Monday, November 30, 2015

Getting Good at Prayer Isn't the Point Part 1 (of 6)


This week’s posts are paraphrased from Dr. John Ortberg’s insights to prayer as he expressed them for Christianity Today on July 6, 2015.  John is trained as a pastor, theologian and psychologist  I find everything he writes to be insightful, God honoring, practical and written in a way that speaks to the actual lives that average Christians live.   Jeff

“If you ever feel guilty about not praying enough, raise your mental hand. If someone at a party were to ask you: "How is your prayer life these days?" (which, by the way, is a great way to kill a conversation at a party), what would you say? Is the state of your prayer life determined by how often you pray? How long you pray? Is it measured by how many people you are praying for, or how much faith you pray with, or how many prayers get answered?

Why is it that some Christians pray fervently and frequently, yet their lives always seems to be a struggle? Why do others pray rarely, yet their lives seem to be flourishing? Prayer has an essential relationship to our effectiveness in life, yet there's a mystery to it. One day Jesus' disciples came to him with a difficult ministry challenge—an exorcism they could not perform. With a word, Jesus cast out the demon. The disciples asked, "Why couldn't we drive out the demon?"
"This kind only comes out by prayer," Jesus told them. But here's what's curious—Jesus didn't pray. He just told the demon to leave. And it did.
Perhaps Jesus was already prayed up. Perhaps for Jesus, prayer was embedded in a larger context of life in which prayer permeated every moment.
Many years ago I read words that helped me to understand Jesus and ministry and prayer in a new way:   

To believe is to begin to pray  

To believe as Jesus did doesn't just mean believing that God exists. It means to believe he's always present. That's a different level of awareness, which begins to turn all my words into prayer.

We can understand this by thinking about speaking in the presence of another person. There are three possibilities:
1. I can speak to someone.
2. I can speak in the presence of someone.
3. I can speak in the absence of someone.

If I'm speaking in the absence of someone ("behind their back"), I might say something I would not say in their presence ("to their face" or knowing they will hear my words).

In fact, the strain of managing my words in the presence of others is why some believers look forward to being ‘off duty’ from God so they can just "be themselves."

When it comes to God, we know Scenario #1 is possible (I can speak to God), and Scenario #2 is possible (I can speak to someone else aware of God's presence). But we can forget that Scenario #3 is not possible ("where can I go from your Spirit? Where can I flee from your presence?" writes David in Psalm 51).

Yes, at times God "hides" himself from us. God does not force his presence upon us, and we can live as though God were not present. This leads to oddities in our spiritual lives. I (John Ortberg) went to a Christian college where in the cafeteria we would play the "thumbs game" to see who would pray. The last one to raise his thumb (the loser) would have to pray over the meal: "Heavenly Father, we are grateful to be in your presence and grateful for this food."

Years later it occurred to me that God must wonder, "If it's such an honor to pray to me, how come the loser is the pray-er?" It's as if, while we were playing the thumbs game, we thought God was not watching. Then when we bowed our heads, we were suddenly on the heavenly radar.

Jesus never did this. Jesus knew his Father was listening not just when he prayed but all the time. For Jesus, the line between praying and just speaking in God's presence thinned out to the point of disappearing. This is why, when he healed people, sometimes Jesus would address his Father, and other times address the person he was going to heal.

He actually comments on this directly when he's about to raise Lazarus: "I thank you that you hear me. I know that you always hear me, but I said this for the benefit of the people standing here" (John 11:42).  

In other words, the goal of prayer is not to get good at prayer, not to see who can spend the longest time in prayer. (Jesus said not to pray like the pagans who believe they will be heard because of their many words.)

The goal is not to pray with greater feelings of certainty, or greater eloquence, or even greater frequency.  

The goal of prayer is to live all my life in the joyful awareness that God is present, right here, right now. This is the prayer-filled life that can sustain and empower a life of loving God and loving others

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Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Jesus More Than Meets the Eye

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Tuesday, November 24, 2015
Jeff Lampl


“Jesus became a wrecking ball to life in Galilee and Judea as he came out of the wilderness in the power of the Spirit (Luke 4:13-14). With his cousin, John the Baptist, arrested, Jesus roared into action. Jesus came out of the wilderness with a sense of urgency, a vision with unparalleled clarity, and insight that there is more to any moment and situation than meets the eye."  

"Far from the learned conclaves of religious leaders in Jerusalem, Jesus roamed the shore of the Sea of Galilee in search of leaders. Kingdom leaders. Two pairs of brothers, yearning for the kingdom to come, are called by Jesus into the kingdom task. Two were casting nets and two were repairing nets: ordinary business work by ordinary, unschooled men. “I am going to make you fishers of people.”  

"Jesus and the four fishermen soon entered a synagogue and the service was blasted by chaotic yelling (Mark 1). What a surprise! Demons right there in worship!  Can’t you hear some people saying, “Who knew that old Abijah was possessed with a demon?”  

