Unless you've been living under a rock, you've probably heard about or seen something that has to do with the End of the World. Hollywood has been mass-producing movies about world-wide destruction in rapid succession over the last few years. The Mayan's calander has been getting a lot of coverage surrounding their 2012 prophesy. The History channel has been showing a ton of programs on The Book of Revelation and the coming apocolypse. Shows on Ancient Aliens are on day and night, linking present day alien encounters with the "gods" of ancient civilizations like Sumeria and Egypt.
As believers, we may find it difficult to wade through all the differant worldly concepts regarding the time of the end. We may choose to disregard the theories all together, believing that tomorrow will come and go just like the day before and that the 2nd Coming is a distant and vague concept that is probably true but won't happen in our lifetime.
If you are a believer, and you believe that God is who He says He is, then you have no other option but to believe His Word, The Holy Bible, Is what He says It is, and is 100% without a shadow of a doubt, the Truth, and the prophesies about the 2nd Coming of Christ will unfold with complete accuracy just like the prophesies predicting Jesus' first coming.
We know, as Christians, that our Savior is coming back for us. This fact is not up for debate.
If we truly believe this, then the world should be able to tell we believe this by the way we act every day and the way we live our lives.
So I guess the real question is do we behave like our Father will show up at any moment?
Jesus says over and over again that if we aren't looking for His return, if we aren't paying attention, He will come when we least expect it, like a thief in the night.
Have we taken His promise seriously? Do we believe He is who He says He is, means what He says, and intends to keep His promises?
Most of the time my children are pretty well behaved. Every once in a while they seem to lose their little minds and I find them in the midst of a screaming match over a toy or game or invasion of personal space, but for the most part, they will check themselves and remember that Mommy is never very far off and once they reach a certain decibel level I will appear and dole out the befitting punishments.
The reality of my close proximity helps them to remember that I am who I say I am, I meant what I said, and I intend to keep my promise to them that every action brings about a reaction and the consequence will either be good or bad.
In the summer time, I cut the grass once a week. We have a big piece of property and I also cut my Mother-in-Laws grass, who lives just behind us. Even with our industrial deisel fuel 0' turn lawn mower, it still takes me about 3-4 hours to get everything cut. I put my headphones on and off I go. I try to do this chore when the kids aren't home or when someone else is home to keep an eye on them, but there have been a few times when I have let them play outside or stay inside together while I'm busy.
I like to pop in the back door periodically to check in on them and just to let them know Mommy is still here, I'm still watching, and they are still expected to do what they know they are supposed to do.
I can always tell when they have lost track of reality and have wandered into the land of "out of sight out of mind" because the kitchen will be ransacked with candy and junk food wrappers everywhere, toys littering every room of the house in a Hansel & Gretel trail leading to a room in the house that will be totally and utterly destroyed, at which point I will enter to find them engaged in some type of activity that they know full well they are not allowed to do, like painting our fingernails and toenails on our bedroom carpet, or cutting our sister's hair, or giving each other tatoos with Mommy's colored Sharpi Markers.
They get this look on their faces that is a mix between sheer terror and frantic creativity to come up with a way to make this the other one's fault or to convince me that this activity is perfectly acceptable.
I often wonder what look most of us will have on our face the day Jesus comes back for us. Will we be terrified and grasping frantically to validate our behavior? Will we be reasoning to ourselves that Our Father didn't really mean we had to do ALL those things He asked of us, and surely He wasn't serious about ALL those things he told us to avoid.
Maybe like my kids, we will tell Him that we were going to get to those chores He left for us, just as soon as we were done with this video game, or cartoon, or art project. We meant to obey, we just got sidetracked.
While you may be content to continue believing Jesus' 2nd Coming is far away in the future, one glaring fact you can't ignore is that each of us has a shelf life on this earth. Death & Taxes are the only things you can count on, isn't that how they saying goes?
Our bodies will perish one day, and just like with Jesus' return, we are not told exactly when that day will come.
It could be tomorrow, or 50 years from now. Wether
You will meet your maker. This moment will either catch you unawares and ill prepared or will fill you with joy because you know that you have walked step by step listening for His voice, following His instructions and directions, and that He has been right there with you at every turn.
What do you want Him to find you doing when He returns? More importantly....Begin to shift your view of reality and become aware of the fact that He is watching you and with you every moment of every day. Wether you chose to acknowledge or be conscious of Him, He sees everything you think and do and say.
We think of coming face to face with Him in terms of, "We have'nt been in His presence, and one day we will be." when the actuality is that our every breath is taken in His presence.
Are you living your life as one of the little mice that play when they think the cat is away, or are you living each day as the warrior and salt & light that Jesus called you to be, bled and died for you to be?
I don't want to be like Lucy and have a bunch of "splainin' to do" when "Ricky" comes home. I choose to wake up and realize today that My Savior is very much alive, very much present, and very much aware of every move I make. Not only that, but He has called me, redeemed me for a special purpose. I don't belong here on this earth. This is not my home. I am just passing through. I am a warrior in the Lord Almighty's army, a servant in His House, a missionary to His lost children, and an ambassador to His Great Name. I am to be about my Father's business.
People's souls are on the line. We are in a battle of life and death. Our Father's lost loved ones are in danger of dying behind enemy lines. We have been sent in to battle to seek them out and bring them back to base camp so when the rescue ship shows up, we can all leave together.
Most days, I feel like this is not the reality I have chosen to live in at all. Here I am, a soldier in God's army, and I have moved in to the local village, put on their garments and have started shopping at the local markets, taking in the sights, going to the shows, and trying real hard not to offend the bad guys who are there only to kill steal and destroy. Either that, or I've become so preoccupied with myself and my own struggles that I don't even try to go out and find lost civilians any more, I'm just worried about my own safety and comfort and when I'll get to go home.
Time here is limited. God payed a heavy price to buy us back from slavery. He is coming for us, and we will see Him face to face.
My prayer is that every believer alive today will wake up to this reality, and no matter what your "End Time" scenario looks like, or what you think you believe, none of us are given any guarantee for how much longer we have here. It's time for the Body of Christ to get to busy and be about our Father's business.