|
In contrast to the teachings of some cults, death is not merely an
illusion, or something good, or eternal extinction, or an inevitable
door to heaven or the next life, or multiple lives (reincarnation).
Further, heaven is not merely a positive experience in life, such as
feeling good, or a higher state of consciousness. Hell is not a negative
condition in life, or a temporary purgatory, or the consequences of
unenlightened consciousness in this life.
Death per se is a condition of separation. According to the
Bible, there are only two kinds of death. First, there is physical
death, which involves the temporary separation of the spirit from
the body. In the resurrection, the body is later rejoined with the human
spirit. Second, there is eternal spiritual death, or the eternal
separation of the human spirit from God. This condition has no remedy.
Death is not good; it has never been good. Physical death—separation
from the body—is not good, since by it man is left "unclothed" in an
unnatural state (2 Cor. 5:4; Phil. 3:21; 1 Cor. 15:53-54). Spiritual
death—separation from God—is not good, since by it one is eternally
separated from God.
"Death" and "life" are irreconcilable and opposite conditions of
existence in both this life and the next. Apart from Christ, death
leads to one thing only: eternal judgment. "It is appointed for men to
die once and after this comes judgment" (Heb. 9:27). But with
Christ, death leads to life. "I am the resurrection and the life; he who
believes in Me shall live even if he dies, and everyone who lives and
believes in Me shall never die" (John 11:25-26). "Truly, truly, I say to
you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal
life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into
life" (John 5:24).
The Bible teaches that prior to salvation, even as they are alive,
all men and women exist in a state of spiritual death or separation from
God. Their human spirits are "dead" to those things that God is truly
concerned about (Luke 15:24-32; Eph. 2:1; 1 Tim. 5:6, Rev. 3:1). Thus,
even though they are alive physically, they do not consider the one true
God, nor do they honor Him or care about His interests. Whatever God or
concept of God they may believe in, they do not concern themselves with
the concerns of the one true God (Rom. 3:10-18). This is why Jesus
Himself referred to "the dead burying their own dead," explicitly
teaching that the living human beings around him were, as far as God was
concerned, spiritually dead (Luke 9:60).
The Bible teaches that physical and spiritual death exists for one
reason: sin. God warned Adam and Eve that if they disobeyed Him, in that
day they would die (Gen. 2:17). They died first spiritually and then
physically. This is why the Bible teaches, "The wages of sin is death"
(Rom. 6:23).
Because sin causes death, the problem of sin must be dealt with
before death can be dealt with. This is the reason for the Christian
teaching on the atonement: that Christ died for the sins of the world.
As Jesus taught, "For God so loved the world that he gave his only
begotten Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have
eternal life" (John 3:16). Whoever receives Christ as personal savior is
"born again," regenerated, made alive spiritually. The believer’s state
of spiritual death is cancelled at the point of receiving Christ. Since
Christ paid the full penalty of sin (Col. 2:13), there is no longer the
possibility of the believer suffering God’s judgment for his sins, which
is the second death. Instead, the believer will join God forever at the
point of physical death. This is the essence of the term "saved." And it
must be stressed that people must come to belief in the atoning death of
Jesus Christ or they cannot be saved. The only condition is to accept
what God has done in the person of Christ. Thus, the biblical view is
that the saved are with God; they go to be with Him at the moment of
death (Luke 23:43; John 12:26; Acts 7:59; 2 Cor. 5:8; Phil. 1:23).
The Christian hope, then, is not a cultic or mediumistic view of
gradual, spiritual self-progression after death but in physical
resurrection and eternal immortality based on Christ’s resurrection and
life (Rom. 4:25; 1 Cor. 6:14; 2 Cor. 4:14; 5:1; Eph. 1:15-21; 2:4-10;
Phil. 1:21; 3:21; Col. 3:4). Those who accept Christ inherit heaven for
eternity; those who reject God and His mercy inherit hell for eternity
(2 Pet. 2:4, 9). There is no possibility of altering one’s fate after
death (Heb. 9:27; Luke 16:19-31).
Death, then, is not extinction, as many cults teach. It does not
involve a condition of rein-carnation, where the soul experiences many
lifetimes, as occult religions teach. It does not involve a condition of
ultimate union or absorption into some impersonal, divine essence as
many Eastern cults teach. (See Eccl. 12:5; Luke 12:46-47; Luke 16:19-31;
Acts 1:25; Heb. 9:27; Psa. 78:39; 2 Cor. 5:11; Heb. 10:31; 12:27-29; 2
Pet. 2:4, 9; Rev. 20:10,15).
What Will Heaven Be Like?
