The 30-Second Summary
Throughout this series, we have focused on the Stewardship of Sorrow; how to manage the “hardware” of your body, the “map” of your emotions, and the “trellis” of your community. But every good steward works toward a deadline. In the kingdom of God, that deadline is the return of the King and the final restoration of all things. While Integration helps us live with our scars today, the Horizon of Hope reminds us that those scars are temporary. This final article focuses on the ultimate theological anchor: the Resurrection. We don’t just survive the storm; we wait for the dawn of a day where sorrow and sighing will flee away forever.
The Long View from the River
In Van Buren, we are used to the rhythm of the seasons. We know that even the hardest winter or the highest flood is eventually answered by the spring. There is a “next season” that we can rely on because we’ve seen it happen year after year.
Grief, however, feels like a season that will never end. It feels like a permanent change in the climate of your heart. When you are deep in the Fog of Shock or the exhaustion of Tending the Vacant Spaces, the idea of “hope” can feel like a cruel fantasy.
But as stewards, we are called to take the long view. We aren’t just managing sorrow so we can be “functional” for a few more years. We are managing it in light of an eternal reality. We look past the immediate bend in the river to the horizon, where the Master has promised a total restoration.
The Resurrection Protocol
The hope of the Christian faith is not a vague idea that “things will get better.” It is a technical, historical, and future reality called the Resurrection. This truth changes our stewardship in three vital ways:
1. Sorrow is Not the Final Word
If this life is all there is, then your loss is an absolute tragedy with no resolution. But if Christ is risen, then death is a defeated enemy. The resurrection hope that anchors us is the very subject of The Lazarus Principle. Your grief is real and the scars are permanent for now, but they are not the end of the story. The Resurrection is the Master’s “overrule” on death.
2. Physical Restoration is Guaranteed
We have spent a lot of time discussing the Tired Body. One day, the weight of that fatigue will be lifted. The promise of the Resurrection is not just “soul rest,” but a physical restoration. The empty chairs at our tables in Van Buren will not be empty forever. We grieve, but we grieve with the knowledge that a reunion is part of the blueprint.
3. All Tears Will Be Redigested
The Bible says God will “wipe away every tear from their eyes” (Revelation 21:4). This isn’t just comfort; it’s the final act of stewardship. Every moment of Lament and every Sown Tear is gathered by the Master. In the final restoration, the pain that felt so meaningless will be fully integrated into the glory of God’s kingdom.
Waiting for the Morning
Stewardship in the valley of sorrow is essentially an act of “waiting well.” It’s about keeping your lamp lit while it is still dark. We practice the protocols; we anchoring in Sovereignty, we lean on the Trellis, and we tend our vacant spaces; not because we enjoy the dark, but because we know the morning is coming.
The “New Normal” we’ve been building isn’t a permanent home; it’s a staging area. We are people who live on the edge of a great promise.
Anchored in the Current River Valley
At Covenant Church, we are engineering a community ready to walk with you through the valley of sorrow. If you live in the Winona, Fremont, or Van Buren area, you don’t have to carry this load alone. We invite you to find stable ground with us.
Frequently Asked Questions
If I have ‘hope,’ why do I still feel so sad?
Hope is not an anesthetic. It doesn’t numb the pain of the present; it provides a reason to endure it. Jesus had the ultimate hope, yet He still wept at the grave of His friend. Stewardship means holding the weight of current sorrow in one hand and the promise of future joy in the other. Both are part of the real-talk version of faith.
How do I ‘look at the horizon’ when I can barely get through the next hour?
You don’t have to stare at the horizon all day. Sometimes, stewardship just looks like glancing at it for five seconds during your Daily Manifest and then focusing back on the task in front of you. The goal is to remind your hardware that this valley has an exit, even if you can’t see it from where you’re standing right now.
Is it wrong to want the Master to return sooner just so the pain stops?
No. That is the cry of every steward who understands the cost of the fall. “Even so, come, Lord Jesus” (Revelation 22:20) is a holy prayer. Use that longing as fuel for your current assignments. Let the desire for restoration drive you to be more purposeful in how you love and serve the people around you today.
Action Steps
- Read the Final Blueprint: Read Revelation 21:1-5. Don’t read it as poetry; read it as the Master’s technical specification for your future.
- Declare the Dawn: Find one person today who is struggling and share this simple truth: “The dark is real, but the morning is coming.” Sometimes, saying it out loud helps you believe it too.
- Perform the Final Daily Manifest: In your morning prayer, tell the Master: “Master, I am still in the valley, but my eyes are on the horizon. Thank You for the promise of the Resurrection. Help me to be a faithful steward of this day, managing my sorrow in the light of Your coming restoration. I am Yours, the scars and all, until the morning breaks.”
This is part of our Grief series, designed to walk you through every step of building a life aligned with God's design.