By J. L. Dagg
Duty
of Preparing for the Future World[1]
The people of God have ever been strangers and pilgrims in the earth. Though
in the world, they are not of the world; and, both by their professions and
their deportment, they declare plainly, that they seek another country, as
their final home. Hence, they walk not according to the course of this world,
and are deaf to its enticements, and appear to have their eyes fixed on objects
that the world sees not. So Moses endured, as seeing him who is invisible.[2] So he turned his back on the pleasures of sin
and the treasures of Egypt, and had respect unto the recompense of the reward,
to be obtained in the future world. So patriarchs, prophets, apostles, and
martyrs, have lived for eternity, and have left their testimony to mankind,
that they were not of this world, and that their treasure, their hearts, and
their final home to which they journeyed, were in heaven. These examples call
on us for imitation, and, if we possess the wisdom and spirit by which they
were actuated, we too shall make it the business of our lives, to prepare for
the future world.
The precepts of revelation call on us to prepare for eternity. "Prepare to
meet thy God." "Set your affections on things above."[2] "Lay not up for yourselves treasures on earth, but lay up
for yourselves treasures in heaven; for where your treasure is, there will your
heart be also."[3] "O that they were wise, that
they would consider their latter end."[4] All
revelation calls as with one voice, as with a voice from heaven, a voice of
warning, expostulation, and earnest entreaty, to quit this perishing world, to
flee from the wrath to come, to lay hold on eternal life, and to seek a
continuing city, an enduring portion, in the world to come. With reference to
this future world, every duty is enjoined, every promise made, every motive
presented, and he whose eye is not steadfastly fixed on that world, has no
reason to hope that he will secure the inheritance of the saints.
Since the motives to holiness, and to diligence in the pursuit of it, are
drawn so abundantly from the future world, a knowledge of that world is of
great importance to all men. Every man knows that the time of his continuance
on earth is short and uncertain; and while fully assured that he must leave
this world, and that the time of his departure is just at hand, to make no
inquiry concerning the world to which he is going, or to disregard authentic
information concerning it, and the means of obtaining happiness there, is folly
in the extreme. It is therefore wise to study the doctrine concerning the
future world, and to study it as a subject of momentous personal interest. At
every step in our progress, we should ask, how does this truth affect my heart?
Am I so running, as to obtain? Are my prospects clear? Ought I not to renew
my diligence, and to seek more earnestly the guidance and help needed, that I
may finish my course with joy? |
|
[1] Amos iv. 12. prepare to meet thy God. 2 Cor. iv. 18. We look not at the things which are seen and temporal, but at the things which are unseen and eternal. [2] Heb. xi.27. [2] Col. iii. 2. [3] Matt. vi. 19, 20, 21. [4] Deut. xxxii. 29. |