The Hope of Eternal Life
by Pastor Kevin Sadler
“In hope of eternal life, which God, that cannot lie, promised before the world began” (Titus 1:2).
Dr.
Tony Evans says this abo eternity: “If we were to empty the Pacific
Ocean, the largest body of water in the world, we’d be left with a hole
that’s beyond imagination. If we were then to fill that hole with sand
and make a pile as high as Mount Everest, we’d be talking about a lot of
sand because Mount Everest is the tallest mountain peak in the world.
Since the ocean is fairly deep and Mount Everest is fairly high, we’d
have a fairly sizable sandpile! Now, if we had a bird that would take
one grain of sand from that sandpile every 100 billion years, how long
would it take the bird to finish the sandpile? I don’t know that in
human language we have such a number. It is probably beyond numerical
count. Whatever that number is, when the bird finishes the last grain of
sand, you will have been in eternity your first second.” 1
It
is glorious to think of spending eternity with Christ in heaven, but
it’s also heartbreaking to think of those who will be in the lake of
fire forever. Our faith rests on the sure hope of eternal life. We can
live our lives for Christ confidently and courageously, knowing that
nothing we do for the Lord is ever in vain (1 Cor. 15:58). We have
certainty in what we believe. The “hope” Scripture holds out is not a
hope-so hope. Our hope is a complete certainty, a confident expectation.
It is a destiny.
Eternal
life is both a present possession and a future hope. It doesn’t just
begin when you die; we have it at conversion, the moment we trust Christ
as our Savior. God is “eternal” (Deut. 33:27), and having “eternal”
life means we have been given God’s life, which is Christ in us (Col.
1:27; 3:4). Our future hope of eternal life is in the sense that we
confidently look forward to eternal life in its final, victorious form
when we’ll be in our eternal home in heaven, having received our
eternal, incorruptible, glorified bodies (2 Cor. 5:1), dwelling in
Christ’s presence forever (1 Thes. 4:17).
All
the truth of the Bible and the hope of eternal life is based in God
Himself. Our faith is secure by virtue of God’s unchanging character and
the fact that He cannot lie. God is Truth and free from all deceit
(Deut. 32:4). Numbers 23:19 says, “God is not a man, that He should
lie.” Hebrews 6:18 tells us it is “impossible for God to lie.” God’s
character backs up our absolute hope of eternal life. If He said it,
it’s true, He cannot lie, and it will happen.
From
eternity past, “before the world began,” God promised what He was going
to do for those who believed (2 Tim. 1:9; Titus 1:2). God is a
promise-keeping God. What He has said, He will do. You can place your
soul’s eternal destiny in His hands, and you don’t need to be anxious
about it. We can rest in Him because we can count on Him and on His
character. When (not if) we find ourselves in heaven one day, we’ll
praise Him saying, “The Lord was faithful, faithful to me, faithful to
all His promises.”
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