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Looking Toward Heaven--Part 1
As I pointed out a couple of weeks ago, we live in a society
of instant gratification, a society where people want to delay
and defer absolutely nothing except payments. They certainly
don't want to defer the gratification, they just want to defer
the pain that goes with it.. We live in a time when everybody
wants what they want now and we have the credit cards that allow
us to buy what we don't have the money to buy, to go where we
don't have the money to go, to do what we don't have the money to
do. And then we pay from then on, hopefully, the indebtedness
sometimes mounting up to the point that we cannot pay our bills
and then people get themselves into deep problems.
It's reflective of an attitude that says "I want what I want
and I want it now." And I had mentioned to you a couple of weeks
ago how we used to sing songs about heaven and we don't sing
songs about heavenly anymore, rarely if ever. I can't remember a
song about heaven being written recently because we're not into
delayed gratification and heaven is delayed gratification. We're
not into anything being put off into the future. We're into
instant gratification. We want it now and we are glad to
sacrifice the future on the altar of the immediate. We don't
want to wait for anything.
As a result of living in a society of instant gratification,
a society of materialistic indulgence, the church has fallen prey
to that and we no longer have set our affections above, as
Colossians 3 calls us to, but we have set our affections on
things on the earth. We really are not interested in some
nebulous future, some place in space, as some people have chosen
to call it. We are not committed to laying up our treasure in
heaven as Jesus told us to, but rather laying up our treasure
here.
Certain television and radio preachers and ministries are
having a great amount of success by promising people that Jesus
wants them rich now, healthy now, wealthy now, successful now.
We call it "the prosperity gospel." And it's very popular
because people want all the goodies now.
I was very curious when I was recently in a conversation
with Jerry Falwell and asked him, "What do you think the future
of the PTL Club is now that you've stepped down." He said, "It's
my conviction that Jim and Tammy Bakker will be back." It's
interesting that the underlying reason for that is that the
creditors believe that Jim and Tammy can come back to the PTL
Club and effectively raise all the money needed to pay off all
the creditors.
It's almost inconceivable to me that people like that could
come back into the public limelight and occupy a place of
quote/unquote "ministry" in the Christian church. It's just
inconceivable except for the fact that we live in a day when
people want the prosperity gospel and they'll give the money to
whoever is selling it. People will buy into something they think
will make them wealthy, successful, prosperous in this life and
that's what's being promised to them.
The church in America in general doesn't have heaven on its
mind. And as a result of that, it tends to be indulgent and
selfish and self-centered and weak. It is consumed with its own
indulgences. It desires to be comfortable with only passing
thoughts of heaven.
Contrast that with the fact that just about everything
that's precious to us is in heaven. Let me just give you a
little bit of an insight into that. In Matthew's gospel, chapter
6 and verse 9, you have a very familiar verse that all of you
know, "Pray then in this way, Jesus said, Our Father who art in
heaven, hallowed by Thy name." And may I remind you, to begin
with, and you don't need to try and follow me in all these
verses, I'm going to cover many of them, but first of all, your
Father is in heaven. In a very real sense, the one who is the
source of everything for us, God Himself, is in heaven.
Furthermore, in Hebrews chapter 9 and verse 24, "For Christ
did not enter a holy place made with hands, a mere copy of the
true one, but into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence
of God for us." Not only is our Father in heaven, but our Savior
is in heaven as well.
In Hebrews chapter 12, and verse 23, it says, "To the
general assembly and church of the first born who are enrolled in
heaven." Not only is our Father in heaven, and our Savior in
heaven, but our brothers and sisters in the faith are in heaven.
Old Testament saints are there, New Testament saints are there,
everyone who has died in faith in Christ or faith in God in the
Old Testament is in heaven.
In Luke chapter 10, we find a most interesting statement in
verse 20 and what it says ought to give hope to all of our
hearts. It says, "Nevertheless, do not rejoice in this that the
spirits are subject to you...referring to His disciples who were
casting out demons...but rejoice that your names are recorded in
heaven." Not only is our Father there and our Savior there and
our brothers and sisters there, but our name is recorded there.
What does that mean? That means we have a title deed to some
property there. We are citizens of that place.
