Introduction
One of the
telling questions is that God has put upon my heart is: ‘Would you want
heaven or would you want healing?’ This
explicit question says so much about a person’s walk with God, about their
desire to see Jesus, and their outlook on and beyond this world..
The choice is
mutually exclusive, it is a binary decision for it reveals our hearts desires. By
its very nature, there cannot be a ‘but’ (such as wanting to see children grow
up, finish my career, and so on), for it demonstrates that there is not a
whole-hearted yearning to be with the Lord in heaven. There are so many
instances of when people have put other things in front of being with God right
now, it might be almost a disappointment to them if He was to call them Home
right now (yes, even before finishing reading this blog article!). The hustle and bustle,
the busyness of life, even of church life, can restrict our vision.
Sadly, there is
not always the response when I have asked that question that Christians have wanted
to go to heaven in preference over healing. This article is written to address
some of the responses that have been made to me, and I hope that it is done in
a loving and truthful way, in a biblical way and, above all, how God would want
to turn all our hearts toward Him.
It should be
emphasised that, beyond our desire whether to go Home with Him or to tarry on
this earth, God is sovereign so we might want healing, but He may decree that
the number of our days is concluded; or we might want heaven, but God may want
us to finish the work He has set out for us to do.
Personal
Perspective
I thought it
would be useful to put this article into context, why this question has become
predominant in my life at this moment.
It will come as
no surprise to anyone that knows me that my greatest longing is for heaven. I
am aware that my attitude is like an impatient child on a journey: “Lord, am I
nearly there yet?” I cannot wait for the prequel to finish and get to God’s
great Opus. My answer would be ‘heaven’
any second of a minute, any minute in an hour, any hour within a day, any day
within a month, any month within a year, and any year that God gives to me.
It might be
understandable to those same people as my gorgeous and godly wife, Deborah, has
been called Home by God. It is true that that the question has taken on a new
momentum since Deborah has commenced her new adventures with Jesus, which she
was looking forward to.
However, my sentiment
even predates this both sad and happy event, an oxymoron known only to
Christians since we grieve her absence with us and yet celebrate her presence
with our Lord. As a couple, we have experienced the deaths of much-loved
relatives (such as my grandparents, Deborah’s Dad and her beloved Aunty Mary)
and friends almost beyond number. The saddest events for us were the deaths of
our three pre-born children: Henry, Hannah and Timothy, who were so dearly
longed for.
And yet the
history of my longing to be with Jesus in heaven is even before these events. At
our marriage service, Deborah walked down the aisle, accompanied by her Dad, to
the tune of ‘Thine Be the Glory.’ The Bible reading was from Psalm 139, a
touchstone passage for us, telling how God knows and cares for us from our
conception until He calls us to be with Him. Two of the songs on that day were
about standing before God in glory and singing His praise – not the usual
wedding material. We knew that we were setting out on an earthly journey
together that would only be ended when we entered into the presence of our
Saviour.
For me, the
desire to be with Jesus started before all of these events, when He came as
Lord and Saviour of my life; and, from that moment, I could never understand
why any Christian would not want to see Him face to face. I cannot wait to cast
my crown before Jesus.[i]
Indeed, a year
to the day after Christ brought me into His family, I was knocked down on a
pedestrian crossing by a car – so forcefully that one of my shoes was found in
a garden 200 yards away. The tibia and fibula in my right leg were broken, but
I had no fear of seeing Him who had saved me.
Shortly after
God had called Deborah Home, I was conversing with a friend at church and
commented (part joking, but more seriously) that I was ‘miffed’ that Deborah
had gotten to see Jesus face to face before I had. She reminded me that it was
not a competition. I know that, in His good plan, I will be with Him who is my
Lord and Saviour in His wonderful plan.
It is important
to state that it does not mean having a suicidal mentality, but continuing to
take the medicines prescribed by the doctor.
Healing
There would
have to be biblical linguistic gymnastics to deny that God heals (for that is
one of His names, cf. Exodus 15; 26) and, furthermore, that He still heals
today. For a start, the New Testament clearly shows that there is the gift of
healing available in the Church (1 Corinthians 12: 9, 28, 30). We cannot pick
and choose as to which gift is applicable today – the Bible does not give us
that option. If we say that the gift of healing ceased at the end of the New
Testament period, then we would have to state that evangelists, teachers,
administrators and so on are also not applicable to our generation – there has
to be consistency.
Once it is
accepted that healing is applicable to the Church in all generations, the
question has to be posed as to what reason healings take place, since they are
not random occurrences as our God has His reasonable purposes.
It cannot just
be that the healing miracles are there to glorify God, as it is only part of
the reasoning and not its total raison d’étre. It should be true that
everything that the Christian does, speaks and thinks should be for the Lord’s
glory. For as Paul writes to the church at Corinth: ‘So whether you eat or
drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God.’ (1 Corinthians 10:
31) It is a lazy thought process that allows this to be the only cause. It
applies equally to all aspects of our lives, such as the arts which is
illustrated by the composer Johann Sebastian Bach writing ‘Deo gloria’ at the
bottom of his manuscripts.
Reasons
Healings are
metaphorically sticking plasters, pointing to the permanent healing that will
happen in heaven (as seen in Revelation 22: 3 for example) where sickness will
be banished. It is the truth that all the people in the Bible who were brought
back to life or healed had the common experience: they either died again or got
sick again and died – for none of them are still around today. Likewise, in the
subsequent ages, people who were raised from the dead or were healed had the
same experience – they will be dead again or they will get sick again and die.
When we read of
Jesus’ healings, they occurred in order that people could have the opportunity
to hear the Good News[ii]. When Jesus sent out the
twelve disciples on their mission, He equipped them to cast out demons and to
heal (Matthew 10: 1, 8, cf. Mark 3: 15; 6: 13, Luke 10: 9). His work was
prophesied in Zechariah 11: 16. The ministry continued with the apostolic band
that Jesus sent out.[iii]
Interestingly, the Bible does not tell
of healings occurring again in the same place, although it could be argued from
silence but the Bible would have detailed any subsequent healings happening at
the same place where the Gospel had been preached. After all, it was not that
the healings were important as the Gospel is not transmitted by anything but
hearing (Romans 10: 14 – 15). It can be illustrated that the believers’ prayer
in Acts 5: 25 – 30) put the emphasis and priority on speaking out the message,
and healing was clearly secondary to the proclamation.[iv]
Occasionally,
healings take place so that a Christian can continue the work that God has
given to that person. An example of this in the Bible is the healing of Dorcas
(Acts 9: 39 – 42). Elsewhere, there is the clear indication that healing of any
Christian was to be accompanied by a visit from the elders, to anoint the sick
person with oil accompanied by prayer (James 5: 14 – 16).
