Copyright © 1999 by The Voice of Prophecy
David B. Smith

P.O. Box 53055    
Los Angeles, CA 90053   

Listen to Real Audio Broadcast
July 12, 1999

 

HEAVEN'S LITTLE HELPERS #1

TWO GIRLS FOR EVERYONE

There's a dilemma I've never faced, but I've known people who faced it big-time . . . and so today we want to think about The Three Boyfriends. Actually, these men were all husbands. And the first scenario is one I've seen repeated more than once.

In my years as a pastor, of course, I've been blessed to know many wonderful Christian couples who have celebrated golden anniversaries. Fifty years together . . . and certainly, being men and women of God, they had the assurance of an eternity of fellowship. True, the Bible tells us we won't be married in the New Earth, not in the way we are here. (More about that later.) Still, these delightful, gray-haired partners were fully convinced that when Jesus came again, they would continue, certainly, in one way or another, to enjoy friendship and a special partnership of some kind right into God's wonderful future.

Well, then, considering the senior citizen-ness of these good friends, finally one would pass away. There would be a funeral, and we would think with some sorrow about the few years of loneliness that lay ahead for the survivor, but also with great hope, as Paul puts it, for the promise of forever. "We do not mourn as those who have no hope." Sometimes these couples have been part of our wonderful Voice of Prophecy "VisionBuilder" family of major supporters; we'd meet them yearly as we gathered together to celebrate and plan for the future of this radio work. Well, now just that widow, or widower, would be there for those get-togethers.

And then, lo and behold, maybe just a year later, that elderly gentleman, Bob, who had sat with Esther at the supper table for five or more decades, would arrive the next year with Sylvia on his arm. A brand new wife! Wonderful! we'd say. And there'd be some good-natured teasing around the dessert table, and rejoicing that God had brought this new happiness to drive away the grief.

But that brings us to a question, and I'll illustrate with a second story we've mentioned before. Right here at the Adventist Media Center, about ten years ago, a sweet, gentle worker — I'll call her Jenny — was suddenly laid to rest. One afternoon, she took a quick break for a nap, and simply did not wake up. A weakened heart had abruptly quit on her. Well, that was painful. We all mourned, especially her husband and teenage son. She was just in her early 40s, so this seemed like such a sad event. But again, these two Christian men — father and son — believed in the resurrection, believed in God's promises of a reunion, and so that helped. Some day they'd be with Jenny again.

Not many months later, this man, who also worked right here in our Christian media center, came to our producer, David Smith, with a question. It seemed that God had already opened up some romantic doors, and he was now quite interested in a lovely young lady just a few office doors down. Naturally, he wondered about the decorum of a new relationship. How soon might be too soon, and so on. But then this second question: "David," he asked, "in heaven, what will happen? I was with Jenny for so long. And now here's Amanda. But . . . I don't like to think that throughout all eternity, I won't somehow be with Jenny too. Or that she might be all alone. How will God handle this?" Right here on planet earth, in the state of California, with a very real aching heart and real loneliness and hormones still all working, this Christian man was truly concerned about the hereafter. What would God do, now that there was a kind of future triangle looming? What was heaven's answer to this? Did Jesus' statement about "no marriage in heaven" mean that all of the saved would be single, celibate, self-contained, unfeeling robots, with no emotional connections, no love?

Third story, and this one takes us back about 6,000 years to the very first book of the Bible and the very first boyfriend. His name was Adam. And he only had a girlfriend for about five minutes, because God performed a wedding ceremony during their very first date on that Friday afternoon. "Adam, meet Eve. I highly recommend her. Do you take this woman to be your wife?" And they both said "I do."

But now we come to Genesis chapter three . . . and I'm sure all of you know the story. Eve is tempted to sin — and she does sin. She listens to the serpent and she's tricked by him. She eats the fruit. Verse six, part one. In the very next sentence, verse six, part two, it says this:
"She gave also unto her husband with her: and he did eat."