But Jesus showed up, and the cosmic powers of evil were expelled with a word  

 “The people were amazed, astonished, shocked at his teaching, because he taught as
  one who had authority
. . . .”*
 

This is the God Whom we worship, Jesus, the one ruling this world with the same power that he used to create the world, the very same power that is holding the world together, the very power by which we, knowingly or not, live every moment of our lives.  

Our first act of worship is to acknowledge that it only, quite literally only, by the gracious power of God in Jesus Christ ruling the universe at every moment that we live and breathe and move and have our being

*italics paraphrased from John Frye

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Monday, November 23, 2015

How Should Christians Think about Defeating ISIS?

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Monday, November 23, 2015
Jeff Lampl

How Should Christians Think about Defeating ISIS?


“The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting.
It has been found difficult; and left untried.” 

G.K. Chesterton.  

“Forgive them for they know not what they do”
Luke 23:34

Some will think the following article to be absolutely nuts.   But I am hoping that each of you will read it all the way through and think as a Christian, not as an American who is also a Christian.  

It seems to me that God gave us a means for defeating the powers of sin and evil and ever since Christians have had incredible difficulty believing it, much less acting on it.  

Is there in the cross the power to defeat the powers of darkness?   What do you think?  Read on.  

“My heart goes out to the people of France, especially the residents of Paris. When faced with such unspeakable violence and barbarism humans cannot help but experience a visceral loss of our sense of security. The fear resulting from such a loss can send us straight into our limbic system, and it’s fight, flight, or freeze. America came out fighting. Will France have the discipline to choose an alternative response?

In the wake of 9/11 theologian and ethicist Stanley Hauerwas pointed out that President Bush and American leaders made a massive tactical mistake in terms of the language they used to describe the attacks. They called it an act of war. But it wasn’t war. It was murder.  

I see the leaders of France making the same mistake. This was not an act of war, this was cold blooded murder. Those who planned and executed the attacks are not warriors. They are murderers. The moment you call an act of terrorism an act of war you give the perpetrators of such violence exactly what they want. You elevate them to a status far beyond what they deserve.  

This was not an act of war. This was an act of murder, and great nations don’t go to war because of murder.

Turning a plane load of civilians into a smart bomb is not an act of war, it’s an act of lunacy. Turning the peaceful public sporting events, concerts, and restaurants into bloodbaths is not act of war, it is an act of madness. When Americans adopted the language of war in order to describe the hijacking of airplanes and flying them fully fueled and loaded with people into buildings, we normalized that behavior, categorizing it as collateral damage in this horrific thing we call war.  

I beg the people of France not to make the same mistake America did. When America adopted the language of war it initiated not one, but two wars at the cost of trillions of dollars and untold lives, not to mention a massive financial recession. The major result of those wars was the creation of ISIS, the organization now taking credit for planning and executing the violence in Paris. Our strategy of war has not been very effective in terms of quelling global terrorism, and it has eroded all of the goodwill we experienced after 9/11.  

Call terrorism an act of war and you unwittingly surrender the high ground. Call it murder, and you name these acts and their perpetrators much more accurately. Call it murder and you can still promise to hunt down the murderers and bring them to justice, but this time you can say: we refuse to stoop to your level. We could bomb you into oblivion but we won't, because we’re better than that. We will not become murderers like you. We refuse to seek revenge and retribution, and the world will see our true colors. We promise to bring these murderers to justice, but we refuse to join the ranks of ordinary nations by acting rashly.  

Nations have already begun to rain down bombs in response to the violence in Paris. If you continue down this road and let slip the dogs of war I can promise two things will happen.  

First, you will find out that going to war with radical Islam will not make you safer, and it will not make you happy. You may get a momentary buzz of actually doing something in response, but the euphoria will be replaced by the cries of mourning as your sons and daughters are lost to war. War will never satisfy the longing you have right now, because what you long for is peace, and the road to peace only comes through forgiveness.  

Second, you will find that once you go down the road of war with radical Islam, you cannot control the outcomes. You can have the most powerful military, the best strategy, the greatest leaders, and the most virtuous intentions in the world, and you still won’t be able to determine outcomes to your satisfaction. War in the Middle East will always go sideways because the West has more to lose. Desperate poverty makes for a dangerous enemy. Those who fight wars on terror will invest more and more money, relational capital, and lives with very little to show for it in the end. The only way to vanquish this enemy is to make them a friend. If France will have the imagination and discipline to pursue peace with as much creativity and vigor as the U.S. pursued war, they may well lead the way to a better future.  