There are many
references to heal’, ‘heals’ and ‘healing’ in the Bible all with different
connotations, just as we say that someone has ‘healed our broken heart’, we do
not literally mean that our hearts are broken nor do we mean that someone
physically patched us up.[v]
There are also
passages that refer to ‘natural’ healing, i.e. where there is no supernatural
intervention by God, (e.g. Exodus 21: 19,
Leviticus 13: 18 and 37, Leviticus 14: 3, Joshua 5: 8, Job 5: 18,
Ecclesiastes 3: 3), so these instances could be included in our definition of
healing.
One of the
verses that is often used is Isaiah 53: 5, where the prophet told of the
Suffering Servant: ‘But he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed
for our iniquities, the punishment that brought us peace was upon him, and by
his wounds we are healed.’ The verse is referred to in 1 Peter 2: 24. Isaiah
employed the word ‘healing’ in its holistic and total meaning not in the
limited and temporary way that we have now, where there is completeness and
fullness, that will be seen on the day when we come before our Lord (cf. Isaiah
30: 26).[vi]
It has to be
acknowledged that, when people are healed, there are occasions when the healed
person makes disastrous decisions subsequently. An example is King Hezekiah,
whose life summary can be found in 2 Chronicles 32: 24 – 26 (a fuller treatment
is in 2 Kings chapter 20 and Isaiah chapter 38). It is not that the healing is
important, but what the Christian does with the time that God has granted them.
The extra time has not been given to squander in profitless and/or selfish
activity, and will be one of those things for which we will be accountable
before God when we do see Him (cf. Matthew 25: 14 – 30).
The
limitations of healing
There is nothing
wrong in asking for a miracle, but it should mean that we do not take our eye
off the ultimate goal of wanting to be with our Lord where He dwells. Tim
Keller reminds us: ‘We modern people think of miracles as the suspension of the natural order,
but Jesus meant them to be the restoration of the natural order. The Bible
tells us that God did not originally make the world to have disease, hunger,
and death in it. Jesus has come to redeem where it is wrong and heal the world
where it is broken. Jesus’ miracles are not just proofs that he has power but
also wonderful foretastes of what he is going to do with that power. His
miracles are not just a challenge to our minds, but a promise to our worlds,
that the world we all want is on the way.’ [vii]
The reality is
that our bodies will wear out (as the ‘anti-aging’ products advertisements
remind us), however much we want them to be renewed on earth. Paul reminds the
church in Corinth: ‘For while we are in this tent, we groan and are burdened,
because we do not wish to be unclothed but to be clothed with our heavenly
dwelling, so that which is mortal may be swallowed up by life’ (2 Corinthians
5: 4).
The lack of
healing has nothing to do with the amount of faith that we may or may not have,
regardless of what has been said in the past, which has caused guilt for those
people who were not healed. It can be illustrated by Jesus in the garden of
Gethsemane, praying not once but twice for His destiny to be diverted. In
Mathew 26: 39, Jesus prayed, “My Father, if it is possible, may this cup be
taken away from me. Yet not as I will, but as you will.” Then several verses
later, He prayed a similar plea, “My Father, if it is not possible for this cup
to be taken away unless I drink it, may your will be done.” (v. 42)
Likewise, Paul
pleaded with God to take away a ‘thorn in the flesh’ (although we are not told
the nature of this physical ailment) on three occasions (2 Corinthians 12: 7 –
9). The response of the Lord was that “My grace is sufficient for you, for my
power is made perfect in weakness.’ (v. 9)
It cannot be
said that either Jesus or Paul lacked faith, what they have was trust – trust
that God had everything in control. It is that same putting our hand into His
hand which will determine our attitude to our illnesses, disorders and diseases
– knowing that God knows the best way to achieve His plan for His glory and our
benefit.
Indeed,
conversely, it takes faith to move from what we know and are comfortable with
to the eternal scene which will be amazingly new to us, where we will actually
be praising God in heaven with the multitudes rather than a church pew with a
few thousand at the most and considerably less than that number in the experience
of most of us. It really does take faith to move from hope, however certain, to
reality.
The wonderful
saint of the twentieth century, Corrie Ten Boom, has commented: ‘The wonderful
thing about praying is that you leave a world of not being able to do something,
and enter God’s realm where everything is possible. He specialises in the
impossible. Nothing is too great for His almighty power. Nothing is too small
for His love.’[viii]
It could be, and often is, the way that God’s possibility is achieved is by the
remarkable act of Him taking you into His presence forever.
Christians can
fall into secular thought by thinking that healing can delay or ‘cheat’ death.
It is interesting to observe, in our churches, the ‘hallelujahs’ of when a
procedure is successful and the doom and gloom of a Christian has gone to be
with Jesus (although there is sorrow that we will miss that person) – almost as
though death has won (contrary to what we sing and say) and that it is
preferable to be in this world. There can be a false sense of optimism and
positivity, borrowed from the mindset of the world, which can veil the
inevitable consequence of the disease or condition, and may even be damaging to
the person concerned who has failed to be prepared to meet Jesus. These thought
processes are addressed further in the article.
Being aware
of all circumstances
There is deep
truth in that, bearing the witness that we should pray for all outcomes as He
is sovereign. (Deuteronomy 32: 349). We may need to recognise that the person
has completed the work that God has planned for them to do, however many or few
are their days on earth.[ix]
In our very
limited understanding of God’s sovereignty, it is therefore right to pray for
all eventualities, without being duped by the false promises of medicine. It is
often the case, as has been admitted by palliative care and other medical
professionals, that death is often viewed as a failure of surgeons and
physicians, when life has a natural ending as determined by God. Medicine is
literally not the panacea for all ills, since disease and sickness is the
outcome of sin, which will only be removed when we are in the presence of God.
Despite all of
these provisos, there is still a disconcerting tendency for Christians to state
‘Praise the Lord’ (or more usually ‘PTL’) when things go in the direction that
they want, that is normally the delay in seeing Jesus in person. When the test
comes back and the cancer or other disorder is not there, when the operation
rectifies the body’s fault, then the messages comes out ‘PTL.’ It is so far
from the Biblical model where Job experienced the deaths of his children,
certainly not what he desired: ‘The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away; may
the name of the Lord be praised.’ (Job 1: 21) was his only response for his
offspring were never going to be resurrected from the dead but they had gone to
be with the One who had made them..
It is strange
that, although many Christians have (rightly) disavowed the health, wealth and
prosperity ‘gospel,’ there are echoes of this theology in our mentality as
people do not want to leave this earth, preferring to be in churches on Sunday
that are but shadows of the Church that is waiting for us.
In May 2000,
Pastor James Montgomery Boice stood up and preached for the last time at Tenth
Memorial Church in Philadelphia. He told the stunned congregation that he had liver
cancer and would soon be meeting his Lord at the age of 61 years. At the
conclusion of the sermon, the pastor commented: ‘Should you pray for a miracle?
