[Ed. Note: This article is excerpted from
interviews with Dr. Erwin Lutzer, pastor of Moody Church
in Chicago, IL. These interviews were conducted by Dr.
John Ankerberg as part of The John Ankerberg Show.
Edited for publication.]
What actually happens at the point of
transition from life, to death, to heaven?
One day, while my wife and I were
traveling, I felt some real heaviness on my chest. And
this fear came over me that I might be dying. I thought
I might be having a heart attack. Well, thankfully, it
wasn’t that, of course, but I began to wonder, "What
would it be like just at that moment of death?" And it’s
amazing that driving along like that, the thing that
came to my mind first is that I knew that if I died at
that moment, that I would see angels. Of course, those
angels would then take us into the presence of Christ.
That’s what Luke 16 teaches. It says that the rich man
died and was buried; and Lazarus, the poor man, died and
he was carried by angels into Abraham’s bosom. So I
don’t know about you, but I expect to see angels when I
die.
Sometime ago I read in Christianity
Today a marvelous story by Steve Saint, who is the
son of one of the missionary martyrs who died in the
jungles of Ecuador. He said that there are people living
today who say that when those killings were taking
place, when those five missionaries were being martyred,
they actually heard beings singing in the trees. And
today some of these people say that they did not know
what the singing was until years later when they heard
Christian records.
Well, we can’t always build our theology
on experiences, but an experience like that would be
perfectly consistent with the Scriptures because the
angels are watching us. They are sent "to minister to
those who shall be heirs of salvation." So one of the
things that we shall see, when we die, I believe, is
angels.
But, of course, we want to see the Lord
Jesus Christ because He is the One whom we love. Now,
remember, we are talking about those who know Jesus
Christ as Savior, you who have believed in Him.
But what actually happens at that point
of transition? What happens when you die and a moment
later? Oftentimes we talk about how different heaven is
going to be. What I’d like to do first is talk about the
things that remain the same when you die. As a pastor
I’ve often discovered that people forget that we are the
same people after we die as we are here.
Now, of course, we’re different in the
sense that we have a different way of living: we have a
new nature, we are not sinners anymore. But here’s what
I’d like to point out. Personal knowledge continues
in heaven. Remember the rich man that Jesus told
about in Luke 16? Here he is in Hades. He is
tormented. And what does he say? He says, "Send Lazarus
so that he might go and preach to my five brothers so
that they do not come to this same place of torment."
Notice that compassion and knowledge continued. He
remembered his brothers.
Remember the Mount of Transfiguration
where you have Peter, James and John. They are up on the
mountain and they meet Moses and Elijah. There is, of
course, sharing of information and so forth. I like to
think of the fact that when we get to heaven we won’t
need name tags. And I base that on the fact that I think
that Peter, James and John instantly knew Moses and
Elijah. But furthermore, the Bible says, "We shall know
even as we are fully known." So you die and you go to
heaven. Do you remember your family on earth? Of course
you remember your family on earth. Personal knowledge
continues.
Personal love continues.
I mentioned the rich man. He was concerned about his
brothers. When I speak to a widow, and she says, "Pastor
Lutzer, does my husband remember that he was married to
me?" Of course he remembers that he was married to you.
Does he remember your children? Of course he remembers
your children. He remembers where he was in his own
family tree and who he is. He’s the same person over
there as he is here. So, let’s keep that in mind.
You’ll remember there is that passage of
Scripture that talks about the fact that Jesus, in
responding to an issue that was brought to Him said that
in heaven we are "like angels who neither marry nor are
given in marriage." Some people have misinterpreted
that. They think it means that in heaven we are going to
be sexless; that just like angels are neither male nor
female, apparently, that in heaven we will not be male
or female. I strongly disagree. What Jesus was simply
saying is that there are no baby angels and there is no
marriage in heaven.
But in heaven your mother will still be
your mother. Your father will be known as your father.
These kinds of bits and pieces of information and
concern will be known—I can assure you of that.
