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Bible Question: Lazarus'
death is mentioned in John 11:1-46. Jesus meets Lazarus' sister
Martha and tells her that her brother will rise. She agrees saying, "I
know he will rise in the resurrection on the last day." Obviously,
when Jesus walked this earth, it was taught and believed the dead
were dead and the only hope for them was the resurrection. When
did Christians start teaching that the dead are not really dead
but go to heaven or hell? Ecclesiastes 9:5, 10 contradicts this
idea.
Bible Answer: The
Old Testament and Jesus Christ teach us that the spirits of dead
people really do go to heaven
or hell and their physical bodies are resurrected in the future.
Lazarus. Yes,
Lazarus died according to Jesus (John 11:14). Later in John 11:23, Jesus said
that Lazarus would rise, which He did (John 11:43-44). Martha responded according
to her understanding of the future. We know from Jewish history that the Pharisees
taught a resurrection from the dead, but the Sadducees did not believe in a resurrection
(Luke 20:27). In Luke 20:27-33 we are told the Sadducees tried to trap Jesus
with a question about the resurrection. Jesus surprised them with His answer
(Luke 20:34-40) saying,
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"Now
He is not the God of the dead, but of the living; for all
live to Him." (NASB) Luke 20:38 |
The
dead! Did
Jesus teach that the dead are dead until the resurrection? Does Ecclesiastes
9:5, 10 teach this when it says,
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For
the living know they will die; but the dead do not know anything,
nor have they any longer a reward, for their memory is forgotten.
(NASB) Ecclesiastes 9:5 |
The answer is implied in Eccl. 9:2 where the writer of Ecclesiastes
says "There is one fate for the righteous and for the wicked." We
know from scripture that the righteous go to heaven where they spend
eternity and the wicked go to eternal punishment (Matt. 25:46; John
3:16-18). So what is the writer saying? He is talking about physical
death. It is true that death overtakes the wise man and the fool
alike, and all living creatures end up in the grave and they become
dust. That physical corpse in the ground no longer remembers anything,
no longer has any rewards, and is eventually forgotten.
Is
there a heaven? However,
man's spirit lives on. Let us look at three Old Testament men. The first one
is Enoch. Genesis 5:24 tells us that Enoch walked with God and "was not." He
was a very righteous man. In 2 Kings 2:11 we are told that the prophet Elijah
was taken up to heaven by a whirlwind. The Jewish scriptures agree with the Bible
and use the word "heaven." The third man is Moses, who died in the
wilderness and was buried according to Deuteronomy 34:5. They all ceased to have
physical bodies. Yet, in Matthew 17:1-4, Elijah and Moses appeared with Jesus
in an unusual display of His divine glory. Moses was alive and Elijah was alive.
Where were they? They were together in heaven.
Is
there a hell? Jesus taught
that there was a heaven and a hell in the parable found in Luke 16:20-31. There
is a contrast between two worlds, Abraham's bosom and Hades. The poor man is
in Abraham's bosom, and the rich man is in Hades or Hell. Notice that the rich
man wants someone to go back to earth and warn his five brothers. That implies
Hades/Hell was a place, and the spirits of these men could think. But their bodies
were in the ground and their bodies were dead - no thought, no glory, and no
reward.
Resurrection
at Jesus' death. If
we say the dead are dead until the "resurrection on the last day" and
we mean both the physical and spiritual, then Matthew 27:52-53 also creates a
problem. Scripture tells us that "many bodies" came out of the tombs
at Jesus' death. Where did they go between now and the "resurrection on
the last day?" The last day has not come yet!
Conclusion: The
Holy Spirit tells us in Phil 1:23 that Paul struggled with living
on this earth or departing to be with Jesus Christ,
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But
I am hard-pressed from both directions, having the desire
to depart and be with Christ, for that is very much better;
(NASB) Philippians 1:23. |
Paul, the apostle, expected to depart immediately and to be with
God. He did not expect to wait until the last day. He wanted to be
with Jesus now. Some day when we die, we will go to either heaven
or hell. Then someday we enter the New Heaven and Earth or go to
the Lake of Fire (Rev. 20:11;21:1). It
all depends on who you are depending on. Jesus said, "I
am the way, the truth and the life." |
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