Well, you say, where's the story? And what does this have to do with the radio title for the week: HEAVEN'S LITTLE HELPERS? Over in the New Testament, the Apostle Paul sheds a bit of additional light on this sad little drama. In First Timothy two, he writes this:

"Adam was not the one deceived; it was the woman who was deceived and became a sinner."

Many Bible students, in weighing this tragic Genesis story, see a picture where perhaps Adam and Eve were temporarily separated in Eden. Eve and Lucifer went one-on-one, and she was deceived. But when she brought the fruit to Adam, he wasn't deceived. Listen as I share this passage again, as expanded in the very interesting Clear Word amplified paraphrase:

"The woman saw how good the fruit looked as the serpent ate it. Suddenly she felt a strong urge to eat it too. She plucked the fruit, took a bite and instantly felt a new surge of energy. Excited, she took more fruit and ran to find her husband." Now notice this next part: "When Adam saw her, he knew what she had done and also what the consequences would be. But in the blush of her excitement, she looked more beautiful than ever. He couldn't bear the thought of living without her, so he quickly took the fruit and ate it also."

Now let's freeze the frame right there between Eve's sin and Adam's. She was tricked, but his eyes are wide open. He knows the ramifications of what she's done. She's got the fruit there, offering it to him, but he hasn't touched it yet. He knows what God has said, that rebelling in this way is fatal. Is Eve going to die? Is he going to be alone again, like he was before?

And you know, in a way, he faced the same question as the two men I mentioned earlier. Here's a dilemma. Someone you love is either gone, or it appears that the rules dictate that she be gone. How can you go on without her? Can even God find an answer?

I've got an old, old book in my library that is really excellent in painting a picture of how Adam likely wrestled with this horrible, poignant moment. What will he do? Eve is right there in front of him. He can't bear the thought of losing her. Now, he's not fooled; no way. In fact, his mind is pounding with what's at stake. Will he choose God, or this beautiful bride? Put it another way. Will he figure there's no way out of this mess, no solution to the impending execution and loneliness he's going to feel, or will he lock arms with Eve, join her in sin, and share her destiny? The writer of this classic book, entitled Patriarchs and Prophets, puts his mental process in these terms:

"[Adam] did not realize that the same Infinite Power who had from the dust of the earth created him, a living, beautiful form, and had in love given him a companion, could supply her place."

In other words, he decided that even though God had created him, and God had created her, that God wasn't able to create a fix for this problem. So, out of what he thought were his limited choices, he made the worst possible decision.

Now, friend, let me be very honest. What would God have done if Eve had sinned, but not Adam? I don't know. None of us do. Such a conjecture creates an entire new corridor in what time-travel enthusiasts call the space-time continuum. I do know that God would have set the entire Calvary model into motion just for Eve . . . instead of for all of us. But how would God have handled this? I don't know. But I know God would have been ready, creatively ready, lovingly ready, powerfully ready, unstoppably ready — to honor Adam for obedience instead of lack of faith. Somehow God would have made it work.

And back to my Christian friends who remarry, not knowing or understanding how God will resolve what seems to them a problem. I don't know heaven's solution for that, for the many human triangles of honest-hearted affection that may step up to the pearly gates. There stands Bob with Wife #1, Esther, and Wife #2, Sylvia. It reminds us of that old Beach Boys song, Two Girls For Everyone. But friend, I have every confidence that what appears to us a problem is not a problem and never will be a problem for the Kingdom of God.

That's why we didn't simply choose the title: GOD'S HELPERS. No, you and I are God's little helpers. With our woefully inadequate, human, shortsighted, bifocaled vision, we so often can't see how God might solve our problem. So with our little shovels and pails, we begin to dig into the mountain of our own doubts. We forget an answer Jesus gave which abides and endures regarding all times and all mountains. Luke 18:27:

"What is impossible with men is possible with God."



 

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