shall drop and disappear at the threshold of heaven.
If our tent-home stirs up within us imperishable joys,
by the power of anticipation and foretaste, what joy
will not that better land afford? If the promise
is so cheering, what must the fulfillment be!
If the pursuit is so inspiring, what must the possession
be! If our home on Tabor, where we have but a
distant view of home-life, affords us so much happiness,
what must our home on the eternal throne of God be?
There your intercourse with the loved ones of earth
will not be clogged by pain and infirmities. Your
society there will be the most endearing, and with
“a great multitude which no man could number,
of all nations, and kindred, and people, and tongues,
standing before the throne, clothed with white robes,
and palms in their hands.” You shall there
hold fellowship with the fathers of a thousand generations,
with the patriarchs, and prophets, and apostles, and
martyrs, and reformers, and the “innumerable
company of angels.” With these you shall
engage in the most delightful avocation. There
will be no indolence there, as we often find in earthly
homes; but all will be continually engaged. “They
serve Him day and night in His temple.”
There will be one unbroken worship, which will afford
you rapturous delight. You shall be presented,
before God’s glory, with exceeding joy; for “in
His presence is fullness of joy, and at His right
hand are pleasures for evermore.” These
joys will be eternal,—forever and ever.
That better home will never be dissolved, cannot be
shaken, and your crown of glory there is a crown which
fadeth not away.
But this happiness and glory of heaven are not only
eternal but progressive,—ever increasing.
There is nothing stationary there with the saints;
but their powers will ever expand and their glory increase.
New songs will be ever bursting in new strains from
the celestial choir; new discoveries and fresh exclamations
of praise and gratitude will he continually made.
Here on earth they were “by nature the children
of wrath, even as others;” they had their tribulations
and often murmured at God’s dealings with them.
But there in that heavenly home they will understand
the reason for all this. The deep mysteries of
the Christian life are now revealed, and they see
that a father’s chastisements are the work of
a father’s love, and worketh out for them that
are exercised thereby, an “exceeding and eternal
weight of glory.” They now see that while
in their tent-home they lived in the center of a grand
system of natural, providential and spiritual things,
all of which were working in beautiful harmony together
for “the good of them that loved God and were
the called according to His purpose;” and with
rapturous gratitude they cry out, “Marvelous
are thy works, Lord God Almighty; just and true are
all thy ways, O thou King of Saints!”