What's Your Final Destination?
Do you have a special place on earth that you call your own? I’m more a sojourner in spirit. I am planning on staying at one place as long as God is not specifically calling us elsewhere. I think, until I get to heaven, I will always be eager to move on. How about you?
"What is your final destination?" is a question that asks where you are going or flying to. However, the phrase can also refer to the final judgment of the soul after death. If you are in Christ, your works shall be judged by Jesus, but if you are not, your works shall be judged by God. The phrase can also be used to encourage people to come to the Lord Jesus and be saved.
The final destination of the devil and his evil angels is the lake of fire and brimstone, according to Revelation 20:1-10. Heaven is reserved for those who follow Jesus, and is the final destination of the faithful. Scripture says that when believers die in Jesus Christ they go to be with the Lord in a place called heaven.
Over 118 million peoples will be traveling this year, and "the destination" is always in mind, whether it's the a nearby city or a distant destination. Yet most of them are traveling through life without giving serious thought to where they're headed when their "journey" on earth is over.
When you travel far enough you most likely exchange airplanes many times. Then you are bound to hear this question some time along the way: “What’s your final destination?” When you live long enough and grow old enough, you sooner or later start wondering what will happen to you after you die. What’s your final destination, you ask? It is such an important question. Are you just going where everyone else is going? Are you taking the matter into your own hands? You know, the Bible tells us about our choices: hell and heaven. A final resting place does matter.
Where are you headed?
Wherever it is and however you travel—by plane, train, bus or car—you’re one of 118 million adults who will be traveling this year.
We all travel for various reasons, but all those trips have one thing in common—a final destination chosen by the traveler. Given the expense of gasoline and maintaining a car, it doesn’t make sense to drive around aimlessly without a place to go. And with all the hassles of public transportation—high ticket prices, lost luggage, security checks, delays and missed connections—it would be unthinkable to randomly select an arrival city. Whether traveling for business or pleasure, it is the destination that is important.
Heaven is a holy place and that’s why we can’t get there on our own. We can only get there by grace through faith in Jesus. We are not holy without Jesus. But because Jesus died for us and our sins, we can be forgiven and made whole and holy. We just need to ask. When we have experienced this new birth in Christ, we are not of the world anymore. This world – not even our own special place – is not our final destination. Heaven is.
Yet, incredibly, millions of people are traveling without any thought about their final destination. They are traveling through life, everyone’s most important journey… from birth to the grave. Every individual life journey is different, but all of us share the same end—death. But is death our final destination? Some think so. But the Bible declares that there is life after death. In fact, God’s Word teaches us that, after death, everyone will arrive at one of two destinations. One of these destinations is desirable and one is not.
Jesus once spoke of two men, a beggar and a rich man, who arrived at their final destinations. After death, the beggar was carried to a better place where Abraham was, but the rich man died and found himself in a place of suffering. “The poor man died and was carried by the angels to Abraham’s side. The rich man also died and was buried, and in Hades, being in torment, he lifted up his eyes and saw Abraham far off…” (Luke 16:22-23).
How tragic it is that so many, like the rich man, live their lives without giving any thought to their final destination.
How does a person get a ticket for transport to heaven? Obtaining a ticket is a matter of knowing the right person. Jesus said, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6). A personal relationship with Jesus is required; only he can guarantee our final destination.
Because of our sin, we cannot purchase a ticket to heaven. As a result of disobedience—what the Bible calls sin—all human beings are under the sentence of death. Mankind’s death sentence includes both physical death and eternal punishment. “For the wages of sin is death” (Romans 6:23). We cannot enter on our own merits. We come up short of God’s “security clearance” because “all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23). No amount of goodness or good works can approach the sinless perfection required for entry into heaven.
So Jesus Christ became our substitute. Being God, Jesus lived a sinless life. And having become a man, he was qualified to be our substitute in death, bearing the penalty of our sins. “While we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8). When he died, he paid the price of our sins and purchased our ticket to heaven.
Therefore, our final destination is dependent on knowing him. Only he can supply us with a valid ticket. Although Jesus paid the price of our ticket, it is necessary for God to credit what he did to our account.
The Bible tells us that faith is required on our part for this transaction to take place. “For by grace you have been saved through faith…” (Ephesians 2:8). This is how we obtain our ticket to heaven. By his death for us on the cross and resurrection from the dead, Jesus made it possible for us to choose our final destination. It is faith that delivers us from a destination of suffering and secures our final destination in heaven.
The kind of faith that is required means more than simply agreeing that Jesus died in our place. It involves turning from anything else you might be clinging to in hopes of getting a ticket to heaven.
It’s believing we can have a reservation to heaven only through what Jesus has already done to make it possible. It is this personal dependence upon the Lord Jesus that secures a reservation for us and guarantees our final destination.
Would you like to enter into such a relationship with Jesus right now? It is a personal step of faith, but the following prayer may help you put your decision into words.
Dear Lord Jesus, I have sinned against you and I am in need of a relationship with you that will result in forgiveness and secure my final destination with you in heaven. Since you died for me and rose again, I know you will accept me if I truly believe in you and what you did for me. I invite you into my life now to save me from my sins, and to help me live in a way that pleases you.
Your Final Destination – 10 out of 10 people die! Where will your final destination be? Is your eternal destination Heaven or Hell? (Only 2 places we will go)
So, what’s your final destination?
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