Daily Devotional For December 4, 2025
[God] will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and there will be no more death, neither will there be any more sorrow or crying or any more pain, because the former things have gone away. Rev 21:4.
“I love you, Dad.”
Those were the last words that Howard had heard his daughter say. What had prompted her to make the phone call that ended with those words? Did she know that the bus she was going to ride on would explode? Wasn’t he supposed to die before his child did? Howard felt alone in his grief. Paul had promised that God wouldn’t lay on us burdens greater than we could bear (1 Cor 10:13), but Howard wasn’t so sure anymore. The heaviness in his chest left him breathless at times.
He sought comfort in the words of Jesus, “Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.” Matt 5:4, NIV. But the promise did not seem to be fulfilled in Howard’s experience. He read the text, but he didn’t feel comforted. He was still wrenched with a sense of loss.
I wonder what Mary thought when she saw her son on the cross, he pondered, It’s interesting that the Bible does not record any emotional outburst from her. She never cried out, “What are you doing to my son?” Did she know that He was supposed to die? Did she know it was part of some cosmic plan? Why didn’t she run over and offer to take His place?
When Spring came Howard felt a little better. When the roses began to bloom he remembered happy times with his daughter planting and enjoying roses. But then the rains came and he felt gloomy again. “I still relive that tragedy-laden phone call as if it was yesterday, ” he said, “Lord, I still don’t understand Your plan!”
One day he came across Rev 21:4: “He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and there will be no more death, neither will there be any more sorrow or crying or any more pain, because the former things have gone away.” These were words from the future, words he was longing to hear. Howard came to realize that these words explained Matt 5:4 as well. Those who mourn are not always comforted in this life. The future tense is a promise that doesn’t always apply to the here and now.
But both texts are clear in this. Howard will see his daughter again. Because he believes in eternal life, Howard has gradually found comfort in Revelation’s vision of hope. Even though his daughter lies in a grave, he knows that Jesus will return again. And when He does, God will wipe every tear away and the mourners will be comforted forever.1
Lord, I have often been frustrated by prayers that went unanswered, tragedies that were not prevented, loved ones I have lost. Help me trust Your future promise.
1 Based on Tamara Michalenko Terry, “Grief Observed,” Adventist Review, February 19, 2004, 28-29.