1 Corinthians 15:29–34 (NKJV)
29 Otherwise, what will they do who are baptized for
the dead, if the dead do not rise at all? Why then are they baptized for the
dead? 30 And why do we stand in jeopardy every hour? 31 I affirm, by the
boasting in you which I have in Christ Jesus our Lord, I die daily. 32 If, in
the manner of men, I have fought with beasts at Ephesus, what advantage is it
to me? If the dead do not rise, “Let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we die!” 33
Do not be deceived: “Evil company corrupts good habits.” 34 Awake to
righteousness, and do not sin; for some do not have the knowledge of God. I
speak this to your shame.
Prior to
becoming a pastor I used to daydream about preaching a sermon on the text in
John, “Jesus wept.” I found myself frustrated by the way in which death is
often trivialized in our current discourse; by the way in which even well-meaning
Christian people speak of death as though it is a normal and natural part of
human existence. And so I wanted to preach on that text, “Jesus wept.” There in
the face of death, the death of his close friend Lazarus, Jesus wept. Tears
that were a protest against death; a protest against the notion that death is
natural. Jesus wept.
And we all
sense this, particularly we who know our Bibles and who know that Jesus has
risen from the dead. We know that death is unnatural; we know that death is an enemy.
Jesus wept. And it is this knowledge of the abnormality of death which Paul
highlights in our text today.
How can some
of you say, Paul has been insisting, that there is no resurrection of the dead?
How can you say that death has the final word? How can you say that Jesus’
resurrection from the dead has not transformed all of human history? Jesus is
the firstfruits of those who sleep! Because Jesus has risen from the dead, we
too shall rise from the dead.
Now Paul
appeals to the absurdity of their claim, their claim that death will basically
continue on indefinitely. If death is normal, if death is not something that
God intended from the very beginning to eliminate when the Seed of the Woman
crushed the head of the Seed of the Serpent, then why did God command our
fathers be baptized, to be washed with water, whenever they touched a dead body? Further, why do we
Christians keep putting ourselves in harm’s way? Subjecting ourselves to
ridicule, to criticism, to persecution, to death? Why endure all this pain and
agony? If there is no resurrection of the dead, then let us eat, drink and be
merry for tomorrow we die.
But Jesus
wept. Jesus wept because death is not natural; it is an invader; it is not a normal thing; it is
a foe. But glory be to God, it is a defeated foe. There shall be a resurrection
of the dead. Jesus has risen – so we too shall rise. We shall stand before our
Creator and give an account of what we have done in the body.
Therefore,
we must beware how we conduct ourselves during the time of our stay on earth.
We must pursue righteousness and holiness; we must beware departing from the
simple Gospel of the death and resurrection of Christ; we must beware embracing
ideas that undermine our hope in the resurrection.
So what of
you? Are you prepared to stand before your Maker? Have you sought His
forgiveness through Christ and endeavored to conduct yourself in righteousness?
It is the reminder that we must all appear before our Creator that is issued to
us every Lord’s Day. Today we enter into God’s presence – and so we must kneel
before God and confess that only in Jesus are we worthy to enter into His
presence. So let us kneel and seek His forgiveness in Christ.