Books of Remembrance
By Marcia Lee Laycock
It sounds like a gunshot. The report, echoing back from
the marble walls, is the sound of a single soldier coming to attention. The
sound comes from the sole of his boot as it strikes the floor in the Memorial Chamber on the second level of the Peace Tower on the Parliament Hill in
Ottawa Canada.
The soldier salutes, bows, stands in silence for a moment
and then opens a glass case in front of him. Carefully he reaches in and
turns the page of a large book. Then he closes the case and moves on. There
are six cases, each containing a large book. The soldier comes to attention,
salutes and bows at each one. This process is repeated every day at eleven
o’clock. The six books contain the names of the thousands of men and women,
Canadians, who have died at war.
It took several artists many years to create the books,
which are decorated with heraldic illumination and calligraphy. The paper and
binding used were specially made. The steps and stand on which they rest are
made of marble imported from the quarries of Flanders Fields. They are
imbedded with brass plates hand-crafted from the shell casings retrieved from
battlefields and bearing the names of the major battles in which Canadians
took part. All the symbolism and ceremony surrounding the Six Books of
Remembrance is meant to honour those men and women, some long dead, for their
sacrifice and acts of valour.
But there are more than six Books of Remembrance. Revelation
20:11-15 tells us there are books in heaven, too. The exiled Apostle John
described them as he saw them in his vision. He wrote: “And I saw the dead,
great and small, standing before the throne and books were opened. Another
book was opened which is the book of life. The dead were judged according to
what they had done as recorded in the books. (v.12) .... If anyone’s name was
not found written in the book of life, he was thrown into the lake of fire.”
(v.15)
There will no doubt also be great ceremony, great honour,
but also great disgrace associated with the books of remembrance in heaven.
That final judgement will herald a new beginning for all of God’s creation.
For some, those whose names are written in the book of life, it will be the
beginning of an eternity lived in the presence of God. For others, those
whose names are not in that book, it will be the beginning of an eternity
lived in the absence of God.
But there will be a difference between the ceremony in
heaven and the one that is conducted on earth. The ceremony in heaven will
happen in the presence of those people. They will be there to see the books
opened and to hear their names called. Whose names will be written in the
book of life? Jesus tells us - “I tell
you the truth, he who believes has everlasting life” (John 6:47).
****
Marcia Lee Laycock writes from central
Alberta Canada where she is a pastor's wife and mother of three adult
daughters. She was the winner of The Best New Canadian Christian Author Award
for her novel, One Smooth Stone. The sequel, A Tumbled Stone was short listed
in The Word Awards. Marcia also has four devotional books in print and has
contributed to several anthologies. Her work has been endorsed by Sigmund
Brouwer, Janette Oke, Phil Callaway and Mark Buchanan.
Her
most recent release is Christmas, a collection of short stories that will take you from the far reaches of the galaxy to the Canadian Arctic and the streets of an inner city. Available in ebook and paper-back.
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Friday, November 11, 2016
Books of Remembrance by Marcia Lee Laycock
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Thanks for sharing this beautiful ceremony to remember those who went before. In S.Africa those in power are doing all they can to wipe out the country's memories. So very sad.
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