People often ask me, "Well, our loved
ones in heaven, do they know what we’re doing here on
earth?" I would simply say this, that there’s no
evidence in the Scriptures that they can see us. My own
hunch is that they’ve got better things to do than to
watch us. They are in the presence of Jesus. They are
rejoicing.
But I would say that, if they wanted to
have an update, I really do believe that the Lord Jesus
Christ would give it to them. I can’t imagine that in
heaven they would desire information that Jesus Christ
would not grant them.
One day the seven-year-old daughter of an
associate pastor at the Moody Church said something very
interesting. Her grandfather died, and she said, "Daddy,
can we pray to Jesus to get a message to Grandpa?" Now,
my associate said that he was somewhat taken aback. He
had never been asked that question before. But as he
began to think about it, he thought, "You know, there’s
nothing in my theology that says that we can’t pray to
Jesus to get a message to Grandpa."
Now, you think of the wisdom of that
little girl. She knew that if anything, you pray to
Jesus to get a message to Grandpa. You don’t pray to
Grandpa to get a message to Jesus. All that I know is
that in heaven the needs and the desires of people will
be fulfilled. And if they want updates on what is
happening here on earth, I can assume that those will be
granted to them.
Let me tell you something else that
continues. Personal feelings continue. I need to
stress this because sometimes we think of heaven in such
metaphysical ways that we forget that we’re the same
people on the other side. For example, there is joy in
heaven. Even Asaph in the Old Testament said that there
is joy: "Thou dost guide me with thy counsel and
afterward receive me to glory." In the 16th
Psalm it says, "At thy right hand there are pleasures
forevermore."
Do people, after death, even have a sense
of justice? Oh, yes. The Book of Revelation talks about
those who are underneath the throne, and then it says
they had died and they were beneath the throne and they
kept saying, "Lord, how long will it be until you avenge
those who have put us to death?"
Let me say also that in heaven I think
that various activities continue. By that I mean,
scientists may continue to do their work. They may
continue to explore the vastness of the universe. Then,
of course, I can imagine also musicians doing their
work. Our leader of worship at the Moody Church
sometimes tells me that when we get to heaven, he’s
still going to have something to do, but as a preacher,
I’m going to be out of work.
I want you to know that I believe that in
heaven "the ideas of God," said Jonathan Edwards, "The
ideas of God will continue to eternity." I like to
think of it this way. We will begin knowing God, but our
knowledge of Him will be constantly increasing and we
will never exhaust the knowledge of the Lord our God.
What kind of body will we have in heaven?
What kind of a body do the saints who are
in heaven today have? We know that the great emphasis in
the New Testament is on the Resurrection. First
Corinthians 15 says, "We shall be raised." Paul
anticipates that and it is so important to our theology.
Well, if people in heaven today do not
yet have a body, how do they communicate? There are two
different views that have been given about this. First
of all, there are those who believe that we have an
intermediate body; that is, that God creates a body that
the saints in heaven can use until they get their
permanent resurrected one. Now, that’s a plausible
theory, but I have to wonder, "What happens to that body
at the day of resurrection? Is it just thrown away,
annihilated, discarded?"
There might be another explanation that I
want you to think about. Possibly, our souls, after we
die, take on the characteristics of a body. Now, that’s
more plausible than it seems. Listen to this text from
the Book of Revelation: "And when he broke the fifth
seal, I saw underneath the altar the souls of those who
have been slain because of the Word of God and because
of the testimony which they had maintained; and they
cried out with a loud voice, saying, ‘How long, O Lord,
holy and true, wilt thou refrain from judging and
avenging our blood on those who dwell upon the earth."
Now, that’s what the text says. The souls were beneath
the altar and look at what they were doing. They were
crying out loud. They were speaking. They were clothed
with white garments.
I can’t understand that mystery, but
maybe what God does is enable the souls of those who go
to heaven to have those characteristics which they need
to communicate. There needs to be communication with
words and what have you. There needs to be some visual
sight of these individuals so that they recognize one
another and are in the presence of Christ. And just
possibly, it is that the soul is able to do that.
