Showing posts with label heaven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heaven. Show all posts

Friday, April 11, 2008

Metaphors and similies

"The kingdom of God is like..."

Last Sunday, I took up the topic of hell and what happens to those who willfully and stubbornly resist God's call to come and follow. The images that God used in the Scriptures to describe their punishment are horrible. "Lake of fire", "where the worm never dies", "where the fire is never quenched", "Wailing and gnashing of teeth", "outer darkness" - are all mentioned and provide the backdrop to what happens when we refuse God's call on us to live our lives loving God and loving our neighbors.

I made the point then that God commissioned the writers of the NT to use phrases that even if symbolic, point to a greater reality. That should give anyone pause to consider what God thinks of the way we've spent our lives.

Now I've been immersed in the language of heaven all week and I see the same pattern play itself out. Sure there are some specifics we can pull out of the Scriptures about what heaven is like, but there's still more of the use of similes and metaphors than our modern "I need to know exactly" minds can find comfort in.

William Willimon, former Dean of the Chapel at Duke University, and now Bishop of the United Methodist Church in North Alabama, wrote recently about how hard it is for us to appreciate mystery and metaphor.

As Douglas Sloane, in his book on higher education puts it, in American universities, at least since the early 1900’s quantifiable thinking (statistics, matter, money) has reigned supreme while qualifiable thinking (thoughts of beauty, right and wrong, good and bad) has had a rough go of it.

Augustine, as a bright young man with a superior classical education, confessed to Bishop Ambrose that he had tried to read the Bible but frankly, he was unimpressed. To him the Bible seemed like woefully inferior literature, crudely written, poorly edited.

“You young fool,” replied Ambrose. “You can’t get it because when you read in the Bible about ‘fish,’ you think ‘fish.’ When you read ‘bread,’ you think ‘bread.’”

Ambrose explained to him the spiritual depth of scripture, showed young Augustine levels of meaning beyond the surface appearance of things.

Thus, years later, after entering this strange new world of the Bible, Augustine is sitting under a tree in a garden. He hears a child singing, “Take up and read, take up and read.” Is it the voice of a child or an angel? By this time his imagination is so excited, his consciousness so heightened that he can’t tell the difference. He does what the voice says, takes up the Bible, flops it open to an obscure passage from Romans, and his life is changed forever. After that, we call him “St. Augustine.”
HT A Peculiar Prophet - William Willimon


I realized early on this week that I was approaching the topic of heaven more like the young Augustine than the Saint he became once he let God leave mystery and wonder out front of us.

Wouldn't following Jesus mean that we don't have to know everything about where we are headed, just that He will guide us?

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Sometimes You Can See When It's Dark

From One Time by William Stafford

When evening had flowed between houses
and paused on the schoolground, I met
Hilary's blind little sister following
the gray smooth railing still warm from the sun
with her hand; and she stood by the edge
holding her face upward waiting
while the last light found her cheek
and her hair, then on over the trees

You could hear the great sprinkler arm
of water find and then leave the pavement
and pigeons telling each other their dreams
or the dreams they would have. We were
deep in the well of shadow by then, and I
held out my hand, saying, "Tina, it's me - Hilary says I should tell
you it's dark,
and, oh Tina, it is. Together now-"

And I reached, our hands touched
and we found our way home."

To paint a picture of reality like this writer has done is a rare, rare gift.

Like this.

"I will not leave you orphaned. I'm coming back. 19 In just a little while the world will no longer see me, but you're going to see me because I am alive and you're about to come alive. 20 At that moment you will know absolutely that I'm in my Father, and you're in me, and I'm in you. John 14:18-20 (MSG)

Sometimes you can see through the words of Jesus, not just how theology works, but how deep is the Father's love. "And He reached, and our hands touched, and we found our way home."

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

On Heaven - Music that fits the theme



Nearly nine out of 10 people in the United States say they believe in heaven, according to a recent ABC News poll. But what exactly do people think of when they think of an afterlife and what do they believe is required to get there? - Barbara Walters, ABC News report "Heaven, Where Is It? How Do You Get There?"


That's a good question, Barbara.

One of the interesting things I am finding as I prepare for Sunday's message on "What Happens When We Die" is that while I remember when I first became a Christian it seemed like we sang about heaven all the time (Shall We Gather At the River, In the Sweet By and By", When We All Get To Heaven, etc.) I am not finding much help with contemporary songs with that theme. I suppose "I Can Only Imagine" would fit.

Any ideas out there?