault, abuse, and bullying are morally wrong— attitudes and behaviors that dehumanize human beings mar the image of God.      

             All human life is sacred and precious to God! It is the gift of God! This is why the taking of human life through homicide, suicide, genocide, infanticide, and abortion in most cases is morally wrong! This is why a military “mistake” like firing missiles at a passenger airplane is so egregious! This is why the assassination of a foreign general outside the bounds of a just war is immoral, regardless of how terrible he is! This is why we should be heartbroken when we hear our fellow Christians advocate for force so quickly and excuse collateral damage so flippantly! Human beings are God’s precious masterpiece!    

            Likewise, since God is the giver of life, we must remember that our lives are not our own—they belong to God. Over the past few decades, American popular culture has coined the catchphrase, “It’s my life! I can do whatever I want with it!” This motto is the epitome of arrogance and egotism! We wouldn’t have life, breath, family, friends, health, wealth, work, meaning, joy, or anything else apart from God’s gracious gift! Our lives do not belong to us; they belong to God! We are simply stewarding of what God has given us! God is the divine sculptor; we are the clay!

 

God, the Divine Gardener (2:4-6, 8-17)

In Genesis 1, we learned that God created the natural world, with sky and sea, field and forest, rock and rivers, and all the creatures that inhabit them. Now in Genesis 2:4-6, we catch an early glimpse of God as the divine gardener as he caused a mist to rise up out of the ground and nourish the vegetation—for he had not caused rain to fall on the land because he had yet created man to work the ground.

Then in verse 8, after he created the first man, God planted a special garden in the east, in a place called Eden. The Hebrew word for “garden” refers to a parklike setting featuring trees and what we would call landscaping. The word “Eden” means “to enrich” or “make abundant.” The abundance in this garden is seen in the mighty spring that gushes up from Eden and flows through the garden and waters all the trees. This river eventually divides into four rivers to nourish the fertile land outside the garden where gold and precious gems are found.

The author of Genesis draws special attention to the trees inside God’s garden. The trees were pleasing to the eye and provided plentiful food to eat. But there were two particular trees that held prominence over all the others. The fruit from the tree of life extended human life—it was like a fountain of perpetual youth. And Adam was allowed to eat from it freely. On the other hand, God forbid Adam to eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. “The knowledge of good and evil” is a figure of speech that means moral knowledge or wisdom—the ability to distinguish good and evil. Since everything God had created was good, the man did not need this ability. All he needed to do was trust God and obey the prohibition to eat from this tree.

            The picture that emerges from this description is one of paradise. By his goodness and grace, God, the divine gardener, planted a perfect environment for the human race to prosper and flourish. He provided beauty for the eye to behold, abundant food to sustain life, and meaningful work in managing the garden. Adam only had to obey one commandment to preserve paradise.

            In these verses, God, the divine gardener, reveals the secret to living a blessed life. Even though we no longer live in the paradise of Eden, God has blessed us with a world where natural beauty abounds. Especially, here in Vermont, our eyes gaze upon a kaleidoscope of color in the springtime flowers, the marled green grass of summertime meadows, the awe inspiring arrays of autumn foliage, and the snow-capped mountains of wintertime. God has also blessed us with an abundance of food to eat and meaningful work to do.

            Just yesterday afternoon, Jennifer and I beheld God’s beauty while cross-country skiing the snow laden Mississquoi Valley Rail Trail. Then we came home and enjoyed God’s bounty in the form of a delicious venison stew with biscuits and butter. Then, with a clear mind and a full belly, I sat down and put the final touches on this sermon, which was meaningful work for me; hopefully it is meaningful to you too!

            The first part of living a blessed life is appreciating God’s gifts of beauty, abundance, and meaning!

            The second part of living a blessed life is obeying God’s commandments. The tree of the knowledge of good and evil is long gone, but God has given us many commandments in his word. These commandments, which include “Don’t murder! Don’t lie! Don’t steal! Don’t commit adultery!” are parameters that protect us from the consequences of sin—guilt, shame, conflict, pain, and death! (For instance, if you lie to your wife, it will lead to conflict and pain, and it may result in death!) The Divine Gardener has given us everything we need to live a blessed life. Let us live within the parameters of his plan!

 

God, the Divine Wedding Planner (2:18-25)

After God sculpted the man out of the dust of the ground and planted him in the beautiful Garden of Eden with all of its bountiful provisions, Genesis 2 goes on to present God as the divine wedding planner. In Genesis 2:18, we see that God’s creative work was incomplete. Adam was alone and had no suitable partner to help him tend the garden and rule over God’s creation. He did not recognize his need or desire for human companionship until God had given him the task of naming the animals. Presumably, as the menagerie of animals paraded by him, he realized that there was no creature like him. Perhaps God waited to create the woman until the man could fully appreciate God’s gift of a wife. (Waltke 89)

So, God the divine anesthesiologist caused the man to fall into a deep sleep and then God the divine surgeon removed one of the man’s ribs and fashioned it into the first female human being. It is not altogether clear why God created the woman from the man’s rib. It may be a mere reference to the man’s flesh and bone, which would imply intimacy and harmony in the marriage relationship.

Either way, the best explanation I’ve heard comes from the nineteenth century commentator Matthew Henry, who famously said, “The woman is not made out of his head to top him, nor out of his feet to be trampled by him, but out of his side to be equal with him, under his arm to be protected, and near his heart to be beloved.”

When the man woke up from his slumber and laid his eyes on the beautiful woman standing before him, he explodes with the exuberant elegy: “This at last is bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man.” Can’t you here his joy? The point of this poem is that humankind has reached its goal in the complementary partnership of man and woman. (Ross 127)

The epilogue in verses 24-25 provides God’s model for marriage for the rest of human history. For the sake of the wife, the man leaves his family of origin and is united to his wife in a covenantal commitment and then they join together in a one flesh relationship. God intended that husband and wife be a spiritual, functional unity, walking in integrity, serving him, and keeping his commandments. If this pattern prevailed, humans would experience God’s blessing.

            When God, the divine wedding planner, brought the first man and woman together in holy matrimony, he established the pattern for human marriage. Notice the components of God’s plan: Marriage is between one man and one woman—not two men or two women or one man and multiple women! Marriage necessitates a separation from the family of origin—our spouse becomes our primary relational priority—not our parents or even our children. Marriage requires a lifelong covenant commitment to our spouse. Marriage is a spiritual, emotional, and sexual relationship—body, mind, and soul are shared with our spouse.

            Notice also the order of these components—marriage begins with leaving your family—then it involves a cleaving to the spouse—and then it involves the weaving of bodies in a sexual relationship. Leaving, cleaving, and then weaving! When this order is inverted in any way, it breaks God’s pattern for marriage. Any departure from this pattern is unsanctioned by God and therefore forfeits his blessing. Since God is the divine wedding planner, let’s follow his pattern for marriage and family life!

Well, Genesis 2 has given us a close-up view of God’s marvelous masterpiece. Since God is the divine sculptor of the human race, let’s respect and support the sanctity of human life! Since God is the divine gardener, let’s appreciate his beautiful and abundant provision and obey his commands! And since God is the divine wedding planner, let’s follow his master plan for marriage!

God, the Original Artist
Genesis 1

And God stepped out on space,
And he looked around and said:
I’m lonely –
I’ll make me a world

And far as the eye of God could see
Darkness covered everything
Blacker than a hundred midnights
Down in a cypress swamp.

