Cross & Crown

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It seems like every little girl loves to dress up and play princess. From my experience, Disney princesses are usually favored identities to assume. Adorning crowns and “twirly” dresses, young ones imagine themselves as blissful royals ready to take on their own little part of the make-believe world.

The funny thing is that I’ve never met a little girl who plays the part of the princess prior to their transformation. The part of Cinderella scrubbing the floors is usually left to the movie – it is not the stuff of little ones’ dress-up time. No child is Snow White banished to the woods. We love the happily-ever-after parts of fairytales, and those are the roles we relish playing.

In a similar way we must remember that there are two parts to every Christian’s story. It is not just about the crown of glory that we will one day receive – a day that will be greater than any happily-ever-after ending that Disney concocted. It is also about the cross that we must bear while on this Earth. The Christian’s story ends in Paradise, but the road to get there does not promise to be easy.

As William Barclay wrote:

To be chosen by God so often means at one and the same time a crown of joy and a cross of sorrow. The piercing truth is that God does not choose a person for ease and comfort and selfish joy but for a task that will take all that head and heart and hand can bring to it. God chooses us in order to use us.

Unlike the Disney princess, the Christian can joyfully approach their trials, knowing the ending that is in store. The day that we receive our eternal crown will be a glorious one indeed. In the meantime, let us not abandon the cross that God has chosen for us, but instead take it up daily  in order to follow and be used by Him (Lk. 9:23).

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Happy Life

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Recently I was listening to a Christian radio station, and they shared a short vignette. The vignette’s main message seemed to be “Jesus will solve all of your problems.” I figuratively shook my head after listening to it, wondering why we are so tempted to make the Christian life sound easy. History and personal experience would tell us the complete opposite. This isn’t to imply that the Gospel is complicated, after all it’s message is fairly simply understood (repent from your sins and put your faith in Jesus.(Acts 3:19, Gal. 2:16)) Nor am I suggesting that Jesus won’t solve the ultimate problem – the penalty of death that is a result of our sin –  because for the Christian, He does (Rom. 6:23). However, being saved means that you have assurance that your eternal destination is secure and safe; it doesn’t mean that the rest of your life on this Earth will be. 

I was reminded though, that simply stating that for the Christian this life is hard is incomplete as well. Even though Jesus promised that His followers will have trouble, it doesn’t mean that we are also unhappy. As John Newton stated:

The life of faith is a happy life, and if attended with conflicts, there is an assurance of victory; if we sometimes get a wound, there is healing balm near at hand; if we seem to fall, we are raised again; and if tribulations abound, consolations shall abound likewise.

In other words, the Christian will surely face trials in this life, but the trials are not the end of the story. Because of our faith in Christ, we know that our victory is secured (I Cor. 15:57). We know that any pain we feel here, is but temporary (Rev. 21:4). We know that while our heart breaks, our God is near (Ps. 34:18). There will surely be moments of unhappiness and grief, but we can have confidence that His mercies are new every  morning (Lam. 3:22-23). Our trails are momentary, but our happiness, eternal.

The life of Christian faith is not easy, nor is it free from pain, but it is one of assured joy. 

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