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The third point of John Calvin's 1536 book is about how we need to realize the vanity of the world. The number one greatest fear is the fear of death. But, the truth should be the opposite.
Good morning. Welcome to The Morning Motivation. Thanks for being here.
This week, we're—this is brought to you by Patriot Gold Group and the Public Square app. This week, we're going through John Calvin's 1536 book, A Guide to Christian Living. First point was love righteousness. Second, denying the self. Yesterday, we talked about picking up your cross, and today's chapter is realize the vanity of this present life. This is such an interesting one because what's everyone's greatest fear? Everyone's greatest fear in our culture is death. And Calvin's point is there's nothing more you should be looking forward to. I love this because it's a on my radio show it's perhaps the opposite is true was one of the themes of the show So if everyone's greatest fear is death, you should be thinking okay. What's the opposite of your greatest fear being death? It should be your greatest joy Maybe that's closer to the truth Here's what Calvin says whatever kind of tribulation we may suffer this should always be our goal to learn contempt for the present life and Thus be led to meditate on the life to come. Our folly comes from the fact that our minds are more or less dazzled by the false glitter of wealth, honor, and power, which are superficially attractive and which stop us from looking further ahead. By the same token, our heart is full of greed, ambition, and other evil desires, and is held so fast by them that it cannot look higher up? Check out this line. If someone were to quote the old proverb, man is a creature of a single day, we might readily agree, but with so very little thought that nothing could shake our belief that here is where we were always meant to live. All right, so what's that mean?
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On Monday, Monday was the 22nd anniversary of 9-11. And on my show, we shared a bunch of 9-11 stories. There's a ton, and we don't have time to share them all here, but there's so many stories of close calls and such bizarre stories. I'll just give you a quick one. This is like the super short. This doesn't do it justice, but I got to go quick. This guy was in New York City at a conference and his thing was he always wore crazy ties, really crazy, bizarre, weird ties. And he goes down to the lobby of the hotel with his colleagues and one of his colleagues was on vacation the week before and bought a tie in a store window, a crazy tie, and gave it to him as a gift. And he was so moved and touched that he said, I got to wear this at the presentation. I said, great, thank you so much. But I'm wearing a green shirt and it clashes. I'll tell you what, I'll go up to the room, you guys go ahead to the conference and I'll just change shirts, then the tie off at the time and I'll meet you there. So he went up to the room and the rest of them went up to the top floor of the World Trade Center. And by the time he got there, the plane crashed into the building when he was in the lobby and he survived and everyone died. And I have so many stories like that of the executive chef at the World Trade Center who stopped to buy some sunglasses in the lobby. Another person who worked at the World Trade Center who stayed up late the night before to watch the Monday Night Football game that happened to be the Broncos versus the New York Giants, missed the 7-11 train, made the 746, was late to work, unfortunately for him, he was. Or the woman who worked at the World Trade Center but the express elevator happened to be broken that day, so instead of being at the top of the World Trade Center, as she always is, she was told to go down to the 76th floor and she was able to survive while all of her colleagues died because they were above the plane. You're like, what? And then people who missed the flight, like United 93, they were supposed to get on and they missed it because they broke their ankle the night before and they couldn't make it, or people who moved on to that flight. So she's like crazy stories that then you're like, I don't even know what to do with these. And the only thing I have is, you have no guarantee for tomorrow. And that's what that proverb is, right? If someone were to quote the old proverb, man is a creature of a single day. Meaning, this is all you got. You got your single day, this is it. This is from 1536, right? And it's the same point I made on Monday. You have no guarantee for tomorrow, and we know that, like we hear that, we're like, ah, I know, that's right. And then, within 20 minutes, we're off to living life as if we were made to live here forever. And it's not just 9-11, my dad died of a stroke on, I don't know, like a Wednesday, and he was playing with the dog on the floor in the living room, and then boom, stroke dead. You don't know what's coming. But then we immediately, and we know that's true, we know that's true. And that's what John Calvin said. He said, and we might readily agree, but we just boom, go right back to as if we never heard such a thing. And we go right back and don't change anything about our life or our longing for eternity. This point from John Calvin, it may seem so foreign to us, but it's scriptural. 1 John 2, 15, Do not love the world or the things in the world. Well, to what degree? If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world, the desires of the flesh, the desires of the eyes, the pride of life, is not from the Father, but is of the world. And the world is passing away, along with its desires. But whoever does the will of God abides forever." It's right there. And Paul, I love Paul, said, I'm ready to go. He said, I'm ready to go. Philippians 1.24, For to me, to live is Christ, and to die is gain. If I'm to live in the flesh, and that means fruitful labor for me, yet which I shall choose I cannot tell." I'm hard-pressed between the two. Dying or living. My desire is to depart and be with Christ. For that's far better. But to remain in the flesh is more necessary on your account. He's like, well, you want me here, so here's where I'll be. Wow, what an amazing thing. In our culture, the greatest fear is death. But the Bible says our greatest joy, there's nothing we should be looking forward to more than death. Mike Slater dot Locals dot com. Transcript commercial free night before. more than death. Mike Slater dot Locals dot com. Transcript commercial free night before. Mike Slater dot Locals dot com.