all my Afterlife articles – to date

Afterlife

During the past few years, I have written a substantial number of Bible studies and theological articles for a website called AFTERLIFE, based in New Zealand. Here is an alphabetical list of links to those articles.

  1. a coming kingdom
  2. A Conditional Immortality Bibliography
  3. A conditionalist looks at αἰών
  4. A final punishment bibliography
  5. a futile quest?
  6. a gospel without a resurrection
  7. a modern metaphorical view
  8. a new sky and land
  9. a resurrection perspective
  10. A soul sleep bibliography
  11. About those mansions
  12. Abraham: Machpelah
  13. Afterlife: After or Beyond?
  14. all about a Promise (part 1)
  15. all about a Promise (part 2)
  16. altered
  17. An Eastern Orthodox Perspective
  18. an invitation to study God’s exclusive immortality
  19. Attention, witnesses!
  20. being with Christ will have to wait
  21. Bell’s Base Cards | Review of Love Wins by Rob Bell
  22. better than survival | The Hope of Resurrection
  23. blaspheming heaven | Revelation 13:6
  24. Book Review of The Tree of Life Paul Sellman
  25. challenging modern mantras
  26. christian perseverance
  27. Christmas joy and peace
  28. Christmas light
  29. Christmas Myths
  30. Clarifying Evangelical Conditionalism
  31. coaching for the mission in Jewish Galilee | The light of Christ
  32. Comparing God and humans
  33. Conditional Immortality and the Tree of Life
  34. consumed
  35. Daring to say SLEEP
  36. Death is not the answer
  37. Defending a bit of unconsciousness
  38. demon mortality and Revelation 20:10
  39. Did Judas go to hell? Judas’ eternal sin?
  40. Did You Say “Sleep”? | Sleep of the dead
  41. discovered | “… and they will reign with him for a thousand years…” (Rev. 20:6).
  42. embarrassing lessons in ministry
  43. ending it all
  44. Erasing Hell Review by Jefferson Vann
  45. eternally
  46. Eternity somewhere vs the Kingdom of Heaven
  47. evangelism: an offer of the Holy Spirit
  48. everlasting
  49. excess life
  50. exchanging this world for heaven
  51. Explaining our hope
  52. exterminate!
  53. false hopes for reward
  54. first look at natural death
  55. Five questions to ask while reading the rich man and Lazarus story
  56. formed from the dust | Snips and snails
  57. God Alone is Immortal
  58. God’s mouse
  59. God’s trap
  60. Grudem on the Image of God in humanity
  61. Guidance through the dark times
  62. hard questions and heaven’s king
  63. having life, or awaiting wrath
  64. he laid down his soul for us
  65. Help for a hard parable
  66. How hell will really glorify God
  67. how to keep your soul
  68. how to receive permanent life
  69. if you died today…
  70. Immortality: a gift, not a given
  71. in good hands
  72. introducing the breath of God
  73. introducing the collector
  74. invaded | dwelling place of God
  75. Is Death a Better Place ?
  76. Isaac: other sons sent away
  77. it’s like a box of chocolates
  78. Jacob rolling over in his grave
  79. Jesus has the keys of death and Hades
  80. last climb
  81. learning to trust
  82. let my soul live
  83. life from above
  84. Life in Christ alone
  85. Life Only in Christ
  86. Limited to the visible
  87. looking at 1 Thessalonians 5:10
  88. lost souls and other insights from the First Book of Psalms
  89. more than release
  90. morning is coming
  91. Moses on the souls of animals
  92. my riddle
  93. never see death?
  94. no future
  95. no more
  96. not a better place
  97. not be there
  98. not enough | Ecclesiastes 6
  99. not welcome
  100. Not whisked off
  101. only Jesus: great shepherd of God’s flock
  102. only potentially immortal”
  103. only two destinies | Permanent Life | Permanent Death
  104. Our Resurrection | The Next ‘You’
  105. Paradise
  106. Paul’s ‘sky and land’ references
  107. perhaps you may be hidden
  108. Perish the thought
  109. permanent digs
  110. presently prohibited
  111. protective clothing | immortal body
  112. Q & A: resurrection chronology
  113. q & a: the devil hurled out
  114. q&a: the ascension of Christ
  115. Questions and Answers about Immortality
  116. Reading Romans Again – as a conditionalist
  117. Recent studies of 1 Corinthians 15 (an annotated bibliography)
  118. remembering the price of sin
  119. rescuing the text
  120. resurrection makes sense
  121. Review of “First Doctrine” | Conditional Immortality
  122. Review of Neighbor To The Nations by Ronald A. Murch
  123. Review of The Meaning of Jesus
  124. safe sinning
  125. satisfied with your presence
  126. set apart for destruction
  127. Set Free ? The soul after death
  128. sheol in the ground
  129. Sheol in the Bible: The Old Testament Consensus
  130. Should we modify conditional immortality?
  131. sky and land
  132. sky and land in Revelation
  133. Sky and land in the Gospels
  134. Solving the Problem of Hell
  135. sorry, Socrates!
  136. soul searching | What is a soul?
  137. Spoiling the Vineyard
  138. Spring up, Oh Well
  139. sustenance and sacrifice
  140. swept away
  141. Testing Pink’s presupposition
  142. The author of Hebrews chimes in
  143. the awesome power of Jesus’ presence
  144. the bloody city
  145. the body apart from the spirit | spirit in man
  146. the breath of our nostrils
  147. the collector converts
  148. the collector reflects on a mystery
  149. the collector reflects on aging
  150. the collector reflects on control
  151. the collector reflects on human mortality
  152. the collector reflects on human nature
  153. the collector reflects on life
  154. the collector reflects on success
  155. the collector reflects on the rat race
  156. the collector reflects on time
  157. the collector reflects on work
  158. the coming hour
  159. The consequences of separation
  160. The context of 1 Timothy 6:16
  161. the curse of immortality
  162. The curse of immortality Audio
  163. The dead will hear, and come out
  164. The desert snake
  165. the evolution of the afterlife
  166. the goal of Christian faith
  167. the gospel Christ preached
  168. The hook that caught me
  169. the Lamb has arrived
  170. The legacy of Millerism
  171. The one and only | Mark 12:28-30
  172. the promise | eternal life
  173. The promise of permanence
  174. the purpose of hell
  175. the real rescue
  176. the resurrection is Jesus
  177. The Rich man and Lazarus and the intermediate state
  178. The sky above – shamayim, the land beneath – erets
  179. The sky God is supreme
  180. The Stars and the Future by Jefferson Vann
  181. the third answer
  182. The true resurrection
  183. the unity that he prayed for
  184. the unsatisfied artist
  185. the wrath to come
  186. three ruined outfits
  187. three Solomons
  188. throwing away the earthly tent
  189. Thrown away from your grave
  190. time and chance
  191. To be gathered to his people”
  192. to die is gain
  193. tomorrow – fallen | Revelation 18:2
  194. tomorrow – ready
  195. Tough times and Christian discipleship
  196. Tough times and Christian faith
  197. Tough times and Christian identity
  198. tripping over words
  199. two gardens
  200. Unto You is born this day…”
  201. Up in smoke
  202. victory through resurrection
  203. wading through the “simplicity”
  204. waiting at the station
  205. Waking to taunt Babylon
  206. Was Adam created immortal?
  207. watch your language
  208. what God wants of you
  209. What if we taught John 3:16?
  210. What is an evangelical ?
  211. What is Life ? Life is…
  212. what little boys are made of
  213. what the dead really know
  214. where did all the spirits go?
  215. which assembly?
  216. why conditionalism matters – exposing the lie
  217. worth continuing forever
  218. wrong about hell
  219. you two point oh
  220. Αἰώνιος in the New Testament – the four adverbial instances
  221. Αἰώνιος in the New Testament – the fourth attributive instances
  222. Αἰώνιος | aiónios in the New Testament – the first attributive occurrences
  223. Αἰώνιος in the New Testament – the second attributives
  224. Αἰώνιος in the New Testament – three rare instances

