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Posted on 02/13/2011 4:03:35 PM PST by Salvation
What Is Heaven Really Like?
By Jimmy Akin
Wings and halos. Robes and harps. Sitting on clouds. Being greeted by St. Peter at the pearly gates: These are the images of heaven we get from movies, TV, and newspaper cartoons. Silly as they are, the ideas behind these images can seep into our consciousness and affect the way we think of heaven.
For example, its commonly believed that we will have no bodies in heaven. Thats only partly true. People in heaven do not have bodies (with rare exceptions such as Jesus and Mary), but thats a temporary state of affairs. At the end of time, we will be raised from the dead and reunited with our bodies (cf. 1 Cor. 15:1618).
The idea that we will spend eternity as disembodied ghosts is one of the most widespread myths about the afterlife. God created men to be embodied spirits, and while death may temporarily interrupt that, death is not the final word. Our ultimate destiny is to be the embodied spirits that God always intended us to be.
Of course, ordinary bodies are not able to survive for all eternity. Paul explains that "flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, nor does the perishable inherit the imperishable" (1 Cor. 15:50).
Our bodies will be modified somehow when we are reunited with them after the resurrection. What these modifications will be even Paul did not claim to understand, though he compared the difference between our bodies now and our bodies then to the difference between a seed and the plant that is grown from the seed (1 Cor. 15:3544).
Elsewhere he states that Jesus "will change our lowly body to be like his glorious body" (Phil. 3:21), raising the possibility that in our resurrected bodies we will be able to do many of the things that Christ was able to do in his resurrected form, such as appear or disappear from places at will, without locked doors or other barriers obstructing us.
Winging It
The other images our culture gives us of heaven are also problematic. The idea that we will have wings has absolutely no basis in Scripture or Tradition.
Neither does the idea that we will become angels. Angels are created beings that are pure spirit and have no bodies (cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church 328330). They are a different order of being than we are, and humans and angels dont turn into each other.
Halos are simply an artistic way of representing holiness, and while we will be holy in heaven, we have no reason to think that this will manifest itself in halos as we see in illustrations.
Robes are something people wore in biblical days, so it is common to picture people in heaven wearing robes, but we have no idea what clothes (if any) we may wear.
The image of harps in heaven is drawn from Scripture (Rev. 5:8), though not everyone in heaven is depicted as playing a harp.
Scripture does not picture those in heaven sitting around on clouds, but it does picture heaven as being "up" from an earth-bound perspective, so clouds are a natural image for artists to supply.
The image of St. Peter in charge of "the pearly gates" is not taken directly from Scripture but is based on two things that Scripture does say. The first is that Peter was given the "keys of the kingdom" and the power to "bind" and "loose" by Christ (Matt. 16:1819). Indeed, one cannot knowingly and deliberately cut off communion with Peter and his successors without committing schism and denying oneself heaven, so Peter has been portrayed as admitting or barring people from heaven. In reality, Peter does not (so far as we know) personally approve each persons admission to heaven.
The image of the pearly gates is taken from Scripture as well. We typically see this pictured as a set of golden gates framed by two large white (pearly?) structures, but the image in Scripture is somewhat different. There, the heavenly city is described as having twelve gates, "and the twelve gates were twelve pearls, each of the gates made of a single pearl" (Rev. 21:21).
Paved in GoldScripture employs far more images of heaven in addition to the handful our culture has latched onto. One of the most common New Testament depictions of heaven is a feast (Matt. 8:11; Luke 13:29; 14:1524), in particular a wedding feast (Matt. 22:114; 25:113; Rev. 19:79) understood as a first-century Jewish wedding feast, not a modern wedding reception.
Another notable image is heaven as a temple. Heaven was understood as the dwelling place of God. Earthly temples were in some sense modeled on heaven. Much of the book of Revelation takes place in heaven, so its not surprising that it describes Gods temple in heaven (Rev. 11:19) and heavenly worshipers with censers (8:3), incense (8:4), trumpets (8:7), bowls (16:2), harps (5:8), and other trappings of the kind of worship given to God in the Jerusalem temple.
Heaven also is depicted as a city of the righteous named New Jerusalem. It is mentioned in various New Testament passages (e.g., Gal. 4:2526; Heb. 11:22), but it receives its fullest description in Revelation 21, where the image of the streets being paved with gold comes from (21:21), though what the text says is that "the street of the city was pure gold, transparent as glass."
