the gospel

At the office this week, one of my co-workers (who came from a Catholic background) was asking me about my church. He had heard the term evangelical before, but was not clear on what the word implied. I told him that when a church calls itself evangelical, it tends to emphasize the gospel, rather than some church tradition or heritage. The term comes from the Greek word euangelion, meaning “good news.” My co-worker’s question brought back to my mind something that I had learned some time ago: most evangelicals do not really know what the gospel is.

Oh, they know that if they believe in Jesus they can receive eternal life (and that is certainly true). But most would be surprised to discover that this conditional statement is not the biblical good news. The Good news that the Bible teaches is something different. Consider, for example, the following texts which contain the word euangelion:

“Jesus traveled throughout the region

of Galilee, teaching in the synagogues

and announcing the Good News about

the Kingdom. And he healed every kind

of disease and illness.”[1]

This first occurrence of the term in the New Testament is remarkable for what it does not say. It does not say that the gospel is a theological concept that someone must believe. No, the good news is not about a theological decision one makes (or prayer that one prays) as much as it is about a kingdom that one can join. Jesus himself is the king of that kingdom. He teaches about himself, and then proceeds to back up that teaching about himself with miracles that prove he is who he says he is. The gospel here is not as much about what you and I believe as it is about who Jesus is.

“Truly, I say to you, wherever this gospel is

proclaimed in the whole world, what she has

done will also be told in memory of her.”[2]

When Jesus commanded us to proclaim the gospel to the world,[3] he was not referring to another gospel: a gospel other than the one he was preaching. Yet he had not been proclaiming his death and substitutionary atonement. As important as that truth is, it is not the heart of the gospel. The heart of the gospel is something else.

“But none of these things move me, neither

count I my life dear unto myself, so that I might

finish my course with joy, and the ministry,

which I have received of the Lord Jesus, to

testify the gospel of the grace of God.”[4]

Paul called his message “the gospel of the grace of God.” He was set apart to teach and proclaim this gospel.[5] It was the good news – not that we can do something for God (like believe in his Son) – but that God has graciously done something for us. The good news is Jesus himself – a gift of God’s grace.

“For I am not ashamed of the gospel,

for it is the power of God for salvation

to everyone who believes, to the Jew

first and also to the Greek. For in it

the righteousness of God is revealed

from faith for faith, as it is written,

“The righteous shall live by faith.””[6]

Knowing this gives the reader a fresh perspective on how Paul describes the gospel in Romans. If the gospel that is the power of God for salvation is the person of Christ himself, then the faith that leads to the righteousness of God is not just acceptance of his forgiveness. It is acceptance of all that he is, all that he has done for us, and all that he will do. The gospel does not simply draw our attention back to the cross. It also draws our attention to the eternal ramifications of the cross. It is good news, not just because of something done in the past, but also because of the future.

The righteousness of God revealed in the gospel is not simply the fact that God regards us as righteous because of what Jesus did for us. It is a righteousness that is imputed by justification, and imparted by sanctification, and realized by faith in future glorification. So, the good news that is the gospel touches us in all three tenses.

Past:

Jesus died for me. I have been saved from my sin by the sacrifice of Christ on the cross. My sins are atoned for by his death. They are forgiven. I am no longer on the list of those whose destiny is eternal death.

Present:

Jesus teaches me. I stand forgiven, and have access to the Holy Spirit to affect true change in my behavior. I can now live in victory over sin, and grow in the likeness of Christ. The key to living this life is the gospel message that Jesus proclaimed when he was on this earth. He gave commands which can drastically alter my life. But I have to learn and obey those commands. I am a disciple of Christ. I must choose to live like one. The gospel is the gospel of the kingdom. If I choose to live outside of the principles taught in the gospel, I have not responded to the gospel, regardless of what I believe about the atonement.

Future:

Jesus will make me immortal. I have an eternal destiny that will begin the day Jesus breaks the clouds and returns from heaven. On that day, if I am still alive, I will be transformed, and never taste death. If I die before that happens, I will be raised to life at Christ’s command when he returns, never to die again. The gospel is good news because it shows us the destiny that is our beyond the grave. It does not deny that death is real. It shows hope beyond death.

“Now I would remind you, brothers, of

the gospel I preached to you, which

you received, in which you stand, and

by which you are being saved, if you

hold fast to the word I preached to you

– unless you believed in vain. For I

delivered to you as of first importance

what I also received: that Christ died

for our sins in accordance with the

Scriptures, that he was buried, that

he was raised on the third day in

accordance with the Scriptures”[7]

This explains why Paul’s most extensive presentation of the gospel is found in a chapter entirely dedicated to the resurrection. There is no gospel without the resurrection. Because Christ was raised, we now can have victory over the penalty of sin in the past, and the power of sin in the present. Because Christ will raise us from the dead, we now have an eternal destiny – a future besides destruction in hell.

