Pastor Tim Patoka 3 Sunday Of End Time: Saints Triumphant November 18, 2018 God’s Saints Are Triumphant 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18 rd
1) Over The End Of Death 2) Together For All Time We are currently in the season of the church year called End Time where each Sunday as a specific name and focus. It’s a short season, only 4 weeks long, and if you’re not careful it can pass you by as quickly as an Tucsonan winter. We began this End Time season two weeks ago with the Reformation as we looked at the comfort that God’s Word alone has. Last week we had Last Judgment as we considered the significance of Christ’s real 2nd coming. This Sunday we have Saints Triumphant as we talk about God’s saints and their promised triumph. But if I were to ask you, “What makes a person God’s saint?” how would you answer? Would you say that saints are people who are larger than life whose lives are impossible to replicate? Do you think of statues or icons of departed Christians who have an in with God? That’s how most people would define what makes a person a saint, that they are larger than life. But would it surprise you that the Bible has a different definition for saint? That a saint is simply any person who has been made holy? Because that’s what makes a person a saint in the biblical sense. A saint is a Christian who has been made holy before God by the Holy Spirit. Christians like you and me. This morning as we talk about God’s saints, we are talking about Christians, God’s children, who today have been made holy. But as we’ll also see as we dig into our verses from 1 Thessalonians chapter 4, God’s saints are also triumphant. For they will triumph over the end that is death as surely as Christ triumphed over death itself. And they will celebrate their triumph with every other saint for all time. 1) Over The End Of Death The Apostle Paul visited the city of Thessalonica during one of his missionary journeys and did what he did at almost every place he went. He shared God’s good news of our Savior with as many people as possible until he had to leave town (Acts 17:1-9). But there were some teachings that Paul wasn’t able to address before he had to leave the Thessalonians – specifically what would happen to believers who passed away before the Last Day. It seems from our verses that the Thessalonian Christians were hopelessly grieving at the death of their loved ones thinking that death was the end. That was the prevailing thought of their 1