ENDTIME
ISSUES NEWSLETTER No. 183
ÒLife
After DeathÓ
Samuele Bacchiocchi
Retired Professor of Theology, Andrews
University
Chapter 3 of the forthcoming book
POPULAR BELIEFS: ARE THEY BIBLICAL?
INDEX
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NEW
OUTREACH BOOK:
POPULAR
BELIEFS: ARE THEY BIBLICAL?
GOOD
NEWS! The newsletter you are about to read contains the first draft of CHAPTER
3 of the forthcoming new book POPULAR BELIEFS: ARE THEY BIBLICAL? This chapter builds upon the previous chapter on ÒThe
Immortality of the Soul,Ó by focusing on the biblical view of death and of the
state of the dead. This is a crucial chapter that examines the popular but
unbiblical belief in conscious life after death.
Over
a century ago Ellen White predicted that ÒThrough the two great errors, the
immortality of the soul and Sunday sacredness, Satan will bring the people
under his deceptionsÓ (Great
Controversy, p. 588).
Both of these errors are spreading like wildfire today. The vast majority of
people have come to believe SatanÕs lie that no matter what they do, they
Òshall not dieÓ (Gen 3:4) but become like gods by living for ever.
This
lie has fostered a host of heresies such as spiritualism, communication with
the spirits of the dead, praying for the dead, the intercession of the saints,
purgatory, eternal hellfire, the worship of Mary, indulgences, etc. All of
these heretical beliefs fall automatically like dominos when we expose the
fallacies of conscious life between death and resurrection.
In
view of its importance, I have devoted much time and efforts in writing this
chapter, which is the longest chapter so far. Feel free to comment upon this
chapter after you have had the opportunity to read it.
I
wish to thank God for helping me to write the first 3 chapters of Popular
Beliefs: Are they Biblical?in about 6 weeks, in spite of my speaking engagements. If I can
continue at this pace, the book should be out by the end of February or early
in March. I expect the book to
have 10 chapters (for the 10 commandments), averaging 30 pages each.
I
decided against having 15 or 20 short chapters with a brief treatment of each
popular heresy. I prefer to have
fewer chapters with a fuller analysis of the popular heresies deceiving people
today. This means that I may have to write a series of volumes, if the first
book is well-received. This is not a problem. Left Behind is a series of 13 volumes. If heretical
books are published in series, why shouldnÕt sound biblical studies be
published also in the same way?
TARGET
AUDIENCE AND GOAL OF
POPULAR
BELIEFS: ARE THEY BIBLICAL?
Several have asked me: What is the target
audience of Popular Beliefs: Are they Biblical?
My answer is that that I am aiming to the average person with a high
school education but with an inquiring mind. The level of eduation is relative.
My father had only a fifth grade education, but had a keen mind and an
extensive library with solid biblical studies.
Most
of the 30,000 plus subscribers to this newsletter, are people with an average
education but a great eagerness to deepen their understanding of Bible truths.
I can tell it by the perceptive comments that I receive. These are the people I
have in mind in writing this book.
Some
have proposed to me to write a short and simple version of this book. Frankly, I do not think it is
necessary, because there are plenty of them available at our ABC stores. All
our popular preachers have written simple, short booklets that present our
beliefs to the general public. These booklets meet a felt need, but the fact
remains that an increasing number of people are not satisfied with simple
booklets that do not scratch where it itches, that is, do not address critical
deeper questions.
The ultimate goal of the book is not
merely to expose the flaws of some popular beliefs, but to help people
appreciate the biblical validity and timeliness of our Adventist beliefs. My strategy in writing each chapter is
threfold:
1)
First, I try to give an accurate description of a popular belief like the one
examined in this chapter on life after death.
2)
Second, I examine the belief from a biblical perspective, showing why it is
contrary to the scriptural teachings.
3)
Third, I appeal to consider the Seventh-day Adventist understanding the belief
examined in the chapter, simply because it is biblical sound.
You
will see a sample of this strategy in this chapter. After exposing biblically
the deceptive and popular belief conscious life after death, I proceed to help
people appreciate the beauty of the biblical view of the resurrection of the
body, as taught in Scripture and espoused by our Adventist church.
To my
knowledge our Adventist church has never published a substantive book that
helps people to understand why some of their popular beliefs are unbiblical,
and why the corresponding Adventist beliefs are biblically sound. Many
subscribers have confirmed my conviction that such a book is urgently needed
for our witnessing outreach. We can hardly expect people to accept our
Adventist beliefs, if we do not show them first of all why their beliefs are
unbiblical.
The
book Seventh-day Adventist Believe . . . was warmly received by our church at large. I was invited to
contribute to a chapter. The book makes a significant contribution to the
presentation of our Adventist beliefs, but it is too limited in scope. It
simply presents the Adventist beliefs, without comparing or contrasting them
with the beliefs of other churches. Uninformed readers may feel that Adventists
beliefs are not much different from their own beliefs.
The
new book Popular Beliefs: Are they Biblical? will leave no room for this uncertainty.
It will clearly show the difference between the Adventists beliefs and some
popular Catholic and Protestant beliefs. In other words, it will give to people
a choice between biblical and unbiblical beliefs. You will see a clear example
in this chapter on ÒLife After DeathÓ that you are about to read.
The
sponsors of this project are hoping to raise sufficient money to cover most of
the expenses for printing 100,000 copies of Popular Beliefs: Are they
Biblical? The idea is to offer the book to churches
at a minimum cost of only $2.00 or 3.00 a copy, primarily to cover the mailing
expenses. The regular price for this 320 pages book would be $25.00.
What
do you think of this project? Do you feel that we badly need such a book for
our witnessing outreach? Are you
willing to pass out this book to your friends? Would you consider contributing
financially to the realization of this project? Your input is greatly
appreciated. Let me know what you
think.
In
order to complete this project by the end of February 2008, I need to
re-prioritize my schedule. This will entail cutting down on
speaking-engagements, posting the Endtime Issues Newsletters only once a month, and spending less
time answering messages and speaking on the phone.
To
benefit from the constructive criticism of our subscribers, I plan to post most
of the chapters as soon as the first draft is completed. An example, is this
chapter which examines the major false views of the nature of the Bible. I look forward to receive your
constructive criticism. Do not hesitate to be frank. Rest assured that I will
not be offended.
ÒLife
After DeathÓ
Samuele Bacchiocchi
Retired Professor of Theology, Andrews
University
Chapter 3 of the forthcoming book
POPULAR BELIEFS: ARE THEY BIBLICAL?
Belief
in life after death seems to have come back from the grave. News weekly covers
it. Talk-show hosts discuss it. Popular books such as Moody and KŸbler-RossÕ Life
After Life and Maurice
RawlingsÕ Beyond DeathÕs Door examine case histories of out-of-body experiences. Even some
pastors have begun preaching it again.
Once
regarded by the secular community as a relic of a superstitious past and by
believers as something too difficult to comprehend, belief in life after death
is regaining popularity. According to a poll conducted by the General Social
Survey, ÒA greater fraction of American adults believe in life after death in
the 1990s than in the 1970s.Ó1
While
the percentage of Protestants who believe in life after death has remained
stable at 85 percent, there has been a noticeable increase among the Catholics
and Jews. ÒThe percentage of Catholics believing in an afterlife rose from 67
percent to 85 percent from 1900 to 1970. Among Jews, this percentage increased
from 17 percent (1900) to 74 percent (1970).2
A similar recent survey (2003) conducted
by the reputable Barna Research Group of Ventura, California, confirms that
Òthe vast majority of Americans continues to believe that there is life after
death, that everyone has a soul, and that Heaven and Hell exist.Ó3
ÒBelief in life after death . . . is widely embraced: 8 out of 10 Americans
(81%) believe in an afterlife of some sort. Another 9% said life after death
may exist, but they were not certain. Just one out of every ten adults (10%)
contend that there is no form of life after one dies on earth. Moreover, a
large majority of Americans (79%) agreed with the statement Òevery person has a
soul that will live forever, either in GodÕs presence or absence.Ó4
The
conscious or subconscious belief in life after death is reflected in the
elaborate funeral arrangements which are intended to preserve the corporeal
remains of the deceased. In the
ancient world, the dead were provided for the next life with food, liquids, eating
utensils, and clothes. Sometimes even servants and animals were buried with the
corpse to provide the necessary conveniences in the next life.
Today,
the mortuary rituals are different, but they still reveal a conscious or subconscious belief in
life after death. The corpse is embalmed and hermetically sealed in a
galvanized metal casket to retard decay. It is dressed in the finest clothes
and placed on plush satin lining and soft pillows. It is sent on its way
accompanied with items cherished in life, such as rings and family pictures. It
is sacredly and silently interred in a cemetery, which is expertly manicured,
surrounded by flowers, gates, and guards.
The dead are surrendered to the Òperpetual careÓ of the Lord in a
professionally maintained and landscaped cemetery where no children play and no
visitors disturb them.
The
concern of people to send their deceased loved ones to the world of the dead
with dignity and elegance reveals a desire to ensure their comfort in the
afterlife. But, is there life
after death? Are the dead conscious or unconscious? If conscious, are they able to communicate with the living?
Are they enjoying the bliss of paradise or the torments of hell? This chapter
seeks to answer these questions by investigating the biblical view of death and
of the state of the dead.
Objectives
of This Chapter
This chapter continues our investigation
of the biblical view of human nature, by focusing on two major questions:
First, What is the biblical view of death? And, second, What is the condition of the dead during the
period between death and the resurrection? This period is commonly known as
Òthe intermediate state.Ó
This
chapter is divided in four parts. The first part provides a brief description
mainly of the Catholic and Protestant views of the afterlife. We shall see that
both hold in common the belief in the transition of the saved souls to Paradise
and of the unsaved souls to Hell. Protestants reject the Catholic belief in
Purgatory.
The
second part examines the Biblical understanding of the nature of death. Does the Bible teach that death is the
separation of the immortal soul from the mortal body? Or, does the Bible teach that death is the termination of life for the whole person, body
and soul? In other words, is death
according to the Bible the cessation of life for the whole person or the
transition to a new form of life for the immortal component of our being?
The
third and fourth parts examine the Old and New Testaments teachings regarding
the state of the dead during the period between death and resurrection. The
fundamental question we pursue in the last two parts is: Do the dead sleep in
an unconscious state until the resurrection morning? Or, Is the soul of the
saved experiencing immediately after death the bliss of paradise, while that of
the unsaved writhing in the torment of hell?
PART
1
BELIEFS
ABOUT THE AFTERLIFE
The belief in some forms of life after
death is common to most Christian and non-Christian religions. The reason, as
noted in the previous chapter, is the common belief in the immortality of the
soul, which presupposes the continuation of the conscious life of the soul
after the death of the body. We found this belief to be contrary to the Bible
which clearly defines death as the cessation of life for the whole person, body
and soul.
For
the purpose of this chapter, we briefly mention how three major wings of
Christianity view life after death: Roman Catholics, Conservative Protestants,
and Liberal Christians.
Roman
Catholic View of Heaven, Hell, and Purgatory
The
Catholic Church teaches that when a person dies, the soul leaves the body and
is immediately evaluated in a Particular Judgment that determines three possible
destinations for the disembodied soul: Heaven, or Hell, or Purgatory.
Heaven. The new Catechism of the Catholic
Church explains that the
souls of a few believers Òwho die in GodÕs grace and friendship and are
perfectly purified, live for ever with Christ.Ó5 They are taken immediately to their eternal rewards in
Heaven, where they enjoy the communion with the Trinity, the Virgin Mary, the
saints, and the angels. ÒIn the glory of heaven the blessed continue joyfully
to fulfill GodÕs will.Ó6
Hell.
Hell is the place where
those who have died Òwith grave
and unrepentant sinsÓ which have not been wiped clean by church rituals,7 will be severely punished without any
hope of relief, for eternity. As stated in Catechism of the Catholic Church: ÒImmediately after death the souls of
those who die in a state of mortal sin, descend into hell, where they suffer
the punishment of hell Ôeternal fire.ÕÓ8
The
torment of Hell will last forever, without any prospect of relief or mercy, but
level of torture depends on the seriousness of the individualÕs sin. Like the
Catholics, Eastern Orthodox churches believe in Hell, but they teach that the
precise form of punishment is not known to us.
The
teaching that sinners burn eternally in Hell, makes God appear like an inhumane
father who in desperation locks away his rebellious children in a horrible
hovel, and then throws away for ever the key. More will be said about more
implications of this popular belief in the next chapter.
Purgatory.
The Catholic Church
teaches that Òall those who die in GodÕs grace and friendship, but still
imperfectly purified, . . . after death they undergo purification, so as to
achieve the holiness necessary to enter the joy of heaven.Ó9 The souls in Purgatory are
systematically tortured with fire until they have paid the residual temporal
punishment for their sins. The more purging is necessary, the longer a soul
must suffer in Purgatory. This is a type of time-limited Hell during which they
become fully cleansed and acceptable for admission to heaven.
As
stated in the Catechism of the Catholic Church Òthe Church commends almsgiving, indulgences,
and works of penance undertaken on behalf of the dead.Ó11 This means
that friends and family members can shorten the stay of their loved ones in
Purgatory, by paying for Masses,
prayers, buying indulgences, and making pilgrimages to holy shrines.
The
beliefs of the Eastern Orthodox Churches very closely parallel those of the
Roman Catholic Church about Heaven and Hell. However, they have no formal
belief about the existence of purgatory.
Conservative
ProtestantsÕ View of Heaven and Hell
We noted in chapter 2 that the Protestant
Reformation started largely as a reaction against the medieval superstitious
beliefs about the afterlife in Purgatory.
The Reformers rejected as unbiblical and unreasonable the practice of
buying and selling indulgences to reduce the stay of the souls of departed
relatives in Purgatory. However,
they continued to believe that the souls of the believers enjoy the bliss of
heaven, while those of the unbelievers suffer the torments of hell. At the resurrection, the body is
reunited with the soul, thus intensifying the pleasure of paradise or the pain
of hell. Since that time, belief in heaven and hell has been accepted by most
Protestant churches and is reflected in various Confessions.12
For
example, the Westminster Confession (1646), regarded as the definitive
statement of (Calvinistic) Presbyterian beliefs in the English-speaking
world, states: ÒThe body 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 who
gave them. The souls of the
righteous, being then made perfect in holiness, are received unto the highest
heavens, where they behold the face of God in light and glory, waiting for the
full redemption of their bodies: and the souls of the wicked are cast into
hell, where they remain in torment and utter darkness, reserved to the judgment
of the great day.Ó13 The
confession continues declaring as unbiblical the belief in purgatory.
