12/15/13
LIFE AND DEATH AT
CHRISTMAS
“The thief comes only
to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life and have it
abundantly.”—John 10:10
As I was about to begin this devotional, I received word that
Marion Newstrum had just died. She and her husband Elmer have been part of
Bethlehem longer than most of our members have been alive. Marion was 87. They had
been married 64 years. When I spoke to Elmer and told him I wanted him to be
strong in the Lord and not give up on life, he said, “He has been a true
friend.” I pray that all Christians will be able to say at the end of life,
“Christ has been a true friend.”
Each Advent I mark the anniversary of my mother’s death. She
was cut off in her 56th year in a bus accident in Israel. It was December 16,
1974. Those events are incredibly real to me even today. If I allow myself, I
can easily come to tears—for example, thinking that my sons never knew her. We
buried her the day after Christmas. What a precious Christmas it was! Many of
you will feel your loss this Christmas more pointedly than before. Don’t block
it out. Let it come. Feel it. What is love for, if not to intensify our
affections—both in life and death? But, O, do not be bitter. It is tragically
self-destructive to be bitter. Jesus came at Christmas that we might have
eternal life. “I came that they might have life, and have it abundantly” (John
10:10). Elmer and Marion had discussed where they would spend their final
years. Elmer said, “Marion and I agreed that our final home would be with the
Lord.” Do you feel restless for home? I have family coming home for the
holidays. It feels good. I think the bottom line reason for why it feels good
is that they and I are destined in the depths of our being for an ultimate Homecoming.
All other homecomings are foretastes. And foretastes are good. Unless they
become substitutes. O, don’t let all the sweet things of this season become
substitutes of the final great, all-satisfying Sweetness. Let every loss and
every
delight send your hearts a-homing after heaven.
Christmas. What is it but this: I came that they might have
life. Marion Newstrum, Ruth Piper, and you and I—that we might have Life, now
and forever. Make your Now the richer
and deeper this Christmas by drinking at the fountain of Forever. It is so near

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