You cannot really understand the gospel without this perspective on the future, and that is exactly what the problem was in Corinth. The believers in Corinth had lost the good news of the resurrection. They had lost the gospel.

“how can some of you say that there

is no resurrection of the dead?[8]

Throughout the world today, this problem continues to exist. People live with no eternal hope. They live for today because they think today is all that we have. Author Paul David Tripp calls it “eternity amnesia.” He outlines the following symptoms of this malady:

1. Living with unrealistic expectations.

2. Focusing too much on self.

3. Asking too much of people.

4. Being controlling of fearful.

5. Questioning the goodness of God.

6. Living more disappointed than thankful.

7. Lacking motivation and hope.

8. Living as if life doesn’t have consequences.[9]

We can understand it when people who do not know Christ live this way. But all too often, those of us who claim to know Jesus find the same symptoms. Tripp explains that “because we fall into thinking of this life as our final destination, we place more hope in our situations, relationships, and locations than they are able to deliver.”[10]

We are victims when we should be living in victory. The victory was already obtained by Christ. Because of what he did for us, we need never live as if these temporary lives are all that we have. We can see everything that happens now in the light of the glory that awaits us in eternity. We can tolerate pain and failure because we understand them to be temporary setbacks. We can better grasp the significance of success when we see it from the standard of eternity as well. We can look on every soul we encounter as another being who is potentially immortal and glorified, which might help us tolerate their present imperfections. We can have a better attitude about our own present failures to hit the mark.

“And if our hope in Christ is only

for this life, we are more to be

pitied than anyone in the world.”[11]

If you take away the resurrection, Christianity is an empty religion with no real hope, and believers are of all people most to be pitied. The reason is that all human beings are born mortal. We have a death sentence hanging over us because of Adam’s rebellion. We imitate Adam by being creatures who return to the dust. But the hope of the resurrection gives us an opportunity to imitate Christ, the man from heaven.

“As was the man of dust, so also

are those who are of the dust, and

as is the man of heaven, so also are

those who are of heaven.”[12]

People who live without the forever perspective can only hope to accomplish “of the dust” things. No matter how happy or successful or significant their lives, that happiness, success and significance will be buried in the ground when they die. But people who have a forever perspective – a gospel perspective, can accomplish “of heaven” things. We can make an eternal difference in other people’s lives by pointing them to the Savior. We can get our minds off of the things which enslave others, because our focus is on serving the “man of heaven.”

Knowing our future can free us to truly live in the present.

“In a moment, in the twinkling of an

eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet

shall sound, and the dead shall be raised

incorruptible, and we shall be changed.

For this corruptible must put on

incorruption, and this mortal must put

on immortality. So when this corruptible

shall have put on incorruption, and this

mortal shall have put on immortality,

then shall be brought to pass the saying

that is written, Death is swallowed up

in victory.””[13]

The resurrection is God’s victory, and ours. The gospel is the good news about that victory. It is the story of God entering this world of sin and pain through his Son, and taking on that sin and pain through the atonement on the cross. It is the story of the crucial battle won on the cross, and demonstrated by Christ’s resurrection. It is the story of the final victory over sin and pain through the resurrection at Christ’s return. Coming to faith in Christ is entering into that story. We know how the story ends. That is why we can have an eternal perspective.

As we celebrate the resurrection this year, may the knowledge that Christ’s tomb is empty help us to avoid eternity amnesia. May we not live recklessly – like there is no tomorrow. But may we live fearlessly, because there will be a tomorrow. The gospel assures it.

Jefferson Vann

Williamsburg, Virginia, USA

Saturday, February 18, 2012


[1] Matthew 4:23 NLT, (see also Mark 9:35).

[2] Matthew 26:13 ESV.

[3] Mark 13:10.

[4] Acts 20:24 KJV.

[5] Romans 1:1.

[6] Romans 1:16 ESV.

[7] 1 Corinthians 15:1-4 ESV.

[8] 1 Corinthians 15:12b ESV.

[9] Paul David Tripp, Forever: Why You Can’t Live Without It. (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2011). Kindle edition, location 254-287.

[10] Forever, location 416.

[11] 1 Corinthians 15:19 NLT.

[12] 1 Corinthians 15:48 ESV.

[13] 1 Corinthians 15:52-54 KJV.

“A Better Place…”

I overheard two men talking the other day, and caught the last bit of a conversation they were having. I do not really know what they were talking about, but I can hazard a guess. They concluded their talk with “she’s in a better place.” My guess is that they were talking about a loved one who is now dead. Perhaps they were consoling themselves with thoughts that their loved one was no longer suffering and in Jesus’ protection until his return. But I wonder if those men knew what they were talking about. Does the Bible describe death – even the death of a believer – as “a better place”?

