What is Heaven Like? Discovering the Undiscovered Country

What happens when we die? When my oldest son, Drew, was just a toddler, we had the conversation that parents dread. No, not that conversation. The other one. Something had happened that prompted him to ask us about death. We tried to answer as gently as possible, in terms a small child could understand. We shared the good news of the gospel with him. Along with it, we talked about the hope of heaven. We told him that if he died, he would be with Jesus. But his reaction was not what we expected. Rather than being reassured, he burst into tears. He wailed in sorrow. โ€œWhere will you be?โ€ he asked. โ€œWho will take care of me?โ€ It was sweet, in a way. It was also a little unnerving because I could identify with his anxiety.

Much of what the Bible has to say about what heaven is like seems ambiguous. Itโ€™s almost as if Scripture speaks in code about this subject. It is, at least, expressing itself by way of images that are both strange and familiar simultaneously. We take comfort from the sight of things we know, but their juxtaposition with the strange is often unsettling. Saints cry out from under the altar. There are rivers and trees, or at least one river and one tree. The old heaven and earth pass away and are replaced by the new.

Shakespeare called death โ€œthe undiscovered country.โ€ More precisely, Shakespeareโ€™s Hamlet describes death as โ€œThe undiscovered country from whose bourn No traveler returns . . .โ€ Most who travel to the undiscovered country do not come back, which is Hamlet’s point. But there have been some, like Samuel, Moses, Elijah, and Lazarus, to name a few. However, they donโ€™t tell us what happens after death. Then, of course, there is Jesus, the one that Revelation 1:5 calls โ€œthe firstborn from the dead.โ€ Yet, even he did not describe that place to us in the kind of detail that most of us would prefer.

In Shakespeareโ€™s play, Hamlet seems to speak more of ordinary experience than these extraordinary cases. He has just seen a ghost, and he questions his senses. Or perhaps it is that he is pondering what might lie beyond the senses. Hamlet goes on to assert, โ€œThere are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.โ€ This is certainly true when it comes to heavenly reality.

Image of cover of the book On Things Above. linked to Amazon.

On the one hand, the apostle Paul quotes Isaiah 64:4 when he describes the life to come and speaks of โ€œWhat no eye has seen, what no ear has heard, and what no human mind has conceived,โ€ calling them โ€œthe things God has prepared for those who love him.โ€ Then, with his next breath, he claims, โ€œthese are the things God has revealed to us by his Spiritโ€ (1 Cor. 2:9โ€“10). What things does Paul mean? They are what the apostle elsewhere characterizes as โ€œthings above,โ€ which he also urges us to set our hearts on, seek, and set our minds upon (Col. 3:1โ€“2).

Itโ€™s hard to think about things we donโ€™t know. Itโ€™s even harder to set our hearts on something that seems to be at odds with everything we have always known and experienced. This is one of the problems we face when it comes to thinking about heaven. My son couldnโ€™t imagine being happy in a world without the people he already knew who loved and cared for him, even if it was God who was taking their place. He knew his mother. He did not know God, at least not in the same way.

โ€œHeaven is rhetorically anti-world,โ€ Baylor University professor of theological ethics Jonathan Tran has observed. โ€œWhatever we donโ€™t like about this world, heaven promises the opposite.โ€[1] But our difficulty isnโ€™t just that we have been taught to expect the opposite of all we hate about the present world in the life to come. Itโ€™s the impression we have that heaven stands against all that we know and love. While this is certainly true when it comes to sin, we have come to believe that it is also true of the more concrete aspects of earthly life that we know. To many, heaven is an amorphous realm of spirits, clouds, and gossamer wings. It is too indistinct to describe and too immaterial to look forward to.

Mark Twain, a religious skeptic, lampooned the popular stereotype of heavenly bliss by characterizing it as a place where the newly arrived expect to be fitted out with a harp, a halo, a wreath, and a hymnbook. If, as Paul declares in 1 Corinthians 15:50, flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, why does the Christian message place so much emphasis on bodily resurrection?

