This
week Slate.com ran an article entitled, “Why
No One Actually Wants to Live Forever.”
Subtitle: “It would be really,
really dull.” Let me tell you why I both
totally agree AND vehemently disagree with the author, Gemma Malley.
The
article is mostly about the quest to extend the human lifespan. “We’re already living for decades more than
our grandparents.” And who knows how
future medical breakthroughs could elongate lifespans decades further! But is that what we really want? Malley concludes, “If we were to live
forever, even if we lived in perfect health every day of our lives, it wouldn’t
be long, in my view at least, before we were all lying in bed in the morning
wondering why we should bother to get up and get dressed.”
I
can appreciate this point—given a
life with no Savior and no real purpose beyond oneself. But I cannot appreciate viewing eternal life
as a bore—given that I belong to
Jesus and cherish his promise of resurrection life and ever-increasing joy in
his presence forever!
Malley
is on to something when she points to the human drive that insists, “We cannot
die—there must be some way of cheating … the system.” What she doesn’t consider is that this will
to live may be a sign of something “transcendent” about beings made in the
image of God and for the ultimate satisfaction of unbroken fellowship with
him. C. S. Lewis contends, “If we find
ourselves with a desire that nothing in this world can satisfy, the most
probable explanation is that we were made for another world.”
But
Malley does not seem to be willing to imagine what wonders the Awesome Lord of
All Things has prepared for his beloved children in the age to come, or how
profoundly satisfying it would be to revel in Jesus’ presence “world without
end”! Just think: even now he’s preparing a place for us (what
does it mean that the eternal Son of God is working on the future home of his
people?!), and Jesus will come again to gather us to be with him (John
14:3). Just think: No eye
has seen, no ear has heard, no heart has imagined what the Lord has prepared
for those who love him (1 Cor 2:9)!
So
the next time you hear someone say they’ll take a pass on heaven (“What a dull
ordeal to sit on a cloud endlessly strumming a harp…”), pray that our gracious,
almighty, and unbelievably amazing Lord would breathe life, eternal life, into their dead heart (Eph
2:1-5)!
.
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