By Ron Bartanen
As a ship would need an anchor to
prevent it from being driven by the wind and waves onto a
rugged, rock-infested shore and destroyed, without
exception we all need an anchor for our lives to keep us
from the storms of life that would destroy us. Our
faith in Christ is just such an anchor—and especially we
would view the resurrection of Christ in this
regard. While all religions have their revered
founders and gurus, all are powerless against the winds of
time that would drive us onto the shores of God’s
judgment. Only Christianity has a founder who died
for our sins and been raised from the dead. Death is
not the ultimate conqueror. Though even Jesus, in
death, willingly gave up His spirit into the Father’s
hands, yet, as a verse in one of our hymns declares,
“Death could not keep his prey.” He arose in triumph
over death, and holds within His hands “the keys of hell
(hades) and of death” (Rev. 1:18). Ours is not a
dead savior, but the Living One. Without the
assurance of a living Savior, we would be at the mercy of
all that is spiritually destructive to our souls. We
would not even be assured of who Jesus is—the Son of
God. After all, anyone could make the claim.
Of Jesus alone can it be said that He was “declared to be
the Son of God with power, according to the spirit of
holiness, by the resurrection of Jesus from the dead”
(Romans 1:4). We know who He is because of His
resurrection.
Without His resurrection we would
have no assurance of our own. Death would be the
great ultimate destroyer. But because He was raised,
we, too, will be raised. In 1 Corinthians 15, the
apostle Paul linked our resurrection to His, saying, “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.
But now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the
firstfruits of them that slept. For since by man
(Adam) came death, by man (Christ) came also the
resurrection of the dead” (15:17-20). Hebrews
6:19-20a compares His resurrection to the believer’s
anchor, declaring, “which hope we have as an anchor of the
soul, both sure and stedfast, and which entereth into that
within the veil, whither the forerunner is for us entered,
even Jesus.” This hope is secure—“within the veil,”
that is, beyond the veil of death into heaven itself,
where the risen Christ has entered as the “forerunner”,
preparing the way for our resurrection. Our eternal
welfare is established only in the crucified, risen and
glorified Son of God.
The greatest question we could
ask is: Is your faith anchored and made secure in
Christ. Have you accepted Him, who, by the grace of
God, “tasted death for every man?” (Hebrews 2:9)
Have you identified yourself with Him in being “buried
with Him in baptism” and raised with Him to walk “in
newness of life” (Rom. 6:3-4). Is it your hope to
continue that walk till you share in “the likeness of His
resurrection” (6:5)?—to share His glory?
- via THE SOWER, a weekly publication of the Arthur Church
of Christ, Arthur, IL. Ron Bartanen, who serves as
minister and editor, may be contacted through the
congregation's website:
http://www.arthurchurchofchrist.com
No comments:
Post a Comment