Which Eschatology is your favorite, and Why?
Interesting question…..since salvation has nothing to do with personal opinion or preference…beliefs are just that….what beliefs appeal to us, and the reasons why some hold to one set of beliefs whilst others sincerely hold to something completely different (whilst all claiming to believe the same Bible)…..really can’t compete for salvation. There is one truth and God provides enough information in his word to furnish one set of beliefs for all. (1 Cor 1:10)
So what went wrong?
What is the truth about what the Oxford English Dictionary defines as "the part of theology concerned with death, judgment, and the final destiny of the soul and of humankind".
If we take them one at a time…
DEATH: What is “death” biblically speaking?
Is death the opposite of life….or is death a continuation of life, somewhere else, in another form?
What does the Bible say? (Eccl 9:5, 6, 10; Psalm 146:4; Matt 10:28)
Was man created and thereafter “given” a
soul?…..or was man created and “became” a
soul when God gave him ”the breath of life”? (Gen 2:7) What was a “soul” in Jewish understanding and how did the first Christians understand the condition of the dead, if they were all Jewish? Solomon said that at death all conscious activity ceases….and no dead person is capable of displaying emotion…even their “love” has “perished” with them.
The Bible does not teach that we have an “immortal soul”, because when the body dies, and the breath of life ceases, so does that person….for now.
What did the ancient Israelites understand as regards what came to be called in Christendom…the “Afterlife”? There is no life after death because death is the very opposite of life. The Bible does not say that the dead continue to live in a spiritual state once the earthly organism ceases to function….Adam was not told about any “afterlife”…just the opposite….
Gen 3:17-19…
”And to Adam he said: “Because you listened to your wife’s voice and ate from the tree concerning which I gave you this command, ‘You must not eat from it,’ cursed is the ground on your account. In pain you will eat its produce all the days of your life. 18 It will grow thorns and thistles for you, and you must eat the vegetation of the field. 19 In the sweat of your face you will eat bread until you return to the ground, for out of it you were taken. For dust you are and to dust you will return.”
There is no mention of “heaven or hell”…just “life or death” which depended solely on obedience to God’s command.
Israel were given the same option at Mt Sinai…to obey and live…or to disobey and die…..and it was restated after their dispersion into foreign lands…..if they obeyed their God, he would return them to their land.
God said to them…
”I take the heavens and the earth as witnesses against you today that I have put life and death before you, the blessing and the curse; and you must choose life so that you may live, you and your descendants, 20 by loving Jehovah your God, by listening to his voice, and by sticking to him, for he is your life and by him you will endure a long time in the land that Jehovah swore to give to your forefathers, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.” (Deut 30:19-20)
For Jews, life after death was not immediate, but would involve a “resurrection”, which was a return or restoration of life, not a continuation of it somewhere else.
So having the Jewish view of the
soul and
death, rather than Christendom’s view, which was borrowed from the pagan Greeks, we have a whole different scenario concerning death and the next subject…
”judgment”….and “the final destiny of the “soul”.”
What gets judged? And what is the “soul“ that receives this judgment?
Jesus spoke about the resurrection and even demonstrated what they meant by restoring the dead to life.
The most famous account is that of Lazarus, and if we read the account, we see what state that Jesus said Lazarus was in.
John 11: 11-14…
”After he said these things, he added: “Lazʹa·rus our friend has fallen asleep, but I am traveling there to awaken him.” 12 The disciples then said to him: “Lord, if he is sleeping, he will get well.:13 Jesus, however, had spoken about his death. But they imagined he was speaking about taking rest in sleep. 14 Then Jesus said to them plainly: “Lazʹa·rus has died.”
Jesus likened death to “sleeping”, and the resurrection that he was going to perform, as an ”awakening”.
When was this resurrection of the dead to take place? In the future…..he said in John 5:28-29..
”Do not be amazed at this, for the hour is coming in which all those in the memorial tombs will hear his voice 29 and come out, those who did good things to a resurrection of life, and those who practiced vile things to a resurrection of judgment.”
So if the hour was “coming”, when Jesus walked the earth, what happened to all those who died before him?
No one went to heaven before Jesus. (John 3:13)
I like to look at the big picture….
Why are we here?
What life did God originally intend for us here on this carefully prepared planet?
Was death part of that life? If you read Genesis you will see why God put us here, and how long we were supposed to live on this earth. (Gen 3:22-24)
A rebel angel derailed God’s first purpose, and God proposed a way to buy back what Adam lost for all his children….he sent his son to pay a ransom for them that only a sinless human could.
Jesus said that he is “the way, the truth and the life”….”no one can come to the Father except through” him.
So we have to know who “the only true God” is and “the one he sent” if we want everlasting life. (John 17:3)
As for their “destiny”…?
Only “few” will be found on the road to life (Matt 7:13-14)…..so where does that leave the majority?