The Eternal Weight of Glory 

We fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen. For what is seen
is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal. 2 Cor. 4:18, NIV. 

The years of self-denial, of privation, of trial, affliction, and
persecution that Paul endured, he called a moment. The things of the present
time were not considered worth mentioning when compared with the eternal
weight of glory that awaited them when the warfare should be over. These
very afflictions were God's workmen, ordained for the perfection of
Christian character. Whatever may be the circumstances of the Christian,
however dark and mysterious may be the ways of Providence, however great his
deprivation and suffering, he may look away from them all to the unseen and
the eternal. He has the blessed assurance that all things are working for
his good. . . . 

The Holy Spirit irradiated the soul of Paul with light from heaven, and he
was assured that he had an interest in the purchased possession reserved for
the faithful. Paul's language was strong. He was not able to find words of
sufficient force to express the excellency of that glory, honor, and
immortality which believers would receive when Christ should come. Compared
with the scene upon which his mind's eye was dwelling, all temporal
afflictions were but momentary, light afflictions, unworthy of thought.
Viewed in the light of the cross, the things of this life were vanity and
emptiness. The glory that attracted him was substantial, weighty, durable,
beyond the power of language to describe. 

Yet Paul comes as near to expressing it as he can, that the imagination may
grasp the reality as far as is possible to finite minds. It was a weight of
glory, a fullness of God, knowledge that was measureless. It was an eternal
weight of glory. And yet Paul feels that his language is tame. It falls
short of expressing the reality. He reaches out for words more expressive.
The boldest figures of speech would fall far short of the truth. He seeks
the broadest terms which human language can supply, that the imagination may
grasp in some degree the superlative excellency of the glory to be given the
final overcomer. 

Holiness, dignity, honor, and felicity [happiness] in the presence of God
are things now unseen except by the eye of faith. But the things which are
seen, worldly honor, worldly pleasure, riches, and glory, are eclipsed by
the excellency, the beauty, and resplendent glory of the things now unseen.
The things of this world are temporal, enduring only for a time, while the
things which are not seen are eternal, enduring through endless ages. To
secure this infinite treasure is to gain everything and lose nothing (The
SDA Bible Commentary, Ellen G. White Comments, vol. 6, pp. 1099, 1100). 

In the future we shall see how closely all our trials were connected with
our salvation, and how these light afflictions worked out for us "a far more
exceeding and eternal weight of glory" (2 Cor. 4:17) (letter 5, 1880). 

>From Lift Him Up - Page 250

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