DYING EMPTY OR FULL
"Abraham gave up
the ghost, and died in a good old age, an old man, and full" Gen. 25:8
That is a great word, especially if we leave it as it is in
the Hebrew Bible, without the addition of the words, “of years." Abraham died FULL,
not of years only, or principally, but of life, of experience, of all the great
things. By faith he had abandoned much, but he had gained far more. He had come
to know God; to walk with Him, to talk with Him; to enter into a true
fellowship with Him in all the great processes of His heart. "He was called
the friend of God" (James
2:23). Such life is FULL, whatever it seems to lack. The man whose vision
is bounded by the things of time and sense might well say that Abraham died
singularly EMPTY. As the writer of the letter to the Hebrews said he "died in faith,
not having received the promises" (Heb.
11:13). For a hundred years he had dwelled in a land given to him in a
covenant, but he had not possessed it according to the standards of human
possession. Surely he had little of earthly gain in which to boast, and he had
given up very much when he left Ur of the Chaldees. Nevertheless he died FULL,
for in his fellowship with God, he had learned, to measure time by eternity, to
value the things of sense by those of spirit. To such a man death is but
passing on to wait the accomplishment of the Divine purposes, and the fulfillment
of the promises of God on the other side. So the FULLNESS of Abraham was that
of a wealth which death could not touch. The FULLNESS which men gain who live
by sight and not by faith, is a FULLNESS of which they are EMPTIED in death.
They leave their possessions behind them. The men of faith carry their FULLNESS with them. It is a great thing thus to die—FULL.
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