These images are meant to convey a sense of wonder at what God has in store, but we must be careful of how literally we take them. Paul warns us that "no eye has seen, nor ear heard, nor the heart of man conceived, what God has prepared for those who love him" (1 Cor. 2:9; cf. CCC 1027). In a weekly catechesis, Pope John Paul II wrote:
In the context of Revelation, we know that the "heaven" or "happiness" in which we will find ourselves is neither an abstraction nor a physical place in the clouds but a living, personal relationship with the Holy Trinity. It is our meeting with the Father that takes place in the risen Christ through the communion of the Holy Spirit. It is always necessary to maintain a certain restraint in describing these "ultimate realities" since their depiction is always unsatisfactory (July 21, 1999).The images Scripture gives us of heaven point to the realities that God has in store for his people. When we experience the realities that these symbols point to, we will find them more amazing, not less, than what human language could express.
Deepest LongingsThe fundamental essence of heaven is union with God. The Catechism explains that "perfect life with the Most Holy Trinity . . . is called heaven. Heaven is the ultimate end and fulfillment of the deepest human longings, the state of supreme, definitive happiness" (CCC 1024). It also states that "heaven is the blessed community of all who are perfectly incorporated into Christ" (CCC 1026).
Traditionally theology has explained the chief blessing or "beatitude" of heaven as "the beatific vision"an insight into the wonder of Gods inner, invisible essence. "Because of his transcendence, God cannot be seen as he is, unless he himself opens up his mystery to mans immediate contemplation and gives him the capacity for it. The Church calls this contemplation of God in his heavenly glory the beatific vision" (CCC 1028).
Because humans are made for having a conscious relationship with God, the beatific vision corresponds to the greatest human happiness possible.
Many people wonder how our relationships with others will work in heaven. Some have even wondered whether we will retain our own identities. The answer is that we will. The Christian faith assures us that those in heaven "retain, or rather find, their true identity" (CCC 1025). We do not become anonymous, interchangeable entities in heaven. Rather, we each receive our own reward (cf. 1 Cor. 3:1115).
This does not mean that there will be no changes in our relationships. Jesus was clear in teaching that we will not be married in the next life (Matt. 22:30). But because we retain our identities, we will continue to know and love those we were close to in earthly life. Indeed, in heaven our love for them and our spiritual intimacy with them will be truer, purer, and stronger than it was in this life.
Pain in Heaven? A special problem that has been raised by some is the question of pain in heaven. Some have wondered how it would be possible for individuals to enjoy the beatitude of heaven if they knew that some peopleperhaps some they were close to in earthly lifeare in hell. Others have wondered about apparitions of Mary and other saints in which they are crying over what is happening or may happen on earth. These problems have made people question whether there is pain in heaven.
The answer is that there is not. Scripture assures us that for those in heaven God in the end "will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning nor crying nor pain any more, for the former things have passed away" (Rev. 21:4).
How we will be able to know of the existence of the damned without being pained by it is a mystery, but we can only conclude that the glorified human mind will be configured in such a way that it is ablewithout painto recognize both Gods justice and the free choices of men that led to damnation. Gods own beatitude is not damaged by the existence of hell, and he will not allow our ultimate beatitude to be damaged, either.
As far as weeping apparitions, the tears in these cases perhaps are best understood as an expression of the gravity of mans sins and of what one in a non-glorified state would be justified in feeling rather than what literally is being felt in heaven.
Is It a Place?Disembodied spirits are not extended in space. They dont have shape or take up space. As a result, some have wondered whether heaven is a "place." This is a difficult question. Heaven is not a location in the physical universe. One could never travel far enough in any direction in space to arrive in heaven.
But it does seem that heaven has something corresponding to space. It may not be anything remotely like space as we experience it, but heaven does seem to have the ability to receive bodies into it. Christ took his body with him to heaven when he ascended. Mary took her body when she was assumed. A few otherssuch as Enoch, Elijah, and perhaps Mosesalso seem to have their bodies with them in heaven.
We cannot say what the present state of these bodies is. They may not be extended in space at the momentor they may. We dont know.
What Time Is It? Related to the problem of space in heaven is the problem of time. We often hear of heaven being described as "eternal" or "timeless." God himself, in his divine essence, is completely outside of time. For him, all of history exists in an "eternal now" without past or future. But it is not clear that created beings in union with God are completely drawn outside of time.
Medieval thinkers proposed that departed souls, such as those being purified in purgatory, exist in a state that shares some properties in common with time and some with eternity. They called this state "aeviternity." Whether this speculation is correct, or what properties such a middle state might have, are open to question. We ultimately dont know how timeor whatever might replace timeworks in the afterlife.
It does seem, though, that just as heaven can receive bodies into it, it also has some kind of sequentiality. Thus there can be a point before a soul is in heaven, a point during which it is disembodied in heaven, a point after this when it is reunited with its body at the resurrection, and a point at which it exists in the eternal order in body and soul.
Will It Be Boring? A question many have is: "Wont we get bored in heaven?" Some descriptions make it sound as if heaven will be like being in church all the time, and we get bored in church down here. While worship is central to heaven, the worship that takes place there is far deeper and richer than anything we experience on earth, for there we have the beatific vision that corresponds to the greatest human happiness. The fact that time may not work the same way there may also play a role in us not getting bored. We can be certain, though, that we will not be bored, for boredom is a form of suffering, and we have seen already that heaven excludes suffering.
It is also not clear that we will do nothing besides exclusively praising God every moment. Scripture and the Catechism both speak of us "reigning" with Christ (Rev. 22:5; CCC 1029). This suggests that we will have authority over and responsibility for things.
Where we may undertake those tasks may come as a surprise for some. Many have the idea that after the resurrection we will return to a celestial realm, leaving the physical world deserted.
But Scripture speaks of a new heaven and a new earth and seems to locate the dwelling place of man on the new earth. In Revelation, John sees "the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God" (21:2, emphasis added) and then hears: "Behold, the dwelling of God is with men. He will dwell with them, and they shall be his people, and God himself will be with them" (21:3).
This suggests that heaven and earth may not be separated in the way they presently are. The Catechism thus states that "the visible universe, then, is itself destined to be transformed, so that the world itself, restored to its original state, facing no further obstacles, should be at the service of the just" (CCC 1047).
All I ask of heaven is to be reunited with my Mom and being with my wife so we can talk as we did through my entire life. We can watch the Earth and analyze it forever.
That, and having my kitties, and I will be content for eternity. I will never be bored. I will be blessed.
I like you testimony from your dad. Sounds perfectly logical to me. You have FReepmail.
That is a powerful, substantial and profound dream.
When you make contact that way, it is God’s way of revealing to you a hint of what awaits.
I know that some say the passage doesn’t refer to blindness and lameness in Heaven, but if that is so, why is it used, even if it is for effect? Why would one use a false statement to impart wisdom?
The idea that heaven and heavenly bodies are more REAL is described in C.S. Lewis’ “The Great Divorce”. (Unfortunate title, since it refers not to the end of marriage, but to the great chasm/divorce between heaven and hell.) Visitors to heaven find heaven’s grass so REAL that it pokes through the soles of their spirit feet.
It’s a good read, and I’ve found it helped me re-think the idea of hell. Instead of flaming torture it is the ultimate collection of narcissists whose individualism has run amuck. It’s worth reading.
I would suggest a book by Randy Alcorn called Heaven. He takes scripture and give as a vision of heaven. Not that I agree with all that he writes, but it does give some things to think about.
No matter what age we are at death, we will all have the body of a 33 year old. That is the prime condition of the physical body, after that, it starts to deteriorate.
Even children and infants will be age 33, but we will instantly recognize them and they will know us.
This is my opinion.
***Presumably that would mean wed be something like older teenagers, without the attitude. :-0***
That’s funny. Thank you.
I personally believe that Heaven is not our final destinatiion, but only an interim stop before we inhabit the new Earth eternally. I can’t find any scripture that comes right out and states that, but why else would God create a new Earth if He didn’t plan on peopling it?
Will have to look that up and read it. My parsing of the Bible provides very thin support that anyone is going to heaven, besides Him who came from there.
How is it false? If your eye causes you to sin, pluck it out and endure blindness on earth for vision in heaven.
And that’s even assuming that we need ‘eyes’ to see in heaven.
Doctor
Mortician
Psychiatrist
Any others :>)?????
Like I said, it is a good read, with supporting scripture, however, he does make a few assumptions, so read it with a grain of salt. Lots to think about...
In Revelation there is a scene in Heaven of a lamb (Christ) bearing the wounds that caused his death. If so, they are the only man made things in Heaven.
Eye has not seen nor the mind of man imagined heaven ... to be in the presence of God ...
Thanks, I understand now.
This is somewhat how I picture it, scattered out across the galaxy.
And as you zoom in its just as beautiful up close as it is from a distance.
We will also cry out for judgement and Justice wanting God to avenge those that murdered those that brought the gospel.
Come close to something I wrote long ago when the topic of Heaven was posted.
The Heaven that awaits us is not harps, white robes, and never-ending boredom which is the perception that many people have, because that is what movies, cartoons, and paintings have showed us what it is like.
The Heaven John wrote about in the Bible is so full of wonders and mysteries that in our wildest dreams we could not imagine it. Certainly Heaven contains many surprises which we will never be able to comprehend in this life. And it will not be boring.
The only way I, with my puny little mortal human brain can even begin to comprehend Heaven and to explain it is to ask you to think back to the one single best day of your whole life. Maybe it was your wedding, the birth of your child, your first trip to Disneyland, the anniversary cruise with your spouse, whatever. Now imagine each day in Heaven being that multiplied 100-fold, and the number of those days will be endless. That is what I firmly believe Heaven will be like. Is it no wonder that John saw All the Heavenly host on their knees worshiping the creator of it all.
I heard it said once that, - as a Christian, the day I die will be the best day Ive ever lived. But it wont be the best I will ever live.
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