Just as people are
destined to die once, and after that to face judgement, so Christ was
sacrificed once to take away the sins of many... Hebrews 9:27-28
I read in the paper recently
that you can buy an app for your smart phone which will remind you five times
every day that you are going to die. Ninety-nine pence it will cost you. Cheap
at the price?
In the world of ancient Rome
a victorious general returning from battle might have a slave standing behind him
in his chariot whispering in his ear, “Remember you must die”. The idea was to
keep him grounded while the crowds roared their admiration and sang his praises.
Surely you don’t need to be among the high and mighty to benefit from such a
reminder?
We live in a culture where
most of us prefer to brush the whole subject under the carpet. Just a week or
so ago I was chatting to someone I don’t often see, and remarked that we ought
to keep in closer touch because “We don’t know how much time we’ve got”. I was
being a little light-hearted, to be honest; but she quickly replied, “Oh, I
don’t think about things like that.” I got the impression that I had touched a
raw nerve.
The people who have produced
the app make it clear that they don’t mean to be morbid. No, on the contrary, their
very positive view is that we could all live more productive and focussed lives
if we only took our own mortality more realistically. And that, surely, is
right: there is at least a chance that our lives would be more balanced, that we
would use our precious time better, and that in the end we would achieve more.
The only weakness I can see
in that app is what it doesn’t say. Yes, we would do well to look firmly in the eye
of death; but as the writer of the letter to the Hebrews says, we are not only “destined
to die once” but destined also “to face judgment”.
Ah... judgment! Doesn’t that
give it a whole different dimension?
The Bible never encourages
the belief that after we die, that’s that: end of story. No: death is a prelude
to more - and solemn - things. We will stand before God, and the lives we have lived
while on this earth will be subject to his scrutiny: our deeds, our words, even
our thoughts. Paul puts it with crystal clarity: “... we must all appear before
the judgment seat of Christ” (2 Corinthians 5:10).
If you believe in Jesus you
might protest against that idea - doesn’t the same Paul tell us that “there is no
condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus”
(Romans 8:1)? Isn’t the whole point of Jesus’ death on the cross that he has
paid the price for our sins? Don’t these verses in Hebrews 9 make that very
point: he “was sacrificed once for all to take away the sins of many”?
Yes, of course. But there is
a difference between “judgment” and “condemnation” (in fact, they are two
related but distinct Greek words). Condemnation - well, that speaks for itself; it means judgment which results in a
bad outcome. Judgment - that means simply
a just verdict.
Which means that when we
Christians face divine judgment, the lives we have lived will be exposed to
God’s eye, even though our sins are forgiven. There will indeed be “no
condemnation”, as Paul says - but I suspect that, for most of us, there may be plenty
of room for shame. Putting it another way, I don’t think many of us - certainly
not me, anyway - will feel particularly comfortable on that day.
If the idea of judgment
makes us feel this way, perhaps we should ask ourselves the question: Would we
prefer that there is no judgment at all? Would we rather that God were simply
to turn a blind eye to sin and wickedness? Would we be happier if even great evil
were forever unpunished?
If that’s the way it was, it
would make nonsense of any notion of right and wrong - just “eat, drink and be
merry”, for what does it matter? It would make nonsense of conscience; it would
take the shackles off self-control and self-discipline, and the result would be
sheer moral chaos. The difference between good and bad would be dissolved - don’t
grumble, for example, if somebody lies to you or does you a bad turn, for,
well, why shouldn’t they? And why shouldn’t you do the same to them?
The fact that there is
judgment to come is, though it seems strange, ultimately good rather than bad
news. It means that God intends at last to straighten this crooked world out.
So - all credit to the
people who produced that app. All we need to do now is listen to the Bible, move
on that vital step further - and take seriously that final Great Day.
Lord God, bring me to
that place where Paul found himself: able to rejoice that to me to live is
Christ - and to die is even better. Amen.
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