For the past 18 months or so I have been working my way
through a series of books, Reformed
Confessions of the 16th and 17th Centuries in English Translation. There are
four volumes in the series, each volume being in the 700-800 page range, and as
of this morning I have less than 200 pages to go in volume four. The title may
not sound very exciting to the average Christian but I have found it to be a
fascinating experience, reading the various statements of faith within the
Reformed tradition that were brought forth through the first two centuries of
the Reformation.
It has been an interesting reading project but as is my
habit in such a project, I am getting anxious to finish as the end draws near.
I've got the next book on tap and I look forward to beginning it. I am longing
for the end of this reading project. It is a longing I seem to sense with just
about any book or reading project I am involved with as the end approaches.
My bible reading plan brought me into Revelation this week. So far I've read from the beginning through chapter 11. There are many symbolic and
confusing parts to the last book of the bible, but one thing that we glimpse
along the way, and is made clear in its final chapters, is the glorious ending
God will one day bring to this world he has created and the people who have lived
in it who have had faith in his son, Jesus. Part of the glory is the setting
right of all the things that, right now, are not as they should be because of
the presence of sin. In Genesis 3 we read of the sin of Adam and Eve, a first
sin that has had terrible consequences. Some of these consequences we can see
fairly easily and others reveal themselves over time, often tragically so.
Right now Robin has a dear friend suffering from the what
is, at root, the downstream consequences of that first sin. Her ordinary state
of health has virtually disappeared, without warning. One day everything was as
it always was and two days later there are no guarantees as to how things will
turn out. Not only is Robin's friend suffering, but also her family and
friends.
Robin's friend is a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ. She
has faith in Jesus and while everything else about her situation may be
uncertain one thing that she can trust is the faithfulness of her Savior. He
holds her and will never let her go. He holds her and nothing will ever take
her from his hand. Don't take my word for it. God put those promises in his
word, in Romans
8 and John
10.
Thinking about Robin's friend brings up in me a longing for
the end. Not a longing that I have to finish a reading project, or a longing
for Robin's friend's illness to resolve, but a longing for that day when God
will bring all things together and draw all his children to his very presence,
where they will worship and enjoy that presence forever. Amen.
Scripture quotations
are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version® (ESV®), copyright © 2001 by
Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All
rights reserved.
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