Laughter Is The Best Medicine… or is it?

When school was almost out, one of my students started laughing. She was trying to control it, but the harder she tried, the worse it got. Then you can guess what happened. The student next to her started laughing, and soon the whole row joined in. Mind you, no one knew what she was laughing at. I made the statement. “I want to laugh, too. Do share!” I walked up to the student, and she was laughing so hard that tears were streaming down her face. By then, all the students and teachers in the room were laughing or smiling. I finally said, “Okay. Let’s get to work,” with a smile.

Continue reading “Laughter Is The Best Medicine… or is it?”

The Peril Of A Passive Man

I had never thought of myself as passive. Throughout my life, at least since I graduated from school, I have always been a driven dreamer and achiever. I thought of myself as the organized one, the proactive one, the disciplined one, the visionary. I was the one who initiated the next steps, important meetings, needed changes, group plans, and challenging conversations.

And then I got married, and marriage revealed sides of myself I had never seen before. A real man does not change much by making vows and putting on a ring, but an awful lot changes for a man that day. The apostle Paul tried to prepare us: “He that is unmarried careth for the things that belong to the Lord, how he may please the Lord: But he that is married careth for the things that are of the world, how he may please his wife.” (I Corinthians 7:32–33). The married me was not as put-together and proactive as the single me had been. And as the pressures rose and the cracks began to show, I suddenly saw how tempted I could be to self-pity and passivity. Even though we had a good marriage, I learned to choose battles—and keep the peace.

Over the first year or two of marriage, the role of learning to be a bit passive went from a foreign and perplexing problem to a profoundly familiar and humbling one. In some ways, vision and initiative were easier when fenced into certain parts of my life. Now, as two became one, all of life required the consideration of a partner. To a stand-on-your-own guy like myself, that wasn’t always easy. Will I give myself up for her good again today (Ephesians 5:25)? Will I keep pursuing, studying, and wooing her? Will I develop and carry out a vision for our family? Will I consistently open the Bible and pray for them? Will I lead our family in loving and serving the church? Will I lean into conflict with patience and love, or will I withdraw? Will I anticipate our family’s needs? Will I discipline our children, even when I’m tired? Will I bring up difficult conversations and make tough decisions? Or, like Adam, when God comes calling, will I hide and point the finger at my wife? God expects a lot from husbands. As my senses have been heightened to my own tendencies to passivity, stories of husbands in Scripture, good and bad, have come alive with greater relevance.

God often trains men to be faithful husbands and fathers by giving us great examples to follow; the faith of Abraham, the conviction of Moses, the leadership of Joshua, the wisdom of Solomon, and the heart of David. Sometimes, however, God trains us for faithfulness by showing us how wicked men can be. He trains us to love by showing us men who failed to love, to lead by showing us men who failed to lead, to fight by showing us men who refused to fight, to die for others by showing us men who saved themselves.

And as husbands and fathers go, few were as corrupt and shameful as King Ahab. When we first meet the man, Scripture tells us, “Ahab the son of Omri reigned over Israel in Samaria twenty and two years. And Ahab the son of Omri did evil in the sight of the LORD above all that were before him.” (I Kings 16:29–30). The kings before him were a group of evil, murdering, and idolatrous fools. Ahab, we learn, was worst of all.

It is also apparent that his marriage was at the center of his rebellion. “and it came to pass, as if it had been a light thing for him to walk in the sins of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, that he took to wife Jezebel the daughter of Ethbaal king of the Zidonians, and went and served Baal, and worshipped him.” (I Kings 16:31). He first mocked God by marrying an idolator, and then, as God warned would happen, he caved and bowed in submission to her and her God. The extent of Ahab’s wickedness is worthy of much study, but here, I want to focus on a scene that exposes the allure and peril of his passivity.

