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What Is "Heaven"?
Is "heaven" a place, a condition
of existence, a close relationship with God, or something else? Do the righteous
go to "heaven" (whatever it may be) at death or at the resurrection?
Scripture is vague on the details of what
happens to the righteous at death; the church therefore feels it is not
necessary to have an official position on this subject. What the church tries to
emphasize are the topics Scripture is clear about. What are some of these?
Christ will return to judge the world, and
those who are dead "in Christ" will be resurrected and will be with
the Lord forever (1 Thessalonians 4:13-17). In the symbolism of the book of
Revelation, the martyrs will come to life and reign with Christ (Revelation
20:4). Those who are loyal to him will live with him in joy and glory forever.
We can call that condition of life "heaven," but we should know
something more about how the writers of the New Testament understand that term.
The promise of an afterlife as the hope of
the Christian, of course, comes from the New Testament. The apostles of the
first-century church taught that the righteous would live in the presence of
God. The New Testament writers, while they knew God to be omnipresent, often
located God's presence as being in a place called "heaven." God is the
creator of heaven, of course, and is not forced to be there, but he chooses to
reveal himself as dwelling in heaven.
The idea of a heaven "up there"
came from the world view of the times. In both Greek and Hebrew, the word for
heaven means "sky." It is used to describe God's kingdom and his
throne (Psalm 2:4), and was the "place" to which the glorified Jesus
ascended (Acts 1:11). The term "kingdom of heaven" is interchangeable
with "the kingdom of God" (Matthew 13:11, 24, 31, 33, 44, 47, 52).
In ancient thought, the universe formed a
cosmic building: the underworld, the earth and heaven. In this three-tiered
scheme, the gods lived in the upper realm (heaven). The middle world (earth) was
populated by humans. Below that was the netherworld or Sheol, the grave, the
place of death and the abode of evil spirits.
God couldn't rightly be said to live in
our fallen, sin-dominated middle world (though he is really
"everywhere"). And God couldn't be located in the shadowy netherworld.
To speak of his presence, then, was to "place" him in the upper world
of heaven.
When the biblical writers spoke of God as
dwelling in heaven, they were really emphasizing what we call his
"transcendence." That is, God exists beyond the limits of our narrow,
earthbound experience. That meant he had to be pictured as existing apart from
the created order he had placed on earth, including the human family. Of course,
God often "came down" from heaven to intervene in the affairs of
humanity, as at the tower of Babel (Genesis 11:5). And when Christians said that
the righteous would live in the presence of God, they naturally concluded that
the righteous went to heaven to be with the Lord.
The heavenly abode of God became a
metaphor for the presence of the Creator's universal power and authority. It was
the kingdom of heaven or God's kingdom. Jesus looked up to heaven when he prayed
— to the seat of God's authority, where he "dwelt" (John 11:41). But
where is "up" on a spinning earth?
The writers of the Gospels didn't know
that anyone would have a theological concern about them speaking of God as
existing in some specific place. In their world view, they simply didn't think
it odd to speak of heaven as the place of God's presence. The Gospels tell us
that Jesus on several occasions talked about God as being in heaven, and that he
taught his disciples to pray, "Our Father in heaven..." (Matthew 6:9).
Jesus said he would go and prepare "rooms" for the believers. This going
was to his Father's house — to heaven — to "prepare a place" for
them (John 14:2).
But people today, with an expanded view of
what the universe is like, may not think of heaven as a place at all. For most,
"going to heaven" simply means existing in an imperishable state in
the presence of God. Paul called this new condition of life of the faithful an
immortal existence (1 Corinthians 15:50-54).
To say that a person is going to heaven is
a shorthand way of saying the person is in the presence of God. There is nothing
wrong with saying that a Christian is going to heaven after death because it
means that the person is assured of his or her place in the kingdom of God.
Of course, some do think in terms of
"going" to heaven — as going to a "place" somewhere in
space. It's understandable, because "heaven" is a convenient image to
describe a state of existence that we cannot fully understand in any concrete
way.
When dealing with such questions we must
remind ourselves of the limitations of human understanding. Whatever the
believer's new life will be, and "wherever" it might be experienced,
it will be based on a very different dimension of reality. Besides, the final
answers about questions regarding the "place" of heavenly existence,
and the time when the righteous get there, are really of a distant secondary
importance for the Christian.
It's perhaps best to view
"heaven" in the way the New Testament describes it. That is, a
heavenly existence is the eternal life after this life in which God is the
centrality of our being. To put it simply, the righteous are promised that they
will live forever in absolute joy in the presence of God (Revelation 21:2-7).
The New Testament promises believers that
on the other side of death they will experience the resurrection and the
heavenly state forever. This eternal existence is now "stored up for you in
heaven," wrote Paul (Colossians 1:5). All who long for this hope — for
eternal life on the other side of death — distinguish between earthly and
heavenly realities. They store up, as Jesus counseled, "treasures in
heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in
and steal" (Matthew 6:20).
Copyright 2001
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