As Christians the greatest change that ever happens in
our life is at baptism, where we are granted the gift of
God’s own divine life. It is a point of division. Before
baptism we are natural children of God, but after
baptism we become His adopted children of who share in
His own divine nature, and that is a genuinely radical
change. After that, the next greatest change in our life
is when we die. That is also a point of division. Death
divides spirit from flesh. It divides this life which we
know so well from life that we have yet to experience.
Death divides us from family and friends.
Because of all these effects, because the division of
death is so basic and so profound, it can stir up a
great deal of unpleasant emotions within us when we face
the reality of the end of life in this world: grief,
sorrow, fear, anxiety, regret, doubt, guilt, anger,
loneliness. These are reminders that life in this world
always carries with it a great deal of suffering. And
we’re also reminded that we ourselves will one day cross
that line of division. We too will have to depart from
this life.
For so many people today, the reality of death is
something they’d like to avoid at any cost, as much as
they possibly can. No funeral, no service, nothing
public to mark the death of their loved one. Better not
to speak of death, because there is nothing there we
want to see, nothing there we want to take part in.
But for us, as Christians, there is so much more than
just division and loss. We also know and believe in
something much greater than that, and we hold to a
virtue that can be more powerful than all the negative
emotions that accompany death. We have hope. And our
hope is placed in nothing less than the saving power of
Jesus Christ, and his love for those who have followed
him in this world. As sad as we may be today or
tomorrow, we can have hope in the Lord Who conquered the
power of sin and death because He Himself suffered and
died. He has experienced death, and He came back from
death to offer us life, and so that we can live in the
hope of his promise.
Hope that on the last day, body and soul will be
reunited. Hope that the goodness of life we may
experience in this world will be magnified beyond our
imagination in the life that is yet to come. Hope that
we will be judged worthy to stand in the presence of the
Lord. Hope that we will be united once again with all
those who have died before us.
To share in this hope, to live in faith in Jesus Christ
is not to deny the reality of death, nor the sorrow that
comes with it. But it is also so much more than that.
It’s a call to live in His victory over the power of
death so that we can live our lives according to His
truth, with genuine love for one another. That is the
power of our hope in Jesus Christ. Our hope in Him is
the power that we have over death.
We pray today, and we will be praying that the Lord
receives Laura into His heavenly kingdom, and into the
peace of everlasting life with Him. And let us also pray
for ourselves and for one another, that we may live our
own lives in the hope that we share in Jesus, in the
hope that Laura deeply shared in Jesus, and in the hope
of life eternal with the Lord.