Our inheritance is there as well, "Blessed be the God and Father of
our Lord Jesus Christ who according to His great mercy has caused
us to be born again to a living hope to the resurrection of Jesus
Christ from the dead to obtain and inheritance which is
imperishable and undefiled and will not fade away, reserved in
heaven for you." Your eternal inheritance is in heaven.
What do you mean by that? All the riches of God's glory and
grace are set aside for you and for me in heaven. Our Father is
there, our Savior is there, our brothers and sisters are there,
our name is there--that is we hold title to a place in that
land--and our inheritance is there. We could sum a lot of that
up in Philippians 3:20 where the Apostle says, "Our citizenship
is in heaven from which also we eagerly wait for a Savior, the
Lord Jesus Christ." Our citizenship is there. We are citizens
of that place, we belong there.
In Matthew 5:12 Jesus said, "Blessed are you when you're
persecuted for great shall be your reward in heaven." Your
eternal reward is there. In Ephesians 6:9, Paul reminds the
believers in Ephesus that their master is there...their master is
there. And in Matthew 6:19 to 21, Jesus said the only treasure
you'll ever possess forever is there, too.
So, when you think about heaven, you're identifying the
place where your Father is, your Savior is, your brothers and
sisters are, your name is there, your inheritance is there, your
citizenship is there, your reward is there, your Master is
there...of course, being God and Christ...and your treasure is
there as well. To sum it up, heaven is your home. And that's
why the Apostle Paul says we are strangers, we are pilgrims, we
are aliens in this world. We are like space travelers who are on
a planet not our own. We don't belong here. Every time somebody
in this world meets us, they're meeting alien beings. We are the
aliens, folks. We have arrived here but our home is somewhere
else.
Everything we love is there. Everything we cherish is
there. Everything valuable is there. Everything eternal is
there. And yet here we are in the church of Christ in the United
States in this century, committed to indulging ourselves in this
alien land. Self-indulgent Christianity is the kind of
Christianity that's lost its heavenly perspective. The church
today doesn't hope for heaven, they hope they won't go to heaven.
They don't want to go to heaven until they've had all that earth
could possibly deliver them. And when that's exhausted, and they
finally are too old to enjoy it or too sick to enjoy it, then
they'll be glad that heaven is there to receive them. "But
please, God, don't send me to heaven yet. I haven't been to
Hawaii. I haven't gotten my new car. I...I want to go to the
Bahamas. I want to get a raise. I want a new house. God,
please, no, not heaven." What a jaded perspective.
John says in 1 John 2 that all that is in the world is
passing away. And if any man love the world, the love of the
Father is not in him. I think there are many people who claim to
love Christ but the fact that they love the world so much means
that they're not heavenly citizens at all. And like the old
spiritual said, "Everybody talking about heaven ain't going
there." But everybody going there ain't talking about heaven
either. And that's the other side of it. And we need to learn
to live in the light of heaven. That hope should fill our
hearts, should change our lives, filling us with the joy of
anticipation that loosens us from this passing world. We can get
so tied down to this world, we consume things in this world that
will perish, instead of laying treasure in heaven.
Now I know that some people think heaven is an imaginary
place. Some people think heaven is a human dream for little
children. Some people think it's a wish. Some people think
heaven is a state of mind. Some people heaven is a projection of
all that is good in humanity. Others think heaven is the
immortality of the truth and beauty. And you can read all kinds
of things like that.
But the Bible says heaven is a place. I want you to grab
that, all right? It is a place. And all the people who love God
are either there already or going there. Now that's pretty
simple. Heaven is a place and all the people who genuinely love
God are either there already or are going there to live forever
in complete perfection and glory. Now we have to live in the
light of heaven.
Now let me give you a perspective on that. Turn in your
Bible to 2 Corinthians chapter 5...2 Corinthians chapter 5. And
let's see if we can't catch a little of the heart of the Apostle
Paul. Now he's under a lot of persecution. If you go back,
let's go all the way back to chapter 4 and verse 8. He says, "We
are afflicted in every way but not crushed, perplexed but not
despairing, persecuted but not forsaken, struck down but not
destroyed, always carrying about in the body the dying of Jesus
that the life of Jesus may also be manifest in our body." In
other words, we have it tough here. Afflicted, persecuted,
perplexed, struck down, always carrying, as it were, the death of
Christ around in our bodies, constantly being delivered over to
death for Jesus' sake, verse 11, death works in us in order to
make life work in you. And he says in verse 16, "We do not lose
heart, we do not lose heart, in spite of all of this, though our
outer man is decaying, our inner man is being renewed day by day,
for momentary light affliction is producing for us an eternal
weight of glory far beyond all comprehension, or comparison."
In other words, whatever we endure in this life can't be
compared with the glory that it's producing in the life to come.
The more you suffer here, the more glory will be there. It's
like what Jesus said in Matthew's gospel, when He said, in
effect, James and John and their mother said, "Can we sit on the
right hand in the Kingdom?" And He said, "That's not for Me to
give but the Father." And then the implication was He'll give it
to the one who suffered the most here for His name. The more you
suffer here, the greater exaltation there. That's the way the
Lord equalizes that. So He says our momentary light affliction
is simply producing an eternal weight of glory far beyond all
comparison. So whatever you go through here is being compensated
for eternally. A little temporal trouble for eternal glory.
So he says in verse 18, "We don't spend our time looking at
the things that are seen, but at the things which are not seen.
For the things that are seen are temporal, the things which are
not seen are eternal." We have an eternal perspective. We
endure whatever the world has to give because we know it causes
that we shall have a greater weight of glory in the eternity to
come. We keep our focus on that. And here he comes into verse 1
of chapter 5 and says, "For we know that if the earthly tent
which is our house is torn down," that is if we die, "we have a
building from God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the
heavens." We have another life. We have another form, another
house.
Now our earthly tent is in the process of being torn down.
Is it not? Sure. Somebody asked John Quincy Adams one time how
he was. He gave an interesting reply. He said, "John Quincy
Adams is well, sir, very well. The house he is...in which he has
been living is dilapidated and old and he has received word from
its maker that he must vacate soon. But, John Quincy Adams is
well sir, very well."
Well, that's just how it is. The outer man is decaying all
the time and the earthly tent is being torn down and when that's
gone, we know we have a building from God, a house not made with
hands, eternal in the heavens...in the heavens. So we look to
heaven where we will have that eternal weight of glory, that new
house from God. He says, verse 2, "For indeed in this house we
groan." We groan in this house. I know we do. You do, I do, we
all do. We groan because of the infirmities of our physical
being. We groan because of the sin that reigns, as it were, in
our flesh. We groan because we cannot be what we ought to be and
do what we ought to do. We're debilitated continuously in this
human form and so we groan along with all the rest of creation as
Romans 8 says, groan...waiting for the glorious manifestation of
the sons of God, longing to be clothed with our dwelling from
heaven. We want our heavenly body.
Now do you feel that way? Can you identify with Paul? Can
you say, "Oh, how I long to be clothed with our dwelling from
heaven?" Or is your prayer more like, "Lord, how I long to get
to the mall so that I may be clothed with whatever's on sale at
Nordstrom?" I mean, just where is your, you know, where is your
desire? Where is your longing? I mean, if you look at the
church today, we would have to say there are very few people
wandering around pining their hearts away because they're so
deeply longing to be in the presence of God in heaven. That's
sad. But he says we long to be clothed with our dwelling from
heaven inasmuch as we having put it on shall not be found naked.
Why do you want that, Paul? Why are you so anxious to not
be unclothed but clothed with that eternal body? Verse 4, "For
indeed while we are in this tent we groan, we are burdened,"
burdened by sin, burdened by sickness, burdened by death,
burdened by tears and sorrow and sadness and pain and all the
rest. We do not want to be unclothed. In other words, it's not
enough just for us to have our spirits go into the presence of
God, we want our bodies as well. We want to be clothed in order
that what is mortal may be swallowed up by life.
So here is a man who is literally longing for his heavenly
form, longing to be in that eternal place. And now He who
prepared us, he says in verse 5, for this very purpose is God who
gave to us the Spirit as a pledge.
Now what did he mean by that? The Spirit is a pledge, as
Paul calls Him in Ephesians 1, He is an earnest or an arrabon.
That's a Greek word that means an engagement ring. When God gave
you His Holy Spirit, that was an engagement ring indicating that
some day you're going to be His bride and you're going to be
married to Him when you get to heaven. The Holy Spirit is the
down payment, arrabon means down payment, engagement ring, first
installment. It's like earnest money, to borrow that old phrase.
So, the Holy Spirit is the pledge of our immortality, the
pledge of our new form in the glories of heaven. Therefore,
verse 6, "Being always of good courage and knowing that while we
are at home in the body, we are absent from the Lord for we walk
by faith, not by sight. We are of good courage, I say, and
prefer rather to be absent from the body and to be home with the
Lord." Now can you say that? I mean, that's a pretty straight
statement. Can you say that the deepest desire of your heart is
to be absent from the body and present with the Lord? And that's
hard for us to say because we hold so tightly to this life
because it's all we know. And because we experience love and the
meaningful relationships that life brings to us, we become
captive to this life. But we need to be transcendent. And my
purpose, I trust in God's grace over the next few weeks as we
study heaven, is to loosen us all up a little bit in terms of our
holding so tightly to this life. Imagine saying, "I prefer
rather to be absent from the body and to be at home with the
Lord." Notice the phrase "at home with the Lord." That's home
for us with the Lord, that's our home, that's where we belong.
As I said earlier, everything we love is there, our Father is
there, our Savior is there, our brothers and sisters are there,
our name is there, our inheritance is there, our citizenship is
there, reward is there and our treasure is there. That's our
home and we long to go home.
You all can identify with that. When you go away for a
prolonged time, there's something in your heart that longs to go
home. Now we'll come back to that text at a later time in our
study but I wanted to introduce it to you because I wanted you to
see the kind of heart attitude we're after. We want to get to
the point in our own hearts where we groan to be clothed with our
heavenly form, where we long to be absent from the body and
present with the Lord, where we are more concerned about the
eternal weight of glory than the light affliction here, where we
are conscious of laying aside all our treasure in heaven so that
we can enjoy it forever, rather than laying it aside on earth and
leaving it here.
Some very rich person died and someone asked a friend of his
how much did he leave. And the friend said, "All of it." And
that's exactly what you'll leave, all of it.
Now let's talk about some basic things regarding heaven to
help us kind of get a start. First of all, heaven is referred to
in Scripture about 550 times. If we're going to be heavenly
minded and we're going to long for heaven, we've got to know a
little about it so we'll have something to kind of pull us that
way. The Old Testament's key word for heaven is shamayin, it
literally means, it's a plural, it means the heights...the
heights. The New Testament key word is ouranos from which the
planet Uranus was named. It literally means that which is raised
up. So it's a general term in the sense that it means something
that is high and something that is raised up.
Now when we look up in the sky and we look at the night sky
or the daytime sky, we're looking at heaven. Our eyes, however,
can only go so far. Let me just give you this thought from the
Apostle Paul in 2 Corinthians, he says, chapter 12 verse 2, "That
I was caught up to the third heaven," okay? Second Corinthians
12:2, "Caught up to the third heaven." Now that is very clearly
an indication that there are three heavens. So let's talk about
the three heavens, all right?
The first one is what we could call the atmospheric
heaven...the atmospheric heaven. That is the space immediately
above the earth, that is the air we breathe. That is generally
called the troposphere. Sometimes when the Bible talks about
heaven, it is referring to that first heaven. The atmosphere around the earth, it's the air
we breathe, it's our environment in which we live. And when the
Scripture refers to that, it's pretty clear that that's what it
has in mind. For example, in...there are several places but I
think in Isaiah 55 verse 9, "As the heavens are higher than the
earth, so are My ways higher than your ways and My thoughts than
your thoughts, for as the rain and snow come down from heaven..."
Yes, the first heaven, the first heaven is the atmospheric heaven
where the rain and the snow come down. It says they don't return
there without watering the earth and making it bear and sprout
and furnishing seed to the sower and bread to the eater. The
hydrological cycle which is the water cycle occurs in the first
heaven. It's the atmosphere around the earth.
There are several references in the Psalms to that
atmosphere as well. It says, for example, in Psalm 147:8 that
God covers the heavens with clouds, provides rain for the earth.
Again, that's the atmospheric heaven.
The second heaven, and Scripture refers to this as well, and
that is the planetary area, the area where the stars and the
moons and all of the planets move about. Scripture also refers
to this heaven. In fact, way back in the first chapter of
Genesis, God said, "Let there be lights in the expanse of the
heavens...let there be lights in the expanse of the heavens."
