By J. L. Dagg
Chapter 4
Heaven THE RIGHTEOUS WILL BE TAKEN TO HEAVEN, AND MADE PERFECTLY HAPPY FOR
EVER IN THE PRESENCE AND ENJOYMENT OF GOD.[1]
Godliness has the promise of the life that now is, and of that which is to
come. It often happens that the believer in Christ has an afflicted lot in the
present world; but, in the midst of tribulations, be is enabled, through grace,
to rejoice in hope of the glory of God. So much does the happiness of his
present life depend on the hope of a better portion hereafter, that he is said
to be "saved by hope."[2] This hope has for its
object an inheritance that is incorruptible, undefiled, and that fadeth not
away.[3] He is taught by the doctrine of
Christ, to look for this portion, not in this world of sin, not in the pursuits
and enjoyments of carnal men, but in another and better world, to which his
faith and hope are ever directed.
The believer's portion is laid up in heaven.[4]
That heaven is a place, and not a mere state of being, we are taught by the
words of Christ, who said, "I go to prepare a place for you;"[5] but in what part of universal space this happy place is
situated, the Bible does not inform us. It is sometimes called the third
heavens,[6] to distinguish it from the
atmospheric heaven, in which the fowls of heaven have their habitation, and
from the starry heavens, which visibly declare the glory of God. The glory of
the third heavens is invisible to mortal eyes; and the place may be far beyond
the bounds within which suns and stars shine, and planets revolve. Some have
imagined that it is a vast central globe, around which the stars of heaven are
making their slow revolutions, carrying with them their systems of attendant
planets. There is something pleasing in this conjecture, which connects
astronomical science with the hopes of the Christian: but it must be remembered
that it is mere conjecture. No telescope can bring this glorious place within
the reach of human view. "Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have
entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that
love him."[7] Yet, though science cannot give us
a knowledge of this happy world, divine revelation has made us to some extent
acquainted with it. Paul adds to the words just cited, "but God hath revealed
them to us by his Spirit." By faith, which is the evidence of things not seen,
we look at things unseen and eternal. The light of revelation brings the
glories of the distant land before the eyes of our faith; and in the spiritual
enjoyment which we are made to experience, even in this land of exile, we have
an earnest[8] and foretaste of heavenly joy.
These drops of heaven sent down to worms below, unite with the descriptions
found in God's holy word, to give such ideas of heaven as it is possible for us
to form; but at best, we know only in part. "It doth not yet appear, what we
shall be," or where we shall be, or in what our bliss will consist. But though
in looking forward to the inheritance in prospect, we are compelled to see
through a glass darkly, we may yet discover that the future happiness of the
saints will include following elements:
1. An intimate knowledge of God. Now we know in part, but then we
shall know even as we are known.[9]
Heaven is "the high and holy place, where God resides, the court of the great
King." He says, "heaven is my throne."[10]
Though present everywhere throughout his dominions, he manifests himself in a
peculiar manner in this bright abode, of which the glory of God and the Lamb
are the light. Here the blessed are permitted to see God. To see God,
as human eyes now see material objects, by means of reflected light, will be as
impossible then as it is now, for God is a spirit: but we shall have such a
discovery of God, as is most appropriately expressed by the word see;
otherwise, the promise of Christ would not be fulfilled. "Blessed are the pure
in heart for they shall see God."[11] The
knowledge of God will be communicated through the Mediator. "No man hath seen
God at any time; the only begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, he
hath declared him."[12] Though God dwells in
light which no man can approach unto, and is a Being whom no man hath seen, or
can see;[13] yet the light of the knowledge
of the glory of God, in the face of Jesus Christ, the same that shines into the
hearts of God's people on earth, fills the world of bliss. There no sun or
moon shines; but "the glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb is the light
thereof." The glory of God is the illumination, and the Lamb is the luminary
from which it emanates. Jesus will still be our teacher there, and through him
we shall acquire our knowledge of the perfections and counsels of God.
