Our God, the God of the Bible, is the God of all things past, present, and future. He created all things. He is the Alpha. He is the uncaused cause of all that we know. We can take much comfort in this thought, for the God who created the universe also cares for us. His care toward us leads me to the fact that He is the God of the present as well. Not only did God exist in all times past, He exists in the constant present, drawing us ever closer in our walk toward Him, and wooing the lost to come in as sons and daughters through Christ. He actively hears our prayers. He is aware of the pains and the sorrows that we face in this sin-affected world with our sin-affected bodies. There is comfort found there. Also, God is the God of the future. He is the Omega, the End. Only He has the right to end things as they are, as He sees fit. God is the Victorious Warrior over sin, and the punishment for the evil one has been spelled out. As sure as we, in our broken bodies, will one day face our appointment with death and then be judged, the great deciever will meet his end at the hand of the LORD. God has reigned from the beginning, He continues to reign, and He will reign in the future forever. Amen!!!
As God Himself is the God of all things past, present and future, it is rightly reflected as such in His word, the Bible. In the Bible, we have a historical account of the dealings of God with man. We understand why things are as they are through history, which in turn provides us with a clear worldview by which we live. The stories of the dealings of God with man hit home, because we can see certain qualities of ourselves in the characters of the Old Testament. Namely, the brokenness of man that is common to all. It is a comfort to know that God cares about the broken. By relating the past to ourselves in the Present, and through the active work of the Holy Spirit on our lives, the Bible is a book of the present as well. Amazingly, although this book is thousands of years old, it still pierces to the heart of sinful man, drawing men to come to faith in Christ. God has spelled out the future for us in the Bible as well. It is through the reading of His word that we understand our gift of eternal life and the punishment that will come to those who reject Him. We understand that the enemy has already been defeated, because God has decreed it to be so. And now, we wait, and we look, and most importantly, we work.
Thus, as God is the God of all things past, present, and future, and as His word reflects all three, it only makes since that we, as God’s children, should be concerned with the past, present, and future as well. Personally, I would venture to say that most of my life is spent in the present-past, immediate present, or the present-future. Basically, most of my attention is turned toward the events that have happened, are happening, or will happen in a week or so. I truly think that this is a problem that I have. How would my life be different if I considered the far past in relation to today more often? How would my life be affected if I considered the far future, even unto death, and the promise of God of eternal life after death, and yet even the judgement of God? I think that focusing on such things cannot help but change the way that we live out our lives in the present. Now, there is also work to be done in the present. And there is joy to be found in life and in rest in the present. My case is simply that I do not spend nearly enough time thinking about the past or the future.
On a personal note, I am truly benefitted in my own life to stop and think about some of the great memories of times past and the hopes of the time future. God has blessed my life richly. I have had a wonderful life so far, and I look forward to what God will do with my flawed person in the future as He sanctifies and draws me to Himself.
Mostly, though, I praise God today for rest. Rest in things past, rest in present troubles, and rest in life eternal. Glory to God in the Highest!