Most
conservative Protestant believe that there are only two possible destinations for the soul after death. One
either passes immediately into the glories of Heaven and the presence of God,
or else one is sent straight to the flames of Hell for eternal punishment, with
no possibility of reprieve. Any other destination for the soul, such as the
Catholic Purgatory, is merely an ÒinventedÓ doctrine.
Heaven. Heaven is reserved for those who have been justified by
faith in ChristÕs saving work. The soul of believers ascend immediately after
death to heaven, to live in the presence of Christ, while awaiting the
resurrection of their bodies. At the final resurrection, the disembodied soul
will receive new incorruptible bodies, and will live in the presence of Jesus
Christ in the new earth where there is an absence of pain, disease, sexual
activity, and depression.
Hell.
Conservative
Evangelicals believe that the souls of those who have rejected Christ, at death
will be sent to Hell, a place of torment and eternal separation from God. Views
vary on what punishments Hell may hold beyond isolation from God.
Liberal
ProtestantsÕ View of Heaven and Hell
In general, liberal Protestant believe
that at death people go to either Heaven, to live in the presence of God, or to
Hell, to experience separation from God. But liberal Protestants hold to a wide
range of non-traditional views. For example, some define heaven as the triumph
of self-giving, not as a new heaven and a new earth. ÒHeaven is cordial,
honest, loving relationships,Ó says GordonÕs Kalland.14
Conversely,
to most liberal theologians, Hell is alienation from God. ÒHell is estrangement, isolation,
despair,Ó says Dean Lloyd Kalland
of Gordon Divinity School in Wenham, Mass.15 In his Principles of Christian
Theology, Dr. John
Macquarrie of Union Theological Seminary describes hell as Ònot some external
or arbitrary punishment that gets assigned for sin, but simply the working out
of sin itself, as it destroys the distinctively personal being of the sinner.Ó16
Afterlife
in Islam, Buddhism, and Hinduism
Space does not permit to mention the
views of afterlife held by Islam, Buddhism, and Hinduism. It suffices to say
that all of them share the belief in the survival of the soul at the death of
the body. In Hinduism, for example, the ultimate goal is Moksha, that is, the
self-realization and release of the soul from the cycle of death and
rebirth. When Moksha is achieved,
the soul becomes one with God.
The
preceding brief description of the major Catholic and Protestant views of life after death, has served to show
that these popular views stem from two assumptions: 1) Death is the separation
of the immortal soul from the mortal body, 2) The soul is an independent,
immaterial, and immortal component that survives the death of the body.
Are
these assumptions biblically correct?
Does the Bible teach that death is the separation of the immortal soul
from the mortal body? Does the
soul survives the death of the body and continues to exist in the bliss of
Paradise or torment of Hell? To these questions we must now turn our attention
by examining the biblical view of death.
PART
2
THE
BIBLICAL VIEW OF DEATH
To
understand the Biblical view of death, we need to go back to the account of
creation where death is presented, not as a natural process willed by God, but
as something unnatural opposed to God. The Genesis narrative teaches us that
death came into the world as a result of sin. God commanded Adam not to eat of
the tree of knowledge of good and evil and added the warning: ÒIn the day that
you eat of it you shall dieÓ (Gen 2:17).
The fact that Adam and Eve did not die on the day of their transgression
has led some to conclude that human
beings do not actually die because they have a conscious soul that survives the
death of the body.
Sin and
Death
This
figurative interpretation can hardly be supported by the text, which, literally
translated, reads: Òdying you shall die.Ó
What God simply meant is that on the day they disobeyed, the dying
process would begin. From a state
in which it was possible for them not to die (conditional immortality), they
passed into a state in which it was impossible for them not to die
(unconditional mortality).
Prior
to the Fall the assurance of immortality was vouchsafed by the tree of life.
After the Fall, Adam and Eve no longer had access to the tree of life (Gen
3:22-23) and, consequently, began experiencing the reality of the dying
process. In the prophetic vision of the New Earth, the tree of life is found on
both sides of the river as a symbol of the gift of eternal life bestowed upon
the redeemed (Rev 21:2).
The
divine pronouncement found in Genesis 2:17 places a clear connection between
human death and the transgression of GodÕs commandment. Thus, life and death in the Bible have
religious and ethical significance because they are dependent upon human
obedience or disobedience to God.
This is a fundamental teaching of the Bible, namely, that death came
into this world as a result of human disobedience (Rom 5:12; 1 Cor 15:21). This
does not diminish the responsibility of the individual for his participation in
sin (Ez 18:4, 20). The
Bible, however, makes a distinction between the first death, which every human
being experiences as a result of AdamÕs sin (Rom 5:12; 1 Cor 15:21), and the
second death experienced after the resurrection (Rev 20:6) as the wages for
sins personally commited (Rom 6:23).
Death as
the Separation of the Soul from the Body
A major question we need to address at
this point is the Biblical view of the nature of death. To be specific: Is
death the separation of the immortal soul from the mortal body, so that when
the body dies the soul lives on? Or, is death the cessation of existence of the
whole person, body and soul?
Historically,
Christians have been taught that death is the separation of the immortal soul
from the mortal body, so that the soul survives the body in a disembodied
state. For example, the new Catechism
of the Catholic Church
states: ÒBy death the soul is separated from the body, but in the resurrection
God will give incorruptible life to our body, transformed by reunion with our
soul.Ó17 Augustus
Strong defines death in similar terms in his well-known Systematic Theology: ÒPhysical death is the separation of
the soul from the body. We distinguish it from spiritual death, or the
separation of the soul from God.Ó18
Massive
Attack by Modern Scholars
The
above historical view of the nature of death as the separation of the soul from
the body has come under a massive attack by many modern scholars. A few
examples suffice to illustrate this point. Lutheran theologian Paul Althaus writes: ÒDeath is more than
a departure of the soul from the body.
The person, body and soul, is involved in death. . . . The Christian
faith knows nothing about an immortality of the personality. . . . It knows
only an awakening from real death through the power of God. There is existence
after death only by an awakening of the resurrection of the whole person.Ó19
Althaus argues that the doctrine
of the immortality of the soul does not do justice to the seriousness of death,
since the soul passes through death unscathed.20 Moreover, the notion that a person can
be totally happy and blessed without the body denies the significance of the
body and empties the resurrection of its meaning.21 If believers are already blessed in
heaven and the wicked are already tormented in hell, why is the final judgment
still necessary?22 Althaus
concludes that the doctrine of the immortality of the soul rips apart what
belongs together: the body and the soul, the destiny of the individual and that
of the world.23
Roman
Catholic Theologian Peter Riga of CaliforniaÕs St. MaryÕs College acknowledges
that the old idea of a soul that departs from the body at death Òmakes no sense
at all.Ó He goes on saying: ÒThere is just man, man in GodÕs image and
likeness. Man in his totality was created and will be saved.Ó24
This
challenge of modern scholarship to the traditional view of death as the separation
of the soul from the body has been long overdue. It is hard to believe that for
most of its history, Christianity by and large has held to a view of human
death and destiny which has been largely influenced by Greek thought, rather than by the teachings
of Scripture.
What
is even more surprising is that no amount of Biblical scholarship will change
the traditional belief held by most churches on the intermediate state. The reason is simple. While individual
scholars can and will change their doctrinal views without suffering
devastating consequences, the same is not true for well-established
churches. A church that
introduces radical changes in its historical doctrinal beliefs undermines the
faith of its members and thus the stability of the institution.
Death as
Cessation of Life
When we search the Bible for a
description of the nature of death, we find many clear statements that need
little or no interpretation. In the first place, Scripture describes death as a
return to the elements from which man originally was made. In pronouncing
sentence upon Adam after his disobedience, God said: ÒIn
the sweat of your face you shall eat bread till you return to the ground, for .
. . you are dust and to dust you shall returnÓ (Gen 3:19). This graphic statement tells us that
death is not the separation of the soul from the body, but the termination of
oneÕs life, which results in the
decay and decomposition of the body. ÒSince man is created of perishable
matter, his natural condition is mortality (Gen 3:19).Ó53
A
study of the words Òto die,Ó Òdeath,Ó and ÒdeadÓ in Hebrew and Greek reveals
that death is perceived in the Bible as the deprivation or cessation of life.
The ordinary Hebrew word meaning Òto dieÓ is muth, which occurs in the Old Testament over
800 times. In the vast majority of cases, muth is used in the simple sense of the death
of men and animals. There is no hint in its usage of any distinction between
the two. A clear example is found in Ecclesiastes 3:19, which says: ÒFor the fate of the sons of men and
the fate of beasts is the same; as
one dies, so dies the other.Ó
Old
Testament Descriptions of Death
Hebrew noun maveth which is used in the Old Testament about 150 times and is
generally translated Òdeath,Ó
offers us three important insights about the nature of death.
First,
there is no remembrance of the Lord in death: ÒFor in death [maveth] there is no remembrance of thee; in
Sheol who can give thee praiseÓ (Ps 6:5).
The reason for no remembrance in death is simply because the thinking
process stops when the body with its brain dies. ÒHis breath goeth forth, he
returneth to his earth; in that
day his thoughts perishÓ (Ps 146:4).
Since at death the Òthoughts perish,Ó it is evident there is no
conscious soul that survives the death of the body. If the thinking process,
which is generally associated with the soul, survived the death of the body,
then the thoughts of the saints would not perish. They would be able to
remember God. But the fact is that
Òthe living know that they will die, but the dead know nothingÓ (Eccl 9:5).
Second,
no praise of God is possible in death or in the grave. ÒWhat profit is there in my death [maveth], if I go down to the Pit? Will the dust praise thee? Will it tell
of thy faithfulness?Ó (Ps 30:9). By comparing death with dust, the Psalmist
clearly shows that there is no consciousness in death because dust cannot
think. The same thought is
expressed in Psalm 115:17: ÒThe dead do not praise the Lord, nor do any that go
down into silence.Ó Here the
Psalmist describes death as a state of Òsilence.Ó What a contrast with the ÒnoisyÓ popular vision of the
afterlife where the saints praise God in Heaven and the wicked cry in agony in Hell!
Third,
death is described as a Òsleep.Ó
ÒConsider and answer me, O Lord my God; lighten my eyes, lest I sleep the sleep of deathÓ (Ps 13:3).
This characterization of death as ÒsleepÓ occurs frequently in the Old and New
Testaments because it fittingly represents the state of unconsciousness in
death. Shortly we examine the significance of the ÒsleepÓ metaphor for
understanding the nature of death.
In
several places, maveth
[death] is used with reference to the second death. ÒAs I live, says the Lord
God, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn
from his way and liveÓ (Ez 33:11; cf. 18:23, 32). Here Òthe death
of the wickedÓ is evidently not the natural death that every person
experiences, but the death inflicted by God at the End on impenitent sinners.
None of the literal descriptions or figurative references to death in the Old
Testament suggests the conscious survival of the soul or spirit apart from the
body. Death is the cessation of life for the total person.
New
Testament References to Death
The New Testament references to Òdeath,Ó
a term rendered by the Greek thanatos, are not as informative regarding the nature of death as
those found in the Old Testament.
The reason is partly due to the fact that in the Old Testament many of
the references to death are found in the poetic or wisdom books like Psalms,
Job, and Ecclesiastes. This kind of literature is absent in the New Testament.
More important is the fact that death is seen in the New Testament from the
perspective of ChristÕs victory over
death. This is a dominant theme in the New Testament which conditions
the Christian view of death.
Through
His victory over death, Christ has neutralized the sting of death (1 Cor
15:55); He has abolished death (2 Tim 1:10); He has overcome the devil who had
power over death (Heb 2:14); He has in His hand the keys of the kingdom of
death (Rev 1:18); He is the head of a new humanity as the first-born from the
dead (Col 1:18); He causes believers to be born anew to a living hope through
His resurrection from the dead (1
Pet 1:3).
ChristÕs
victory over death affects the believerÕs understanding of physical, spiritual,
and eternal death. The believer can face physical death with the confidence
that Christ has swallowed up death in victory and will awaken the sleeping
saints at His coming (1 Cor 15:51-56).
Believers
who were spiritually Òdead through trespasses and sinsÓ (Eph 2:1; cf. 4:17-19;
Matt 8:22) have been regenerated into a new life in Christ (Eph 4:24). Unbelievers who remain spiritually dead throughout their
lives and do not accept ChristÕs
provision for their salvation (John 8:21, 24), on the Day of Judgment will
experience the second death (Rev 20:6; 21:8). This is the final, eternal death
from which there is no return.
The
figurative meanings of the word thanatos-death depend entirely on the literal meaning as
cessation of life. To argue for the conscious existence of the soul on the
basis of figurative meaning of death is to attribute to the word a meaning
which is foreign to it. This runs contrary to literary and grammatical rules
and destroys the connections among physical, spiritual, and eternal death.
Death as
Sleep in the Old Testament
In both the Old and New Testaments, death
is often described as Òsleep.Ó
Before attempting to explain the reason for the Biblical use of the
metaphor of ÒsleepÓ for death, let us look at a few examples. In the Old Testament, three Hebrew
words meaning ÒsleepÓ are used to describe death.
The
most common word, shachav, is used in the frequently occuring expression so-and-so Òslept
with his fathersÓ (Gen 28:11; Deut 31:16; 2 Sam 7:12; 1 Kings 2:10). Beginning
with its initial application to Moses (ÒBehold, you are about to sleep with
your fathersÓ - Deut 31:16), and then to David (ÒThou shall sleep with
thy fathersÓ - 2 Sam 7:12, KJV), and Job (ÒNow I shall sleep in the dustÓ
- Job 7:21, KJV), we find this beautiful euphemism for death running like
an unbroken thread all through the Old and New Testaments, ending with PeterÕs
statement that Òthe fathers fell asleepÓ (2 Pet 3:4). It is evident that if the
souls of the ÒfathersÓ were alive in Paradise, Bible writers could not have
regularly spoken of them as being Òasleep.Ó
Another
Hebrew word for ÒsleepÓ is yashen. This word occurs
both as a verb, Òto sleepÓ (Jer 51:39, 57; Ps 13:3) and as a noun, Òsleep.Ó The
latter is found in the well-known verse of Daniel 12:2: ÒAnd many of those who sleep in the
dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and
everlasting contempt.Ó Notice that
in this passage both the godly and ungodly are sleeping in the dust of the
earth and both will be resurrected at the End.
A
third Hebrew word used for the sleep of death is shenah.