Our knowledge of God will be for ever increasing. On earth, believers "grow
in the knowledge of God and our Saviour Jesus Christ," and the advantages for
attaining to higher knowledge, instead of ceasing at death, will be far greater
in heaven. The perfections and counsels of the infinite God, will be an
exhaustless source of knowledge, a boundless subject of investigation; and the
Mediator, the equal of the Father, and his bosom-counsellor, will be our
all-sufficient instructor; and our glorified spirits will be fitted to
prosecute the study through eternal ages. It follows, that we shall continue
to grow in the knowledge of God, while immortality endures.
The angels diligently study the dealings of God with his people on earth, and,
by this means, acquire knowledge of God's manifold wisdom. They saw his
creative skill and power displayed, when the creation sprang forth from his
hand in its unmarred beauty; and they rejoiced in songs and shoutings. They
learned the justice of God, when some of their number were driven from heaven
for their transgression, and doomed to interminable woe. While the angels have
been making the dispensations of God's providence and grace their delightful
study, we cannot suppose that the spirits of the just, who are their companions
in glory, have been indifferent to these subjects; which interested them so
deeply while on earth. It must be, that they continue to make progress in the
knowledge which, while here below, they so earnestly desired to acquire, and in
which they made a small beginning. Here, the ways of God appear dark and
mysterious, and the doctrine taught us in his word, is attended with
difficulties, which our finite minds labor in vain to remove. We desire
instruction on these points; and Jesus has said, "What I do, thou knowest not
now, but thou shalt know hereafter."[14] We
wait now for the fulfilment of this promise; and we hope hereafter, with the
spirits that are before the throne, to drink in the knowledge which we are here
so desirous to obtain, which we so greatly long to acquire.
How far the learning of the future world will include the sciences which are
taught in the schools on earth, it is of little use to inquire. It will
certainly include whatever is necessary to the knowledge of God. We shall
study his works, his moral government, and the mysterious scheme of redemption.
New truths, of which we have now no conception, will be unfolded to our view;
and the truths of which we have now some knowledge, will be exhibited in new
relations, and with new attractions. The truths which now appear discordant
with each other, will have light thrown on their connecting links; and the
whole will be seen, in one grand system of beautiful proportion and perfect
harmony, and in everything God will be displayed. All our knowledge will be
the knowledge of him.
2. Perfect conformity to God. The first man was made in the image of
God; and the subjects of regeneration are renewed, after the image of God. But
the likeness given in creation has been lost; and that which is reproduced in
regeneration is incomplete. God's people are striving and praying for a higher
degree of conformity; and they are looking to the future world for the
consummation of their wishes: "Then shall I be satisfied, when I awake in thy
likeness."[15] They are predestinated to be
conformed to the image of God's Son,[16] who
is the image of the invisible God.[17] As they
study the divine character here, they grow in conformity to it: "We, beholding
as in a glass, the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image, from
glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord."[18] The same transforming influence which the knowledge of
God exerts in this life, will continue in the future world. As we make
progress in the knowledge of God, we advance from glory to glory, in the
likeness of God; and this progress will be interminable, through all our
immortal existence. "We shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is."[19]
In being conformed to God, who is love, we shall love the display of divine
perfection, of which we shall obtain increasing discoveries in our study of the
character, works, and government of God. As our knowledge enlarges, our love
to the things learned will become more intense, and the new developments which
will be made at every stage of our endless advancement will be increasingly
ravishing. What would be subjects of barren speculation to merely intellectual
beings, will be to us as moral beings, having a moral likeness to God, sources
of ineffable bliss, ever rising higher and higher in its approach towards the
perfect and infinite blessedness of God.
3. A full assurance of divine approbation. In this world we groan,
being burdened. A sense of sin, and God's displeasure on account of it, often
fills the mind with gloom. We see, in the gospel of Christ, how God can be
just, and the justifier of the believer in Jesus: but our faith is often weak.
We are conscious of daily offences against infinite love; and the bitterness of
grief possesses the soul. Oh! to see our Father's face, without a cloud
between, and to feel that perfect love occupies the full capacity of our
hearts, and governs every emotion! We pant after God, the living God. We long
for heaven; because there we shall dwell for ever in the light of his
countenance. The sentence of the last judgment, "Come, ye blessed of my
Father," will give an eternal assurance of divine acceptance, and perfect love
in the heart will for ever exclude all fear.