But here’s the bottom line—let’s not miss
that which is most important—when you die as a
Christian, you are immediately in the presence of
Christ. You are immediately conscious. There is no break
of consciousness. And, as a result of that, you know
that all of the faculties that you had here on earth,
all of your abilities, carry over to the other side. Of
that we can be certain.
Dwight L. Moody, before he died, said,
"Soon you shall read in the newspapers that D. L. Moody
has died." He said, "Do not believe it, for in that
moment I shall be more alive than I have ever been."
I like what Chet Bitterman said.
Following the death of his son as a missionary martyr,
Chet said, "We have eight living children. Seven are on
earth and one is in heaven." It is really true that the
moment you die, you are more alive than you have ever
been.
What are the differences between our
bodies now and the new bodies that God will give to us
when we get to heaven?
I’d like to take a moment to discuss the
resurrection body, because that’s the body that we shall
have permanently. In 1 Corinthians 15, the Apostle Paul
makes four contrasts between this body and the one that
we shall have.
And by the way, before I get into those
contrasts, there are some people who think that God is
going to create these bodies ex nihilo, that is
to say, "Out of nothing." No! There is continuity
between the body that you have today and the one that
you will have. You see, when the disciples went to the
tomb of Christ on Easter morning, when they went there,
God didn’t just create a brand new body for the Lord
Jesus Christ and leave His physical body in the tomb.
No, there was continuity. And that’s why they were able
to recognize Him. And He could even say to Thomas,
"Reach hither thy finger and behold my hands, and reach
hither thy hand and thrust it into my side, and be not
faithless but believing."
Everything that we know about the
resurrection body of Jesus really applies to us. As I
think about this, not a one of us would like to die, but
it is exciting, isn’t it? Because the Scripture says
that eventually "we shall be like Him… For we
shall see Him as He is." What a fantastic hope God gives
to us in the Scriptures.
1. Sown a perishable body; raised
imperishable
Well, very quickly, let’s look at what
these contrasts are. First of all, it says, in
1 Corinthians 15, "We are sown a perishable body; we are
raised imperishable."
Why don’t you come with me—let’s do some
hospital visitation. We go through the hallways and in
this room, here’s a young mother, 24-years-old, two
small children. She’s dying of cancer.
We go across the hall and we visit a man
who has had a heart attack and the question is whether
he is going to make it or whether he is going to die.
We go down the hall and we discover that
someone else is dying from a very rare disease and the
doctors do not even know its cause.
And all the way down, we see the
deterioration of the body. And the Scripture says that
just a kernel is put into the ground–and there is
continuity between the kernel and the stalk, between the
acorn and the tree–in the very same way a person is
buried and then they are raised imperishable.
Imperishable.
2. Sown in dishonor, raised in glory
Paul also tells us that it is "sown in
dishonor." I know that the funeral industry today is
able to do some marvelous things with bodies, but the
fact of the matter is that every time a person dies,
there is that sense of hopelessness, of helplessness,
and death is not pretty. The Scripture says here, "It is
sown in dishonor, but it is raised in glory."
You take the most humble Christian you’ve
ever met—maybe even someone you don’t like very much and
they’re believers in Jesus Christ and they die. They are
raised, they will receive a body that is a blaze,
really, of glory—a body like that of Jesus Christ. A
body like that of Jesus Christ. What a wonderful thing
we have to look forward to.
3. Sown in weakness, raised in power
It is "sown in weakness." I don’t have to
say anything about that because we all know that, don’t
we? But it is "raised in power."
4. Sown a natural body, raised a
spiritual body
It is "sown a natural body," the
Scripture says, "it is raised a spiritual body."
I need to clarify something because you
have all of these ideas prevalent. Some people think
that when we die we’re going to be angels. No, that’s
not true. The angels have their separate existence. Some
people also think that we’re going to be spirits. No,
you’re not going to be a spirit. You’re going to be a
spiritual body but there’s as big difference. Remember,
after the Resurrection Jesus said to the disciples,
"Touch me. Handle me, and see. A spirit does not have
flesh and bones." So you can see that we are going to
have a body like that of Jesus Christ.