Job asks this rhetorical question: ÒBut man dies and is laid low; man
breathes his last, and where is he?Ó (Job 14:10). His answer is:
ÒAs waters fail from a lake, and a river wastes away and dries up, so
man lies down and rises not again; till the heavens are no more he will not
awake, or be roused out of his sleep [shenah]Ó (Job 14:11-12; cf. Ps 76:5;
90:5). Here is a graphic
description of death. When a person takes the last breath, Òwhere is he?Ó that
is, Òwhat is left of him?Ó Nothing.
He does not exist any more. He
becomes like a lake or river whose water has dried up. He sleeps in the grave
and Òwill not awakeÓ till the end of the world.
One
wonders, would Job have given us such a negative description of death if he
believed that his soul would survive death? If death introduced JobÕs soul into the immediate presence
of God in heaven, why does he
speak of waiting Òtill the heavens are no moreÓ (John 14:11) and Òtill my
release should comeÓ (Job 14:14)?
It is evident that neither Job nor any other Old Testament believer knew
of a conscious existence after death.
Death as
Sleep in the New Testament
Death is described as sleep in the New
Testament more frequently than in the Old. The reason may be that the hope of
the resurrection, which is clarified and strengthened by ChristÕs resurrection,
gives new meaning to the sleep of death from which believers will awaken at
ChristÕs coming. As Christ slept in the tomb prior to His resurrection, so
believers sleep in the grave while awaiting their resurrection.
There
are two Greek words meaning ÒsleepÓ which are used in the New Testament. The first is koimao which is used fourteen times for the
sleep of death. A derivative of
this Greek noun is koimeeteerion , from which comes our word cemetery.
Incidentally, the root of this word is also the root of the word
Òhome-oikos.Ó So the home and the cemetery are
connected because both are a sleeping-place. The second Greek word is katheudein,
which is generally used
for ordinary sleep. In the New Testament it is used four times for the sleep of
death (Matt 9:24; Mark 5:39; Luke 8:52; Eph 5:14; 1 Thess 4:14).
At
the time of ChristÕs crucifixion, Òmany bodies of the saints who had fallen
asleep [kekoimemenon]
were raisedÓ (Matt 27:52). In the
original, the text reads: ÒMany bodies of the sleeping saints were
raised.Ó It is evident that what
was resurrected was the whole person and not just the bodies. There is no reference to their souls
being reunited with their bodies, obviously because this concept is foreign to
the Bible.
Speaking
figuratively of LazarusÕ death, Jesus said: ÒOur friend Lazarus has fallen
asleep [kekoimetai],
but I go to awake him out of sleepÓ (John 11:11). When Jesus perceived that He was misunderstood, He Òtold
them plainly, ÔLazarus is deadÓ (John 11:14). Then Jesus hastened to reassure
Martha: ÒYour brother will rise againÓ (John 11:23).
This
episode is significant, first of all, because Jesus plainly describes death as
ÒsleepÓ from which the dead will awaken at the sound of His voice. LazarusÕ condition in death was similar
to a sleep from which one awakens.
Christ said: Ò I go to awake him out of sleepÓ (John 11:11). The Lord
carried out His promise by going to the tomb to awaken Lazarus by calling:
ÒÔLazarus, come out.Õ And the dead man came outÕÓ (John 11:43-44).
The
awakening of Lazarus
out of the sleep of death by the sound of ChristÕs voice parallels the
awakening of the sleeping saints on the day of His glorious coming. They, too,
shall hear the voice of Christ and come forth to life again. ÒThe hour is
coming when all who are in the tombs will hear his voice and come forthÓ (John 5:28; cf. John
5:25). ÒFor the Lord himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, . . . And the dead in
Christ will rise firstÓ (1 Thess 4:16).
There
is harmony and symmetry in the expressions ÒsleepingÓ and ÒawakeningÓ as used
in the Bible for going into and coming out of a death state. The two
expressions corroborate the notion that death is an unconscious state like
sleeping, from which believers will awake on the day of ChristÕs coming.
Lazarus
Had No Afterlife Experience
LazarusÕ experience is also
significant because he spent four
days in the grave. This was not a near-death experience, but a real death
experience. If, as popularly believed, the soul at death leaves the body and
goes to heaven, then Lazarus would have had an amazing experience to share
about the four days he would have spent
in paradise. The religious
leaders and the people would have done all in their power to elicit from
Lazarus as much information as possible about the unseen world. Such information would have
provided valuable answers to the question of life after death which was so
hotly debated among the Sadducees and Pharisees (Matt 22:23, 28; Mark 12:18,
23; Luke 20:27, 33).
But
Lazarus had nothing to share about life after death, because during the four
days he spent in the tomb he slept the unconscious sleep of death. What is true
of Lazarus is also true of six other persons who were raised from the dead: The
widowÕs son (1 Kings 17:17-24); the ShunammiteÕs son (2 Kings 4:18-37); the widowÕs
son at Nain (Luke 7:11-15); the daughter of Jairus (Luke 8:41, 42, 49-56);
Tabitha (Acts 9:36-41); and Eutychus (Acts 20:9-12). Each of these persons came out of death as if it were out of
a profound sleep, with the same feeling and individuality, but with no
afterlife experience to share.
There
are no indications that the soul of Lazarus, or of the other six persons raised
from the dead, had gone to heaven. None of them had a Òheavenly experienceÓ to
share. The reason being that none
of them had ascended to heaven.
This is confirmed by PeterÕs reference to David in his speech on the day
of Pentecost: ÒBrethren, I may say to you confidently of the patriarch David
that he both died and was buried, and his tomb is still with us to this dayÓ
(Acts 2:29). Some could argue that
what was in the grave was DavidÕs body, not his soul which had gone to
heaven. But this interpretation is
negated by PeterÕs explicit words: ÒFor David did not ascend into the
heavensÓ (Acts 2:34). The Knox translation renders it, ÒDavid never went up to
heaven.Ó The Cambridge Bible has the following
note: ÒFor David is not ascended. Better ascended
not. He went down to the grave and Ôslept
with his fathers.ÕÓ What sleeps in
the grave, according to the Bible, is not merely the body but the whole person
who awaits the resurrection awakening.
Paul and
the Sleeping Saints
In the two great chapters on the
resurrection in 1 Thessalonians 4 and 1 Corinthians 15, Paul repeatedly speaks
of those who have fallen ÒasleepÓ in Christ (1 Thess 4:13, 14, 15; 1 Cor 15:6,
18, 20). A look at some of PaulÕs statements sheds light on what Paul meant by
characterizing death as sleep.
In
writing to the Thessalonians, who were grieving over their loved ones who had
fallen asleep before experiencing the coming of Christ, Paul reassures them
that as God raised Jesus from the dead, so He will through Christ Òbring with
him those who have fallen asleepÓ (1 Thess 4:14). Some maintain that Paul is here speaking of disembodied
souls, which allegedly ascended to heaven at death and which will return with
Christ when He descends to this earth at His return.
This
interpretation ignores three major things. First, our study has shown that the
Bible nowhere teaches that the soul at death ascends to heaven. Second, in the context, Paul is not
speaking of immortal souls but of Òthose who are asleepÓ (1 Thess 4:13; cf. v.
14) and of Òthe dead in ChristÓ (1 Thess 4:16). ÒThe dead in Christ will rise firstÓ from their graves (1 Thess 4:16) and will
not descend from heaven. There is no hint that the bodies rise from the graves and the souls descend from heaven to be reunited with the
bodies. Such a dualistic notion is foreign to the Bible.
Third,
if Paul really believed that Òthe dead in ChristÓ were not really dead in the
grave but alive in heaven as disembodied souls, he would have capitalized on
their blissful condition in heaven to explain to the Thessalonians that their
grieving was senseless. Why should they grieve for their loved ones if they were already enjoying the bliss of
heaven? The reason Paul did not give such an encouragement is obviously because
he knew that sleeping saints were not in heaven but in their graves.
This
conclusion is supported by the assurance Paul gave to his readers that living
Christians would not meet Christ at His coming before those who had fallen
asleep. ÒWe who are alive, who are
left until the coming of the Lord, shall not precede those who have fallen
asleepÓ (1 Thess 4:15). The reason is that Òthe dead in Christ will rise first;
then we who are alive, who are left, shall be caught up together with them in
the clouds to meet the Lord in the airÓ (1 Thess 4:16-17).
The
fact that the living saints will meet with Christ at the same time as the
sleeping saints indicates that the latter have not yet been united with Christ
in heaven. If the souls of the
sleeping saints were already enjoying fellowship with Christ in heaven and were
to descend with Christ to earth at His second Advent, then obviously they would
have an unmistakable priority over the living saints. But the truth is that
both sleeping and living believers
are awaiting their longed-for union with the Savior; a union which both will
experience at the same time on the day of ChristÕs coming.
PaulÕs
discussion of the sleeping saints in 1 Corinthians 15 confirms much of what we
have already found in 1 Thessalonians 4.
After affirming the fundamental importance of ChristÕs resurrection for
the Christian faith and hope, Paul explains that Òif Christ had not been raised
. . . Then those also who have fallen asleep in Christ have perishedÓ (1 Cor
15:18-19). Paul could hardly have
said that the sleeping saints would have perished without the guarantee of
ChristÕs resurrection, if he believed that their souls were immortal and were
already enjoying the bliss of Paradise. If Paul believed the latter, he
probably would have said that without ChristÕs resurrection the soul of the
sleeping saints would remain disembodied for all eternity. But Paul makes no allusion to such a
possibility, because he believed that the whole person, body and soul, would
have ÒperishedÓ without the guarantee of ChristÕs resurrection.
It
is significant that in the whole chapter which is devoted to the importance
and dynamics of the resurrection,
Paul never hints at the alleged reunification of the body with the soul at the
resurrection. If Paul had held
such a belief, he hardly could have avoided making some allusions to the
reattachment of the body to the soul, especially in his discussions of the
transformation of the believers from a mortal to an immortal state at ChristÕs
coming. But the only ÒmysteryÓ
that Paul reveals is that Òwe shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changedÓ
(1 Cor 15:51). This change from a
perishable to an imperishable nature occurs for all, living and dead, at the
same time, namely, at the sounding of Òthe last trumpetÓ (1 Cor 15:52). The
change has nothing to do with disembodied souls regaining possession of their
resurrected bodies. Rather, it is
a change from mortal to immortal life for both the living and the dead in
Christ: ÒThe mortal puts on immortalityÓ (1 Cor 15:54).
The
Significance of the ÒSleepÓ Metaphor
The popular use of the ÒsleepÓ metaphor
to describe the state of the dead in Christ raises the question of its
implications for the nature of death. Specifically, why is this metaphor used
and what insights can we legitimately derive from it about the nature of death?
There are three major reasons for the use of the ÒsleepÓ metaphor in the Bible.
First,
there is a similarity between the ÒsleepÓ of the dead and the ÒsleepÓ of the
living. Both are characterized by
a condition of unconsciousness and inactivity which is interrupted by an
awakening. Thus, the ÒsleepÓ metaphor fittingly represents the unconscious
state of the dead and their awakening on the day of ChristÕs return.
A
second reason for the use of the ÒsleepÓ metaphor is suggested by the fact that
it is a hope-inspiring figure of speech to represent death. It implies the
assurance of a later awakening. As a person goes to sleep at night in the hope
of awakening in the morning, so the believer falls asleep in the Lord in the
assurance of being awakened by Christ on resurrection morning.
When
we hear or say that a person is dead, we automatically think that there is no
more hope of bringing him/her back to life. But when we say that a person is sleeping in the Lord, we
express the hope for his or her restoration to life on the day of the resurrection.
The ÒsleepÓ metaphor does not describe the sleeping condition of the dead, but
the possibility of being awaken to live again on Resurrection morning.
The Sleep
of Death as Unconsciousness
A third reason for the use of the ÒsleepÓ
metaphor is suggested by the fact that there is no consciousness of the elapse
of time in sleep. Thus, the metaphor provides a fitting representation of the
unconscious state of the deceased between death and resurrection. They have no
awareness of the passing of time. In his early writings, Luther expressed this
thought in a most graphic way: ÒJust as one who falls asleep and reaches
morning unexpected when he awakes, without knowing what has happened to him, so
shall we suddenly rise on the last day without knowing how we have come into
death and through death.Ó25
Again Luther wrote: ÒWe shall sleep until He comes and knocks on the
little grave and says, Doctor Martin, get up! Then I shall rise in a moment and be happy with Him
forever.Ó26
For
the sake of accuracy, it must be pointed out that later in life Luther largely
rejected the notion of the unconscious sleep of the dead, apparently because of
CalvinÕs strong attack against this doctrine. In his Commentary on Genesis, which he wrote in 1537, Luther remarks:
ÒThe departed soul does not sleep in this manner [regular sleep]; it is, more
properly speaking, awake and has vision and conversation with the angels and
God.Ó27 The change in LutherÕs position from the unconscious to the
conscious state of the dead only serves to show that even influential reformers
were not exempted from the theological pressures of their time.
Our
study of the ÒsleepÓ metaphor in the Old and New Testaments has shown that the Bible uses the ÒsleepÓ metaphor
frequently because it enshrines a vital
truth, namely, the dead who sleep in Christ are unconscious of any lapse
of time until their resurrection.
The believer who dies in Christ falls asleep and rests unconscious,
until he awakes when Christ calls him back to life at His coming.
The
Meaning and Ground of Immortality
Immortality in the Bible is not an innate human possession but a
divine attribute. The term ÒimmortalityÓ comes from the Greek athanasia, which means Òdeathlessness,Ó and hence
unending existence. This terms occurs only twice; first in connection with God
Òwho alone has immortalityÓ (1 Tim 6:16) and second in relation to human
mortality which must put on immortality (1 Cor 15:53) at the time of the
resurrection. The latter reference negates the notion of a natural immortality
of the soul, because it says that immortality is something that the resurrected
saints will Òput on.Ó It is not something that they already possess.
Nowhere
the Bible suggests that immortality is a natural quality or right of human
beings. The presence of the Òtree of lifeÓ in the garden of Eden indicates
indicates that immortality was conditional to the partaking of the fruit of such tree. Scripture teaches that Òimmortality is
to be sought (Rom
2:7) and Òput onÓ (1 Cor 15:53). It is, as Ôeternal life,Ó the gift of God (Rom 6:23) to be inherited (Matt 19:29) by knowing God (John 17:3) through Christ (John 14:19; 17:2; Rom 6:23). In PaulÕs
view immortality is tied solely to the resurrection of Jesus (1 Cor 15) as the
ground and pledge of the believerÕs hope.
Those who insist in finding the philosophical idea of the immortality of
the soul in the Bible, ignore GodÕs revelation and insert dualistic Greek ideas
into the Biblical faith.