The heaven of Scripture is not a fantasy or a philosophy. Neither is it merely a projection of our personality, style, and individual tastes into eternity. Heaven is not an invention of the church meant to serve as the carrot that motivates its members to toe the line on this side of death. It is a real location where an embodied and resurrected Christ is seated at the right hand of God (Col. 3:1). Heaven is also an order or rule that intrudes into our earthly experience even now and will one day control it entirely.

The landscape of the undiscovered country is not as alien as we thought. Nor do we have to wait until we pass through the gates of death to catch a glimpse of its powers. In fact, if we take Scripture at its word, all those who are in Christ are already in residence there in some mysterious sense. At the same time, โ€œwe are looking forward to a new heaven and a new earth, where righteousness dwellsโ€ (2 Pet. 3:11). What is more, those same passages that speak of the believerโ€™s dual residency on earth and in heaven, also promise that we have begun to experience the righteousness that is characteristic of the new heaven and earth even now.

The discomfort that some Christians feel when speculating about what is to come is often not due to uncertainty about their ultimate destination but rather anxiety about what that transition will be like. After Adamโ€™s fall, the Lord warned that the first stage of lifeโ€™s journey would be marked by discomfort. God told the woman, โ€œI will make your pains in childbearing very severe; with painful labor you will give birth to childrenโ€ (Gen. 3:16). It is the hope of new life that enables those who suffer such pain to bear with it.

Although the Lord doesnโ€™t mention it there, subsequent human experience showed that the final stage of lifeโ€™s journey would also often be accompanied by discomfort. Perhaps Paul is alluding to this when he writes about bodily resurrection and admits that โ€œwhile we are in this tent, we groan and are burdened, because we do not wish to be unclothed but to be clothed instead with our heavenly dwelling, so that what is mortal may be swallowed up by lifeโ€ (2 Cor. 5:7). The apostle goes on to say that God has โ€œfashioned us for this very purposeโ€ (v. 8). God designed us for bodily life. That is what the future holds for us. One of the first confessions of faith recorded in Scripture, at least in terms of chronology, was that of Job, who declared:

โ€œI know that my redeemer lives,
    and that in the end he will stand on the earth.
 And after my skin has been destroyed,
    yet in my flesh I will see God;
 I myself will see him
    with my own eyesโ€”I, and not another.
    How my heart yearns within me!โ€ (Job 19:25โ€“27)

Shakespeare was right. The country for which we yearn is still undiscovered by us. But it is not as unfamiliar as we thought. There is far more to the Christianโ€™s heavenly hope than harps, halos, and hymnals. In fact, none of these seems to figure in it at all. The hope of the Christian is the hope of things above. That same hope is also the secret to holy living in the here and now. We are going there. But the real secret is that we have already arrived.

To learn more about John Koesslerโ€™s new book, On Things Above: The Earthly Importance of Heavenly Reality, watch the video below or click here.


[1] Jonathan Tran, โ€œLooking to Heaven Without Looking Past Earth,โ€ The Christian Century, September 2022, 36.

Holy Week’s Trajectory of Hope

The seven days from Palm Sunday to Easter have a rhythm. It is one that moves from anticipation to fulfillment. The week begins with the crowdโ€™s shout of acclamation for Jesus and culminates in His stunning victory over death on Easter morning. Between these two are the Last Supper (sometimes commemorated with foot washing on Maundy Thursday) and Christโ€™s suffering on Good Friday. These two events strike an entirely different note, providing a counterpoint to the upbeat mood of the two Sundays that bookend them. The difference in tone is often reflected in the churchโ€™s observance.

Yet even during those sober moments, there is still a trajectory of hope that mitigates what would otherwise be impossibly gloomy. This sense of direction enables believers to move through the awkwardness of Maundy Thursday and the gloom of Good Friday with a sense of expectation. We know how this story ends. That was also true for the original participants. Jesus told His disciples how it would all turn out. But their actions make it clear that they had either forgotten or had refused to believe what He had said. โ€œHow foolish you are, and how slow to believe all that the prophets have spoken!โ€ Jesus would later say to them (Luke 24:25).

Our Interrupted Hope

In the Scriptures, the Saturday between Good Friday and Resurrection Sunday is a day of silence. The Bible does not really say where the disciples were or what they were doing on that day. When Jesus appeared to them on Sunday evening, He found them behind locked doors and afraid (John 20:19). This description resonates, especially now that the spread of COVID-19 has disrupted the churchโ€™s normal rhythm of Holy Week observances. We too are huddled together in our homes. For many fear ear grows along with the body count.

