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The Salvation Sermon Series

Number V




Link to the other sermon mss for the Salvation Series:


1. "Predestined for Salvation?"
2. "Saved By Law or Faith?"
3.
"No Salvation without Justice"
4. "Hell and God’s Deliverance!"
5. "How Far is Heaven?"

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How Far Is Heaven?
based on 2 Corinthians 12:1-5 and various other passages
by Rev. Frank Schaefer

      
2 Corinthians 12:1-5: 

 1 I must go on boasting. Although there is nothing to be gained, I will go on to visions and revelations from the Lord. 2 I know a man in Christ who fourteen years ago was caught up to the third heaven. Whether it was in the body or out of the body I do not know—God knows. 3 And I know that this man—whether in the body or apart from the body I do not know, but God knows— 4 was caught up to paradise and heard inexpressible things, things that no one is permitted to tell. 5 I will boast about a man like that, but I will not boast about myself, except about my weaknesses.

 

Here, we have a Biblical report from someone (most likely, the apostle Paul himself) who saw a vision of heaven.  Of course, the most prominent account we have is the entire book of Revelation to which I will also refer to many times today.

I chose this passage for our reading to wet our appetite, to raise our interest; this passage is just doing that with its intriguing language of “inexpressible” things that “no one is permitted to tell.”  And what exactly is the “third heaven?”  Believe it or not, that’s probably the easiest question to answer, as we will see later.

Is this like one of the reports we hear from those with near-death experiences?  We have heard about report where dying people moved toward bright lights, met deceased loved ones, and even encountered Jesus. Is this similar to what Paul is talking about in this passage? It’s impossible to find a certain answer, but regardless, the important thing is that those experiences provide insights into what “heaven” might be like.

In order to understand the Biblical concept of heaven, we need to start with a Biblical survey:

 

Old Testament References to “Heaven”

The earliest biblical references of heaven are synonymous with “sky” (Gen 1:1; Gen 2:1; etc) However, the sky was believed to be the realm of God.

[show slide #3]

Keep in mind that early biblical writers believed in a flat earth as well as a universe that was contained within the realm of the heavens above the earth and the deep waters below. In other words, the sun, the moon and the stars were all seen as objects fixed to the firmament of the earth’s sky instead of being viewed as different planets in outer space.

Now here is a clue as to what Paul meant by the third heaven, as this image shows the three levels of 1.the firmament (sky), 2.the ocean of heaven and 3. the heaven of heavens.

What is important, theologically, is that from very early on, God was associated with a realm outside of the earth, while still being involved with the affairs of God’s creation and God’s creatures.

There are indications that the early biblical authors believed that heaven possessed a geographic dimension, whereas today we believe heaven to be in a different, spiritual dimension.  For instance, the Tower of Babel is one biblical example that shows that people actually believed that they could construct a tower so high that it would give them entrance to God’s realm.

Genesis 11:4:  Then they said, "Come, let us build ourselves a city, with a tower that reaches to the heavens, so that we may make a name for ourselves…”

I find it humorous that the author also seemed to have bought into this theory as he or she portrays God as feeling threatened by the building of this tower: Gen. 11:6 reads like this: The LORD said, “If as one people speaking the same language they have begun to do this, then nothing they plan to do will be impossible for them.”

Of course, we know what happened; suddenly the people became confused and they realized they were speaking different languages and working together became increasingly difficult.

One of the more interesting points about this story is that in antiquity, high buildings and mountains were viewed as a place where heaven and the earth were connected; Mt. Sinai or Horeb as well as Mt. Zion were examples of that. 

God was first believed by the Israelites to have chosen to enter the earthly realm on Mt Horeb. Moses went up the mountain and brought down the Ten Commandments believed to have been written by the finger of God.  By the time David became king, God was believed to “dwell” on Mt. Zion, in Jerusalem and the temple, built under King Salomon in Jerusalem was said to be God’s footstool. In other words, the temple was held to be an extension of Mt. Zion, a holy place where the presence of God dwelled.

So, the early Biblical concept of heaven as God’s realm was very much limited geographically to the sky above with only a few connecting points, where God’s presence was manifest in special ways in holy places.

[slide #4]

During the Babylonian captivity, however, after the Jerusalem temple had been destroyed (587 B.C.), the theology about heaven as the realm of God was refined again.  The prophet Ezekiel reflects this change in his vision which described God sitting on a movable throne (Ezekiel chapter 1).  Ezekiel’s break-through realization was: God is present with us anywhere on earth; God’s throne is moveable, God rules over all parts of the earth.  From that time forward, God’s realm / heaven was seen more and more as a spiritual realm rather than a geographical one—long before it was discovered that the earth is a sphere and is not the center of the universe.
 

Perhaps the earliest notion of heaven in terms of a blissful afterlife for the faithful believers can be found in Isaiah 26:19: “But your dead will live; their bodies will rise. You who dwell in the dust, wake up and shout for joy. Your dew is like the dew of the morning; the earth will give birth to her dead.”  The thought of heaven as a blissful afterlife became more accepted with the apocalyptic passages of the prophets Isaiah, Joel and Zechariah and Daniel.

