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Is "Heaven" really the goal? No.

My friend Bill sent me a link to the following post describing the confusion many Christians embrace regarding “Heaven” and referencing N.T. Wright’s recent interview with Time Magazine where he discusses his newest book “Surprised by Hope.”

http://christianmind.blogspot.com/2008/02/more-on-heaven.html

Here is a quote the author gives from an essay on this subject that is sure to raise a few eyebrows…especially among well-meaning worship leaders and Hymn-singers! 🙂

With these two distinctions (concerning creation and redemption) in mind, it becomes easier to see that the traditional picture of “heaven” (found in many classic hymns and contemporary praise songs) as perpetual fellowship with, and worship of, God cannot constitute full redemption in biblical terms. This is because the traditional picture typically omits (and thus implies the negation or abrogation of) large areas of human life that God created good. “Heaven,” therefore, as an eschatological state does not constitute genuine redemption of the multifaceted world God intended from the beginning. The logic of biblical redemption, when combined with a biblical understanding of creation, requires the restoration and renewal of the full complexity of human life in our earthly environment, yet without sin.

It is sometimes shocking for readers of the Bible to realize that the initial purpose and raison d’etre of humanity is never explicitly portrayed in Scripture as the worship of God (or anything that would conform to our notion of the “spiritual,” with its dualistic categories). Instead, Scripture portrays the human purpose in rather mundane terms of exercising power over our earthly environment as God’s representatives…To put it another way, while various psalms (like 148 and 96) indeed call upon all creatures (humans included) to worship or serve God in the cosmic temple of creation (heaven and earth), the distinctive way humans worship or render service to the Creator is by the development of culture through interaction with our earthly environment (in a manner that glorifies God).

Definitely something to think about next time we find ourselves singing about or teaching about “Heaven”!

Blessings,
JMS

Posted by on February 29, 2008.

Categories: Biblical Theology, Blog, Eschatology, Heaven

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