“Can you believe it’s been 250
years since this country was founded?”
The lady sitting across from me asked me. “I remember 1976 when it was the 200th
year anniversary and that seems like yesterday.
I have a 50 cent piece from that year and I want you to have it.”
“Thanks,” I said, taking the
half dollar she offered me. It had John
F. Kennedy’s image engraved on one side along with the dates 1776-1976. “250 years does seem like a long time, doesn’t
it?”
“Yes,” she paused
thinking. “I suppose I won’t be here for
the next 50 year anniversary. That’ll be
in 2076 and I’ll have long been in the ground by that time.”
“I don’t suppose I’ll be around
either,” I said. “I don’t imagine we’ll
be celebrating anniversaries like that in heaven – although maybe they have
fireworks there.”
It has been 250 years since a
bunch of men in Philadelphia signed a piece of paper that listed a bunch of
complaints against King George III (never mind that it was really the British
parliament that was the culprit). Of
course, the United States’ Constitution wasn’t ratified until over a decade
later in 1789.
I know that many pin their
hopes on the success of the United States, seeing in it the “Hope of the Free
World.” Scripture makes it clear that
there is a different future for the world.
King Nebuchadnezzar had a dream
and in his dream, he saw an amazing statue with parts of made of various metals. As Daniel eventually explained to him, each
part of the statue represented a different earthly empire. Some of those empires would last for a few
decades, others for hundreds of years, but all would eventually fall,
superseded by a different people group.
Then, at the end of his dream, “Thou
sawest till that a stone was cut out without hands, which smote the image upon
his feet that were of iron and clay, and brake them to pieces. Then
was the iron, the clay, the brass, the silver, and the gold, broken to pieces
together, and became like the chaff of the summer threshing floors; and the
wind carried them away, that no place was found for them: and the stone that
smote the image became a great mountain, and filled the whole earth.” (Daniel
2:34,35)
The stone is the kingdom of
God, as represented by the church. It is
a kingdom that knows no boundaries and has spread throughout the world –
regardless of governments and languages.
While kingdoms rise and fall, its goal remains constant, to bring the
good news of Jesus’ victory over sin and death people who live in darkness.
Unlike earthly kingdoms, this
one will know no end. While no one has
made pieces of money to celebrate its anniversaries or set off fireworks for
it, it truly is the hope of the world – the only kingdom that brings peace and
light into a world full to the brim with kingdoms of darkness.