Compared to France, America is still a relatively young nation. We made the mistake of youth. We responded to our tragedy by calling it war instead of murder. Maybe, if we had the discipline to call it murder, we would have more quickly heeded the wisdom of leaders like Martin Luther King, Jr. who said,
“Through violence you may murder a murderer, but you can’t murder murder. Through violence you may murder a liar, but you can’t establish truth. Through violence you may murder a hater, but you can’t murder hate through violence. Darkness cannot put out darkness; only light can do that.”  

To the people of France I say: you have the benefit of maturity and many more centuries of experience. I urge you not to make the mistake of youth. Don’t call it war. Call it murder. Don’t try to murder murder. The only way forward is for France to do what America was unable to do: find the high road, and take it. Find a way to forgive. If you don’t, you only have yourselves to blame. If you do, you will prove yourselves to be a great nation.
  *You can learn more about the author of this article at TimSuttle.com

Saturday, November 21, 2015

The Most Important Thing in the World


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Saturday, November 21, 2015
Jeff Lampl

The Most Important Thing in the World


For no one can lay any foundation other than the one we already have—Jesus Christ.  Anyone who builds on that foundation may use a variety of materials—gold, silver, jewels, wood, hay, or straw.  But on the judgment day, fire will reveal what kind of work each builder has done. The fire will show if a person’s work has any value.  If the work survives, that builder will receive a reward.  But if the work is burned up, the builder will suffer great loss. The builder will be saved, but like someone barely escaping through a wall of flames.”       
                                          
 
1 Corinthians 3:11-15 (NLT)

So, what will happen to you when you die?  

Near Death Experiences have been recorded for millennia in all religious traditions.   In fact recent movies have been made about them.  Skeptics will claim that they are simply neurons in the brain firing off whatever inputs it has received during the deceased’s life time.   I think this skepticism is good, yet I am fairly certain that there is something valid to at least some NDE’s, both those reported to be “heavenly” and those reported to be “hellish”  (To Heaven and Back by spine surgeon Mary Neal is one that makes sense to me)  

Beyond that the bible tells us that every human being who ever lived will, in some way, shape or form, meet God in Jesus and the cross.   This is the first judgment.  Those who have believed and pursued the things of God in this lifetime will find that the first judgment is a huge “welcome home, beloved son/daughter” and they will enter heaven or paradise as Jesus called it when talking to the thief on the cross beside him.     

Those people who have rejected God and the things of God, including his forgiveness, will have grown a heart hardened to the love of God.   The Love of God that melts the heart of the repentant, hardens the heart of the recalcitrant.  Those who have practiced a patterned resistance toward God on earth will be resistant to Him on judgment day  (read The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis).   To them Heaven will be repugnant and they will choose the outer darkness, one of Jesus’ reference to an eternity apart from God.   It will an angry, bitter, existence of sub human loneliness.  If you are counting on an end of life conversion, don’t.   It’s a bad bet.  I suspect they are rare.   Those who find God an interference now will find him intolerable when they see him face to face.  

Those who in this life say to God, “Thy will be done” will enter heaven.  Those to whom God says, “Thy will be done” will miss heaven both in this life and the next.  

But heaven is not the destiny.  Isaiah 65, Revelation 20-22 and elsewhere tell us that God will renew the world  (Acts 3:21).   Heaven is temporary.  One day Jesus will return to earth, bringing heaven and all those in heaven with him to earth, at which time believers will receive a new physical body, albeit animated by the Spirit (1 Corinthians 15) and live a life on earth that is unimaginably magnificent (1 Cor. 2:9) (see characteristics of life on the new earth below).  

WHY THIS MATTERS  

This matters more than anything in the world.   The decisions you make about God in this life determine your eternal destiny.   Again, I seriously doubt if there are many, if any,  death bed conversions.  

Secondly, 1 Corinthians 3 (above), tells us that every moment, hour, day, month, year, relationship, attitude, behavior, act of faith or unbelief, word of disbelief or belief, every aspect of every day is either building us into the kind of person who can flourish in God’s New World or the kind of person who cannot.  Those who have grown in the things of God in this world will find that they have a developed large capacity for God and God’s New World.   Those who have built their lives on “straw” will discover that most of themselves will be burnt away at what the bible calls the second judgment.  They will enter but not much of them will be left.   I like how one theologian quipped, “I’m sure God will let anyone in who can stand it”  

There is a great myth that says that those who are the most heavenly minded are no earthly good.   History shows the opposite.  Those who lived the Lord’s Prayer “Thy kingdom (heaven) come on earth” are those who lived on earth becoming the kind of person who loves the things of God and has sought to bring the things of God about in their lifetimes on earth, and in doing so they will be the ones prepared for life in God’s coming New World when Jesus returns brings heaven with him.   It will be the great merger of heaven and earth and Satan’s best anti-trust suit can’t stop it.      

Those who live for heaven now are those who are the most earthly good.   In fact I’m certain if you are reading this you know people just like that.   You are probably too humble to believe yourself one of those people but I have no doubt at all that many of you indeed are.    

