Cramming for Finals!

Wednesday, July 3, 2024

“Till I come, give attendance to reading, to exhortation, to doctrine” (1 Timothy 4:13 KJV).

One joke features an elderly Christian woman spending a great deal of time reading her Bible. Her young grandson’s friend asks him, “What is your grandmother doing so often with that book?” The grandson replies, “She is cramming for finals!” Although comical, it does prove a valid lesson—and fosters some ignorance too.

Students who procrastinate, such as putting off studying for an exam, will wait until the night before the test to do their most intensive examination of their textbook and class notes. This is especially true of college people who are busy working jobs, partying, and so on. In the above joke, grandma is assumed to be closer to being with her Lord in Heaven by virtue of her advanced aged, so she is getting better acquainted with her Bible before she soon meets Him.

However, in real life, people much, much, much, MUCH younger than grandma leave this world for Heaven or Hell. Perhaps it is a 50-year-old pastor’s wife dying after a long battle with cancer; a 45-year-old man suffering a sudden, massive, and fatal heart attack; a 20-year-old mother perishing in a violent automobile crash; a 20-year-old jogger killed by lightning; a 10-year-old departing by suicide; a two-year-old accidentally run over by a car; and a child just a few months old succumbing to a fatal congenital disease. Then again, people live well beyond grandma’s age too. The deceased might be 105 or 110 years old, or maybe even 120-plus!

Certainly, placing our faith exclusively in the Lord Jesus Christ as our personal Saviour guarantees us a place in Heaven: “Christ died for our sins, He was buried, and He rose again the third day” (1 Corinthians 15:3,4). Yet, once we get to Heaven (whenever it is), what will we say when the Lord Himself asks us why we believe this or that? Will we be familiar enough with the Bible to be able to point to a chapter and verse for support? After all, “My church told me…,” “Tradition says…,” and “My priest or preacher taught me…” will not be valid answers.

We should all “cram for finals” in the spiritual realm—because finals just might be much, much, much, MUCH closer than we think!