Tomorrow Will Be Bright Enough

Psalm 97

A visitor to London England was concerned about the dismal, rainy, and generally unpleasant weather.
Seeing the overcast conditions, he asked a native of London,
"What kind of weather can we expect today?"
Without even glancing toward the window, the Londoner replied, "Oh, it's going to be bright enough!"

The visitor was about to ask, "And how bright is bright enough?"
when he realized that what he had just heard was a declaration of faith of this individual.
It was not a forecast for one particular day.
It was an affirmation for every day.
"It's going to be bright enough."

This is a central affirmation of our Christian faith.
It is the reasonable confidence of a believer in God who Jesus made known to us as the loving,
all-powerful Ruler of the universe.
Jesus also taught us that God is our loving, heavenly Father.

This is a reasonable confidence because it is restrained.
The Londoner did not predict it would be bright -- but that it would be "bright enough."
As the Christian examines probabilities in planetary weather, he also is restrained.
Few are left to retain the ecstatic hopes which ones were prevalent in our Western world.
To believe that our human society is full of sweetness and light, and that its progress is inevitably
upward and onward, is to have your head in the sand.

Life has its fogs.

Christian realism has never denied that stormy weather overtakes the inhabitants of God's earth.
Someone once observed that "Anyone who looks for trouble just hasn't been paying attention."
Trouble is here in surplus quantities.
Disease strikes; accidents shatter or destroy; friends vanish or, worse, betray;
dreams of a secure, healthy future crash into fragments -- in one situation after another.

The verdict of a homespun philosopher seems accurate:
"The good ain't able, and the able ain't good."

Notwithstanding a in encouraging increase in religious interest, there are countries in which
the Christian Church has been driven underground.
Our world is rapidly becoming pagan.
Life is a mixture of heartaches and happiness.

Yet this remains the astonishing affirmation of Christian faith: "Tomorrow will be bright enough!"
It will be bright enough to encourage our spirits today.
It will be bright enough to go about today's task believing in the God of the ages and that He makes
"all things work together for good to them that love him." (Romans 8:28)
Is this verse just a streamlined or contemporary version of the old secular optimism?

Do we believe that tomorrow will be fair because of man's astonishing resourcefulness,
his technological skill, his innate capacity to defeat adversaries?
Do we still cling to the faith that despite disconcerting failures in the machinery from time to time,
the old escalator marked, "Progress," is taking us to ever higher floors of achievement
in human relations?
The answer is a blunt, "No!"

Christian confidence in a bright tomorrow is not a secular hope wearing Sunday-go-to-meeting clothes.
All human effort on behalf of a better life for human beings is not doomed to failure.
It is necessary to reject partial views.
After all, weather forecasters base their predictions on more than one day's storms.
Air travelers know how a few hours flight can change the picture.
You can leave when the skies are filled with clouds and it is storming.
You can arrive at your destination and enjoy the sunshine.

Out of our own experiences we must find enough light to affirm that there will be
at least bright intervals in the darkness ahead.

We must not focus on fragments.
We must not subtract from the sights and sounds only that which is fearsome and terrifying.
Children do this.
Sometimes in the night, children hear only the strange sounds and noises, and forget
the familiar furniture and the caring family nearby.

Perhaps, this was why this little poem was composed:
"From ghoulies and ghosties and things that go bump in the night, Good Lord deliver us!"
But even so, focusing on the total picture is insufficient to support the forecast,
"It will be bright enough tomorrow."

What is the foundation of such confidence?
In our own living, how can we be sure of this?
The basic reason for our forecast is found in this claim of the psalmist:
"The Lord reigneth; let the earth rejoice." (Psalm 97:1)

What does this mean in our language of today?
It means this -- enthroned in power, active in history, and therefore living and operating in our world is God.
This is the conviction that is strong as steel, solid as stone, and stirring as a battle-cry.
God is not an absentee ruler.
Therefore, with God what shall be shall be!
We have the foundation of our confidence in the triumph of the church.
If we, as church leaders and church members, submit to discouragement, act jittery and uncertain
about the future, it is usually because our idea of God is insufficient.

J. B. Phillips asked the question, "Is your God too small?"
A great religion demands a great God for its starting point.
A complex and difficult problem requires a great God to provide light in which to find the solution.
Our Christian faith takes the whole world for its field of service.
We preach a world-wide redemption.
We assert that the church must be all-inclusive with a cure and a fellowship reaching to the last
and to the least.

Only a tremendous conception of God can accomplish this enterprise.
Only a mighty conception of God can make this faith credible.
If we have doubts, timidities, hesitantancies about the future, it may well be due to our inadequate picture of God.
We have made Him too much like ourselves.
Our God is a great God who is above all and is all-powerful.
That is our confidence!
No magnified, glorified man is equal to the transformation of which our gospel speaks.
This vision of the divine supremacy and the direction of events rescues us from a delusion common
to activists such as ourselves; that the triumph of the church depends on us.

It is our mighty God who said: "Ask of me, and I will give thee the heathen for thine inheritance,
and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession
." (Psalm 2: 8)
God said that!
Our Almighty God said that, and He will do it!

When you read the closing verses of Mark's Gospel, you read this wonderful antithesis:
"Then... the Lord... was received up into heaven, and sat down on the right hand of God.
And they went... everywhere
."
The Lord is on His throne!
The Lord is reigning in power!
The servants are out in the field, and Christ is living within.
This vision of the Almighty God produces the same effect in every age.

"Do you expect to convert China?" Asked the captain of the ship on which Robert Morrison sailed.
"No," replied the indomitable missionary, going out alone to claim China for Christ,
"But I expect God will."

The Lord reigneth; let His church rejoice.
The days ahead maybe loaded with difficulties.
Greater is He that is with us than all that are against us.
He will not fail nor be discouraged.
He will bring forth justice and victory.

Let this truth of faith pervade your private life.
To realize that God, who is holy, loving and righteous is supreme, can dissipate the fog of doubt
and uncertainty.
To realize that God reigns is the antidote to fretfulness and agitation that each soul needs.

God compasses our path and our going out and coming in.
He is acquainted with all our ways.
He orders our steps.
Knowing this should make us glad and encourage.
How can we be listless, inactive, and resigned to conditions as they are,
when we know this great truth.

The Lord reigneth! "Tomorrow will be bright enough!"
"The Lord reigneth; let the earth rejoice."

Sermon by Dr. Harold L. White

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