Intro
We have a saying: “Ignorance is bliss.”  When we say that, we don’t apply that 
expression to every piece of our life.  But ignorance is bliss instead of 
knowing every thoughtless and unkind word spoken against you.  Ignorance is 
bliss when it comes to a special surprise that others have planned for you.  
But ignorance is not bliss when it comes to knowing what happens to us after 
death.  

Main Body
The writers of 1st Thessalonians--the Apostle Paul and Pastors Silvanus and 
Timothy--speak with one voice when they say: “Brothers, we don’t want you to be 
ignorant about those who are asleep.”  Of course, they are using the word 
“sleep” to refer to death.  After all, sleep implies that a time will come when 
one will wake up.  And that is so on the Last Day.  That’s when our bodies will 
arise from death, when Jesus returns, when He will reunite body and soul. 

But I’m getting ahead of myself here.  1 Thessalonians tells us that we are not 
to be ignorant about those who have died.  And here’s why: “So you will not 
grieve like the rest who have no hope.”

We learn a sobering truth--even for Christians.  The death of someone we love 
saddens and grieves us.  It’s not that it’s a sin to be sad.  Didn’t Jesus weep 
with the family of Lazarus after Lazarus had died?  And when praying at 
Gethsemane before His death by crucifixion, Jesus said, “My soul is deeply 
grieved, even to the point of death” (Matthew 26:38).  

Death causes us to grieve.  Yet, as true as that is, our grief is different 
from the grief of a non-Christian.  Why?  It’s because we know the divine union 
that we have with God in Christ Jesus is unbreakable.  We know that we have 
been brought into the divine life of the Holy Trinity, into whose name we have 
been baptized.  And death does not take that away from us. 

God has joined those whom He has brought into His Church in a holy union that 
is stronger than death.  And we will see God fulfill that reality on the Last 
Day, when Jesus returns.  But until then, we are to take God’s word for it, 
knowing, by faith, that it is the true reality.  

God the Father, through His Son, in the Holy Spirit, will raise a Christian 
loved-one who has fallen asleep in physical death.  This will happen when Jesus 
returns on the Last Day, which will usher in the new reality, a reality of body 
and soul, where we will live in the new heaven and the new earth.  

When the Bible refers to death as a sleep, it doesn’t mean the soul is asleep 
until the Last Day, as if the soul is unconscious.   We know that’s not the 
case.  For when Scripture mentions what we will experience between death and 
resurrection, it describes us being aware, and delighting in, God’s presence.  
Jesus said to the repentant thief on the cross, “Today, you will be with me in 
Paradise.”  The Apostle Paul said that he wanted to leave this world and be 
with Christ, which is far better than life in this fallen world (Philippians 
1:23).  

So, the sleep of death is not the sleep of the soul.  It’s the sleep of the 
body in the grave.  For the body that dies will not remain forever dead.  Jesus 
will return.  His voice will call the dead from the sleep of physical death, 
and all of humanity will stand before Him.  Those who died “in Jesus” will be 
raised first.  They will be reunited with those who are still living in their 
bodies here on earth.  The bond between Christ and Christian will never be 
broken. 

But we would be careless if we didn’t notice the contrast, the difference, 
between how Scripture refers to the death of Christ and the death of a 
Christian.  When 1 Thessalonians tells us about the death of a Christian, it 
uses the word “sleep.”  But when Scripture refers to Jesus’ death, it minces no 
words and says that Jesus died.  We sleep; Jesus died.  

Why is that we sleep, but Jesus died?  First, Jesus didn’t have a long, 
protracted time when body and soul were separated.  He rose on the third 
day--body and soul!  But it’s more than that.  We sleep because Jesus died.  
Our death is a sleep because Jesus has died our death for us, removing its 
sting, taking away its power to keep us enslaved in fear.  How did Jesus do 
that?  He paid the wages of sin.  That’s why Scripture calls our death a 
“sleep.”

If death is but a sleep, then why do we still grieve, although not like those 
who have no hope?  Here’s why: Those who have no hope have no eternal future of 
joy and peace.  We do.  But we still grieve because we still experience loss.  
But what makes our grief different is that our pain of loss is only for now, 
not for all eternity.  Oh, our pain is still real.  But underneath the pain of 
losing someone you love who has died in the Faith is knowing that a reunion 
awaits you in eternity.  

