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This week’s theme is “End Time Ethics - if we are living in the last days, what kind of people are we to be?”
Redundancy is often a good thing. I always drive with a spare tire. If I’m flying over the ocean, I like having more than one engine on the plane. And I never run out of coffee or propane because I keep two containers on hand and replace the first when the backup goes into service.
Redundancy can be good when communicating to clarify a point, but it can reach a point of diminishing returns. In a favorite old television show, there was a character who, despite being a self-important blowhard, revealed just enough insecurity that he remained likeable. He was having an argument with someone who implied he needed to get to the point. Then he delivered this great line in a fit of frustration: “Oh, now you're saying that I'm redundant, that I repeat myself, that I say things over and over.”
I still think of that quote occasionally when I’m waiting for somebody to navigate their way to the end of a sentence. I thought of it again when I read the following verse, but hang with me because after the verse I’m going to tell you why I was mistaken to do so:
Praise the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. According to His great mercy, He has given us a new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead and into an inheritance that is imperishable, uncorrupted, and unfading, kept in heaven for you. (1 Peter 1:3-4 HCSB)
When I read “imperishable, uncorrupted, and unfading” my reaction was, “Yes, Peter. Our inheritance is really, really, really good. Let’s move on.” I thought he was being redundant using all those adjectives, but he wasn’t. They’re not the same thing.
Something imperishable could become corrupt (like an idea). Something uncorrupted could fade (like a memory). And something could remain unfaded but then perish (like a life cut short).
Peter is saying our inheritance in Christ will not perish. It will not be corrupted. It will not fade. Not only is it forever, but it won’t spoil, and it won’t diminish with time. When we approach the end of our time here on earth, those who have accepted this inheritance have this to look forward to. Sound pretty good?
You can say that again. And repeat it. Over and over.
By Mark Stuart
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