Now, mind you, it will be able to go
through doors. It will not be subject to the limitations
that we know in this life because our body is going to
be like that of Jesus Christ.
I like to point out at funerals that when
we say that this person is in heaven, we’re not saying
that just to make people feel better. Sometimes we
preachers are expected to say some wonderful things
about those who have died. No, my friend; we say it
because if they have believed in Jesus Christ, it is
true! It is true because Christ is the Savior of the
world. "He who believes in Me has everlasting life." And
that means you can go from this life to the next and
Christ carries you all the way through to the very
throne room of God.
Why are you convinced that heaven is
real?
There’s a story I love to tell, because
it talks to us about how real death is and how real
heaven is. In Iowa there was a little girl who was
dying. The pastor came to visit her one Saturday morning
and she looked up and she said, "I want to go to heaven
but they’re letting Mamie in ahead of me." Then a little
while later she said, "And now they’re letting Gramps go
in ahead of me." As time went on, the pastor had to
leave. He discovered a few hours later that the little
girl died. The pastor decided that he would check on who
these people were. Who was Mamie? Who was Gramps? He
discovered that Mamie was a little girl who used to live
in the neighborhood, but had moved to New York State.
Gramps was a friend of the family who had moved to the
Southwest. He tracked them down and would you believe
that both of them died that Saturday morning?
I want you to know that death is real but
heaven is very real. And that little girl actually saw
the entrance to heaven and saw those people go in. Now,
of course we don’t build our theology on this, we build
it upon the Scriptures. But an experience like that is
consistent with what the Bible teaches. It makes sense
that there are those who die who, during that period of
transition—especially in the days before tranquilizers
and sedatives were given to people, they died with their
faculties intact—they could already see the spirit
world. Jesus died that way, in fact. He refused what was
given to Him. That does not mean that we should not use
pain-killers and things like that. I’m just simply
saying that the experience of seeing the other side is a
very, very real one.
What does the Bible tell us about heaven?
One day a little girl was looking at
pictures of Jesus in a storybook. That night the little
girl dreamt about Jesus. The next morning she said to
her parents, "I dreamed about Jesus and He’s a hundred
times better than the pictures." Well, I think that the
time is going to come when you and I are going to agree
that He’s a hundred times better than anything that we
could possibly say about Him. And even eye is not able
to grasp and ear is not able to hear and tongue is not
able to speak all of the wonders that God has prepared
for those who love Him.
What we’d like to do is to help us to
understand heaven a little better by looking at what the
Bible calls "the New Jerusalem coming down from God out
of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband,"
the text says in Revelation 21. Just this past Saturday
I attended a wedding. Beautiful bride adorned. We all
know what goes into that dress, don’t we? We know how
much it costs, those of us who have had daughters who
have been married. But the whole emphasis is on the
bride and God makes them beautiful, even more beautiful
on the day of their wedding.
Now, what can we say about the New
Jerusalem? First of all, I want to say a word about its
size. Listen to the words of Scripture: "And the city is
laid out as a square, and its length is as great as the
width; and he measured the city with the rod 1500 miles
its length and width and height are equal."
Now, when you stop to think about it, you
realize that the New Jerusalem could either be a cube
1500 miles square, or it could also be a pyramid,
because it talks about its height and then its base
being 1500 miles. Let’s suppose that it is a cube. Do
you know that the New Jerusalem would have 396,000
stories, each one half the size of the United States?
Each story 20 feet high, if you take it literally, 1500
miles by 1500 miles—that’s lots of room. It’s enough for
the Redeemed of the Old Testament. It’s enough for the
Redeemed of the New Testament. And it’s enough for you.
And you know, I believe that there’s a
crown that only you can wear. There may be a
condominium—and I’m putting this into language that we
can understand—there may be a condominium with your name
on it. The Bible says that there’s a place reserved in
heaven for you. I like that. I’ve been to restaurants
where there is this long line. But, if you have a
reservation, you can walk past the line and immediately
be seated—because it’s reserved. And there is a place
reserved in heaven for you. Heaven has enough room for
you. It has enough room for the saints of all the ages.