By Holy Spirit-given faith, we know that God’s promises are true.  And so we 
know that the covenant of God with us in baptism will stand.  The Father 
created us body and soul.  The Son redeemed us body and soul.  The Holy Spirit 
sanctifies us body and soul.  What does that mean?  It means that God saves us, 
body and soul, not just our souls.  And so our eternity will be one of body and 
soul.  That means that God will raise our bodies from the grave and reunite 
them with our souls, which death had separated.  

That’s why I say these words at the committal of the body into the grave:  

May God the Father, who created this body; may God the Son, who by His blood 
redeemed this body; may God the Holy Spirit, who by Holy Baptism sanctified 
this body to be His temple, keep these remains to the day of the resurrection 
of all flesh. 

So, when will this be, when will body and soul reunite for all eternity?  It’ll 
be when Christ returns to judge the living and the dead.  Now, we don’t know 
the day or hour of that event.  It could be in a few minutes; it could be in a 
few thousand years.  

Our epistle reading tells us: “The Lord himself will come down from heaven, 
with a command, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trumpet call of 
God.”  When it happens, Jesus’ return won’t be a secret.  The whole world will 
see Him.  All people will be brought before Him.  The dead will be raised, and 
those still living will then be brought before the Lord.  

It’s as our epistle reading says: “First, the dead in Christ will rise.  After 
that, we who are still alive will be taken in the clouds to meet the Lord in 
the air.  In this way, we will always be with the Lord.  So then, encourage one 
another with these words.” 

The Christians who have died will rise first.  Then the Christians still 
living, those who have not died, will join them in the clouds to meet Jesus.  
We will always be with Him.  Nothing can separate us from Him.  The grave 
cannot take the joy that we have in Christ, for the grave cannot separate us 
from the love of God that we have in Christ. 

When God’s original creation fell from grace, He didn’t discard or dispose of 
His creation.  That’s because God loves those whom He made in His image, even 
those who have fallen away from Him and live as if He doesn’t exist.  God still 
loves them.  Jesus suffered and died for them.  The Holy Spirit still works 
through Word and Sacrament to give them life-saving faith.  

When Jesus rose from the dead, it was then that He destroyed death.  Jesus died 
the death of all humanity.  So, death has no power over God.  When we die, we 
are in His hands.  That’s our comfort!  It’s the comfort of knowing that God in 
the person of His Son died for us and rose from the dead for us.  It’s also the 
comfort of knowing what God alone can teach us: That He will raise our bodies, 
and we will have a joyous eternity beyond our imagination.  

In His Scriptures, God has revealed a truth to us that keeps us from grieving 
as those who do not have eternal hope.  We live and die in this hope because we 
know that God has forgiven us our sins because of Jesus. 

Those who don’t know Christ don’t have this hope.  For them, eternity will be 
different.  For, apart from Christ, God is a consuming fire (Deuteronomy 4:24, 
Hebrews 12:29).  That’s what hell is.  Hell is experiencing eternity apart from 
the holiness given to you by Jesus Christ.  For if someone doesn’t have 
Christ’s righteousness and holiness, he will experience eternity, not as a 
child of Light, but as if being on fire.  Your own righteousness is not enough. 
 If it were, you wouldn’t need Jesus.  

But we who are baptized into union with Christ’s death and resurrection have a 
bright, Light-filled future awaiting us.  We who, by faith, know that Jesus 
died for us, bearing our sins, paying its wages for us, dying our death for us, 
suffering its judgment for us, have comfort in the face of death.  For we know 
that we will not experience or suffer what our Lord Jesus experienced and 
suffered.  

For Jesus, death was death.  But for us it will be but a sleep.  Not even death 
can break our fellowship with God.  “So then, encourage one another with these 
words,” not just any words.  We need the words of Christ, and what He did and 
does to defeat death, spoken to us when we are alive and well.  That’s why God 
calls you to come to Church every week. 

Conclusion
Then, when death strikes or Jesus returns at a moment we cannot anticipate, we 
will be ready.  For those Holy-Spirited words that fill us with Jesus will 
encourage us and bring us the fullness of joy on that Day, which no one can 
take away from us.  That’s why we can pray what the Apostle John prayed in the 
book of Revelation: “Amen!  Come, Lord Jesus! (Revelation 22:20).”  Amen. 


--
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

_______________________________________________
Sermons mailing list
[email protected]
http://cat41.org/mailman/listinfo/sermons

Reply via email to