Then God smiled,
And the light broke,
And the darkness rolled up on one side,
And the light stood shining on the other,
And God said: That’s good!

Then God reached out and took the light in his hands,
And God rolled the light around in his hands
Until he made the sun;
And he set that sun a-blazing in the heavens.
And the light that was left from making the sun
God gathered it up in a shining ball
And flung it against the darkness,
Spangling the night with the moon and stars.
Then down between
The darkness and the light
He hurled the world;
And God said: That’s good!

Then God himself stepped down –
And the sun was on his right hand,
And the moon was on his left;
The stars were clustered about his head,
And the earth was under his feet.
And God walked, and where he trod
His footsteps hollowed the valleys out
And bulged the mountains up.
Then he stopped and looked and saw
That the earth was hot and barren.

So God stepped over to the edge of the world
And he spat out the seven seas –
He batted his eyes, and the lightnings flashed –
He clapped his hands, and the thunders rolled –
And the waters above the earth came down,
The cooling waters came down.

Then the green grass sprouted,
And the little red flowers blossomed,
The pine tree pointed his fingers to the sky,
And the oak spread out his arms,
The lakes cuddled down in the hollows of the ground,
And the rivers ran down to the sea;
And God smiled again,
And the rainbow appeared,
And curled itself around his shoulder.

Then God raised his arm and he waved his hand
Over the sea and over the land,
And he said: Bring forth! Bring forth!
And quicker than God could drop his hand,
Fishes and fowlsAnd beasts and birds

Swam the rivers and the seas,
Roamed the forests and the woods,
And split the air with their wings.
And God said: That’s good!

Then God walked around,
And God looked around
On all that he had made.
He looked at his sun,
And he looked at his moon,
And he looked at his little stars;
He looked on his world
With all its living things,
And God said: I’m lonely still.

Then God sat down –
On the side of a hill where he could think;
By a deep, wide river he sat down;
With his head in his hands,
God thought and thought,
Till he thought: I’ll make me a man!

Up from the bed of the river
God scooped the clay;
And by the bank of the river
He kneeled him down;
And there the great God Almighty
Who lit the sun and fixed it in the sky,
Who flung the stars to the most far corner of the night,
Who rounded the earth in the middle of his hand;
This Great God,
Like a mammy bending over her baby,
Kneeled down in the dust
Toiling over a lump of clay
Till he shaped it in his own image;

Then into it he blew the breath of life,
And man became a living soul.
Amen. Amen.

“The Creation” by James Weldon Johnson

            This poem, titled “The Creation” was composed by James Weldon Johnson (1871–1938) and published in The Book of American Negro Poetry in 1922. Johnson used a poetic style called “pulpit oratory” to retell the creation story from the Book of Genesis. This style, which incorporates vivid description and grandiose expression, is common in African American rhetoric. It’s a form of literary art that brings a story to life. 

            With one caveat, I love Johnson’s poem! I take theological exception to his affirmation that God created the world because he was lonely. To the contrary, God was not lonely at all. In the eternal self-existent triune Godhead, the persons of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit have supreme relational fulfillment among themselves. God does not need the universe or even angels or human beings to satisfy some emotional deficiency or longing. He did not create the world because he was lonely; rather, he created the world to display his glory! (Psalm 19:1) 

            Apart from this, I think Johnson’s poem is brilliant! It utilizes creative imagery and artistic expression to exhibit God’s masterpiece. He uses a form of human art (poetry) to showcase the divine artist! This creative interpretation of Genesis 1 certainly incites our imagination as we reconsider the creation story.  

What Genesis 1 Does Not Teach Us

            Before we take a closer look at what this text teaches us, let me begin by mentioning a couple of things that this text does not teach us, and hopefully avoid some mistakes that well-intentioned people have made in the past. First, Genesis 1 does not tell us everything about creation. Even the iconic opening line of the Bible, “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth,” does not tell us when God created the universe. When you read this verse, have you ever asked yourself the question, “In the beginning of what?” It is obviously not referring to the beginning of God and therefore not the beginning of everything. Does the author mean the something abstract like the beginning of time or history? Is it perhaps a more scientific beginning—like the beginning of matter or the universe? Or is it possible that this is a simple literary summary that means “in the beginning of the story?” (Walton 67)

            Notice, in verse 2, the actual creation story does not begin with the creation of matter; it begins with the cosmos already in existence, albeit in in a chaotic state—“The earth was formless and void, and darkness was over the face of the deep.” This verse raises many questions about creation: How did the earth become formless and void? Where did the darkness and the deep come from? The text does not answer these questions. We know from other places in Scripture that God created the universe out of nothing, but the author of Genesis begins the creation story with God bringing order out of chaos! The purpose of Genesis 1 is not to answer all of our questions about how the world came to be; rather it is to affirm God as the original artist who transformed a chaotic cosmos into a picturesque planet where life could flourish.   

            Second, Genesis 1 is neither a scientific treatise nor does it address our scientific questions about cosmic origins. When the ancients wanted to describe or discuss creation, they had little interest in the material structure or formational history of the cosmos. Rather, their concerns focused on the functional cosmos. Genesis 1 was never meant to answer scientific questions like the Big Bang, the age of the earth, or even evolutionary process. When we reduce Genesis 1 to an apology for creation against evolution, we miss the whole point of the passage. Genesis 1 is not even primarily about creation; it is about the creator! 

            Therefore, lets shift our focus to what Genesis 1 actually teaches us about the creator. Since I don’t have enough time to address every aspect of Genesis 1 in a single sermon, let me highlight two things we learn about this creator God.

What Genesis 1 Does Teach Us

1.) God is the original artist.

            The Bible begins, in the very first verse, by telling us that God is the original artist. He conceived the universe in his creative mind and then spoke it into existence with incomparable craftsmanship. He created the heavens and the earth and everything that is within them. The story really begins in verse 2, when God brought order out of chaos. He brought form to the formless void—his breath was hovering over the surface of the deep and he spoke into the darkness and filled the empty and uninhabitable earth! Like a master painter who begins with a blank canvas and a palate of many colors, God took the formless earth and fashioned it into a marvelous masterpiece.   

            Throughout Genesis 1, we witness God’s creative qualities and artistic abilities. His creation was not randomly or haphazardly thrown together; it was formed with intricate order and structure. There is a clear plan and a consistent pattern in the six days of creation. Do you see rhythm of creation? Each day begins with an announcement (“And God said”), and then a command (“Let there be…”), separation (“and he separated”), a report (“and it was so), a naming (“and God called”), an evaluation (And God saw that it was good”), and finally a chronological marker (and there was evening and morning…”). 

            The six days of creation are also divided into two triads, which contrast with the unformed and unfilled state of the earth when the story begins. On days 1, 2, and 3, God creates light, sky and sea, and land and vegetation. Then on days 4, 5, and 6, God creates the sun, moon, and stars to bear the light, fish to swim the seas and fowl to soar the skies, and livestock and wild animals to inhabit the land and eat the vegetation. 

            Like a Bach concerto or a great work of Jazz, the original artist displays a brilliant blend of unity and diversity in his creation. God brought order to the uninhabitable chaos and created this picturesque planet as a place for life to flourish. Therefore, every time we gaze upon the mountains and meadows, rocks and rivers, forests and flowers, we should pause and appreciate the intricacies of the original artist! Whether it’s the glimmer of a glorious sunrise or the glow of a harvest moon hanging in the southern sky, the scent of pine while walking through the woods, the sweet taste of sap dripping from the maple trees, or the sparrow singing in the bloomed dogwood, we should praise the original artist for his beauty and creativity! Every time we stroll through God’s multi-dimensional art gallery, we should pause and thank him for his handiwork. And as we enjoy and subdue God’s glorious creation, we should do our part to preserve his marvelous masterpiece! 