You say, "Pastor Lutzer, what if I am
stuck on the thousandth floor or the ten thousandth
floor and all of the activity is in the downstairs
lounge? Well, I want you to know that’s no problem,
because remember this—we learned this previously—that
when we have our resurrected bodies, we will be like
Christ. Do you remember how effortlessly He traveled;
how He could be in Jerusalem and then be in Galilee, or
be in Galilee and then be in Jerusalem? Or how He went
through doors because He had a body whose molecular
structure was different and therefore was not limited by
matter? And you know that in heaven the thought is going
to be the movement. If you say, "I want to be where the
action is" and you want to travel in a certain direction
or to a certain place, you simply desire to do that, you
choose to do that, and so far as we know, the travel is
effortless and you will arrive there. So we have all of
that to look forward to in the heavenly Jerusalem. It is
indeed a place. You know, Jesus said, "I am going to
prepare a place for you," and this is the place that He
went to prepare. And He spoke and it was created.
What will we do in heaven?
Another question that people oftentimes
ask is, "What are we going to be doing in heaven? What
is our occupation going to be?"
Well, it’s not going to be like that
Sunday School child who thought that heaven was going to
be like sitting in a church service where you begin in
the hymnal with number one, you sing all the way
through, and when you’re finished, you start over again
and sing the same songs. Heaven is not going to be
boring.
God is going to have work for us to do.
For example, it says, first of
all, that we’re going to worship God. Revelation 5
places God right in the midst of the throne and then it
talks about the elders worshiping Him and it talks about
all of us joining together to worship Him. What a
wonderful experience that is going to be.
You know, I am interested in Church
History and maybe you are, too. You read it and what do
you find? Doctrinal heresies. You find moral failures.
You wonder how in the world the Church survived all
these centuries. Well, it wouldn’t have unless Jesus
Christ were behind it and building His Church. Won’t it
be wonderful to finally be all together, believe the
same thing, united with one mind? That is what you have
when the Church is finally in the presence of God, one
Church all worshiping together, all praising the same
Lord, united in one faith. I look forward to that. It’s
going to be a wonderful occasion.
But also, keep in mind that we are
going to serve Him. Heaven is going to be a place of
activity. In fact, the text says here, "And they shall
see His face; His name shall be on their foreheads and
there shall no longer be any night and they shall not
have need of the light of the lamp nor of the light of
the sun because the Lord God shall illumine them and
they shall reign forever and ever."
You say, "What is it that we’re going to
reign over?" The Bible says that we’re going to judge
angels. It means that we’re going to rule over the
angels. By the way, I think this is what makes the devil
so angry is to think that sinners like us who fell—just
as he fell—that we who were plunged into sin, God
redeemed, lifted up, and made heirs of God and joint
heirs with Jesus Christ. We shall be above the heavenly
hosts, a position which he once occupied. We’ll be above
that. And we shall rule over angels.
I tend to think, too, that the universe
is a big place with hundreds of trillions of stars. The
experts tell us more stars in the sky than there are
grains of sand on the seashores of the world. I don’t
know about you, but I can’t believe that God would
create all of these without each one of them giving Him
glory. Who knows? Maybe we are going to be ruling over
galaxies and have huge responsibilities in the universe.
Travel is going to be effortless. We’ll be able to
travel from one place to another even as Jesus did, as
we’ve emphasized, and therefore God is going to have
responsibilities for us and we shall serve Him. We shall
serve Him.
Of course, we have to combine all of
these wonders with the fact that we will have an
indestructible, eternal body, as we’ve already learned.
And no one will comment on our age. Nobody is going to
say, "You don’t look as young as you used to," because
we will be eternally young.
I love the poem that Dr. Henson wrote:
"The stars shall live for a million years and million
years and a day, but God and I shall live and love when
the stars have passed away." Wow. All of that awaits us.
But if you do not know Jesus Christ as
your Savior, what you must do is believe that when He
died on the cross He did all that ever will be necessary
to reconcile you to God. If you give up trusting
yourself and believe in Him, you’ll belong to Him
forever. "For as many as believed on Him, to them He
gave the power to be the sons of God, even to those who
believe on His name."
