``I wish I could think that I have come
just a short distance toward being as prepared as he was,'' a woman said to
me recently concerning a man who had died. Her statement was intended to be
an expression of confidence in the deceased, and I shared her confidence,
but the truth is: if that lady is living a faithful life in Christ, she is
fully as prepared as any other person in Christ.
Entrance into heaven will not be based upon
a long list of credentials built up accumulatively through the years (so
many new converts, so many passages memorized, so many lives influenced, so
many years in the service of the Lord, so many sermons preached, etc.), the
person's chances of going to heaven being enhanced with each new
credential. Entrance into heaven will be based on the merit of Christ's
blood. One prepares for heaven by entering into Christ through faith,
repentance, and baptism
(Gal. 3:27; Rom. 6:3);
living a faithful life in Christ; and dying in Christ. ``Blessed are the
dead which die in the Lord"
(Rev. 14:13).
This is the true basis for one's hope, whether he has been a faithful
Christian for fifty years or is just rising from baptism in newness of life.
Now if the lady had said, ``I wish I could
think that I have come just a short distance toward being as Godlike as I
believe he was,'' that would have been different. Here is the prevailing
purpose of every Christian, to become more like God every day. ``And every
man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself, even as he is pure"
(1 John 3:3).
Regular worship, liberal giving, unceasing prayer, concerned benevolence,
unfeigned love of the brethren, self-control, etc.--all of which are
commanded of God--are a means to the end of becoming like Him, or as stated
by Jesus, ``That ye may be the children of your Father which is in heaven"
(Matt. 5:45).
One who ignores these commands shows his contempt for God, becomes
unfaithful, ceases to be like God, and loses his hope of heaven. On the
other hand, one who does conscientiously obey the commands of God becomes
more Godlike, and the person who has done so for fifty years will obviously
have attained a greater degree of Godlikeness than one who has just begun
the Christian life.
But while we recognize different levels in
attainment toward becoming like God, all who are faithful, and are thus
purifying themselves as He is pure, share equally the hope of heaven. None
has earned his way to heaven. All are dependent on God's grace, and His
grace is extended to all the faithful.
Let not the young in the faith, then, be
intimidated by the attainments of the more mature in the faith. Let not the
mature become proud and over-confident. All must be faithful. All must be
growing. All must become more and more like God. And all must die in the
Lord. And to all who do so, the Lord will say, `"Well done, thou good and
faithful servant: thou has been faithful over a few things, I will make thee
ruler over many things; enter thou into the joy of thy Lord."