When I Kings 21 opens, Ahab covets the vineyard of his neighbor, Naboth, and asks to buy it from him, disregarding God’s law that prevented the permanent sale of land (Leviticus 25:23). Naboth doesn’t merely refuse because he wants to keep his land; he refuses because to do otherwise would be to disregard God. Now watch how Ahab responds, crumbling into self-pity and passivity:

Ahab went into his house vexed and mad because of what Naboth had said to him, for he had said, “I will not give thee the inheritance of my fathers. And he laid him down upon his bed, and turned away his face, and would eat no bread.”(I Kings 21:4)

The most powerful man in the land curled up in a ball, like a spoiled child. He refused to eat. He pouted because he didn’t get his way. As pitiful as the cry-baby king seems, many husbands will know something of the temptation he indulged. Self-pity is strangely seductive and can be equally paralyzing. It can keep a man from confessing his sin, initiating reconciliation, making a difficult decision, or taking the hard next step. As Ahab nurses his hurt feelings, what happens next compounds his shame. See how self-pity imprisons and disables him.

Knowing his wife and what she was capable of, Ahab should have stepped up to stop her, for the good of Naboth and those who loved him, for the good of the kingdom, for the good of his own soul, and for the good of his wife. A passive husband will inevitably enable and encourage the sins of his wife. When Jezebel sees how miserable and pathetic King Ahab is, she takes matters into her own hands. She says to him, “Dost thou now govern the kingdom of Israel? arise, and eat bread, and let thine heart be merry: I will give thee the vineyard of Naboth the Jezreelite” (I Kings 21:7).Ahab’s sorry silence suggests he was all too glad to accept her offer.

So, Jezebel instructed the leaders in Naboth’s city to kill him. She wrote letters in Ahab’s name, saying, “And set two men, sons of Belial, before him, to bear witness against him, saying, Thou didst blaspheme God and the king. And then carry him out, and stone him, that he may die” (I Kings 21:10). The greed, the deceit, the robbery, the conspiracy, the murdering of a blameless man. These were the weeds of wickedness in full bloom.

Jezebel was so depraved that Jesus uses her as a metaphor for unrestrained wickedness (Revelation 2:20). For now, however, notice how her husband’s passivity kindled her peculiar sins. While he wallowed in self-pity, he encouraged her iniquity. Had he had the conviction and nerve to act as God called him to, he likely could have prevented all that unfolded here. He could have saved a good man’s life.

But he stayed in bed instead. Ahab proves that sometimes a man who does nothing is as harmful as the man who does the wrong thing. A good husband cannot keep his wife from sinning, but he also will not lie on the couch while she does. A bad husband, especially a passive husband, will encourage her to sin even more if it makes her happy and serves his own selfish purpose. In the challenging moments of our marriages, some men will lie down like Ahab, others will rise up like the prophet we meet shortly. Jezebel tells Ahab that Naboth is dead and that his vineyard is now available. “When Ahab heard that Naboth was dead, Ahab rose to go down to the vineyard of Naboth the Jezreelite, to take possession of it” (I Kings 21:16). Again, the passivity. Not, what have you done? Not, how did he die? No, “as soon as he heard that Naboth was dead,” he suddenly found the strength to leave his bed and enjoy another man’s field.

“And the word of the LORD came to Elijah the Tishbite” (I Kings 21:17). As much as I despise how selfish, passive, and evil Ahab was, I admire all the more the man who stepped up to confront him. While Naboth’s innocent blood ran in the street, the prophet Elijah came knocking at Ahab’s door. Notice he  comes to Ahab, not Jezebel, with a word from the Lord: “thou hast sold thyself to work evil in the sight of the LORD” (I Kings 21:20).

They had just killed a man for refusing to sell them a vineyard. Imagine what evil they might do to a man who confronted them with their sin. While other men watched and stayed silent, one refused the pull of passivity and embraced the costs of obedience. He would rather die than sit and watch God’s law be vandalized. Don’t miss what God says next through Elijah. Ahab’s passivity would come back not just on his own head, but on the heads of all he loved — his sons, their sons, his wife: “Behold, I will bring evil upon thee, and will take away thy posterity, …for the provocation wherewith thou hast provoked me to anger, and made Israel to sin. And of Jezebel also spake the LORD, saying, The dogs shall eat Jezebel by the wall of Jezreel” (I Kings 21:21–23).

