“I’m tired of living for eternity. When do I get to care about the life I’m living now?”
These words stuck with me long after a person I love had deconstructed and chosen to walk away from Jesus. It was one of many questions that demonstrated just how much we’d been sold a version of Christianity in which God did not really care about us, our lives, the circumstances that we are living in right now.
The underbelly of the question clung to the peripheries of my own faith: why was it, actually, that every decision we were asked to make had to be based “in eternity” and not in the present? And what did “based in eternity” even mean? Did my high school church leaders realise how distant and unobtainable eternity – and God, by extension – sounded?
IF everything we do is “rooted in eternity” and eternity is some vague, far off, inaccessible “someday,” then what are we to make of our present lives? And what of God’s goodness? What of His desire to care for the suffering and joy which we experience on a moment-by-moment basis?
Are we just slaves to an unknown future on the other side of death, asked to discard the lives we lead in exchange for the “someday” we’ve been promised?
My spirit never seemed satisfied by this conclusion, and yet, I couldn’t ignore the valid frustrations that my deconstructing friend expressed. This was, indeed, the narrative we’d both been sold. And the implications made for a faith (and a God) that was both complacent and cruel. If the Christian life is a constant chase of the rainbow’s end, a constant game of roulette in which we hope and pray that God will eventually drop the dangling carrot, then why bother?
In a word, the Future is, of all things, the thing least like eternity.
- C.S. Lewis, The Screwtape Letters, Letter 15
The first time that I read Screwtape, this letter went completely over my head. But by college, when I re-read it, the beauty of Chapter 15 literally changed my relationship with time, eternity, and God Himself.
The simple, profound, yet easily obscured truth of the matter is that when Christians think that the word “eternity” is another word for “the future,” they find themselves believing the exact fallacy which brings Satan such joy: namely, that our present lives are unimportant, not just to us but to God.
In fact, what Lewis draws our attention to in Letter 15 (my favourite letter in the entire book) is the dazzling revelation that eternity starts now.
“The Present is all lit up with eternal rays,” Screwtape laments.
Do you know what this means for us as God’s creation?
It means that the work and rest and worship that we carry out every single day is the work of eternity – not just for some future reward but for the very real present moment in which our God is deeply invested (because far from being indifferent or cruel, He is in fact the embodiment of kindness, tenderness, love, and mercy).
This mindset shift on eternity is quite literally an embodiment of the Lord’s prayer:
His Kingdom come (now).
His will be done (now).
On Earth (now) as it is in Heaven (now).
Suddenly, it seems, our theology can pivot. Our view of God’s concern for our lives can expand. Our ability to bask in the eternal rays of the present moment can increase. We can stop white-knuckling it. The exhausting, never-ending chase for the rainbow’s end can instead turn into a deep exhale – one that sounds an awful lot like “My yoke is easy and my burden is light.”1
I hope you’ll join us for this episode of Magic Like This, where I talk with current Oxford theology student, Blair Milo, about the revolutionary shifts that we can experience in our relationship with time, faith, hope, and God Himself as we discover what it truly means to live for eternity by way of being present. (Because perhaps the present moment is more deeply connected to the eternal future than our youth group pastors ever let on).
Ultimately, we’re reminded that in looking back to our past, living in our present, or staring ahead towards our future, the invitation was never to store up points for the next life. No, the real invitation is to root our hope in the truly eternal – because eternity is not a point on a timeline but rather a Person who knows us each by name.
All my love,
Listen to this week’s episode:
Book Club Discussion Questions:
Has eternity always felt like a “someday” thing, not a “right now” thing? Where did that idea first start for you?
How might the way you practice your faith shift if you started treating eternity as something you’re participating in right now?
Has your relationship with eternity influenced how you feel towards God? If so, how?
If eternity starts now, how might you treat today differently?
Links and episode mentions:
The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis
The Weight of Glory by C.S. Lewis
My essay on my Oxford interview: I tanked my Oxford interview, and this is what it taught me...
Surprised by Hope by Tom Wright
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Matthew 11:30
I enjoyed this read immensely! I had the paradigm shift several years ago of eternity being the within the present and that allowed so much freedom in living moment by moment for me. I love your connection to the Lords prayer. That is exactly it! I've got a podcast teaching coming out of the first triad of the Lords Prayer this Friday. Thankful to follow you Christina!
Greetings, again, Christina.
I had enjoyed Screwtape Letters but didn't really pay such close attention to the 15th one.
Nevertheless, God is good, and along the way of my spiritual growth I came to the sudden realization that our eternal lives began at our conception, created of love from our parents and God infusing our soul into the mix.
So our life here is like being at the eternal life concert listening to the pre-headliner warm up band. Of course we are active participants, not just spectators (a truth some Christians need to understand that better).
A fun consequence of this is my speculation and musings about our afterlife. Is it as simplistic as two destinations, Heaven filled with the untreated eternal light and Hell replete with unquenchable of fire?
Does St. Peter act like a cosmic Court Clerk and Jesus sit on a throne of Judgement like Ceaser turning a thumbs up or thumbs down for our particular judgement?
I recall Jesus saying in scripture (Jn 12;47-48) the He does not judge or condemn, but His words do. So as we accept and live by His words, so we will also in eternity.
It's almost like we are creating and shaping our own plaster mold here in this life that gets cast in bronze for eternity.
Sidebar: People often think if eternity as "timeless" and conclude wrongly that there is "no" time in eternity. But really it is "all time" wrapped into a single existence.
We usually assume that our eternal life will be an order of magnitude greater in "experience" than this life. I wonder if we get to experience all the good and bad effects of our life actions, the joys, willing sacrifices, praises of God, lies, etc in our eternal life at 1000x intensity, including the experiences of those we helped, loved, cheated. Lied to, etc. It might be like a multidimensional experience of our words and actions not only from our own perspective but the consequential experiences of others that resulted from them, excluding of course the sins forgiven us by Jesus when we offer them to him with a contrite heart.
So when I buy a flavored protine drink and piece of fruit for the homeless begger in the supermarket parking lot and give it to him out of kindness, perhaps his gratitude is cast into my eternal life experience as well into my bronze "room" among many rooms in Heaven.
Consequently all the experiences and damaging consequences of mean, thieving, abusive and narcissistic, etc., people get to live 1000 fold those experiences and consequential experiences of those they abused in their own particular hell. Which, of course, would be eliminated by the blood of Jesus should they offer those sins to Him with a contrite heart.
Perhaps.🤔
Sorry for such a loooong comment. Hope you enjoyed it a bit.
Peace and Blessings
✨️🕊🙏🎊✨️