BibleProject - Heaven + Earth: Q + R
Episode Date: February 12, 2016We’ve gotten requests to take our Q+R Youtube sessions and put them on the podcast for people to enjoy listening to, without the hassle of watching a Youtube video :) This is a Q+R on our Heaven and... Earth video. Thank you to all our supporters! You are so meaningful to us! Q's and Timestamps: Why does the Bible Project video only talk about heaven and earth and not hell? (1:15) Could people have gotten injured in the Garden of Eden before the fall? (4:09) Uniqueness of Hebrew temples v other culture temples in the ancient world (8:15) Is there a disembodied state? What does Jesus mean when he says “you will be with me in paradise today” to the thief on the cross? (10:24) What is the relationship between the “thousand year reign” of Jesus and heaven? (14:30) At the end of the world, does Jesus come here? Or does he take us away and then bring heaven to earth. (17:50) In the Old Testament God seems to say “just be a good person, love your neighbor etc” but in the New Testament, it seems like God wants to “save you from hell.” Why the change? (21:06) What was the Old Testament Hebrew Kings’ knowledge of Heaven/Hell/Sheol. (30:25) Is or Isn’t there marriage in heaven? (34:45) Is love the meaning of the universe? What does the Lord’s Prayer mean “on earth as it is in heaven?” And what does it look like for Heaven and Earth to unite? (39:45) Links: Original video conversation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DH55c_GfPO0 Heaven and Earth video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zy2AQlK6C5k&t=1s Music Credits: Defender Instrumental by Rosasharn Music
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, this is Cooper at Bible Project.
I produce the podcast in Classroom.
We've been exploring a theme called the City,
and it's a pretty big theme.
So we decided to do two separate Q and R episodes about it.
We're currently taking questions for the second Q and R
and we'd love to hear from you.
Just record your question by July 21st
and send it to us at infoatbiboproject.com.
Let us know your name and where you're from,
try to keep your question to about 20 seconds
and please transcribe your question when you email it in, try to keep your question to about 20 seconds,
and please transcribe your question when you email it.
That's a huge help to our team.
We're excited to hear from you.
Here's the episode.
Hey, this is John at the Bible Project, and today on this podcast episode, we're going
to do something a little bit different.
About a year ago, Tim and I recorded a live question and response on YouTube.
We were answering your questions about heaven and earth, a video that we did, actually the
first video that we released on our YouTube channel.
Many of you have asked for that Q&R to be posted on our podcast so that you can just listen
to it instead of have to watch it on YouTube.
Some of the questions are, why do we talk about Heaven and Earth and not hell?
Could people have gotten injured in the garden before the fall?
What's the deal with Hebrew temples versus other temples in the ancient world,
and many other questions.
So we're gonna dig into all of that.
Thanks for joining us.
Here we go.
Here we go.
Today, we're gonna talk about your questions on Heaven.
There's a video that we did on Heaven and Earth.
Yep, I picked from among your questions you guys were sending in.
Sean Horton, you asked a good question that we've been asked many times.
So it's a good chance to address it.
Sean's question is about.
Says, my question is the video talks about heaven and earth,
but hell is never mentioned.
Was that intentional?
And if so, will hell be covered at some point?
Yeah. Great question, Sean. It was intentional that we didn't talk about hell because we felt like
we had enough ground to cover just in reframing the concept of heaven and earth just by itself that's a topic that's really important
and what hell is and how it fits into the story of the Bible is itself complex
and needs a lot of reframing from our modern distortions of it so we just
decided to separate those out. Here's but an interesting fact about that though. If you ask most modern people in the Bible,
when you think of a word pair, if I say heaven, you say,
and most people would say hell, heaven and hell,
what's interesting is you will never find anywhere in the Bible
heaven and hell in the same sentence.
And that's because in the Bible, hell is not the opposite pair of heaven.
Earth is the opposite pair of heaven. And that heaven and earth appears as a key
unified idea all over the Bible. And so if you type in heaven and hell into Bible
gateway with quotes around it, you won't find it. But if you type in quote
heaven and earth, yes, unquote, you'll find that all over.
