IF I SHOULD DIE BEFORE I LIVE
Scripture: Romans
6:19-23
Most of us are tenderly familiar with the child's bedtime
prayer taught to us by our mothers:
"Now I lay me down to sleep,
I pray the Lord my soul to keep.
If I should die before I wake,
I pray the Lord my soul to take."
For my sermon today I am lifting out that third line and
changing the last word from "wake" to "live" to read,
"If I should die before I live." Sounds like a paradox, doesn't it?
How can a man die before he lives? Well, it all depends on how you define the
word "live."
A cow or a sheep or a hog lives. In contrast to a stone or a
mountain or a coal mine,
animals live -- they are animate. The other objects are
inanimate. They have no powers of
locomotion. They are static,
unmoved, set.
The word "animal" comes from the same root as
"animate." It moves, eats, drinks, sleeps.
In brief, it lives biologically.
A man also moves, eats, drinks, sleeps
-- lives biologically.
In nature there is a mineral, a vegetable, and an animal
kingdom. Each exists. Man
physically and biologically belongs to the animal kingdom.
But he is more than an animal. He is a living, breathing,
pulsating soul. His body is made
from the dust of the earth but his soul is the breath of
God. The account reads, "God created man in his own image" (Gen. 1:
27).
After creating the heavens and the earth, the sun and moon
and stars, the mineral kingdom, the vegetable kingdom, the animal kingdom, God
climaxed His creative genius by making man in His own image. Here is the
procedure as recorded in God's Holy Word, the Bible: "And the Lord God
formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath
of life; and man became a living soul."
Man has a unique existence. He is more than an animal. He is
more than a biological,
physical organism. He is a living
soul. He has a body which needs food and liquid and sleep as all animals do. He
exists physically but he is more -- he is a spirit inhabiting a body.
When a man lives like an animal, just eats and drinks and
sleeps, he has stooped from the
high levels of moral and spiritual living to the low plane
of mere physical existing; and this is the number one tragedy. For a man
created in God's own likeness to wallow in the quagmires of sensual, animal,
physical cesspools is pathetic.
A child in its first years is concerned almost entirely with
physical needs. Its body must be fed and protected. Later the mind begins to
function and think. To remain in the animal stage and spend all of one's time
in satiating thirst and satisfying hunger, ultimately leading to drunkenness
and gluttony, is a horrible prostitution of God's crowning creation. Never to
reach the levels of moral achievement or scale the heights of spiritual
enrichment is the supreme travesty.
That is the import of my sermon subject -- to die before one
lives. Merely to exist, like an
animal, and never to live, like an immortal soul, is tragic.
One of our great magazines carried a soul-moving story of
the war recently. The writer
was a soldier. He recounted the
experiences of his outfit and gave a graphic description of one of his fellow
soldiers. He was a low character -- had a foul tongue mouthing the most
blood-curdling profanities and boasting of the vilest, unclean escapades.
Whenever on leave he became drunk and frequented the lowest dives. He gambled
and cursed and drank and caroused. He finally died in one of his drunken
brawls. The author of the article in commenting on his death wrote this
striking, sobering sentence: "I'm not sorry he died; I'm sorry he never
began to live."
George Bernard Shaw advocated that every five years every
man should be arrested and
put on trial. When asked, "Why?" he replied,
"To decide whether it is justifiable for both society and himself that the person on trial should live longer."
If a man is not producing anything, if he is not creating
value, if he is merely a parasite
consuming and destroying, why should he live longer?
If a person has already descended to animal levels, if
society is no better (probably
worse), if his family is not uplifted (probably
embarrassed), if he has ignored his soul and
forgotten the blessings of God, if he is a thankless
ingrate, a profligate prodigal, a human animal, what claim does he have to
continue to exist? And if he has squandered this mortal life why should he
merit immortality?
No man can really live without Christ. He came to bring life
and life more abundantly. He sets goals, posits worthy objectives, and gives
worth-while ideals. In addition Jesus makes available a power that one may not
become a victim on the animal level but that he may become a victor on the
God-inspired spiritual heights. In brief, that one may live, not merely exist.
Of course the personal import of this sermon is: Are you
existing like an animal or living
like a son of God?
Clarence Edwin Flynn wrote:
To be a slave when one might be a king,
To walk low roads when one might walk the high,
To crawl when one might just as well take wings,
To take the slime when one might have the sky;
To mingle with those whose lives are cheap
When with the sons of God we might commune,
To have the shallow rather than the deep,
To choose the discord, rather than the tune,
To dwell in swamps when one might have the heights,
To have a hovel for a heart and miss the golden dome
Where we might dwell in light --
Is there a greater tragedy than this?"
If you should die before you live may God have mercy on your
wasted life and ruined soul.
Why don't you surrender yourself to Christ and begin to
live?