The older I become, the more aware I am of how quickly life moves. Years that once seemed long now pass in what feels like moments. Seasons come and go, children grow up, and memories quietly accumulate behind us. What once felt like the beginning of life slowly becomes a collection of stories we look back on.
Sometimes when I reflect on those passing years, I’m reminded of the song “Remember When.” The song walks through the seasons of life—young love, building a family, raising children, and eventually looking back across the decades. One moment life is just beginning, and before you know it, you find yourself remembering when the kids were little, remembering when the house was full of noise and laughter, remembering when the future seemed so far away. Life quietly fills with those “remember when” moments, reminding us how quickly time moves.
Those reflections have a way of turning our hearts toward deeper questions. If life moves this quickly, what truly lasts? What lies beyond the years we spend here?
This morning my thoughts were drawn to what awaits those who know Jesus Christ as their personal Savior. For the believer, our future is not defined by the uncertainty of this world. While everything around us seems to shake, the promises of God remain unshaken. The older I become, the more I realize that death is not the end of the story for those who belong to Christ. It is the doorway into the life God has prepared for us from the beginning.
Paul reminds us of this incredible promise in 1 Corinthians 15:42–44:
“It is the same way with the resurrection of the dead. Our earthly bodies are planted in the ground when we die, but they will be raised to live forever. Our bodies are buried in brokenness, but they will be raised in glory. They are buried in weakness, but they will be raised in strength. They are buried as natural human bodies, but they will be raised as spiritual bodies. For just as there are natural bodies, there are also spiritual bodies.”
When I read Paul’s words, I’m reminded of the transformation of a caterpillar. For a time it crawls along the ground, limited to the world beneath it. Then one day it forms a cocoon and disappears from sight. To anyone watching, it almost seems as if its life has come to an end, hidden away and motionless. Yet inside that quiet cocoon something remarkable is taking place. The old form is being changed into something entirely new. In time the cocoon opens, and what emerges is no longer a creature bound to the ground but a butterfly with wings. What once crawled now rises into the air, able to travel to places it could never go before.
In many ways, Paul is describing something far greater for those who belong to Christ. Every human life eventually reaches the moment when this earthly body gives way to death. Whether buried, scattered, or returned to dust in some other way, our bodies do not escape that reality. Yet the promise of God is not limited by the way our bodies leave this world. The same power that raised Christ from the grave will one day raise all who belong to Him to a new and eternal life.
That promise has become more meaningful to me as the years pass. The body we live in now carries the marks of this fallen world. It knows sickness, fatigue, temptation, and the slow wearing down that comes with time. But Scripture reminds us that what we experience now is not the end of our story.
When I watch the turmoil in the world today—nations threatening one another, families divided, cultures losing their moral compass, and people searching desperately for peace—I am reminded that this world was never meant to be our final home. Creation itself seems to be longing for restoration. The chaos we see around us only points to how deeply this world needs redemption.
For those who belong to Christ, that redemption is not a distant hope. It is a certainty. The day is coming when the struggles that define this life will be gone forever. There will be no more sickness and no more death. There will be no more shame from sin and no more battle with temptation. The limitations that bind us to time and space will disappear, replaced by a life that will never fade, never weaken, and never end.
Sometimes I imagine that one day this entire life will simply become another “remember when.” Remember when we walked by faith. Remember when we struggled with weakness. Remember when we lived in a world filled with sorrow and uncertainty. Those memories will fade in the presence of something far greater—the life God has prepared for those who love Him.
The older I become, the more this truth settles deeply into my heart. This life, with all its beauty and all its struggles, is only the beginning of the story God is writing. The aches we feel, the losses we endure, and the brokenness we see around us are not the final chapter. One day, through the power of Christ, what is mortal will give way to what is eternal.
And on that day, those who belong to Him will stand in a life untouched by death, untouched by sin, and filled forever with the glory of the One who saved us.