Your task and mine in this life is to become the kind of person who has grown a capacity to flourish in the New Merger of Heaven and Earth.    

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Appendix:   What is Life like on the New Earth?  

Jesus returns, bringing Heaven to earth.  Heaven and earth are merged forming a New Creation where God, human beings and nature are finally united into a vibrant, flourishing, creative New World   (Rev. 21:1-5)

·         We will discover that life on the new earth is a continuation of the life believers had
          already begun to live on earth.  Believers will discover they have “entered and lived in
          heaven” before they died.  

·         They will discover that the hard work of repentance and obedience on earth was
     preparation for flourishing in the presence of God in God’s new world.  They will be
     thrilled to be living the kind of life foreshadowed by the 10 commandments & the
     sermon on the mount: a life of   Honesty, vulnerability, love, humility, courage,
     generosity, selflessness, service and joy.  

·         On the New Earth we will be part of a society of people (the metaphor in Revelation
     is city) not unlike life today, only exponentially more vibrant, joyful and flourishing. 
     Genesis 1:28 will be fulfilled  (see the word pictures of Rev 20-22)  

·         Beauty will be overwhelmingly stunning.  The coming new world will be as a full color
     landscape is to a pencil sketch.  Our lives  today are the sketch, the portrait is yet to
     come  Rev 21:9-22 (word pictures of indescribable beauty using words from earthly
     experience)  

·         All relationships are made right:  all hate, resentment and broken relationships will
     be repented of and forgiven.  Those who refuse repentance and forgiveness will be
     choosing to refuse heaven” 

·         We will be given new physical bodies  complete with intellect and emotions  
    
1 Cor.15. Phil 3:21  

·         We will be reunited with loved ones who have chosen a destiny with God
     1 Thess.  4:14-18  

·         We’ll eat and drink   Luke 14:15, 22:18  

·         We will have joyful jobs to do, a purpose to pursue, a calling corresponding to our
     giftedness.   The toil of work will be over and the joy of work will have become
     complete.  2 Timothy 2:12 Rev 22:5  

·         Will have free will, freely choosing God’s will because the Goodness of God is
     “irresistibly compelling.  The Worship of God will direct our will.  
    
Jeremiah 24:7  Ezekiel 36-25-28  

·         All of nature will be restored including animal life Isaiah 11:6-9 and 65:25  

·         There will be no loss:  no one will become unmarried.  the greatest pleasure on
     earth will have been only a dim foretaste of the real thing  

·         Everything that has gone wrong on earth will be made right.  Even evil deeds will
     be used by God for making the world right .     Romans 8:28  

·         Everything done for the Lord on earth will be found here in its completion. 
    
1 Cor 15:58  

·         We will grow, life will not be fixed: expansion & increasing vastness.
     Isaiah 9:7 Rev 7  

·         Every pleasure of earth including hobbies, sports, activities will find themselves in
     the new world, only not in their “sketch” form  as they are today, but in their
     consummate form,  to be enjoyed in ways we have only hints of today.  

·         The rewards received in heaven are like the reward of the master pianist.   His
     reward is not external (accolades), rather his reward is the achieved ability to joyfully
     play a concerto.  Our reward will be the capacity to enjoy in “heaven” that which we
     have practiced for on earth.    1 Corinthians 3:12-15

Friday, November 20, 2015

What will Heaven Be Like?

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Friday, November 20, 2015
Jeff Lampl


One Seminary Professor who has written on the subject of life beyond the grave is Randy Alcorn. I have read his book on Heaven and I do find that what he summarizes below is in some way, shape or form as accurate a picture of the eternal destiny of believers as any I have read.  
Those who have looked carefully at the history of the Western World know that those who have set their hearts on the things of heaven have been those who have been of the most earthly good.    Jeff
 

1. Heaven is the dwelling place of God (Deut. 26:15; Matt. 6:9).

2. Heaven is the dwelling place of God’s angels (Luke 2:15; Matt. 28:2; Heb. 12:22).

3. Heaven is the dwelling place of God’s saints from earth who have died and now live there in his presence (Rev. 4-5; Luke 16:22, 25; Heb. 12:23).

4. At death, the human spirit leaves the body (Ec. 12:7) and goes either to heaven or hell (Luke 16:22ff).

5. There is immediate conscious existence after death, both in heaven and hell (Luke 16:22ff.; Luke 23:43; 2 Cor. 5:8; Rev. 6:9-11; Phil. 1:23). There is no “soul sleep” or period of unawareness preceding heaven. (“Fallen asleep” in 1 Thes. 4:13 is a euphemism for death, describing the spirit’s departure from the body, ending our conscious existence on earth.)

6. Heaven is an actual place, to and from which Christ (John 1:32; 6:33; Acts 1:2), angels (Matt. 28:2; Rev. 10:1) and in rare circumstances people, even prior to their deaths, have traveled (2 Kings 2:11; 2 Cor. 12:2; Rev. 11:12).