Well, you’re free to do that, of course. My general impression is that the God
who is able to perform miracles – and certainly He can – is also able to keep
you from getting the problem in the first place…Above all, I would say pray for
the glory of God. If you think of God glorifying Himself in history and you
say, ‘Where in all of history has God most glorified himself?’ the answer is
that He did it at the cross of Jesus Christ, and it wasn’t by delivering Jesus
from the cross, though He could have…And yet that’s where God is most
glorified.’[x]
From a personal
perspective, Deborah and I knew that our earthly journey together was going to
be ending in the April when we received the diagnosis of my wonderful wife
having brain tumours, which were confirmed as glioblastomas the following month.
She did receive palliative radiotherapy, in order to slightly prolong her life,
but we were saddened by the fact that we were going to be parted, albeit briefly
(as Deborah reminded me that I would be leaving this world shortly after her),
but rejoiced in our Saviour who had already prepared a place for us (John 14: 2
– 3).
We had to
completely trust the One who loved and saved us; after all, if He is not Lord
of all, He is not Lord at all. It was in His strength and sustenance that we realised
the truth of these words:
No more we
doubt Thee, glorious Prince of Life!
Life is
naught without Thee; aid us in our strife.
Make us more
than conqu’rors, through Thy deathless love;
Bring us
safe through Jordan to Thy home above.[xi]
Heaven
Reluctance
to go to Heaven
Christians are
more concerned about the Second Coming of Christ, rather than them going to see
Him. It is as though they are kicking meeting their Saviour into the long grass
– the longer off it can be, the better. It could be that many Christians are
almost too scared about their own death especially if they ‘escape’ it through
operations or circumstances, so they try to think about the longer perspective
instead.
Till He
returns or calls us home[xii]
A study in the
United States, which presumably is typical of many Western countries, has shown
that people of religious faith (95 per cent of respondents in this category
were of Christian faith) were three times more likely to choose aggressive
treatment in end-of-life days, even though they knew that they were dying and
that the treatment they wanted was unlikely to lengthen their days on earth.
The survey maintained that ‘relying on religion to cope with religion to cope
with terminal cancer may contribute to receiving aggressive medical care near
death.’[xiii]
It is not the
action of people who realise the limitations of the medical profession and who
know that God uses death to bring His people to Himself. It is certainly opposite of the example of the
early Methodists who, in John Wesley’s words, died well. It seems as though the
appetite to be with God has diminished in this day and age.
In the last two
lines of the song ‘O Church arise and put your armour on’, there are the words
that we ‘hunger for the day/ When with Christ we stand in glory’ (my
italics).[xiv]
We should have that hunger, that thirst to meet with our Maker; but, sadly, it
is so lacking in all of us.
The last verse
of ‘Abide with me,’ a hymn that I think is one of the most evangelistic and willingly
included it in the funerals that I conducted, reads:
Hold thou
thy cross before my closing eyes.
Shine
through the gloom and point me to the skies.
Heaven’s
morning breaks and earth’s vain shadows flee;
In life, in
death, O Lord, abide with me.[xv]
A more modern
song uses these words:
I long to be
where the praise is never-ending,
Yearn to
dwell where the glory never fades,
Where
countless worshippers will share one song,
And cries of
‘worthy’ will honour the Lamb!
[xvi]
I wonder if Christians
sing these words with the Church equivalent of crossed fingers behind their
backs – knowing that that the sung sentiments are correct, but they do not want
to see the reality just yet, not wanting God to take them to Himself at the
moment. There is truth in the often-used quote by A W Tozer: ‘Christians don’t
tell lies – they just go to church and sing them.’ There might be a reticence
to sing with honesty about us standing before God on His throne (in such songs
as ’10,000 reasons (Bless the Lord)’)[xvii] There is a need to sing
and speak convinced that we really want to be there, otherwise we should be
silent when those words are in the lyrics.
Some of the
reticence surrounds the fact that the Bible tells us comparatively little about
Heaven. However, it has told us of the important issues such it is where God is
and that should be the best thing about the destination.[xviii] It is true that we do
not know, at present, everything about heaven, or even as much as we would
like, and indeed we can speculate. (Deborah said on occasions that I speculate
about issues and put it forward as fact!) It is like planning to go on holiday
to a wonderful place, when we would naturally read all the brochures that we
can get our hands on and locate all the websites that we put our destination
into our search engine, even seek out the photographs, videos and opinions of
those who have been there. Even after undertaking all these activities, no
person is ever deterred from wanting to be there. Likewise, there are the writings
of Daniel, Ezekiel and John, and the testimony of Jesus, that give us insights
about our ultimate destination. However, it is only when we reach our Home that
we will wonder and marvel at the place which God has prepared for us. We are clearly told that the glory will be
evidently revealed and we who love our Saviour will share in it (1 Peter 5: 1).
In the meantime, we can only hanker after seeing God when He is revealed fully
to us as we stand before Him.
In a poor
comparison, it is like having a friend in a different locality. You would have
spoken to each other, and you would have been sent photos and videos of their
home by your friend. When you go to visit your friend, you know that you will
have a good time because your friend is there, regardless of how great their
home is. Likewise, our Friend has sent us ‘snapshots’ of Home, but it will be
really great for us because we are going to be with our Friend – regardless
that the fact that Heaven will be sumptuous.
Moving on
When Deborah
and I facilitated Bereavement Awareness events on behalf of Care for the Family[xix] to assist churches, we
often asked the question as to when the attendees last heard a sermon on death
of people. Even on Good Friday and Easter Sunday, very few sermons mention our
deaths, although we celebrate the Lord who has overcome and vanquished death. (Our
Anglican friends are generally better in this respect as they remember those
people who have died in the previous twelve months on All Souls’ Day, 2
November.) It is incredible that death is one of the events that is common to
all people (the other being birth) is very often ignored within our churches.
This state of
affairs can be traced back to a lack of excitement generally in going to
heaven– as we should not merely intrigued or interested. Our attitude should be
a longing to be with God; however, there are Christians who are too firmly
encamped in this world and are reluctant to be on the move.
There is an old
song that reads: ‘This world is not my home, I’m just a-passing through.’
However, many Christians particularly in the Western world have, like Terah
(Genesis 11: 31 – 32), settled down and feel more at home here rather than
looking forward to being with Jesus in person.
When we read
the words of Romans 12: 1 – ‘Therefore, I urge you brothers, in view of God’s
mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God –
this is your spiritual worship’ – there is a tendency to restrict the meaning
to us living on this earth. However, it applies to all circumstances that we
find ourselves in, so we are not to hold back, even when He calls us Home. Our
departure from this world should be as pleasing to Him as the way we live,
indeed the early Methodists saw how a person died as an extension and a
reflection of how they had lived.
There has been
the increasing tightening of the Christian’s hand, particular in the affluent
West, around the materialism that surrounds us, and loosening our grip on the
certain hope of heaven. It is worth quoting Oliver Burkeman (a British author,
who has written about time management among other subjects) in a podcast: ‘You
could set out to say that everything that’s wrong with our feelings about time
is capitalism’s fault. You can set out to say that capitalism is a symptom of
deeper things, or technology is. There’s a big sort of industrialisation and
technology piece. There’s evolutionary psychology, always waiting in the wings
to step in and say “Ah, this is the explanation for everything.” I just sort of
end at the point of like, we are afraid of the fact that we die, and that we
are somewhat uniquely material beings with the deeply finite material beings
with the conscious capacity to envision, to understand that we’re going to die,
and to envision infinity and to envision the possibility of escape from our
finitude. And so, this creates a sort of insurmountable thing that we’re always
trying to surmount by, if not literally with the sort of transhumanist
experiments in Silicon Valley, then at another sort of conceptual level by
attaining control over our lives that would be tantamount to stepping outside
of the finite stream. And so, you can either do that by imagining that you’re
going to live forever, or you can do it by imagining that you’re going to get
it done by the end of next week. Right? They’re both different routes to not
being constrained by finitude. And I kind of think probably, fear of death is
where that stops. And I think there’s a more and more…I think the argument that
capitalism at its worst excesses is a symptom of the fear of death makes more
sense to me than that all of this comes from the economic level first.’[xx]
If we divert
our eyes away from the things that can entice us in this world, we will see
things as they really are. Randy Alcorn has stated the reality: ‘Death is
life’s great certainty. Death will come, whether or not you’re prepared. But
death is not an end – it’s a transition that will bring us face to face with
our Creator. The absolute certainty of our death gives the gospel it’s
urgency.’[xxi]
The passage in
2 Timothy 4: 7 – ‘I have fought the good fight’- is not about fighting any
disease albeit through possible healing, but about keeping close to God and
using the spiritual armour that He has provided (cf. Ephesians 6: 10 – 20). It
is about the conclusion of the turmoil of this earthly life and going to see
the One who has conquered sin and death.
There can also
be the temptation to allot an arbitrary age to when we want healing and we do
not. However, the Bible tells us that ‘All the days ordained for me were
written in your book before one of them came to be.’ (Psalm 139: 16 – this
psalm was our signature one) In case we
did not get the point, James tells us: ‘Why, you do not even know what we
happen tomorrow. What is your life? You are a mist that appears for a short
while and then vanishes. Instead, you ought to say, “If it is the Lord’s will,
we will live and do this or that”.’ (James 4: 14 – 15).
It is
illustrated by the character of Simeon who (in Luke 2: 28), after seeing the
baby Jesus, praised God by saying: ‘Sovereign Lord, as you have promised, you
now dismiss your servant in peace.’ In many depictions, he is seen as an aged
man, but the Bible does not tell us how old he was – he could have been in his
thirties or any age for all we know – however, the important thing is that his
work was completed and he was willing to be with God, regardless of how many
years he had been on earth.
In my blog
article, ‘Taken too soon,’ I have outlined the lives of people who lived a
limited number of years on this earth, including Jesus Christ, so we cannot be
guaranteed three score years and ten.
Otherworldliness
We are, through
Christ who loves us, more than conquerors in all things (Romans 8: 37), and
that includes the process of death. We are told continuously in the Bible ‘do
not be afraid’, which someone has calculated to be 365 times – one for each day
of the year. God has assured us: ‘Fear not, for I have redeemed you, I have
summoned you by name; you are mine. When you pass through the waters, I will be
with you; and when you pass through the rivers, they will not sweep over you.
When you walk through the fire, you will not be burned; the flames will not set
you ablaze.’ (Isaiah 43: 1b – 2)
Because we know
that, when we go through that fire, our attitudes will be refined in new purity
and our intensity to see Jesus will increase, as has been the testament of so
many saints. In the Beatitudes, Jesus told us that ‘Blessed are the pure in
heart, for they shall see God.’ (Matthew 5: 8). The commentary by C. S. Lewis
is: ‘It is safe to tell the pure in heart that they shall see God, for only the
pure in heart want to.’[xxii]
It is not about
abandoning the needs of the world, as can be illustrated by the words of
William Wilberforce (who was responsible for so many of society’s good): ‘Keep
me from being absorbed by, or too solicitous about, worldly things, remembering
that a Christian is to regard and feel himself a stranger and a pilgrim, and to
have his portion, his conversation, his treasure, his country in heaven’[xxiii]
Enthusiasm for
Heaven
There was a
definite enthusiasm as I can recall singing about going to see the Lord. A song of my childhood was: ‘I’ve got a home
in glory land (that outshines the sun).’ One of my favourite hymns then and
still is ‘I saw a new vision of Jesus,’ written by a pastor who was in hospital
after an asthma attack from which he was not expected to recover, and he
literally saw Jesus.[xxiv]
I was reminded
by friends in New Zealand that, when I was with them for a number of months in
the early 1990’s, there was the song ‘Soon and very soon, we‘re going to see
the King,’ which concluded ‘Hallelujah, Hallelujah, we’re going to see the
King.’
In the present
day, there are very few songs for children and adults that address our eternal
destiny. There are so many that address how we are to live in this world in
order to please God, which is good, but the other world gets scant attention
from our hymn and song writers.
In my wife’s school
(where she had responsibility for religious education and collective worship),
they sang ‘My Lighthouse’ written by the Rend Collective, which states ‘I will
trust the promise, You will carry me safe to shore.’ Incidentally, they also
enjoyed ‘The Lord’s my shepherd’ (the Stuart Townend arrangement, which was
Deborah’s favourite), which looks forward to being in the house of the Lord
forever. However, these are exceptions as we have written songs for children,
as for adults, in the modern era that has very little reference to being with
God after this life.
It is in
contrast with the certain hope and longing by members of the early Church to be
with Jesus in heaven. Paul wrote: ‘I consider that our present sufferings are
not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us’ (Romans 8: 18);
‘’For in this hope we were saved. But hope that is seen is no hope at all. Who
hope for what he already has? But if we hope for what we do not yet have, we
wait for it patiently’ (Romans 8: 24 – 25); ‘Therefore we do not lose heart.
Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by
day. For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory
that far outweighs them all. So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on
what is unseen. For what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal’
(2 Corinthians 4: 16 – 18); ‘we groan, longing to be clothed with our heavenly
dwelling’ (2 Corinthians 5: 2); and ‘we are always confident and know that as
long as we are at home in the body, we are away from the Lord. We live by
faith, not sight. We are confident, I say, and would prefer to be away from the
body and at home with the Lord’ (2 Corinthians 5: 6 – 9).
Paul was not
the only one as Peter described the Christian as ‘aliens and strangers in the
world’ (1 Peter 2: 11), which means that not only are we to hold loose to what
we have on earth but to strive and willingly hope for that residency with our
Lord and Saviour,
The delight was
expressed by the eminent Victorian preacher, C H Spurgeon: ‘Depend upon it,
your dying hour will be the best hour you have ever known! Your last moment
will be your richest hour, better than the day of your birth will be the day of
your death. It shall be the beginning of heaven, the rising of a sun that shall
go no more go down forever!’[xxv]
Spurgeon also
addressed the subject in another sermon: ‘What if we should soon be called to
the heavenly realm? Certainly, there would be nothing to deplore in such a
summons, but everything to rejoice in. Living or dying we are the Lord’s. If we
live, Jesus will be with us; if we die, we will be with Jesus.’[xxvi]
In the same
light, Alexander Maclaren stated: ‘We lose nothing worth keeping when we leave
behind the body, as a dress not fitted for home, where we are going.’[xxvii]
That desire to be with our lovely Lord Jesus is expressed in the words of Isak Dinesen: ‘God does not create a longing or a hope without having a fulfilling reality ready for them. But our longing is our pledge, and blessed are the homesick, for they shall come home.’[xxviii] It reflects the words of C S Lewis, who wrote: 'If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made fir another world. If none of my earthly pleasures satisfy it, that does not mean that the universe is a fraud. Probably earthly pleasures were never meant to satisfy it, but only to arouse it, to suggest the real thing. If that is so, i must take care, on the one hand, never to despise, or be unthankful for, these earthly blessings, and on the other, never to mistake them for something else of which they are only a kind of copy, or echo, or mirage. I must keep alive in myself the desire for my true country, which I will never find until after death; I must never let it get snowed under or turned aside; I must make it the main object in life to press on to that other country and help others do the same.' [xxix]
The Church that
we are experiencing now is but a dress rehearsal for the time when we see our
God in person. The book to the Hebrews was written to Jewish converts who
tempted to revert to their previous beliefs because they were facing
persecution and could be killed at any moment. The author urges the readers:
‘Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for he who promised is
faithful. And let us consider how we may spur one another on towards love and
good deeds. Let us not give up meeting together, as some are in the habit of
doing, but let us encourage one another – and all the more as you see the day
approaching’ (Hebrews 10: 23 – 25, the NIV has unhelpfully inserted a capital
‘D’ for ‘day’ as the original is in lowercase). The day was the one when these
persecuted Christians would go to meet their Saviour. It is an echo of Isaiah
2: 3 where, on the last days, ‘Many people will come and say, “Come, let us go
up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob. He will teach
us his ways, that we may walk in his paths”.’
Indeed, the
book of Hebrews does look back to the finished work of Jesus on the cross and
how He is greater than the angels and Moses; however, it is also a book that
projects forwards, Chapter 12, the hall of faith, tells of men and women who
were keen to press onward until they see God by sight and the fulfilment of His
promises.
In chapter 8,
the author refers to the New Covenant and its culmination in heaven where ‘No
longer will a man teach his neighbour, or a man his brother, saying, ‘Know the
Lord,’ because they will all know me, from the least of them to the greatest.’
(Hebrews 8: 11, quoting Jeremiah 31: 34). The time when we are gathered
together in our church buildings are a faint reflection of how we will all be
in heaven.
We should be
wanting to praise and glorify God in His presence. There is the reminder in a
Christmas carol as it exalts ‘Sing, all ye citizens of heav’n above’[xxx] – the company that we
should want to join where saints who have gone before us and are waiting for us.
A good example
was seen on the last night of Isaac Watts’ life on earth, on 24th
November 1748. The person who was attending the beloved pastor noted how he had
taught his friends how to live and, at that moment, he was teaching them how to
die. The people sitting close to Isaac Watts’ bed listened intently. ‘If no
more service for me to do,’ the pastor explained, ‘through grace I am ready…I
trust all my sins are pardoned through the blood of Christ…I have no fear of
dying.’ After uttering these words, the author of so many hymns went to meet
his Saviour.
In more recent
days, there was the message from the great pastor Tim Keller’s twitter account
by his son Michael: ‘Today, Dad is being discharged from the hospital to
receive hospice care at home. Over the past few days, he has asked us to pray
with him often. He expressed many times through prayer his desire to go home to
be with Jesus. His family is very sad because we…’ ‘all wanted more time, but
we know he has very little at this point. In prayer, he said two nights ago,
“I’m thankful for all the people who’ve prayed for me over the years. I’m
thankful for my family, that loves me. I’m thankful for the time God has given
me, but I’m ready…’ ‘…to see Jesus. I
can’t wait to see Jesus. Send me home.’[xxxi] Tim saw his Saviour
face to face on Friday 19 May 2023.
God does not
forsake us in the process of death; indeed, there is the great promise in the
Bible that God will never leave or forsake us (Hebrews 13: 5, cf. Deuteronomy
31: 6). The writer to the Hebrews then also quotes Psalm 118: 6 – 7, which
states triumphantly: ‘The Lord is with me; I will not be afraid. What can man
do to me? The Lord is with me; he is my helper. I will look in triumph on my
enemies.’[xxxii]
It is
reminiscent of Paul’s words that ‘neither death nor life’ among other things
‘will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our
Lord’ (Romans 8: 38 – 39). It is interesting that death is not split in two,
that is the process and the finality, because both are conquered by Jesus as
Paul reminds us that ‘Christ Jesus, who died – more than that, who was raised
to life – is at the right hand of God and is interceding for us.’ (Romans 8: 33
– 34). It is mind-blowing that we do not even have to fear the process of death because Jesus Christ has already gone
through it and was risen again, and is willing to walk through it with us.
Erwin Lutzer states: ‘Death is not the end of
the road; it is only a bend in the road. The road winds only through those
paths through which Christ has gone. This Travel Agent does not expect us to
discover the trail for ourselves. Often we say that Christ will meet us on the
other side. That is true, of course, but misleading. Let us never forget that
He walks with us on this side of the curtain and then guides us through the
opening. We will meet Him there, because we have met Him here.’[xxxiii]
When there is
temptation to cower in the face of death, Tim Keller wrote to challenge us: ‘If the most powerful person, the power behind the universe loves you with all his
heart, soul, strength, and mind, and you can see that on the cross, why are you
afraid?’[xxxiv]
Evangelism
If as
Christians, we want others to know Jesus and be with Him in heaven, which we
surely must do, we must confront our
mindsets in the first place.
