The
Upcoming Wedding
By
Rev. Tom Tuura
Pastor
of Christ Lutheran Church
I
grew up hearing many wonderful things from the pulpit. But few were
as great as this:
And
I heard, as if were, the voice of a great multitude, as the sound of
many waters and as the sound of mighty thunderings, saying,
“Alleluiah! For the Lord God Omnipotent reigns! Let us be glad and
rejoice and give Him glory, for the marriage of the Lamb has come,
and His wife has made herself ready.” And to her it was granted to
be arrayed in fine linen, clean and bright, for the fine linen is the
righteous acts of the saints.
Then
he said to me, “Write; blessed are those who are called to the
marriage supper of the Lamb!”
Revelation
19:6-9
I
heard about the marriage supper of the Lamb over and over again.
You've no doubt heard the language or terminology referring to the
church as the bride of Christ. (I invite you to try to tackle the
book of Revelation either for the first time, or a second or third.
Try using a book, or commentary as a guide. Or perhaps your Bible
has some helpful pointers and comments. Keep in mind that as sincere
as the various authors are, their interpretations are at best
“guess-timates”.
From
my own experience, chapters 1-4, and 20-22 are pretty straight
forward, leaving the fifteen chapters in the middle somewhat
mysterious.)
Its
kind of interesting historical note that Christ Lutheran's first
affiliation the Iowa Synod, held chapter 20 (the 1000 years or
millenium) as an open question. Lutheran's have always debated
whether the 1000 years spoken is a literal future time, or
figurative. Today they definitely lean toward figurative.
The
events of Revelation 19 are yet future and take place up in heaven in
the familiar setting before the throne, and the twenty-four elders
(see Revelation 4 and 5). Again, just a reminder, we will all
participate in this, so pay attention.
So
much of the end times discussion focuses on judgment, and it rightly
should. But also there is the salvation and glory awaiting the
Christian. The Devil wants to water that down as much as he can. As
a result, we think, only in two dimensional terms, heaven and hell;
and heaven is just an undefined eternity of harp playing. Hell is
hardship, even suffering on this earth and possibly some punishment
below somewhere. Hell is undesirable, but the Devil's
characterization of Heaven is like the boredom of sitting in church
for all eternity.
And
death is the real culprit, at least in our current mindset, ending
our life down here followed by decay and darkness. Life here is
perceived as all there is. The Apostle Paul begs to differ in 2
Corinthians 5.
Whatever
your influences, attitudes and opinions are regarding the hereafter,
the Bible does have a lot of clear things to say about the future.
First
of all the Bible speaks authoritatively about the future. That's the
nature of the Bible. It seems obvious and like we don't need to say
it, but we do. And if you think about it, we will not be dead, or
indisposed, but will be active participants in all future events in
Scripture.
To
be able to accurately predict the future is the ability of God
Almighty alone. The devil has not that ability, even though he is
very clever.
Second,
the Bible is clear about heaven and hell. Every New Testament author
has written clearly about the afterlife. It is a clear apostolic
consensus. And every one of the church fathers has concurred. This
is why it is written in each of the Creeds of the Church.
Third,
Hell is always described in serious terms with strong universal
warnings. This is also a mighty motivation for the worldwide
missionary effort. Rev. Maynard Force a pastor and professor at the
Lutheran Bible Institute years ago writes in his paper entitled
“Assurance” published by the Lutheran Evengelistic Movement in
1945,
“The
unbeliever is given a serious classification in God's catalog of
sinners. "But
the cowardly, unbelieving, abominable, murderers, sexually immoral,
sorcerers, idolaters, and all liars shall have their part in the lake
which burns with fire and brimstone, which is the second death."(Rev.
21:8). Notice that the unbeliever is put in the same class as
"murderers and fornicators.'' They are together doomed to
eternal damnation.
Quoting
again from Dr. Walther, we read, "It
would be awful if any of you would have to retire this evening with
the thought in his heart: 'I do not know whether God is gracious to
me, whether He has accepted me as His child, and whether my sins are
forgiven. If God were to call me hence tonight, I would not be sure
whether I should die saved.' God grant that no one of you will retire
in that frame of mind; for he would lie down to rest with the wrath
of God abiding on him."
Hence
Jesus' most famous statement in John 3:16. Say it from memory. Hell
is not suffering on this earth, or hardship. It is clearly the lake
of fire the second death—not annihilation
as some believe.
And
this brings us to Revelation 19:9 “...write
blessed are those who are called to the marriage supper of the Lamb!”
Consider this your invitation. “And the Spirit and the bride say,
“Come!” And let him who hears say, “Come!” And let him who
thirsts come. Whoever desires, let him take of the water of life
freely.”
This
is not aimless solitary harp playing sitting on a cloud. This is a
serious existence in the presence of our Lord Jesus, at the marriage
of the Lamb to the church His beautiful bride. We don't have to wait
for death to serve Him, it begins now with the time left on this
earth.
That’s
my view from the Blackberry Patch Pulpit
Pastor
Tom
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