Showing posts with label heaven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heaven. Show all posts

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Is Heaven For Real? - John 14:2

"In my Father's house are many dwelling places; if it were not so, I would have told you..."

It has been a long time, about a month, since I wrote a new post. In one sense, I apologize to those of you who have faithfully come here looking for a fresh commentary from God's Word only to be disappointed. I truly regret that. But in another sense, I am not sorry because the last month has been incredibly busy and difficult. Besides all that, I just simply have not been moved to write about anything. However, this morning I just finished a book I have been trying to read for a couple of months.

It is a book that has been on the New York Times Best-Seller list for some time, but much more important, it is a book about heaven. I love books about heaven, though a good one is rare, and this is a good one in my opinion. Randy Alcorn's book on heaven is still my all-time favorite, but this may be second. Why? Because it is written by a pastor in Nebraska named Todd Burpo (no belching jokes, please) about his son, Colton, who had a near death experience (NDE), and supposedly was transported to heaven during an emergency operation to save his life. I say "supposedly" because not everyone believes that NDEs are real, including a lot of evangelicals, not just pagan skeptics. But having talked with down-to-earth, sensible, normal people who have had them, I do believe in NDEs, as long as what the person experiences is not contrary to Scripture. If it is, then I have to conclude that they were either deceived by Satan or that they failed to remember things accurately.

Having qualified my belief in NDEs, Colton, who was about four at the time of his operation and NDE, tells his father in the first year or so afterward many wonderful and scripturally verifiable things about heaven. A few of them are difficult for me to accept, i.e., that people have wings to fly. But there is little or nothing that I can say for sure is bibically wrong, and there are some things that are absolutely extraordinary. Colton says that he saw Jesus and that He has red "markers" on His hands and feet. Could he be referring to the marks of our Lord's crucifixion, which He still bears (see Revelation 5:6)? Colton also says he met a girl in heaven who claims to be his other sister. It turns out that his mother, Sonja, had a miscarriage. He believes that he met his sister in heaven, but he never knew about his mother's miscarriage. He also met his grandfather, "Pop", who died many years before he was born. Colton identified him not by a picture of him in old age, but in his grandfather's youth. But I'm not doing justice to the book. I recommend that you read it. Even if you don't believe in NDEs, or think that the kid was lying, or assume that the father made all this up to sell a book, you need to read it. It is at the least, very thought-provoking. At the most, it could convince you that, as Colton says, "Heaven is for real."

 But the truth is that Jesus already told us that heaven is for real (John 14:2) and He even went so far to tell us that if heaven did not exist, and did not have a "dwelling place" for us, He would have told us and set the record straight. So even if you don't believe Colton Burpo, we really should trust Jesus on the subject of heaven. Who would know better than the Son of God !? But I still recommend that you read, Heaven Is For Real. This little boy's perspective on heaven is priceless!

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Do children and babies who die go to heaven? Mark 10:14

At the memorial service for the victims of the Oklahoma bombing some years ago, Billy Graham clearly stated that he believed the babies and young children who died were now in heaven. R.C. Sproul immediately spoke out against this as bad theology. All this forced me to go back to Scripture to see what it really teaches about children and heaven.

In Mark 10:14, Jesus told His disciples, "Permit the children to come to Me; do not hinder them; for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these." (NASV) The King James Version translates the last part of this verse this way  "...for of such is the kingdom of God."

The King James translation makes it seem as if Jesus is saying that some children are a part of God's kingdom, but some are not. The NASV, I believe after considerable research, is the best translation, and it clearly indicates that "children", meaning babies and young children, do belong to the kingdom of heaven.

What I believe Jesus is saying is that children and all those who "receive the kingdom of God like a child" i.e., with child-like trust in Jesus as Savior (v. 15) are going to be in heaven.

Therefore, I would agree with Billy Graham on this, and disagree with R.C. Sproul. Babies and young children who die are in heaven. I base this not on theological constructs or emotional bias but on the clear statement of our Lord when properly understood in context.

Now I realize this raises other significant questions, and I will attempt to answer them as best as possible.

First, does the Bible teach an "age of accountability"? No and yes. I do not believe that there is a particular age at which children become accountable. The Bible does not speak explicitedly an "age of accountability", let alone give us a specific age . But I believe that until a particular child is constitutionally able to make a decision about Jesus Christ, that child, though a sinner (see Psalm 51:5), has grace imputed to him or her by God based on the sacrifice of Jesus Christ for the entire world (see post on II Corinthians 5:19). I do not believe that God will condemn a baby or small child that has no ability to interact with the truth about Jesus Christ. I base this on the belief that the true God is a fair God who gives every person in the world an opportunity to know the truth and believe (see my upcoming posts on Romans 1:18-20 and John 16:8-11).

This brings me to another crucial question, that is, how does my belief fit with unconditional election?

My answer is that God in eternity past unconditionally elected those He would save based on His good pleasure and absolutely no merit on the part of the recipient (see Ephesians 1:3-6). I believe that He elected all babies and small children who would die before they obtained the ability to believe in Christ. This is still unconditional election because it is not based on any merit on their part, rather the issue is lack of any ability to exercise saving faith. This belief reconciles nicely the truth that children belong to the kingdom of heaven, and that God also unconditionally chooses those who He will save.

So in the end, I agree with Billy Graham that babies and small children go to heaven when they die, and I also agree with R.C. Sproul that everyone is born a sinner and that God unconditionally elects those He will save. But most importantly I agree with Jesus and His Word.