“The Bible contains the world’s best and most important story, the story of redemption. You and I live between the First and Second Coming of Christ in the middle of the story. Sometimes life can seem a lot like reading a novel. You’re in the middle of the story and you can’t resist scanning the last chapters to see how things turn out. It’s only when you know the end that the plot twists begin to make sense.
The biblical story has a clear beginning. Out of nothing whatsoever, God created a beautiful world and placed Adam and Eve in it. They were perfect people, living in a full and complete relationship of love, obedience, and worship with the Creator. They had everything they could ever need or want. Adam and Eve were God’s image bearers, appointed by God to be resident managers over the world he had created.
But Adam and Eve were not content to worship and obey God. In a shocking act of disobedience, they stepped outside of God’s place. This defiance opened the floodgates of sin and destruction onto the once perfect earth. The fellowship between God and man was horribly broken. Fear, guilt, and rebellion replaced love, worship and obedience. All of creation was cursed with weeds, decay, and disease. But God was not content to let things remain broken. He declared war on sin and sent his Son to earth to win the final victory on the cross. He now applies the results of that victory to his sin-scarred children and his sin-marred earth.
When the biblical story ends, God will defeat every last enemy, the final enemy being death. We will become like God and live with him forever. This is important for three reasons:
1. If you want to go in the right direction, know your final destination.
2. The details of your life only make sense when viewed from the perspective of eternity.
3. Eternity teaches us what is really important in life.
The Bible is a storybook that gives us everything from our origin to our ultimate destiny. God opens up the last chapter of the story for us and invites us to look in, to listen, and then to look back on our lives. The purpose of Scriptures like Revelation is not to provide maps and charts to determine when Christ’s return will take place. No, Revelation is in the Bible to help us understand our final destination, and thereby make sense of our lives here and now.
The biblical story makes no sense without eternity. There had to be a better end than what we are living in right now! Sin has to be conquered. People have to be purified. The cosmos has to be restored. Anything less would be a universal defeat. All the suffering, brokenness, trail, sacrifice, and battle would make no sense. Paul says it powerfully in 1 Corinthians 15:19, ‘If only for this life we have hope in Christ, we are to be pitied more than all men.’ If God isn’t taking us somewhere, following Christ has been a colossal waste of time. There has to be more than this – and there is!”
Timothy S. Lane & Paul David Tripp, How People Change. (Greensboro, NC: New Growth Press, 2008), p37-38.