ACST 27. The Root

After almost ten years, I just discovered today that I apparently did not include this article in my blog. So, here is the long lost article that eventually became chapter 27 in my Advent Christian Systematic Theology book. – Jeff

The root cause of all personal sins is original sin. This term does not refer to the first time someone willfully sins. It refers to what happened the first time the human race sinned: the fall of our ancestors in the Garden of Eden. The choice to break the original prohibition has lead to a change in human nature and destiny, which is universal in scope.

The Black Hole

The doctrine of original sin is tied to the historical event of Adam and Eve’s rebellion in Eden. Since many today are convinced that the Genesis record is not factual, they are left with no space in their universe for original sin. As a result, “if there is a black hole for church doctrines, original sin is in one.”1 But to jettison this doctrine is to leave unanswered questions which continue to be asked by people who want to know what is happening to humanity, and what our destiny is.

The Change

Paul tells the Romans that death is a result of that original sin. He argued that “when Adam sinned, sin entered the world.”2 From that point on, there is no such thing as human innocence. All human beings have been changed. Part of that change is the inherited sinful inclination, and that leads inevitably to personal sins, for which we are accountable. But the difference made in Eden is even more fundamental than that. Since the wages of sin is death,3 and all humanity has been mortal since that fateful day, the original sin has resulted in an inherited guilt – not just a changed nature. The status of humanity changed that day.

Paul expressed the change in these terms: “so death spread to all men because all sinned.”4 He did not mean that we all will eventually sin, but that on that day, in the garden, all sinned. This is clear from the fact that Paul is comparing two event in Romans 5. He compares the fall in Eden with the sacrifice of Christ at Calvary.

By the one act of rebellion, all humanity were made sinners, and thus deemed deserving of immediate condemnation. Paul explains this by comparing the sin in the Garden with Christ’s sacrifice on the cross. He says “as one trespass led to condemnation for all men, so one act of righteousness leads to justification and life for all men. For as by the one man’s disobedience the many were made sinners, so by the one man’s obedience the many will be made righteous.”5

God regards all human beings as sinners, even if they have not yet personally sinned. He sent his Son to die for us “while we were still sinners.”6 But Jesus died before you and I were even born. So, even before we were born, our status before God was sinners in need of salvation. Our status was not that of innocents. To understand why this is so will take another trip to the Garden.

