Ideas from the Edge –
Christians Wrong About Heaven by Bishop NT (Tom)
Wright
Bishop
Tom Wright, respected NT scholar, Bishop of
What he says
challenges the common christian view of the afterlife and heaven – you might
find some surprises in it. I’ve
been aware for some time that this (the afterlife) is an area that needs some
rethinking / clarification, particularly after the publication of the “Left
Behind” series, which, although being very successful as a series of books, was
highly inaccurate & supported a view of the future that most christian scholars
had discarded long ago.
Our views of
‘heaven’ and ‘hell’ (particularly permanent suffering in hell) need reviewing (&
changing). Here is a glimpse of what a solid evangelical bible scholar says
about our view of heaven …
Happy reading ...
Blessings
David Allis
‘ideas from the edge’
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Christians Wrong About Heaven, Says Bishop
N.T. "Tom"
Wright is one of the most formidable figures in the world of Christian thought.
As Bishop of Durham, he is the fourth most senior cleric in the Church of
England and a major player in the strife-riven global Anglican Communion; as a
much-read theologian and Biblical scholar he has taught at Cambridge and is a
hero to conservative Christians worldwide for his 2003 book The Resurrection
of the Son of God, which argued forcefully for a literal interpretation of
that event.
It therefore
comes as a something of a shock that Wright doesn't believe in heaven — at
least, not in the way that millions of Christians understand the term. In his
new book, Surprised by Hope (HarperOne), Wright quotes a children's book
by
Wright, 58,
talked by phone with TIME's David Van Biema.
TIME: At one
point you call the common view of heaven a "distortion and serious diminution of
Christian hope."
Wright:
It really is. I've often heard people say, "I'm going to heaven soon, and I
won't need this stupid body there, thank goodness.' That's a very damaging
distortion, all the more so for being unintentional.
TIME: How so?
It seems like a typical sentiment.
Wright:
There are several important respects in which it's unsupported by the New
Testament. First, the timing. In the Bible we are told that you die, and enter
an intermediate state.
TIME: Is there
anything more in the Bible about the period between death and the resurrection
of the dead?
Wright:
We know that we will be with God and with Christ, resting and being refreshed.
Paul writes that it will be conscious, but compared with being bodily alive, it
will be like being asleep. The Wisdom of Solomon, a Jewish text from about the
same time as Jesus, says "the souls of the righteous are in the hand of God,"
and that seems like a poetic way to put the Christian understanding, as well.
TIME: But it's
not where the real action is, so to speak?
Wright:
No. Our culture is very interested in life after death, but the New Testament is
much more interested in what I've called the life after life after death
— in the ultimate resurrection into the new heavens and the new Earth. Jesus'
resurrection marks the beginning of a restoration that he will complete upon his
return. Part of this will be the resurrection of all the dead, who will "awake,"
be embodied and participate in the renewal. John Polkinghorne, a physicist and a
priest, has put it this way: "God will download our software onto his hardware
until the time he gives us new hardware to run the software again for
ourselves." That gets to two things nicely: that the period after death is a
period when we are in God's presence but not active in our own bodies, and also
that the more important transformation will be when we are again embodied and
administering Christ's kingdom.
TIME: That is
rather different from the common understanding. Did some Biblical verse
contribute to our confusion?
Wright:
There is Luke 23, where Jesus says to the good thief on the cross, "Today you
will be with me in
TIME: Why,
then, have we misread those verses?
Wright:
It has, originally, to do with the translation of Jewish ideas into Greek. The
New Testament is deeply, deeply Jewish, and the Jews had for some time been
intuiting a final, physical resurrection. They believed that the world of space
and time and matter is messed up, but remains basically good, and God will
eventually sort it out and put it right again. Belief in that goodness is
absolutely essential to Christianity, both theologically and morally. But
Greek-speaking Christians influenced by Plato saw our cosmos as shabby and
misshapen and full of lies, and the idea was not to make it right, but to escape
it and leave behind our material bodies. The church at its best has always come
back toward the Hebrew view, but there have been times when the Greek view was
very influential.
TIME: Can you
give some historical examples?
Wright:
Two obvious ones are Dante's great poetry, which sets up a Heaven, Purgatory and
Hell immediately after death, and Michelangelo's Last Judgment in the
Sistine chapel, which portrays heaven and hell as equal and opposite last
destinations. Both had enormous influence on Western culture, so much so that
many Christians think that is Christianity.
TIME: But it's
not.
Wright:
Never at any point do the Gospels or Paul say Jesus has been raised, therefore
we are we are all going to heaven. They all say, Jesus is raised, therefore the
new creation has begun, and we have a job to do.
TIME: That
sounds a lot like... work.
Wright:
It's more exciting than hanging around listening to nice music. In Revelation
and Paul's letters we are told that God's people will actually be running the
new world on God's behalf. The idea of our participation in the new creation
goes back to Genesis, when humans are supposed to be running the Garden and
looking after the animals. If you transpose that all the way through, it's a
picture like the one that you get at the end of Revelation.
TIME: And it
ties in to what you've written about this all having a moral dimension.
Wright:
Both that, and the idea of bodily resurrection that people deny when they talk
about their "souls going to Heaven." If people think "my physical body doesn't
matter very much," then who cares what I do with it? And if people think that
our world, our cosmos, doesn't matter much, who cares what we do with that? Much
of "traditional" Christianity gives the impression that God has these rather
arbitrary rules about how you have to behave, and if you disobey them you go to
hell, rather than to heaven. What the New Testament really says is God wants you
to be a renewed human being helping him to renew his creation, and his
resurrection was the opening bell. And when he returns to fulfil the plan, you
won't be going up there to him, he'll be coming down here.
TIME: That's
very different from, say, the vision put out in the Left Behind books.
Wright:
Yes. If there's going to be an Armageddon, and we'll all be in heaven already or
raptured up just in time, it really doesn't matter if you have acid rain or
greenhouse gases prior to that. Or, for that matter, whether you bombed
civilians in
TIME: Has
anyone you've talked to expressed disappointment at the loss of the old view?
Wright:
Yes, you might get disappointment in the case where somebody has recently gone
through the death of somebody they love and they are wanting simply to be with
them. And I'd say that's understandable. But the end of Revelation describes a
marvelous human participation in God's plan. And in almost all cases, when I've
explained this to people, there's a sense of excitement and a sense of, "Why
haven't we been told this before?"