The Bible clearly teaches the existence of a place called heaven:
Our Father in heaven.... (Matt. 6:9)
You will have treasure in heaven.... (Matt. 19:21)
He was taken up into heaven.... (Mark 16:19)
No one has ever gone into heaven except the one who came from
heaven—the Son of Man. (John 3:13)
You also have a Master in heaven.... (Col. 4:1)
To wait for his Son from heaven.... (1 Thess. 1:10)
He himself will come down from heaven.... (1 Thess. 4:16)
Many good books have been written on heaven and we would encourage
the reader to read these for greater insights into the eternal existence
of the redeemed.1
Heaven is not a perpetual vacation—something that would be terribly
boring after only fifty years, let alone for endless time. Heaven is an
eternity of purpose and destiny. After the largest conceivable amount of
time multiplied by the largest conceivable amount of time, eternity has
only just begun. Therefore, heaven must not only be beyond our
imagination but also commensurate with the nature and demands of a
redeemed eternity itself. Heaven will be an infinitely superb,
multi-faceted and glorious paradise because an infinitely superb,
multi-faceted, glorious God lives there. Words such as grandeur,
exquisite, magnificent, marvelous, resplendent, elegant and super
luxurious are, at best, shadows of its descriptions. Heaven is a real
and substantial place for real and substantial people. In this place,
Jesus told us that we would be glorified and exalted with Him. We will
have spiritual bodies (Eph. 2:6; Rom. 8:11-17; Phil.3:21,1 John 3:2),
and will reign with Him "forever and ever" (Rev. 20:6; 22:5). We will
also judge (and perhaps rule) the angels (1 Cor. 6:3).
In heaven everything that makes life unpleasant or tortuous will be
forever vanquished. Those present in heaven will never experience pain,
sadness, sorrow, depression, sickness, death, sin, evil, selfishness,
fatigue or suffering of any kind, "for the old order of things has
passed away" (Rev. 21:4; 22:3). Heaven will be a place of indescribable
love, beauty, peace, joy, happiness, rest, adventure, excitement, union
and fellowship with God (Rev. 21:3)—multiplied to the degree suggested
by what an infinitely loving, omnipotent and omniscient God would do in
eternity for those He willingly sacrificed His only Son for. Scripture
itself teaches that if God has given us His only Son now, how much more
will He give us throughout eternity? (Rom. 8:32; 1 Cor. 2:9; 3:21-23).
Life in heaven will be beyond our wildest imagination. If heaven by
definition is devoid of everything old that is negative, it must be
saturated with everything new that is positive. "He who was seated on
the throne said, ‘I am making everything new!’ Then he said, ‘Write this
down, for these words are trustworthy and true’" (Rev. 21:5). Thus
heaven will be a place of eternal security and protection where God’s
creation is redeemed and transformed into an absolutely perfect new
earth and heavens (Rom. 8:18-23; Rev. chs. 21,22).
In this never to be equaled universe, which could be inexhaustible,
we will be able to explore and never exhaust the ability to explore,
just as we will never be able to exhaust our exploration of all there is
to know and experience of an infinite God in all His perfections.
Obviously, since people are finite beings, there will be never-ending
growth in knowledge, truth and wisdom, of God and perhaps of the
creation, angels and men and women. We will not only have joyous,
intimate, personal fellowship with God, Jesus and the angels but with
billions of redeemed people throughout history, and with whatever else
God may have created. Yet service and worship to God will be one of our
greatest joys. As suggested by the parable of the talents (Matt.
25:14-23; Luke 19:11-26), we will also enjoy rewards for service given
on earth. These will probably include different positions of honor and
authority in heaven. However, all our heavenly blessings and glories
will be eternal and indestructible (1 Pet. 1:3-4).
But it must also be remembered there is far, far more that we don’t
know about heaven than we do know; its beauties and glories are
indescribable to us now. First Corinthians 2:9 only hints at what awaits
those who have made Jesus their Lord and Savior: "No eye has seen, no
ear has heard, no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who
love Him." Indeed, "our present sufferings are not worth comparing with
the glory that will be revealed in us" (Rom. 8:18). In sum, we will
inherit all that God is and all that God has (1 Cor.
3:21-23) in a true eternal paradise as God originally intended it. As a
result, "the righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their
Father" forever and ever (Matt. 13:43). We should expect nothing less
from a future kingdom prepared by Jesus Himself, for those He dearly
loves and died for personally (Matt. 25:34; John 14:2).
This helps explain why apart from Christ there is no such thing as
real life, either now or in eternity.
What Will Hell Be Like?
Just as with the doctrine of heaven, the Bible is clear that there is
an eternal place termed hell:
Let him warn them, so that they will not also come to this place of
torment. (Luke 16:28)
In danger of the fire of hell.... (Matthew 5:22)
God did not spare angels when they sinned, but sent them to hell.