 

New Testament References to “Heaven”

By the time we get to first-century Judea, religious leaders were split on the notion of heaven as an afterlife.  Some priests and the sect of the Sadducees did not believe in it.  The Pharisees (who are the founders of the modern rabbinical school), on the other hand, presented the more popular Jewish view of an afterlife with God (as we explored in our discourse on “Gehenna and Sheol” in last week’s sermon).

The New Testament witness of Heaven represents a strong theology of a blissful afterlife.

In 1 John 3:2, for instance, we read:  “Dear friends, now we are children of God, and what we will be has not yet been made known. But we know that when Christ appears, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is.”

In terms of our new body this verse suggests that we will possibly have a body much like Jesus following his resurrection.  This body could possibly have some features that resemble our current bodies.  Or else the disciples would not have recognized Jesus when they did.  However, this resurrection body seems also different enough that some did not recognize Jesus—at least not right away (such as Mary at the tomb and the Emmaus disciples)

If our body is to be like Jesus’ body, then we may still enjoy meals like Jesus did after his resurrection (I am hoping that calories will not be an issue).  On the other hand, Jesus was able to walk through closed doors, and appear and disappear at will. Jesus says in Matthew 22:30being children of the resurrection, they will be like angels.”  It’s mind-boggling!  It’s going to be some of the same, yet also different from anything we could ever imagine!

Perhaps, the incomprehensibility of heaven to the human mind is the reason

why the Scriptures often define heaven terms of what it’s NOT!

In Revelation 21 we read that every tear will be wiped from our face by God; there will be no more pain no more sorrow no more hunger. no more death!                  

A chaplain in a rehab hospital once asked a group of patients what they thought heaven was going to be like. The most amazing answer came from a woman who could barely move. She responded: "Heaven is a place without wheelchairs." What a great answer!
 

How does Salvation figure into the Christian theology of Heaven?

In Matthew 19 Jesus refers to "eternal life" and "being saved" as being equal to entering the Kingdom of God once it arrives on earth.

Throughout the synoptic gospel accounts (Matthew, Mark, and Luke), Jesus insisted that “the Kingdom of Heaven is near,” or that “the Kingdom of God is upon us.

Kingdom of Heaven permeates this world; it permeates time and space; it permeates our lives.  It may not be fully realized and come to earth, but it already exists.

We have to understand that the Kingdom of heaven is eternal, it has no beginning and no end. It existed in the past, it exists now, it will exist in the future.

As much as Old Testament believers may have struggled with getting beyond seeing the kingdom of heaven as a geographical dimension, we are struggling today with getting beyond seeing it as tied to the end of the physical world/earth.  To us it seems logical to speak of heaven like it is a place and time that will be in the future.

[slide # 5]

Following Jesus cue in Matthew 19, theologians often describe the moment when Jesus died on the cross as a cosmic event. It was (and is) that moment when human history and our concept of time intersected with eternity and God’s ultimate purpose for salvation.

Somehow, when we accept Jesus and claim what he did for us on the cross for our personal salvation, we become a new creation, we become born anew, we now belong to Jesus. And it all goes back to that moment in history when Jesus died for us.

Except from God’s perspective there is no time, there is only eternity. This means that Jesus’ salvific event is as much present today as it was in the year 32 A.D. That’s why something other-worldly happens to us when we are born again, when we become a new creation. What happens is that we become eternal beings. Once we accept Jesus as Savior we are now part of Heaven already!

Somehow, in ways we cannot explain scientifically, Jesus says God’s Kingdom permeates this earthly realm.

How can this be? No one can answer this question with certainty, but perhaps we can borrow an illustration from mathematics:  In 1884 English Schoolmaster Edwin Abbott published a book entitled: Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions.

In it he describes the world of squares--flatlanders living in a two dimensional world. As a flatlander, you have no perception of depth. You cannot see three-dimensional objects like a sphere.

But here is the curious thing:  you can perceive a sphere when you encounter one as a flatlander—even though you can’t see its real dimensions!

Now imagine that the sphere would slowly pass through flatland                        

[slide #6]

What would you actually see?  A dot appears and starts to grow, then shrinks again until it disappears.

Perhaps this is how we can understand how heaven permeates the dimension of this world.

It’s already here, even if we cannot presently grasp its form! As we draw near, as we are surrounded by the Light of Heaven, a light that, somehow, gently penetrates us, we awaken to an eternity consciousness.

God invites you and me to be a part of this place called heaven

                                                --starting right here;

                                                                   --starting right now!

Can you hear God’s call?

          Can you hear the Spirit whisper?

                   It may be a faint, gentle whisper, from another world

                                      yet, somehow, we can perceive it.

                                                                   If we really listen!

               

          It’s an invitation . . .

                   --an invitation to draw near;

                             --an invitation to wait for the coming of our Lord;

                                      --an invitation to wait with hope and patience,

--longing for a better world to come.

     

“No eye has seen, not ear has heard the marvelous things God is reserving for those who love him.” (1Cor 2:9)

Maranatha, Lord Jesus, come again quickly. Amen.


 

 

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