“The wages of sin is death” (Romans 6:23). Sin is separation, a falling away from
God. The contract of Eden was that when Man ate of the forbidden fruit they
would surely die (Genesis 3:3).
Man rebelled against the one law of Eden’s covenant and was removed from God’s
presence, a separation our selfish nature tends to make us forget. The
consequence of sin is death – the inescapable result of choosing separation
from God was we got our wish. Now, physically separated from God, our souls’ reunion
with Him comes at the cost of separation with mortal (literally “death-sentenced”) men. So we who are left behind
endure a deep longing for nearness to the one we have lost – to remind us of
the deep longing the One who has lost us has had from the beginning.
Thankfully, God has not left us to suffer without cause or
without benefit. As we come to recognize the great empty chasm between us and
God, we find ourselves drawn to the remedy for it. The awareness of our
predicament comes by the Spirit of the One who bridged the gap by His own sacrifice.
The common thread between Eden’s Covenant, the Mosaic Covenant (the Law and the
Ten Commandments), and the New Covenant (the Gospel of Jesus Christ) is that
sin requires a death (Hebrews
9:22). It is by no accident or miscalculation that we all feel unworthy to
come to God; none of us is. But the unattainable price of our sin-bounty was
paid by the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ, God Himself in
human form (Romans 3:25).
The lie Eve and Adam bought was that this life is all there
is – that “you shall not surely die” (Genesis 3:4) was their reality.
We, as their descendants, risk believing that same lie when we live as though
this temporary separation is all there is. When we fail to recognize that Earth
is a nursery, training academy, and proving ground for what we will become, and
embrace it as though our existence will not go on beyond this world, we stand
in pre-sentenced judgment and are granted our wish – eternal destruction. But
if the pain of our separation serves its purpose, and makes us long for home
enough to lean into it even now; if we more than just believe in Christ but
believe on Him enough to live out
that faith (John 3:18), we have
the assurance that we are among His beloved children (Ephesians 5:1), and He will
never really leave us or forsake us (Hebrews 13:5).
Our tie to the eternal realm from Earth is prayer (Psalm 102:17, Revelation 8:4). God’s people
communicate with Him, and He with them, through prayer. It is as simple as talking
to a friend. Won’t you reach across the great divide with the one tool we have
to do so, and end the separation that so grieves the heart of God, our loving
Father? When you do, you may find that you become the answer to the question, “Why
does it hurt so much?”