2.) God created human beings to be cocreators with him.

            As we consider God’s artistic creativity through the first five days of creation, we must zoom in on the second part of the sixth day, the crescendo of creation, when God, the Holy Trinity, spoke and said , “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.” (Gen. 1:26) He created humans, male and female, with anatomical and reproductive diversity, so that they might perpetuate the human race. Then God commanded them to “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it and have dominion…” He created human beings to be creative—to take the raw materials he made and use them to create more human life and subdue the earth. 

            Since God created us to be cocreators with him, we uniquely reflect God’s image and glory when we apply our creative abilities. God gave us the unique ability to create other human beings! He gave us the ability to subdue and have dominion over the earth by painting pictures, composing melodies, crafting quilts, penning poems, telling stories, forming sculptures, baking cakes, building buildings, shooting photographs, planting gardens, brewing beer, designing clothing, drawing blueprints, roasting coffee, choreographing a dance, and making maple syrup. 

            Consider two powerful quotes. The Nobel Prize winning Russian novelist Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn once said, “It is the artist who realizes that there is a supreme force above him and works gladly away as an apprentice under God’s heaven.” Likewise, the Austrian composer Joseph Haydn once said, “Never was I so devout as when I composed The Creation. I knelt down each day to pray to God to give me strength for my work….When I was working on The Creation I felt so impregnated with Divine certainty, that before sitting down to the piano, I would quietly and confidently pray to God to grant me the talent that was needed to praise Him worthily.”

            Let us live out Genesis 1 by joining Solzhenitsyn, Haydn, and the great cloud of artists who have glorified God by using their creative abilities to cocreating with him! What creative abilities has God given you? How are you using them glorify God and bless other people around you? You never know how God might use even a modest work of art to inspire the masses! I recently heard the story of a lowly Catholic priest collaborated with an elementary school teacher to compose the famous Christmas Carol “Silent Night!” It’s amazing how God can use a forgotten poem and a simple guitar tune to teach the world about the birth of his son, our Savior, Jesus Christ!  

           As we contemplate everything that we have learned from Genesis 1 today, let me bring this sermon to a climactic conclusion with a quote from comedian Demitri Martin who said, “The earth without art is just eh.” Let us pray! 

Beholding Beauty in Aesthetic Extravagance
Mark 14:1-11

            Mokoto Fujimura is a renowned Japanese American author and painter. In his recent book Culture Care: Reconnecting with Beauty for Our Common Lives, he tells an interesting story about the time his wife infuriated him by bringing home a bouquet of flowers. Listen to the story in his own words: 

            “As newlyweds, my wife and I began our journey with very little. After Judy and I got married in the summer of 1983, after college, we moved to Connecticut for Judy to pursue her master’s degree in marriage counseling. I taught at a special education school and painted from home. We had a tight budget and often had to ration our food (lots of tuna cans!)  just to get through the week. 

            One evening I was sitting alone, waiting for Judy to come home to our small apartment, worried about how we were going to afford the rent and pay for necessities over the weekend. Our refrigerator was empty, and I had no cash left. 

            Then Judy walked in and had brought home a bouquet of flowers. I got really upset.          “How could you think of buying flowers if we can’t even eat?” I remember saying, frustrated. Judy’s reply has been etched in my heart for over thirty years now. “We need to feed our souls too!”   

            The irony is that I’m an artist. I am the one, supposedly, feeding people’s souls. But in worrying for tomorrow, the stoic responsibility I felt to make ends meet, to survive, I failed to be an artist. Judy was the artist: she brought home a bouquet. 

            I do not remember what we ended up eating that day (probably tuna fish.) But I do remember that particular bouquet of flowers. I painted them. “We need to feed our souls too!           Those words still resonate with me today. Is Judy still right? Do we, as human beings, need more than food and shelter? Do we need beauty in our lives? Given our limited resources, how do we cultivate and care for our souls?”

            For just a moment, put yourself in Mokoto Fujimura’s shoes! How would you have reacted to Judy’s exhibit of aesthetic extravagance? Would you have complained about her choice of aesthetic impracticality over nutritional necessity? Be honest with yourself: which would you value more, a bouquet of flowers or a basket of food? 

            This story compels us to contemplate the question: Do our souls need beauty as much as our bodies need bread? What value do you place on aesthetic beauty in our life? 

            Jesus helps us answer some of these questions in Mark 14:1-11, where we encounter the surprising scene of Jesus defending an act of aesthetic extravagance against the conventional concerns of his disciples. As we examine this story together, notice how Jesus values art, aesthetics, and beauty for our common lives. You just might become convinced that beholding beauty is essential for a healthy soul. 

An Act of Aesthetic Extravagance (1-3)

            It was a few days before the Passover Feast. As Jerusalem swelled with people from all corners of the country to celebrate this sacred Jewish holiday, the chief priests and teachers of the law were conspiring to kill Jesus.

            But just three miles outside Jerusalem, in the little village of Bethany, Jesus and his disciples were attending an intimate dinner party at the home of Simon the Leper. We don’t know much about Simon the Leper or the reason for this meal. He was probably one of the lepers whom Jesus healed; perhaps the meal was given as an expression of gratitude. Mark doesn’t tell us what was on the menu that night, but in a Jewish home like this we can be certain that shrimp scampi or pulled-pork BBQ didn’t appear on the plates. 

            After the meal was finished and everyone was relaxing around the table, a woman came to Jesus with an alabaster jar of very expensive perfume. Mark doesn’t tell us the woman’s name, but John’s gospel reveals that it was Mary, the sister of Martha and Lazarus, who were also from the village of Bethany. We don’t know how Mary acquired this precious jar of pure nard, but we know that it was rare and very expensive because spikenard was imported all the way from India. (Back in those days, Amazon Prime didn’t offer free delivery.) 

            Nevertheless, Mary took her most precious earthly possession, broke the alabaster jar, and poured a year’s worth of wages over Jesus’ head, and as John’s gospel tells us, she also poured some on his feet and she washed them with her hair. A beautiful fragrance filled the room. What an extraordinary expression of aesthetic extravagance! What a demonstrative display of devotion to Jesus!      

            When we consider Mary’s audacious act, it induces us to think about how we express our love and worship for Jesus. Would we be willing to sacrifice our most precious earthly possession for such an act of adoration to the Lord? Would we offer our time, our talent, and our treasure?

Wasteful Spending (4-5)

            Well, not everyone was impressed with this act of aesthetic extravagance. Mark does not name those who reacted negatively to the “waste” of perfume, but Matthew tells us that it was the disciples and John tells us that Judas Iscariot led the charge. They protested by asking, “Why this waste of perfume? It could have been sold for more than a year’s wages and the money given to the poor.” Judas’ indignant objection seemed pious, but he didn’t really care about the poor; he was the treasurer of the Twelve and he had a habit of dipping into fingers into the money bag for his own selfish purposes. 

            It is also interesting that these disciples railed on Mary for her wastefulness when they were often the beneficiaries of her hospitality. I guess they never learned the proverb: “don’t bite the hand that feeds you.” 

