1004 - Looking Beyond
Friends: Want to find meaning in this world? Better look to the life beyond. Blessings, Bob
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Spirituality Column #1004
February
4, 2026
Common
Christianity / Uncommon Commentary
Looking
Beyond
By
Bob Walters
“God
will bring to judgment both the righteous and the wicked.” – Ecclesiastes 3:17
Now
there’s a cheerful thought: we will all get what’s coming to us.
As
Christians, we know the righteousness of Jesus covers what we accept to be our fallen
wickedness. If any person is interested in heaven, or in a loving God, restored
eternal relationship with that God, or is seeking divine purpose and ultimate meaning
in this present realm, then faith in Jesus is the only way, truth, and life to
attain them.
Our
job at hand isn’t to defeat our wickedness; we can’t, although it doesn’t hurt
to try. Our goal, our faith, is to accept the love and truth of God. Then,
to love others.
On
the other hand, if a person in this life has no interest or belief in those
divine things, or perhaps is openly contemptuous of, hostile to, or cynical
about them, it makes no logical sense in this life to worry about spending
eternity with someone, i.e. Jesus, in someplace, i.e., heaven, they already
reject. Are you going to like Jesus better later?
We
all, as Christians, pray for those folks.
We call them the lost.
This
is the lesson in Luke 16:19-31 of poor, sick Lazarus in heaven and the rich man
viewing him from hell. The rich man awoke too late to the truth of his sin, and
once he departed this life, there was nothing he could do to save his sons from
the same fate.
Every
time I settle into my gratitude for the sacrifice of Jesus and his gift of
freedom from sin’s eternal consequence, I am unsettled knowing many are still
shackled to their sin. It is not only
their forever fate I grieve but their absence of light in this life, seeing the
things of God as meaningless, and the things of this world as supreme.
I
don’t want people first to fear judgment; I want them first to feel God’s love.
It
is a tough nut to crack. Ecclesiastes
famously declares all things of this life as “meaningless.” Yet, why would a
loving, creative, rational, and relational God create a world and its
inhabitants for no discoverable purpose? It wouldn’t be logical or rational.
Then
look again at Ecclesiastes 3:17, about God’s judgment of our righteousness and
wickedness. None of us likes judgment, we all think our opinions are righteous,
and many folks seriously wonder if their wickedness (if wickedness is real) truly
matters.
We
know Christians who are awful, and we know “lost” folks we would trust with our
lives. So how do we put this together: that this life means something glorious,
God’s love is as immutable as it is righteous, and faith in Jesus is the only
key that unlocks heaven’s door? And, why would we want that? Don’t we just want
to be happy now?
As
widely as I do not understand either end of the Bible – creation or restoration
– what I have learned is that God does only what is just and true and
righteous. That I do not understand all of it is of no consequence. What is of
consequence is whether I trust Jesus’s promise and believe God’s love. The
Seeker in Ecclesiastes is looking for meaning on this earth. He learns the only
way to find it is to look beyond, to God.
My
mentor George Bebawi often made the very helpful point not to look at judgment and
mercy as opposites; they work together. The greatest secular problem of this
age, culturally, politically, and philosophically, is that we are quick to levy
judgments on others without considering the joy and righteousness – and peace –
of mercy.
God’s
judgment on us all is guaranteed, and God’s righteousness is eternal. His mercy
toward humanity is the component of judgment that Jesus delivered on the cross.
Mercy
doesn’t erase wickedness; only Jesus could do that. Our lives in this realm are
blessed, though, when we look with mercy and faith beyond the ugliness of sin.
Walters
(rlwcom@aol.com) knows that God put a
longing in our hearts…for God.