7. Heaven is consistently referred to as “up” in location (Mark 6:41; Luke 9:51). We do not know whether it is a place “in the heavens” (the universe beyond the earth) or entirely outside the space/time continuum. We do know heaven is someplace, and presently that place isn’t earth.

8. Heaven is where Christ came from (John 6:42), where he returned after his resurrection (Acts 1:11), where he now is and from which he will physically return to earth again (Acts 1:11; Rev. 19:1-16).

9. Heaven is described as a city (Heb. 11:16; 12:22; 13:14; Rev. 21:12). The normal understanding of a “city” is a place of many residences in near proximity, the inhabitants of which are subject to a common government. “City” may also connote varied and bustling activity.

10. Heaven contains for believers a permanent inheritance, an unperishing estate specifically reserved for us. (1 Pet. 1:4).

11. Heaven is the Christian’s country of citizenship (Heb. 11:16; Phil. 3:20). Christ is our King. We are his ambassadors, representing his agenda on earth (2 Cor. 5:20). While on our brief stay here, we are aliens, strangers and pilgrims (Heb. 11:3). Ambassadors, aliens and pilgrims identify themselves and plan their lives with a focus on their home country. Should they become too engrossed in the alien country where they temporarily reside, they can easily compromise their allegiances to their true King and true country.

12. God’s people should long for heaven. This pleases our Lord, who has prepared a place there for us (Heb. 11:13-16; 2 Cor. 5:2). We should be ever-motivated by the anticipation of heaven (Phil. 3:14; 2 Tim. 4:8).

13. Heaven and all that it represents should be a central object of our attention in this life. Our hearts or minds are to be continuously set on these “things above” where Christ is in heaven, not on “earthly things” (Col. 3:1-4).

Note: The popular notion of Christians being “so heavenly minded they’re of no earthly good” is a myth. On the contrary, most of us are so earthly minded we are of no heavenly or earthly good. C. S. Lewis said, “It is since Christians have largely ceased to think of the other world that they have become so ineffective in this one.” God commands us to be heavenly minded, and doing so will give us the perspective and motivation to live on earth as he has commanded us (Heb. 11:26-27).

14. There is a sense in which believers are currently in heaven with Christ (Eph. 2:6; Col. 3:3). Our intimate link with Christ in his redemptive work somehow makes us inseparable from him. As we walk with him and commune with him in this world, this reality makes it sometimes possible to experience a faint foretaste of heaven’s delights and wonders.

15. Heaven will provide us delivery from the present conditions of material decay and corruption (Matt. 6:20).

16. Heaven will provide us delivery from the current sinful human condition (Rom. 7:24).

17. The redeemed in heaven are described as “shining” and wearing “white robes,” indicating their moral purity and righteousness (Dan. 12:3; Matt. 13:43; Rev. 3:4; 6:11).

18. Heaven is a place of great joy and pleasures for the redeemed (Psalm 16:11).

19. The names of Christ’s redeemed are written in heaven (Luke 10:20; Heb. 12:23; Rev. 20:15).

20. When in his presence, Christ will give new names to the righteous, known only between him and them (Rev. 2:17). This implies some level of privacy.

21. The wicked, those whose sins remain uncleansed by the blood of Christ, will be excluded from heaven (Gal. 5:21; Eph. 5:5; Rev. 22:15).

22. Heaven’s central draw is our anticipation of being with Christ (Phil. 1:23).

23. Another draw of heaven is our anticipation of continued and unhindered life, and ultimate reunion with Christian loved ones who’ve gone before us and will come after us (1 Thes. 4:14-18).

24. Heaven has not remained the same since its creation, but has undergone several phases, and will experience future change as well. At least five distinct phases of heaven seem identifiable. There was the pre-sin heaven, before Satan fell (Is. 14:12-15), apparently taking a third of the angels with him (Rev. 12:4). There was the Old Testament heaven of Paradise or “Abraham’s bosom” ( Luke 16:22), which was then one of two compartments of Hades, “the place of the dead,” the other compartment being Hell. Then came the current post-resurrection-of-Christ heaven, where Paradise seems to have been relocated from Hades, and where believers now come directly into his presence at death (Eph. 4:8-10; 2 Cor. 5:8). The millennial kingdom, where Christ rules over the earth with his redeemed seems to be a phase of Heaven (Rev. 20:14). Then there is the Heaven still to come after the final judgment, the New Jerusalem in the new heavens and new earth (Rev. 21-22).

Similarly, what we now refer to as Hell (the only compartment of Hades left since the relocation of Paradise to Heaven) will, after the Great White Throne judgment, itself be relocated in the eternal lake of fire, the ultimate hell (Rev. 20:14-15).