When we pass through a crisis like this, we often feel a burst of energy at the outset. Maybe its adrenaline or just shock, but it propels us through an impossible situation. That drive empowers us to act, sometimes in heroic ways. This initial burst of energy generates a kind of optimism. You can hear it in the way people talk. They say things like, โ€œWeโ€™re going to beat this thing!โ€ or โ€œIโ€™m a fighter.โ€ Spiritually oriented people talk about God doing a miracle. But if the crisis wears on, something changes. Those first heady days of optimism may give way to weariness and lethargy. What was once disorienting starts to feel like a new normal. The days become marked by silent waiting. Because we are busy with the work of survival, we are no longer as vocal about our expectation of coming out of it. God, for His part, also seems to be silent. The hope that God would resolve everything in short order is set aside, at least for a time. We are no longer sure what God is doing or even how things will turn out. For the moment, the trajectory of hope that we felt we were on has been interrupted.

Upon closer inspection, however, the comparison I am trying to make here seems to break down and in a rather spectacular way. For one thing, the disciplesโ€™ time โ€œin-betweenโ€ lasted only a day or two. At the most, they were confined from Friday to Sunday. Then they understood that what had seemed like a tragedy to them was actually something else. Iโ€™m not saying that they understood everything completely. After His resurrection, Jesus appeared to the disciples over a period of forty days and spoke about the kingdom of God (Acts 1:3). When He was done, they still had questions.

Peace, Prosperity, & Safety

Our expectation during the COVID-19 crisis is also somewhat different from theirs. For the disciples, the expectation was the hope that Jesus would redeem Israel and usher in the Kingdom of God. Our aspirations are more modest. We would like to return to our jobs, our churches, and our friends. We arenโ€™t looking for utopia. We just want everything to go back to normal. Yet such workaday ambitions may not be that far from the initial hope of Jesusโ€™ followers as we might think. Before Jesusโ€™ death, their vision of the kingdom had a decidedly earthly flavor. We sense it in the lament of the two who spoke with the risen Christ on the road to Emmaus. โ€œWe had hoped that he was the one who was going to redeem Israel,โ€ they said (Luke 24:21). But what did that mean to them? Before Jesusโ€™ death and resurrection,  their understanding of Israelโ€™s redemption was primarily a vision of peace, prosperity, and national safety.

This Messianic vision was roughly equivalent to an ambition to โ€œMake Israel Great Again,โ€ a view of the world with Israel on top and all its enemies subdued. The law would go out from Zion and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem. Swords would be beaten into plowshares and spears into pruning hooks. Everyone would sit under their own vine, and no one would be afraid anymore (Micah 4:1โ€“5). None of these expectations was outside the realm of what Jesus promised to do. The disciplesโ€™ mistake was an error of timing. During the forty days between Christโ€™s resurrection and ascension, they asked, โ€œLord, are you at this time going to restore the kingdom to Israel?โ€ In His reply, Jesus never said that they were wrong to expect such a thing. Instead, He told them: โ€œIt is not for you to know the times or dates the Father has set by his own authorityโ€ (Acts 1:7).

Jesusโ€™ disciples had also underestimated the scope of what Jesus came to do. They were right in thinking of Jesus as the redeemer of Israel. He was the Messiah. But from the very start of His ministry, Jesus gave indications that He had come to do more. John the Baptist captured the full extent when he called Jesus โ€œthe Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the worldโ€ (John 1:29; 1:36). Johnโ€™s declaration, which Jesus later affirmed, contained two surprises. One was the expansion of this kingdom promise from Israel to the whole world. The other was the means by which its victory was to be accomplished. Unlike all others, this kingdom would come not by the sword but by sacrifice.