Ahab’s judgment is a vivid, bloody picture of how unchecked sin ruins a home. When a husband grows passive, the whole family suffers; perhaps not in judgment like Jezebel, but they will suffer nonetheless. The story circles back to where it began with Ahab: “But there was none like unto Ahab, which did sell himself to work wickedness in the sight of the LORD, whom Jezebel his wife stirred up” (I Kings 21:25). This story gives us a masterclass in marital failure. The next verse, however, is one of the more surprising verses in Scripture:

“And it came to pass, when Ahab heard those words, that he rent his clothes, and put sackcloth upon his flesh, and fasted, and lay in sackcloth, and went softly.” (I Kings 21:27)

One might think this is the man we found lying in bed, feeling sorry for himself, refusing to eat. However, in God’s eyes this is not the same man. Instead of lashing out in fury at the prophet, instead of retreating into more self-pity and passivity, Ahab humbles himself in repentance. He does the hard thing. He sees his sin, hates his sin, and seeks the Lord’s mercy.

“And it came to pass, when Ahab heard those words, that he rent his clothes, put sackcloth upon his flesh, and fasted. And the word of the LORD came to Elijah the Tishbite, saying, Seest thou how Ahab humbleth himself before me? Because he humbleth himself before me, I will not bring the evil in his days: but in his son’s days will I bring the evil upon his house” (I Kings 21:27–29). Consequences remained, but something of his sin had died. The selfish, prideful, passive husband became humble, at least for a time, giving hope to all selfish, prideful, passive husbands.

It’s easy to hate the passivity of Ahab. He was  a king who stubbornly disregards God’s calls to lead and who selfishly sets God’s will below his own desires. It’s harder, however, to hate the passivity in ourselves. Will we, as husbands in Christ, practice leadership even when it’s inconvenient to lead? Will we receive the mercy of God, humble ourselves before Him, lay down our pride and self-pity, and resist the enticing pull of passivity?

The last thing wimpy men want to face is the fact that they are wimpy. But, many men have shed their manliness and turned themselves into a wimp, a softie. Men often convince themselves that women want a passive man who helps, gives, and accommodates. They believe life will be better for everyone if they always let the woman have her way. That may be true for some. But I think real ladies respect a man who takes charge, and will never give up until all the dragons are slain. His wife feels loved, cherished, and protected by his side. 

While men have gotten softer, women have gotten tougher, and it seems that neither understands the toll this has taken on their relationship. Regarding manhood, at one end of the spectrum, there is a wimp, and on the other end is the dominating creep. Tragicially,  too many choose to be the wimp, thinking it is the right thing to do. However, the Bible demands that a man be strong and action-oriented. He should be a take-charge and passionate leader. However, he must also be loving, gentle, considerate, and kind. The other option is to suffer the peril of a passive man.

Dr. Worthington has been in the ministry nearly fifty years and serves as President of Pathway Ministries and Christian Bible College.

Challenges Of Service

The Lord has blessed me beyond measure. I am privileged to wear many hats, each with its own unique beauty and challenges. All of the hats I wear involve people. Oh, each area has paperwork, lists, and many mundane tasks and deadlines. But amidst all this, the most crucial element of each area of service is the relationship involved, and it brings me immense joy.

Continue reading “Challenges Of Service”

A Resurrection In The Now

As a Christian, I certainly believe in the resurrection of Christ. I have also accepted the marvelous benefits that God has given me through His resurrection. It is a grand and personal blessing. But what does the resurrection have to do with what is happening in the world? Does the resurrection relate to the war in Ukraine, the national debt, or men playing women’s sports? Is it relevant to current events and today’s headlines coming out of the Middle East, Russia, or China? Does it help explain anything that is happening in our world today? Ephesians 2:1-9 clearly teaches us that what happens in the world is directly related to what is happening inside us.