(2 Peter 2:4)
Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the
soul. Rather, be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body
in hell. (Matthew 10:28)
They will go away to eternal punishment. (Matthew 25:46)
Who suffer the punishment of eternal fire.... (Jude 7)
Hell may be ridiculed and outdated in the minds of many people, but
that does not eliminate its reality. Given the infinite holiness of God,
one thing is certain: the strongest arguments against hell will be
silenced forever on the other side. (Polls since 1944 indicate that
although 50 to 60 percent of people believe in hell, only 3 to 4 percent
think their chances are good of going there.2)
Many people think they will never go to hell because they don’t
"deserve" it. But popular views of Universalism (all will be saved),
variations on conditional immortality (the unsaved will be annihilated),
and ideas of the opportunity for salvation after death are impossible to
defend scripturally.3 Because of
God’s infinite righteousness, hell cannot logically be considered
immoral. But it could actually be immoral for God to save everyone
irrespective of their will, or to annihilate those having intrinsic
value, those created in His image.4
The most predominant feature of hell will be the eternal absence of
an infinitely loving God and the never-ending presence of just
punishments for individual sins (2 Thess. 1:9; Daniel 12:2; Matthew
10:28). Hell apparently involves degrees of punishment according to the
works done in this life (Matthew 11:21-24; 23:23; Luke 12:47-48). In
contrast to what most people think, those who are condemned to hell will
recognize, and accept, the perfect justice of their presence there. Hell
is a subject that all people should contemplate for many reasons. Among
them5 are the following.
1) God Himself does not desire that anyone perish, and He has done
all He can, this side of death, within the limits of His character and
the human condition, to save people (2 Peter 3:9; Acts 17:26-31). It is
entirely possible that, given God’s infinite knowledge of what every
possible created being would do under every possible circumstance, God
has so structured human existence so as to save the greatest number.
Further, it is equally credible that "of all the possible persons God
could have created, the vast majority of those who would have rejected
Christ never get created in the first place. The number of people who
reject Christ may be an act of mercy on God’s part."6
It is even possible that, given God’s holy character and human
responsibility, there is no world God could have created in which
all created persons would have freely accepted Christ. Apparently, "God
prefers a world in which some persons freely reject Christ but the
number of saved is maximized over a world in which a few trust Christ
and none are lost." Thus, "The actual world contains an optimal balance
between saved and unsaved, and those who are unsaved would never have
received Christ under any circumstances."7
2) It is obviously in our own best interest to escape going to hell.
Apart from Christ, hell is assured, but this fate can easily be avoided
in this life by trust in Jesus for forgiveness of sin (John 1:12;
3:16-18; 5:24; 6:47).
3) Hell is not unjust. The one true God who has revealed Himself as
infinitely loving and merciful has also spoken of the reality of
eternal separation from Him; therefore the doctrine of hell cannot be
inconsistent with His love, justice or mercy. Few people balk at the
devil going to hell because they assume the devil is bad enough and God
just enough to warrant it. Only when it comes to us do we
question its justness. But if it is just for the devil, can we assume it
is never just for those of us who are "like" the devil in attitudes and
actions, especially as they are directed toward God? (See John 8:44; 1
John 3:8.) Indeed, apart from hell, justice itself becomes a myth. All
creation will one day understand this (Romans 3:4-6). Even if someone
like Adolph Hitler were punished for billions of years and then brought
into eternal heaven or annihilated, his time of punishment, compared to
eternity, would be essentially meaningless.
4) Hell is not a place where God actively tortures people endlessly
as if He were the director of some kind of torture chamber. Hell was
made for the devil and his angels (Matthew 25:41), not men and women.
But people who continue their rebellion against God must suffer the just
judgment of their sins. Since God will not permit unrighteousness or
anything unholy to enter heaven (Revelation 21:27; Habakkuk 1:13), there
must be some other place for the unrighteous to inhabit eternity. And if
the unrighteous are not permanently quarantined from the righteous, all
we have is an instant and eternal replay of life on earth, and this is
surely not heaven! There will be psychological and physical anguish and
torment in hell, but this will result primarily from the conditions of
hell and people’s own choices and realizations, not from God Himself
actively inflicting their torment. A judge and jury who justly send a
man to prison do not torment him; his own choices and the conditions of
prison do.
5) Sin committed against God is not like sin committed against
others. Sinning against an infinite being requires an infinite
punishment which, for finite creatures, can only be experienced as
eternal punishment. Further, the amount of time it takes to commit a sin
has no direct relationship to the punishment it deserves. A bank teller
may plan a robbery for months, while his accomplice may murder someone
in a moment. The evil of a crime is related more to the nature of the
crime and the one against whom it is committed than the time it
takes to commit it. No one can accurately gauge how an infinite God,
whose holiness is immeasurable, responds to even the smallest human sin.