The first recorded death in the Bible was that of Abel, who was killed by his brother, Cain. The Bible states that “the LORD had regard for Abel.”[1] Did that mean that Abel was taken up to heaven when he died? No, the Lord told Cain “the voice of your brother’s blood is crying to me from the ground.”[2] Abel did not go to a better place when he died. He went to the ground where his brother had buried him. That was the very reason that the Lord cursed the ground for Cain. He told him that “When you work the ground, it shall no longer yield to you its strength. You shall be a fugitive and a wanderer on the earth.”[3]

The great saint and father of the Israelite nation was Abraham. When he died, did the Bible say that he went to a better place? No, it says that “Abraham breathed his last and died in a good old age, an old man and full of years, and was gathered to his people.”[4] We went where his pagan ancestors had gone: the grave. The Bible says that “Isaac and Ishmael his sons buried him in the cave of Machpelah, in the field of Ephron the son of Zohar the Hittite, east of Mamre, the field that Abraham purchased from the Hittites. There Abraham was buried, with Sarah his wife.”[5] Of course, it is popular for people to speak of burying a body, but still believe that the real person has gone elsewhere. Moses, the author of Genesis, entertained no such delusion.

David was called a man after God’s own heart.[6] Surely if anyone was to be granted a residence in a better place at his death, it would be David. But the Bible declares that “David himself never ascended into heaven.”[7] It was his descendant, Jesus Christ, that would sit at God’s right hand until his enemies are made his footstool.[8]

When Jesus faced the death of his friend Lazarus, he wept. He knew that death was not a better place for Lazarus. He did not console Lazarus’ sister Martha with the notion that her brother was not really dead. Instead, he told her that “your brother will rise again.”[9] He had told his disciples “Our friend Lazarus has fallen asleep, but I go to awaken him”.[10] If Lazarus had gone to a better place, it would have been cruelty to bring him back.

Even Jesus did not go back to his Father at death. After his resurrection, he told Mary Magdalene “Do not cling to me, for I have not yet ascended to the Father.”[11] He had been in the tomb, and he was raised from that tomb. His ascension forty days later came not as a result of his death, but because of his victory over death. His words to us now are not “do not fear death because it will take you to a better place.” His words to us are “Fear not, I am the first and the last, and the living one. I died, and behold I am alive forevermore, and I have the keys of Death and Hades.”[12]

Christians can be comforted at the death of a loved one. Our comfort comes not because we believe death takes us to a better place. The Bible says “the living know that they will die, but the dead know nothing”.[13] David prayed that the LORD would deliver his life because “in death there is no remembrance of you; in Sheol who will give you praise?”[14] Our comfort comes because we know death is not the end. It is a terrible prison where our body decays into nothingness while our personhood exists in a state of unconscious sleep. But our Savior has the keys to that prison. When he comes again, he will raise us from the dead and set us free from death forever.

The world needs honest Christians. It needs people who do not hide behind fairy tales, and deny the existence of death. It needs people who will tell them that death is real, but that Jesus is real too. The world needs hope that extends beyond the cemetery. Believers can offer that hope, but we have to do so with integrity. It is wrong to say that death is a friend when the Bible calls it an enemy.[15] It is wrong to imply that the blessed hope is a better place at death when the Bible says Christ’s second coming is the blessed hope.[16]

When the Thessalonians wanted to know about their loved ones who had fallen asleep in death, Paul told them not to “grieve as others do who have no hope”.[17] His instructions for them to teach each other were as follows:

“For the Lord himself will descend from heaven with a cry of command, with the voice of an archangel, and with the sound of the trumpet of God. And the dead in Christ will rise first. Then we who are alive, who are left, will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and so we will always be with the Lord. Therefore encourage one another with these words. ”[18]

That is all the encouragement we need. Our hope is not in some mythical place that believers supposedly go when they die. Our hope is Jesus. He will not forget us. Death is real, but so is he.


[1] Genesis 4:4 ESV.

[2] Genesis 4:10 ESV.

[3] Genesis 4:12 ESV.

[4] Genesis 25:8 ESV.

[5] Genesis 25:9-10 ESV.

[6] 1 Samuel 13:14.

[7] Acts 2:34 NLT.

[8] Psalm 110:1.

[9] John 11:23 ESV.

[10] John 11:11 ESV.

[11] John 20:17 ESV.

[12] Revelation 1:17-18 ESV.

[13] Ecclesiastes 9:5 ESV.

[14] Psalm 6:5 ESV.

