Wherefore we faint not; but though our outward man is decaying, yet our
inward man is renewed day by day"
(2 Cor. 4:16).
The "outward man" is simply the house of the inward man. Day by
day that house is "decaying" and wasting away. Who, past forty, needs
reminding? Nevertheless, with relentless rapping on the door of our
minds come the messengers of aging; the hoary head, the stooped
shoulders, the wrinkled skin, the dimmed vision, and all the other
infirmities that won't let us forget what Paul says. All men know that
much. But God's people know something else.
They
know that just as surely as the outward man is decaying, the inward man
is being renewed day by day. They know that for the faithful Christian,
growing older means growing better. He is growing better because he is
growing in the knowledge of God's word. As the newborn babe, he
continually longs for the "spiritual milk which is without guile"
(1 Pet. 2:2).
As he grows in knowledge of the word, he also grows in the faith that is
produced by the word
(Rom. 10:17). As he grows in knowledge and faith, he also grows
in usefulness to the cause of Christ. He is renewed in his determination
to live closer to the Lord, to do what is right and oppose all wrong. In
his spiritual growth, the aging Christian has learned that death is not
the end, but merely a transition to something very far better. The happy
anticipation of being in the Father's house makes leaving this worn out
tabernacle a welcomed blessing!
That's
why the apostle Paul saw death as gain. But death is gain only when
living is for the Lord. Every living man knows that he will keep his
appointment with death
(Heb. 9:27).
He should know that living for the Lord is living at its best because it
is living that prepares for death. Though the outward man is perishing
and bound for the dust, we nourish and cherish him; we spare no expense
to care for him and tend to his needs. Will we neglect the needs of the
inward man that we know will survive the grave? With every tick of the
clock and every beat of the heart we are getting closer to the end of
this life.
The
question is are we getting closer to heaven?
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