When we look at ourselves and others, we only see the externals on the surface: rich or poor, liberal or conservative, communist or capitalist. But the Bible teaches what actually occurs deep within us, which is the same in everyone. The Bible says that what is happening inside all unregenerated men is death. That explains it all. Let’s try to think it through.

Observe what the Bible teaches us about lost men. We learn they are dead in the trespasses and sins in which they daily walk, blindly following the fallen pathways of this world; they are all working in complete harmony with the prince of the power of the air. They are, by their very nature, prone to disobedience. They seek to carry out the wicked desires of the body and the mind. They are children of wrath. This is why the headlines read as they do. This explains it all. Evil is not just what they choose to do; because death reigns in them, evil is what they are. You might say weak men rule our world. That may be true, but our world is also primarily governed by dead men, and therein lies the problem.

“For out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, blasphemies:” Matthew 5:19

So, we take that dead heart and mind and think we can use them to solve all the world’s problems. You may say that some of our world’s leaders seem like nice people. They may be, but that alone doesn’t mean they have life. The wicked man may go off and get drunk, and the nice man may stay home with his family and drink sweet tea, but if they are both dead, neither one can bring life to the world. Neither has life to offer. 

When Adam sinned, God spoke to him and said: “Adam, where art thou?” Here is the first thing that you need to understand about a man. God was not inquiring about Adam’s geographical position; He was speaking of Adam’s spiritual position. Adam was dead, just as God promised. Death is a separation. Physical death is the separation of the soul and spirit from the body, and spiritual death is the separation of the soul and spirit from God. Regardless of your social, political, or military position, if you are spiritually dead, you are dead!

Yes, you might say, but if dead men genuinely try, they might devise a plan to bring lasting peace and stability to the world. Well, has this ever happened in the entirety of human history? I mean, a real, lasting peace and stability? It’s not as though some cultures were failures, but others learned from them and rose above it all. That seldom happens, and even when it does, as in the case of our founders, it is usually forgotten in a couple of generations. We never learn from history. We make the devil’s job easy because we repeatedly make the same mistakes.  There are flashes of brilliance here and there, but every society eventually grows corrupt and dies. We are dead men capable of accomplishing a little temporary good, but we can’t keep it up for more than a few generations. The spirit of death within us is too strong. The evolutionists say the world is improving; we are all evolving into a higher life form. We all know this is a lie.

So, if our culture is declining, and while we can discuss all the political, racial, and moral reasons that might contribute to our decline, our Lord is reminding us that we are still not addressing the root cause behind them all. It is because we are dead. If you’re a dead man with a family, you will help create a dead family. That dead family will then contribute to a dead city. That dead city then contributes to a dead state, a dead country, and a dead world. And, the more power that dead man has, the more damage he will do.

It is no secret that, in the end, you will live in a messed-up world. So, if you want a better world, you must start by becoming a better man. How does a dead man become a better man? The answer is simple: he must find life!

Those who reject the greatest reality of them all, that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, died and then rose from the grave, become incapable of accepting other realities. Without receiving that truth, they will not diagnose their own death or the possibility that they may actually find life. The dead heart usually does not concern itself with hurting others or long-term consequences. Truth can easily be sacrificed for what is felt to be expedient.

So, what all unregenerated men have in common is this deadness to reality. Here’s how we can observe how dead they really are: We see it in their inability to change by their own power. A man might change his politics, but he can’t just choose or contrive his own way out of his deadness. Dead people can’t leverage their way to life. That is what the Bible teaches. Life comes from only one source, and that source is Jesus Christ. 

The further we read, the worse it gets. Since men are dead on a personal level, that means they have created an entire culture of death that surrounds them. Ephesians 2:2 refers to “the course of this world,” which means this is the way our society functions. Isn’t it fascinating that nothing even close to a perfect society has ever appeared in all of human history? Unfortunately, it gets even worse. As if the course of this world is not bad enough, the devil gets involved. He is identified in Ephesians 2:2: “the prince of the power of the air.” That is another name for Satan. Why does the Bible call him “the prince of the power of the air”? It may be because Satan’s influence is not restricted to one small area. It’s not as though there are dark places only here and there. You cannot get away from Satan’s influence in this world. Even as Christians, we don’t know what it would be like not to swim in a daily ocean of temptation and seduction. 

