A Life That Cannot Be Suspended

Because I live, ye shall live also – John 14:19

So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory. – 1 Corinthians 15:54

You are travelling along the iron road of the railway, and there comes a sudden jerk, and you stop. What is it? It is the thought of death…It is an item in the great world of life that to you who are in Him is scarcely worth consideration, because the text over-rides that, and swallows it up, as it is written “death is swallowed up in victory”: it is made as though it did not exist. “Because I live, ye shall live also.” Your continued life of happiness, of holiness, of spirituality, of consecration, and of obedience-which, indeed is your only life worth having-is guaranteed to you in the text. Death cannot interfere with it, not even by the space of a single second-nay,. I tell you not even by the space of the ticking of a clock. What, a Christian die? “Because I live, ye shall live also,” is never suspended. There is not time for it to be suspended in. Do you know what death really is? Does it take long to die? I have heard of men who have been said to be weeks in dying. Not so; they were weeks living; the dying occupied no space; that was done at once, and immediately. And so with the believer. To him death is so slight a jerk that he still keeps on upon the same line. He still lives, only there is this difference, that it is as though the railway had hitherto been running through a tunnel, and he now comes out of it into the open plain. His life below was the train in the tunnel, but when he dies, as we call it, there is a jerk, and then it comes right out of the tunnel into the fair, open, champaign country of heaven, where all is clear and bright, where all the birds are singing, and the darkness is over, and the mist and fogs are gone, and his soul is for ever blessed… ~ C.H. Spurgeon

https://www.blueletterbible.org/Comm/spurgeon_charles/sermons/3401.cfm

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