Tag Archives: second coming

Stagehands for the Savior | Bible Gleanings | August 9-10, 2025

Every personโ€™s pupils were practically glued to the pandemonium among the pirates and pillagers. Buccaneers swung from the crowโ€™s nest to the main deck, battling raiders and robbers with their blood-drawing blades. โ€œAvast ye! Give no quarter to these scurvy dogs!โ€ yelled the captain. After a brief brawl, the invaders were repelled and the ruckus settled down. And thatโ€™s when I saw it: a man stepping out of the shadows to mop the deck.

While watching the Pirates Voyage Dinner & Show in Panama City, Florida, I couldnโ€™t help but notice the stagehands who quietly emerged from behind the scenes to keep the stage safe and prepare for the next act. They unhooked ropes, removed and repositioned props, and checked on the actors to ensure everything was running smoothly. They werenโ€™t the center of attentionโ€”their job was to guarantee that the stage was set for the main actors who were. They werenโ€™t the stars of the show and received no applause. They had one mission: to ensure the spotlight shined on the real stars. 

And this is precisely what Christians are called to do for Christ. Believers are stagehands for the Savior. Jesus is highly exalted โ€œfar above all rule and authority and power and dominion, and above every name that is namedโ€ (Eph. 1:21a), and our job as believers is to keep it that way in our hearts and lives. The mission statement of our lives ought to be that of John the Baptizer: โ€œHe must increase, but I must decreaseโ€ (John 3:30). As the reformer John Calvin once said, this world is a โ€œtheater for Godโ€™s glory,โ€ and our divine duty is to ensure that the spotlight shines on the real Hero: Jesus.ย 

This means fighting the temptation to โ€œthink of [ourselves] more highly than [we] ought to thinkโ€ (Rom. 12:3). We must see ourselves as โ€œunworthy servantsโ€ (Luke 17:10) whose principal assignment is to shine the light of our good works upon Him (Matt. 5:16). Everything we do should draw peopleโ€™s attention to Christ, so โ€œthat the name of our Lord Jesus Christ may be glorifiedโ€ (2 Thess. 1:12a). Our soulโ€™s greatest passion should be that of Psalm 115:1, where the psalmist prayed, โ€œNot to us, O LORD, not to us, but to your name give glory, for the sake of your steadfast love and your faithfulness!โ€

One day, Jesus will return to take center stage and every eye will see Him (Rev. 1:7). Everyone in the universe will โ€œtake a bowโ€ not to receive glory, but to give glory to the Morning Star (Phil. 2:10-11; Rev. 22:16). And those who hogged the spotlight will be humbled and eternally regretful that they did not make Jesus the center of their lives (Luke 14:11). But, saints who served as stagehands will be eternally glad they did not steal the spotlight (Rev. 4:10-11). Are you a stagehand for the Savior?


Brandon is the pastor of Bandana Baptist Church in Bandana, Kentucky, where he lives with his wife, Dakota, and their three dogs, Susie, Aries, and Dot. Brandon and Dakota are also foster parents through Sunrise Children’s Services of Kentucky. Brandon is also a published author and a religious columnist for the Advance Yeoman newspaper in Ballard County, Kentucky. He is also a devotional contributor for Kentucky Today, a news publication of the Kentucky Baptist Convention. His columns are also featured in the Times-Argus newspaper of Central City, Kentucky, West Kentucky News of western Kentucky, and the online blog, Reforming the Heart.

We Are Going Home | Bible Gleanings | October 19-20, 2024

They were hopelessly and helplessly stranded on the beaches of northern France with no way home. Over 300,000 Allied troops were geographically incarcerated on the French seaport of Dunkirk, and the German army was closing in. Knowing that they were facing annihilation, the British government launched Operation Dynamo during those early days of WWII, with the goal of transporting the troops to safety across the English Channel. A fortified fleet of over 800 naval vessels began shipping soldiers home on May 26 of 1940, and the magnitude and multifariousness of the evacuation inspired Winston Churchill to call it โ€œa miracle of deliverance.โ€ The soldiers knew a homegoing was coming soon, and they held out hope until help arrived.

The same is true for all saint-soldiers who serve the Savior. When Jesus returns, all believers will be relieved of and rescued from their warring against the flesh, the world, and the devil. A heavenly homegoing is hastening for Godโ€™s holy nation because the return of the King of kings and Lord of lords draws nearer with every passing day. The Lordโ€™s people will not be trapped in their sinful bodies interminably, nor will they battle the worldโ€™s wickedness and Satanโ€™s wiles indefinitely. And Christ will not send boats after His saintsโ€”rather, He will personally deliver them, riding on a white horse to rescue them with His irresistible might (Rev. 19:11-16).

God gives His beleaguered and battle-hardened people such blessed assurance in Philippians 3:20-21, where Paul wrote, โ€œBut our citizenship is in heaven, and from it we await a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, who will transform our lowly body to be like his glorious body, by the power that enables him even to subject all things to himself.โ€ One glorious day, Jesus will raise and resurrect His redeemed people, and render ruin, retribution, and reckoning unto the damned, the devil, and even deathโ€”and it will be the mightiest miracle of deliverance ever. The great evacuation will look something like this:

โ€œFor the Lord himself will descend from heaven with a cry of command, with the voice of an archangel, and with the sound of the trumpet of God. And the dead in Christ will rise first. Then we who are alive, who are left, will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and so we will always be with the Lordโ€ (1 Thess. 4:16-17).

Until then, all believers must hold out hope that the Helper will arrive in due time. As Christians, we are โ€œwaiting for our blessed hope, the appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior Jesus Christโ€ (Titus 2:13). And let us occupy our waiting by praying the next-to-last words in the Scripture, โ€œEven so, come, Lord Jesusโ€ (Rev. 22:20b, KJV).

Brandon is the pastor of Bandana Baptist Church in Bandana, Kentucky, where he lives with his wife, Dakota, and their three dogs, Susie, Aries, and Dot. Brandon and Dakota are also foster parents through Sunrise Children’s Services of Kentucky. Brandon is also a published author and a religious columnist for the Advance Yeoman newspaper in Ballard County, Kentucky. He is also a devotional contributor for Kentucky Today, a news publication of the Kentucky Baptist Convention. His columns are also featured in the Times-Argus newspaper of Central City, Kentucky, West Kentucky News of western Kentucky, and the online blog, Reforming the Heart.

Pick up a copy of Brandon’s latest book, Fundamentals for the Faithful, which explains the importance of all the basics which every believer should know: