Life
After Death
Presbyterians Today
[April 1998]
By Lewis R. Donelson
Actually, I don't think much about heaven. I have enough to worry
about just getting through the day."
It is a common sentiment. One, in fact, that I share from time
to time. Perhaps it is my age--48, in the middle of my career and
the raising of a family. I just don't seem to have time to worry
about what happens when I die, or at least what happens to me when
I die. But I also suspect that the problem is not simply my age
but the age in which I live. We simply do not hear much talk about
heaven these days.
Do we really believe in heaven anymore? And if we do, what difference
does it make? Is it even a good thing to think about heaven?
Should we focus instead on meeting the demands of today, and let
God worry about heaven? I doubt if any complaint against Christians
(apart from their being hypocrites) has been more frequent and more
effective than the one about our focus on life after death. We have
been told: "You abandon the earth in favor of heaven. You permit
injustice here because you think heaven will solve it all. Your
dreams of eternal life dull you to the wonders and challenges of
this life."
And it seems we agree. If loving heaven means hating earth, we
cannot do it. We have transformed John's warning into "If you
say you love heaven and do not love earth, if you say you love the
next life and do not love this one, then you are a liar. How can
we love heaven if we do not love earth? God made them both and called
them both good" (cp. 1 John 4:20).
But I also hear other voices in us. Powerful voices. I remember
a friend whose wife had recently died asking me, really asking me,
"Will I see my wife when I die?" I knew what he was asking:
he still had to be himself, his wife still had to be herself. And
they needed to meet, probably in space and time. It needed to be
a lot like life here. I also knew it was not a naked question. He
was already answering it in the asking. It was a faith question.
Believing and trusting in God for him meant that his relationship
with his wife, that wonderful and miraculous relationship, could
not really ever end.
We connect God with both heaven and earth. We find God here (or
God finds us), and in finding God here we expect there to be more.
We have always done this. The Bible does this. Our confessions
do this.
The oldest confessions in our Book of Confessions focus more on
the future than the present. For example, the Nicene Creed reads:
"He [Jesus] suffered and was buried, and the third day he rose
again according to the Scriptures, and ascended into heaven, and
sitteth on the right hand of the Father. And he shall come again
with glory to judge both the quick and the dead, whose kingdom shall
have no end."
The Apostle's Creed is almost identical, only changing the final
imagery to "from thence he shall come to judge the quick and
the dead."
The Jesus story is also our story. That Jesus died, was raised,
ascended into heaven, and sits on God's right hand prefigures our
own story. We will follow him. This means our confessions often
describe the future of individual Christians by how they tell the
story of Jesus. In the earliest confessions it is understood that
we are destined, when we die, to follow Jesus into God's presence.
But after our death and ascension, Jesus will return as Judge.
Life after death includes not only departure to be with God but
a final judgment and establishment of God's kingdom. If the first
imagery is one of departure, of our leaving this earth, the second
is one of arrival, of Jesus coming here.
The confessions are echoing a tension in the Biblical passages.
The Bible speaks both of our departure and of Jesus' arrival. And
more often than not, except perhaps in Paul, the two images are
not systematically combined. The Bible does not explicitly work
out an account of what happens when we die. Instead it multiplies
images of departure, arrival, judgment, spiritual bodies. Our confessions
reflect this rather poetic cast of the Biblical imagery.
The Scots Confession and the Westminster Confession of Faith, however,
do work out a consistent narrative. The Scots Confession declares:
"The chosen departed are in peace, and rest from their labors;
not that they sleep and are lost in oblivion as some fanatics hold,
for they are delivered from all fear and torment, and all the temptations
to which we and all God's chosen are subject in this life."
Westminster is even more precise, declaring that "the bodies
of men, after death, return to dust, and see corruption; but their
souls (which neither die nor sleep), having an immortal subsistence,
immediately return to God."
In heaven these souls "behold the face of God" and wait
for "the full redemption of their bodies." When we die
our souls (and only our souls) go to be with God. But this is not
the end of our story. The Scots Confession declares: "We believe
that the same Lord Jesus shall visibly return for this Last Judgment
as he was seen to ascend. And then, we firmly believe, the time
of refreshing and restitution of all things shall come, so that
those who from the beginning have suffered violence, injury, and
wrong, for righteousness' sake, shall inherit that blessed immortality
promised them from the beginning." Westminster connects this
final judgment with a reuniting of the soul with the body. And both
connect the giving of eternal rewards to the elect with the casting
into hell of the wicked.
If there is a Presbyterian narrative about life after death, this
is it: When you die, your soul goes to be with God, where it enjoys
God's glory and waits for the final judgment. At the final judgment
bodies are reunited with souls, and eternal rewards and punishments
are handed out. As the Scots Confession notes, final judgment is
also "the time of refreshing and restitution of all things."And
it is clearly the case that both the Scots Confession and the Westminster
Confession of Faith want to orient the present-day life of believers
around this future.
But the Bible spends more time focusing on new life here than on
life after death. So do all our more recent confessions. Although
the Confession of 1967 mentions life after death, it does so only
briefly. Its focus is on new life now and on the church's ministry
of reconciliation.
Our most recent "Brief Statement of Faith" has only one
line explicitly mentioning eternal life. The rest of the confession
is devoted to present life on this earth. The focus of the Nicene
Creed and the Apostles' Creed on Jesus' ascension and future return
is missing. Instead, Jesus is the one who models our ministry here.
We all seem to be 48-year-olds, like me, concentrating on the enormous
tasks of this life and letting God worry about heaven.
It is difficult not to hear good American practicality in this
shift in emphasis. Let us take up the tasks within our reach and
leave heaven to those who live there. But it also may be that we
are being very Biblical in this. Rather than articulating life-after-death
narratives, the Bible offers a variety of images. The Biblical call
is not to believe in one known scenario but to trust both the present
and the future to God.
Perhaps "A Brief Statement of Faith" says it well. Each
section begins with the declaration, "We trust . . . "
We trust. This is, after all, the core meaning of the Greek word
for faith; to have faith means to trust.
I think my friend wondering about himself and his wife and death
was speaking to the heart of it. He does not know about bodies and
souls and space and time in God's heaven, but nonetheless he trusts
himself and his wife and their relationship to God.
Lewis R. Donelson is professor of New Testament
at Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary, Austin, Texas.
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