Conclusion
Our study of the biblical view of the
nature of death, has shown that both the Old and New Testaments clearly teach
that death is the extinction of life for the whole person. There is no remembrance or
consciousness in death (Ps 8:5; 146:4; 30:9; 115:17; Ecc 9:5). There is no
independent existence of the spirit or soul apart from the body. Death is the
loss of the total being
and not merely the loss of well-being. The whole
person rests in the grave in a state of unconsciousness characterized in the
Bible as Òsleep.Ó The ÒawakeningÓ
will take place at ChristÕs coming when He will call back to life the sleeping
saints. The ÒsleepÓ metaphor is truly a beautiful and tender expression which
intimates that death is not the final human destiny because there will be an awakening out of the
sleep of death on resurrection morning.
PART
3
THE
STATE OF THE DEAD
IN
THE OLD TESTAMENT
A
major challenge to the conclusion that death in the Bible is the cessation of
life for the whole person, comes from unwarranted interpretations given to two
words used in the Bible to describe the dwelling place of the dead. The two words are sheol in the Old Testament and hades in the New Testament. They often are
interpreted to represent the place where disembodied souls continue to exist
after the death and the place of punishment of the ungodly (hell). Thus, it is imperative for us to study
the Biblical meaning and usage of these two terms .
Translations
and Interpretations of Sheol
The Hebrew word sheol occurs 65 times in the Old Testament and is translated variously
as Ògrave,Ó Òhell,Ó Òpit,Ó or
Òdeath.Ó These variant
translations make it difficult for the English reader to understand the basic meaning
of sheol. For example, The King James Version (KJV) renders sheol ÒgraveÓ 31 times, ÒhellÓ 31 times, and
ÒpitÓ 3 times. This means that
readers of the KJV are often led to believe that the Old Testament teaches the
existence of hell where the wicked are tormented for their sins.
For
example, in the KJV, Psalm 16:10 reads: ÒFor thou wilt not leave my soul in
hell.Ó An uninformed reader will
assume that the text means, ÒFor thou wilt not leave my soul to be tormented in
hell.Ó Such a reading is an
obvious misinterpretation of the text which simply says, as rendered in the
RSV, ÒFor thou does not give me up to Sheol,Ó that is, the grave. The Psalmist
here expresses confidence that God
would not abandon him in the grave. In fact, this is the way the text is
applied in Acts 2:27 to Christ,
who was not left in the grave by the Father. The text has nothing to say about
hell.
To
avoid such misleading interpretations, the Revised Standard Version and The New American Standard Bible simply transliterate the Hebrew word
into English letters as sheol. The New International Version usually translates it as ÒgraveÓ
(occasionally as ÒdeathÓ), with a footnote Òsheol.Ó
This translation accurately reflects the basic meaning of sheol
as the grave or, even better, the collective realm of the dead.
Different
translations often reflect the different theological convictions of the
translators. For example, the translators of the KJV believed that at death the
righteous go to Heaven and the wicked to hell. Consequently, they translated sheol ÒgraveÓ when referring to the righteous,
whose bodies rested in the grave, and ÒhellÓ when referring to the wicked whose
souls are supposedly tormented in hell.
A similar approach has been adopted by Old Testament scholar Alexander
Heidel,28 who has been
criticized for arbitrarily handling the Biblical data.29
These
interpretations of sheol as the dwelling place of souls (rather than the resting place of
the body in the grave) or the place of punishment for the wicked, known as
hell, do not stand up under the light of the Biblical usage of sheol. This fact is recognized even by John W. Cooper who has
produced what is perhaps the most scholarly attempt to salvage the traditional
dualistic view of human nature from the massive attacks of modern scholarship
against it. In his book Body, Soul, and Life Everlasting, Cooper states: ÒPerhaps most interesting for traditional Christians to note
is the fact that it [sheol] is the resting place of the dead irrespective of their religion
during life. Sheol is not the ÔhellÕ to which the wicked
are condemned and from which the LordÕs faithful are spared in glory. . . . There is no doubt that believers
and unbelievers all were thought to go to sheol when they die.Ó30
The
liberal The InterpreterÕs Dictionary of the Bible states even more emphatically that ÒNowhere
in the Old Testament is the abode of the dead [sheol] regarded as a place of punishment or
torment. The concept of an
infernal ÔhellÕ developed in Israel only during the Hellenistic period.Ó31
In his classic study on Israel: Its
Life and Culture,
Johannes Pedersen flatly states: ÒSheol is the entirety into which all graves are merged; . . .
Where there is grave, there is sheol, and where there is sheol, there is grave.Ó32 Pedersen
explains at great length that sheol is the collective realm of the dead where all the deceased go,
whether buried or unburied. This conclusion becomes self-evident when we look at some usages of sheol.
Etymology
and Location of Sheol
The etymology of sheol is uncertain. The derivations most
frequently mentioned are from such root meanings as Òto ask,Ó Òto
inquire,Ó and Òto bury oneÕs
self.Ó33 In his
dissertation on ÒSheol in the Old Testament,Ó Ralph Doermann proposes a
derivation from the stem shilah, which has the
primary meaning Òto be quiet,Ó Òat ease.Ó
He concludes that Òif a connection between sheol and shilah is feasible, it would appear that the
name is not connected with the location of the realm of the dead, but rather
with the character of its occupants, who are primarily Ôat rest.ÕÓ34 The difference between the two words is
relative. More important is the fact that sheol denotes a place where the dead are at
rest.
Sheol is located deep beneath the surface of
the earth, because it is often mentioned in connection with heaven to denote
the uttermost limits of the universe.
Sheol is the
deepest place in the universe, just as the heaven is the highest. Amos describes the inescapable wrath of God in these
terms: ÒThough they dig into
Sheol, from there shall my hand take them; though they climb up to heaven, from
there I will bring them downÓ (Amos 9:2-3). Similarly, the Psalmist exclaims: ÒWhither shall I go from
thy Spirit? Or whither shall I flee
from thy presence? If I ascend to
heaven, thou art there! If I make
my bed in Sheol, thou are there!Ó (Ps 139:7-8; cf. Job 11:7-9).
Being
situated beneath the earth, the dead reach sheol by Ògoing down,Ó a euphemism for being buried in the
earth. Thus, when Jacob was
informed of the death of his son Joseph, he said: ÒI shall go down to Sheol to
my son mourningÓ (Gen 37:35).
Perhaps the clearest example of the location of sheol beneath the earth is the account of the
punishment of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram, who had revolted against the authority
of Moses. ÒThe ground under them split asunder; and the earth opened its mouth
and swallowed them up, with their household and all the men that belonged to
Korah and all their goods. So they
and all that belonged to them went down alive to Sheol; and the earth closed
over themÓ (Num 16:31-33). This
episode clearly shows that the whole person, and not just the soul, goes down
to sheol, to the
realm of the dead.
Characteristics
of Sheol
The characteristics of sheol are essentially those of the realm of
the dead, or the grave. In numerous passages, sheol is found in parallelism with the Hebrew
word bor, which
denotes Òa pitÓ or any kind of subterranean hole, such as a grave. For example, the Psalmist writes: ÒFor
my soul is full of troubles and my life draws near to Sheol. I am reckoned among
those who go down to the Pit [bor]Ó (Ps 88:3-4).35
Here the parallelism identifies sheol with the pit, that is, the burial place
of the dead.
Several
times Sheol appears
together with abaddon,
which means Òdestruction,Ó or Òruin.Ó36 Abaddon appears in parallelism with the grave:
ÒIs thy covenant loyalty declared in the grave, or thy faithfulness in AbaddonÓ
(Ps 88:12). The fact that sheol is associated with abaddon, the place of destruction, shows that the
realm of the dead was seen as the place of destruction, and not as the place of
eternal suffering for the wicked.
Sheol is also characterized as Òthe land of
darkness and deep darknessÓ (Job 10:21), where the dead never see light again
(Ps 49:20; 88:13). It is also Òthe
land of silenceÓ (Ps 94:17; cf. 115:17) and the land of no-return: ÒAs the
cloud fades and vanishes, so he who goes down to Sheol does not come up; he
returns no more to his house, nor does his place know him any moreÓ (Job 7:10).
Sheol as the Realm of the Dead
All the above characteristics of sheol describe accurately the realm of the
dead. The pit, the place of
destruction, the land of darkness, the land of silence, the land of no-return
are all descriptive of the realm of the dead. Furthermore we have some instances where sheol occurs in parallelism with death and the
grave: ÒLet death come upon them;
let them go down to Sheol alive; let them go away in terror to their graveÓ (Ps
55:16). By virtue of the
parallelism, here sheol
is identified with death and the grave.
The
various figures used to describe sheol all serve to show that it is not the locality of departed spirits,
but the realm of the dead. Anthony Hoekema, a Calvinistic scholar,
reaches essentially the same conclusion in his book The Bible and the Future. He writes: ÒThe various figures which
are applied to sheol
can all be understood as referring to the realm of the dead: Sheol is said to have bars (Job 17:16), to be
a dark and gloomy place (Job 17:13), to be a monster with insatiable appetite
(Prov 27:20; 30:15-16; Is 5:14; Hab 2:5). When we think of sheol in this way, we must remember that both
the godly and the ungodly go down into sheol at death, since both enter the realm of
the dead.Ó37
Any
attempt to turn sheol
into the place of torment of the wicked or into the abode of spirits/souls
clearly contradicts the Biblical characterization of sheol as the underground depository of the
dead.
The
Condition of the Dead in Sheol
Since death is the cessation of life and
vitality, the state of the dead in sheol is described in terms antithetical to the concept of life
on earth. Life means vitality and
activity; death means weakness and inactivity. This is true for all, the righteous and the wicked. ÒOne
fate comes to all, to the righteous and the wicked, to the good and the evil,
to the clean and the uncleanÓ (Eccl 9:2).
They all go to the same place, sheol, the realm of the dead.
The
wise man offers a graphic description of the condition of the dead in sheol: ÒThere is no work or thought or
knowledge or wisdom in Sheol, to which you are goingÓ (Eccl 9:10). It is
evident that sheol, the realm of the dead, is the place of
unconscious non-existence. ÒFor
the living know that they will die, but the dead know nothing, and they have no
more reward; but the memory of them is lost. Their love and their hate and their envy have already
perished, and they have no more for ever any share in all that is done under
the sunÓ (Eccl 9:5-6). The main
argument here is that death puts an abrupt end to all activity Òunder the sun,Ó
and what follows death is sheol, the realm of the dead where there is a state of inactivity,
without knowledge or consciousness. Such a state is best described as Òsleep.Ó
The
phrase Òand he slept with his fatherÓ (cf. 1 Kings 1:21; 2:10; 11:43) reflects
the idea that the dead join their predecessors in sheol in a somnolent, unconscious state. The
idea of rest or sleep in sheol is prominent in Job,
who cries in the midst of his sufferings: ÒWhy did I not die at birth, come forth from the womb and expire? .
. . For then I should have lain down and been quiet; I should have slept; then
I should have been at rest. . . . There the wicked cease from troubling and
there the weary are at restÓ (Job 3:11,13, 17).
Rest
in sheol is not the
rest of souls enjoying the bliss of paradise or the torments of hell, but the
rest of dead bodies sleeping in their dusty, worm-covered graves. ÒIf I wait
for the grave [sheol]
as my house, if I make my bed in the darkness, if I say to corruption, ÔYou are
my father,Õ and to the worm, Ôyou are my mother and my sister,Õ where then is
my hope? . . . Will they go down to the gates of Sheol? Shall we rest together
in the dust?Ó (Job 17:13-16, NKJV).
The
dead sleep in sheol
until the End. ÒA man lies down and rises not again; till the heavens are no
more he will not awake, or be roused out of his sleepÓ (Job 14:12). ÒTill the heavens are no moreÓ is
possibly an allusion to the coming of the Lord at the end of time to resurrect
the saints. In all his trials, Job never gave up his hope of seeing the Lord
even after the decay of his body. ÒFor I know that my Redeemer lives, and He
shall stand at last on the earth; and after my skin is destroyed, this I know
that in my flesh I shall see God, whom I shall see for myself, and my eyes
shall behold, and not another. How
my heart yearns within me!Ó (Job 19:25-27; NKJV).
In
summation, the condition of the dead in sheol, the realm of the dead, is one of
unconsciousness, inactivity, a rest or sleep that will continue until the day
of the resurrection. None of the texts we have examined suggests that sheol is the place of punishment for the
ungodly (hell) or a place of conscious existence for the souls or spirits of
the dead. No souls are in sheol simply because in the Old Testament the
soul does not survive the death of the body. As N. H. Snaith flatly states it: ÒA dead body, whether of man, or bird, or beast is without nephesh [soul]. In sheol, the abode of the dead, there is no nephesh [soul].Ó38
PART
3
THE
STATE OF THE DEAD
IN
THE NEW TESTAMENT
The
New Testament says very little about the state of the dead during the
intermediate period between their falling asleep and their awakening on the day
of the resurrection. The primary concern of the New Testament is with the
events that mark the transition from this age to the Age to Come: the return of
Christ and the resurrection of the dead.
Our
major source of information for the New Testament view of the state of the dead
are the 11 references to hades (which is the Greek equivalent of the Hebrew sheol) and 5 passages commonly cited in
support of the belief in the conscious existence of the soul after death. The 5
passages are: (1) Luke 16:19-31, where we find the parable of the Rich Man and
Lazarus; (2) Luke 23:42-43, which reports the conversation between Jesus and
the thief on the cross; (3) Philippians 1:23, where Paul speaks of his Òdesire
to depart and be with ChristÓ; (4) 2 Corinthians 5:1-10, where Paul uses the
imagery of the earthly/heavenly houses and of the unclothed/clothed conditions
to express his desire to Òbe away from the body and at home with the LordÓ (2
Cor 5:8); and (5) Revelation 6:9-11 which mentions the souls of the martyrs
under the altar crying to God to avenge their blood. We proceed to examine each of the above in the order given.
The
Meaning and Nature of Hades
The Greek word hades came into Biblical use when the
translators of the Septuagint
chose it to render the Hebrew sheol. The
problem is that hades
was used in the Greek world in a vastly different way than sheol. While sheol in the Old Testament is the realm of the
dead, where, as we have seen, the deceased are in an unconscious state, hades in Greek mythology is the underworld,
where the conscious souls of the dead are divided in two major regions, one a
place of torment and the other of blessedness.
Edward
Fudge offers this concise description of the Greek conception of hades:
ÒIn Greek mythology Hades was the god of the underworld, and then the
name of the nether world itself.
Charon ferried the souls of the dead across the rivers Styx or Acheron
into his abode, where the watchdog Cerberus guarded the gate so that none might
escape. The pagan myth contained all the elements of the medieval eschatology:
there was the pleasant Elysium, the gloomy and miserable Tartarus, and even the
Plains of Asphodel, where ghosts could wander who were suited for neither of
the above. Ruling beside the god was his queen Proserpine (or Persephone), whom
he had raped from the world above.Ó39
This
Greek conception of hades influenced Hellenistic Jews, during the intertestamental period,
to adopt the belief in the immortality of the soul and the idea of a spatial
separation in the underworld between the righteous and the godless. The souls of the righteous proceeded
immediately after death to heavenly felicity, there to await the resurrection,
while the souls of the godless went to a place of torment in hades.40 The popular acceptance of this scenario is reflected in
the Parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus to be examined shortly.
This
view of hades as a
place of torment for the wicked eventually entered into the Christian Church
and influenced even Bible translators. It is noteworthy that the word hades, which occurs 11 times in the New
Testament, is translated in the KJV 10 times as ÒhellÓ 41 and 1 time as Ògrave.Ó42
The RSV transliterates the word as ÒHades.Ó
The
translation of hades as
ÒhellÓ is inaccurate and
misleading, because, with the exception of Luke 16:23, the term refers to the
grave or the realm of the dead, not to a place of punishment. The latter is designated as gehenna,
a term which also
occurs 11 times in the New Testament43
and is rightly translated
Òhell,Ó since it refers to the lake of fire, the place of doom for the
lost. Hades,
on the other hand, is used in the New Testament as the standing
equivalent of sheol, the
realm of the dead or the grave.
Jesus and
Hades
In the Gospels, Jesus refers to hades three times. The first use of hades
is found in Matthew 11:23, where Jesus upbraids Capernaum, saying: ÒAnd
you, Capernaum, will you be exalted to heaven? You will be brought down to
HadesÓ (cf. Luke 10:15). Here hades, like sheol in the Old Testament (Amos 9:2-3; Job 11:7-9), denotes the
deepest place in the universe, just as the heaven is the highest. This means
that Capernaum will be humiliated by being brought down to the realm of the
dead, the deepest place in the universe.
The
second use of hades
in the teaching of Jesus occurs in the parable of the rich man and Lazarus
(Luke 16:23). We shall return to this shortly. The third use is found in
Matthew 16:18, where Jesus expresses His confidence that Òthe gates of Hades
shall not prevailÓ against His church. The meaning of the phrase Òthe gates of
HadesÓ is illuminated by the use of the same expression in the Old Testament
and Jewish literature (3 Macc 5:51; Wis. of Sol 16:13) as a synonym for death. For example, Job asks rhetorically:
ÒHave the gates of death been revealed to you, or have you seen the gates of
deep darkness?Ó (Job 38:17; cf. Is 38:18). The underworld was pictured as
enclosed with cliffs, where the dead were locked in. Thus, what Jesus meant by
Òthe gates of HadesÓ is that death shall not prevail against His church,
obviously because He had gained the victory over death.
Like
all the dead, Jesus went to hades, that is, to the grave, but unlike the rest He was victorious over
death. ÒFor thou wilt not abandon my soul to Hades, nor let thy Holy One see
corruptionÓ (Acts 2:27; cf. 2:31).
Here hades is
the grave where ChristÕs body rested for only three days and, consequently, did
not Òsee corruption,Ó the decay process resulting from a prolonged interment.
Because of His victory over death, hades-the grave is a defeated enemy. Thus, Paul exclaims:
ÒO death, where is thy sting? O
grave [hades] where
is thy victory?Ó (1 Cor 15:55, KJV). Here hades is correctly translated ÒgraveÓ in the
KJV since it is in parallel with death.
Christ
now holds the keys to Òdeath and HadesÓ (Rev 1:18), He has power over death and
the grave. This enables Him to
unlock the graves and call forth the saints to everlasting life at His coming.
In all these passages, hades is consistently associated with death, because it is the resting
place of the dead, the grave. The same is true in Revelation 6:8, where the
pale horse has a rider whose name Òwas Death, and Hades followed him.Ó The reason ÒHadesÓ follows ÒDeathÓ is
obviously because hades,
as the grave, receives the dead.
At
the end of the millennium, ÒDeath and HadesÓ will give up their dead (Rev
20:13) and Òthen Death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire. This is the second death, the lake of
fireÓ (Rev 20:14). These two verses are significant. First, because they tell
us that eventually hades will give up the dead, which indicates again that hades is the realm of the dead. Second, they
inform us that at the End, hades itself will be thrown into the lake of fire. By means of this
colorful imagery, the Bible reassures us that at the End, both death and the
grave will be eliminated. This
will be the death of death, or as Revelation puts it, Òthe second death.Ó
This
brief survey of the use of hades in the New Testament clearly shows that its meaning and usage is
consistent with that of sheol in the Old Testament. Both terms denote the grave or the realm of
the dead and not the place of punishment of the ungodly.44
The Rich
Man and Lazarus
The word hades also occurs in the parable of the rich man and Lazarus, but with a
different meaning. While in the 10
references we have just examined hades refers to the grave or the realm of the dead, in the
parable of the rich man and Lazarus it denotes the place of punishment for the
ungodly (Luke 16:23). The reason
for this exceptional use will be explained shortly. Obviously, dualists make
great use of this parable to support the notion of the conscious existence of
disembodied souls during the intermediate state (Luke 16:19-31). Because of the
importance attached to this parable, we need to examine it closely.
First,
let us look at the main points of the story. Lazarus and the rich man both die. Their situations in life
are now reversed after their death.
For when Lazarus died, he Òwas carried by angels to AbrahamÕs bosomÓ
(Luke 16:22), whereas the rich man was taken to hades where he was tormented by scorching
flames (Luke 16:23). Although a great gulf separated them, the rich man could
see Lazarus in AbrahamÕs bosom. So he pleaded with Abraham to send Lazarus on
two errands: first, to Òsend
Lazarus to dip the end of his finger in water and cool his tongueÓ (Luke 16:24)
and second, to send Lazarus to warn his family members to repent lest they experience
the same punishment. Abraham
denied both requests for two reasons.
The first, because there was a great chasm that made it impossible for
Lazarus to cross over to help him (Luke 16:26); the second, because if his
family members did Ònot hear Moses and the prophets, neither will they be
convinced if some one should rise from the deadÓ (Luke 16:31).
Before
looking at the parable, we need to remember that contrary to an allegory like PilgrimÕs
Progress, where every
details counts, the details of a parable do not necessarily have any
significance in themselves, except as ÒpropsÓ for the story. A parable is
designed to teach a fundamental truth, and the details do not have a literal
meaning, unless the context indicates otherwise. Out of this principle another grows, namely, only the
fundamental teaching of a parable, confirmed by the general tenor of Scripture,
may be legitimately used for defining doctrine.
The
Problems of a Literal Interpretation
Those who interpret the parable as a literal representation
of the state of the saved and unsaved after death are faced with insurmountable
problems. If the narrative is an
actual description of the intermediate state, then it must be true in fact and
consistent in detail. But if the parable is figurative, then only the moral
truth to be conveyed need concern us. A literal interpretation of the narrative
breaks down under the weight of its own absurdities and contradictions, as
becomes apparent under scrutiny.
Contenders
for literalism suppose that the rich man and Lazarus were disembodied spirits,
destitute of bodies. Yet the rich man is described as having ÒeyesÓ that see
and a ÒtongueÓ that speaks, as well as seeking relief from the ÒfingerÓ of
Lazarus—all real body parts. They are portrayed as existing physically,
despite the fact that the rich manÕs body was duly buried in the grave. Was his
body carried away into hades together with his soul by mistake?
A
gulf separates Lazarus in Heaven (AbrahamÕs bosom) from the rich man in hades. The gulf is too wide for anyone to cross and yet narrow
enough to permit them to converse. Taken literally, this means that Heaven and
Hell are within geographical speaking and seeing distance from each other so
that saints and sinners eternally can see and communicate with one
another. Ponder for a moment the
case of parents in Heaven seeing their children agonizing in hades for all eternity.
Would not such a sight destroy the very joy and peace of Heaven? It is unthinkable that the saved will
see and converse with their unsaved loved ones for all eternity across a
dividing gulf.
Conflict
With Biblical Truths
A literal interpretation of the parable
contradicts some fundamental Biblical truths. If the narrative is literal, then
Lazarus received his reward and the rich man his punishment, immediately after
death and before the judgment day.
But the Bible clearly teaches that the rewards and punishments, as well
as the separation between the saved and the unsaved will take place on the day
of ChristÕs coming: ÒWhen the Son of man comes in his glory, . . . and before
him will be gathered all the nations, and he will separate them one from
anotherÓ (Matt 25:31-32). ÒBehold,
I am coming soon, bringing my recompense, to repay everyone for what he has
doneÓ (Rev 22:12). Paul expected
to receive Òthe crown of righteousnessÓ on the day of ChristÕs appearing (2 Tim
4:8).
A
literal interpretation of the parable also contradicts the uniform testimony of
the Old and New Testaments that the dead, both righteous and ungodly, lie
silent and unconscious in death until the resurrection day (Eccl 9:5-6; Job 14:12-15, 20, 21; Ps
6:5; 115:17). A literal
interpretation also contradicts the consistent use of hades in the New Testament to denote the grave
or the realm of the dead, not a place of punishment. We have found that in 10
of its 11 occurrences, hades is explicitly connected with death and the grave. The exceptional
use of hades in this
parable as a fiery place of torment (Luke 16:24) derives not from Scripture,
but from current Jewish beliefs influenced by Greek mythology.
Current
Jewish Concepts
Fortunately for our investigation, we
have Jewish writings that illuminate the parable of the rich man and Lazarus.
Especially revealing is the ÒDiscourse to the Greeks Concerning Hades,Ó written
by Josephus, the famous Jewish historian who lived during New Testament times
(died about A. D. 100). His
discourse parallels very closely the narrative of the rich man and Lazarus. In
it Josephus explains that ÒHades is a subterraneous region where the light of this world does
not shine. . . . This region is allowed as a place of custody for souls, in
which angels are appointed as guardians to them, who distribute to them temporary
punishments, agreeable
to every oneÕs behavior and manners.Ó45
Josephus
points out, however, that hades is divided into two regions. One is Òthe region of lightÓ where
the souls of the righteous dead are brought by angels to the Òplace we call The
Bosom of Abraham.Ó46 The second region is in Òperpetual
darkness,Ó and the souls of the ungodly are dragged by force Òby the angels
allotted for punishment.Ó47
These angels drag the ungodly Òinto the neighborhood of hell itself,Ó so
that they can see and feel the heat of the flames.48 But they are not thrown into hell
itself until after the final judgment.
ÒA chaos deep
and large is fixed between them; insomuch that a just man that hath compassion
upon them, cannot be admitted, nor can one that is unjust, if he were bold
enough to attempt it, pass over it.Ó49
The
striking similarities between JosephusÕ description of hades and the parable of the rich man and
Lazarus are self-evident. In both
accounts we have the two regions that separate the righteous from the ungodly,
the bosom of Abraham as the abode of the righteous, a great gulf that cannot be
crossed, and the inhabitants of one region who can see those of the other
region.
JosephusÕ
description of hades
is not unique. Similar descriptions can be found in other Jewish literature.50 What this means is that Jesus capitalized on the popular
understanding of the condition of the dead in hades, not to endorse such views, but to drive
home the importance of heeding in this present life the teachings of Moses and
the prophets because this determines bliss or misery in the world to come.
JesusÕ
Use of Current Beliefs
At this juncture, it may be proper to
ask, ÒWhy did Jesus tell a parable based on current beliefs that do not
accurately represent truth as set forth elsewhere in the Scripture and in His
own teachings?Ó The answer is that
Jesus met people on their own ground, capitalizing on what was familiar to them
to teach them vital truths. Many
of His hearers had come to believe in a conscious state of existence between
death and the resurrection, though such a belief is foreign to Scripture. This
erroneous belief was adopted during the intertestamental period as part of the
process of Hellenization of Judaism and had become a part of Judaism by the
time of Jesus.
In
this parable, Jesus made use of a popular belief, not to endorse it, but to impress upon the minds of His
hearers an important spiritual lesson.
It should be noted that even in the preceding parable of the Dishonest
Steward (Luke 16:1-12), Jesus uses a story that does not accurately represent
Biblical truth. Nowhere, does the
Bible endorse the practice of a dishonest administrator who reduces to half the
outstanding debts of creditors in order to get some personal benefits from such
creditors. The lesson of the parable is to Òmake friends for yourselvesÓ (Luke
16:9), not to teach dishonest business practices.
John Cooper, though he has produced in
my view the most scholarly defence of the dualistic view of human nature, acknowledges that the parable of the
rich man and Lazarus Òdoes not necessarily tell us what Jesus or Luke believed
about the afterlife, nor does it provide a firm basis for a doctrine of the
intermediate state. For it
is possible that Jesus simply uses popular images in order to make his ethical
point. He may not have been endorsing those images. He may not have believed them himself because he knew them
to be false.Ó51
Cooper
then asks the question: ÒWhat does this passage tell us about the intermediate
state?Ó He flatly and honestly
replies: ÒThe answer may be, ÔNothing.Õ
The dualist case cannot lean on this text as a main support.Ó52 The reason he gives is that it is most
difficult to draw conclusions from the imagery of the parable. For example,
Cooper asks: ÒWill we be bodily beings [in the intermediate state]? Will the
blessed and the damned be able to see each other?Ó53
Jesus and
the Thief on the Cross
The brief conversation between Jesus and
the penitent thief on the cross next to Him (Luke 23:42-43) is used by dualists
as a major proof for the conscious existence of the faithful dead in paradise
before the resurrection. Thus, it
is important to take a close look to the words spoken by Jesus to the penitent
thief.
Unlike
the other criminal and most of the crowd, the penitent thief did believe that
Jesus was the Messiah. He said:
ÒJesus, remember me when you come into your kingdomÓ (Luke 23:42). Jesus answered him, ÒTruly I say to you today you shall be with me
in paradiseÓ (Luke 23:43). A major problem in the interpretation of this text
is caused by the location of the comma, which in most translations, is placed
before Òtoday.Ó Thus, most readers and commentators assume that Jesus said:
ÒToday you shall be with me in paradiseÓ
Such reading is interpreted to mean that Òon that very dayÓ54 the thief went to paradise with
Christ.