Satan is a compulsive liar. He builds his influence on lies. He inspires us to lie. Most men can’t get through a single day without lying. If you haven’t noticed, the whole world appears to run on lies. How often does the government lie to us? Do advertisers lie to us on occasion? Man has learned to feel totally comfortable in a world of deception. The entire life of a dead man is a lie, and it is dead men who are leading us. So, we live in a world ruled by dead men who are often, whether they know it or not, inspired by the devil himself. No wonder the Bible says in Ephesians 2:3 that we are “by nature children of wrath.” We are so bad that we deserve God’s wrath. Isn’t that a cheerful Easter message?

We might think God would just give up on us and consider us a lost cause. But God had a different plan. See what the Bible says in Ephesisans 2:4-9: “But God, who is rich in mercy, for his great love wherewith he loved us, Even when we were dead in sins, hath quickened us together with Christ, (by grace ye are saved;) And hath raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus: That in the ages to come he might shew the exceeding riches of his grace in his kindness toward us through Christ Jesus. For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast.”

So, do you see the problem? The world is primarily ruled by dead men. Their hearts, minds, and spirits are dead. That is not to say one is as bad as another; I am just saying that few of them can rule unselfishly.

So, what is the cure? Dead men don’t need reviving; they need resurrecting. Just as Easter reminds us that Jesus is committed to the resurrection of your body, since He is not the God of the dead but of the living. Easter also reminds us that Jesus is equally committed to the resurrection of your mind and heart. This means He is committed to removing all that deadens your heart and mind: all the sins, addictions, arrogance, and insecurity; all the stuff that makes you less than a man; all the thirst for power and all the crutches you lean on to make you feel like you are essential. This is the tragedy of our deadness, which describes the condition of most of the rulers of this world.

But underneath all this is something even more tragic: most men, including our world leaders, feel the shame of not being real men. The surest thing most men know about themselves is that they are not one. Man is not what he was meant to be. This shame resides deep in the core of his being, permeating everything he says and does. Jesus is committed to seeing you come alive in this life, glowing with love, grace, and power. Speaking with the mind of Christ while radiating joy and peace. 

So, this is how the message of the resurrection is repeated constantly in our daily news. It is a message of dead men doing stupid stuff and caring less about how it affects others. Easter reminds us that we don’t have to wait for a physical resurrection, as glorious and certain as it may be; each day, we can be more alive than the day before as we await that day when we shall be completely alive. This is the wonder of resurrection, a wonder we can walk in every day. Oh, the joy of experiencing a resurrection in the now. 

Now, you might say, “Pastor, I am a Christian, so I believe in the resurrection.” Yes, but your heart can still have areas of deadness. I know world leaders can’t get along, but neither can some of us. World leaders can’t control their spending, but neither can some of us. World leaders are selfish and short-sighted, but so are some of us. Perhaps our hearts and minds might need a little resurrecting also. Oh, the joy of experiencing a resurrection in the now. 

Dr. Worthington has been in the ministry for nearly fifty years and serves as President of Pathway Ministries and Christian Bible College.

The Power Of Forgiveness

Power-of-Forgiveness

People are always looking for purpose.  They want to know why they are here.  As Christians, we know we are here to worship and serve God and to fulfill His Will.  How do we fulfill His Will?  We let Christ live through us, and we seek to emulate the attributes of our Saviour. Satan loves to put roadblocks in our way as we seek to serve our Lord. I Peter 5:8-9 speaks of the devil as a roaring lion seeking whom he may devour. He will do everything he can to keep us defeated.  Continue reading “The Power Of Forgiveness”

