Ben Sasse Is Dying and Telling the Truth
The diagnosis did not make Ben Sasse a dying man. It made him an honest one.
Most of us spend our days polishing the jar. We tend the calendar, answer the texts and make the plan for next month and next fall and five years from now. We move through bright kitchens and parking lots and church foyers with the quiet assumption that time is ours in workable portions. Then one sentence from a doctor can split the room open and let the truth rush in like cold air.
Sasse has spoken from that place with unusual plainness. He said he was given a three to four month life expectancy and that he is now living on “extended time already.” He has also called his cancer “a touch of grace because it forces me to tell the truth.”
That is the line that stays with me…forces me to tell the truth.
A man does not need a terminal diagnosis to become mortal. He needs one to stop pretending.
Paul opens the cupboard and brings out the cracked dishes. “We have this treasure in jars of clay, to show that the surpassing power belongs to God and not to us” (2 Corinthians 4:7). God places His jewel in a clay jar. He puts the glory of Christ in fragile people so nobody mistakes the source of the power.
A clay jar is useful. A clay jar is common. A clay jar breaks.
That is where American Christians often get disoriented. We know the verses. We confess the doctrines. Then we still live as if faithful people ought to feel sturdy all the time.
We think obedience should make life feel steadier. Then pressure comes. Fear comes. The body weakens. The phone rings at dusk. The scan lights up and the biopsy comes back. The doctor pauses too long.
Paul does not sound surprised. “We are hard pressed on every side, yet not crushed; we are perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; struck down, but not destroyed” (2 Corinthians 4:8-9).
God keeps His people alive under pressure. Christians are ordinary people, suffering people, dying people, yet held up by a power that does not come from force of personality.
Sasse is not revealing a new truth. He is revealing an old one most of us keep covered with busyness. The body is a jar of clay. Flesh gives way. Life keeps moving anyway. Then one day a man realizes that every ordinary sound has been happening on the edge of eternity.
He said cancer forces him to tell the truth. One of the truths he has told is better than all the others. “Jesus did everything on the cross to fulfill the whole law. I fulfilled none of it. He fulfilled all of it, and he took away all of my sins.”
There is the treasure in the jar!
When death comes close enough to sit down beside your bed and wait, the old religious games lose their charm. A man stops boasting in his record. He stops rearranging his merits into a ladder. Christ becomes bread, water, blood, righteousness, refuge. Christ becomes the difference between terror and peace.
Paul says we are “always carrying in the body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be manifested in our bodies” (2 Corinthians 4:10).
There are losses that come only because we belong to Christ. There are wounds, pressures, refusals, sacrifices, disappointments and private griefs that would never have come to us on another road. Yet life comes out of death. That is the shape of the gospel itself. Christ went down into the grave and came out alive and His people live that pattern in smaller ways all through their lives.
American Christians need that reminder badly.
We live in a country that teaches us to manage appearances, protect comfort and treat inconvenience as a kind of injustice.
Even in church we can start talking as if the highest good is a decent retirement and a body that cooperates. Then God allows the jar to crack and suddenly we can see what has been true all along. We were never strong anb certainly never sovereign.
Paul keeps going. “Though our outer self is wasting away, our inner self is being renewed day by day” (2 Corinthians 4:16). That sentence does not deny decay. It stares right at it.
Skin loosens. Hands tremble. Names slip. Energy thins out. The outer man wastes away in plain sight. Behind that wasting, God is building something. It’s like scaffolding coming down while the real structure rises behind it. The visible frame weakens while God prepares a glory that will outlast the sun.
This is where the Christian either sees or refuses to see.
“For this light momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison” (2 Corinthians 4:17). Paul is not mocking pain. He has been beaten, hunted, pressed, and exhausted. He is weighing things. On one side of the scale, every pressure of this present life. On the other, glory. The scale drops hard toward glory every time. Affliction is brief and glory is eternal.
That is the truth a sick man can help healthy people hear.
Ben Sasse has stage 4 pancreatic cancer and was told he is going to die. He has spoken openly about that reality and he has spoken openly about Christ.
Reuters reported his diagnosis in December 2025, and he has since described himself as living on borrowed days, days he receives as gift rather than possession. He cannot tell the truth for us. He can only tell it near enough for us to hear our own hearts more clearly.
Every one of us is on extended time already.
The stronger man is not the one who keeps that fact out of his mind. The wiser man is the one who lets it drive him straight to Christ. Not to borrowed language about faith. To Christ crucified for sinners. A Christ who fulfilled all righteousness. To Christ who took away sin and who will raise His people up.
“We look not to the things that are seen but to the things that are unseen” (2 Corinthians 4:18).
That is where this whole matter settles. Seen things fill the table. Unseen things rule the world. The IV pole, the grave, the tears, the dwindling strength, the aging face in the mirror, all of it is temporary. Christ is not temporary.
Christ endures. The resurrection stands. The kingdom cannot be shaken.
The jar will break.
The treasure will not.
NEW: Iran’s latest proposal in negotiations offers no concessions and represents an Iranian effort to end the war on Tehran’s terms. The proposal illustrates that Iran’s current decisionmaker, Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps Commander Major General Ahmad Vahidi, believes Iran is winning despite the serious damage Iran has suffered. The United States remains opposed to the most recent April 26 proposal because it failed to address both Iran’s nuclear program and enabled Iran to assert “control” over the Strait of Hormuz.
Other Key Takeaways:
Iran’s growing challenges in storing and exporting its oil could be one mechanism by which Iranian calculations change in negotiations. Iran also faces significant pressure on other parts of its economy. It is unclear, however, whether this pressure on Iran’s economy will cause Vahidi and his inner circle to make concessions to the United States.
Iran’s highest national security decision-making body is preparing for a potential protest wave as economic deterioration and social pressure intensify. Iran’s prolonged internet shutdown is also posing severe economic damage and accelerating unemployment, which likely increases pressure on regime stability.
Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf appears to be trying to retain political support and remain a key actor in negotiations despite prior signs of opposition from Vahidi and his inner circle.
Infighting among hardline factions has escalated into a public media confrontation amid intra-regime competition over negotiations. Intra-regime power struggle between pragmatic hardliners and ultrahardliners indicates the absence of a decisive central arbiter, which has allowed factional disputes to unfold publicly.
Iran continues to cooperate with key US adversaries, such as Russia and China, as it prepares for a potential resumption of conflict with the United States and Israel.
NEW: Artemis II Commander Reid Wiseman reflects on being MOVED to tears by the Christian cross after returning to Earth from the historic expedition:
"When I got back on the on the ship — I'm not really a religious person — but there was just no other avenue for me to explain anything or to experience anything."
"So I asked for the chaplain on the Navy ship to just come visit us for a minute, and when that man walked in, I'd never met him before in my life. But I saw the cross on his collar, and I just broke down in tears."
"It's very hard to fully grasp what we just went through."
“Questioning Jesus” A devotional sent from me-a Chaplain-to Techs & Operators while in central Iraq when deployed. Hope it encourages you.
#VocatiAdServitium#ProDeoEtPatria
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