You'll get a ton of hits in the Bible.
And that's because, and it's what we explored in the video, that the vision of reality in
the scriptures is not even of heaven and earth as separate spaces, but as overlapping spaces. And the main storyline of the Bible is about
heaven and earth's interaction with each other.
And that's just, that's not on most people's radar.
And this strange because it's actually what the story of the Bible is about.
So we left Hell out because once you have this reframed story of what the Bible is actually about,
Heaven and Earth, then Hell is fits as one piece in that larger story.
So we don't have a theme video on Hell planned, but we are going to tackle it in some ways.
Yeah, we're going to do a theme video on the theme of the Day of the Lord in the prophets, which will be about God's
justice in the prophets and in Israel's history leading up to the King of God coming on earth.
And then we are going to do a video on some kind of final judgment in some way. Jeff, pace, you had a really interesting question about, did Eden allow for the
possibility of painful injury prior to Adam and Eve eating the fruit,
wondering if this is any different than from how it will be in the new heavens
in the new earth? That's a really great question. The Eden story depicts the commission and the task of humans in the world and in the garden as work.
Gardening, like cultivating and gardening, which is really hard work.
It's like, it's the hardest work.
Yes, like farming. It's immensely, the hardest workers I've ever met in my life are farmers, and they have
the scars to prove it.
So, in that sense, that work requires resistance and you're overcoming conflict with something,
you know, whether it's dirt or weed.
So, yeah, work.
What in the Eden narrative, the curse in Genesis 3 after human sin is that the environment
in which humans now operate because of their sin and selfishness is going to be more difficult.
And so, and and that their relationship to creation itself will be one of adversity or hostility.
And that's depicted in this image of thorns and thistles.
And I don't think we should push that to me,
and therefore there were no weeds before the fall.
Just like there were probably mosquitoes
and other types of annoying pests.
You know, but it's that the environment is now probably mosquitoes and other types of annoying pests.
But it's that the environment is now complicated
and fraught with hostility because of sin.
And one of that will be even our relationship
to creation itself.
So I do think that has implications
for how we think about the new creation
that we're going to have meaningful work.
It's gonna be a work.
It's gonna be a redeemed heel,
the version of how we experience the world now.
But we had this conversation before about this perspective
of Eden being where there was no pain, right?
Like no mosquitoes.
Right.
I had a garden with no mosquitoes.
Yeah.
A place where you couldn't scratch yourself,
you wouldn't heal pain.
Is that inherently in the Genesis story?
Yeah, it's not just my conviction,
but it's my conviction that we have read
most of those ideas into the story.
There's no indication that you couldn't
like chop off your thumb with your sickle.
Or, you know, like there's just no indication.
What there is an indication of is that human beings,
because of their closeness and proximity to God's presence,
and with the tree of life symbolizes as God's gift of eternal life,
that that was possible and accessible,
but ultimately that it was lost.
So it wasn't the tree of, you'll never cut your finger off.
It was the tree of eternal life
because you're in God's presence.
So we don't really have any, I think we just have
to humble ourselves and say, we don't know.
The point of the story is to say that things were set up
to be as good as they possibly could have been,
but we ruined it.
That's the point of the goodness of the Garden.
And it's so hard, like I rack my brain to try to have categories for what that means.
And I keep, I want to know, like, well, you know, what does it mean that we won't die?
And what's that really going to be like?
And what will pain be then?
And how will we deal with all this?
But there's a certain amount of mystery to that.
Yeah, and the Bible's purpose isn't to answer all of our questions about this kind of thing.
It's to tell us about what God has done in the story through Israel and Jesus
to redeem heaven and earth and to bring them back together again,
which leaves all kinds of things unanswered, and that's we just
are going to have to deal with that one.
Ben Brown, you had a good question about how does the Israelite view of heaven and earth
compare to other ancient Near Eastern perspectives of God's space and human space?
