We read that when Christ was crucified, the two thieves wrestled and fought 
with the soldiers who nailed them to the bars. In the final judgment when the 
lost face the second death, will they also fight against the justice of their 
fate?
We read in Revelation 15:3 that in the end all will confess, "Just and true are 
Thy ways, Thou King of saints." All will kneel before Him (Phil 2:10). The 
final judgment will include an awakening to the full truth of their guilt 
before Heaven. Not one will have an excuse to plead. Not one will be able to 
shake his fist at God and charge Him with injustice, that He did less for them 
than He did for those who are saved inside the Holy City.

For those who will be saved at last, it will be true that Christ died for them, 
took their iniquity upon Himself, and died their second death as their 
Substitute. Did He do less for those who will be lost? Can they charge God with 
being unfair? Or do the lost pay for their sins themselves, as in the Hindu 
doctrine of karma, balancing their own books, paying up their debt themselves? 
They cannot charge God with any semblance of injustice; therefore it must 
follow, that Christ died the second death of the wicked as surely as He died 
the second death of the righteous as Hebrews 2:9 says, He "tasted death for 
every man." "The Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all" (Isa. 53:6).

But the lost will realize at last that they have deliberately despised and 
thrown away that which God had given them "in Christ." A wise writer has said, 
"The wicked see what they have forfeited by their life of rebellion. The far 
more exceeding and eternal weight of glory was despised when offered them; but 
how desirable it now appears. 'All this,' cries the lost soul, 'I might have 
had; but I chose to put these things far from me ... I have exchanged peace, 
happiness, and honor for wretchedness, infamy, and despair.' All see that their 
exclusion from heaven is just" (The Great Controversy, p. 668).

It will help us all today if we can anticipate that last judgment and also 
realize that Christ as the Second Adam has died our second death, has paid the 
full penalty for our sins. Then an appropriate gratitude and praise will fill 
our hearts, motivating us to live for the One who died for us. This is how we 
shall discover that Jesus' "yoke is easy, and [His] burden is light."

--Robert J. Wieland

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