We’re going on a month now since my fiancé and I were supposed
to get married and over a month since I was going to move overseas. My bags
have been (mostly) packed since the beginning of June, and we still don’t know
when I’ll be able to move—or get married. In some ways, you would think that a
person like me, who loves time to prepare for things, would be relieved at the
extra time to make preparations for two such life-altering occurrences, but
while it is true that I have been able to do a lot more things to get ready
than I initially was going to be able to, I’ve found myself much more angsty from
this prolonged “preparation” time largely because it has required me to live in
a state of being always ready.
My favorite clothes and other necessities have been in
suitcases for weeks. Sometimes I’ve needed to dig something out to use, but
then must remember to pack it back in the right suitcase so the carefully
measured weight stays the same. I could have waited to pack, had I known how
long our plans would be delayed, but the constant unknown of when I’ll be able
to travel directs me to be as prepared as I can be to leave at a moment’s
notice. These weeks have shown me that being always ready for something you
know is coming but know not when is frustrating, wearying, and just plain
exhausting.
But as I’ve been thinking about this state of always being
ready, the Lord has reminded (and convicted) me that this state is exactly the one
He has called me to be in as I wait for His return. This tension that I have
been annoyed at of living in some sort of in-between world mirrors the tension
I am to embrace spiritually as I live in the already-but-not-yet reality of
God’s kingdom.
Before His crucifixion, when Jesus is talking to His
disciples about His second coming, He tells them, “But concerning that day
and hour no one knows, not even the angels of heaven, nor the Son, but the
Father only. […] Therefore you also must be ready, for the Son of Man is coming
at an hour you do not expect” (Matthew 24:36, 44, ESV). He goes on to tell
parables about people who were living their lives unprepared—wedding guests
unprepared for the arrival of the groom and servants unprepared for their
master’s return—and says, “Watch therefore, for you know neither the day nor
the hour” (Matthew 25:13, ESV).
In Mark’s accounting, Jesus commands, “Be on guard, keep
awake. For you do not know when the time will come. It is like a man going on a
journey, when he leaves home and puts his servants in charge, each with his
work, and commands the doorkeeper to stay awake. Therefore stay awake—for you
do not know when the master of the house will come, in the evening, or at
midnight, or when the rooster crows, or in the morning—lest he come suddenly
and find you asleep. And what I say to you I say to all: Stay awake” (Mark
13:33-37). And in Luke, Jesus says, “Stay dressed for action and keep your
lamps burning, and be like men who are waiting for their master to come home
from the wedding feast, so that they may open the door to him at once when he
comes and knocks” (Luke 12:35-36, ESV).
All of these passages impress upon the reader a strong sense
of active waiting, of constant readiness and relentless alertness. Notice the
phrases, “be ready,” “watch,” “be on guard,” “keep awake,” “stay awake,” “stay
awake,” “stay awake,” “stay dressed for action,” “keep your lamps burning.” These
things all require effort, stamina, and intentional action. Just keeping a lamp
burning would require making a plan to have enough oil, including working so
that resources would be available to purchase the oil, keeping the lamp clean,
and watching the lamp 24/7 to make sure the oil did not run out. Staying awake also
takes effort, especially when you are tired and it seems like you’ve been
waiting forever already. Yet these things are pictures of what we are called to
do as followers of Jesus.
Through this temporal waiting period of anticipating my move
and marriage, the Lord has given me a glimpse into how I am to live as His
Bride. I now have a point of reference for what it looks like to live every day
being ready to go. I understand in a more experiential way what it means to
live in one place while keeping my ties to it loose, so that I am ready to
leave the moment the doors open.
I live in my house in the United States, but in another
place I have another house waiting on me—a house that I direct time and
attention and affection toward building up with my future husband. In the same
way, on a spiritual level, I live in my home on Earth, but in another Place I
have another home waiting on me—a home that I should be directing time and
attention and affection toward building up with my forever Husband. I am not to
completely detach from my current home—I still live here; it is the place where
God has put me to invest in for this time. But neither am I to neglect my other
home or sit by and snooze because its coming seems so far away.
Exactly how this plays out practically when it comes to our
forever home, I am still learning, just as God is still teaching me how to
practically (and placidly) live in this active-waiting stage of prolonged
engagement. But I think it’s safe to say that, since God desires us to live
each day in this state of readiness for His return, His Spirit will provide the
strength and guidance we need to do so.
He is coming. We don’t know when, but we know He is. So
let’s not wait until the last moment to ready ourselves for His return. In His
strength, with His peace and perseverance and wisdom, let’s be always ready for
that day and the eternity to come. And, oh, what a glorious day that will be.
I would love to hear from those of you who have studied
God’s Word—what do you think it looks like on a day-to-day basis to live always
ready for Christ’s return?
To read the Arabic translation of this post, click here.
لقراءة الترجمة العربية لهذا المنشور إضغط هنا.
PC: Christina Hildreth. Used with permission.
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