[15] 1 Corinthians 15:26.

[16] Titus 2:13.

[17] 1 Thessalonians 4:13 ESV.

[18] 1 Thessalonians 4:16-18 ESV.

Waking a friend

waking

 

 

 

 

 

One of the simplest descriptions of death given in all of Scripture comes from Jesus as he explains his plans to go to Bethany to raise Lazarus.  He tells his disciples “Our friend Lazarus has fallen asleep, but I go to awaken him” (John 11:11). 

Sleep is the most widely used metaphor for death in the Bible.

Some Christians talk about death using language that the Bible never uses, and Jesus never endorsed. Here are some examples.

the travel metaphor

Some talk about death as if the dead person (or his soul or spirit) has travelled to a far-away place. It is very comforting to think that a loved one has “gone to a better place.”  But is it Christian?  The Bible says that the better place is coming to us.  When Jesus returns, he will set up his eternal kingdom on this earth, redeemed, restored, and glorified.  The Christian hope is not going some place. The Christ hope is a coming someone: Jesus himself.

joined the angels

Usually, the person has traveled to heaven, and has joined the angels.  The Bible says that when Jesus returns, his angels will accompany him to earth, where they will assist in gathering the righteous dead for the resurrection harvest. Paul calls this time “when the Lord Jesus is revealed from heaven with his mighty angels” (2 Thessalonians 1:7).  He does not mention humans making that return trip. 

Some people actually talk about the deceased as if they have actually become angels.  This is absurd.  Angels are actually sent by God to minister to us (Hebrews 1:14). God has greater things in store for us than simply becoming angels.

joined the heavenly choir/ playing a harp

Some people think that dying makes a person become musical.  That would be nice. I cannot carry a tune in a bucket, and I can hardly play the radio.  It would really be nice to think that I was going to join some great worship jam session in heaven when I died.

Alas, the Bible shoots down that proposition as well. David said “For no one mentions your name in the realm of death, In Sheol who gives you thanks?”  (Psalm 6:5 NET).  He was asking a rhetorical question that called for a negative answer. No one gives God thanks in the realm of death (Hebrew Sheol).  David’s plea was for God to keep him alive so that he could continue to send up songs of praise.  The psalm would make no sense if David anticipated going to join a heavenly orchestra when he died. 

Peter said of David “Men and brethren, let me freely speak unto you of the patriarch David, that he is both dead and buried, and his sepulchre is with us unto this day” (Acts 2:29 KJV). He knew where David was, and there was no music there.

The music will come when the Bridegroom returns for his wedding feast. But we do not have to wait to start sharing the music that is in our hearts. Believers are to be “addressing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody to the Lord with all your heart,  giving thanks always and for everything to God the Father in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.” (Ephesians 5:19-20). Death does not make us musical. Life does.

escape

Some view death as a release from the prison of the body to enjoy freedom forever.  Nothing captures this hope better than the famous epitaph of Solomon Pease:

Pease

“Under the sod and under the trees

Here Lies the body of Solomon Pease

The Pease are not here

There’s only the pod

The Pease shelled out and went to God.”1

 

Who would not want to believe that death brings release from the pain and sufferings of this life?  Yet, once again, the Bible places the terminus of rescue and escape not at death, but at the coming of Christ.  As tempting as it is to believe that death will bring rescue, the most that we can say biblically is that at death the suffering will end.  The rescue comes when the rescuer comes.  No one shells out of his body at death. 

Even Jesus – when he died on the cross – went to the grave and stayed there until his resurrection.  He told Mary “Do not cling to me, for I have not yet ascended to the Father” (John 20:17).  Death did not bring escape for him.  It was his resurrection which enabled him to escape from death.  His resurrection guarantees ours.  His return will be our means of escape. Jesus promised that when he comes the dead will be in their tombs and will hear his voice and be raised to life again (John 5:28-29).

gone to their reward

Some people think that death is the gateway to the reward that Jesus promised those who are faithful to him. 

Martha would disagree.  She stood next to the tomb of her brother, and refused to believe that he had been rewarded. She did not believe that he was anywhere but in that tomb.  Her theology was biblical. She told Jesus that she knew that her brother would rise again, and that it would happen on the last day (John 11:24). 

Martha’s eschatology (doctrine of the last things) was spot-on.  Her Christology needed a little help.  She had said to Jesus “even now I know that whatever you ask from God, God will give you” (John 11:22). 

Jesus told her, “I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live,  and everyone who lives and believes in me shall never die” (John 11:25-26).   Jesus was talking about that resurrection day that Martha had mentioned.  He said that on that day if any of his followers will have died, like Lazarus had, he will raise them back to life again.  Then (he said) on that day any of his followers who are still living will never die at all.  That is a great reward.  It is so much better than shelling out and leaving the pod!