And what He meant by that, He goes on to say..."Lights, two great
lights, the greater light to govern the day, the lesser light to
govern the night. And He made the stars also. And God placed
them in the expanse of the heavens to give light on the earth."
And again, heaven there is the heaven of the planets, the heaven
of the stars and the moons. The Psalmist refers to that as the
heaven as well. That's the second heaven.
Then the third heaven, moving beyond the second heaven, is
the divine heaven. Now that's where God dwells. And that's
where He dwells with His holy angels, and that's where He dwells
with all the saints of all the ages who have been redeemed.
That's the heaven we want to concentrate on, the heaven where God
lives, where the holy angels dwell, where all the redeemed of the
ages dwell and will dwell forever and ever.
Now I want to give you one reference so that you will not be
confused. Turn for a moment to 1 Kings 8:27...1 Kings 8:27, it
says, "Behold, heaven and the highest heaven cannot contain
Thee," Solomon says, "how much less this house which I have
built?" Now here the Scripture says that on the one hand and
even the highest heaven, or literally in the Hebrew, the heaven
of heavens, can't contain God. How can we say on the one hand
that the heaven of heavens can't contain God, and on the other
hand that the heaven of heavens is His abode? I'm not sure. I'm
not sure how we can say that but that's what the Bible says.
There is a sense in which the heaven of heavens can't contain
God, and yet there is a sense in which that's His abode.
I don't think it's too difficult to understand. You can
understand it from a simple human illustration. I have a place
where I live but there's a sense in which my house cannot contain
me. It cannot contain me bodily at all times and it certainly
cannot contain the effect of my life, the effect of my influence
and so forth and so on. So in a very crass way, a very common
way, we can understand that God can dwell in heaven and yet
heaven, in a sense, cannot contain God.
But there is a heaven of heavens where God dwells. It is
His place. It is His home. It is His dwelling. In Isaiah
57:15, "For thus says the High and Exalted One who lives forever,
whose name is holy, I dwell on a high and holy place," He said.
God has a place where He lives, a real place, a dwelling place.
In Isaiah 63 and verse 15, "Look down from heaven and see from
Thy holy and glorious habitation." That tells us where the place
is, it's in heaven. He says in chapter 57 God has a place and in
chapter 63, God, he says, look down from Your place, and he calls
that place heaven. That's the heaven of heavens where God
dwells.
In fact, in Psalm 33:14 it says that God looks from heaven,
verse 13, from His dwelling place He looks out. So there is a
place where God dwells. And that place is called heaven. It's
the heaven of heavens, the third heaven.
In Psalm 102, just another reference, we could give you many
but here it says in verse 19, "He looked down from His holy
height, from heaven the Lord gazed upon the earth."
In the New Testament, just so that you'll have a New
Testament reference, in Revelation 3:12, "He who overcomes, I
will make him a pillar in the temple of my God, he will not go
out from it anymore, I will write upon him the name of my God and
the name of the city of my God, the new Jerusalem which comes
down from out of heaven from my God." And again the New
Testament identifying God with heaven. God lives in heaven.
Now let me give you a little bit of a quick trip through
Matthew, just to kind of solidify this thought in your mind. All
right? Open your Bible to Matthew 5:16 and let me see if I can't
nail this thought down and show you how important a thought it is
in the New Testament. Now follow, Matthew 5:16, get your Bible
ready and see if you can't pick up the obvious trend. "Let your
light so shine before men in such a way that they may see your
good works and glorify your Father who's...where?...who is in
heaven." Verse 34, "But I say to you, make no oath at all either
by heaven for it is the throne of God." Verse 45, "In order that
he may be...that you may be sons of your Father who is in
heaven." Chapter 6 verse 1, "Beware of practicing your
righteousness before men to be noticed by them, otherwise you
have no reward with your Father who is in heaven." Verse 9,
"Pray then in this way, Our Father who art in heaven." Chapter 7
verse 11, "If you then being evil know how to give good gifts to
your children, how much more shall your Father who is in heaven
give what is good to those who ask Him?" Verse 21, "Not every
one who says to Me, Lord, Lord, will enter into the Kingdom of
Heaven, but he who does the will of My Father who is in heaven."
