Return Of Christ
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Updated
July 23, 2007
Robert
Shannon tells the story of the Waldensians, a small Protestant group greatly
persecuted in Europe in the seventeenth century. In 1686 they were exiled to
Switzerland where they remained until 1689. Then they crossed the mountains,
going 128 miles in 8 days over treacherous terrain. Village by village they
made their way back to the valleys of their homeland in France. They arrived
back in May 1694. Eventually the Duke of Savoy changed his mind and granted
them religious liberty and the right to remain in their valleys. They called
that May day in 1689 "The Glorious Return." Descendants on the Waldensians
live in Valdese, North Carolina. Every year on August 15 they celebrate "The
Glorious Return." But those who celebrate it were never persecuted in Europe.
They were never in exile in Switzerland, and never saw the valleys their ancestors
called home. Still they celebrate "The Glorious Return;" just as Jews
the return of their ancestors from exile though they themselves were never in
Babylon and never saw Jerusalem. We do the same thing in reverse when we come
to Communion. We commemorate the Lord's death "until He comes." We
celebrate an event that has not yet occurred and in which we ourselves may not
live long enough to participate.
_______________
J.
Michael Shannon is professor of preaching at Cincinnati Bible College in Cincinnati,
OH.