Destroying the last enemy
1 Corinthians 15:20-28 But Christ has indeed been raised from the dead,
the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep. 21 For since death
came through a man, the resurrection of the dead comes also through a man.
22 For as in Adam all die, so in Christ all will be made alive. 23
But each in his own turn: Christ, the firstfruits; then, when he comes, those
who belong to him. 24 Then the end will come, when he hands over the
kingdom to God the Father after he has destroyed all dominion, authority and
power. 25 For he must reign until he has put all his enemies under
his feet. 26 The last enemy to be destroyed is death. 27
For he "has put everything under his feet." Now when it says that
"everything" has been put under him, it is clear that this does not
include God himself, who put everything under Christ. 28 When he has
done this, then the Son himself will be made subject to him who put everything
under him, so that God may be all in all.
Thomas Eric Duncan was the
first person in the U.S.
to die from Ebola – one of the nastiest and most frightening viruses in recent
history. After Duncan was
hospitalized at the Texas Presbyterian
Hospital , the Dallas County Health
and Human Services directory issued a statement in order to calm the public:
“It is contained. There is no outbreak. And so therefore everyone should ease
their fears and allow public health officials … to respond to this issue.”
At the time, everyone hoped
that the virus was contained … until they learned that it wasn’t.
10 days after Duncan
was admitted into the hospital, a healthcare worker at Texas
Presbyterian Hospital
who had provided care for Duncan
tested positive for Ebola. 5 days aster that, a second healthcare worker who
had also provided care for Duncan
tested positive for Ebola. Two weeks later, a medical aid worker for Doctors
Without Borders had returned from Guinea
with another case of Ebola, now in New York City .
In spite of official
statements, government warnings, and CDC assurances, many in America
are still on edge, fearful of a national outbreak of this deadly disease.
Perhaps you can sleep more
comfortably if I give you my personal assurance. Though I’m not a doctor, I do
know how to Google. According to the NPR website, the chance of you contracting
Ebola in America
is 1 in 13.3 million. Your chance of dying in a plane crash is 1 in 11 million.
Your chance of dying from a lightning strike is 1 in 9.6 million. Your chance
of being eaten by a shark is 1 in 3.7 million.
Your chance of dying in
general – 1 in 1. There is a 100% fatality rate for humans infected with the
deadly disease of sin.
We don’t have to worry too
much about dying from an exotic illness like Ebola. Most of us will probably
die in much more “common” ways like cancer, a stroke, dementia, heart attack,
car accident or old age. But every one of us is going to die. The percentages
are clear.
Death is creepy. Every film
that calls itself a horror movie has death in it. A casket is not a happy
symbol in our culture, is it?
Death is terrifying. Death
does not discriminate. It affects every nationality, gender and race. It
doesn’t hesitate. It will take parents, spouse or children. It is endlessly
innovative and perfectly ruthless.
Death is devastating. One of
the hardest things about death is it takes away the people we love – one by
one. The longer we live, the worse it gets. And when it comes to the death of
someone extremely close to us, we may never completely get over it. Such a
death is going to leave a scar. That’s just the way it is. That’s what it means
for sinful people to live in a sinful world. The moment we are conceived in the
womb the clock starts ticking toward the moment of our death. We are born to
die. Everyone dies.
Death is a reality. And it
points us to another reality – that we are sinners. Death is God’s punishment
for sin. “For dust you are and to dust you will return” (Genesis 3:19 ). Death is God’s righteous judgment upon
all of our sins – the secret sins, the willful sins, the accidental sins, the
sins of omission, the sins of commission, the sins of thoughts and words and
deeds. Death does not inflict and infect us without cause. God sees our sin and
His holiness demands death.
Death is the great human
enemy. Death seems to make it certain that the body will never move again, that
the heart will never beat nor the lungs breathe again. The mind will never
think again nor feel any emotion again. Death seems final. It is Satan’s last
laugh.
But then along comes Jesus.
Along comes His resurrection from the dead. He defeated death when He walked
out of the tomb on Easter morning. However, death still remains. It still
claims the people we love. It will still claim us. All of that ends, though,
when Jesus returns. Then death itself will die. Death is the last enemy to be
destroyed.
The apostle Paul assures us: “Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the
firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep” (1 Corinthians 15:20 ).
Christ is the “firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep.” Firstfruits
were the first of the harvest from the fields and groves picked by the Israelites
and then offered to God. These sacrifices were given in faith that the Lord of
the harvest would bless them with more to come. The best part of picking and
offering the firstfruits was knowing that this was just the beginning. The
firstfruits were God’s guarantee that the remainder of the harvest would soon
come in. The resurrection of Jesus guarantees that there will be more
resurrections. The harvest of believers will come in on the Last Day.
