1 Corinthians 15:56, 57
We all must cross the black stream. Each one of us must go through the iron gate. There is no passage from this world into another without death. Having told us, then, that there is no hope of our escape, he braces up our nerves for the combat. But he gives us no hope that we shall be able to slay the monster. He does not tell us that we can strike our sword into his heart and so overturn and overwhelm death. But pointing to the dragon, he seemed to say, “You can not slay it, Man, there is no hope that you should ever put your foot upon its neck and crush its head. But one thing can be done–it has a sting which you may extract.
God might have furnished horses and chariots of fire for each of His Elijahs. Or as it was said of Enoch, so it might have been declared of each of us, “He is not, for God has taken him.” Thus to die, if we may call it death. To depart from this body and to be with God, would have been no disgrace. In fact it would have been the highest honor–fitting the loftiest aspiration of the soul–to live quickly its little time in this world, then to mount and be with its God. And in the prayers of the most pious and devout man–one of his most sublime petitions would be, “O God, hasten the time of my departure, when I shall be with You.” When such sinless beings thought of their departure they would not tremble, for the gate would be of ivory and pearl–not as now, of iron–the stream would be as nectar, far different from the present “bitterness of death.”
A dying man to dying men."
In the cold grave to which we haste.”
With God eternally shut in.”
With Divine assurance knowing
That He made your peace with God?”
Simply to Your Cross I cling."
On Christ’s kind arms I fall.
He is my Strength and Righteousness,
My Jesus and my All”
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