Tuesday, March 17, 2009

How do you get to heaven?

Lots of people, Christians and those of other religions or no religious belief at all, believe in heaven. Fewer people seem to believe in hell or at least don’t want to think about it. And now days many don’t seem to give much thought to how you get to one place or the other.

Christ talked about the existence of both frequently, and urged everyone to do what was necessary to go to heaven. As Christians our reason for believing in the existence of heaven and hell is because we believe in Him and He believed in them!

Back in the 1970’s I taught religion at a Jesuit boys high school. At some point during the courses I taught I would ask the question, “When you die what is the reason for getting to go to heaven?” I almost always got the same answers: Because I was good, I didn’t hurt anyone, I was sincere. Rarely was Jesus mentioned as the answer. Many of the students had received Catholic education throughout their schooling yet did not understand what Christ Jesus had to do with eternal life.

Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father except by me.” (John 14:6) He also said, “eternal life is this to know you the only true God, an Jesus Christ whom you have sent.” (John 17:3)

The Church teaches, “By his death and Resurrection, Jesus Christ has “opened heaven to us. The life of the blessed consists in the full and perfect possession of the fruits of the redemption accomplished by Christ. He makes partners in his heavenly glorification those who have believed in him and remain faithful to his will. Heaven is the blessed community of all who are perfectly incorporated into him.” Check it out in the Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC), 1027

The essential answer for our getting to go to heaven is, Christ. Jesus has “opened heaven to us.” He is the way we can be eternally with God. By his death and resurrection Jesus accomplished what we in and of ourselves could not accomplish - our redemption. It is the love of God made manifest on the cross, bearing our sins, granting us forgiveness and through the Spirit entry into relationship with God. It is God’s initiative, not ours that allows us this access to eternal joy with the Trinity and all of the saints and angels! The Father wants us to be with Him eternally and through the Son has made the way for us be with them, happily ever after! It is our responsibility to respond to this grace of God with faith doing his will in our daily lives.

Let me make one comment on hell. Hell is the consequence of our free will. We can choose it for ourselves. God does not cast anyone into hell against his will. If we truly are creatures with free will then we have the capacity to say no to a loving Creator. That is essentially what hell is. Eternal separation from the One who loves us so much that he allows us to choose to be with Him, or not. Take a look in the CCC, 1033-1037.

The Church also teaches that even those who have not baptized and responded with faith in Christ may be saved (under the impulse of grace) who “sincerely seek God and strive to do his will can also be saved without Baptism (Baptism of desire).” CCC,1258-1261. It is a mystery and thank God He is the judge of all and not me or you! It is not our responsibility to judge who is or isn’t going to heaven when they die.

Our responsibility is to pray for salvation for everyone and to be witnesses of the eternal life that begins here and now in knowing the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. (See John 17:3 noted above). What is important for those of us who know Christ and are seeking to do his will, is to graciously be available to share the good news of what God has done in Jesus our Lord so that all might have fullness of life here and eternal happiness in heaven! After all, if we believe in a heaven and hell we certainly want to help others to be in heaven and to know the way to get there!

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2 Comments:

At March 17, 2009 8:01 PM , Blogger stephen said...

Dave,

I like your explanation much better then the CCC. The part that I think I was raised on was "Heaven is the blessed community of all who are perfectly incorporated into him.”

Most of the people I grew up with were brought up in this Gotcha God world. Where you had to work your way into heaven. Every bad thing that you did sent you to hell. The above quote is very defining in that you have to be perfectly incorporated into Jesus. That seems to be a contradiction since our Church also teaches that we all fall short.

It is also a contradiction where in Acts it says that you have to be baptized to attain heaven but again here we see that you don't have to be baptized.

So again I like your explanation better because it falls into place a more realistic approach.

I often find that the simple messages of the Gospel bring me closer to the Lord. But when I get into the meat and potatos, I always get bones stuck in my throat.

Any insight?

 
At March 18, 2009 2:37 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Good thoughts Stephen. I'm one of the minority that wasn't taught the way you were. I think a lot of my generation learned about God's love and our problem - is not having a healthy filial fear of God, the Judge of the Living and Dead.

Both extremes (you have to work your way to heaven - or - everybody's going to heaven because God is Love) I think misses the mark of relationship with a Person.

Jesus says a really amazing line in the Gospel to the Pharisees, "You search the Scriptures, because you think that in them you have eternal life; and it is they that bear witness to me; yet you refuse to come to me that you may have life." (John 5:39)

What I take from that - is that Christianity is essentially about a person. The Pope knows this, "The Church is not an association that wishes to promote a certain cause. It is not about a cause. It is about the person of Jesus Christ.”
(July 1, 2008)

Love, truth, mercy, forgiveness, the way, the life, the living water, the good shepherd, the true vine, the bread of life, the lion of Judah, the Lamb of God- these are the many words and images the Bible uses to grasp at the magnificence of Jesus Christ.

I think if we read scripture and understand doctrine with the right lenses (the start and the finish are personal encounter with Jesus) - then everything is put in perspective.

If we approach the Master with an agenda or something to prove - we prove we're really the Master - rather than Him.

 

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