When Christ who is your life appears, then you also will appear with him in glory. -- Colossians 3:4
The better translation of “when” is probably “whenever”. There’s no definite, set time, even, it
seems, of the Second Coming. The birth
of Jesus happened, I think, at a “whenever” point, too – “in the fullness of
time”. The Incarnation took place when
everything aligned properly. Thinking
about freewill, this is a point to keep in mind. Outside of weather events and such, a
baseball game will usually start on time or close to it. Most of the time, it will end after nine
innings – eight and a half if the home team is ahead. We don’t know what time that will be. If it’s a low-scoring pitchers’ duel, it can
go pretty fast sometimes, or it may run much longer. The rules, the underlying structure and definition
of a game determine how it will end but not when.
However, I don’t
think our verse today is strictly limited to the Apocalypse or the end of
history or the end of the world. Here is
Wuest’s version: Whenever the Christ is made visible, our life, then also you with Him
shall be manifested in glory.
I believe that we can, by our faith, by setting our minds on
the heavenly reality, by living and acting in harmony with truth, allow Christ
to be visible in our lives. Whenever that
happens, because He is our life, we are
right there with Him. We don’t
disappear. Christ does not absorb us or
consume us or devour us in some sort of reverse communion. In Screwtape,
though, Lewis postulates that the devil does seek to ingest souls in just such an
inversion.
To go back to one of our favorite pictures, the glory of the
grapevine is the flowering forth to the beauty of the grape. When we enjoy the fruit, it is the work of
the vine and branch together. Christ is
made visible by the fruit of the Spirit in the lives of believers. That’s who He is and that’s who the believer
is as well.
5 comments:
Whenever that happens, because He is our life, we are right there with Him. We don’t disappear. Christ does not absorb us or consume us or devour us in some sort of reverse communion.
I think that's the fear that keeps people from diving in.
Here's my take, you will still be you, you may like different (better) things or behave differently (better), but you'll like it! You will just be aligned from a different pull.
I like Buddhism. If there were just Christians and Buddhists in the world, we could get along.
But our death of self results in a rebirth into new life.
Buddhists are peaceful for the most part, except I'm always amazed how often Buddhist Monks from different temples attack each other.
What's that all about?
Rather than consume us, Christ completes us, if we are willing.
Yep, sectarian jealousy pops up everywhere. It doesn't make much sense.
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