How does God decide who goes to heaven, and who goes to hell?
When the Great White Throne Judgment comes at the end
of the final battle with Satan (in Revelation 20:11), who takes the
"up" escalator with the sheep, and who's on the "down"
elevator with the goats?
The kindergarten answer - "Good people go to heaven, and bad people go to hell" –
is wrong, of course. This greatly irritates many folks, especially the
so-called "Christians at heart": the Christmas & Easter churchgoers,
the deeply humane and kind atheists, and anyone else with what they consider
substantial accreditation in the field of "good".
To them, the true
answer, Christ's answer (and
pardon the bluntness, my friends, but He would definitely know the right
answer on this topic), is callous and unjust. John the Baptist summarized that
answer succinctly in John 3:36 --> "Whoever believes in the Son
has eternal life; whoever does not obey the Son shall not
see life, but the wrath of God remains upon him."
Translation (as
if the learned reader needed it!): Believe and obey Christ, and go to
heaven after your earthly death. Fail to do so, and you go somewhere other than
heaven – a place where the "wrath of God remains upon" you.
Colloquially, that 'where' is called
'Hell'.
But, why?
Why, goes the standard argument, wouldn't a
'just and merciful God' simply look into a man's heart (as of course, He
certainly could), and determine who's been naughty and who's been nice,
like Santa (theoretically) does?
Many theologians, most much wiser than I am, have
eloquently expressed the standard, godly response to this - we
are all sinners, there is no
such thing as a righteous man, and it is only through the
salvation of Jesus, through His sacrifice on the cross at Calvary,
that any man could be viewed as
being sufficiently clothed in righteousness for the Lord Almighty to accept
into His sinless Home of heaven. Be you a pastor, a pope or a king, it doesn't
matter: only by accepting Christ as our Lord and Savior can we be accepted into
heaven after our earthly life has expired.
†
However, my personal preference among the
various descriptions of the situation for the uninformed strays towards a reframing of the definitions of "heaven" and "hell" as "being
eternally with God" and "being eternally separated from
God". For, no matter how "good" you are by whatever
arbitrary standards you choose to judge yourself by (and, just out of curiosity, what standard of "good" ARE
you using if not the Biblical one?), the essence of heaven as revealed
in the book of Revelation is basically the eternal worship of the omnipresent
Lord - and if in your earthly, "shadow" life you chose not to open
yourself up to even the comparatively marginal presence and level of
praise Christ asked of you here, would
you not be absolutely miserable spending eternity in the
place where that's seemingly ALL that goes on? Wouldn't "heaven" be hellish for you?
Another way to consider this version of the question
is as follows: When it's your turn at the Great White Throne, perhaps it's not
so much that you will be "judged by
what was written in the books, according to what (you) had done" (Rev.
20:12), as much as you might be asked one single, crucial question:
"Did you choose Christ?"
I mean, really
choose Christ… chose Him as your guiding light by which you led your
life? Or, did you not?
Simple as that.
If you chose Christ on earth, you chose to live
with Him after earth as well. If you did not, then you chose not
to live with Him. "On earth, as it is in heaven." None of this, "Were you a good enough person?"
hogwash. That's not relevant in this way of thinking; if you really did choose to obey
Christ while you lived, your actions would have said so. (I am
absolutely convinced that it's impossible to make the saving choice to obey
Christ without it showing up in almost every aspect of your life. If someone who's born again can spend even a
day with you has to ask if you're a Christian… then you're not
one.)
†
I'd like to suggest another angle on this whole
"heaven or hell" topic. It's not that different, except that the
viewpoint is flipped – away from the human deserving (or not deserving) to go
to heaven, and towards God’s perspective for a change.
Imagine,
for a fleeting and idolatrous moment, that YOU are the fourth member of the
mythical "quadrene God" - Father, Son, Spirit, and You. (Don't get too comfortable: it won't last
long enough for You to blaspheme about Your new role.)
At the end of Time, You are going to put on an
Eternal Party – we'd call it a sleepover, except there will be no need
for sleep ever again! – at Your Place. You know... Your Place – Heaven.
Who are You going to invite?
Personally, if it were me, I would only invite
the people I liked. But that's not God's way – excuse me, that's not Your way of doing things. The God of
the Bible is the God of Love; so if You are truly as loving as the Father is,
You will probably make it an open invitation to anyone and everyone. That
sounds more like Your style! (But don't
get cozy! This isn't going to last!)
So, You issue an open invitation to every human who
has ever lived:
"Party at
Our Place! Starts immediately following the Millennium! Lasts forever! No cover
charge! All the gold you can eat!" (See,
now, just listen to yourself! I told You not to get too comfortable! The
Other Three are going to throw You out any moment now!)
Here's the catch:
"All you
have to do is simply accept this Invitation sometime before your death, and
agree to abide by Our House Rules."
Think about
it.
If you're throwing a party in your own home (notice the lower case "your"? Oh
well, it was Fun While It Lasted...), those are basically the two
conditions your guests would reasonably expect, right? Let you know
they're coming, and follow your house rules. Pretty basic etiquette,
I'd say.
For a party in your earthly domicile for, say, Super
Bowl Sunday or something, that translates into, "we need to know how many pizzas to order, so tell us for sure
if you're comin', brah!" and,
"Hey, don't put that glass on the tabletop, you slob! Use a coaster!"
Nothing outrageous; but it IS your party, and you have every right to exclude
gate crashers and to expect some common courtesy.
For a Party At His Place, a.k.a., Entrance Into
Heaven, God expects the same thing. If you're planning to attend, He's looking
forward to seeing you There... providing that you RSVP and follow His
rules.
The RSVP to
accept His open-to-all invitation is written in Romans 10:9 - "Confess
with your mouth that Jesus is Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised
Him from the dead." (Consider that like your password into the “speakeasy”,
if you prefer. That sounds a touch sacrilegious to me, but whatever...) This
way of thinking about heaven also justifies God’s accepting deathbed conversions,
too. Heaven is not so much a reward
for being good as it is a thank
you for choosing to follow the Lord. (So, if you choose to believe
in and follow the commands of a different
deity, it’s their responsibility to provide a life-after-death for you,
assuming they can find a way around the whole “fire-and-brimstone” arrangement
already in place. And, if you choose not to align yourself with any deities, then you have no 'agent'
to work with you in the afterlife business. It’s probably like trying to deal with a
government aid agency on your own….)
The house rules
are, admittedly, a bit lengthy, but they're easily found - why, you probably
have at least one copy already in your home! After all, it IS the best-selling
book in history, and it’s available as an app for your phone or tablet now,
too.
And if you don't want to do one or both of
those things, or you simply don't WANT to go to His stupid party anyway! – you don't have to. There's another
option. The Lord is certainly not going to force you to come into His Home if
you don't want to – hey, I mean, we wouldn't
force you to come were it our party! The last thing you'd
want to see at your party, in your home, would be some party crasher who
can't follow your rules, right? "Hey!
You! Get off my table! Put the cat down, you jerk! I'm calling the
police!"
Of course, God won't need to call the police.
He IS the police. And this will be one Party that will never need to be broken
up by the cops!
†
So, hey...
...while we're on the subject...
…Have you accepted your invitation yet?
It's going to be a whale
of a great Party!
I'd really love to
see you There!
†
I mean it, man.
I'd really LOVE to see you There.
I mean it, man.
I'd really LOVE to see you There.
Don't miss It.
†
Please.
No comments:
Post a Comment