The
original Greek text, however, has no punctuation and, translated literally,
reads: ÒTruly to you I say today with me you will be in paradise.Ó The adverb Òtoday-semeronÓ stands between the verb ÒI say-legoÓ and Òyou will be-ese.Ó This means that grammatically the adverb ÒtodayÓ can apply
to either of the two verbs. If it qualifies the first verb, then Jesus said:
ÒTruly I say to you today, you shall be with me in paradise.Ó
Translators
have placed the comma before the adverb Òtoday,Ó not for grammatical reasons,
but for the theological conviction that the dead receive their reward at death.
One would wish that translators would limit themselves to translating the text
and leave the task of interpretation to the reader.
The
question we are facing is: Did Jesus mean to say, ÒTruly, I say to you today. .
.Ó or ÒToday you shall be with me in paradiseÓ? Those who maintain that Jesus
meant the latter appeal to the fact that the adverb ÒtodayÓ does not occur
elsewhere with the frequently used phrase ÒTruly, I say to you.Ó This is a valid observation,
but the reason for this
exceptional attachment of the adverb ÒtodayÓ to the phrase ÒTruly, I say to
youÓ could very well be the immediate context. The thief asked Jesus to remember him in the future when He would establish His messianic
kingdom. But Jesus responded by remembering the penitent thief immediately,
Òtoday,Ó and by
reassuring him that he would be with Him in paradise. This interpretation is supported by two major considerations:
(1) the time when the saved will
enter upon their reward in paradise, and (2) the time when Jesus Himself
returned to Paradise.
When Will
the Redeem Enter Paradise?
Throughout
His ministry, Jesus taught that the redeemed would enter into His FatherÕs
Kingdom at His coming: ÒCome, O blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom
prepared for you from the foundation of the worldÓ (Matt 25:34; 16:27). Paul taught the same truth. At ChristÕs second coming, the sleeping
saints will be resurrected and the living saints translated, and all Òshall be
caught up together . . . in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air; and so we
shall always be with the LordÓ (1 Thess 4:17). It is at that time, following the resurrection of the
righteous, that the thief will be with Jesus in Paradise.
When Did
Jesus Return to Paradise?
Those who interpret ChristÕs statement to
the thief as meaning that on that very day the thief went to paradise to be
with Christ, assume that both Jesus and the thief ascended to heaven
immediately after their death. But
such a conclusion can hardly be supported by Scripture.
The
Scriptures expressly teach that on the day of His crucifixion, Christ went into
the grave-hades. At Pentecost, Peter proclaimed that in
accordance to DavidÕs prophecy (Ps 16:10), Christ Òwas not abandoned in Hades,
nor did his flesh see corruption,Ó but was raised up by God (Acts
2:31-32). Hades, as we have seen, is associated consistently in the New
Testament with the grave or the realm of the dead. What this means is that Christ could hardly have told the thief that on that very day he
would be with Him in paradise, when He knew that on that day He would be
resting in the grave.
Those
who would argue that only ChristÕs body went into the grave while His soul
ascended to heaven ignore what
Jesus said to Mary on the day of His resurrection: ÒDo not hold me, for I have not yet ascended to the FatherÓ
(John 20:17). It is evident that
Jesus was not in Heaven during the three days of his burial. He was resting in
the grave, waiting for His Father to call Him back to life. Thus, the thief could hardly have gone
to be with Jesus in Paradise immediately after his death when Jesus Himself did
not ascend to the Father until some time after His resurrection. To appreciate more fully the meaning of
being Òwith Christ in paradise,Ó
let us look at PaulÕs use of the phrase Òbeing with Christ.Ó
ÒTo
Depart and Be With ChristÓ
In
writing to the Philippians, Paul says:
ÒMy desire is to depart and be with Christ, for that is far better. But to remain in the flesh is more
necessary on your accountÓ (Phil 1:22-23). Dualists consider this text one of
the strongest proofs that at death the soul of the saved immediately goes into
the presence of Christ. For example, Robert Morey states: ÒThis is the clearest
passage in the New Testament which speaks of the believer going to be with
Christ in heaven after death. This
context deals with PaulÕs desire to depart this earthly life for a heavenly
life with Christ. There is no
mention or allusion to the resurrection in this passage.Ó55
The
fundamental problem with this interpretation is the failure to recognize that
PaulÕs statement, ÒMy desire is to
depart and be with ChristÓ is a relational and not an anthropological statement. By this I mean, it is a statement of
the relation that exists and continues between the believer and Christ through
death, not a statement of the ÒstateÓ of the body and soul between death and
the resurrection.
The
New Testament is not concerned about a ÔstateÕ which exists between death and
resurrection, but about a relation that exists between the believer and Christ
through death. This relationship
of being with Christ is not interrupted by death because the believer who
sleeps in Christ has no awareness of the passing of time.
For
Paul those who Òdie in ChristÓ are Òsleeping in ChristÓ (1 Cor 15:18; 1 Thess
4:14). Their relation with Christ
is one of immediacy, because they
have no awareness of the passing of time between their death and resurrection.
They experience what may be called Òeternal time.Ó But for those who go on living on earth-bound temporal time
there is an interval between death and resurrection. The problem is that we cannot synchronize the clock of
eternal time with that of our temporal time. It is the attempt to do this that
has led to unfortunate speculations and controversies over the so-called
intermediate state.
By
expressing his desire Òto depart and be with Christ,Ó Paul was not giving a doctrinal exposition of what
happens at death. He is simply expressing his longing to see an end to his
troubled existence and to be with Christ. Throughout the centuries, earnest
Christians have expressed the same longing, without necessarily expecting to be
ushered into ChristÕs presence at the moment of their death. PaulÕs statement must be interpreted on
the basis of his clear teachings regarding the time when believers will be
united with Christ.
With
Christ at His Coming
Paul addresses this question in his
letter to the Thessalonians where he explains that both the sleeping and living
believers will be united with Christ, not at death, but at His coming. ÒThe dead in Christ will rise first;
then we who are alive, who are left, shall be caught up together with them in
the clouds to meet the Lord in the air; and so we shall always be with the LordÓ (1
Thess 4:17).56 The ÒsoÓ
(houtos) refers to
the manner or way in which believers will be with Christ, namely, not by
dying, but by being
resurrected or translated at His coming.
The word ÒsoÓ in Greek houtos Òmeans Ôin this way.Õ Its place here at the beginning of the
sentence is meant to explain the way believers will be with Christ, namely,
through the resurrection.
It
should be noted that in describing the union with Christ which believers will
experience at His coming, Paul never speaks of disembodied souls being reunited
with resurrected bodies. Rather,
he speaks of Òthe dead in ChristÓ being risen (1 Thess 4:16). Obviously, what
is risen at ChristÕs coming is not just dead
bodies but dead people. It is the
whole person who will be resurrected and reunited with Christ. Note that the
living saints will meet Christ at the same time Òtogether withÓ the resurrected
saints (1 Thess 4:17). Sleeping and living saints meet Christ ÒtogetherÓ at His
coming, not at death.
The
total absence of any Pauline allusion to an alleged reunion of the body with
the soul at the time of the resurrection constitutes, in my view, the most
formidable challenge to the notion of the conscious survival of the soul. If Paul knew anything about this, he
would surely have alluded to it, especially in his detailed discussion of what will happen to sleeping and
living believers at ChristÕs
coming (1 Thess 4:13-18; 1 Cor 15:42-58). The fact that Paul never alluded to the conscious
survival of the soul and its reattachment to the body at the resurrection
clearly shows that such a notion was totally foreign to him and to Scripture as
a whole.
ÒAt Home
With the LordÓ
In
2 Corinthians 5:1-10, Paul expresses again the hope of being with Christ by
using several striking metaphors.
This passage is rightly regarded as the Òcrux interpretum,Ó that is Òthe
cross of interpreters,Ó primarily because the figurative language is cryptic
and open to different interpretations. Unfortunately, dualistic interpreters
are eager to derive from this passage, as from Philippians 1:22-23, precise
definitions of life survival of the soul after the death of the body. Such concerns,
however, are far removed from Paul, who is using the poetic language of faith
to express his hopes and fears regarding the present and future life, rather
than the logical language of science to explain the afterlife. All of this
should put the interpreter on guard against reading into the passage what Paul
never intended to express.
The
passage opens with the preposition Òfor-gar,Ó thus indicating that Paul picks up from
chapter 4:16-18, where he contrasts the temporal, mortal nature of the present
life which is Òwasting awayÓ (2 Cor 4:16) with the eternal, glorious nature of
the future life, whose Òeternal weight of glory [is] beyond all comparisonÓ (2
Cor 4:17). Paul continues in chapter 5
developing the contrast between temporality and eternity by using the
imagery of two dwelling places representative of these characteristics.
ÒFor
we know that if the earthly tent we live in is destroyed, we have a building
from God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens. Here indeed we groan, and long to put
on our heavenly dwelling, so that by putting it on we may not be found
naked. For while we are still in
this tent, we sigh with anxiety; not that we would be unclothed, but that we
would be further clothed, so that what is mortal may be swallowed up by life.
He who has prepared for us this very thing is God, who has given us the Spirit
as a guaranteeÓ (2 Cor 5:1-5).
In
this first section of the passage, Paul uses two sets of contrasting
metaphors. First, he contrasts
Òthe earthly tent,Ó which is subject to destruction, with the Òbuilding from
God, a house not made with hands,Ó which is Òeternal in the heavens.Ó Then Paul highlights this contrast by differentiating
between the state of being clothed
with the heavenly dwelling and that of being found naked.
The second section, verses 6 to 10, is
more straightforward and contrasts being in the body and therefore away from
the Lord, with being away from the body and at home with the Lord. The key
statement occurs in verse 8 where Paul says: ÒWe are of good courage, and we
would rather be away from the body and at home with the Lord.Ó This passage has
been the object of enormous variety of interpretations which are discuss at
length in my book Immortality or Resurrection? pages 180186.
Heavenly
and Earthly Modes of Existence
After rereading the passage countless
times, I sense that PaulÕs primary concern is not to define the state of the
body before and after death, but rather to contrast two modes of existence. One
is the heavenly mode of existence which is represented by the Òbuilding from
God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavensÓ (2 Cor 5:1). The other is the earthly mode of
existence which is typified by Òthe earthly tentÓ which is ÒdestroyedÓ at
death.
The
meaning of the imagery of Òputting onÓ or Òbeing clothedÓ with Òour heavenly
dwellingÓ has more to do with accepting ChristÕs provision of salvation than
with Òthe spiritual bodyÓ given to believers at the Second Coming. Support for
this conclusion can be seen in the figurative use of Òheavenly dwellingÓ with
reference to God and of Òbeing clothedÓ with reference to the believerÕs
acceptance of Christ.
PaulÕs
assurance that Òwe have a building from GodÓ (2 Cor 5:1) reminds us of such verses as ÒGod is our refuge and
strengthÓ (Ps 46:1), or ÒLord, Thou hast been our dwelling placeÓ (Ps 90:1).57 Christ referred to Himself as a temple
in a way that is strikingly similar to PaulÕs imagery of the heavenly dwelling
Ònot made with hands.Ó He is
reported to have said: ÒI will destroy this temple that is made with hands, and
in three days I will build another, not made with handsÓ (Mark 14:58). If Paul was thinking along these lines,
then the heavenly dwelling place is Christ Himself and the gift of eternal life He provides to
believers.
How,
then, does a believer put on Òthe heavenly dwellingÓ? A look at PaulÕs use of the metaphor of clothing may provide
an answer. ÒAs many as were
baptized into Christ were clothed with ChristÓ (Gal 3:27). In this text, the clothing is
associated with the acceptance of Christ at baptism. Paul also says: ÒThis perishable being must be clothed with
the imperishable, and what is mortal must be clothed with immortalityÓ (1 Cor
15:53, NEB). Here the clothing represents the reception of immortality at
ChristÕs coming. These two
references suggest that the ÒclothingÓ can refer to the new life in Christ,
which is accepted at baptism, renewed every day, and consummated at the
Parousia, when the final clothing
will take place by means of the change from mortality to immortality.
In
the light of the above interpretation, to Òbe found nakedÓ or ÒunclothedÓ (2
Cor 5:3-4) may stand in contrast with being clothed with Christ and His
Spirit. Most likely ÒnakedÓ
for Paul stands not for the soul stripped from the body, but for guilt and sin
which results in death. When Adam
sinned, he discovered that he was ÒnakedÓ (Gen 3:10). Ezekiel allegorically describes how God clothed Israel with
rich garments but then exposed her nakedness because of her disobedience (Ez
16:8-14). One may also think of
the man without Òthe wedding garmentÓ at the marriage feast (Matt 22:11). It is
possible, then, that being ÒnakedÓ for Paul meant to be in a mortal, sinful
condition, bereft of ChristÕs righteousness.
Paul
clarifies what he meant by being ÒunclothedÓ or ÒnakedÓ versus being
ÒclothedÓ when he says: ÒSo that
what is mortal may be swallowed up by lifeÓ (2 Cor 5:4). The same concept is repeated in 1
Corinthians15:35 which speaks of the transformation that human nature as a
whole will experience at ChristÕs coming: ÒFor this perishable nature must put
on the imperishable, and this mortal nature must put on immortalityÓ (1 Cor
15:53).
In
both passages, 2 Corinthians 5:1-5 and 1 Corinthians 15:35, Paul is not concerned with the state of
the body or the soul as such before or after death. Incidentally, he never
speaks of the soul nor of the Òspiritual bodyÓ in 1 Corinthians 5. Instead, PaulÕs concern is to show the
contrast between the earthly mode of existence, represented by Òearthly tent,Ó
and the heavenly mode of existence, represented by the Òheavenly dwelling. The former is ÒmortalÓ and the latter is immortal (Òswallowed up by
life;Ó 2 Cor 5:4). The former is
experienced Òat home in the bodyÓ and Òaway from the LordÓ (2 Cor 5:6). The latter is experienced Òaway from
the bodyÓ and Òat home with the LordÓ (2 Cor 5:8).
The
failure to recognize that Paul is speaking about two different modes of
existence and not about the state of the body or soul after death, has led to
unnecessary, misguided speculations about the afterlife. A good example is
Robert PetersonÕs statement: ÒPaul
confirms JesusÕ teaching when he contrasts being Ôat home in the bodyÕ and
Ôaway from the LordÕ with being Ôaway from the body and at home with the LordÕ
(2 Cor 5:6, 8). He presupposes that human nature is composed of material and
immaterial aspects.Ó58
This
interpretation is gratuitous, because neither Jesus or Paul are concerned with
defining human nature ontologically, that is, in terms of its material or
immaterial components. Instead,
their concern is to define human nature ethically and relationally, in terms of
disobedience and obedience, sin and righteousness, mortality and immortality.
This is PaulÕs concern in 2 Corinthians 5:1-9, where he speaks of the earthly
and heavenly modes of existence in relationship to God, and not of the material
or immaterial composition of human nature before and after death.