Note: Heaven is not yet as it one day will be. There is still sin and suffering in the universe which will not be relieved until after the present heaven and earth pass away, and the heavenly city is established (Rev. 21:4). There are said to presently still be “spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms” (Eph. 6:12). This may explain the apparent incongruity of the already-fallen Satan’s coming before the presence of God (Job 1:6) and the future “war in heaven” (Rev. 12:7) in which Satan is cast down in some further or final sense. He is not finally defeated until a thousand years after he is bound in the pit and then after one last rage of evil, thrown forever into the lake of fire (Rev. 20:2,7,10).

The resurrection of believers has not yet occurred, and will not until just prior to the new heavens and earth (Rev. 20:12-15). Hence, though the present heaven we enter at death is a wonderful place, it is not yet complete, not in its most glorious form.

25. Heaven contains an actual sanctuary which served as the pattern for the earthly tabernacle (Heb. 8:5; 9:11,23-24). Jesus currently “serves in the sanctuary, the true tabernacle set up by the LORD, not man” (Heb. 8:2). In heaven there is a temple that contains the prototype ark of the covenant (Rev. 11:19, 15:5). (This violates the popular notion of a “spiritual” heaven with no physical form, suggesting heaven is a more tangible reality than we often imagine.)

26. Christ promised his followers they would live with him in heaven (John 12:26; 13:36; 14:2-3).

27. Jesus described heaven as having many rooms or dwellings, and promised that he himself would go there and prepare a place there for us (John 14:2-3).

28. When we are in heaven, it may be possible for us to welcome others into our dwelling places. After speaking of the shrewd servant’s desire to use earthly resources so that “people will welcome me into their houses,” Jesus tells his followers to use “worldly wealth” (earthly resources) to “gain friends” (by making a difference in their lives on earth), “so that when it is gone [when life on earth is over] you will be welcomed into eternal dwellings” (Luke 16:9).

Note: Our “friends” in heaven appear to be to those whose lives we’ve touched in a significant way on earth. They will apparently have their own “eternal dwellings.” This fits the Bible’s portrayal of heaven as a city. In a nonparabolic context, Christ promised to prepare for us dwelling places in heaven (John 14:2-3). Luke 16:9, then, may literally mean these eternal dwelling places of friends could be places to fellowship and/or reside in as we move about the heavenly kingdom.

29. Some believers will receive a “rich welcome” when they enter heaven (2 Peter 1:11). It seems possible, and in keeping with Luke 16:1-9, those who on earth have impacted and/or been impacted by the arriving believer (perhaps including family members), and who have gone to heaven before him, may participate in the welcoming committee at his “rich welcome” into heaven.

30. Christ’s resurrection body appears to be the prototype for our own heavenly bodies (1 Cor. 15:20, 48-49; Phil. 3:21; 1 John 3:2). After his resurrection, Jesus emphasized he was not a “ghost,” a disembodied spirit, but had a physical body (Luke 24:37-39.)

31. In our resurrected state we will have real “spiritual” bodies with physical substance (1 Cor. 15:42-44). We will be capable of talking, walking, touching and being touched (Luke 24; John 20-21). Christ’s resurrection body had an ability to appear suddenly, apparently coming through a locked door to the apostles (John 20:19), and “disappearing” from the sight of the two at Emmaus (Luke 24:31). If our resurrection bodies have the same properties as his, this suggests an ability to transcend the present laws of physics and/or to move and travel in some way we are now incapable of.

32. Christ ate food in his resurrection body, and he and we will eat and drink in heaven (Luke 14:15; 22:18). Yet there will be no hunger or thirst in heaven (Rev. 7:16). It would seem the resurrection body does not need what is now essential–food, drink, oxygen, covering, etc.–but that it is nonetheless fully capable of enjoying some or all of these things (and no doubt many more).

33. Between our entrance to heaven and our resurrection, we may have temporary pre-resurrection bodies (e.g. Luke 16:19ff.; Rev. 6:11). This fits the notion that unlike God and the angels, who are in essence spirits though capable of inhabiting bodies (John 4:24; Heb. 1:14), man is in essence both spiritual and physical (Gen. 2:7). Hence, between our earthly life and our resurrection, a temporary body would allow us to retain the qualities of full humanity.

Note: Some Christians seem strangely repulsed at the biblical teachings of the tangible nature of our heavenly bodies and the heavenly state. But this teaching should not surprise us, since humans have both a spiritual and a physical dimension. We do not become inhuman in heaven, we become everything humans are capable of being by virtue of both creation and redemption. Matthew 22:30, for instance, does not teach we will be genderless (gender is a God-created aspect of humanity) or otherwise non-human, but simply that there will be no marriage in heaven.