If we fail to
tell of heaven and our enthusiasm to be with Jesus forever then our
Christianity will be just another belief system or another social theory. But
it is more than that, much more. It is often said that Christianity is not a
religion but a relationship with God – we need to emphasise that it is the
relationship that goes on forever. Failure to do so sucks the air of our
evangelism because, without showing the eternal destination and the fact that
death is the final barrier, there is nothing distinct about what we believe.
Randy Alcorn
tells of interviewing a young man from Burundi, who gave the profound
observation that: ‘If I fear death as unbelievers do, I have nothing to offer
unbelievers. Only when you are free from the fear of death are you really
free.’[xxxv]
One of the most
notable evangelists of the twentieth-century, Billy Graham, revealed his eager
expectation: ‘The most thrilling thing about heaven is that Jesus Christ will
be there. I will see Him face to face. Jesus Christ will meet us at the end of
life’s journey.’[xxxvi]
There is the
great good news that Jesus has come to release us from the fear of death.
‘Since the children have flesh and blood, he too shared in their humanity so
that by his death he might destroy him who holds the power of death – that is,
the devil – and free those who all their lives were held in slavery by their
fear of death.’ (Hebrews 2: 14 – 15)
There is
undoubtably power in telling how God has healed a person – it is an opportunity
to share the narrative of how majestic and wonderful God is in intervening in
people’s lives. However, it is not an experience that every person can identify
with, for every person knows that they will die and also have experienced loved
ones and others who have died. People want to know how Christians deal with the
common suffering found in bereavement. From personal experience, we have had
talked about how Jesus helped us when our pre-born children went to be with
Him; and, indeed, people have been interested in how the Lord was with Deborah
and myself during her last illness before she saw Him face to face.
If we do not
have joy in where we are going and the fact that we are going to see the Person
we love, we will lose the impact of telling others. We should be like the
character Christian in John Bunyan’s book Pilgrim’s Progress, striding
on toward our heavenly destination and wanting fellow travellers to accompany
us on the way, having knelt at the cross of Jesus and watched what He has done
for our sins have rolled away – that should be the exciting message of the
start and the end of our travels.
Pastoral
Implications
There is a lack
of preparations for death by Christians, which is common in the world in
general. There is a reticence to compose powers of attorney to allow others to
act in their best interest if the person lacks mental capacity in the areas of
health and wellbeing, finance and housing.
Although more
controversial, Christians have rarely thought about advance directives – what
treatment they would or would not want if the case that they were unable to
communicate their desires.
The number of
people who have not made a will, outlining what was to happen to their finances
and belongs, is comparatively few. It is important to ensure that your wishes
are observed and that important decisions are made such as the guardianship of
any children under majority age (in the United Kingdom, it is the age of 18
years). I was advised by a solicitor when I was at a young age to make a will,
even if I only had a tent! It is especially important as we never know when the
Lord will call us Home.
David Meyers, a
family physician and a health policy researcher in the Washington D.C. area,
was living with terminal brain tumour (glioblastoma). He wrote: ‘Often when
someone is diagnosed with advanced cancer, friends and family offer advice to
stay strong and be positive, insisting that the person will beat even the most
aggressive form of the disease. For me, these types of well-intentioned
comments are not comforting. Instead, they highlight our culture’s fear of
dying and its denial of death.
‘When I was
diagnosed, I knew that no amount of strength, positivity or even faith would
stop glioblastoma from killing me. The thought of leaving the people I loved
left me heartbroken, but I chose to confront my prognosis honestly and openly.
I thought deeply about what was most
meaningful to me so I could make conscious decisions about what to do with the
limited time I had. Rather than making a bucket list, I decided to carry on
working in a job I found deeply rewarding, to spend time with friends around
our backyard fire pit, and to enjoy many evenings with Hannah reading aloud to
each other while we knit together on the couch.’[xxxvii]
There is the
need for pastoral support for people with illnesses and those who love them. It
is important that people acknowledge that healing will not happen. It is
imperative to prepare for a life of long-term disability or the good and timely
saying of au revoir for the person who is dying. By holding onto a premise that
will not happen robs people of the opportunity to settle into a life that will
continue to be difficult, or to make peace with themselves, with others and/or
(more importantly) with God.
Our hearts
The Church
continues for we are reminded that ‘Once you were not a people but now you are
the people of God; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received
mercy.’ (1 Peter 2: 10) The incredible thing is that we will remain as God’s
people when we arrive in heaven. Indeed, God will announce Himself: ‘Now the
dwelling of God is with men, and he will live them. They will be His people,
and God Himself will be with them and be their God.’ (Revelation 21: 3)
Paul wrote: ‘We
are confident, I say, and would prefer to be away from the body and at home
with the Lord. (2 Corinthians 5; 8)
There have been
a number of requests for prayers from preachers and Christian leaders, or at
least on behalf of them, that those that are ill would be healed. It is a
rarity for such pleas to include a reason why this should be the case. There
appears that the person is more concerned about their ministry than meeting the
One who gave them that task.[xxxviii]
In the great
psalm of the Shepherd (Psalm 23), we are supposed to progress along the paths
of righteousness. God does not want us to remain in the green pastures being
satisfied with the provisions that He gives at that time, for the same paths
continue in and through the valley of the shadow of death, and on to the time
when we will dwell in the house of the Lord for eternity. Our destiny is not
for the pastures of this world but for the feast with our Saviour. Our
destination are not the green fields eating grass but the vast banquet of the
King, which means going through the hard times of death; however, the Lord is
with us in all of these situations. The sad reality is that we often want to
remain where we are comfortable and the surroundings are familiar, when we
should want to be with the Lamb who is also our Shepherd.
Nancy Guthrie
has written honestly: ‘There is no doubt that a shadow is a dark place to be.
But when the Lord is our shepherd, we no longer have to fear the dark places
that death takes us. In the shadows we reach out to find him beside us, and the
fear of the unknown fades. When he gently uses his rod of correction to prod us
in the right direction and his staff of compassion to draw us close, we find
comfort.
‘When we are in
the fold of God, death is impotent to destroy us. It is depleted of its evil
power. The valley where we encounter death is transformed into a place of
peaceful comfort; it is in this valley that we are more aware of God’s presence
than ever before.’[xxxix]
C. S. Lewis
wrote to a correspondent who was in hospital: ‘Can you not see death as a
friend and deliverer?’ Then later in the same paragraph he continued: ‘Has this
world been so kind to you that you should leave it with regret? There are
better things ahead than we leave behind.’[xl]
With
expectancy, Joseph H. Gilmore composed the words:
And when my
task on earth is done,
When by Thy
grace the vict’ry’s won,
E’en death’s
cold wave I will not flee,
Since God
through Jordan leadeth me.[xli]
There should be
great anticipation, not dread, in meeting our Saviour. Tim Keller has exhorted
us: ‘Grieve with hope; wake up and be at peace; laugh in the face of death; and
sing for joy at what’s coming. If you have Jesus Christ by the hand, and he’s
got you by the hand, you can sing.’[xlii]
We should have
the same eagerness as Paul had when he wrote: ‘I want to know Christ and the
power of his resurrection and the fellowship of sharing in his sufferings,
becoming like him in his death, and so, somehow, to attain the resurrection of
the dead. Not that I have already been made perfect, but I press on to take
hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me. Brothers, I do not consider
myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is
behind and straining towards what is ahead, I press on towards the goal to win
the prize for which God has called me heavenwards in Christ Jesus.’