The Icing On The Cake

IcingIsn’t it wonderful to sit down to your favorite dessert and enjoy each bite?  This beautiful lady at our church makes a delicious coconut cake.  The cake is super moist and the icing is superb.  I have to be careful because I could eat the whole thing right by myself.  Self-control with my eating habits has been a lifelong battle as in other areas of my life.  Thankfully, I have grown, but there is still a long way to go.  I keep thinking that I will arrive one day, and God won’t have to work so hard to keep me straight.  I am thankful He doesn’t give up.  He is the perfect Father.  I am blessed beyond measure to have my perfect Father in Heaven from whom I have learned so much.  Continue reading “The Icing On The Cake”

The Besetting Sin

Besetting

I don’t know about you, but I have found my nemesis.  I think we all have one.  Mine seems to defeat me when I go to some very special places.  I don’t ever seem to know when to stop.  I tell myself I might hurt the cook’s feelings, and we sure don’t want to be wasteful.  Of course, I have to get my money’s worth.  I must find an excuse somewhere.  Have you guessed what my nemesis is?  You guessed it!  The notorious buffet restaurant, or so I thought anyway. Continue reading “The Besetting Sin”

Teach Me Lord

Teach

I have always been a planner, so it is very difficult for me to slow down and be still.  We can all agree that our Heavenly Father has everything worked out in our lives, if we will let Him.  I realize every decision in my life is one He needs to control.  However, should He have to worry about my daily schedule?  Yes, He is concerned about that, too.  He wants to guide me in every area of my life. Continue reading “Teach Me Lord”

Death Can Wait

DeathPLAIN

“Pastor, I think that I have more hope now than I’ve ever had.”  That was her words.  Strange words in a way.  The lady was filled with hope, but not for the reasons that you might expect.  She wasn’t filled with hope because she had a great marriage, actually she had recently lost her marriage. She wasn’t filled with hope because of her children; she feared losing them as well. She wasn’t filled with hope because she had a great home; that had evaporated as well. She wasn’t filled with hope because she was surrounded by a great circle of friends.  Due to the vicious lies that had been spoken about her, many of those friends had forsaken her also.  Indeed, after years of deceit and vengeance, her husband was robbing her of those things. Yet, she had hope.

It is important to understand, that kind of hope, so sturdy, so deep, so vibrant, that it could face such loss and still live, that kind of hope is only found at the empty tomb of Christ.  I Corinthians 15 is probably the New Testament’s longest and most detailed narrative on the resurrection of our Lord. Paul is arguing against those in Corinth who said there was no such thing as a resurrection.

In this passage, Paul asks two questions. First, what if Christ is not raised? Paul would follow that out logically. What would that mean for our faith? And then he would turn the argument around to the other side, and say, what if Christ israised?  Notice what he says in verses 14 through 19; he states that if Christ is not raised, then there’s a cascading set of implications that flow out of that. Paul says,

“And if Christ be not risen, then is our preaching vain, and your faith is also vain. Yea, and we are found false witnesses of God; because we have testified of God that he raised up Christ: whom he raised not up, if so be that the dead rise not. For if the dead rise not, then is not Christ raised: And if Christ be not raised, your faith is vain; ye are yet in your sins. Then they also which are fallen asleep in Christ are perished. If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable.”

I Corinthians 15:14-19

Paul is saying that all of the past, present, and future hopes of Christianity, all of the plan of God, all of the principles, all of the commands, all of the teachings, balance on this one point: the bodily resurrection of Christ.

If Christ is not raised, if that actual historical event did not happen, it all comes crashing down like a house of cards.  If Christ isn’t raised, what an empty message we have, because there is no defeat of sin; there is no victory over death; there is no hope that all the evil things we face, all the struggles, all the difficulties, all the disease and suffering and death will end.  If Christ is not raised, there is no hope.

And then Paul says something very powerful.  He says, “If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable.”  Your faith must be connected to eternity.  Faith that goes no further than the grave makes no sense.  It has no lasting benefit.  Your faith cries for an eternity. You can’t live in this world where terrible things happen; you can’t be serious about your own struggles; you can’t live with the moments where you’re sinned against, and you face injustice, and a lack of mercy, and pain, and suffering, and disease, and not deep in your heart to cry out, “When will this stop?”