So what we talked about in the video and what Ben's keying into is that in the
Israelite worldview, the place where heaven and earth, God's space and human space overlap
is in temples. And that idea is not unique to the Israelites. That was a shared idea among
the Canaanites, the Egyptians, and the Babylonians. So that is in common.
Like if you wanted to go to the divine space,
what God was, you go to a temple.
Yeah, that's where.
Sorry, go ahead.
Yeah, that's the overlap.
That's the overlap.
So what makes the Israelite and the biblical vision unique
is that the God whose presence, whose heaven you're entering
when you go into the temple, isn't
just a local tribal God, but the confession of the Old Testament is that the God of Israel
is also the creator of heaven and earth.
And so the idea that God's space and human space used to be completely united that that
was lost, that human beings have done something
really wrong to each other and to God's world and that God's on a mission to heal that
rift and bring heaven and earth back together.
Now we're getting uniquely Israelite.
That's a unique to the biblical story and worldview.
The Egyptians and most Babylonians had more of a pantheistic or pan-antheistic.
Let's wrap it whole. We don't have to go down. But they had a different view. The nature of time is totally different.
So the Israelite views unique in that God's on a mission to bring heaven and earth back together again.
That's all creation coming back together.
Yeah, all of creation being a unity of heaven
and earth that's a uniquely Israelite Jewish Christian Bible idea. Cool. Yeah. Good question Ben.
That was insightful. See Alan he asked a question about what he called the
intermediate period between death and final resurrection, is there any indication in scripture that alludes to heaven's absence of time
or adherence to time?
Yes.
So, one of the most common stories used to unpack this is like, what's happening to someone?
Let's just say a Christian after they die, but before the resurrection into the new creation.
Because Jesus, for example, as he's hanging on the cross and the criminal hanging next to Jesus,
says, remember me when you come in your kingdom. And Jesus says, today, you'll be with me in paradise.
It's one of only three clear passages in the Bible that even
talk about what happened in between right after death. So the question is,
does that today refer to some disembodied state? Or does that today refer to
resurrection into the new creation? In which case, what Alan, you're calling the intermediate state, is just however long
it is after you die.
And so Paul, in his letter, the first echelonians, uses the metaphor of sleep that believers
go to sleep when they die awaiting the resurrection and new creation.
So this is what it is.
And Paul also talks about it as being with God.
Right.
That's right.
Well, a sleep.
Yes.
And then in two places, his letter to the Philippians
and then in second Corinthians, he just describes it
as if a believer is not alive in their body anymore,
they are with Jesus.
With Jesus.
So with me in paradise, it's from Jesus.
With Jesus, Paul says that twice.
That's all the information we have
about what happens after we die.
So it's good to just say,
we don't know the answer to most of our questions
about what that's like.
The Bible just doesn't talk about it.
Yeah. So as far as our relationship to time, you know, time, I don't understand
quantum physics really at all. I've tried. I think a lot of, I think physicists are now
starting to wonder if time is real. Like literally, like they're actually
legitimately questioning whether time even exists. They don't have, they can't
prove it. Anyways, I don't understand it either. I don't have, they can't prove it.
Anyways, I don't understand it either. I don't know what it means to ask that question.
I mean, to the point where I can grasp the time is a dimension.
It's a time space. There's height with depth and then we experience the
three dimensions as we go through time.
And so time is a feature of living in a material world as far as I understand it.
And so to the degree that the whole storyline of the Bible is not about escaping the material world and going to a spiritual non-material world.
That's not the Bible or Christianity at all.
The hope is of resurrection into a new physical world.
And so unless there's some property of that physical world,
that makes it so that it doesn't experience time,
the Bible just doesn't talk about that at all.
But my hunch is that we would experience continuity through time the same way
we do now, because of our nature just as creatures.
That's how we experience reality.
We exist in time.
In the physical space in time. But yeah, the Bible just doesn't go there. This is going
to be a repeated theme. The rest of the live stream about heaven is that the Bible just doesn't answer most of our questions but it's
good. It's good to develop the skill of knowing what the Bible does speak to
and what the Bible doesn't speak to when it comes to these kinds of questions.