Jesus does speak of believers being repaid for their acts of righteousness toward the poor.  He says that those who do acts of kindness toward those who cannot repay them will  be “repaid at the resurrection of the just”  (Luke 14:14).  That does not happen at death. It will happen when Jesus comes back to raise people from the dead. 

Empty-Tomb

Jesus came to the tomb of his friend that day to give us all a visual demonstration of the resurrection at the last day.  His friend had fallen asleep and he purposely waited until that happened. 

Jesus shouted his friend’s name. “Lazarus, come out.”  He didn’t say “come down” because his friend had not gone anywhere.  He had simply fallen asleep.  The shout from Jesus is all it took to wake him.

Someday, you and I will fall asleep. Do not fear. All it will take is a shout from our friend, Jesus, to wake us up again.


1Sandra L. Bertman, Facing Death (London: Taylor & Francis, 1991), 29.

the logic of conditionalism

jd at beach

 

Conditionalist theologians believe that the Bible presents a complete and verified doctrine of human nature.  We do not believe that God has left out pieces of the puzzle from the scripture that have to be supplied by pagan philosophy.  Augustine believed that God gave him insight into human nature through the writings of Plato, but we reject that.  We trust the Bible alone to explain who we are.

Thus we find it illogical to make faith-statements like this:

“I am eternal.

Not this flesh that your eyes can see

But the soul that lives inside of me;

Not this body that soon shall expire

But the sanctified soul that cannot die.

I am eternal.”1

 

Such statements sound spiritual and encouraging, until one dares to actually look into the Bible to find support for them.  It is there that one comes face to face with an astonishing absence of proof for such an eternal soul.

One would expect that if God had endowed all humanity with an eternal immaterial essence, it would have been prominent in the creation account in Genesis.  Here is what God says about our creation:

The LORD God formed the man from the soil of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being.2

Our identity does consist of two parts: this “flesh that your eyes can see”  and life from God.  There is no indication from the text that the life is the person.  The life animates the person.  If the life goes back to God, the person returns to the soil.  Death is not the separation of body and soul, but the separation of life from the person. 

The man (Adam) was formed not from some spiritual substance in heaven, but from the soil of the earth.  God animated that combination of soil-elements and the animated substance became “a living being” – literally, an alive soul.3 Before God animated him, he was already a soul, but was not yet alive.

The reason this is important to conditionalists is that we believe that life is not a right. It is a gift bestowed upon humanity by God’s grace, but conditional upon our proper use of the gift.  If we abuse the awesome gift of life, God is not compelled to keep us alive for eternity.  Life was a gift at creation, an opportunity to live forever, but that opportunity was soon lost.

That is why God warned Adam:

but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for in the day that you eat of it you shall surely die4

What God actually said was “dying, you shall die.”5  He gave a very accurate description of the human species — after the fall.  We have become a dying species, and each individual who is part of the species shall eventually die.

Again, God does not insert any notion that this death sentence refers only to a part of us.  He does not whisper to Adam “of course, this excludes your soul, because it cannot die.” 

Whose idea was it that human beings are incapable of death?  We first hear the words “You won’t die!” from that crafty serpent in the garden.6 Should we trust him to give us an accurate theology of human nature?  Surely he has a lot to gain by convincing us that death is not real.  But what do we gain by believing it? 

Conditionalists believe that death is a reality for everyone was in Adam when God warned Adam not to eat of the forbidden tree.  That includes Eve, since she was part of Adam at the time.  That includes you and me, since we were still part of Adam as well.  So, everyone, regardless of their spiritual condition will experience this death. 

SDC11945

 

Just look around at all the cemeteries scattered throughout the planet.  You will see that God’s threat was real.  Death is a reality for all of us.

The good news of the gospel is not that Satan was right and God was lying.  The good news is that God in his grace offers us hope beyond death: a resurrection of the whole person unto eternal life. 

Jesus said: “an hour is coming when all who are in the tombs will hear his voice and come out, those who have done good to the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil to the resurrection of judgment.7

This resurrection to eternal life is the true hope of the believer, not going to heaven as a disembodied spirit.  In fact, Jesus says that if he does not raise you from the dead, you will be lost!

Now this is the will of the one who sent me–that I should not lose one person of every one he has given me, but raise them all up at the last day.8

This would make no sense whatsoever if believers are already with Jesus in heaven for thousands of years before the resurrection.  It is only logical if believers are in their graves awaiting a resurrection when Christ returns.

