“The Lord has appeared of old to me, saying, ‘Yes, I have loved you with an everlasting love….’” (Jeremiah 31:3)
What part of ‘everlasting’ do we not get?
Lately, we are learning through science what unending and infinite look like. Space seems to be continuous, going on and on. The lineup of galaxies across the heavens staggers our imaginations, considering their size, makeup, and number.
The Psalmist who said, “The heavens declare the glory of the Lord” had no clue just how much they say about the majesty and might of our Creator. That’s not to imply we do, only that we have far more information on the complexities and delights of the universe which the Father has wrought with His own hands than biblical writers.
From everlasting to everlasting, Thou art God (Psalm 90:2).
From everlasting in the past to everlasting in the future, God is God. There never was a time when God did not exist; there will never be a time when God does not reign.
Personally, I cannot get my mind around that. To my puny intellect, infinity of any kind is fearful. To think of being snuffed out upon death, that after our last breath, we are extinguished forever, is frightening and painful beyond belief. I think of loved ones whose passing took with them a huge hunk of my heart and soul. The thought that I would never see them again strikes me with a sadness incalculable.
But infinity of the other kind–living forever and ever, world without end–is just as mind-boggling. How could that work? How could we exist knowing that nothing would ever end?
The answer is and absolutely must be: “It’s a different realm.” This mortal must put off its mortality, its corruption, its limitation, and be changed forever–into immortality, into glory, into power. “We shall be changed.” (See I Corinthians 15.)
Someone protests, “Well, I’ve been bad and I know God cannot love someone like me.” That’s so patently ridiculous as to be laughable. Scripture says, “God demonstrates His own love for us in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8).
If God loved only the worthy, He would be mighty lonely.