Made for Another World

Last Sunday, Pastor Jeremy finished Daniel 1 with the sermon, “Living as Believers in a Pagan Culture.” We learned from Daniel and his friends that in order to remain faithful to the true King while sojourning through this life, we must pursue holiness, stand firm in what we believe, resist pressure from the enemy, stand together, and finally, influence others by our example. As we do, God will bless our faithfulness by sustaining us and granting us everything we need for bringing glory to his name.

Read: Daniel 2:1-49

This Sunday, Pastor Ken will preach the sermon “The God of Heaven” from Daniel 2. Daniel finds himself in another perilous situation, as king Nebuchadnezzar has sentenced all of the wise men in the land to death unless one could reveal to him both the content of his recent terrifying dream and its interpretation.

In faith, Daniel proclaimed that he would be able to do both and urged his friends to pray earnestly that God would reveal to them the dream and its interpretation so that they might not be destroyed with the rest of the wise men. That night, God was merciful and made the revelation known to Daniel, thus saving their lives and even granting them more favor in the eyes of king Nebuchadnezzar, as they were promoted to high ranking positions in the kingdom of Babylon.

The dream was terrifying to Nebuchadnezzar, but it reveals the source of hope for God’s people. According to the dream, God would one day establish his everlasting Kingdom that would replace all of the inferior, wicked kingdoms of this world. Our hope is inextricably tied to this Day, and we must keep our eyes fixated on it because while God’s everlasting Kingdom has been inaugurated through the first coming of Jesus, it is also still being prepared for its final revelation upon Jesus’ return. We still sojourn through this broken world, and to remain faithful to the true King we must remember and long for our true home.

As you prepare your heart for our corporate gathering, let this devotion from Paul Tripp stir your longings for the world to come.

Reflect: “Made for Another World”

Last week we considered awe. Specifically, how:

  • God created human beings with the capacity to be amazed
  • God loaded the world with amazing creation
  • It’s impossible for you to not live in a daily pursuit of things that will leave you amazed
  • Creation, while amazing and designed to be celebrated, cannot satisfy your soul
  • Looking for awe in the wrong places will leave you dissatisfied and is spiritual warfare

But I must say more. Otherwise, our discussion of awe would have a glaring and significant omission. Here’s the missing piece: our quest for awe requires a destination.

We can’t think about awe and not consider eternity. Perhaps we can find no more real and present argument for heaven than the angst that we all carry in the face of the temporary and dissatisfying awes of the present.

The words of C.S. Lewis summarize the angst as best as any: “If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world.”1

On the other side, we won’t need the fingers of creation pointing us to God’s awesome glory because we will see that glory face-to-face. There and there alone will the journey end, the war be over, and our hearts be given the rest they always wanted but never fully had.

We will finally stand in the actual presence of God, and we will bask in the light and heat of his heart-satisfying awe, never to long again. It’s impossible to characterize how deep and expansive our delight in him will be.

Until then, every time you experience the disappointments of this world, remember that your craving for awe is a longing for another world. Your heart cries out each day to be surrounded by the glory of God, freed from the seductive voices of competing glories.

I give painful
evidence every day.
I experience it in
predictable and unpredictable
moments.
I guess I should know
better,
but I am often
caught off guard.
There is an
insatiable longing
inside of me,
a thirst that never
seems to be
quenched.
This deep hunger
doesn’t go away
no matter how busy
I get
or how hard I work to be
distracted.
I long for
Justice
Love
Hope
Peace
Perfection
Satisfaction
Mercy
Contentment
Rest
Harmony
Joy
and none of these
longings
ever gets fully
satisfied.
And so in my quest
for more
I am faced with
the incontrovertible
daily evidence
that this simply is not all
that there is
and the sure truth
that I was
hardwired
for another world.

Your pursuit of awe today is a quest for the heaven of tomorrow that God has guaranteed for every one of his blood-purchased children. Through his death and resurrection, Jesus has paid for and prepared that place for you.

There is no greater grace than to be invited into the presence of such glory. There is no greater gift than to have your fickle heart forgiven and finally satisfied forever and ever.

“The Spirit and the Bride say, “Come.” And let the one who hears say, “Come.” And let the one who is thirsty come; let the one who desires take the water of life without price. . . . He who testifies to these things says, “Surely I am coming soon.” Amen. Come, Lord Jesus! (Rev. 22:17, 20)

God bless.

“Wednesday Word: August 28, 2019,” by Paul Tripp

Sing: Song List for Sunday

1. “Alive in Us,” by Hillsong Worship
2. “The Lord Our God,” by Passion
3. “Singing in the Victory,” by Austin Stone Worship
4. “Behold Our God,” by Sovereign Grace Music

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