(Philippians 3: 10 – 14) We can only truly know someone or rather Someone if we
see them face to face. It is great to have the letters, which the Bible is as
it is 66 love letters from God, but it is a pale reflection to having a close-up
relationship with our Saviour and Lord. We should be straining, using all our
sinews and all the energy we have, in looking forward to that moment in time
when we can gaze on His glorious face.
At this point,
it is important to stress that we must not have a suicidal tendency, and we
must not disregard medical advice. Although I long to see Jesus, I am still
going to take the medicines that my doctor has prescribed for me because God
has given wisdom to medical personnel. However, there should be a holy
dissatisfaction with this world.
It is in the
same vein as Hebrews chapter 11, the great hall of faith, whose examples were
always looking forward to something more than this world could possibly give.
The examples include Abraham looking for the fulfilment of the promise, Moses
seeking God’s permanent value, and Abel who looked to live with God forever.
The passage also speaks to us as people do receive their loved ones after
healing, but in verse 35, the writer tells us that we may not experience
healing, but we can certainly be assured of a better resurrection, guaranteed
by the Great Physician and we will be with Him.
This enthusiasm
(in the proper and literal sense of being in God) was expressed by Fanny
Crosby:
But purer,
and higher, and greater will be
Our wonder,
our rapture, when
Jesus we see.[my emphasis][xliii]
It appears that
we are so transfixed by this pale imitation, wanting to be healed because we
are comfortable, that the idea of being enraptured by the presence of Jesus
does not enter our mind, when it should be our greatest longing – being, at
last, with our Friend.
Our favourite
book in the ‘Chronicles of Narnia’ series was The Last Battle. The
concluding words of the book was read at the celebration of Deborah’s life:
‘And as He [that is Aslan, the figure to portray Christ] spoke He no longer
looked to them like a lion; but the things that began to happen after that were
so great and beautiful that I cannot write them. And for us this is the end of
all the stories, and we can most truly say that they all lived happily ever
after. But for them it was only the beginning of the real story. All their life
in this world and all their adventures in Narnia had only been the cover and
the title page: now at last they were beginning Chapter One of the Great Story
which no one on earth has read: which goes on forever: in which every chapter
is better than the one before.’[xliv]
The Church at
large is eager for Jesus Christ to come for the final time (Revelation 22: 20).
However, it is the also the heart’s desire for the individual Christian (1 Corinthians
16: 22) for the Lord to come and take them Home.
Conclusion
We should be
encouraging each other to look beyond this narrow slit called time:
Come on
heaven’s children,
The city is
in sight.
There will
be no sadness
On the other
side.[xlv]
Death is
something that never should have occurred, but it did because we are creatures
with sinful natures. However, for the Christian, it is the gateway into life
everlasting with our glorious Saviour.
Be excited, be
enthusiastic for the bigger and better Church that we will be part of when God
calls us to Himself – saved by the Saviour’s work on Calvary, clothed in His
righteousness and completely, permanently healed.
[i]
‘Love divine’ (hymn) written by Charles Wesley.
[ii]
Examples are: the general crowd (Matthew 4: 23 – 24; 8: 16; 9: 35; 12: 13 14:
14; 14: 46; 15: 30; 19: 2; 21: 14; Mark 1: 34; 3: 10; 6:5; 6: 56; Luke 4: 40;
5: 15; 6: 18 - 20; 7: 21, 9: 11[cf. 9: 2 and 6], 13: 32; Acts 10: 38), the man
with leprosy (Matthew 8: 3 – 4; Luke 5: 12 - 14), the official’s son (John 4:
46 – 53), the paralysed man (Luke 5: 17 – 25), the man at the pool of Bethsaida
(John 5: 1 – 15), the centurion’s servant (Matthew 8: 5–13; Luke 7: 1 - 10), Jairus’s
daughter (Luke 8: 50), Peter’s mother-in-law (Matthew 8: 14 – 15; Mark 1: 31),
the sick woman (Matthew 9: 20 – 22; Mark 5: 25 – 34; Luke 8: 42 - 48), the
blind and mute man (Matthew 9: 27 – 34), the man with the withered hand
(Matthew 12: 13; Mark 3: 5 – 5; Luke 6: 6:-11), the demonic man (Luke 8: 26 –
39) the blind and mute man (Matthew 12: 22), the daughter of the Canaanite
woman (Matthew 15: 21 – 28), the demonic boy (Matthew 17: 18, Mark 9: 25, Luke
9: 42), the cripped woman (Luke 13: 10 – 13), the man with dropsy (Luke 14: 1 -
4), the ten lepers (Luke 17: 11 – 19),the blind man (John 9: 9 – 16). blind Bartimaeus (Mark 10: 46 – 52, Luke 18:
42), the High Priest’s servant (Luke 22: 51)
[iii]
Examples are the crippled beggar (Acts 3: 1 – 16, cf. Acts 4: 8 - 22), the
crowds (Acts 5: 12 – 16), Acts 19: 12, Philip in Samaria (Acts 8: 7), Peter
healing the paralysed man in Lydda (Acts 9: 32 – 34), Paul in Lystra (Acts 14:
8 -10), Paul on Malta (Acts 28: 7 – 9)
[v]
The wide sweep of passages include those that are poetic (e.g. Psalm 6: 3, Psalm
30: 2, Psalm 103: 3, Psalm 107: 20,
Psalm 147: 3, Jeremiah 30: 7, Ezekiel
34: 4) and others look forward to the coming days in heaven (e.g. Isaiah 35: 6,
Ezekiel 47: 12, Malachi 4: 2), the restoration of the land (2 Kings 2: 21, 2
Chronicles 7: 14, Jeremiah 14: 19, Jeremiah 30: 12 – 13, Jeremiah 33: 6),
regarding unbelief (John 12: 40, cf. Isaiah 6: 10; Acts 28: 27), helping others (Hebrews 12; 13), or healing
after sin (e.g. Genesis 20; 17, Numbers 12: 1 – 15, 1 Samuel 6: 3, 2 Chronicles
30; 20, Psalm 41: 4, Isaiah 19: 22, Isaiah 30: 26, Isaiah 57: 18 and 19, Isaiah
58: 8, Jeremiah 8: 15 and 22, Jeremiah
17: 14, Jeremiah 46: 11, Jeremiah 51: 8 – 9. Lamentations 2: 13, Ezekiel 30;
21, Hosea 5: 13, Hosea 6: 1, Hosea 7: 1, Hosea 11: 3, Hosea 14: 4, Nahum 3:
19).
