Departed saints have not yet got full blessing, but an immense step onward. The position of believers is not changed by death. They were waiting when down here -they are waiting still in the separate state of glory with the Lord. There never was such a thought in connection with the first Adam, as the soul being in one place arid the body in another. In the case of Stephen, we see how the Lord takes the soul at once to be with Himself; and all beloved departed ones, (if they die in Jesus,) are in the experience of that state. This meets the heart when sorrowing under bereavement, and tasting the bitterness which there is in the removal of such from the earth. It is a bitter thing, and death is humiliating, leaving all plans broken up, and all natural affection's rent in twain by it; but there is something deeper, which saints could not have experienced if they had not passed from earth into the presence of the Lord-and that is the feeling all the sympathy of the Lord, when death came and carried them off.
The Lord Himself shall come to take His people up to Himself. There is something inexpressibly sweet in the Lord Himself being thus brought forward; this Jesus who left the grave putting Himself in connection with the dead in Christ; the Lord' Himself, the Son of men, rising up from the place of glory in which He was before as Son of God. The glory is all infolded in Him now, but soon to be revealed. The Lord Himself shall descend with a shout; the Lord's own voice, a blessed thrilling heard by all His own, whether their bodies are in the'-dust or in life down here.
The dead in Christ shall rise first. I would not let the word " first " be erased for worlds, because it is just what I always observe in the Lord, that is, His love specially going forth where there is the expression of weakness. I want that special love, my heart wants it in my weakness; hut that is just what my Lord is, that is just where His love flows forth.
What a thought, that that Lord Jesus knows where to look for, and to gather up, every one of His own from the dust of death! Making the dust give up that which was laid in it, to make each one a body of glory, fashioned like unto His own, and to set each heart in His own presence and glory. The very highest point you can turn to, is the Son of man in the glory of the Father. Turn from that to the other extreme point, this Son of man rising up and coming down from that height, down to the dust, where Satan has been allowed to separate the component parts of the bodies of those that sleep in Him; each one of whom is to stand up as a witness of the truth that He is the Resurrection and the Life; each one starting up from the dust of death at the first word from Him, the first-born from the dead, the first-born of many brethren, and so shall we be ever with the Lord; that to my soul is so unutterably sweet, so divinely and perfectly gracious. What if God had made His Son head over everything, if He had not formed the hearts of His people for that Lord-Himself! If He had once thrown the gates of Heaven open, and all that is in there would not be the volumes to my soul which I find in this word, " Forever with the Lord."
The thought that I have to meet the Lord Himself to be forever with Him, touches the very quick of my heart. Ah! does that Lord who has loved- me with so patient a love, and kept me with so holy a care, from the time He first gave me life, does lie say, "You shall meet me?" And more than that, that He is coming down to meet me in the air? These eyes of mine shall see Him, (the one who loved and gave Himself for me, putting forth this last expression of His love for those whom His Father gave Him, before the foundation of the world,) and this no transient meeting, but caught up to dwell forever with Him.
What did the dying thief know about Paradise? but he did know it was to be with Him on whom He had leaned his soul for eternity. I don't care where I am if with Him; everything is in that "with Rim;" and it is just what we get in the intermediate state; absent from the body and present with the Lord. If I left the body, it would be to be with Him who is the teeming fountain of all the blessings now flowing down to my soul. If in the new Jerusalem, it would be a poor place without Him, what without Him would be all the brightness of heavenly glory? To me there is only this one thing-I shall be forever with Him.
G. V. W.