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Octavius Winslow

John 14:1, 2

John 14:1, 2
Octavius Winslow December, 31 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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December, 31 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about heaven?

The Bible describes heaven as a promised place of rest and joy for believers, where sorrow and suffering are absent.

Heaven is portrayed in Scripture as the ultimate home for believers, a place where God fulfills His promises. John 14:1-2 assures us that Jesus has prepared a place for His followers, emphasizing that this promise is trustworthy because it comes from God, who cannot lie. Believers can find comfort in the knowledge that heaven represents perfect rest and eternal happiness, devoid of the pains and trials present in our earthly existence. The hope of heaven serves as an anchor for the soul, allowing Christians to endure earthly hardships with a joy centered on what is to come.

John 14:1-2, Titus 1:2, Revelation 21:4

Why is the concept of eternal life important for Christians?

Eternal life is crucial as it signifies the fulfillment of God's promises and the culmination of a believer's hope in Christ.

Eternal life is pivotal to Christian belief as it encapsulates the hope promised by God before the world began, as noted in Titus 1:2. This hope is not a fleeting dream but a secure reality anchored in the character of God. The assurance of eternal life brings comfort amid life's trials and tribulations, allowing believers to navigate their earthly journey with confidence. By believing in Christ, who is the source of this promise, Christians are empowered to face difficulties knowing that a perfect and unchanging existence awaits them in heaven.

Titus 1:2, John 3:16, Romans 8:18

How do we know God's promises are true?

God's promises are true because He is immutable and faithful, guaranteeing the fulfillment of His word.

The truth of God's promises rests on His unchanging nature. Scripture affirms that God cannot lie (Titus 1:2), which undergirds the assurance of His commitments, including the promises of heaven and eternal life. The believer's faith is not built on uncertain hopes but on the reliable character of God. As we see the faithfulness of God throughout Scripture and in our personal lives, we can be confident that His promises are secure and will be realized. This provides not only comfort but also motivation for believers to live in light of these eternal truths.

Titus 1:2, Hebrews 10:23, 2 Peter 3:9

What is the significance of Jesus preparing a place for us?

Jesus preparing a place for us signifies His intimate care and commitment to our eternal future.

Jesus' promise to prepare a place for believers in heaven reflects His deep love and personal investment in our lives. According to John 14:1-2, this assurance is a source of hope that uplifts our spirits and assures us that there is a perfect home awaiting us. The act of preparation indicates His ongoing work in our lives, transforming us through His Spirit to be fit for the glory of heaven. This assurance helps believers face challenges with the confidence that our eternal dwelling is secure, showcasing the relational nature of our salvation—a relationship fostered by Christ's sacrifice and love.

John 14:1-2, Philippians 1:6, Hebrews 6:19-20

“Let not your heart be troubled: you believe in God, believe also in me. In my Father’s house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you.”

— John 14:1, 2

GOING home! what a soothing reflection! what an ecstatic prospect! The heart throbs quicker—the eye beams brighter—the spirit grows elastic—the whole soul uplifts its soaring pinion, eager for its flight, at the very thought of heaven. “I go to prepare a place for you,” was one of the last and sweetest assurances that breathed from the lips of the departing Savior; and though uttered eighteen hundred years ago, those words come stealing upon the memory like the echoes of by-gone music, thrilling the heart with holy and indescribable transport. Yes! He has passed within the veil as our Forerunner; He has prepared heaven for us, and by His gentle, wise, and loving discipline He is preparing us for heaven. Amid the perpetually changing scenes of earth, it is refreshing to think of heaven as our certain home. “In hope of eternal life, which God, that cannot lie, promised before the world began.” This is no quicksand basis for faith—no mirage of hope. Heaven is a promised “rest”—exquisitely expressive image! And that promise is the word of Him who cannot lie. Nothing can surpass, nothing can compare with this! Human confidences—the strong and beautiful—have bent and broken beneath us. Hopes, bright and winning, we too fondly fed, have, like evening clouds of summer, faded away, draping the landscape they had painted with a thousand variegated hues in the somber pall of night. But heaven is true! God has promised it—Christ has secured it—the Holy Spirit is its earnest—and the joys we now feel are its pledges and “first-fruits.” The home to which we aspire, and for which we pant, is not only a promised, it is also a perfect and permanent home. The mixed character of those seasons we now call repose, and the shifting places and changing dwellings we here call home, should perpetually remind us that we are not, as yet, come to the perfect rest and the permanent home of heaven. Most true indeed, God is the believer's present home, and Jesus his present rest. Beneath the shadow of the cross, by the side of the mercy-seat, within the pavilion of a Father's love, there is true mental repose, a real heart's ease, a peace that passes all understanding, found even here, where all things else are fleeting as a cloud, and unsubstantial as a dream. "Come unto me, all you that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." But it is to heaven we look for the soul's perfect and changeless happiness. With what imagery shall I portray it? How shall I describe it? Think of all the ills of your present condition—not one exists in heaven! Bereaved one! death enters not, slays not, sunders not there. Sick one! disease pales not, enfeebles not, wastes not there. Afflicted one! sorrow chafes not, saddens not, shades not there. Oppressed one! cruelty injures not, wounds not, crushes not there. Forsaken one! inconstancy disappoints not, chills not, mocks not there. Weeping one! tears spring not, scald not, dim not there. "The former things are passed away." There rests not upon that smooth brow, there lingers not upon those serene features, a furrow or line or shade of former sadness, languor, or suffering—not a trace of wishes unfulfilled, of fond hopes blighted. The desert is passed, the ocean is crossed, the home is reached, and the soul finds itself in heaven, where all is the perfection of purity and the plenitude of bliss. Ages move on in endless succession, and still all is bright, new and eternal. Oh, who would not live to win and enjoy a heaven so fair, so holy, and so changeless as this? He who has Christ in his heart enshrines there the inextinguishable, deathless hope of glory.

Enough that God is my Father, my Sun, and Shield; that He will give grace and glory, and will withhold no good and needed thing. Enough that Christ is my Portion, my Advocate, my Friend, and that, whatever else may pass away, His sympathy will not cease, His sufficiency will not fail, nor His love die. Enough that the everlasting covenant is mine, and that that covenant, made with me, is ordered in all things, and sure. Enough that heaven is my rest, that towards it I am journeying, and that I am one year nearer its blessed and endless enjoyment.

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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