            People always like to complain about other people’s wasteful spending. For instance, how many of you have family members or coworkers who waste money? How many of you believe that our government wastes money? Accusations of wasteful spending are always due to differences in values. What you think is a waste, someone else may consider important; what you think is important; someone else may consider a waste. Our spending always shows what we value! 

            What do you think? Was Mary’s act of aesthetic extravagance a waste? Mary certainly didn’t think so! Did Mary not care about the poor? I’m sure she did; but she valued Jesus more. What do you value most in your life?   

The Beautiful Rebuke (6-9)

            What did Jesus think about this act of aesthetic extravagance? We would expect him to react with the same modesty and utility as the disciples, but he doesn’t. He immediately comes to Mary’s defense. Instead of condemning her, he commends her audacious action as a beautiful expression of love and gratitude toward him, and she should not be berated for it.

            In addition to this being an expression of sacrificial love, Jesus interpreted Mary’s artistic act as a pre-anointing of his body in preparation for burial (This is somewhat like making funeral prearrangements). Typically, bodies were anointed with perfume after death, not before. Time for such an act of adoration while Jesus was with them was running out. On the contrary, opportunities for helping the poor would continue. As one commentator notes, “Mary seems to have been the only one who was sensitive to the impending death of Jesus and who was willing to give a material expression of her esteem for him. Jesus’ reply shows his appreciation of her act of devotion.” 

            In fact, Jesus was so moved by Mary’s gesture that he says, “Truly I tell you, wherever the gospel is preached throughout the world, what she has done will also be told, in memory of her.” In a stroke of unintentional irony, Mark quotes Jesus predicting that this story will always be told in memory of a woman whose very name escapes him. Nonetheless, here we are some 2000 years later still telling this story! 

            But still, you may be wondering: Does Jesus’ rebuke show a lack of concern for the poor? Absolutely not! Jesus constantly showed his compassion for “the least of these” throughout his ministry, but he would not take this expression of love away from Mary.  

            Some people have posed the questions—how, as Christians, are we able to feast in a world where there is so much hunger? How can we celebrate when there is so much sadness and suffering all around us? How do we reconcile our lavish Thanksgiving dinners and Christmas gifts when there are so many people living in poverty? How can we purchase a painting, attend a concert, go to a play, put on a dab of perfume, or buy a bouquet of flowers when there are so many more practical needs in life? Is there ever a place for aesthetic extravagance in the Christian life?

            Here is the way I believe Jesus would answer these questions: balance! If we constantly neglect the poor to support an extravagant lifestyle, we are guilty of selfishness. On the other hand, occasional extravagance can be a beautiful thing and have a profound and lasting impact on our souls. So, enjoy your holiday feasts and celebrations; just don’t do it every day! And when it comes to art, aesthetics, and beauty, we must remember the importance of feeding our souls!

A Costly Betrayal (10-11)

            Immediately, after the anointing, we learn about Judas’ duplicity as he offers to betray Jesus to the chief priests. Mary’s extravagant act of devotion stands in stark contrast to Judas’ act of betrayal. Isn’t it ironic that right after Judas complains about Mary’s extravagant waste, we find him betraying Jesus to the chief priests for a few silver coins? He is willing to sacrifice Jesus to obtain material gain for himself; on the other hand, Mary sacrificed her most precious material possession for Jesus. Mary will always be remembered for her act of devotion; Judas will always be remembered for his act of betrayal. 

            These verses cause us to ask some penetrating questions: How will I be remembered when I’m are gone? Will I be remembered for my greed or my generosity? Will I be remembered for my duplicity or my devotion? Will I be remembered for my selfishness or my sacrifice? Will I be remembered for my betrayal or my faithfulness to Jesus?Conclusion

            Some of you may be familiar with Isaak Dinesen’s short story “Babette’s Feast.” It was adapted into a film and won the Academy Award for “Best Foreign Film” in 1987. It is my favorite film of all time and I watch it every year on the night before Thanksgiving. It is the perfect illustration of beholding beauty in aesthetic extravagance.

            The story is set in 19th century Denmark and centers around two sisters who live in an isolated village with their father, who is the honored pastor of a small Protestant church. Although they each are presented with a real opportunity to leave the village, the sisters choose to stay and serve their father and their church. They always ate a meager meal of bland fish soup so that they could use their modest resources to help people in need.

            Many years later, after the sister’s father is dead and buried, Babette, a refugee from the French Civil War, arrives at the sister’s door, begs them to take her in, and commits herself to work for them as maid/housekeeper/cook. Sometime later, the sisters decide to hold a dinner to commemorate the 100th anniversary of his birth. Meanwhile, Babette unexpectedly wins the lottery and implores the sisters to allow her to prepare an authentic French feast for the celebration. Although they are secretly concerned about what Babette, a Roman Catholic and a foreigner, might make, the sisters allow her to go ahead, but the church members all agree in advance not to enjoy the meal. 

            Babette purchases fine china, crystal, and linen with which to set the table and imports the most luxurious ingredients from France. Then she prepares the feast of a lifetime, with the perfect wines to complement each of the six courses. The church members simply cannot resist enjoying the meal and the whole experience transforms their lives—old conflicts are healed, prejudices pass away, memories are celebrated, and new relationships begin. After the feast, they discover that Babette was the famous former Chef of the Café Anglais, the most prestigious restaurant in Paris. They also discovered that the meal cost 10,000 francs, the full amount of her lottery winnings. 

            Babette sacrificed everything she had to show her love and devotion to her friends. She, like Jesus and Mary of Bethany, knew the value of aesthetic extravagance! For even a tuna fish sandwich tastes better when you’re looking a beautiful bouquet of flowers!

Blue Christmas
Psalm 13

            As usual, Jay Johnson was running late. He had was slow getting started that morning, and the cold rainy weather wasn’t helping at all. On top of that, his green 1939 Mercury convertible had developed a huge rip just above the driver’s seat, and water was pouring through the growing hole onto his head. Pulling the car off to the side of the road, the forty-five-year old Johnson rummaged through the papers he kept on his backseat until he found an umbrella. He pushed it through the hole in the canvas top, then hit the button to open the umbrella. Shifting into first gear, he eased the car back onto the road, with the umbrella keeping most of the water out of the car. Jay continued on to the Stamford, Connecticut train station.

            A script and commercial-jingle writer for radio, Johnson was on his way to New York, a daily commute of little more than an hour. During these trips Jay would often read the newspaper, work word puzzles, and scribbled inspiration for storylines and songs. 

            As the train chugged toward the Big Apple, Johnson pulled out an old piece of hotel stationary and began thinking about some lyrics for his radio show. The holiday season was just around the corner, and with the success of Irving Berlin’s “White Christmas” and the tremendous impact of blues music during the 1940’s, he suddenly realized that no one had yet tackled this play on words, and jotted down this little rhyme:

I expect to have a colorful Christmas
tinged with every kind of holiday hue,
and though I know I’ll find every shade in the rainbow
this design of mine will be mostly blue.

            These lines were destined to become the first verse of the lyric sheet which Johnson would call “Blue Christmas.” Over the course of the next few days, several more verses followed. The song was copyrighted in 1948 and soon popularized by country and western singer Earnest Tubb “The Texas Troubadour.” It was probably Elvis Pressley’s affection for Tubb that led him to record “Blue Christmas” on his initial holiday album. Elvis’ deep baritone voice put the blues in “Blue Christmas” and it became an instant holiday classic. 

