I took off my gloves the other day and laid them on the
kitchen cabinet. I had been outside
watching working in the yard. I have had
these gloves a long time, several years.
When I went back to put them on again, I saw them lying
there, limp and useless. They still held
the form of my hands, the fingers slightly curved. The thumb in place to grasp
something, but they were empty, wrinkled, worn with use and smudged with dirt.
My gloves reminded me
of my body. The day will come when I
will put off this body that has served me for almost eight decades. Like my gloves, my body was once young and
new, without wrinkle, elastic, unscarred.
But over the years it has grown old.
My body groans when it moves, becomes stiff when I sit in one position
too long. It aches. Putting on my socks
has become an exercise in calisthenics.
When I die, I will put off this body like I pull off my
gloves when I come in from the yard. It
will still hold something of my shape.
But it will no longer be me, any more than my gloves are me. When my hand occupies my glove, it can move
and grasp things. The glove is filled with my life. Likewise, my body is filled with me while I
still live. But, someday, I will lay it
down.
According to Scripture, I will eventually put on a new body,
just as I can place my hands in a new pair of gloves. The Bible has a lot to say about this, especially
in 1 Corinthians 15. “It is sown [a perishable body, it is
raised an imperishable body; it is sown in dishonor, it
is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in power; it is
sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body.”
When my mother was dying, we talked about heaven. She was 89 years old. Her body had withered away. Her back was bowed with osteoporosis. Her vision was failing. She had suffered a series of mini-strokes. She had difficulty walking. When she was a young girl she was athletic, a
beautiful fast runner. She won ribbons in track. We talked about how she would run again, the
wind in her hair, flying through the meadow as she did when she was growing up
on the farm.
There’s a lot I don’t know about Heaven. What kind of bodies will we have when we get
there? Will our heavenly bodies resemble
our earthly bodies? Will we have
different ethnicities, different skin color and racial features? Will we all look the same? Maybe we will know each other in a different
way, more spiritual and intuitive than visual.
From what I know of God in this world, I would have to assume there will
be variety … lots of variety … even more than we see on earth. But all prejudice
and pride will vanish.
1 John 1:3-2 states, “Beloved, now we are children of God, and it has
not appeared as yet what we will be. We know that when He appears, we will be like Him, because we will see Him just as He is.”
Bill Tinsley's book, Sunrise Sunset Poems is FREE as an eBook on Amazon July 7-10. His poems won first place in the Colorado Open Poetry Contest and the Mississippi Valley Poetry Contest.
I can hardly wait for that Great Day!
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