The Souls
Under the Altar
The last passage we examine is Revelation
6:9-11, which reads: ÒWhen he opened the fifth seal, I saw under the altar the
souls of those who had been slain for the word of God and the witness they had
borne; they cried out with a loud voice, ÔO Sovereign Lord, holy and true, how
long before thou wilt judge and avenge our blood on those who dwell upon the
earth?Õ Then they each were given
a white robe and told to rest a little longer, until the number of their fellow
servants and their brethren should be complete, who were to be killed as they
themselves had been.Ó
This
passage is often cited to support the notion that the ÒsoulsÓ of the saints
exist after death in heaven as disembodied, conscious spirits. For example, Robert Morey emphatically
states: ÒThe souls are the
disembodied spirits of the martyrs who cry out to God for vengeance on their
enemies. . . . This passage has always proven a great difficulty to those who
deny that believers ascend to heaven at death. But JohnÕs language is clear that these souls were conscious
and active in heaven.Ó59
This
interpretation ignores that apocalyptic pictures are not meant to be
photographs of actual realities, but symbolic representations of almost
unimaginable spiritual realities.
John was not given a view of what heaven is actually like. It is evident that there are no white,
red, black, and pale horses in heaven with warlike riders. In heaven Christ
does not look like a lamb with a bleeding knife wound (Rev 5:6). Likewise,
there are no ÒsoulsÓ of martyrs in heaven squeezed at the base of an
altar. The whole scene is simply a
symbolic representation designed to reassure those facing martyrdom and death
that ultimately they would be vindicated by God. Such a reassurance would be
particularly heartening for those who, like John, were facing terrible
persecution for refusing to participate in the emperorÕs cult.
The
use of the word Òsouls-psychasÓ in this passage
is unique for the New Testament, because it is never used to refer to
humans in the intermediate state. The reason for its use here is suggested by
the unnatural death of the martyrs whose blood was shed for the cause of
Christ. In the Old Testament
sacrificial system, the blood of animals was poured out at the base of the
altar of burnt offerings (Lev 4:7, 18, 25, 30). The blood contained the soul (Lev 17:11) of the innocent victim that was offered as an
atoning sacrifice to God on behalf of penitent sinners. Thus, the souls of the martyrs are seen
under the altar to signify that their blood had been symbolically poured at its
base.
The
language of sacrificial death is used elsewhere in the New Testament to denote
martyrdom. Facing death, Paul
wrote: ÒFor I am already on the point of being sacrificedÓ (2 Tim 4:6). The apostle also says that he was
glad Òto be poured out as a libationÓ for Christ (Phil 2:17). Thus, Christian
martyrs were viewed as sacrifices offered to God. Their blood shed on earth was
poured symbolically at the heavenly altar. Thus their souls are seen under the altar because that is
where symbolically the blood of the martyrs flowed.
No
Representation of Intermediate State
The symbolic representation of the
martyrs as sacrifices offered at the heavenly altar can hardly be used to argue
for their conscious disembodied existence in heaven. George Eldon Ladd, a most respected evangelical scholar,
rightly states: ÒThe fact that John saw the souls of the martyrs under the
altar has nothing to do
with the state of the dead or their situation in the intermediate state; it is
merely a vivid way of picturing the fact that they had been martyred in the
name of God.Ó60
The
souls of the martyrs are seen as resting beneath the altar, not because they are in a disembodied
state, but because they are awaiting the completion of redemption (Òuntil the
number of their fellow servants and their brethren should be completeÓ Rev
6:11) and their resurrection at ChristÕs coming. John describes this event later on, saying: ÒI saw the souls of those who had been
beheaded for their testimony to Jesus and for the word of God, and who had not
worshipped the beast or its image and had not received its mark on their
foreheads or their hands. They
came to life, and reigned with Christ a thousand years. . . . This is the first
resurrectionÓ (Rev 20:4).
This
description of the martyrs as Òbeheaded for their testimony to Jesus and for
the word of GodÓ is very much like that of Revelation 6:9. The only difference is that in chapter
6 the deceased martyrs are told to rest, while in chapter 20 they are brought
to life. It is evident that if the
martyrs are brought to life at the beginning of the millennium in conjunction
with ChristÕs coming, they can hardly be living in heaven in a disembodied
state while resting in the grave.
To
sum up, the function of the vision of the martyrs under the heavenly altar is
not to inform us on the intermediate state of the dead, but to reassure
believers, especially the martyrs who in JohnÕs time and later centuries gave
their lives for the cause of Christ, that God ultimately would vindicate them.
Conclusion
Our
study of all the relevant Biblical passages has shown that the notion of the
intermediate state in which the souls of the saved enjoy the bliss of Paradise,
while those of the unsaved suffer the torments of hell derives not from
Scripture, but from pagan Greek dualism.
It
is most unfortunate that during much of its history, Christianity by and large
has been influenced by the Greek dualistic view of human nature, according to
which the body is mortal and the soul immortal. The acceptance of this deadly
heresy has conditioned the interpretation of Scripture and given rise to a host
of other heresies such as Purgatory, eternal torment in hell, prayer for the
dead, intercession of the saints, indulgences, and etherial view of paradise.
Some of these popular heresies are examined in later chapters.
The
challenge we face today is to help sincere people recover the Biblical
wholistic view of human nature and destiny, and thus dispel the spiritual
darkness perpetrated by centuries of superstitious beliefs.
This
is the challenge the Seventh-day Adventist church is endeavoring to fulfill by
divine grace. It is the challenge of leading people around the world to
understand, accept, and live by some of the fundamental biblical teachings
which are largely ignored or even rejected today.
In
this chapter we have examined a fundamental teaching, namely, the biblical view of death and of the
state of the dead. The conclusion of our investigation is aptly expressed in
the 25th Fundamental belief of the Seventh-day Adventist Church: ÒThe wages of sin is death. But God, who alone is immortal,
will grant eternal life to His redeemed. Until that day death is an unconscious
state for all people. When Christ,
who is our life, appears, the resurrected righteous and the living righteous
will be glorified and caught up to meet the Lord. The second resurrection, the
resurrection of the unrighteous, will take place a thousand years later.
NOTES
TO CHAPTER 3
1. Andrew M. Greeley, Michael Hout,
ÒAmericansÕ Increasing Belief in Life after Death: Religious Competition and
Acculturation,Ó American Sociological Review, vol. 64, No. 6 (Dec., 1999), p. 813.
2.
Ibid.
3.
The Barna Update, ÒAmericans
Describe Their Views About Life After Death,Ó October 21, 2003,
www.barna.org/FlexPage.aspx?Page=BarnaUpdate&BarnaUpdateID=150.
4.
Ibid.
5.
Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1994, p. 267.
6.
Ibid., p. 268.
7.
ÒHell,Ó The Catholic Encyclopedia, R.C. Broderick,
Ed.,1987.
8. Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1994, p. 270.
10.
Ibid., p. 268.
11.
Ibid., p. 269.
12.
See, for example, Charles Hodge, Systematic Theology (Grand Rapids, 1940), Vol. 3, pp.
713-30; W. G. T. Shedd, Dogmatic
Theology (Grand Rapids,
n.d.), Vol. 2, pp. 591-640. G. C.
Berkouwer, The Return of Christ,1972, pp. 32-64.
13.
Westminster Confession, chap. 32, as cited by John H. Leith, ed., Creeds of the Churches, 1977, p. 228.
14.
ÒNew Views of Heaven & Hell,Ó Time, Friday, May 19, 1967.
15.
Ibid.
16.
Ibid.
17. Catechism of the Catholic Church,1994, p. 265.
18. Augustus Hopkins Strong, Systematic Theology, 1970, p. 982.
19. Paul Althaus, Die Letzten Dinge,1957, p. 157.
20. Ibid., p. 155
21. Ibid.
22. Ibid., p. 156.
23. Ibid., p. 158. For a similar view of death as
the termination of life for the body and the soul, see John A. T. Robinson, The
Body, A study in Pauline Theology, 1957, p. 14; Taito Kantonen, Life after Death,1952, p. 18; E. Jacob, ÒDeath,Ó The
InterpreterÕs Dictionary of the Bible, 1962, vol. 1, p. 802; Herman Bavink, ÒDeath,Ó The International Standard Bible
Encyclopaedia,1960, vol.
2, p. 812.
24.
ÒNew Views of Heaven & Hell,Ó Time, May 19, 1967, p. 34.
25. Martin Luther, Werke (Weimar, 1910), XVII, II, p. 235.
26. Ibid., XXXVII, p. 151.
27. Ewald Plass, What Luther Says (St. Louis, 1959), Vol. 1, par. 1132.
28.
Alexander Heidel, The Gilgamish Epic and the Old Testament Parallels, 1949, pp. 170-207.
29.
See Desmond Alexander, ÒThe Old Testament View of Life After
Death,Ó Themelios 11,
2 (1986), p. 44.
30. John W. Cooper, Body, Soul, and Life
Everlasting: Biblical Anthropology and the Monism-Dualism Debate (Grand Rapids, 1989), p. 61.
31. Theodore H. Gaster, ÒAbode of the Dead,Ó The
InterpreterÕs Dictionary of the Bible 1962, p. 788.
32.
Johannes Pedersen, Israel: Its life and Culture, 1991, vol. 1, p. 462.
33. Theodore H. Gaster, (note 31), p. 787.
34. Ralph Walter Doermann, ÒSheol in the Old
Testament,Ó (Ph. D., dissertation, Duke University, 1961), p. 191.
35.
See also Ps 30:3; Prov 1:12; Is 14:15; 38:18; Ez 31:16.
36. In Numbers 16:33 it is used of the rebels who
Òperished in Sheol.Ó
37. Anthony A. Hoekema, The Bible and the Future (Grand
Rapids, 1979), p. 96.
38. N. H. Snaith, ÒLife after Death,Ó Interpretation 1 (1947), p. 322.
39. Edward William Fudge, The Fire That
Consumes. A Biblical and Historical Study of the Final Punishment (Houston, 1989), p. 205.
40. For an informative discussion of the adoption
of the Greek conception of hades during the intertestamental period, see Joachim Jeremias,
ÒHades,Ó Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, ed. Gerhard Kittel (Grand Rapids, 1974),
Vol. 1, pp. 147-148.
41. Matt 11:23; 16:18; Luke 10:15; 16:23; Acts 2:27, 31; Rev 1:18, 6:8; 20:13;
20:14.
42. 1 Cor 15:55.
43. Matt 5:22, 29, 30; 10:28; 18:9; 23:15, 33; Mark 9:43, 45, 47; Luke 12: 5; Jam
3:6.
44. Karel Hanhart essentially reaches the same
conclusion in her doctoral dissertation presented at the University of
Amsterdam. She wrote: ÒWe conclude that these passages do not shed any definite
light on our problem [of the intermediate state]. In the sense of power of death, deepest realm, place for
utter humiliation and judgment, the term Hades does not go beyond the Old
Testament meaning of SheolÓ (Karel Hanhart, ÒThe Intermediate State in the New
Testament,Ó [Doctoral dissertation, University of Amsterdam, 1966], p.
35).
45. Josephus, Discourse to the Greeks Concerning
Hades, in Josephus
Complete Works, trans.
William Whiston (Grand Rapids, 1974), p. 637.
46. Ibid.
47. Ibid.
48. Ibid.
49. Ibid.
50.
For a brief survey of the intertestamental Jewish literature on the condition
of the dead in hades,
see Karel Hanhart, ÒThe Intermediate State in the New Testament,Ó Doctoral
Dissertation, University of Amsterdam, 1966, pp. 18-31.
51. John W. Cooper, Body, Soul, and Life
Everlasting: Biblical Anthropology and the Monism-Dualism Debate,1989,\, p. 139.
52. Ibid.
53. Ibid.
54.
Norval Geldenhuys, Commentary on the Gospel of Luke, 1983, p. 611.
55. Robert A. Morey, Death and the Afterlife,1984, pp. 211-212.
56. Emphasis supplied.
57. Emphasis supplied.
58. Robert A. Peterson, Hell on Trial: The Case
for Eternal Punishment,1995,
p. 28.
59. Robert A. Morey (note 55), p. 214.
60. George Eldon Ladd, A Commentary on the
Revelation of John
(Grand Rapids, 1979), p. 103.
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$950.00, in four different ways:
(1) Online: By clicking here: http://www.biblicalperspectives.com/albumoffer.htm
(2) Phone: By calling us at (269) 471-2915 to give us your credit card
number and postal address.
(3) Email: By emailing your order to <[email protected]>. Be sure to provide your postal address, credit card number, and expiration date.
(4) Regular
Mail: By mailing a check
for $150.00 to BIBLICAL
PERSPECTIVES, 4990 Appian Way, Berrien Springs, Michigan 49103, USA. We
guarantee to process your order immediately.
NEWLY
RELEASED DVD OF PROF. JON PAULIENÕS LIVE SEMINAR ON SIMPLY REVELATION
Prof. Jon PaulienÕs DVD album on SIMPLY
REVELATION was
released few weeks ago. We have
been airmailing the
DVD album to church leaders, pastors, and lay Adventists in different part of
the world. Several pastors have already shown the lectures to their
congregations. They wrote to me
saying that viewing the lectures was an enlightening experience for their
members.
My wife and I
viewed Simply Revelation on our TV on a Sabbath afternoon. Though I had already watched
Prof. PaulienÕs lectures during the taping session, I was spellbound to hear
him again offering so many refreshing insights into the most difficult book of
the Bible. For me it is a thrilling experience listening to a scholar like
Prof. Paulien, who knows what he is talking about.
Prof. Paulien is one of the most respected
Adventist scholars. Besides serving as the chairman of the New Testament at
Andrews University Theological Seminary, he writes and lectures extensively in
many parts of the world. He is rightly regarded as a leading Adventist
authority on the book of Revelation which he has taught at the Seminary for the
past 20 years. His doctoral dissertation as well as several of his books deal
specifically with the Book of Revelation.
The constant
demand for Prof. PaulienÕs CD album with his publications and articles, led me
to discuss with him the possibility of producing a live video recording of a
mini Revelation Seminar, which he chose to call Simply Revelation. As suggested by its title, Simply Revelation aims to simply present the message of
Revelation—not to read into Revelation sensational, but senseless views.
The preparation
of this video recording took several months. The Simply Revelation seminar consists of four one-hour
live video lectures, which
have just been recorded in the studio of Andrews University. An impressive
virtual studio provides the background of the lectures. Each lecture is
delivered with about 50 powerpoint slides. I have spent long hours looking for suitable pictures to
illustrate the text of each slide in order to enhance the visual effect of each
lecture. This mini Revelation seminar will offer you and your congregation
fresh insights into the Book of Revelation. Be sure to inform your pastor about
the newly released Simply Revelation, if he is not aware of it.