            Though Christmas is considered the most wonderful time of the year by many, it is also a very difficult time for some people. Being alone during a holiday period when family and giving are so important would be tough enough without being bombarded by the happy and joyful nature of Christmas. So, while Christmas brings real happiness to millions, Jay Johnsons verses spoke to those forgotten souls who would face the holiday season alone. (Ace Collins 191-193)

            Have you ever had a blue Christmas? Have you ever experienced some form of suffering that negatively affected your holiday spirit? What about now? Is your heart broken over fractured relationship or the loss of a loved one? Are you anxious about something at work or worried about your finances? Have you been trying to make sense of some unexpected tragedy in your life? All of these things, and many others, can cause us to have a blue Christmas. While everyone else is decking the halls with boughs of holly, some of us just want to duck our heads and disappear into a dark hole. 

            When we suffer, sometimes we feel like God has abandoned us. We cry out to him and ask, “Why me?” or “Why this?” or “How long must I suffer?” or “How long must I wallow in the depths of despair?” Suffering sometimes causes us to doubt God’s power or his love. We think to ourselves “If God really had the power to prevent this, why didn’t he?” or “If God really loved me, why did he let this happen? Why didn’t he answer my prayer?” 

            If you have ever felt this way, I want you to know that you are not alone. This is exactly how David felt when he composed Psalm 13.  He felt like God has totally abandoned him and he doesn’t know why! Whereas Psalm 98, which we looked at last Sunday, is one of the most joyous Psalms of praise in the whole Psalter, Psalm 13 is one of the most sobering Psalms of lament. We don’t know for sure, but David probably composed this Psalm during his years of exile when King Saul was pursuing him. Whatever the precise circumstance, he was certainly down in the dumps when he wrote it.

            The Psalm begins in the depths of despair but then the pain rises through prayer and it eventually concludes with an expression of God’s steadfast love and salvation. In the first stanza, we see an inward groan of desperate feelings. In the second stanza, we see an outward gasp of dangerous foes. In the third stanza, we see an upward gaze od deepening faith. Let’s take a closer look at these three stanzas, and may this Psalm help us difficult times—even a blue Christmas.

1.) An Inward Groan- Desperate Feelings (1-2)

            The first thing we notice about verses 1 and 2 is that David repeats his question “How long?” four times. The repetition intensifies the emotion of the Psalm by alluding to the fact that David had been suffering for a long time.  This was not some momentary displeasure; it was such severe suffering that it made him feel like God had abandoned him. 

            We don’t know what was causing his pain, but we do know that he didn’t seem like God was doing anything about it. He felt like God had forgotten him. The longer he suffered, the more he felt like God didn’t care about him. His heart was filled with sorrow and he didn’t see any light at the end of the tunnel. He was spiritually depressed and lonely.  

            One thing I love about this Psalm is its honesty. David doesn’t sugarcoat his words; his emotions are raw before God. If someone stood up in church today and said the things David says here, most of us would wonder if the person was even a Christian. We have been taught to say nice things to God when we pray, but this is not what David did. David was brutally honest with God about how he felt. He had finally hit rock bottom, and he wanted God to know about it!

            Have you ever been consumed by the inward groan of desperate feelings? Have you ever felt like God has turned his back on you or has abandoned you? Have you ever cried out to him and asked, “How long, O Lord?” Many of us can empathize with David. We have been where he was. We prayed fervently and faithfully, but our prayers have gone unanswered. You say with David “How long, O Lord?  Will you forget me forever?”

            What should we do when you feel like this?  What should we do when God is absent and silent?  Well, let’s see what David did!

2.) An Outward Gasp- Dreaded Foes (3-4)

            How did David get out of the depths of despair? How did he overcome his spiritual depression and feelings of abandonment? He prayed! He prayed to the Lord! For the true child of God there is always an awareness of God’s presence, regardless of how deep our depression may be.  We may be depressed, even to the point of feeling utterly abandoned. But the fact that we feel abandoned itself means that we really know God is there. To be abandoned you need someone to be abandoned by. Even when David felt abandoned by God, he still prayed to him because he knew that he was there.

            David’s prayer has three requests: “Look on me”; “Answer”; and “Give light to my eyes.”  His feelings told him that God had turned away from him, hiding his face forever.  So, the first thing he asked God to do was turn around and look in his direction once again. His feelings told him that God was no longer speaking to him and would never speak to him again.  So, the second thing he asked God to do was answer his questions. His feelings told him that his foes would triumph over him. So, he asked the Lord to give light to his eyes, that is, to preserve him and to restore him to full physical, emotional, and spiritual health.

            How can we get out of the depths of despair?  What do we do when we are in the midst of suffering, pain, loneliness, depression, or abandonment? What do we do when we face danger from our foes? We do what David did, we pray! We must pray consistently and urgently, especially about our feelings of abandonment. We plead with God look toward us and answer our questions.    

            When we feel abandoned by God, the last thing we want to do is pray to him, but this is what we must do!  Remember, even when we don’t see God’s hand, we can trust his heart!

3.) An Upward Gaze- Deepening Faith (5-6)

            Well, what was the result of David’s prayer?  You may be surprised by what we see in the text. There is no clear answer to his prayer. There is no indication that God delivered David from his enemies. There is no announcement that God alleviated his suffering. There is no fairy tale ending to this Psalm. But even though God did not change David’s circumstances, he changed his perspective. Through prayer, David gained a renewed sense of God’s presence. 

            See how the parallelism “trust, rejoice, and sing” increases and intensifies the level of trust through outward expression. His response begins with deep trust in the Lord’s unfailing love. The Hebrew word translated here as “unfailing love” is (hessed).  It is the highest form of love in the Hebrew language. It is the unwavering steadfast love that God has for his people.

            Then David’s expression heightens to “rejoice in your salvation.” To rejoice is to trust with joy. David remembers how the Lord has been there for him in the past and has delivered him from other enemies. His heart is bubbling up with joy.

            David concludes the Psalm with the climactic announcement “I will sing to the Lord.”  This highest level of trust expresses itself in jubilant singing. Why does David sing to the Lord?  Because he remembered God’s love and salvation! His upward gaze resulted in a deeper faith! 

            When we express our inward groans and desperate feelings to the Lord—when we pray with outward gasps about our dreaded foes—God will grant us a renewed sense of his presence. Like David, he may not change our situation or circumstances, but he will change our perspective. Whenever we are tempted to doubt God’s power or love for us, let us remember that he sent his own son to a sinful earth in the first advent. Whenever we don’t understand why bad things happen to us, let us remember that God arranged for his Son Jesus to take on human flesh and be born in Bethlehem. Whenever we feel like God has abandoned us, let us remember that God allowed his own Son to be whipped and beaten and nailed to a tree so that sinners like us could be saved from hell!

            When Jesus was on the cross, God proved his power to alleviate human suffering. He suffered to save us from eternal suffering! He proved his love by giving up his one and only Son. Our suffering is not caused by God’s lack of power or love. Suffering helps us understand God’s power and love with a deeper faith. 