[vi]
Alec Motyer, The Prophecy of Isaiah (Inter Varsity Press, Leicester,
1993), p. 431
[vii]
Tim Keller, The Reason for God: Belief in an Age of Scepticism (Hodder
& Stoughton, London, 2009) pp. 95 - 96
[viii]
Corrie Ten Boom, I stand at the door and knock: Meditations by the Author of
the Hiding Place (Zondervan, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 2008) p. 95
[ix]
See my blog article ‘Taken too soon’ https://andrewd-followjesus.blogspot.com/2023/03/taken-too-soon.html
[x]
Quoted in Eternal Perspectives, Spring/Summer 2022, p. 5
[xi]
‘Thine be the glory’ (hymn), words by Edmond Budry translated by Richard Hoyle,
music by George Frederic Handel
[xii][xii]
‘In Christ Alone’ (song) composed by Stuart Townend and Keith Getty © 2001
Thankyou Music
[xiii]
Andrea C Phelps et al, ‘Religious Coping and Use of Intensive Life-Prolonging
Care Near Death in Patients With Advanced Cancer,’ Journal of the American
Medical Association 301, no 11 (2009), https://journalofethics.ama-assn.org/article/coping-religious-coping/2009-10,
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19293414/
[xiv]
‘O Church arise and put your armour on [O Church arise]’, Stuart Townsend and
Keith Getty © 2004 Thankyou Music
[xv]
‘Abide with me’ (hymn) written by Henry Francis Lyte. It was written at the
death of a fellow clergyman.
[xvi]
‘All my days (beautiful Saviour)’ (song) composed by Stuart Townend © 1998
Kingsway’s Thankyou Music
[xvii]
’10,000 Reasons (Bless the Lord)’ (song) composed by Matt Redman and Jonas
Myrin, © Capitol Christian Music Group
[xviii][xviii]
It is not the purpose of this article to discuss what heaven is like. For a fuller
treatment, see Randy Alcorn, Heaven (Tyndale House Publishers Inc.
Wheaton, Illinois)
[xix]
For more information, https://www.careforthefamily.org.uk/support-for-you/family-life/bereavement-support/bereavement-care-awareness-for-churches/
[xx]
Oliver Burkeman in conversation with Elizabeth Oldfield, The Sacred
podcast, 19 April 2023
[xxi]
Tweet (@randyalcorn), Saturday 29 April 2023, 4: 30 p.m.
[xxii]
C S Lewis, The Problem of Pain (Harper Collins, London, 2012) p. 149
[xxiii]
Robert Isaac Wilberforce and Samuel Wilberforce, The Life of William
Wilberforce, volume III (John Murray, London, 1838) p. 154
[xxiv]
https://andrewd-followjesus.blogspot.com/2023/03/i-saw-new-vision-of-jesus-hymn-by-w.html
[xxv]
The sermon ‘Christ with the Keys of Death and Hell,’ Revelation 1: 18, 3
October 1869, Metropolitan Tabernacle volume 15
[xxvi]
Charles H Spurgeon, The Promises of God: A New Edition of the Classic
Devotion Based on the English Standard Version (Crossway, Wheaton,
Illinois, 2019) June 22 – Proverbs 10: 27
[xxvii]
Alexander Maclaren, Pictures and Emblems (Forgotten Books, London, 2015)
p. 4, note 13
[xxviii]
Isak Dinesen, Anecdotes of Destiny and Ehrengard, https://gutenberg.ca/ebooks/blixenk-anecdotesofdestiny/blixenk-anecdotesofdestiny-00-h-dir/blixenk-anecdotesofdestiny-00-h.html
[xxix][xxix]
C S Lewis, Mere Christianity (Fontana Paperbacks, Glasgow, 1980) pp 118
- 119
[xxx]
‘O Come all ye faithful, joyful and triumphant’ attributed to John Francis Wade, translated by Frederick
Oakeley
[xxxi]
Tim Keller twitter account (@timkellernyc) Thursday 18 May 2023, 10:44 p.m.,
three separate tweets
[xxxii]
An excellent book is Rob Moll (afterword by Clarissa Moll), The Art of Dying
– Living fully into the life to come (Inter Varsity Press, Downers Grove,
Illinois, 2021)
[xxxiii]
Erwin Lutzer, One Minute After You Die (Moody Publishers, Chicago,
Illinois) pp. 78 - 79
[xxxiv]
Tim Keller twitter account (@timkellernyc) 15 May 2023, 12: 11 p.m.
[xxxv]
Quoted in Eternal Perspectives Spring/Summer 2017, p. 14
[xxxvi]
Billy Graham, Franklin Graham, Donna Lee Toney, Billy Graham in Quotes
(Thomas Nelson Inc, Nashville, TN, 2011) p. 52
[xxxvii]
David Meyers, ‘I Have Just Months To live. Instead Of Making A Bucket List,
Here’s What I’m Doing Before I Go,’ 23 December 2022, https://www.huffpost.com/entry/brain-cancer-glioblastoma-knitting-son_n_639892c3e40169d76dacc78
[xxxviii]
A notable exception was Nearing Home: Life, Faith, and Finishing Well
written by Billy Graham (Thomas Nelson, Nashville, TN, 2011)
[xxxix]
Nancy Guthrie, One Year Book of Hope (Tyndale House Publishers Inc,
Carol Stream, Illinois, 2005) p. 61
[xl] The
Collected Letters of C.S. Lewis, volume 3: Narnia, Cambridge, and Joy 1950 –
1963. Letter to Mary Willis Shelborne, 17 June 1963. She would live for
another 12 years, C. S. Lewis died less than five months later. (The quote has
often incorrectly two additional words to read ‘far, far better.)
[xli]
Hymn: ‘He leadeth me’ composed by Joseph H. Gilmore
[xlii]
Tim Keller, On Death (Penguin, 2020) p. 72
[xliii]
‘To God be the glory’ written by Fanny Crosby. Later versions have watered down
her original sentiment, so that one version has ‘our wonder, our worship’ which
is less impactful.
[xliv]
C S Lewis, The Last Battle (Harper Collins Publishers Ltd, London, 1980)
pp 171 - 172
[xlv] ‘Battle
Hymn (There’s a sound on the wind)’ written by Graham Kendrick © 1978 Thankyou
Music
Comments
Well done Andrew, very thought-provoking.
Andy