This also explains why the apostle Paul argued strenuously for a physical resurrection to the Corinthians.  These Corinthians had been exposed to the pagan philosophical notion of the immortal soul.  In explaining the gospel, Paul had to convince them that this notion was wrong.  He had to show them that the resurrection is necessary.This is what Paul says to them:

For if the dead are not raised, not even Christ has been raised. And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and you are still in your sins. Then those also who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished. If in this life only we have hoped in Christ, we are of all people most to be pitied. But in fact Christ has been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep. For as by a man came death, by a man has come also the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be made alive. But each in his own order: Christ the firstfruits, then at his coming those who belong to Christ.9

Nowhere in Paul’s argument does he concede that death is not real.  He argues for the absolute necessity of a resurrection. In fact, he says that if there is no resurrection, believing in Christ is futile.  If there will be no resurrection, we are all still in our sins.  If there will be no resurrection, we are of all people most to be pitied.

Why? Because those who die have fallen asleep.  They are not alive somewhere up yonder or down there.  They are not alive anywhere. 

Jesus experienced that state of death – from Good Friday to Easter Sunday.  Paul says that Christ was the first to be awakened from that sleep.  The rest of us await his coming. It is then that we will be made alive again. Paul argues that until that takes place, our hope in Christ is only that. It is a hope.  If Christ does not return to raise us, that hope will be in vain.

200px-Plato_Silanion_Musei_Capitolini_MC1377Plato’s philosophy of the innate immortality of the soul had permeated the western world. Surely all the Greeks in Corinth would have been aware of it.  If Paul had agreed with Plato, this would have been a logical place to indicate it.  Instead, Paul argues against the popular notion of a continued conscious existence at death. He argues that unless and until the resurrection takes place, the Christian hope of eternal life will not be fulfilled. The popular Christian teaching today borrows Plato’s notion of continued conscious existence and reads it into the Bible.  The result is that the resurrection takes second place to “going to heaven when I die.”  The biblical hope is never death, but always resurrection.

Jesus knew that each one of his disciples would go to that dark place of death and experience that sleep for millennia before his return. His message to them was not “you will come to me when you die”  but “I will come again and take you to be with me.10 He comforted them by assuring them of their resurrection and reunion with him at his return.  Surely, if they were going to already be with him in heaven for thousands of years, that would have been the logical message to give them.  Why would he omit that if it were the truth?

The popular theology of conscious existence at death teaches that people go to their reward or experience their punishment immediately after death.  The Bible teaches that both reward and punishment will take place after Christ returns. 

“For the Son of Man is going to come with His angels in the glory of His Father, and then He will reward each according to what he has done.”11

God has appointed a day in which every believer will receive the blessings of his faith and every unbeliever will receive the consequences of his unbelief.  That day is not the day of our death but the day of Christ’s return.  By following the pagan teaching of immediate rewards and punishment at death, we are in effect rejecting what the Bible says.  We are choosing to believe what the world teaches instead of what God says in his word.  Conditionalists believe that it makes a difference. 

The logic of conditionalism says that God will not judge before the day in which he has set to judge: the judgment day.

For he has set a day for judging the world with justice by the man he has appointed, and he proved to everyone who this is by raising him from the dead.12

The parables Jesus taught his disciples that refer to his return indicate that his return is the time in which he will “settle accounts” with his followers and his enemies.

When the Son of Man comes in his glory…Then the King will say …take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world. 13

After a long time, the master of those slaves came and settled his accounts with them.”14

If Jesus had intended to settle accounts with us at death, why would he mislead his disciples by teaching something different?  Why would he allow these teachings to be placed in holy Scripture to further the misleading?  Conditionalists see the teaching that people go to their reward or punishment at death as a clear misrepresentation of what the Bible actually says about how and when God will bring about justice.

Jesus also taught the disciples to be hospitable toward the poor, who will not have the means to repay them for their hospitality.  He said that they would be repaid, not when they die and go to heaven, but “at the resurrection of the righteous.”15  Surely if believers go to their reward at death, then they would be repaid for their good deeds then.  But the Bible says otherwise. 

The consistent and systematic emphasis of the apostles also concurs that believers will be rewarded, not at death, but at the second coming:

let us encourage one another– and all the more as you see the Day approaching.16

Yet a little while, and the coming one will come and will not delay17

Be patient, therefore, brothers, until the coming of the Lord. See how the farmer waits for the precious fruit of the earth, being patient about it, until it receives the early and the late rains. You also, be patient. Establish your hearts, for the coming of the Lord is at hand.18

Look forward to the gracious salvation that will come to you when Jesus Christ is revealed to the world.19

“So now, little children, remain in Him, so that when He appears we may have boldness and not be ashamed before Him at His coming.20

“…that you keep the commandment without stain or reproach until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ.21

Each of these apostles taught that the hope of the believer was the return of Jesus Christ, accompanied by the resurrection of all in their graves, the reward of those in Christ, and the punishment of those not in Christ. 