So Alan, thank you for that great question. This one was from Austin, Austin
House and this might be a hobby horse for some people
when they think about heaven and earth and this kind of thing, or maybe not, I don't know.
But it's the question about the thousand year reign of Jesus in relationship to actual
heaven.
What's the relationship between those two?
Good question, Austin.
So what you're asking about is, in the book of Revelation,
the way John impacts the storyline of how heaven and earth come together,
there's this idea that there's the final battle
and a conquering of evil in the world,
and that what Jesus does is set up a thousand-year
reign to so that the martyrs, this is in Revelation chapter 20, that the martyrs, people
have had their heads cut off as actually who he specifies, for Jesus have a chance to
reign over God's world and vindicated from their suffering. And John distinguishes that from then the final return
of Jesus and the merging of heaven and earth.
And what's interesting about that passage is that it's the only thing
like it in the New Testament.
Every other place in the New Testament that talks about the return
of Jesus or the New Creation, it just has Jesus' returns,
sets up his kingdom, defeats evil forever and ever, and then it or the new creation. It just has Jesus returns, sets up this kingdom,
defeats evil forever and ever, and then it's the new creation. So once again, I think we have to
we have to be humble and say what John's doing in Revelation 20, it's the only thing like it in
the whole Bible. So we should acknowledge there's probably going to be a diversity of views and there are. Some people think that that is a metaphorical way to talk about the vindicated suffering
believers who followed Jesus, who are reigning in God's kingdom, and it refers to the period
we're in now, but even though they might be killed or martyred, think of the martyred Egyptian Christians who had their heads cut off on
the Libyan coast last year.
Miss the live issue still today and it was 2000 years ago.
So some people think Revelation 20 is giving a special place of honor to the Christian
martyres in God's kingdom period right now and that even though they die, they are reigning,
just like Jesus, His death was His enthromance king.
There are some people who don't hold that view,
they think that the thousand-year reign is referring
to some kind of earthly kingdom that Jesus will set up here on earth,
home-based in Jerusalem, for a thousand years
is this intermediate kingdom and
then he'll bring the whole heaven and earth. If I'm if you're asking for my
opinion between those two my hunch my strong hunch I could be wrong but my
strong hunch is that the first view that it's a way of talking about the
kingdom period now where the martyrs receive a place of honor,
and that even though they've been killed,
actually they're reigning with Jesus himself.
So, I could be wrong about that,
but that gets into whole other set of questions.
Josh Huss, I'm looking at it on the live feed.
Josh, you ask. So, in it on the live feed. Josh, you ask, so in
regards to the end of the world, is Jesus, excuse me, is heaven coming here or does
Jesus take us then bring heaven to earth? That's a good, that's a good question.
There's differing views on that, as there are. Almost everything.
But in my humble opinion, and I could be wrong about this, but I don't think I am.
I think the New Testament gives a pretty clear vision that when Jesus returns,
He will bring His heavenly kingdom to earth, and that God's kingdom
will come and his will will be done here on earth, fully as it is in heaven.
There is one passage in the New Testament in Paul's first letter to the Thessalonians,
chapter 4, where Paul uses an image of Jesus arriving and then of believers coming up to meet Jesus in the air when he returns.
And that has been unfortunately misunderstood in the last hundred and fifty-two hundred years or so
to refer to believers getting like raptured or evacuated off of planet earth.
For some period of time and then God reigns, you know,
hell and brimstone down on Earth,
then what's called the tribulation,
and then Jesus comes back and sets up this kingdom.
And that used to be the view that I held
until I just started reading these passages
and realizing, like, the evidence for that view,
what I'm calling the rapture
view, is zero.
It's just zero evidence for it in the New Testament.
And this actually isn't that controversial anymore, but it was a really widely held belief
and still has, especially American Christianity.
So anyway, first Thessalonans 4 is the only place that
you could get that Jesus zaps a bunch of
people up and then brings them back
down again when he returns. But for a
number of reasons I think that is just a
fundamental misunderstanding of what
Paul's trying to say in first desoloneans
chapter 4. What he used, sorry, just
to clarify, what he means in first
desoloneans 4 is that he uses a word who pantecists the
meeting, the believers come to meet Jesus, and a much better
translation would be to greet Jesus or welcome Jesus.
