The most
powerful thing I have ever read in fiction, with no equals, is the final scene
of A Tale of Two Cities. When the man who takes the place of
another man is being led to the gallows, he quotes to himself the words of
Jesus,
"I am the Resurrection and the Life, saith the Lord,
he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall live: and whosoever
liveth and believeth in me shall never die."
"They said of him, about the city that night, that
it was the peacefullest man's face ever beheld there. Many added that he looked
sublime and prophetic."
The last line
of the book says this, "it is a far, far better rest that I go to than I
have ever known." Man that hit me when I first read it. What a story, based
on the greatest true story ever told.
Charles
Dickens’s character, Sydney Carton, embodies a truth that transcends fiction.
He was a man who lived a wasted, cynical life, yet in his final act of ultimate
sacrifice—dying in the place of a better man, Charles Darnay—he found profound
purpose and a peace that defied human understanding. His story is a powerful
allegory for the gospel itself. Just as Carton willingly mounted the scaffold to
take the place of another man, so too did Jesus Christ, the sinless Son of God,
take the place of sinners who justly deserved condemnation. Carton’s peaceful
countenance is a glimpse of the supernatural peace that comes from knowing
one’s destiny is secure, not in one’s own goodness, but in a righteous
substitute. He knew Jesus held his eternal fate in his hands.
Dicken’s
story points to an eternal reality. The world offers many paths to find
meaning: success, wealth, relationships, or legacy. Yet all of these are
temporary, crumbling in the face of our one universal certainty: death. You
don't know the day or the hour when your life will end. You can be strong,
young and healthy, and an evil act, an accident, or illness can take your life
in a moment. The bell will toll for thee eventually, you don’t know when your
time will come. And it could come in the most unlikely moment. A moment when
you thought you were at the top of your game, surrounded by those who support
you, and in a moment it can be gone.
But the
message of the cross declares this is not the end. The hope of the Christian is
not merely a moral code or a positive philosophy; it is the audacious claim
that death has been defeated. The empty tomb of Jesus Christ is the historical
proof that His sacrifice was accepted, and His promise of resurrection is
secure. But if your life is hidden in Christ, you will not truly die. Physical
death becomes not a period at the end of a sentence, but a passage, a doorway.
To be "hidden in Christ" means to be so united with Him by faith that
God sees His righteousness when He looks at you. Your sins are paid for, your
guilt is removed, and your eternal life is guaranteed. You will not avoid the
grave, unless Jesus returns first, but you will pass through it into the
presence of God, exchanging a broken world for a glorious, redeemed eternity.
This is why
the words Carton recalled are so powerful. Jesus didn’t say, “I am a good
example” or “I am a wise teacher.” He said, “I am the Resurrection and the
Life.” He is the source of life itself, both now and forever. The “far, far
better rest” is the promise of a reality without sin, sorrow, or pain—a
restoration of all that was lost.
This hope is
offered to you as a free gift of grace, received through faith alone. It
requires humility to admit your need and to turn from trusting in yourself,
that is called repentance. Don't let another moment pass before your turn from
your sins, trust in Jesus and hope in him for eternal life. The story of two
fates—one of condemnation, one of salvation—is the ultimate choice every person
must make. Choose life and choose it today. Trust in Jesus now. I implore.
Charlie knew that our only true hope was to trust in Jesus. Let today’s
tragedy be a reminder that life is fragile, but your eternity can be secure in
Christ.
“Jesus
defeated death so that you can live.” Never a truer word has been spoken. But
it will only apply to those who trust in Jesus.
Rest in peace
Charlie Kirk.

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