One would think that for a literally infinitely holy Being, even the
most minute human sin would be fully heinous and worthy of eternal
separation. Also, because the unredeemed are unredeemed, they
continue to sin after death and apparently will continue to sin
inwardly forever (Matthew 8:12). But the only just
punishment for eternal sin is eternal punishment. The bottom line is
that a good God cannot be unjust in punishing people eternally. What
hell means is that there is final justice and that hell is no
more or less than perfect justice (Romans 3:4-6). If, in this
life, few things are as satisfying as justice, this must also be true in
the next life. And hell must also be in full harmony with the love of
God. "God loves justice, holiness, and righteousness so much that He
created hell. The love of God for His own nature, His law, His universe,
and His people, makes hell a product of love as well as justice.8
6) Our choice for God is important to Him (Luke 13:34). People
who refuse Christ in this life would be quite unlikely to accept Him in
the next life, in hell, because their basic nature is not altered. If
Scripture declares that the unredeemed are God’s enemies who want
nothing to do with Him (Acts 4:25-27; Romans 1:18-32; 5:6-10), why would
anything change just because someone died? Even if they somehow did
decide for Christ, it would only be to escape the punishments of hell
rather than to love and obey God. They would not be choosing God and
Jesus on their own merits, and thus they would not be suited for eternal
life with God and Jesus in heaven. No one wants to live forever with
someone the person dislikes. The more we understand the nature of heaven
as being infused with the nature of God, the more credible is the idea
that the unredeemed would not enjoy heaven either.
Of course, the longer we refuse God’s gift of mercy now, the harder
it becomes to accept it later. Every day, in almost every way, we are
either moving closer to God or further from Him. At the end of an
unrepentant life, God simply grants our wishes. C. S. Lewis emphasized,
"There are only two kinds of people in the end: those who say to God,
‘Thy will be done,’ and those to whom God says, in the end, ‘Thy
will be done.’ "9 In another book,
Lewis writes:
If a game is played it must be possible to lose it. If the
happiness of a creature lies in self-surrender, no one can make that
surrender but himself (though many can help him to make it) and he may
refuse. I would pay any price to be able to say truthfully "all will
be saved." But my reason retorts, "without their will, or with it?" If
I say, "without their will" I at once perceive a contradiction; how
can the supreme voluntary act of self-surrender be involuntary? If I
say "with their will," my reason replies "how if they will not
give in?"10
7) The punishment in hell is apparently tempered for some. God can
only do what is just in this life and the next. Hebrews 11:6 says that
God rewards those who seek Him. Acts 10:35 says, "In every nation the
man who fears Him and does what is right, is welcome to Him." Abraham
asked, "Will not the Judge of all the earth do right?" (Genesis 18:25)
The psalmist said, "He will judge the world with justice and the peoples
with unfaltering fairness" (Psalm 98:9). Thus, not everyone experiences
the same degree of pain in hell, since there are apparently degrees of
punishment. The person who did not know God’s will and did not do it
will receive "but few" stripes (Luke 12:35-48; Matthew 10:15). It makes
sense to believe that those who were less evil in this life are not
punished to the same degree as those who were more evil, because God is
unable to violate His holy character and give any person more
punishment than he or she deserves. This means that God, who is infinite
in knowledge, knows the perfectly deserved and righteous punishment for
every person who has ever lived. In the end, although hell is not what
the unrighteous want, it will be seen to be what the unrighteous
deserve.
Notes:
1 For example, John Gilmore,
Probing Heaven: Key Questions on the Hereafter (Grand Rapids, MI:
Baker, 1989); Joni Eareckson Tada, Heaven Your Real Home (Grand
Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1995); Gary R. Habermas and J. P. Moreland,
Immortality the Other Side of Death (Nashville: Thomas Nelson,
1992).
2 John Ankerberg, John Weldon,
The Facts on UFOs and Other Supernatural Phenomena and The
Facts on Spirit Guides (Eugene, OR: Harvest House, 1992).
3 For detailed refutation, see
Robert A. Morey, Death and the Afterlife (Minneapolis: Bethany,
1984).
4 Gary R. Habermas and J. P.
Moreland, Immortality the Other Side of Death (Nashville:
Thomas Nelson, 1992). pp. 169-71.
5 Ibid., pp. 157-80.
6 Ibid., p. 178.
7 Ibid., p. 180.
8 Robert A. Morey,
Introduction to Defending the Faith (Southbridge, MA: Crowne
Publications, 1989), p. 38e.
9 C. S. Lewis, The Great
Divorce (New York: MacMillan, 1946), p. 69.
10 C. S. Lewis, The Problem
of Pain (New York: MacMillan, 1971), p. 8.
|