            So, when you are in the depths of despair and you feel like God has abandoned you, pray! Pray openly! Pray honestly! Pray often! God may not change your health, wealth, or circumstances, but he will change you! God must be our first recourse, not our last resort. Let us put our trust his steadfast love! Let us rejoice in his salvation! Let us sing to the Lord, because he has dealt bountifully with us!Conclusion

            As I conclude, let me try to put all of this into perspective. Many of you remember when Brianna Maitland went missing fifteen years ago—a young girl who grew up right here in our community. I want you to imagine that your eighteen-year-old daughter has vanished without a trace. You don’t know what happened to her. You don’t know where she is.  You don’t even know whether or not she is dead or alive. And even after all these years, there are still no answers. Can you imagine the pain and anguish that her parents, Bruce and Kellie, have carried with them for all of these years? Can you imagine the suffering they have endured? Can you imagine how many times they have prayed, “How long, O Lord?” Can you imagine trying to celebrate Christmas with this dark cloud hanging over you?  

            I eventually lost touch with Bruce and Kellie after they relocated to New York, but before they moved away, I spent a lot of time with them. I was impressed by their resilient faith and fervent prayer. Even when they felt like God had abandoned them, they continued to wake up every morning and prayed for Brianna’s return. They continued to trust in God’s steadfast love. Their hearts continued to rejoice in God’s salvation. They continued to come to church week after week and sing to the Lord.              Some of us are in the midst of terrible suffering today. Some of us have problems that are tearing us up inside. Some of us are being tossed by the waves of turmoil, pain, depression, or abandonment. Some of us are on the brink of a blue Christmas. But I want you to remember this: When the storms of life sweep you off your feet, land on your knees!

The Second Coming of Christ

            On Thanksgiving morning 1983, three Baltimore teenagers woke up to a policeman’s pistol starring them in the face. Alfred Chestnut, Ransom Watkins, and Andrew Stewart were arrested and later convicted for the first-degree murder of fourteen year DeWitt Duckett, who was gunned down in the hallway of Harlem Park Junior High—the motive for the murder—Duckett’s coveted Georgetown University Basketball jacket! Although the three teenagers maintained their innocence, they were sentenced to life in prison. They have been serving their sentence for the past 36 years—until this past Monday when Baltimore Circuit Court Judge Charles J. Peters exonerated them.

            “On behalf of the criminal justice system, and I’m sure this means very little to you, I’m going to apologize,” Peters told them. “We’re adjourned.” The packed courtroom erupted in applause, and family members began crying and hugging.

            The extraordinary exonerations were set in motion through the perseverance of one of the defendants, Alfred Chestnut, now 52, who never stopped pushing for a review of the case. This spring his claim was picked up by the Baltimore City state’s attorney’s office’s Conviction Integrity Unit, which uncovered a flawed case that prosecutors now say encouraged false witness testimony and ignored evidence of another assailant.

            On Monday at 5:15 p.m., Chestnut and his childhood friends Ransom Watkins and Andrew Stewart walked out of the courthouse onto North Calvert Street as free men, into the arms of weeping mothers and sisters and fiancees who doubted they would see this day.

            “This is overwhelming,” said Chestnut, surrounded by cameras, lawyers and family. “I always dreamed of this. My mom, this is what she’s been holding on to forever. To see her son come home.” 

            As the decades passed, two of the men gave up hope of ever seeing the outside world again. But Chestnut kept pushing. In May, he sent a handwritten letter to city prosecutor Marilyn Mosby’s office, after seeing her on television discussing the unit dedicated to uncovering wrongful convictions. Chestnut included new evidence he’d uncovered about the incriminated man authorities now say was the actual shooter. The Baltimore prosecutors dug in quickly, reviewed the case. They were “horrified” to see the amount of evidence that was hidden from the defense team and jury. 

            Can you imagine what it would feel like to be convicted of a crime that you did not commit and serve a prison sentence for 36 years? How could maintain your sanity in the midst of such insane injustice? How could you hold onto hope in such a hopeless situation? Likewise, can you imagine if your fourteen-year-old son was murdered because someone wanted his basketball jacket—and then the wrong people were punished?

            Stories like this infuriate our sense of justice and remind us that every sector of our society is broken. When three teenage boys are falsely convicted and incarcerated for 36 years, we see that our law enforcement and criminal justice systems are broken. When a company CEO rakes in 25 million dollars a year and a hard-working waitress scrapes by on $25,000 a year, we see that our economic system is broken. When a family files for bankruptcy to pay for their son’s chemotherapy, we see that our healthcare system is broken. When good parents are denied adoption rights and children are placed in bad foster homes, we see that our social systems are broken. When politicians abuse their power and refuse to work with colleagues on the other side of the aisle, we see that our political system is broken. I wish I could say that our spiritual institutions were immune to these types of problems, but when bishops cover up child abuse allegations or pastors embezzle money from their churches, we see that even our spiritual institutions are broken. 

            Now we should remember that all of these examples are exceptions to the general rule. Most cops aren’t crooked, most priests don’t abuse children, and many people do have their basic healthcare needs met. Nevertheless, we have witnessed enough systemic failure to cause a baseline of hopelessness. We see the symptoms all over our society. 

            According to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 19.7 million American adults (aged 12 and older) battled a substance use disorder in 2017. According to the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, 47,173 Americans died by suicide in 2017. An even more staggering statistic is that in just 2017, 1.4 million Americans attempted suicide. 

            The causes of addiction and suicide are certainly more complicated than systemic failure, but they are major contributors to the sense of hopelessness that encompasses our culture today. What is the common denominator in these broken systems and expressions of hopelessness? It is human sin—pride, greed, lust, envy, and anger. Institutions and systems are comprised of many individual sinners. The old proverb is true: hurt people hurt people! And the vicious cycle is perpetuated.  

The Hope of the Second Coming of Christ

            Hopelessness—this is why the doctrine of the second coming of Christ is so important for our world today! The Bible tells us that King Jesus will one day return to the earth. He will eradicate sin and establish a kingdom of righteousness. As we learned last Sunday, Jesus will make a new heaven and new earth where there is no more death, disease, tears, conflict, or pain of any kind. 

            The doctrine of the second coming of Christ offers us hope for a better future—when Jesus returns, he will correct every individual injustice and fix every systemic failure. In the new creation, children aren’t murdered for their jacket and people aren’t falsely imprisoned—the absence of health problems will negate the need for health insurance—everyone will be rewarded equitably for their work—everyone will be treated with love and respect, regardless of race, class, or political affiliation (actually, there won’t be political parties )—there will be no more no more addiction or abuse, no more betrayal or backstabbing, no more hunger or homelessness, no more school shooting, terrorism, or war—there will be no more anxiety, fear, or worry! We will live in perfect peace God, each other, and the world around us! 

            As Christians, this is our great hope! Jesus came to the earth in the first advent 2000 years ago and began this great work of redemption. He died on the cross and was resurrected three days later to offer sinners the hope of eternal life in this new creation. And now we look forward to the day when Jesus returns at the second advent to finish what he started! So, even now, we call out, “Jesus, come quickly!”       

The Timing of Christ’s Second Coming

            So, when will Jesus return? How much longer do we have to wait for the second coming? Well, over the centuries, these questions have perplexed many people. But in Matthew 24:36-44, Jesus tells us explicitly:

No one knows about that day or hour, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father. As it was in the days of Noah, so it will be at the coming of the Son of Man. For in the days before the flood, people were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, up to the day Noah entered the ark; and they knew nothing about what would happen until the flood came and took them all away. That is how it will be at the coming of the Son of Man. Two men will be in the field; one will be taken and the other left. Two women will be grinding with a hand mill; one will be taken and the other left. Therefore, keep watch, because you do not know on what day your Lord will come. But understand this: If the owner of the house had known at what time of night the thief was coming, he would have kept watch and would not have let his house be broken into. So you also must be ready, because the Son of Man will come at an hour when you do not expect him.