Much misunderstanding stems from the Greek/Platonic belief that the body is evil and the spirit’s highest destiny is to be free from the body. This is in stark contrast to the biblical belief that God is the Creator of both body and spirit, both of which were marred by sin, but both of which are redeemed by Christ. True, I need to be delivered from my earthly body, which is subject to sin and decay (Rom. 7:24). But the promise of the heavenly state is not the absence of body, but the attainment of a new and sinless body and spirit. In 1 Cor. 15, Paul regards the new body–not simply the new spirit-as essential to our redemption. If the body is not redeemed, then man is not redeemed, since man is by nature body as well as spirit. A spirit without a body, like a body without a spirit, is not the highest human destiny, but would be a state of incompleteness, an aberration from the full meaning of humanness.

34. At death the believer is ushered into heaven by angels (Luke 16:22). We may be accompanied in death’s relocation by ministering angel(s) who have served us while we were on earth (Heb. 1:14). Some angels are assigned to children, and they have special continuous access to God (Matt. 18:10). This suggests that ministering or guardian angels could be assigned to people even prior to their conversion to Christ, though this is uncertain.

Note: Angels are individual beings who have their own names, and are capable of reasoning, speech and interaction (Dan. 8:16-26; Luke 1:26-38; Dan. 10:13, 31; Rev. 12:1). Angels active on earth are normally invisible to human eyes (2 Kings 6:17). They are sent out by God in response to prayer, and wage war on behalf of God and men (Dan. 9:21, 23; 10:12-13; Rev. 12:7). Angels can take on physical form and appear as humans (Gen. 18-19). We can respond to or interact with angels, unaware of their identity (Heb. 13:2).

35. In heaven, we will worship God along with the angels and redeemed people from every race and background (Rev. 4:9-11; 5:11-13; 7:9-12).

36. In heaven, we will sing praise songs along with all the rest of God’s creation (Rev. 5:13).

37. Communication, dialogue, corporate worship and other relationship-building interactions all take place heaven (Rev. 1-22). Apparently saints and angels and God will all interact together, building and deepening their relationships.

38. In heaven, we will exercise not only intellect but emotions (Rev. 6:10; 7:10). Angels too seem capable of responding with emotion (Rev. 7:11-12; Rev. 18). Heaven is described as a place where there is great rejoicing (an emotional response) over what God is accomplishing on earth (Luke 15:7,10).

Note: Some suggest there will be no emotions in heaven. But emotions are part of God-created humanity, not some sinful baggage we are to be cleansed of. We should not expect the absence of emotion there, but pure and accurately informed emotions, emotions guided by reality, not easily misled and subjective feelings. The tears that will be wiped away are the tears of suffering over sin and death (Rev. 21:4). Since we are capable of now shedding tears stemming from joy, there is no reason to believe there could be no tears of joy in heaven. (For instance, at meeting Christ or at reunion with loved ones.)

And since the loving acts of God for his people, including his death on the cross, naturally prompt the spiritually sensitive to tears (and we will be more, not less, spiritually sensitive in heaven), it seems possible that there could be tears of sobriety and gratitude over the redemptive price Jesus paid for us. This could be true throughout eternity, but certainly could apply prior to the New Heaven and New Earth where the “no more tears” promise first appears.

39. Heaven is a place from which God is said to exercise his wrath against godlessness on earth (Rom. 1:18), and even to send down his judgment of fire (Rev. 13:13; 20:9). In heaven, saints gain an increased sense of holiness and long for God’s wrath and vengeance to be poured out against injustice (Rev. 6:9-11). Angels in heaven too long for God’s judgment to be exercised against the ungodly (Rev. 16:4-7).

40. In heaven, we will have eternal rewards, permanent possessions and positions which vary from believer to believer (Matt. 6:19-25; 25:20-21; Luke 19:17-19; 1 Cor. 3:12-15; 2 Cor. 5:9,10). Rewards will be granted in light of our faithfulness and motives (1 Cor. 4:2,5). In dispensing rewards, Christ will not overlook the smallest act of kindness done in his name (Mark 9:41).

Note: Heavenly rewards are promised to those who endure difficult circumstances out of their trust in God (Heb. 10:34-36), and to those who persevere under persecution for their faith (Luke 6:22, 23). A life of godliness (2 Peter 3:11-14) and compassionate obedience (Matthew 25:20, 21) will be richly rewarded by our Lord. When we extend hospitality and give a meal to those too poor or incapacitated to pay us back Christ promises us “although they cannot repay you, you will be repaid at the resurrection of the righteous” (Luke 14:14).

Salvation and rewards are completely different. Salvation is God’s work for man given as a free gift, to which man can contribute absolutely nothing (Eph. 2:8-9; Titus 3:5). Rewards, however, are man’s work for God. Salvation is dependent on God’s faithfulness and mercy, while rewards are conditional, contingent as well on man’s faithfulness (2 Tim. 2:12; Rev. 2:26-28; 3:21).

