Introduction
What matters in life is the journey, not the destination.
How untrue! This is (at best) a concession to dogmatic agnosticism (Since
we cannot know where we're ultimately headed, just try to focus on now)
or (at worst) deliberate self-deception (I don't want to think about
my future annihilation, so I'll just focus on this life). According
to the Bible, we can know the destination. And therefore, while the journey
is important, knowing the destination is more important because this is
what provides direction for the journey, makes it meaningful, and fortifies
you when the journey is difficult.
This is why the book of Revelation (and the Bible) would be woefully
incomplete with this fourth vision, the vision of God's eternal kingdom . . .
Misconceptions about heaven corrected
Before we look at John's vision of God's eternal kingdom, let's first
correct some of the popular misconceptions about heaven.
It will be disembodied. This is Greek/Gnostic/New
Agethe body is the prison-house of the soul. But the
Bible says humans are essentially embodied spirits. Therefore,
while avoiding the crass sensuality of animism and Islam, God's eternal
kingdom will be physical and that we will be embodied with glorified
bodies suited for it.
It will be static and boring. This is the baby
in diapers floating on a cloud and strumming a harp view. But
the Bible says that since humans were created to work creatively, eternity
will involve the pleasure of creativity (e.g., music) and accomplishment
(e.g., administrative responsibility).
There will be no free will. This view reasons that
since free will involves the risk of rebellion, and since heaven will
be guarantees everlasting harmonious submission to God, therefore everyone
who makes it to heaven will receive frontal lobotomies in
this sense. But the Bible says that since humans were created with free
will, heaven will preserve and perfect this. Evidently, the historical
record of God's love and wisdom, and of rebellion's folly and destructiveness
will be so clear that people will freely and intelligently choose to
worship and follow God.
Everyone will be the same. This perverts heaven
into an Industrialized State nightmare in which all individual identity,
creativity, and diversity are crushed beneath conformity to the
good. But the Bible says that God delights in diversity (witness
creation) and he created humans with rich diversity. Freed from the
stain of sin and rewarded for our service in this life, true human diversity
will be perfected in heaven.
These corrections tell us what heaven is not, and a little about what
it will bebut they don't get at the heart of what it will be like.
For that, we need Revelation 21 and 22 . . .
What will it be like?
NOTE: Because his eternal kingdom is both similar to and very different
from present existence, God must describe its similarity through metaphor/analogy
and it difference through negation. But even this limited description
is more than enough to delight, inspire and fortify.
Read 21:1. Here we learn two basic things about God's eternal kingdom.
It will be a new heaven and a new earth because the
first heaven and the first earth passed away. Does this mean that
God will destroy this universe and create ex nihilo a completely
new universe (see 2 Peter 3:10-13; Hebrews 12:26-28)?
Or does this mean that God completely cleanses this same universe from
all stain of sin
(implied by 21:5 and continuity of resurrected bodies)? Regardless,
it is a new order of reality that is perfectly suited for the eternal
life of God's people.
In John's vision, this new heavens and earth has no sea.
This is almost certainly figurative. Remember that in previous visions,
the sea symbolized the nations of the world in perennial conflict with
one another (Revelation 13:1; 17:15). In God's eternal kingdom,
peace and serenity between its inhabitants will reign.
Now John describes his vision in greater detail. Notice the three symbols
he uses that communicate the essence of life in God's eternal kingdom.
Read 21:2a. He sees a holy city (new Jerusalem).
What's the main feature of cities? That they're filled with people who
interact with each other in various ways. Of course, heaven will be
different (holy) from today's cities because it won't be
filled with traffic jams, air/noise pollution, crime, etc. But it will
be filled with redeemed, glorified people who interact with each other.
Conversely (although I'm sure there will solitude available), it won't
be solitary (more like Bible's definition of hell!).
But the holy city is not just people who relate to one another. They
also relate to God in joyous intimacy. This is why God describes the
holy city made ready as a bride for her husband (read 21:2b).
Both Old Testament and New Testament employ this metaphor of God as
the husband and believers as his bride to emphasize God's desire to
have a deep love union with his people.
In Israel, a marriage took place in three stages. First, the husband's
parents entered into an agreement with the wife's parents and paid
a dowry for her. Then began the betrothal (engagement), during which
the bride made herself ready. Then came the wedding day, when the
groom came to the bride's parents' home to take her as his wife and
then in procession to the marriage feasta days-long party to
celebrate their union.
