
Some of you reading will be able to do this easily as you have kids and others will not, but try to put yourself in this situation for a moment. You’re coming home with your spouse on a snowy afternoon and see that your driveway is fairly covered with snow. Enough that you know if you do not shovel it now it will be nearly impossible to get out of the driveway.
You tell your spouse that you will get out and shovel the drive, and they are to move the car in the road until it is clear. Your spouse tells you to watch the children, as they are already jumping out of the car, as it is hard to contain a six year old and an 18 month old when they see snow and they are home. You nod and turn to go and get the shovel, but that moment, that one moment you turn towards the door and take your eyes off your child the unthinkable happens. In that brief moment you hear a noise no parent ever wants to hear; a shrill scream that sends a shock up your spine that is indescribable.
Turning quickly toward the shriek, you find that your eighteen month old child is now underneath the tire of the car. She has stopped making any noise and is motionless. Your adrenaline kicks in now and you panic, yelling for your spouse to back-up and you jump down to your knees and try to revive your child while screaming for your spouse to call 911. Reaching the hospital you are told that there is nothing the doctors could have done, and that your beloved daughter is no longer alive. You just lost your youngest child by a freak accident, and you may never be able to forgive yourself or your spouse.
Before you think that this is a made-up story to elicit emotion to make my

It is easy to see logically how the atheist can give no hope to such a family. Seriously, what do they say that can be comforting at all, except “I am sorry.” Absolutely nothing, because they don’t think there is anything after this life. The question then is what do the other religions give as hope for in such an occurrence? Not much. Hindus will give them the hope that they can be reincarnated so they can come back to this sinful planet and try it all over again. I guess they should be happy that they do not remember all the turmoil and heartache that they felt the first or tenth time around. They can only hope that they move to enlightenment, but again there are different views as to what it takes to attain that state. That does not sound very hopeful to a family that just had a great loss.
You can take this for every religion, except Christianity because we see that Jesus came and gave us this hope. He defeated death and resurrected for us, giving us a hope for something much better. If there is something better then there is hope for a tragedy in this temporal time. That parent can have hope if one day they know they will see their daughter again in Heaven. Before anyone asks about children in heaven, read my answer on a previous blog (http://aleris.blogspot.com/2008/09/all-babies-go-to-heaven.html). 1 Peter 1:3-4 tells us, “Blessed be 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.”

The challenge is can we say the same as they did? “LORD, I turn my hope to You” (Psalm 25:1).
Psalm 147:11, “The LORD values those who fear Him, those who put their hope in His faithful love.”
1 comment:
Fear God, and give glory to him; for the hour of his judgment is come: and worship him that made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and the fountains of waters.
Post a Comment