Jesus keeps repeating this. Chapter 10 verse 32, "Everyone
who confesses Me before men, I will also confess Him before My
Father who is in heaven. But whosoever shall deny Me before men,
I will also deny him before My Father who is in heaven." Chapter
12 verse 50, "For whoever shall do the will of My Father who is
in heaven, he is My brother and sister and mother." And over in
chapter 16 and even in verse 17 there, Blessed are you,
Simon Barjona, son of Jonah, because flesh and blood did not
reveal this to you but My Father who is in heaven." Chapter 18
verse 10, "See that you do not despise one of these little ones,
a believer, for I say to you that their angels in heaven
continually behold the face of My Father who is in heaven."
Verse 14, "Thus it is not the will of your Father who is in
heaven that one of these little ones perish." Verse 19, "Again I
say to you, if two of you agree on earth about anything they may
ask, it will be done for them by My Father who is in heaven."
Verse 35, "So shall My heavenly Father also do to you."
Now you get the feeling that Jesus wants us to understand
that God's in heaven, don't you? Over and over and over He
repeats it. In the sixth chapter of John in identifying God and
heaven, Jesus says in verse 33, "For the bread of God is that
which comes down out of heaven." Obviously the one who came from
heaven was the Lord Jesus Christ, again indicating that that was
the place where God dwelt. Verse 38, "I have come down from
heaven." Verse 41, "I am the bread that came down from heaven."
Verse 42, "I have come down from heaven." Verse 50, "This is the
bread that comes down out of heaven." Verse 51, "I am the living
bread that came down out of heaven." Verse 58, "This is the
bread which came down out of heaven."
Now what I want you to understand is that heaven is a place
and God lives there and Christ came from there. It is not a
figment of imagination, it is not a feeling, it is not an
emotion, it is a place. It is God's place. It is the place
where God lives. In fact, now watch this thought, it is so much
God's place, follow this, this is a key to interpreting the New
Testament, it is so much God's place that heaven became a synonym
for God. And you find that in the New Testament.
Let me show you it. There are several illustrations, I'll
just give you one or two. In Matthew 23:22 it says...and Jesus
speaking, "He who swears by heaven, swears by the throne of God
and by Him who sits on it." Heaven there is synonymous with God.
You swear by heaven, you're swearing by God. They're really one
and the same. Heaven is the place where God is and it is so much
His place that you can refer to one or the other and mean both.
In Luke 15 verse 7, "I tell you in the same way there will
be joy in heaven," what does that mean? Joy on the part of God.
Verse 18, I love this, "I will...the prodigal son comes back, now
listen to this...and he says, Father, I have sinned
against...what?...heaven." What does he mean? I've sinned
against God.
Now listen carefully. Whenever the scripture refers to the
Kingdom of Heaven, what does it mean? Kingdom of God. It's just
another way to express God. You say, "Well, why did they
substitute the word `heaven' for God?" It's interesting to note
that. The New Testament writers are not necessarily bound by
that, they'll refer to the Kingdom of God and the Kingdom of
Heaven, Jesus refers to the Kingdom of God and the Kingdom of
Heaven, but they mean one and the same.
In the period between the Old and New Testament, there's a
400-year gap called the intertestamental period. During that
period the Jews really highly developed the tendency never to use
the name of God. That tendency had been there even at the end of
the Old Testament era, they didn't like to use the covenant name
of God because they thought it was too holy to come through their
lips. And so, they began a process of substituting things for
the name of God. And one of the things that came in the
intertestimental period which they substituted for the name God
was heaven. Instead of saying I worship God, they would say I
worship heaven. Instead of saying call upon the name of God,
they would say call upon the name of heaven. Since God's name
they thought was too holy, they substituted the word heaven. And
by the time the Jewish culture of the New Testament is settled,
any reference to the Kingdom of Heaven in their ears is simply a
reference to the Kingdom of God. It's the same reality. It's
the place where God dwells, the place where God rules. So to
enter the Kingdom of Heaven is to enter the Kingdom of God.
Heaven is a place.
Now let me take it a step further. The Apostle Paul says
something very interesting in Ephesians chapter 1, look at it for
a moment. Verse 3, "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord
Jesus Christ," now follow this, verb tense past, "who has--in the
past--blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenlies
in Christ." Now look at chapter 2 verse 6 and 7, it says that
God in His mercy loved us and when we were dead in transgression,
verse 5, made us alive together with Christ, that's our salvation
by grace, you've been saved. "And--past tense--already raised up
with Him and seated with...and seated us with Him in heavenlies
in Christ Jesus." Now listen to this, we aren't in heaven yet,
that's a place, we're not there. Though we're not in heaven, we
are in the...what?...the heavenlies.