The Lamb of God

One can only imagine how unsettling it must have been for Johnโ€™s disciples to hear him describe Jesus in such terms. To us, the lamb metaphor has a certain charm. Lambs are tame creatures. They are soft and cuddly. We think of lambs as pets. But for John and his contemporaries, lambs were for food and sacrifice. Johnโ€™s contemporaries bred lambs for slaughter. Their presence on the temple altar was a continual reminder of a plague far more deadly than the coronavirus. To say that Jesus was the Lamb of God was to say that He was under a death sentence. To call Jesus the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world is to say that we too are under a death sentence and that He is the only remedy.

If there is a gift in the COVID-19 crisis, it is not in the heroic effort of nurses and doctors, as admirable as those are. Nor is it in those spontaneous acts of goodwill we see taking place between our neighbors. If there is a gift to be found in the current crisis, it is the stark gift of forcing us to face up to the collateral damage of the worldโ€™s greatest pandemic. Death always does this, though we are skilled at suppressing its message. Now it is as though the suffering of every nation on earth shouts the warning of Romans 5:12: โ€œJust as sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and in this way death came to all people, because all sinned.โ€

The death of so many is a great tragedy. But perhaps it is not a mistake that such loss should also coincide with the week that many in the church commemorate the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. The humility of Thursday, when Jesus washed the disciplesโ€™ feet, and His suffering on Good Friday, are both in keeping with the redemptive trajectory of Christโ€™s final week. They are the pivot points that make the acclaim of Palm Sunday and Easterโ€™s shout of victory meaningful. โ€œJust as people are destined to die once, and after that to face judgment,โ€ Hebrews 9:27โ€“28 says, โ€œso Christ was sacrificed once to take away the sins of many; and he will appear a second time, not to bear sin, but to bring salvation to those who are waiting for him.โ€

This is the gospel. It reminds us that, in these days, as the death toll continues to rise, the last enemy to be destroyed will be death itself (1 Cor. 15:26). It is a reminder that even though the normal rhythm of our Easter celebration has been interrupted, the trajectory of hope still holds. Godโ€™s message to us has not changed since that first morning when the disciples rushed back from the empty tomb to declare, โ€œChrist has risen!โ€ To which, we can only reply, โ€œHe has risen indeed!โ€

Hope, Agony, & Prayer

There is a homeless man I often see on my walk to the train. All knees and elbows as he sits on the curb,ย he looks as if his bony form has folded in on itself in total collapse. He holds a cup in his hand, which he lifts high above his head as I approach. Waving it in my general direction he cries, โ€œCan I get a blessing today?โ€ His voice seems strangled, as though it pains him to ask the question.

An observation by C. S. Lewis about prayer brought him to mind this morning. In Letters to Malcolm, Lewis mentions a friend who is waiting for confirmation of a potentially catastrophic diagnosis and is experiencing the tormenting uncertainty that afflicts people in such circumstances. There is hope but there is also the agony of waiting. As you wait, Lewis notes, your thoughts run in circles. You alternate between expectation and despair. You pray, โ€œbut mainly such prayers as are themselves a form of anguish.โ€

When I was a young Christian, I thought the key to answered prayer was to be sure God would do as I asked. This posed a problem for me because I could never find that kind of certainty within me. It wasnโ€™t that I doubted Godโ€™s capability. It was His willingness that was in question. I concluded that the purpose of my prayer was to prove to God that I was convinced. But how? Usually, it took the form of posturing. I labored to affect the right tone. I spouted affirmations and made declarations. Sometimes I shouted. If I did not weary the courts of heaven with my voice, I at least grew weary of it myself. And of course, when I was finished, I was no more certain of the answer than when I had begun.

According to Hebrews 11:1, faith is โ€œbeing sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see.โ€ But I do not think this means that I must be convinced that God will do what I want in order to get answers to my prayer. It does not even mean that I must be sure that the thing I ask of God is a possibility. Jesusโ€™ qualifying, โ€œif it is possible,โ€ in Gethsemane is proof enough of this (Matt. 26:39). Jesusโ€™ many predictions of His own impending death make this request even more striking. He seems to have known that the request would be refused even before He asked.

This means that we can make our requests of God without possessing absolute certainty of the outcome. It also means that, even when we are persuaded that the thing we desire from God is unlikely, we have permission to ask anyway. We lift the cup of supplication high above our heads and cry out in the agony of hope, โ€œCan I get a blessing today?โ€