You will be
pleased to know that we have placed on a separate file all the powerpoint
slides and text used for the live video presentations. Each slide has the
script of the live lecture. This
means that if you are a pastor or a lay member who want to use Prof. PaulienÕs Simply
Revelation Seminar,
you can pick and choose the powerpoint slides that you like.
The file with
the powerpoint slides is placed on Prof. PaulienÕs CD album containing all his
publications and articles. The
reason is that there was no memory left on the DVD disks. In spite of my pleas, Prof. Paulien was
so full of the subject that he used the full 60 minutes of his four lecture,
leaving no space for the slidesÕ file.
This has been a
very expensive project, both in time and money. The regular price of the DVD album is $100.00, but you can
order it now at the introductory price of only $50.00. The price includes the airmailing expenses to any overseas
destination.
If you have not
ordered before the CD Album with Prof. PaulienÕs publications, we will be glad to add it to your DVD
order for only $20.00, instead of the regular price of $60.00. This means that
you can order both the DVD album with Prof. PaulienÕs four live video
lectures on Revelation and his CD album with all his publications and the powerpoint slides of Simply
Revelation, for only
$70.00, instead of the
regular price of $160.00.
As an
additional incentive, I am offering you together with Prof. PaulienÕs DVD/CD
albums, also my own popular DVD album on The Mark and Number of the Beast, for an additional $10.00, instead of the regular price of
$100.00. This means that
you can order the DVD and CD albums by Prof, Paulien, together with my DVD
album on The Mark and Number of the Beast, for only $80.00, instead of the
regular price of $260.00.
This
research on The Mark and Number of the Beast, was commissioned
by Prof. Paulien himself. He asked me to trace historically the origin and
use of the PopeÕs title Vicarius Filii Dei and of the number 666. I spent six months conducting this investigation
which was professionally taped at the Andrews University Towers Auditorium.
I use 200 powerpoint slides to deliver this informative two hours lecture
which is warmly received by Adventist church leaders and pastors in many parts
of the world. For a detailed description of this DVD album click: http://www.biblicalperspectives.com/Beast/BeastPromo
SPECIAL
OFFER ON PAULIEN/BACCHIOCCHIÕS ALBUMS
*
ONE DVD Album of Prof. PaulienÕs four video lectures on Simply Revelation at the introductory price of $50.00,
instead of $100.00. The price includes the airmailing
expenses to any overseas destination.
*
ONE DVD Album of Simply Revelation and ONE CD Album with Prof. PaulienÕs publications for
only $70.00, instead of
the regular price of $160.00. The price includes the airmailing expenses to any overseas destination.
*
ONE DVD Album of Simply Revelation, ONE CD
Album with Prof. PaulienÕs publications, and ONE DVD Album with BacchiocchiÕs
two hours video lecture on The Mark and Number of the Beast for only $80.00, instead of the regular price of $260.00.
The price includes the airmailing expenses to any
overseas destination.
FOUR
WAYS TO ORDER
(1) Online: By clicking here: http://www.biblicalperspectives.com/revelation/
(2) Phone:
By calling us at (269) 471-2915 to give us your credit card number and
postal address.
(3) Email: By emailing your order to <[email protected]>. Be sure to provide your postal address, credit card number, and expiration date.
(4)
Regular Mail: By mailing
a check to BIBLICAL PERSPECTIVES,
4990 Appian Way, Berrien Springs, Michigan 49103, USA. We guarantee to process
your order immediately.
NEW
EDITION OF BRADFORDÕS MORE THAN A PROPHET
The
new edition Prof. Graeme BradfordÕs book More than a Prophet with an additional 20 pages, was
released few weeks ago. Many churches have ordered the book by the case of 30
copies for only $150.00, that is, $5.00 per copy, instead of the regular price
of $25.00. This book is urgently needed to restore confidence in the prophetic
ministry of Ellen White by telling the truth about her divine revelations and
her human limitations.
The
most gratifying responses have come from former Adventist. One lady wrote:
ÒAfter reading More than a Prophet, I am seriously reconsidering returning to the Adventist church.Ó
It is unfortunate that many Adventists have left the church, because they felt
that they had been deceived about Ellen White. They could not reconcile in
their mind that prophets do make mistakes. But Prof. Bradford compellingly
shows that the mistakes found in the Bible or in the writings of Ellen White,
do not negate the divine inspiration of their messages.
For
a detailed description of More than a Prophet, together with the reviews and a picture
of the book, click at this link: http://www.biblicalperspectives.com/BradfordOffer/offer.htm
To
facilitate the distribution of this timely book among your church members, we
are offering you two things:
1)
Special discount on quantity orders of the book. Only $5.00 per copy, instead of $25.00
for a case of 30 copies.
2) A
FREE ALBUM of Prof. BradfordÕs DVD with a live two hours lecture on Ellen
White. The DVD contains also a PDF file with
all of Prof. BardfordÕs books and articles. The regular price of the DVD album
is $100.00, but you will receive it FREE with an order of 2 or more copies of
More than a Prophet.
The
reason for offering a Free Album of Prof. BradfordÕs DVD live lecture on Ellen
White, is to give your members the opportunity to enjoy the highlights of the
More than a Prophet. After viewing the DVD, most members are eager to order the book.
SPECIAL
OFFER ON MORE THAN A PROPHET
ONE
COPY of More than a Prophet for $20.00
(instead of $25.00), plus $5.00 for mailing in the USA, or $10.00 for
airmailing overseas.
TWO COPIES
of More than a Prophet plus the DVD album with Prof. BradfordÕs live two hours
lecture on Ellen White, for $50.00 (instead of the regular price of $150.00). Add $10.00 for
airmailing overseas.
THIRTY
COPIES of More than a Prophet plus the DVD album with Prof. BradfordÕs live two hours
lecture on Ellen White, for only $150.00, instead of the regular price of $850.00. The price includes
the mailing in the USA. Unfortunately as of May 14, 2007, the USA Post
office no longer offers surface mail service for overseas. Everything must be
sent AIRMAIL. The
cost for airmailing a case of 30 books, is $95.00. Thus, the total cost for a
case of 30 copies AIRMAILED overseas is $245.00. The advantage is that you will
receive the case within a week.
FOUR
WAYS TO ORDER
(1)
Online: By clicking
here: http://www.biblicalperspectives.com/BradfordOffer/offer.htm
(2) Phone: By calling us at (269) 471-2915 to give
us your credit card number and postal address.
(3) Email: By emailing your order to <[email protected]>. Be sure to provide your postal address, credit card number, and expiration date.
(4)
Regular Mail: By mailing
a check to BIBLICAL PERSPECTIVES,
4990 Appian Way, Berrien Springs,
Michigan 49103, USA. We guarantee to process your order immediately.
UPCOMING
SEMINARS FOR THE MONTHS OF SEPTEMBER AND OCTOBER
Gradually I am rescheduling some of the invitations I had to cancel
because of the colon cancer surgery and liver treatments. Here is a list of the
upcoming weekend seminars for the months of September and October
AUGUST
31 - SEPTEMBER 1: DAYTONA BEACH
SDA CHURCH
Location:
401 North Williamson Blvd, Daytona Beach, FL 32114.
For
directions and information call Pastor William Barrett at (386) 258-1073.
SEPTEMBER
7-8: FRIENDS OF THE SABBATH CONFERENCE
Location:
The Lecture Hall, Knoxville Convention Center, 701 Henley Street, Knoxville, TN
37920. This Sabbath Conference is
organized by English Prof. Bruce Horne, Ph. D., a leader of the Seventh-day
Christian Assembly in Knoxville with about 120 members. Several non-SDA
sabbatarian churches and groups from neighboring states are participating at
this Sabbath Conference.
Adventists
living in the Knoxville area are encouraged to attend this Sabbath
Conference. I will be the keynote
speaker on Friday evening and Saturday. We are planning also for a panel
discussion conducted by church leaders of various sabbatarian churches. This will be a unique opportunity to
become acquainted with other sabbatarians. For directions and information call Prof. Bruce Horne at
(865) 671-4342 or (423) 914-5475.
SEPTEMBER
15: WORLDÕS WOMANÕS CHRISTIAN TEMPERANCE UNION CONFERENCE
Location:
AdamÕs Mark Hotel, 2544 Executive Drive, Indianapolis, IN 46241. The hotel
phone number is: (317) 248-2481.
This is the international WorldÕs WomanÕs Christian Temperance Union
that brings together WWCTU delegates of different denominations from all over
the world.
Ellen
White was very active in this organization and was often featured as the
keynote speaker. Our Adventist church had an active Temperance program in
the past. Today we hear little from our pulpit about Temperance, partly because
alcohol and drugs are seen more as a medical than a moral issue.
I
have been invited to deliver the keynote address on Saturday, September 15,
2007 at 10: 30 a. m. Prior to my lecture, there will be a church service from
9:00 to 10:00 a. m. My powerpoint lecture is entitled ÒThe Christian and
Alcoholic Beverages.Ó I will be sharing the highlights of my book Wine in the
Bible, dealing with the biblical imperative of total abstinence. If you live in
the Indianapolis area, I would urge you to attend the meetings, especially on
Saturday. For directions and more detail information, contact Sarah R. Ward,
WWCTU President, at (765) 345-2306
SEPTEMBER
21-22: HAWAII SAMOA-TOKELAU CHURCH
Location:
1128 Banyan Street, Honolulu, Hawaii 96817.
For
directions and information call Pastor Michael Asuega at (808) 261-7321 or
(808) 206 5892.
SEPTEMBER
28-29: HONOLULU CENTRAL SDA CHURCH
Location:
2313 Nuuanu Avenue, Honolulu, Hawaii 96817. This will be the Hawaii Conference
Convocation for all the churches in Oahu.
For
directions and information, call the Hawaii Conference Office at (808)
595-7591.
OCTOBER
12-13: SUNNYSIDE SDA CHURCH, WA
Location: 1875 East Lincoln Avenue, Sunnyside, WA
98944.
For
directions and information call Pastor Larry Mays at (509) 840 1932 or (509)
837 4233 or (509) 837 6411
OCTOBER
19-20: ENGLAND: EAST HAM & STRATFORD
Location:
The East Ham SDA Church worships at Bryant Street Methodist Centre, Bryant
Street, Stratford, London E14 4RU.
The
Stratford SDA Church worships at 58 Janson Road (off Leytonstone Road)
Stratford London E15 1TE.
For
directions and information, call Pastor Leslie Ackie at 01279 427 558
OCTOBER
26-27: ENGLAND, LEEDS SDA CHURCH
Location:
The Leeds SDA Church is located at 169 Meanwood Road corner of Oatland Place,
Leeds LS7 1JW, Great Britain.
For
directions and information call Pastor Ian Sweeney, 0114 286 9965.
NOVEMBER
2-3: BIRMINGHAM CAMP HILL SDA CHURCH
Location: Camp Hill Sparkbrook, Birmingham, West
Midlands B12 OJP, Great Britain.
For
directions and information call Pastor Jeffeth Nicholson at 01543 360253.
INCREDIBLE
NEW OFFERS ON HITACHI PROJECTORS
HITACHI
has just released the new CP-X400 3000 lumens projector, which replaces the
CP-X444. The new projector has an
impressive high resolution, low fan noise, and a wealth of connectivity
options. The most impressive feature of this projector is the incredible price
of only $1395.00 to
help especially our churches and schools in developing countries.
This is
the special offer on the following three models:
CP-X260
HIGH RESOLUTION 2500 LUMENS - Only $1095.00
Previous SDA
price for the 2500 lumens was $2395.00.
CP-X400
HIGH RESOLUTION 3000 LUMENS - Only $1395.00
This is the
lowest price for an HITACHI 3000 lumens projector.
CP-X1250
HIGH RESOLUTION 4500 LUMENS Only $3795.00
Previous SDA
price for the 4500 lumens was $4900.00.
WARRANTY: The above prices include a 3 years 24/7
replacement warranty worth about $285.00.
You can
order the HITACHI projectors online by clicking at this link: http://www.biblicalperspectives.com/cart/catalog/index.php?cPath=24
If you
have a problem ordering online, call us at (269) 471-2915. We will take your order by phone. Your
order will be processed immediately.
THE
SMALLEST, MOST POWERFUL REMOTE PRESENTER
If you are looking for an outstanding REMOTE for your PowerPoint
presentations, you will be pleased to know HONEYWELL has just come out with the
smallest and most powerful remote in the market.
The size of the transmitter is smaller than a credit card. You can stick
it inside the palm of your hand and nobody can see it. I tested the remote in
an open environment, and the radio signal can go up to 400 feet of distance. IT
IS INCREDIBLE! The transmitter has three button: forward, backward, and laser.
You
can order online the new POWERPOINT PRESENTER simply by clicking here: http://www.biblicalperspectives.com/cart/catalog/product_info.php?cPath=27&products_id=67
If
you have a problem ordering online, simply call us at (269) 471-2915.
We will take your order by phone. You can also email us your order
at <[email protected]>,
giving us your address, credit card number, and expiration date.
DOES
YOUR CHURCH OR SCHOOL NEED A SCREEN?
If your church/school is looking for a screen, the DA-LITE SCREEN
COMPANY, the largest manufacture of screens in the world, has agreed to offer
their line of screens to our Adventist churches and schools at about 30%
discount.
The
procedure is very simple. Visit the DA-LITE SCREEN COMPANY website at http://www.da-lite.com.
You will see hundreds of models of screens with their respective prices. Once
you find the screen that you need, give us the model number by phone (269)
471-2915 or email your request <[email protected]>
We will forward your order immediately to DA-LITE that will ship the screen
directly to your address. You will receive the screen at about 30% discount.
BED
& BREAKFAST FACILITIES IN LONDON, ENGLAND
If
your travel plans call for a stop in London, you will be pleased to learn
about a most gracious Adventist couple that offer the best accommodation and
breakfast I have ever enjoyed. It has become my home away from home when in
London. See details at: http://www.biblicalperspectives.com/Promotions/BED&BREAKFAST.htm
TAGNET
SPECIAL NEW WEB HOSTING OFFER FOR ADVENTIST CHURCHES AND MEMBERS
TAGnet
provides an incredible number of webhosting services to our churches and members.
This newsletter comes to you through their gracious and efficient service.
For detail information, visit their website at http://www.netadventist.org
or http://home.tagnet.org/
You may also call their office 800 - 9TAGNET. They are ready and eager to
help you.