II
Corinthians 5:1,8 (NLT)
For
we know that when this earthly tent we live in is taken down (that is, when we
die and leave this earthly body), we will have a house in heaven, an eternal
body made for us by God himself and not by human hands…Yes, we are fully
confident, and we would rather be away from these earthly bodies, for then we
will be at home with the Lord.
Janelle Green published a book in 2008 entitled
“This Earthly Tent”, taken from I Cor 5:1.
She writes about her life after being struck with multiple sclerosis in
1975 when she was a young wife and mother.
While her earthly tent—her physical body—kept deteriorating, she fought
to maintain a positive attitude. She
wrote the book to give hope to others that the grace and strength of God can
provide those with damaged tents an active, giving, and caring life with great
optimism that better days are ahead because this is what God promises.
Paul was a tentmaker by trade and so made the
analogy between a tent and physical life.
Studies have shown that the body grows until about age 20 and then from
that age until you die, the body deteriorates.
Every component of our bodies deteriorates over time after age 20---all
our senses weaken (e.g. need for eyeglasses, hearing aids), muscles lose
stamina, joints become weak, bones soften, the heart becomes more frail, the
brain loses activity, hair starts graying and falling out, all cells lose
metabolic efficiency, etc). Sure, we
humans do all we can to retard the deterioration process, some smart (exercise,
right eating, skin care, alleviating stress, etc) and some ridiculous (phony
anti-aging products, plastic surgery, massive Botox® treatments, spending
enormous amounts of money at health spas, etc.).
No matter what you try to do, you live in an earthly
tent that will keep deteriorating until it is destroyed. Plus, for so many people, like Janelle Green,
our earthly tents can become severely damaged, even at a young age; yet people
still live in them for years. Think of
loved ones and others you know who are handicapped, blind, deformed, deal with
chronic pain and hundreds of other physical maladies that affect these
temporary perishable tents. Think about
the perspective these people have (and you never know if/when you might be in
the same position?) and why this quote from Helen Keller is so profound: “Death … is no more
than passing from one room into another. But there’s a difference for me, you
know. Because in that other room I shall be able to see.”
A tent is a temporary structure. The word “tent” was first mentioned in
Genesis 4:20 and Old Testament heroes like Noah, Abraham, Issac, Jacob, Moses
and the Israelites, etc lived in tents.
Not only are tents temporary structures as our bodies are, but we as
Christian people are like tents in that we are sojourners (I Peter 2:11) while
on this earth. We are on a journey to
our eventual home, heaven. Take comfort in the reality that your tent body
deteriorates for a purpose, that you are headed for a much better place, that
when you die, you will be home with the Lord. Home is the place where you
belong, where you find true love, shelter, security, fellowship, and
acceptance. Why wouldn’t you rather be
where your true home is?
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