You say, "What does that mean?" I'll tell you what it
means. Heaven is where God is, heaven is where God rules, heaven
is where God dominates. We're not in the place called heaven,
but we are presently under the dominion of the King of heaven, so
we're not in heaven but we're in the heavenlies in that sense.
And what the writer is trying to say is we've come under the rule
of God. When the Bible says Jesus preached the Kingdom of Heaven
is at hand, He meant the Kingdom of God is at hand. And when He
called people into the Kingdom, He called them to salvation.
When Jesus said you must be saved, He meant salvation. When He
said you must inherit eternal life, same thing, He meant
salvation. And when He said, "Enter the Kingdom of God, or the
Kingdom of Heaven," He meant salvation. So when you become saved
and inherit eternal life and become a believer in Christ, you
enter into the Kingdom of God, you're under His rule, not in
heaven but in the heavenlies, as it were. You're under His rule.
So presently we don't live in heaven, but we live in the
heavenlies and that's why we are to have our preoccupation with
heavenly things. We have a heavenly life. Our new life in
Christ is life in the heavenlies, that is it is under the
dominion and the rule of God.
Now what is heaven like? It's a new order. It's a new
community of holiness. It's a new fellowship of harmony with God
and Christ. It's a place of joy and peace and holiness and love
and fulfillment. And don't we experience that in part here?
Hasn't the Holy Spirit who is the guarantee or the pledge of that
produced in us the fruit of love, joy, peace, gentleness,
goodness, faith, meekness, self-control? All of those will be
characteristic of heaven. We are experiencing them in a smaller
way here because we--not in heaven--are in the heavenlies. The
hymn writer said, "It's a foretaste of glory divine." The future
heaven where we will be we are tasting right now. We have the
pledge of the Holy Spirit. We have the life of God within us.
We have the rule of God over us. We know joy and peace and love
and goodness, blessing. We have come into a new kind of
humanity, a new kind of community, a new kind of fellowship, a
new kind of family. We have come out of the kingdom of darkness
into the kingdom of light. We are no longer under the dominion
of Satan but under the dominion of God in Christ. We have a new
life principle. "If any man be in Christ he is a
new...what?...creature," 2 Corinthians 5:17, "old things have
passed away and behold, new things have come." We are new
creations.
We are members of a new family. We are no longer in the
family that we once were in. We are children of God. We are
children of a new place...Galatians 4:26 says, "Jerusalem is our
mother," what Jerusalem? The Jerusalem of God where God rules.
We have a new citizenship. Philippians 3:20, I read it to you
earlier, our citizenship is not in this world it is in heaven.
We have a new affection. We are to set our affections on things
above and not on things on the earth. We have a new storehouse,
our treasures are to be placed there.
So, heaven is a place but it is also a sphere in this world
where God rules and gives us a foretaste of glory divine. Now
listen to this, the best of your spiritual experience is a taste
of what will be commonplace in heaven. Your highest highs
spiritually, your profoundest depths spiritually, your greatest
blessings spiritually would be the commonest things of heaven.
We are tasting in a small way the age to come, the glories of the
life to come. So we live now in the heavenlies. And we need to
occupy ourselves with that heavenly kind of mindset. We're part
of a new order, a new community, a new fellowship. We possess a
new life principle, a new family, a new citizenship, a new
affection. And we're just passing through this life in this
world until we can get to the place where all of the heavenly
reality becomes just that for us. It is now a sphere where we
live under the rule of God and in the blessing of His Spirit.
It some day will be that and a place where we will actually set
our glorified feet and walk...a real place.
The prayer of Jesus...what a magnificent, magnificent prayer
it is, John 17, listen to verse 24. I love this, "Father, Jesus
says, I desire that they also whom Thou hast given Me be with Me
where I am in order that they may behold My glory." That is
Jesus praying to the Father to bring His own to heaven where He
will live forever and ever.
So, we're in the heavenlies now and some day we'll be in
heaven. What a tremendous hope. In John 14, do you remember it?
