Eternity Begins Today: The Revolutionary Choice to Live Like We Actually Believe

“For to me, to live is Christ and to die is gain… our citizenship is in heaven… Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things.” (Colossians 3:2 and Philippians 1:21)

One of the most radical claims of Christianity is this: eternity isn’t something we wait for. It’s something we enter into now.

We don’t live as if God might be faithful. We live as if He is faithful. We don’t hope that resurrection power might work in us. We live as if it does work in us.

This is the leap Colossians 3:2 invites: what if we actually lived like we believe the gospel is true? How would that change everything?

The Baroque Version: “Eternity Begins Today”

The full chorus enters with grandeur. Strings swell. Brass announces. The text builds in intensity: “Our hearts are set on things above, not on the passing things of earth. We fix our gaze upon His love, and in His kingdom, find our worth.”

The music modulates, building energy. “Eternity begins today! Eternity begins today! The old has passed and gone away, all things are made new, we say!”

This is baroque majesty expressing cosmic truth. Not with arrogance, but with genuine theological conviction. The orchestra swells. The choir rises. This is formal affirmation of the most radical truth: Christ’s kingdom is breaking in. Now. Here.

The final chorusโ€””Eternity! Eternity! Eternity begins today!”โ€”is triumphant, powerful, certain.

This is the baroque approach: celebrate with formal grandeur the revolutionary truth that eternity is now.

The Broadway Version: “Eternity Is Now”

A solo soprano opens: “Can you see it? Can you feel it? The kingdom breaking through, a new creation rising up, in me, in you, in all of us.”

Characters step forward, claiming this truth together. “We’re not waiting for tomorrow, we’re not holding off our hope, eternity is breaking in, and we’ve got the strength to cope.”

There’s a spoken moment that’s crucial: “We are the bridge between the already and the not yet. We are living in both kingdoms right now. And that means we have access to a power that changes everything.”

The ensemble builds: “Eternity is now! All things are made new in Him! Eternity is now, and it starts with me and you!”

This is relational eschatology: we live into eternity together, as community, discovering that God’s kingdom is breaking in through our collective witness.

The Singer/Songwriter Version: “I’m Gonna Live Like I Believe It”

“I’m gonna live like I believe it, like the gospel is actually true, like my life matters, like there’s eternal significance in the everyday.”

The singer/songwriter strips away formality and creates something devastatingly personal. This isn’t about doctrine. It’s about decision.

“I’m gonna set my mind on things above, keeping my heart tethered to eternity while my feet are planted on solid ground.”

Then the chorusโ€””Live like I believe it, believe it, live like I believe it’s true, let it change the things I do”โ€”becomes an invitation to personal transformation.

“So I’m gonna love boldly, I’m gonna hope fiercely, I’m gonna believe tenderly, and I’m gonna live like I believe that God is faithful and good and near.”

This is intimate conviction: I’m choosing to live as if the gospel is true, starting today.

The Alternative Rock Version: “Eternity Crashes In”

An explosive voice declares: “Everything I thought I knew is burning, everything I thought was solid’s melting. But something’s breaking through the walls, something’s finally, finally arriving.”

The song builds from sparse verses to explosive choruses: “Eternity’s crashing in, breaking down the barriers! Eternity’s crashing in, and it’s glorious, it’s terrifying!”

The alternative rock approach is cosmic, transcendent, defiant. Not gentle. Not passive. But fierce, active, revolutionary.

“The old world is collapsing, the new world is emerging, and I’m caught in the collision, and I’m finally, finally surging.”

There’s a crucial realization: “This isn’t someday theology, this isn’t future hope. This is now, this is breaking through. This is how I cope.”

By the final section: “I’m living between the already and the not yet, I’m walking in the power of the resurrection, I’m claiming the truth that Christ has conquered death, and that changes everything, that changes everything!”

The song explodes with cosmic, otherworldly energy: “Eternity! Eternity! The new world is beginning!”

The Same Truth, Four Languages

Colossians 3:2 invites us to set our minds on eternal things, and promises that this perspective transforms everything. The way we experience this transformation differs:

  • Baroque celebrates with formal grandeur the revolutionary truth that eternity begins now
  • Broadway creates communal vision: we enter eternity together, as witnesses to God’s kingdom breaking in
  • Singer/Songwriter creates personal conviction: I’m choosing to live like I believe the gospel is true, starting today
  • Alternative Rock creates cosmic explosion: eternity is crashing in, breaking down the old world, creating something radically new

What This Means for Your Life

Here’s the question Colossians 3:2 poses: if you actually believed the gospel was true, how would you live differently?

Would you worry less about things that don’t matter eternally?

Would you love more boldly?

Would you hope more fiercely?

Would you forgive more readily?

Would you live as if you’re part of something cosmic, something eternal, something that matters infinitely?

The baroque version invites you to contemplate, with formal beauty, the radical truth that eternity begins now. What does that mean for you?

The Broadway version invites you to realize that living into God’s kingdom isn’t a solitary endeavor. It’s something we do together, witnessing to each other that eternity is breaking in.

The singer/songwriter version invites you to make a decision: I’m gonna live like I believe it. Starting today.

The alternative rock version invites you into cosmic transcendence: eternity is crashing in, the old world is collapsing, the new world is being born, and you’re part of it.

The Life That Begins Now

Eternity isn’t something we wait for. It’s something we enter into the moment we surrender to Christ and begin living as if His kingdom is real.

And here’s the most beautiful part: the moment we start living like we believe it, we discover it’s actually true.

In 2026, that might mean discovering which version of “Eternity Crashes In” / “I’m Gonna Live Like I Believe It” calls you into genuine transformation.

All four offer the same invitation: stop living like eternity is someday. Start living like eternity is now.

Collage image featuring promotional material for 'New Beginnings' by Melanie Grace. Four sections display images representing different music styles: Baroque choir in a festive setting, Broadway cast performing on stage, a singer-songwriter performing at a cozy venue, and an alternative rock band on stage.

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