Sunday, March 10, 2013

A Cabin in the Corner of Glory Land?

By David Hobbs

What would you think of a birthday party with many exciting-looking, fancy-wrapped gifts on the table; but as the people crowd around in expectation, the birthday boy opens the first gift, and in wonder and excitement starts to play with it, then leaves the rest of the gifts on the table while he spends the rest of the party playing with his first gift? We’d go home disappointed and sad, saying, “Wow, he never opened his bicycle; he never opened his baseball bat, ball and glove, his chemistry set, his skateboard…. What a lot he missed out on by just being content with his first gift!” 

 Sound like a crazy scenario? “Brother Hobbs, that would never happen!” But it does happen every day in our churches! Sinners open up their first present from God—salvation--and then spend the rest of their lives caught up in that, while never opening the rest of their presents. 

 My question is, “Is salvation the end, or the beginning?” To most Christians it’s the end. They are perfectly happy with the concept of going to a heaven where there is no more toil, no more pain, no more sorrow, no more separation from loved ones, no more tragedy of any kind. They are perfectly happy to mark time in their churches singing about heaven and waiting for the Lord to come to take them there through death or rapture--perfectly happy singing “Build Me a Cabin in the Corner of Glory Land.” 

 But wait a minute. Who purchased that wonderful gift of salvation for us? Jesus. And not only did He purchase it, but at great cost to Himself—His life! And that was the only price that could have purchased it. It was a costly gift, beyond measure. So shouldn’t we consult the Giver of the gift to see what He wants from us in return? 

 Since the whole root of our sin problem that required such an extreme sacrifice was our self-will—wanting what we wanted and to heck with what God wanted—are we going to continue in that same self-will now that we have salvation? Are we going to try and use heaven for our own purposes, like "hanging out with loved ones by the tree of life?" Or are we finally going to turn back to God in truth and say, “Lord, what is your will in my salvation?”

How do we discover His will? By reading the Bible and by prayer. 

We quickly see that God’s will has never been to build us a cabin in a corner of glory-land. In fact, such a concept, while noble-sounding to us, is in fact an insult to Him. Salvation is not an end, but a beginning. There are many more gifts on the table still to be opened. The next one, that many Christians pass on, is the baptism in the Holy Spirit: that dynamite power of God coming to dwell within us so we can do the things that Jesus did like healing the sick, raising the dead, and cleansing the leper. 

 But that’s only the second gift. Take a few minutes to read Revelations 2 and 3, paying special attention to the rewards given to the overcomers in each church: the right to eat from the tree of life, receiving the crown of life, a stone containing a new name, being made a pillar in… “But Brother Hobbs, Brother Hobbs, what does all that mean? I can’t understand those gifts!” I can’t tell you; when you open the presents you’ll get the wonder of finding out! 

But notice this—it doesn’t say these presents go to them who believe. Salvation goes to them who believe. These presents go to them who overcome. Overcome what? The world, the flesh and the devil.  

It breaks my heart, but many Christians will arrive in heaven, receive their asked-for cabins in the corner of glory land, and be filled with profound remorse when they see others enjoying gifts that could have been theirs as well: being married to Jesus, sitting with Him on His throne, reigning and ruling with Him, etc. God will love the cabin-dwellers as much as anybody else in heaven. He will wipe the tears from their eyes. But He will give them what they asked for and what they qualified for while living on earth.

6 comments:

D. Hobbs said...

[Comment from Nicki T. on Facebook]: interesting. one question? is the thief on the cross stuck in a corner cabin in the glory land filled with profound remorse? i bet not. if our actions on earth correspond to our rewards in heaven as we've been taught, then Jesus' sacrifice means nothing. there are many people who i know that are spirit-fulled believers that aren't healing the sick, cleansing the leper nor raising the dead (as if we could do that in and of ourselves). what is God's will for us in our salvation? obedience. the thief on the cross didn't have a chance to open the other gifts available to him once he recognized the messiah nor did he have the chance to learn all the ridiculous works-based things religion teaches as the way to be a good servant. i believe the first gift opened should be the most cherished; salvation is the ultimate gift. first love...seek this first and all other things shall be added unto.

D. Hobbs said...

[My reply] The reward of heaven goes to him who believes, the rewards in heaven go to him who overcomes. The thief on the cross who cried out to Jesus overcame--his fear of death, the bitterness and unbelief the other thief manifested, etc. He was a great overcomer. That's what counts. He can open all his other gifts in heaven. But too many pew sitters see the gift of eternal life as the final reward, not the start of a glorious relationship with Jesus. That's who I'm talking about. Eternal life is based on faith, the other gifts are based on works--not what we do to try to win His favor, but what we let Him do through us. In Mt. 16:27 Jesus said that "the Son of man is going to come in his Father's glory with his angels, and then he will reward each person according to what he has done." It says the same thing in Rom. 2:6, 2 Cor. 5:10, 1 Peter 1:17, Rev. 2:23, and Rev. 22:12--"Behold I am coming soon! My reward is with me, and I will give to everyone according to what he has done."

D. Hobbs said...

[Nicki's Reply]: the kingdom of heaven is likened to the worker who came early for a job and got paid for a days wage and the worker who came at the end of the day and got paid the same amount but didn't work as much as the worker who worked all day

D. Hobbs said...

[My reply to Nicki]: Great Scripture. That parable is referring to eternal life. Everybody gets the same gift--the thief on the cross and Billy Graham. No difference. That gift gets you in the door of heaven. But once in heaven the rewards vary. Not every Christian will be part of the bride of Christ for instance. That's for those who paid the price of pursuing intimacy with Him. It's mostly a matter of what you want. A cabin in the corner of Glory land is not a punishment or a booby prize. It's what those people said they wanted when they were on earth. We can have whatever we want if we are willing to do what it takes to qualify for it. We can have a soul-winners crown if we are willing to go out and ... win souls. It's no more complicated than that. Jesus isn't going to give a soul-winners crown to someone who has never won a soul to Jesus in their life.

D. Hobbs said...

[Further followup} We get what we want and pursue while living on earth. Those who love and pursue Christ while on earth will be closer to Him in heaven than others who sought the Lord half-heartedly after salvation. The remorse will come after we get to heaven and realize how much more we could have had.

D. Hobbs said...

[My reply} :