Jesus makes it perfectly clear that only the Father knows when he will return to the earth. This is why it is pointless to try to predict his return. Rather than perseverating on the precise timing of the second coming, Jesus teaches us to simply focus on being spiritually ready for his return. This is why he uses the illustration of a thief breaking into a house—since no one knows when Jesus will return, we must always be ready by faithfully following Jesus at all times!

            During his 1960 presidential campaign, John F. Kennedy often closed his speeches with the story of Colonel Davenport, the Speaker of the Connecticut House of Representatives:   On May 19th, 1780 the sky of Hartford darkened ominously, and some of the representatives, glancing out the windows, feared the end was at hand. Quelling a clamor for immediate adjournment, Davenport rose and said, “The Day of Judgment is either approaching or it is not. If it is not, there is no cause for adjournment. If it is, I choose to be found doing my duty. Therefore, I wish that candles be brought.” Rather than fearing what is to come, we are to be faithful till Christ returns. Instead of fearing the dark, we’re to be lights as we watch and wait.  

            Colonel Davenport gives us good advice! When Jesus returns, we want to be found doing our duty! Since we don’t know when he will return, we must always be about fulfilling our duty to the Lord! Watch and wait! Work while we wait! May we be found faithful when Christ fulfills our hope and delivers us from the wickedness in the world!

The Hope of Christ’s Second Coming

            In addition to the timing of the second coming, people often wonder what the second coming of Christ will be like. The Apostle Paul gives us a glimpse in I Thessalonians 4:13-18, when he says:

Brothers, we do not want you to be ignorant about those who fall asleep, or to grieve like the rest of men, who have no hope. We believe that Jesus died and rose again and so we believe that God will bring with Jesus those who have fallen asleep in him. According to the Lord’s own word, we tell you that we who are still alive, who are left till the coming of the Lord, will certainly not precede those who have fallen asleep. For the Lord himself will come down from heaven, with a loud command, with the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet call of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first. After that, we who are still alive and are left will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air. And so we will be with the Lord forever. Therefore encourage each other with these words.

            Unlike others around them, the Thessalonians should not be grieving deaths in their community without hope. Gentile culture, while varied in its beliefs on the afterlife, not only balked at bodily resurrection but also lacked hope for any kind of meaningful and lasting reunion once a friend or family member died. If this life is all one has, its end in death produces considerable grief. Not so for followers of Jesus, Paul says. This is not to say that any grieving is inappropriate, but grief should not have the final word. Paul says that if you believe that Jesus died and was raised (the basic Christian affirmation the Thessalonians had accepted), then you can also believe that God will raise our loved ones. How will that be possible? Here you get a sense of Paul’s grasping of ideas with the prepositions he employs: it will be through Jesus and also with Jesus. The dead ones who also believed in the death and resurrection of Christ are caught up into his eternal life.

            So, whether we are still alive on earth or long dead and buried, we will rise with the resurrected Christ when he returns. We will hear the trumpet blast and the archangel’s voice and we will see Christ coming in the clouds. He will deliver us from the power and presence of sin once and for all and we will be with the Lord forever. This is the great hope that sustains us through days of darkness, danger, and difficulty!Conclusion

During the 2008 presidential race, Senator John McCain was asked by Time magazine to share his “personal journey of faith.” In his article, McCain shared a powerful story of something that occurred while he was a prisoner of war in Vietnam: 

“When I was a prisoner of war in Vietnam…my captors would tie my arms behind my back and then loop the rope around my neck and ankles so that my head was pulled down between my knees. I was often left like that throughout the night. One night a guard came into my cell. He put his finger to his lips signaling for me to be quiet and then loosened my ropes to relieve my pain. The next morning, when his shift ended, the guard returned and retightened the ropes, never saying a word to me.

A month or so later, on Christmas Day, I was standing in the dirt courtyard when I saw that same guard approached me. He walked up and stood silently next to me, not looking or smiling at me. Then he used his sandaled foot to draw a cross in the dirtWe stood wordlessly looking at the cross, remembering the true light of Christmas, even in the darkness of a Vietnamese prison camp.”Because of Christmas, John McCain had the hope of being delivered from his suffering. The first and second advent of Christ gives us the hope of a better existence! In spite of our present circumstances, the first and second coming of Christ gives us hope of a better life! When we are worried about how we are going to pay our bills, the first and second coming of Christ gives us hope! When our families are frayed with conflict and our world torn apart by war, the first and second coming of Christ gives us hope! When our hearts are grieved by the death of a loved one, the first and second coming of Christ offers us hope. When the doctor diagnoses us with cancer or some other debilitating disease, the first and second coming of Christ offers us hope! When we are the victim of gross injustice and systemic failure, the first and second coming of Christ gives us hope! No matter what tribulation or tragedy we face in this life, we still have hope because Christ came, and he will come again! This world is not our home! We look forward to a much better one. This is the hope of the second coming of Jesus Christ!

Final Judgment & Final Destiny

            The last judgment of Jesus Christ was one of the most popular topics for painters during the renaissance. Michelangelo painted the last judgment on the wall of the Sistine Chapel in Rome in the 1530’s. Raphael painted the last judgment in the town hall in the city of Ghent, Belgium in 1600. But my favorite painting of the last judgment is the one by the German painter Hans Memling in the late 1400’s.  

            The central panel of Memling’s triptych shows Jesus sitting in final judgment over the world, while Michael the archangel is using a scale to weigh the souls of human beings. On the left-hand panel, the saved are being guided into heaven by St. Peter and the angels. On the right-hand panel, the damned are being dragged to hell. 

            Without exception, this painting makes an impression on everyone who looks at the vision of heaven and hell. The graphic images force us to contemplate the condition of our own soul and consider the souls of our loved ones. Most of us have either seen pictures like this or have at least heard something about the final judgment, but have you ever wondered if the pictures actually do justice to Judgment Day? Have you ever wondered what it’s really going to be like when Jesus returns to execute final judgment upon the world? What will heaven and hell be like?

            As we move into the final phase of our sermon series “Foundations of the Faith”, we will consider the section of Christian theology called “eschatology” or the study of the last things. Next week, we will conclude the series by looking at Jesus’ return, but today we will focus our attention on the biblical doctrines of the final judgement and our final destination. 

The Final Judgment

            The Bible frequently affirms the fact that every person will face final judgment, believers and unbelievers alike. Jesus himself describes the final judgment in the famous “separating the sheep and the goats” passage in Matthew 25: 31-34, 41, 46:

When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, he will sit on his throne in heavenly glory. All the nations will be gathered before him, and he will separate the people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. He will put the sheep on his right and the goats on his left. Then the King will say to those on his right, “Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world…” Then he will say to those on his left, “Depart from me, you who are cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels…” Then they will go away to eternal punishment, but the righteous to eternal life.”

            The interpretation is passage obvious: when Jesus returns, he will execute final judgment on the whole earth. As a shepherd separates sheep from goats, he will separate believers and unbelievers. The believers will receive their inheritance in heaven and unbelievers will receive eternal punishment in hell.

            Likewise, the final judgment is vividly portrayed by the Apostle John in Revelation 20:11-15:

Then I saw a great white throne and him who was seated on it. Earth and sky fled from his presence, and there was no place for them. And I saw the dead, great and small, standing before the throne, and books were opened. Another book was opened, which is the book of life. The dead were judged according to what they had done as recorded in the books. The sea gave up the dead that were in it, and death and Hades gave up the dead that were in them, and each person was judged according to what he had done. Then death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire. The lake of fire is the second death. If anyone’s name was not found written in the book of life, he was thrown into the lake of fire.