What does the Bible tell us will not be
in heaven?
We always talk about the glories of
heaven and what is going to be there. But we can also
take comfort in the things that won’t be in heaven. When
our children were small, they sang a little song that
talked about the "won’t be’s" of heaven. Things that
will not be there.
I have read Revelation 21 and 22 and I’ve
come up with at least ten things that will not be in
heaven. For example, it says, that the New Jerusalem
comes down from God out of heaven and it says, "And
there was no more sea." The sea in the Bible
usually refers to "the nations,"—the "sea that cannot
rest that casts up mire and dirt." Well, there will be
no more restlessness among the nations of the earth. The
wars are going to end. Those headlines as to what is
happening in some of the countries of Europe are finally
going to be over. Aren’t you glad? No bad headlines in
heaven.
Secondly, it says "there is no more
death." The hearse will have taken its last journey.
You look at all the funeral homes and you can see how
busy they are, day after day. I’m not to the point yet
where I read obituaries, but from time to time, you turn
to it in the newspaper and you see this long list of
people who died. When we do that, what we should really
do is see our own names, because the time is coming when
you and I shall be listed there. It’s going to be all
over and it’ll be all over a lot sooner than we realize.
In Chicago the other day, a friend died
very, very unexpectedly. Just, boom, and he’s gone.
That’s going to be our story. We’re gone. The Bible says
it’s like a vapor that is here today and gone tomorrow.
No more death.
No more sorrow.
I speak to you today because you are filled with sorrow
possibly, and if you are not filled with sorrow today,
you know someone who is.
And then it goes on to say that "there is
no more crying." Let me read the text here. It
says, "And he shall wipe away every tear from their eyes
and there shall no longer be any death, nor mourning,
nor crying, nor pain, for the first things have passed
away." The phrase that I wanted us to zero in on is, "He
shall wipe away every tear from their eyes."
Naturally, the question always is, "Why
are there tears in heaven?" Well, I think that there are
tears in heaven possibly because we regret the way in
which we lived. By the way, this is a good time to
emphasize that we are the same people in heaven as we
are here on earth. And the memories of earth we take
with us. I’m not necessarily saying the memories of our
sins but the memories of who we were, how we served the
Lord, the Judgment Seat of Jesus Christ which shall
already have happened at this point. We have all of this
that we bring to bear and we weep. We weep because of
the way we lived. Yes, we also might weep because of
people we know who will never show up for the celestial
celebration—relatives, friends, possibly a mother, a
father, and we know that they will be lost forever. We
weep.
There are some people who have actually
looked at this and they’ve said, "It is impossible to be
happy in heaven as long as you know that you have a
loved one in hell." They have even suggested that God
will blank out the memory of a son who is lost. I
disagree with that. I can’t imagine that God is going to
somehow take away our tears by giving us the "gift of
ignorance." God’s method of solving these problems is
not to limit the sphere of human knowledge; it is to
broaden it and to give us an explanation. And here is
how I generally answer that question. I say, "Look, if
God can be happy throughout all of eternity, we will be
happy throughout all of eternity, too." So I tend to
think that rather than God having a handkerchief and
coming and wiping away each individual tear—though, of
course, He could do that—I tend to think the tears are
wiped away because He gives us an explanation
for those who are lost and His purposes and we accept
the fact that we have failed and that is put behind
us—that’s one of the reasons for the tears—so that we
can get on with heaven without crying.
I don’t know about you, but I think I
speak for you when I say that when you look at the
newspapers today—children being abused; starvation. What
is it? Twenty thousand every day because of famine
throughout the world?—you think of the buckets and
buckets of tears cried every single minute on this
sinful, hurting world. I want you to know that for
believers in Christ, the tears are wiped away. Wiped
away by God.
Let me say also that there is no more
pain. Revelation 21:4 says, "There shall no longer
be any pain." Well, you come with me to a hospital and
you see the pain, you see the agony, you see those that
are going through these difficult, difficult
circumstances, whether the pain is physical or
emotional. We live in a very, very hurting world. There
is none of that in heaven. No more pain. It’s all gone.