God dowry for us was the death of his Son, Jesus. During the time
between Jesus' comings, all believers are betrothed to Jesus (cf.
2 Corinthians 11:2)making ourselves ready through our spiritual
growth and service in this life. Then comes the wedding, when Jesus
returns to take us his wife in a profound and eternal union, and to
celebrate that union with us. Far from losing our individuality through
this union (as with pantheism), we will retain and flourish as individuals
as we relate to God in perfect, ever-deepening love.
The third symbol ties together the first two symbols. After showing
John the holy city and describing it as a bride,
he now describes it as the tabernacle (read 21:3). The tabernacle
(later the Temple) was a symbol of God's desire to indwell all of his
people and for all of them to experience his presence together.
Since Jesus came and died for our sins (which made it impossible
for God to indwell us), believers are God's tabernacle/temple because
he indwells us with his Spirit. But when Jesus returns, we will experience
and enjoy God's presence together so profoundly that our deepest experiences
of closeness with God and others in this life (CORPORATE PRAYER) will
pale in comparison as down-payments.
The essence of heaven, therefore, is perfect community between God
and his people. Ultimate reality is not time plus matter plus chance,
oneness with the impersonal All. Ultimate reality is the God of the
Bibleand this God is personal. In fact, the God of the Bible is
a community of perfect love relationships (explain TRINITY). This God
has created us in his image, which means above all else that we can
experience profound, relational, loving union with him and other persons.
This is why Jesus says that eternal life is personally knowing God (John 17:3).
Heaven will be the answer to Jesus' prayer in John 17:21-24 (read).
Most of the rest of this vision (21:9-22:5) simply elaborates on this
truth.
This is why when the angel says he will show John the bride
(21:9), what John actually sees is the holy city (21:10).
This is why the holy city is described as having 12 gates
with the names of the 12 tribes of Israel (21:12) and 12 foundation
stones with the names of the 12 apostles (21:14). God's eternal kingdom
will be filled with believers from both Old Testament Israel and New
Testament Church.
This is why the holy city is in the shape of a mammoth
cube (21:16b). What's the point? The cube is symbolic: there is
only one cube in the Old Testament, and that is the Most Holy Place
of the temple, where only the (high) priest could enter once a year,
bearing blood for his own sins and for the sins of the people. Now the
entire city is the Most Holy Place: in the consummation all of God's
people are perennially in the unshielded splendor of his glorious presence.
This is there is no need for a temple (read 21:22).
This is why John sees what he sees at the center of the city (read
22:1-2a). The water of life is a reference to John 7:37-39
(read)being personally indwelt by God's Spirit. The tree
of life is a reference to Gen. 2,3the joy of humans living
together in loving union with God instead of rebelling and living alienated
from him and one another.
This is why 22:4 is the distillation of this whole vision (read). Even
this is symbolic, because God doesn't have a face, and we won't get
tattoos. But together we will know God fully and we will be fully known
by him (1 Corinthians 13:12).
Because heaven will be the above, it will by definition cancel out all
of the effects of sin and alienation from God. This is why there will
no longer be any sadness or death (21:4), any danger from enemies (21:25b,27),
any night (22:5probably symbolic of spiritual deception),
or any curse (22:3apsychological, sociological, ecological damage).
Praise God!
Concluding reminders
As you reflect on this book and (specifically) this vision of God's eternal
kingdom, John wants you to remember three things:
You can bank on the fact that this will really happen. Read 22:6-7.
These words are utterly reliable, because the same God who inspired
his prophets to accurately predict many events (KEY FIRST COMING DETAILS;
REGATHERING OF ISRAEL; etc.) has also inspired John to write these words.
All this is yours for the asking. Misread 22:17 ( . . . take
the water of life by earning it with your good works). No, Jesus
says . . . without cost! God so wants
you to take part in it that he has paid the great cost of your ticket
(through Jesus' death) so that he can offer it to you without cost!
The only condition is that you wash your robes (read 22:14)
in Jesus' bloodthat you personally receive God's forgiveness through
Jesus' death for your sins. How could God make it any clearer than these
words that he wants you there, that no sin of yours can disqualify you,
that it won't cost you anything because he paid for it all? Have you
done this? If not, why not do it right now?
The only alternative permanent banishment from God's kingdom (read
21:8). There is no second chance, no annihilation, etc.only heaven
or hell. Why would you choose this when you can have the alternative?
Footnotes
Copyright 2002 Gary DeLashmutt