Beautiful promise, "Stop letting your heart be troubled, believe
in God, believe also in Me. In My Father's house there are many
rooms, many dwelling places," not mansions, folks, rooms, "if it
were not so I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for
you and if I go and prepare a place for you, I'll come again,
receive you to Myself that where I am there you may be also."
See, Jesus wanted us to be forever where He is that we might see
His glory and the glory of His Father. And He's up there right
now preparing a place for us. "In My Father's house are many
rooms." Jesus is getting us a place ready and we're going to
actually be in that place, as much as we're in this place
tonight. We will be in a physical form...we're going to talk
about that. What are we going to be like in heaven? It will be
a physical form, in a sense, and yet it will be an eternal and
glorified supernatural form in another sense.
You say, "Well, where do you get the model for that?" The
resurrected body of Christ. You remember He walked, He ate, He
sang and yet He ascended through space into heaven. And so,
we're looking for that place. We're looking for that place. The
Bible calls it a city whose builder and maker is...what?...God.
Do you know how much a city meant to people in ancient
times? You see, in ancient times a city was a place of safety, a
city was a place of refuge. Inside the walls there was
brotherhood and harmony. Inside the walls there was security,
protection, safety. And you can imagine the nomadic people of
ancient times wandering across the desert, vulnerable to the
robbers and the thieves who would come and steal and take their
lives, vulnerable to the elements. And you can imagine after
months perhaps, weeks of that kind of life how refreshing it was
to enter the protection of a city, fortified and walled. And
there to find harmony and fellowship, joy, companionship. You
have to see a city from the viewpoint of the biblical time frame.
Cities today represent decadence. They represent crime. They
represent all that is wicked and evil. And it seems to me that
people in the city are longing for a country. But in those days,
people in the country were longing for a city, a place of refuge,
a place of protection, a place of safety. We need that mindset.
We need to see ourselves as pilgrims and strangers wandering
through this world looking for a city whose builder and maker is
God, a real place where we will really go and really live with
Christ. Just as much as His disciples were with Him as after His
resurrection, so will we be with Him. Just as Thomas could touch
His fingers and touch His side, so will we touch Him. So will we
sit with Him. So will we sing with Him. A real place. And we
are only now experiencing a foretaste of that place in the joy of
walking with Christ whom having not seen we love, in the joy of
knowing the Spirit lives within us as the pledge that some day
we'll come to that place.
And by the way, the moment you leave this life as a
Christian, you go to that place. There's no limbus patrum(??) as
the Medieval theologians called it. There's no limbo place.
There's no purgatory place. There's no pit that you wait in.
You go immediately into the Lord's presence. "Absent from the
body," said Paul, "present with the Lord." Philippians 1, "Far
better to depart and be with Christ." Is that your heart's
desire? We should in this hour live in the heavenlies to the
degree that we long for the fullness of all that spiritual
blessing could possibly be. Do you rejoice over the work of God
in your life? Do you rejoice because He has given you all the
good blessings you have? If you do, you're going to want more
and if you're going to want more, you're going to want heaven.
So, when I think to myself that Jesus actually prayed that
all who knew Him would spend eternity with Him to see His glory,
how thankful to God I am for that. And I want to have the heart
of Paul. I want to literally long to be clothed upon with my
heavenly form. I want to get out of this world and on with
eternal bliss. And I hope that by the time this series is over
and I'm already about two weeks a head of you studying, that
you're going to want the same thing. And it's going to have a
profound effect on how you live your life in this world. Let's
bow together for prayer.
Father, how thankful we are for this great promise, the
promise of heaven. We're so unworthy, so undeserving. You've
given us life, breath. You've given us Christ. You've given us
salvation. And You've given us the hope of eternal heaven.
Almost takes our breath away to think that we can leave this
painful existence and spend forever in Your presence is
overwhelming. We just bless Your name for such a promise. And,
Father, it's not something we just wish for, it's something we
count on because You've given us the pledge of the Holy Spirit.
You've given us the guarantee. You've planted in us the One who
has begun that good work that we'll be perfected.
Father, I just pray that each one of us will learn to live
with heaven in mind. Loosen us up from this life. Loosen us up
from this world. Help us truly to set our affections on things
above where everything we really love is waiting for us. In
Christ's name. Amen.
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