In my ongoing effort to demonstrate my spiritual superiority and make most of you feel guilty, Iām going to talk about my morning devotional.
(I was pretty guilty about it myself, by the way, until recently. I finally found a way to make my devotions fairly regular. I spend fifteen minutes with the Bible during my first coffee break each day at work. This isnāt a live option for lots of people, I understand, but since Iām the boss, and I canāt leave the office during that time period anyway, it works for me.)
I was in 1 Corinthians 3:10-15 this morning. I was using the ESV at work, but I donāt have a copy here at home, so Iāll transcribe verses 11-15 from the NIV:
For no one can lay any foundation other than the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ. If any man builds on this foundation using gold, silver, costly stones, wood, hay or straw, his work will be shown for what it is, because the Day will bring it to light. It will be revealed with fire, and the fire will test the quality of each manās work. If what he has built survives, he will receive his reward. If it is burned up, he will suffer loss; he himself will be saved, but only as one escaping through flames.
Occasionally Iāve heard the question asked, āWill Christians go through the Last Judgment?ā It seems to me the answer is right here. Christians will be judged, but only in terms of rewards, not punishment.
Paul imaginesāor perhaps he once observedāa man going through the ruins of his house after it has burned down. The man sifts through the ashes, recognizing charred scraps of clothing or sticks of furniture, ruined forever.
But in the cinders he touches something heavy and solid. He lifts it up. Itās his savingsāa bag of coins. The bag itself has burned up, but the money comes up all together in a lump, because itās gold and silver. Itās melted together, but itās all there, and just as valuable as it was before the fire. Because gold and silver are invulnerable to flames.
Thatās how it will be at the Last Judgment, Paul is saying. It wonāt be like the Muslim Last Judgment. Muslims believe that everyoneāMuslim and infidelāwill stand before the same court. There will be a balance scale there. On one side of the balance, all the personās good deeds will be placed. On the other side all his sins will go. If the good is heavier than the bad, the person goes to Paradise. If the evil weighs more, he goes to Hell. Thus no Muslim is ever entirely sure of salvation (unless he’s a martyr, of course).
I suspect a lot of people who think theyāre Christians are actually Muslims, at least in this doctrine.
But Paul says that as long as you stand on the Foundationāthat is, Jesus Christāyou canāt be condemned in the Judgment. Your deeds, thoughāall the stuff you bring with you from your lifeāyour achievements and pietyāall that will go through the fire. When the fire has had its way, youāll see (and Iāll see) how much of that was gold, how much was kindling.
A comforting thought, and a troubling one, all at once.
I should practice sleeping out of doors, I think.