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Vol. 9 No. 10 October 2007 Page
12 | |
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How often do you contemplate and evaluate your spiritual path to eternity. Young mother, where will you be and what will you be doing in a million years from now? What about you, husband and father, where will you be and what will you be doing in a million years fro now? Teenager, what about you; have you paused to contemplate and evaluate your spiritual path to eternity? Where will our children be and what will they be doing one million years from now? This is neither an idle nor a silly question for those who realize that one’s physical life on earth is a mere pittance of a few years contrasted with an eternity thereafter. Surely, Bible believers acknowledge that what we do in the here and the now will determine where we will be and what we will be doing in a million years from now.
First, no matter how long one may live, life on earth
is comparatively brief. The oldest person who ever lived as far as any record
reveals was Methuselah he lived to be 969 years old (Genesis 5:27). Methuselah
still died! However, ordinarily in modern times, common lifespans range from 70
to 80-years-old (Psalm 90:10). Yet, we know that babies die, too. Some other
people live longer than 80-years-old, maybe approaching or exceeding
100-years-old. Still, all die (Hebrews 9:27). There were two exceptions to
dying as a prerequisite to leaving the land of the living; Enoch and Elijah
avoided the pains of death (Genesis 5:24;
Second, the eternity that follows life on earth is
Vastness with a capital “V” and without end. There are two eternities into one
of which each person will enter. It is well known that there are two possible
eternities that face every soul—heaven and hell (Matthew 25:46;
What a person does or doesn’t do in this life
determines where he or she will spend eternity. God is willing that all souls
be saved (1 Timothy 2:4;
You and I are not taking life and eternity seriously
enough if we are not evaluating our lives by the Holy Word of God. We owe it to
ourselves to evaluate our lives with the light of the Bible (2 Corinthians 13:5).
Only then can we have confidence respecting the eternity looming in the future (1
Ask yourself right now whether you are making
preparation for the forever that follows this life? Please tell me that you are
not so shallow as to be thinking only about the life you are living now and how
you can enjoy it more. One makes preparation for a million years from now by
becoming a Christian if he is not a Christian already (Acts 2:38; 11:26). An
unfaithful or erring Christian makes preparation for a million years from now
through repentance and prayer (Acts 8:22;
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