41. At least five different crowns are given as heavenly rewards: the crown of life (James 1:12; Rev. 2:10), the incorruptible crown (1 Cor. 9:24, 25), crown of rejoicing (1 Thes. 2:19; Phil. 4:1), crown of glory (1 Pet. 5:1-4), and crown of righteousness (2 Tim. 4:6-8).

The crowns may relate to positions of ruling in heaven (Luke 19:17; Rev. 2:26-28), but in any case they are lasting reminders of our work on earth, and Christ’s faithfulness in enabling us to do that work. Ultimately these crowns put at Christ’s feet, to recognize him (Rev. 4:10). Our rewards are given not merely for our recognition, but for God’s eternal glory. However, Scripture sees no contradiction whatsoever between God’s eternal glory and our eternal good.

Note: While heaven will be wonderful for all its inhabitants, not every believer’s position and experience in heaven will be the same. As hell has different punishments (Matt .11:20-24; Luke 20:45-47), so heaven has different rewards. Perhaps it will be a matter of differing capacity. Two jars can both be full, but the one with greater capacity contains more. Likewise, all of us will be full of joy in heaven, but some may have more joy because their capacity for joy will be larger, having been stretched through their trust in and obedience to God in this life.

42. Heaven should be looked to by the believer as the time when all righteous acts–many of which will have been disregarded and some punished on earth–will be finally rewarded. There is a “proper time” for the harvest, a time that normally follows our life on earth–”Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up” (Galatians 6:9).

The Christian’s works done for God’s glory will have eternal significance–of those who die in Christ, God says “their deeds will follow them” (Rev. 14:13). Our rewards in heaven will link us eternally to our service for Christ while on earth. There is a radical change in our location, but no essential discontinuity between our lives here and there.

Note: As Scripture gives no opportunity for the unbeliever to go back to earth and live his life again and this time to put faith in Christ, so there is no opportunity for the believer to go back and relieve his life, this time for Christ. There is no indication that rewards missed by virtue of lack of service on earth (1 Cor. 3: 13-15) will be later achieved in some other way. In heaven, how we have lived on earth will have eternal effects.

43. In heaven, we will serve God (Rev. 7:15). Service implies responsibilities, duties, effort, and creativity to do work well. (Work with lasting accomplishment, unhindered by decay and fatigue, and enhanced by unlimited resources.)

44. In heaven, we will be given rest from our labors on earth (Rev. 14:13). The rest granted us when by Christ on earth (Matt. 11:28-29), paradoxically, is a rest we now must “make every effort to enter” (Heb. 4:11). Heaven’s labor will be refreshing, productive and unthwarted, without futility and frustration. Perhaps it will be like the Adam and Eve did in the Garden of Eden (Gen. 2:15), before sin brought the curse on the ground, with its thorns (Gen. 3:17-19).

45. In accord with our service for Christ while on earth, we will reign with Him in heaven (2 Tim. 2:12; Rev. 3:21; 22:5). This implies specific delegated responsibilities for those under our leadership (Luke 19:17-19). We judge or rule over the world and we judge and rule over angels (1 Cor. 6:2-3).

46. At the center of the future heaven will be the city of the New Jerusalem. The exact dimensions of the heavenly city are measured by an angel and reported as a 12,000 stadia (1500 mile) cube (Rev. 22:15-17). This base of over two million square miles would stretch from the west coast to the Mississippi river, and from the borders of Canada to Mexico, covering two thirds the entire land mass of the United States. More astounding is its 1500 mile height. By present standards, that would be 780,000 stories. It is apparently within this vast city that we will have personal dwelling places, which Jesus has prepared for us (John 14:2; Luke 16:9; Rev. 21:2).

Note: While the dimensions and proportions may have symbolic importance (e.g. the Holy of Holies, God’s dwelling place, was a cube), this does not mean the dimensions are not literal. In fact, Rev. 22 goes to great lengths to express these exact dimensions and to emphasize they are in “man’s measurement”–if the city really were these dimensions (and there is no reason it couldn’t be), what more could we expect God to say to convince us of this?

47. Heaven’s New Jerusalem is filled with magnificent beauty, including streets of gold and buildings of pearls, emeralds and precious stones (Rev. 21:19-21).

48. Heaven has light, water, trees and fruit (Rev. 22:1-2).

49. The heavenly city’s gates are always open, and people will travel in and out, some bringing wonderful things into the city (Rev. 21:24-25; 22:14). Travel outside the city suggests the city is not the whole of heaven, but merely its center.

50. Heaven contains some animals (including wolves, lambs, and lions), at least in its millennial phase (Isaiah 65:25). Even before the millennium, there are horses in heaven (Rev. 6:2-8; 19:11), enough for the armies of heaven to ride (Rev. 19:11; 2 Kings 6:17).

51. In heaven, we’ll eat and drink at a table with Christ and the redeemed saints from earth, communicating and fellowshipping and rejoicing with them (Matt. 8:11; Luke 22:29, 30; Rev. 19:9). 

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