The
way we do that is by remembering Christ in the Lord’s Supper, on Good Friday,
and on Easter Sunday. We remember when the story of Jesus became personal and real
to us, when we received Jesus Christ into our hearts and were born again to a
new relationship with God in Him and the future we have with Him. Hallelujah!
But
there is a danger in looking back. Nothing about us points backward. God
created us to move forward. We are prone to look back and tempted to go back
for all the wrong reasons.
Some
look back on “the good old days” with a longing for the way it was to be the
way it should be now. That kind of thinking focuses upon something lost rather
than something gained. This results in a life of ingratitude and misses the
blessings of God today and yesterday.
Then
there are those who look back with a longing to go back to “do over” some
missed opportunity or mistake. With this backward glare, there is always
regret, guilt, and/or condemnation.
We
wonder what Lot’s wife was looking back to Sodom to see. Was she wanting to go
back, or was she wanting to see them get what they deserved!? Either way, God
was letting us know that it may be better to be a pillar of salt than to live
with that kind of “backward look.”
In
Christ there is now no condemnation, no guilt, nothing left undone. Jesus cried
out on the Cross, “It is finished!” In triumph, He buried the past forever and inaugurated
the New Creation with that victorious shout!
Still
others claim that the past is instructive; learn from it. But God did not
create us to look back in order to learn from the past. He created us to learn
from Him, today; to ask Him for wisdom, today; to learn His ways and move
forward with Him, today. Our foolish forefathers took the bait that we could
learn from a tree (Genesis 3) rather than from God. And today, we are still
going after that bait; desiring to learn from everything other than from God.
But
God commands us to remember. The Hebrew word “remember” in the Old Testament
involves much more than our English word “remember.” The Hebrew word “remember”
encompassed a trinity of reflection (past), realization (present), and rehearsal
(future); all centered upon God.
The
Jews were given annual feasts by God in order to reflect upon the majesty and mighty
deeds of God for them in the past, to realize that the very same God was active
among them and with them right now, and to rehearse the promises of God for the
future. We need to redefine our word “remember” to guard against wanting to go
back in order to enjoy, to fix, to get back at, and/or to learn something.
And
so, let’s remember Christ, the same yesterday, today, and forever. Let’s glance
back with gratitude that God did not leave us back there in the past, and that
He has led us to where we are today in order to prepare us for what He desires
to give us tomorrow. Let’s give thanks and enjoy today what He is doing among
us and seek with joyful anticipation for what He has promised to us and
prepared for us in the future. It is all about Him, from Him, for Him, and to
Him! Hallelujah; Blessed be His Holy Name!