If the doctrine of the immortality of the soul is correct, all of these apostles (James, Peter, John, Paul, and the author of Hebrews) were misinformed.  They placed their hope in the coming of Christ when they should have placed it in the death of the believer. 

But it gets worse.  Even Jesus was apparently just as mistaken.  He told believers “hold fast till I come” when he should have said “hold fast till you die.”22

SDC11135It is the Bible’s teaching about the second coming that is at stake when one surrenders to the innate immortality theory.  The Bible teaches that Christ’s return is the single most important event of all history.  The doctrine that people’s spirits remain alive at death and begin eternity then subverts this truth. That doctrine makes the second coming practically unnecessary.

The logic of conditionalism returns the second coming to the forefront of Christian doctrine.  It says that immortality is conditional. Only those who are given eternal life by Jesus when he returns will live for eternity.  All others will suffer their appropriate punishment for their sins, and die forever.

The logic of conditionalism returns Jesus Christ to the center of Christian theology.  Our hope is not in ourselves – in something intrinsic within our nature.  Our hope is in our Lord.  We await a Savior who will take away the death that we deserve and give us life by his grace.  Our hope is not that we will get what’s coming to us when we die but that he will bring an inheritance we do not deserve when he comes.  We wait on our Lord to fulfill his promise. We promise to hold fast ‘till he comes.


1Alfred T. Mitchell, “I Am” in Tome of the Universal Poet (Xlibris Corporation, 2010), 166.

2Genesis 2:7 (NET)

3Hebrew nephesh chayah

4Genesis 2:17 (ESV)

5a literal rendering of the Hebrew mot tamut

6Genesis 3:4 (NLT)

7John 5:28-29 (ESV)

8John 6:39 (NET)

91 Corinthians 15:16-23 (ESV)

10John 14:3 (NET)

11Matthew 16:27 (HCSB)

12Acts 17:31 (NLT)

13Matthew 25:31,34 (NIV)

14Matthew 25:19 (NET)

15Luke 14:14 (NIV)

16Hebrews 10:25 (NIV)

17Hebrews 10:35 (ESV)

18James 5:7-8 (ESV)

191 Peter 1:13 (NLT)

201 John 2:28 (HCSB)

211 Timothy 6:14 (NASB)

22Revelation 2:25 (KJV)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

the waiting station

 

ecc9_5a 

 

Solomon taught that “the living know that they will die, but the dead know nothing” (Eccl. 9:5).  For him, the intermediate state between death and resurrection was not a time to look forward to.  Like all other biblical authors, he looked forward to the resurrection unto eternal life.  He never denied the reality of death.  Indeed, he taught that all people now living know that their death is coming.  But after death, no one knows anything. 

He taught that the intermediate state is universal.  everyone will experience it, and all will experience it the same: a state of unconscious survival.  It is not non-existence. It merely is a state of existence where one is not conscious or aware of the passage of time and cannot know anything.

This was Solomon’s view, and he held that view with other Old Testament writers:

“Those who are wise must finally die, just like the foolish and senseless, leaving all their wealth behind” (Psalm 49:10 NLT).

Death happens to everyone, and no one can “take it with them.”  It is a universal event that all will experience.  Being wise will not keep you from experiencing death.  The wise will join the foolish in that one place.  The Hebrews called it Sheol

MAXX DC 4369 @ Papakura

It was the place of waiting on God.  Sooner or later, we will all meet at that station and await the resurrection train to take us to our next destination.  The station (Sheol) itself is not our destination.

“But he said, “My son shall not go down with you, for his brother is dead, and he is the only one left. If harm should happen to him on the journey that you are to make, you would bring down my gray hairs with sorrow to Sheol”” (Genesis 42:38 ESV).

Jacob did not want his sons bringing Benjamin down to Egypt.  He thought he had already lost Joseph to Sheol, and didn’t want to lose Benjamin as well.  Such a loss would only mean death for Jacob, and joining his sons in Sheol. 

But – wait a minute.  Isn’t Sheol just another word for hell?  No, it is not.  The Hebrews did not see Sheol as a place of punishment for anyone.  Sheol is the station where everyone waits in an unconscious state for resurrection to their final state: either eternal life or eternal death.  Jacob expected to one day go to Sheol.  He would never have expected to go to hell, and he would have never expected Joseph to go to hell.

“Oh that you would hide me in Sheol, that you would conceal me until your wrath be past, that you would appoint me a set time, and remember me!” (Job 14:13 ESV).