You can’t be honest as the Bible is honest and not cry out for an end to all that sin has brought into the world.  It’s not enough to have a few principles to live by. It’s not enough to have some comforting Psalms and some good theology. We long, we cry for eternity to make things right. And that person that weeps at the loss of a loved one, that person may not know it, but they weep for eternity. That person who has stumbled again and is so discouraged because they’ve surrendered again, that guilt they feel is a cry for eternity.  That person who has been sinned against and is so hurt inside, that hurt is a cry for eternity. That broken marriage, and that person that’s facing that divorce, all that pain deep in their heart, is a cry for eternity. Racism is a cry for eternity. Corruption of government is a cry for eternity. Disease is a cry for eternity to finally set things right.

And what Paul does is he makes a direct connectivity between the resurrection of Jesus Christ and the hope of eternity. In verse 20 he says, Christ became the “first fruits.”  So, if Jesus was raised, then sin has been defeated; death has been conquered; there is hope that we will be raised out of this broken world to a world where there is no suffering; there is no sin; there is no disease; there is no sorrow; there is no death. A world that finally makes sense of it all!

If you’re satisfied with the world the way it is, there’s just something wrong with you. It is right to be dissatisfied with what is going on in the world. And you should hope for eternity.  But then Paul turns the argument around the other way in verses 20 through 28. After talking about Christ being the first fruit, he gives this sort of redemptive historical equation:

“For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead.”

And then notice what he says in verse 24:

“Then cometh the end, when he shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father; when he shall have put down all rule and all authority and power. For he must reign, till he hath put all enemies under his feet. The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death.”

Now, notice what Paul is saying. Not only is there a connection between the resurrection and eternity, and a connection between the resurrection and your future hope, but there is also a connection between the resurrection and your present-day rest and security.  Paul teaches us that the risen Christ is reigning right now, and He will continue His reign until the last enemy is finally placed under His feet. He’s in the process of conquering those enemies, collecting the spoils of the victory of the cross and the grave.   And when the final enemy is defeated, death, He will offer up the kingdom to His Father.

Now, here’s what that means: You do not live in a world of chaotic luck, fate, and chance. You live in a world that’s under rule. I know the devil is the god of this world, but you are not of the world.  Your world is ruled by the risen Lord. You will never enter a situation; you will never enter a location; you will never enter a relationship; you will never be anywhere that isn’t ruled by the risen Lord. Now, our Lord may not always make your circumstances understandable to you, and it can be very tempting to think that life is not under the rule of anything.  But that is precisely why you must trust that your life is under the reign and rule of the One who has conquered it all.  And, no, you will never have control over every situation and relationship, but your Saviour does; your King does; the risen Christ who is your hope does.

The physical, bodily, historical resurrection of Jesus is directly connected to your future hope. But it is also directly connected to your present security and rest. You can have rest now, and you can have hope for then because, the stone in front of the tomb could not hold Him!

Direct connectivity between the resurrection of Jesus and our future hope, direct connectivity between the resurrection of Jesus and our present rest and security. This is hope that can stand in the middle of the deepest difficulties of life; hope that won’t fade in the face of disappointment and discouragement; hope that doesn’t die in the face of pain and loss, and it is only found at the empty tomb of the Lord Jesus Christ. There we find our future hope; there we find our present rest; He is our future; He is our King; He is risen, and His name is Jesus.

Jesus is defeating one enemy after another right now.  He is empowering you to defeat every enemy that comes against you…but, He is saving the enemy of death for last.  Why?  Because death poses no real threat for you and I.  It has no sting. The grave has no victory.  We want Jesus to destroy that enemy now, but in His wisdom, He knows you have bigger enemies than death to overcome.

That’s why…. death…can wait.

Dr. Worthington has been in the ministry for over forty-five years and serves as President of Pathway Ministries and Christian Bible College.