"Why, my soul, are you downcast? Why so disturbed within me? Put your hope in God, for I will yet praise him, my Savior and my God."
Psalm 42:11
There is a famous "Checkmate" painting at the Louvre Museum, an 1831 artwork by German artist Friedrich Moritz August Retzsch titled Die Schachspieler (The Chess Players), in which the artwork depicts a young man playing chess against Satan with his soul at stake. As you can see, the devil is smirking in confidence, while the young man holds his head in his hands in utter despair. An angel stands in the background, watching helplessly. Tragic scene isn't it?
But here is the twist: in a house in Richmond, Virginia, around 1861, a local minister owned a print of Retzsch's engraving and invited the American chess champion, Paul Morphy, over for dinner. Morphy looked at the print, and out of sheer confidence and polite dinner-party showmanship, he allegedly exclaimed, "The King still has one more move!" proving that the young man could actually turn the game around and win. The Learning:
This is the heart of the Gospel. On Good Friday, the enemy stood over the cross of Jesus Christ and smirked. The disciples hid in upper rooms, heads in their hands, weeping in utter despair. The world declared "Checkmate." The game of redemption seemed finished, and death seemed to have won.But the Ultimate Grandmaster—our Heavenly Father—knew the board wasn't cleared yet. On the third day, God looked at the tomb and declared, "The King still has one more move." With the resurrection of Jesus, the ultimate checkmate of sin and death was overturned forever.
If you are sitting in a season of despair today, remember that you are looking at the board through human eyes. Satan is an expert at bluffing. He wants you to believe that your current situation is your final destination.
But our King is not trapped. He is not out of options. He specializes in taking the enemy's "certain victories" and turning them into monuments of His grace.
In real life, when we face "checkmate" situations—a failing health report, a deep grief, a collapsed dream—the human board truly is broken. There is no logical, human move left.
The rescue doesn't come because the board was misread; it comes because the Ultimate Master steps in and changes the rules of the game entirely.
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Notes:
1. the painting never actually hung in the Louvre. It was historically held in private collections before being auctioned by Christie's in 1999.
2. In the painting, the pieces aren't normal kings, queens, and rooks.
a. The Devil’s pieces represent vices: his King is clad in a black cloak, his Queen is Pleasure, and his pawns are Doubts.
b. The Young Man’s pieces represent virtues: his pieces are Humility, Innocence, and Innocent Mirth. His pawns are Prayers.
c. Because the pieces are literal little statues of monsters and angels, they don’t fit cleanly onto standard chess squares.

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