Job actually looked forward to death and the intermediate state (Sheol).  He wanted to forget the pain and unfair treatment he had experienced in life.  His hope was not that he would be rewarded at death, but that death would be hidden (in a state of unconsciousness) and the resurrected back to life at an appointed time when God remembered him.  That is the hope of the New Testament as well. 

“Do not marvel at this, for an hour is coming when all who are in the tombs will hear his voice and come out, those who have done good to the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil to the resurrection of judgment” (John 5:28-29 ESV).

We are all waiting for that hour.  For some of us, we will be alive when the train comes in.  Others are in their tombs, and waiting at the station. The Greeks called the station Hades.  And it corresponds to the Hebrew Sheol.  It is a state of unconsciousness where the dead wait for life.  It is not the final state.  Ears which have long since crumbled to dust will one day hear again. They will hear their master’s voice, calling them to their eternal destiny.

Even Jesus himself waited at the Hades station between his death on Good Friday and his resurrection to life again on Easter Sunday. 

“For David says concerning him, “‘ I saw the Lord always before me, for he is at my right hand that I may not be shaken; therefore my heart was glad, and my tongue rejoiced; my flesh also will dwell in hope. For you will not abandon my soul to Hades, or let your Holy One see corruption. You have made known to me the paths of life; you will make me full of gladness with your presence.’ “Brothers, I may say to you with confidence about the patriarch David that he both died and was buried, and his tomb is with us to this day. Being therefore a prophet, and knowing that God had sworn with an oath to him that he would set one of his descendants on his throne, he foresaw and spoke about the resurrection of the Christ, that he was not abandoned to Hades, nor did his flesh see corruption. This Jesus God raised up, and of that we all are witnesses” (Acts 2:25-32 ESV).

Peter preached that Jesus waited at the Hades station, but was not allowed to wait long.  After three days God raised him from his state of unconscious sleep and gave him life again.  Unlike everyone else who has gone there, Jesus was not abandoned to Hades, and his body never saw corruption.  His resurrection is our guarantee that we, too,  will one day be raised to life.

Paul put it this way:

“But in fact Christ has been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep. For as by a man came death, by a man has come also the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be made alive. But each in his own order: Christ the firstfruits, then at his coming those who belong to Christ” (1 Corinthians 15:20-23 ESV).

Paul knew very well when the resurrection would come.  It would take place “at his coming.”  He was using a harvest metaphor to explain what happens at death.  Death is a kind of planting of a person in Hades until the time of harvest comes.  For Christ, his time of harvest has come, for he was the Firstfruits.  For us, we await our time of harvest, which will happen at the second coming of Christ.  The point is, our reward does not come at death.  We are planted in the ground, and await the one who has the power to raise us up again.  Until that happens, we sleep.  Christ experienced this sleep as well.  He did not cease to exist, but he did cease to function, and was absolutely dead from Good Friday until Easter Sunday.

The intermediate state is not a time of purgatorial purging of sin, nor is it a time of reward or punishment.  Jesus told a story where he seemed to be saying that (Luke 16:19-31) but he was not teaching his disciples doctrine about the intermediate state. He was teaching the Pharisees about true riches (16:11).  He adapted a story from their own folklore and twisted the ending so that the Pharisees “who were lovers of money” ((16:14) could see that God cares more about people like Lazarus than he does about their money.  Jesus never intended this story to contradict all that the Bible teaches about the unconscious state of death.  To use this story in that way is to take it out of its original context intended purpose.1

The Bible teaches that the waiting station of Sheol/Hades is a time when the eyes see no light:

“Consider and answer me, O LORD my God; light up my eyes, lest I sleep the sleep of death” (Psalm 13:3 ESV).

There is no awareness of things that are happening.  There is no consciousness of either good or evil.  And that is how it really should be.  God’s people could not experience joy if they saw their loved ones suffering and falling into the devil’s traps. 

The Bible teaches that absolutely no worship takes place in Sheol/Hades:

“For in death there is no remembrance of you; in Sheol who will give you praise?” (Psalm 6:5 ESV).

If you want to worship God, you had better not wait until you die.  You will be invited to no angelic choruses.  That is all the more reason for you to raise your voice in praise to the God who promises you a resurrection unto eternal life – a chance to praise his name for eternity in a resurrected body with resurrected lungs that can shout, and resurrected hands that can clap, and resurrected feed that can dance! 

Death is a waiting station.  It is not a time of reward.  It is a time where we all pay the price for our ancestor’s rebellion, because the wages of their sin is death for all.  But the waiting station is not the end of the journey.  Thanks be to God who promises a resurrection unto eternal life at Jesus’ second coming.  See you there!


1For more information about the story of the Rich Man and Lazarus, see Edward Fudge, The Fire That Consumes (Cascade Books, 2011) chapter 14: Jesus: Fire (Parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus).