I have implemented a new component in my daily devotions.
Each day of the month I read a different Bible benediction as a prayer. I have
people on my prayer list for whom I often have no specific requests, so I pray
the daily benediction for them. Today’s verse was from Galatians 6:18, “The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit,
brothers.” It got me thinking what it would mean to have grace “with your
spirit.” My prayers often dwell on physical things: health, finances, emotional
well-being. What would a prayer for “grace… with your spirit” look like? Here
is where the thought led me.
Your body has an expiration date. It may be days, years
or decades in the future, but it will expire sometime. You feed and water and
dress your body with care every day. You spend hundreds, thousands or even
hundreds of thousands to keep your body in working condition. Most of us
consider a properly functioning body to be of great importance, perhaps of
greatest importance. Still, even unbelievers have a sense that their life is
more than a body. With Hamlet they ask, “What dreams may come when we have shuffled
off this mortal coil.”
If you believe the Bible’s description of what it means
to be human, you know that the body is simply a temporary vessel in which the
real, true, lasting person exists. Technical differences in theology aside, all
believers expect to enjoy an existence that transcends the mere mortal one we
know now. Some believe that we will get a new, glorified body and live on a
renewed Eden-like earth. Others think that our existence after we shuffle off
the mortal is so new, so different from what we know now that it cannot be
adequately described. Whatever the case, it remains that the physical body we
now inhabit will be superseded by a most excellent replacement.
Along with this,
the Bible makes it clear that there will be continuity between this life and
the next. The New Testament is full of admonitions to live this life in view of
the one that is to come. Our ultimate destination is predicated on our
machinations here and now. Jesus taught us to “store
up treasures in Heaven” that would await us when we die. When Jesus was
about to depart this earth, He
told His disciples that he was going to prepare a place for them to be with
him. John
said that we don’t know precisely what our form will be in that place, but
that we will be like Jesus, “for we shall see him as he is.”
There is nothing wrong with trying to live a healthy
life. The believer’s body is, after all, “the
temple of the Holy Spirit,” and we should not consciously demean or destroy
it. Paul also said physical
exercise is good, but it is even more important to exercise godliness
because it holds promise for the next life. So go to the gym; eat healthy;
watch your weight. Just don’t forget that those things only maintain a
temporary temple. This body has an expiration date, whether it’s three score
and ten, or some other unknown number.
The real question here is what have you done today for the real you – the one that’s going to
last forever somewhere in some form based on something you are doing right now.
Did you eat today; sleep last night; get that twenty minutes of cardio? Fine.
What did you do for the real you? The strength to bench press 350 pounds will
not be sufficient to lift your weight of regret if you get to the expiration
date without having done the simple things to strengthen your eternal spirit.
Enjoy your time at Gold’s gym or the Golden Corral;
just remember: it will be short compared to eternity. And may the grace of our
Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit, brothers. Amen.
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