WTBS - What the Bible Says
What The Bible Says. Fortnightly bible study. Episode 103 - 19/06/26 Led by Tim Clark What happens when a Christian dies? In this third part of our study on life after death, we continue exploring the hope given to believers through the words of Jesus, the teaching of Paul, and the wider witness of Scripture. Beginning with the thief on the cross, we consider Jesus’ promise: “Today you will be with Me in Paradise.” This remarkable moment shows us that salvation is not earned by religious achievement, knowledge, or lifelong works, but received by faith in Christ alone. The dying thief had no time to build a religious reputation, yet he recognised Jesus, confessed his own guilt, and looked to the King for mercy. We also look at the nature of Christian hope. Biblical hope is not wishful thinking, like hoping for good weather or hoping a team will win. It is assurance, expectation, and certainty because it rests on the promise of God. The Christian can face death knowing that Christ has prepared a place for His people and that to be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord. This study also considers the judgment seat of Christ and the difference between being judged for salvation and having our works tested. Salvation rests entirely on the finished work of Jesus, yet Scripture teaches that believers’ lives, motives, and service will be examined. What is built on Christ will endure; what is merely self-centred or worldly will be burned away. We reflect on how the certainty of resurrection should shape the way we live now. If Christ has not been raised, Paul says our faith is useless — but Christ has indeed been raised from the dead. Because of that, death has lost its final victory, and the believer’s future is secure in Him. The discussion also touches on grief, funerals, the death of loved ones, and the difference between grieving with hope and grieving without hope. Christians do sorrow, but not as those who have no hope. The death of a believer is painful for those left behind, but it is not the end; it is a temporary separation until we are gathered together with the Lord. Finally, we consider the Lord’s Supper as both remembrance and anticipation. Each time believers share the bread and cup, we remember the death of Christ, but we also look forward to His return and to the day when all who belong to Him will share in His kingdom together. For the Christian, death is not the end of the story — because Jesus is risen, and those who are His will live with Him forever.
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