Now with gladness
by chuckofish
I read the second lesson in church on Sunday. It was a great passage from the Book of Revelation, the one that starts out “I saw no temple in the city, for the temple is the Lord God Almighty…”
Here is paradise! The hymns reflected this nicely. We sang #620, “Jerusalem, My Happy Home” and #621, “Lights’ Abode, Celestial Salem”.
The sermon, no surprise, did not address the holy city, but was about “Friends”. The preacher vaguely connected this to the Gospel, but it was a stretch.
I can’t help wondering if some ministers do not want to talk about resurrection and heaven, because they do not really believe in it. It certainly makes them very uncomfortable. Partly I think this is because they enjoy their life here and now too much. They certainly don’t buy into the idea put forth so well in hymn #621:
Now with gladness, now with courage,
bear the burden on thee laid,
that hereafter these thy labors
may with endless gifts be paid,
and in everlasting glory
thou with brightness be arrayed.
But what did old Thomas á Kempis know? Or for that matter, the Victorian (J. M. Neale) who translated it?
Well, who am I to say? It just got me thinking, you know? And Lord knows I have to think about something during those long sermons about #friendship.


I hear you. I can accept a certain amount of doubt, but prevarication not so much — and these days there seems to be a lot of that about. It always reveals itself sooner or later though.
Doubt is healthy. But I don’t like thinking that our church leadership thinks its all just a nice story.