Also, "there is no temple therein,"
it says, "And I saw no temple in it, for the Lord God
the Almighty and the Lamb are its temple; and the city
has no need of the sun nor of the moon to shine upon it,
for the glory of God has illumined it, and the lamp is
the Lamb."
Earlier in the Book of Revelation there
is a temple, and it has been suggested that as long as
the earth is in existence and the Great Tribulation is
taking place, there’s a temple in heaven. But once that
ends, in the new order of reality, there is no temple.
Why? Because we have the privilege, then, of worshiping
God directly. We don’t even need a temple that we enter.
Could I say that the whole universe is God’s temple at
that moment. All of heaven is God’s temple. And we have
the privilege of being able to see Him face to face and
to worship Him directly. So there is no temple therein.
Then we read, "There is no need of the
sun, nor of the moon, for God Himself shall illumine
it, and"—remember this—"the lamp is the Lamb."
Wow! Did you know that in heaven we will
not have to sleep, and it’s not because we will be
weary, either. We’re going to have bodies that are going
to be able to just keep going and going and going and we
will never, never be tired. And therefore there is no
need for night because we generally sleep during the
night.
"The lamp is the Lamb." You know, it does
make you want to say, "Lord, come quickly," doesn’t it,
as you think about the beauty and the glories of heaven.
And then, "no more abominations."
Notice, "And the nations shall walk by its light and the
kings of the earth shall bring their glory into it, and
in the daytime"—for there is no night there—"its gates
shall never be closed; and they shall bring the glory
and the honor of the nations into it and nothing
unclean...." We need to take this carefully because we
live in an age where we have taken the holiness of God
and we have brought God down to our own level and we’ve
gotten so used to sin that it doesn’t affect us anymore.
But listen to this: "Nothing unclean, no one who
practices abomination and lying...." Is there someone
reading this who practices lying? Sometime ago I read
that book, The Day America Told the Truth, and I
concluded that the only time you can believe an American
is when he tells you he’s lying. I’ve exaggerated it,
but about 90% of all Americans say they lie at least
every week if not every day? Notice, it says, "... they
shall not enter in but only those whose names are
written in the Lamb’s Book of Life."
How can we know if our name is written in
the Lamb’s Book of Life?
Let’s talk very frankly about this. You
say, "Pastor Lutzer, I’ve committed abominations and I
am one who practices lying." What you need to do is to
flee to Christ. What you need to do is to understand
that, of course, it’s possible to have that in your
background. We have all sinned. But what we need to do
is to recognize that Jesus Christ died for sinners and
when we put our faith in Christ, we can be assured that
our name is in the Lamb’s Book of Life.
Maybe it’s because I’m getting older than
I used to be, which is true of all of us, but I used to
like that song sung many years ago: "Is your name
written there?" The question is, "Is your name here?"
You can find out by believing in Jesus and participating
in the blessings that He brings and be very, very clear
on this, that no abominations will enter heaven. It’s a
pure place for a people that have been purified by God.
One day after dinner I received a phone
call from a friend of mine, a pastor, who is dying of
cancer and just had days to live. He said to me on the
telephone, "Goodbye, Erwin, I will see you in heaven." I
spoke to him very briefly then and put the receiver down
and spontaneously I began to cry. I normally don’t do
that but it was so touching to think that this is real.
These people and many others will be in heaven and we
will be there with them forever. And as we’ve learned,
no more tears, no more crying.
If you have never trusted Christ as your
Savior, if you are not sure whether or not heaven is
your final destination, there’s only one way to be sure,
and that is to trust the One who is already there
qualified to lead you all the way home.
There was a little girl who was asked
whether or not she was afraid to go through the cemetery
near her home. And she said, "No. The reason I am not
afraid to run through the cemetery is because my home is
on the other side."
All of us are going to be in a cemetery
someday. But through faith in Christ, we need not be
overwhelmed by it because our home is on the other side.