This Palm Sunday I am
going to repeat a pen pulpit I did last year - the reason being that I think
the message so significant it deserves a second time around It is especially meaningful Easter week as
we contemplate Christ’s death, celebrate His resurrection and look forward to
His promised return.
“THE POWER OF HIS APPEARING”
I John 3:2-3
Have
you ever given any thought to the awesome power of our Lord’s appearing? That power is seen in I John 3:2-3. In verse 2 John calls attention to our
glorious position:
Beloved, now
we are children of God, and it has not appeared as yet what we shall be. We know that when He appears, we shall be
like Him because we shall see Him just as He is. And everyone who has this hope fixed on Him purifies himself,
just as He is pure.
Two
points loom large and clear in this passage: one future and one present.
1. The
power to change us.
“When
we see Him, we shall be like Him.” Note
what John says - when we see Him. There
is something marvelous about seeing our Savior. There will be transforming power at the sight of Him. This is unexplainable. The molecular structure of our bodies will
be completely altered when we see Christ.
All imperfections of our present state will vanish in an instant of
time. Paul says in I Corinthians 15:
Mortality
will put on immortality;
Sown
a perishable body - raised an imperishable body.
Sown
in dishonor - raised in glory.
Sown
in weakness - raised in power.
Sown
a natural body - raised a spiritual body.
What
this means is that at the first sight of the Savior, a glorious, miraculous
transformation will take place. By and
large our bodies will be just like His, only each of us will retain our
individual identity.
Yes,
the power to change us. But wait! What should that Blessed Hope do for us in
the present? This brings us to the
second aspect of the Power of His Appearing.
2. The
power to challenge us.
“Everyone
who has this Hope purifies himself just as He is pure.” There is something magnetic about the coming
of the Lord. A drawing power. A desire and determination to take the
initiative in seeing change take place in our lives now, to take note of the
impurities in our thought life and attitude - then to submit to His authority
and let Him replace those imperfections with His perfection. There is something wonderfully comforting
and challenging - not in just knowing what He can do but in submitting to His
ability and willingness to make us over.
Just remember, He always knows what is best for us and He will never
hesitate to take what we present to Him and overhaul it (Romans 12:1, 2.)
So
beloved, this week let us contemplate the power of His appearing to change us
and let that glorious reality challenge us in our present circumstances.
Love to you all.