To what lies ahead
I caught myself in a cultural blind spot today. Which is fun, actually. May the Lord always make of his Word an iconoclastic, misconception-busting, presupposition-rattling agent in my life.
The verse was this: “But one thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 3:13,14).
I would have bet dollars to donuts that the words read “straining forward to the future.” We moderns talk a lot about “the future,” by which we vaguely mean that heady land of limitless possibility which we somehow own and engineer.
Paul’s phrasing suggests a subtly different conception. There are things which “lay ahead” in my life. They are already marked out. “In your book were written, every one of them, the days that were formed for me, when as yet there were none of them” (Psalm 139:16).There will be tests to see if my faith is genuine (James 1:3). Expect these. God is rooting for me to pass these tests, so that I will become “perfect” (v.4), so that he can bless me (Matthew 25:21).
My impression from the Bible is that the future is good for two things and two only. The end-of-all-times Future, when Jesus returns and there is joy unending, is good for fantasizing on, to get a second wind. The shorter term future is good for making plans and setting goals — as long as it is understood that the planning is an activity we do in the radical present, which is the only place we really ever move and live.




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back to top3 Comments to “To what lies ahead”
Since it is the season of lent it is a wonderful time to chime in with the Lutheran theology of the cross. The short term future is to take up the cross and suffer with Jesus as we use our time, talent, treasure, and testimony, to bring others to the cross. Christ’s kingdom is not of this world and those that set their hearts on earthly blessings are encumbered with the theology of glory. While they may not confess that their works save them they do think they are able to earn blessings. The Bible tells me that all my earthly righteousness is filthy rags and the earthly blessing I receive are not what God owes me but blessings of His grace. So pressing on toward the goal is not realizing this world triumphs but rather by a growing dependence on the cross and Christ’s grace.
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“We all have reasons for moving, I move to keep things whole” as Mark Strand would say. But then again, was he planning anything?
It’s a bit like having a shabby telescope, you can see pretty good for a little ways but it gets really fuzzy on the horizon.
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I just read a review of a book that sounds interesting and applicable to this topic. It’s called “It All Goes Back into the Box”. It equates our life here with the game Life. No matter how many houses, yachts and impressive job titles you have, when the game is over, it all goes back into the box.
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