Eden and Original Righteousness

God created human beings sinless, and with no condemnation. He “saw everything that he had made, and behold, it was very good.”7 As totally sinless creatures, our ancestors had the potential to become much more than we can imagine. But all this potential had to continue to be directed towards God’s will for them. God had established one small prohibition. They were not to eat of the tree of knowing good and evil. This was the one bad apple that would spoil the barrel.

It was apparently not long before temptation resulted in that original sin. For “when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was to be desired to make one wise, she took of its fruit and ate, and she also gave some to her husband who was with her, and he ate.”8

Born in Sin

Ever since that event, human beings have been born with the defilement of sin.9 Humanity is not a tabula rasa – a blank slate upon which moral impressions are made only after the moment of conscious life. We come into life with the condemnation of God already upon us. That condemnation that came upon Adam was visited upon all who were in Adam at the time. He made the choice for all of us. We are born into a sinful state and a sinful world as a result of that choice.

Born Mortal

This event also explains why all human beings are born mortal. God had warned Adam that if he ate of the forbidden tree it would result in mortality and eventual death.10 This warning was to Adam, as head of the entire adamic species. Had he obeyed the commandment, it might have resulted in eventual immortality for the species. Since he disobeyed, it is not unfair for God to visit the consequences of that choice upon all of us.

The consequences of that choice are spelled out in detail. Mortality from the moment of the original transgression, and eventual death to the entire species. The cemeteries that have appeared all over the landscape of this planet are reminders of that choice, that event in history. Those graves are not there because of anyone’s personal sins. The graves are there because the species has sinned in Adam.

Limits of Original Sin

Original sin explains the universal mortality and sinful state that every human is born into. The doctrine has absolutely nothing to with hell, or final punishment. When human beings are judged at the end of time, not one of them will be punished for even a moment because of Adam’s transgression. This present mortality alone and the death we all face at the end of this life are payment in full for Adam’s transgression.

If a child dies before she has a chance to make the choice to commit personal sin, that child will suffer only the consequences of her ancestor’s sin – that is, the first death. Original sin does not put anyone into hell. Knowing how Christ is just and compassionate in his dealings with all people should answer our questions about those who die early, thus are never given a chance to know him personally.

Likewise, Jesus’ death on the cross does not automatically undo the damage done by original sin. We all continue to suffer the consequences of Adam’s rebellion. There is, if you will, a tombstone with your name on it, regardless of whether you have accepted Christ as your Savior or not. Christ frees us “from our sins by his blood.”11 That is, Christ’s death has paid the price we all owe due to our personal sins. We would otherwise have to pay for those personal sins ourselves by suffering in hell and eventually dying the second death.12

The Complexity

“The wages of sin is death” is a true principle and applies in both cases. It applies to personal sins in that hell’s torments will eventually end in the second death. It applies in respect to original sin in that all humanity will face the first death. The complex nature of the sin equals death principle reminds the believer that God is just. Although some people may die as a result of mistakes, or wrong choices, that they will eventually die is not their choice. It was the choice of their ancestors in Eden.

The Choice

Yet God by his grace has provided everyone with another chance: a choice which will affect their eternal destiny. That choice is Christ. He is “the the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world.”13 By his death he can reverse and wipe out the consequences of personal sin on the species. God gave Adam the choice as to whether or not the species would suffer the first death. He made that choice, and original sin is the result. God gives you and me the choice as to whether we will personally suffer the second death. We cannot blame Adam if we make the wrong choice.

The Cross And Original Sin

Original sin made the death of Christ necessary because it removed the possibility of any human being gaining salvation through his own merits. Christ through his death on the cross has also set in motion a chain of events which will eventually abolish the death-penalty associated with original sin.14 This will happen in stages. First, Christ will reverse the consequences of original sin for believers at his second coming. The perishable will become imperishable.15

The consequences of original sin will be ultimately dealt with at the day of judgment when death and hades give up the dead who are in them.16 After all are whose names are not found in the Lamb’s book of life are destroyed in the second death, then death and hades (the consequences of original sin) will be themselves thrown into the lake of fire to be destroyed.17 This is the ultimate solution to the problem we call original sin. Redeemed and glorified humanity will not carry that problem with us into eternity.

1 Tatha Wiley, Original Sin: Origins, Developments, Contemporary Meanings. (Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 2002), 3.

2 Rom. 5:12 NLT.

3 Rom. 6:23.

4 Rom. 5:12b.

5 Rom. 5:18-19.

6 Rom. 5:8.

7 Gen. 1:31.

8 Gen. 3:6.

9 Psalm 51:5.

10 Gen. 2:17 (cf. 160).

11 Rev. 1:5.

12 Rev. 2:11; 20:6, 14; 21:8.

13 John 1:29, 36.

14 2 Tim. 1:10.

15 1 Cor. 15:42,50, 52,53,54.

16 Rev. 20:13.

17 Rev. 20:14.