The Lighthouse That Never Goes Dark
On the rugged coast of Cornwall, England, the Lizard Lighthouse has burned without interruption since 1752. Keepers came and went. Wars raged across Europe. Empires rose and crumbled into history books. The French Revolution, two World Wars, the rise of the internet — through every chapter of human upheaval, that light kept turning. Fishermen who saw it as boys brought their grandchildren to see the same beam cutting through the same Atlantic fog.
When Trinity House finally automated the lighthouse in 1998, locals gathered on the cliff to mark the occasion. One retired keeper, asked if the light would still be reliable without a human hand, smiled and said, "The light was never about us. It was always about the ships that needed to come home."
This is the God John describes in Revelation — the One "who is, and who was, and who is to come," the Almighty. Not a deity who flickered to life at some point in history and might burn out when our story ends. He is the Alpha and the Omega, the light that was shining before the first human eye opened and will still be shining when the last star goes cold. Rulers rise and fall. Headlines change daily. But the faithful witness, the sovereign Lord over every king and kingdom, keeps turning His light toward us — not because He needs us to keep Him burning, but because He is determined to bring His children home.
Scripture References
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