            After Satan and his cronies are thrown into hell, the only thing left is the final judgment of humanity. John saw a great white throne and the one who was seated on it. Throughout Revelation, thrones are used as symbols of authority and justice. Likewise, the color white symbolizes purity and holiness. The description of the throne highlights the character of the one who is seated on the throne. As John does in other places, he doesn’t mention Jesus by name, but the symbols leave no room for mistaken identity: Jesus is the righteous judge who is sitting on the throne, and he has come to judge everyone. The earth and sky disappearing alludes to his power and foreshadows the coming of his new creation. 

            John sees all of the dead standing before the judgment throne. The term “great and small” emphasizes that all human beings will face final judgment—the living and the dead. All of the temporary places that receive the bodies of the dead, including the ground and the sea, will give up their dead and everyone will appear before the judgment seat of Christ. Then God’s history books, which contain every deed that every human being has ever done, will be opened up and put on display. Everyone will be judged according to the deeds he or she has done. 

            Do these history books, that record everything we have ever done, make you nervous? They should—every little lie, every lustful look, every evil thought, every arrogant attitude, every selfish decision, and every secret sin that we have kept hidden will lay open before God. How embarrassing? How terrifying? God sees and knows everything that we have ever done and these record books show that we are all guilty! This is the bad news of the gospel!

            This is why I am glad that God has another book in his personal library. This book is more important than the Bible and all of God’s history books combined—it is called the book of life! This book contains the names of everyone who has made a faith commitment to Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior. This book records the names of those who have received forgiveness of their sins by trusting in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. This book is heaven’s guest list. You can’t get into heaven if your name is not on the list. This is the good news of the gospel!

             A young girl was sitting on an airplane with an intellectual (a man educated beyond his intelligence). He sneered at her reading the Bible. Asked if she believed it? “Yes.” “Jonah and the whale story?” “Yes.” “How did it happen?” “Don’t know, but I’ll find out when I get to heaven.” “What if Jonah isn’t there?” “Then I guess you’ll have to ask him for me.”

            This little girl understood the implications of the final judgment! Do we?

Final Destination

            Now that we have considered the certainty of final judgment, let’s shift our focus to final destination. The Bible speaks of only two possible final destinations: heaven and hell.

            Earlier this week, I stumbled upon a meme which quipped: “The fact that there is a highway to hell and only a stairway to heaven says a lot about anticipated traffic numbers!” 

            Since it is always better to begin with the bad news, lets look at hell first!

Hell

            Hell may be defined as the place of eternal conscious punishment for the wicked. It is described in multiple places throughout the Bible. As we have already seen in Matthew 25:41, Jesus alluded to hell as “the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels.” In Revelation 14:9-11, the Apostle John paints a more vivid picture of hell:

A third angel followed them and said in a loud voice: “If anyone worships the beast and his image and receives his mark on the forehead or on the hand, he, too, will drink of the wine of God’s fury, which has been poured full strength into the cup of his wrath. He will be tormented with burning sulfur in the presence of the holy angels and of the Lamb. And the smoke of their torment rises for ever and ever. There is no rest day or night for those who worship the beast and his image, or for anyone who receives the mark of his name.”

            This passage describes hell in horrendous detail. Just look at the metaphors: “drink the wine of God’s fury”, “cup of his wrath”, tormented with burning sulfur”, “the smoke of their torment rises forever, and “no rest day or night.” This is what it will be like for those who do not trust in the gospel of Jesus Christ for the salvation of their souls. They will suffer in hell forever! 

            One day, when Vice President Calvin Coolidge was presiding over the Senate, one Senator angrily told another to go “straight to hell.” The offended Senator complained to Coolidge as presiding officer, and Cal looked up from the book he had been leafing through while listening to the debate. “I’ve been looking through the rule book,” he said. you don’t have to go.” 

            Coolidge was right—you don’t to go to hell! And if you commit your life to Jesus Christ, you won’t! 

Heaven

            After the final judgment, believers will enter the full enjoyment of life in the presence of God forever. When referring to this place, Christians often talk about living with God “in heaven” forever. But in fact, the biblical teaching is richer than that: it tells us there will be new heavens and a new earth—an entirely new creation—and we will live with God there. The Apostle John gives us the best glimpse of this in Revelation 21:1-7:

Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and there was no longer any sea. I saw the Holy City, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride beautifully dressed for her husband. And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Now the dwelling of God is with men, and he will live with them. They will be his people, and God himself will be with them and be their God. He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.” He who was seated on the throne said, “I am making everything new!” Then he said, “Write this down, for these words are trustworthy and true.” He said to me: “It is done. I am the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End. To him who is thirsty I will give to drink without cost from the spring of the water of life. He who overcomes will inherit all this, and I will be his God and he will be my son.”

            Popular myths picture heaven as a fanciful place where angels sit on clouds playing harps and people floating around in nebulous space. However, the Bible says that Jesus is building mansions in heaven for those who receive his gift of salvation. He is preparing real buildings with real tangible materials for real people who will inhabit them.

            The Bible even refers to heaven as a country (Hebrews 11:16). Before sin came into this world, it was a physical paradise—a beautiful garden full of fruits, trees, and animals. Similarly, when sin is finally eradicated from this universe, we will get to live life as God originally intended for mankind when he first created the Garden of Eden—not as spirits on clouds, but in a tangible, material heaven.

            Real earth, real houses, real gardens, real work, real hobbies, and real people are all part of the perfect future in store for those who are faithful to God’s Word. This becomes more believable when we realize that the Bible says that the greater part of the future existence of human beings will take place right here on earth, which will be recreated and restored to its original perfection. Heaven will be free from sickness, war, crime and anything harmful. The future life will have the best of this life plus additional joys beyond our imagination.

            Earlier this week, during family devotions, I was discussing the topic of heaven with my children. After reading these same words from Revelation 21, I asked the question: What do you think heaven will be like? Amid multiple descriptions of a perfect paradise, one of my children (who will remain nameless) piped up: “I think we will all be petting lions and singing, “Whoop! There it is! Whoop! There it is!” Conclusion

            Heaven will be more wonderful than our wildest dreams. It is the place of eternal love, peace, and joy. Hell will be worse than we can possibly imagine because! It is the place of eternal torment, pain, and sorrow. When Jesus returns to the earth, we will all stand before his judgment seat. Will you be among the sheep or the goats? Is your name recorded in the Lamb’s Book of Life?

            Let me conclude with a little poem by John Newton, author of the hymn “Amazing Grace.” This lesser known hymn titled “Day of Judgment! Day of wonders!” Listen:

Day of judgment! Day of wonders! Hark! the trumpet’s awful sound,

louder than a thousand thunders, shakes the vast creation round.

How the summons will the sinner’s heart confound!

See the Judge, our nature wearing, clothed in majesty divine;

you who long for his appearing then shall say, “This God is mine!”

Gracious Savior, own me in that day as thine.

At his call the dead awaken, rise to life from earth and sea;

all the pow’rs of nature, shaken by his looks, prepare to flee.

Careless sinner, what will then become of thee?

But to those who have confessed, loved and served the Lord below,

he will say, “Come near, ye blessed, see the kingdom I bestow;

you forevershall my love and glory know.”