Paul also assures that believers “fall asleep” in Jesus. This is not just a
nice euphemism Paul employs to make death less scary. It is an illustration of
what death is like for the believer. Jimmy once asked his mother some
questions about dying. He asked, “Mommy, what is it like to die? Does it hurt?”
His mom replied, “Remember when you were little, you liked to crawl into your
big brother’s bed? And around midnight
big loving hands would carry you into your own bed. You would wake up in your
own room. That’s what death is like, Jimmy. It is waking up in your own room.”
But this sleep is only for
those who belong to Jesus in faith. Death for the unbeliever is not a blessed
sleep. It is the beginning of a nightmare from which there is no ending. If
those people do not want Christ’s fruits, then they will be judged based on
their own rotten fruits. Their fruits are poisoned with their sin. They are
still in Adam’s death.
Paul continues: “For since death came through a man, the
resurrection of the dead comes also through a man” (1 Corinthians 15:21 ). The process of dying entered our world through
the first man, Adam. The reversal of that dying entered our world through the
second Adam, Jesus Christ. Adam was created from the dust of the ground and
because of his sin, he and all of his descendents will be placed in the ground.
Jesus Christ was buried in a tomb in the ground, but when He burst forth from
the tomb, all those who believe in Him have the promise that their graves will
be opened on the Last Day, too.
When Paul writes, ‘For as in Adam all die, so in Christ all will be made
alive” (1 Corinthians 15:21 -23), he is literally saying that in Adam all “are dying.” He reminds us of
our deadly spiritual condition. Sin is not just what we do, it is who we are.
With that sinful nature, we are dying every day. Every one of us is terminal.
Death, along with the fear and sadness it causes is heartbreaking. You can
feel the fear of family members when a loved one is dying in the hospital. You
can see the sadness when a friend has a serious illness. You can sense the heartache
at the cemetery.
But Paul tells us the solution to all this fear, sadness and heartache: “In
Christ all will be made alive.” Jesus Christ has conquered death, and that fact
guarantees He will raise us from death to life when He returns at the end of
time. Jesus’ resurrection reverses all that death has caused. Oh, it won’t
happen right away. We will still suffer the effects of death for a time, but
Christ’s resurrection has changed everything. He has offered forgiveness that
covers over every sin. He has promised a home in heaven where death will never
touch His believers again. He allows us to fall asleep in Him so that we wake
up in our own room in the God’s heavenly mansion. He has brought life – real
life, eternal life that will never end.
When Adam sinned, God the
Father gave His Son an assignment to redeem Adam’s children from sin and defeat
the death that would claim them. Jesus did that when He completed His work by
dying on the cross and rising from the tomb. On the Last Day, the Son will hand
His completed assignment over to His Father. “Then the end will come, when he hands over the kingdom to God the Father
after he has destroyed all dominion, authority and power” (1 Corinthians 15:24 ). Like a captain retuning from a victorious
battle and handing over the keys of a conquered military compound to the
general, so Christ will hand over the kingdom to God the Father upon completely
rendering powerless every enemy.
“For he must reign until he has put all his enemies under his feet. The
last enemy to be destroyed is death” (1 Corinthians 15:25 -26). Jesus is not in heaven
with His feet up on the desk just taking it easy. He is reigning and ruling
from heaven above and ruling here below in human hearts with His Word and
Sacraments. “He has put everything under His feet” is quoting Psalm 8:2. That
is a biblical way of describing Jesus completely destroying all of His enemies
and opponents. At the end, all of Christ’s enemies will be humbled before the
feet of the King of kings and Lord of lords. The Great Dragon (Revelation
12:3), the Great Prostitute (Revelation 17:1), the Beast of the Sea (Revelation
13:1), the Beast of the Earth (Revelation 13:11 ),
the Antichrist (1 John 2:22 ), the
kings of the earth (Revelation 6:15 ),
and all those who pierced him (Revelation 1:7) will be humbled and humiliated. But
the last and greatest enemy to be destroyed is death.
Even though death has no sting
and death has been defeated by what Christ accomplished at the Easter tomb, it
is not defeated by sight. We must remain waiting and trusting in that first
offering to be enough. Jesus is the firstfruits. We and all believers are the
rest of the harvest. He became death’s greatest Victim so that He might become
the Victor over death.
When Paul says that the last enemy
to be destroyed is death, the Greek word he uses for “destroyed” means “to put
out of existence” or “to abolish.” When Jesus returns, death itself will cease
to exist. Jesus will abolish it. When death is defeated once and for all,
stripped of its power, the only thing left for believers is life – eternity in
the presence of the crucified and risen and reigning King.
No matter how we die – exotic
disease or falling asleep in our old age – we have the confidence that death is
dead. We will all die. But through faith in Christ, we will all live. Jesus has
defeated the last enemy. All things are under His feet. Amen.
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