It's great. Paul uses a word there to describe the arrival,
how Romans would describe the arrival of the emperor to their city is how
Jesus, is how Paul describes the arrival of Jesus in the kingdom.
And when he talks about believers meeting Jesus in the air, it's not so that they go away
with him, it's actually that they greet him and welcome him as heaven on earth reunite
here fully.
So anyway, first testimony is for is awesome,
but it doesn't have anything to do with the rapture.
Can I choose the next question?
Yes, you should, John.
Yeah, Rachel, Rachel Kovak, you sent me
the great question earlier today.
This is a little bit different.
Yeah, so she asks, and the Old Testament God says,
if you can just be a good person here on earth,
all as well.
So the Old Testament basically, it's really focused
on what you're doing here on earth now, justice,
take care of the poor, that kind of stuff.
In the New Testament, God wants to save your soul, quote,
save your soul from hell, unquote.
So the question is why the change?
Is there a difference between the perspective and the Old Testament, which doesn't really
talk about the afterlife very much, if at all?
And then, so let's talk about that.
And then the New Testament, all of a sudden, it seems like it's a lot more about this idea
of salvation being this,
just getting to heaven one day when you die, saving your soul from the possibility of eternal
torment in hell.
Yep, yeah, Rachel, really good question.
And by the way, you're awesome. So the first part is I would actually,
when it comes to the New Testament,
in the New Testament God wants to save your soul from hell,
I would say that that's a real misunderstanding
of what the New Testament is actually trying to say. I would say if you
read the New Testament you would only get that idea God wants to save you from hell. If somebody
told you that that's what the New Testament is supposed to be about and then you go read it.
But that idea of summarizing the New Testament with God wants to save us from hell, you wouldn't
get that idea just reading the New Testament by yourself for the first time.
I would read about hell.
Can you read about God willing to save you?
A salvation.
Oh yeah, salvation.
Oh yeah, totally. Salvation.
Loads of salvation in the New Testament.
Salvation from hell is I'm trying to think I can only think of one text off the top of my head
that could be understood to talk about being saved from hell.
And part of it is just,
there's a storyline assumed there.
Mainly, the story of the Bible is about individuals
going throughout life.
And then at the moment of their death,
there's a moment of final judgment,
and you either go to the good place
or the bad place after you die.
And that way of thinking about the Bible
just isn't true to what the story of the Bible
is actually trying to say.
It's so full of half-truths and simplifications.
It's just we need to scrap it and start off with some sort of...
So it's taking a different, more modern paradigm and then placing that back over the story of the Bible and finding it in there.
Yeah.
But if you approach the Bible for what it's actually saying, it's not necessarily there.
Yeah, or it's just the idea of what salvation is and the idea of what hell is has a totally
different kind of meaning when you actually see it in the framework of the biblical story
line.
It's not that it isn't real, it just has a different meaning.
And ultimately I think what modern Christianity has done is piecemeal bits and words and images
out of the Bible and made up a new narrative.
That's kind of Bible-ish, but that isn't actually true to the biblical.
Now that's all kind of theoretical.
Yeah, so here's how I...
But can I say really quick about that?
A lot of people get nervous when you say that,
because if you are dismissing hell,
it sounds a little dismissive of hell.
And there's this fear that
what is true is that there's going to be an accounting for what you do
That God's going to come and judge the world. There's going to be justice on the world and
And so I guess there's a fear of if you're dismissing the idea of hell
Then people aren't going to have motivation to do the right thing.
So you're taking the teeth out of this message.
Yeah, and I agree with that. That's why I would never dismiss the idea of hell or final
judgment. What I'm saying is that the common popular understandings of what hell is
are so distorted and actually not true to what the Bible's
trying to tell us that we need to rebuild
from the ground up again.
Apparently, we need to do a theme video on Final Judgment.
Yeah.
But you can't start there.
Where you start is with the story of heaven and earth.
And so in the Old Testament, the Old Testament story
begins with heaven and earth united.
And then humanity through rebellion
and giving God the F-Bomb, which I'm still quite proud of
that moment.
I don't have a video though.
We've gotten a lot of flack.
A lot of flack for that one.
But I mean, it was very inappropriate, which is why we tried to censor out Adam's middle finger, but that's the best we could do.
Anyhow, so that's how the story begins. And so the Old Testament storyline is then about God selecting one family out of the nations and what he wants to do is at least restore heaven and earth as closely as possible in and through this one family. And so Israel is that family.
And so Israel was called to be a nation of generosity and justice and within
themselves as a little picture of heaven and earth more united than it is
anywhere else. And so Rachel, to your question, that's why
to be a good person here on earth, there's a focus so much of the laws,
but it's not just about being a good person here on earth,
that's what humans are for.
We're made for justice and honesty and integrity and healthy relationships.
That's what we're for.
And so that, but Israel, it turns out,
has a rift between heaven and earth in themselves,
just as much as anywhere else.
And so the story of the New Testament
is the story of Jesus coming as the one person
in whom heaven and earth completely overlap.
And he comes through his kingdom to begin,
to do something for humans that they couldn't
do for the animals, through his life and death and resurrection, and then to begin through
his kingdom movement and the coming of his spirit to begin a people movement in whom heaven
and earth is overlapping more and more inside themselves, and also in our communities pointing
forward to the
complete reunion of heaven and earth. And I love the part of the video where we
show that the the Lord's Prayer is our Father, the Father, heaven, may your kingdom
come on earth as it is in heaven. So may your rain happen here on earth as it is as you reign in heaven.
Yeah.
So I'd refrain the question to say the Old Testament is about God's kingdom and
heavenly presence invading more and more of earth, culminating in Jesus and the
New Testament, where heaven and earth lock together forever in the person of Jesus.
And then through Jesus and his kingdom movement,
more of heaven is invading earth,
and that will culminate in his return.
And so what God is saving people from,
is themselves, is from evil and the grip
that evil and selfishness has on all of us,
from dark spiritual powers of evil, that work on
humans in really mysterious and odd ways, and the way that the story ends, and we
didn't, again this gets to the question earlier about where does health fit
within the story. Health that's within the heaven and her story as a place,
where God allows people to exist in their rebellion
and in their resistance if they don't want to humble themselves before Jesus and be a part
of His kingdom. But hell and that word and what that refers to is its own rabbit hole and
worth exploring in its own right, but it's not some place
other than heaven and earth.
It's a place where people are sustained by God's mercy and care, but God allows them the
dignity of not being in a relationship with Him as if they don't want.
And that's why it's really important that our language about hell is actually true to
the Bible's descriptions of it.
And there's lots of different images for that.
Paul the Apostles' most profound one, I think, in this letter that first Sessalonians is
that it's about exclusion from the present.
It's about people who don't want to be a part of the reunited heaven and earth, and
God honors that decision.
So a lot more to be said there, but Rachel, it's a good question.
I think it really involves reframing our vision of what the story of the Bible is actually
about.
I don't know how to say your name, Sagota Berry.
Sagota Berry.
Anyway, you have a great question.
It says, what was the knowledge of the people in the time of the Book of Kings?
Hezekiah, when he learned that he had to die, he wept bitterly.
And in Isaiah chapter 38 says, Shiaol does not thank you or praise you.
Did Hezekiah not know about heaven? That's a great question.
That's a great question.
There's a couple of things going on there.
I would say in one sense, if by heaven we mean a place of disembodied non-material existence
where people float on clouds and worship God forever and ever,
then I would say, yeah, Hezekiah does
not have that as any part of his imagination.
Or nor did any of the prophets in the Old Testament.
Right, yeah.
So and part of that is due to even the concept itself of resurrection and of some kind of continued physical existence after death.
That is an idea that emerges through the storyline of the Old Testament,
and actually doesn't come to be talked about explicitly until pretty late in the Old Testament period.
So you have Psalms, for example, that come from early in Israel's history where the poet
will, he's praising, he's thanking God for rescuing him from some disaster.
And then he says, you know, God is so faithful, God is so faithful.
He's certain, even death can't keep you from your loving commitment to our people and to us and so on.
And so you have these poems like Psalm 73 is a beautiful expression where he says,
there's no way that death can be stronger than God's loving commitment to me in this world.
So right there you haven't the seedbed of the idea that,
and it's not speculation about life after death that's staying God's character.
He made this world good,
and that death at a real level is a violation
of the beauty and the goodness.
In some ways, it's woven into the natural process of the world,
but in other ways, it seems like a violation.
And so the idea of resurrection and life after death
is born out of a conviction about God's goodness
and his character and his commitment to this world.
And so that's why Hezekiah is so bummed
because the predominant view in the Old Testament
is that once you die, you go to the grave,
sometimes translate as sh-o-l.
And the whole, the uniform conviction in the Old Testament
is, yeah, and the grave nobody's worshiping God, because they're dead. They're dead.
And so there, but there emerges this hope of, is it possible that the grave is less powerful
than God's love for his world? And the Psalms and then the prophets
land on the side of saying, yes, God's love is more powerful.
So Ezekiel has a vision that God is going to recreate
his people someday in a profound way.
And then the book of Daniel is where it comes together
of a resurrection, a recreation of humanity's physical existence.
And then that is what is assumed, that idea is assumed
all over the New Testament.
So that's a long answer to what it's an important one
to say, the idea of even resurrection and new creation
is one that emerged through time in the Old Testament
story.
Isn't that interesting?
That actually really bothered me for a long time
when I first learned that, and there's no way around it.
It's clearly how the idea developed.
But over time, I actually came really to see it as beautiful,
a part of the way that Israel and the biblical authors
were waking up to the far-reaching consequences of God's covenant love for the whole world and for creation.
Anyway, sorry, I could go on.
It's a good question.
Yeah, it's a good question.
So a lot of people are asking about, I'm being marriage came up a couple of times.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Because Jesus says there won't be marriage in heaven. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, oh, so in heaven, I can still work, I could still do projects,
I could still hang out with people,
I have conversations, like it just gets more...
There's a continuity between our existence
in a heaven and earth now,
and the existence of a renewed,
healed heaven and earth in the future.
But there's some sense that that continuity
is going to be a bit different.
A lot different.
I mean, I wouldn't even say a bit.
You wouldn't say a bit, a lot.
Well, I'd say Jesus and the Testament authors would say,
it's similar.
Okay.
But it's different.
It's a lot different.
And one thing is Jesus says,
we're not gonna get married.
You can speak to that maybe a little bit.
But then also speak to other ways that we see
that it's different.
Yeah.
Well, the most helpful analogy is to think about what
has any part of the universe undergone this new birth
or transformation into the new creation
where heaven and earth overlap.
And the answer of the New Testament to that is yes.
It happened in the person of Jesus,
that his resurrection existence is a little bit of new creation.
And so the resurrection stories in Matthew, Luke, and John,
to give us this portrait of the new creation, but here in the old creation.
And so think about how the disciples encountered Jesus.
They recognized him and it was still Jesus' physical body.
But it was a body that had continuity with his body from before because it still had the
scars and the marks in it, of the nails and so on.
But yet at the same time, sometimes they didn't recognize him.
He was the same, yet different. And his body had properties that made it so that if the door was locked,
he could be in the room all of a sudden, and then Jesus would be gone from the room.
Is there something that we can't do? Remarkable?
I've walked that.
Yeah, so I think that's, we just have to say,
the only concrete experience that the apostles ever had
of the new creation was that.
Those experiences with the risen Jesus.
So whatever the guy that didn't seem to adhere to
the rules of physics as they understood them.
Yes, but it was Jesus.
And he had a meal with them.
It was this world, but it was fundamentally different
from this world, too.
And so that's the analogy, I think.
So the weird to at least take up and to explore
is that the new creation is similar, yet different.
And we just have to say we don't know what we don't
know and be okay with that. When it comes to marriage, it is interesting. Jesus got asked
a question about marriage and the resurrection and so on. And it's in Matthew, I think it's 19 or 21. Might be 22.
Anyway, I thought on it.
I teach sermons regularly at my church door of hope
and I have a whole 45 minute sermon on it.
If you go to door of hope's website
and look in the series on Matthew,
I have a whole teaching on what Jesus talked about
in the best direction there.
But in a nutshell, in there. But in a nutshell, the biblical vision of marriage is closely tied to gender and closely
tied to procreation.
And so the whole idea of the new creation, which opens up Moran answered questions, is that new life won't need to be generated
from out of sexual intercourse.
Making babies.
It's not, it's about, which, I mean, that raises
so many interesting questions that we don't have answers to.
But that's, the idea is that that won't be necessary
in the new creation. And so marriage in the Bible is that that won't be necessary in the new creation.
And some marriage in the Bible is innimately tied together with procreation.
And the idea is that human communities and lives are being sustained through healthy,
loving relationships and in proximity to God, the source of all life.
And that's
essentially what's underneath Jesus' answer to that question. There's way more
to it so feel free to go to the sermon if you want. But great question.
Cool. Last question, title us up. When we talk about heaven I get concerned that
we get so obsessed about heaven and we have no idea what it's actually gonna be like.
You've heard the phrase, so heavenly minded
that you're no earthly good.
And I remember one thing that you said,
we were talking about Paul's statement where he said,
you know, the faith, hope, and love,
but the greatest of these is love.
Yes, yes.
And maybe speak to that a little bit where it's like because
hope is this hope in heaven and it's the hope of heaven and earth reunited.
Yeah, I'm talking about you're in the old story of like we're going to the sky.
So the biblical story the hope is heaven and earth
coming here and one day we won't need that hope. Faith is where we have to live in this
time where it's still coming together and we have to have faith when it's not
apparent. And at one point we won't need that faith anymore. And so all that
will have left between those three things is love. That makes love the most
important thing. Yes, it makes love the meaning of the universe. That makes love the most important thing. Yes. It makes love the
meaning of the universe. It makes love the meaning of the universe. Sounds very hippie.
Yeah. Or the hippies sound very much like the Bible on that one. Yeah. So you know as we get
excited about heaven, we really should just be getting excited about love. And then...
Yeah, we're thinking that Jesus boiled down the meaning of human existence to loving God,
which means honoring God and about allegiance and devotion and trust,
and then loving your neighbor as yourself. For Jesus, that's the meaning of life. And so doing that, living as if the kingdom of God
is really here through Jesus and His presence
through the Spirit, living as if heaven and earth
have already reunited through Jesus
that takes an immense amount of hope and a immense amount of faith.
And an immense amount of love that I don't always
feel like I have resources for, right?
But we hope that our hope will become reality one day and that our faith
will be a posture that comes true, but love is the point of the whole deal.
And so that's why Paul says at the end of 1 Corinthians 13 that love endures.
It never fails.
So whatever, yeah, the renewed heaven and earth are all about.
It's a place of healthy, loving relationships
that's safe where everyone can flourish.
And the whole point of having that vision of hope
isn't that you sit around and wait for it.
It's that we experience it and participate it, participate in it now.
That's why we pray the Lord's Prayer every day.
At least Jesus expected that we would pray every day.
It's because that's such a strange idea to have.
Every day, to like, re-center yourself and say, okay, I want God's reign, his kingdom to be here
in my life.
Yeah, on here, on this bit of earth,
as it is in heaven.
Thanks for listening to this question response episode
of The Wild Project.
It came from our YouTube channel.
We have a few YouTube Q and Rs that we did live, the people who showed up and asked us questions, and you
can see those on our YouTube channel, YouTube.com slash the Bible project. You
can watch the other videos we have up there. We can make these videos for free
because of your generous support to this project. So thank you so much for being
a part of it with us. 1 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 you you