4. The best possible society. Paul thus describes this society: "Ye are
come unto Mount Zion, and unto the city of the living God, the heavenly
Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of angels, to the general assembly and
church of the first born, which are written in heaven, and to God, the Judge of
all, and to the spirits of just men made perfect, and to Jesus the Mediator of
the new covenant."[20] Our brethren who have
gone before us, with some of whom we took sweet counsel here, and went to the
house of God in company, are there waiting to welcome our arrival. The angels
that attend on us as ministering spirits, during our pilgrimage here, will
convey us, when we leave the world, to the glorious abode, in which they ever
behold the face of our Father in heaven, and will form part of the happy
society into which we shall be introduced. There we shall be with Jesus, the
Mediator, who loved us, and gave himself for us, in whose blood we shall have
washed our robes, and made them white; there we shall approach to God, the
Judge of all, who is our Father, the object of our love, and the source of our
joy. In such society we shall spend eternity. We are travelling to our final
home, through a desert land, a waste howling wilderness, but we seek a city;
and God is not ashamed to be called our God, for he hath prepared for us a
city.[21] A city is a place where society
abounds. The rich and noble resort to cities, that they may enjoy life. Here
they display their wealth, erect magnificent palaces for their residence, and
multiply the means of enjoyment to the utmost possible extent. In our eternal
home, we shall not be lonely pilgrims; but we shall dwell in the city of our
God; where the noblest society will be enjoyed, where the inhabitants will be
all rich, made rich through the poverty of Jesus, and all kings and priests to
God; and where the King of kings holds his court, and admits all into his
glorious presence.
5. The most delightful employment. The future happiness of the saints
is called a rest: but it is not a rest of inactivity; which, however desired it
may sometimes be, by those who inhabit sluggish bodies, is not suited to
spiritual beings. The rest resembles the Sabbath, the holy day, in which the
people of God now lay aside their worldly cares and toils, and devote the
sacred hours to the worship of God. Such a sabbatism remains for the people of
God, when the cares and toils of this life shall have ceased for ever. To the
glorified saints, inaction would be torture, rather than bliss. Their
happiness will not consist of mere passive enjoyment. They will serve
God day and night; and, in this service, will find their highest enjoyment.
They pray now, that his will may be done on earth, as it is done in heaven; and
when they are themselves taken to heaven, they will delight to do his will, as
it is done by all the heavenly host. The worship of God, and the study of his
holy word, form a part of the delightful employment of the saints on the
earthly Sabbath. So, to worship God with joyful songs of praise and suitable
ascriptions of glory, constitutes, according to the Scripture representation, a
part of the saints' employment in glory. The subjects of their transporting
songs, and rapturous ascriptions of praise and glory, will be supplied by their
continually fresh discoveries of the divine perfections, the study of which
will also form an important part of their blissful employment.
6. The absence of everything which could mar their happiness. Sin,
which here pollutes all our joys, will never enter there; for nothing entereth
that defileth.[22] Devils and wicked men will
be confined in their eternal prison, and will be able to molest no more. The
sorrows and afflictions of this world will have passed away. There will be no
more sickness, no more curse; and death, the last enemy, will have been
destroyed.
7. A free use of all the means of enjoyment. Future happiness is
promised as a kingdom: "Fear not, little flock, it is your Father's good
pleasure to give you the kingdom."[23] "Come,
ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom."[24] A king is superior to all the nobles of his realm, and
holds the highest place of dignity in his dominions. Christ, as king, is
crowned with glory and honor; and believers also will be exalted to glory,
honor, and immortality. The subjects of earthly despots are often deprived of
their possessions by the injustice of those who have power over them; but the
king is above the reach of such injustice. He commands the resources of his
dominions, and makes them contribute to his pleasure. Hence, to minds
accustomed to regal government, royalty conveys the idea of the most abundant
resources, and the highest measure of undisturbed enjoyment; hence the language
of Paul: "Now ye are full; now ye are rich; ye have reigned as kings."[25] In this view, the children of God will be
made kings. Besides the honor to which they will be exalted, their enjoyments
will be boundless. All the resources of creation will be made tributary to
them, and no one will dispute their claim, or hinder their enjoyment. Earthly
crowns are often tarnished by the iniquity of those who wear them, but the
crown bestowed on the children of God is a crown of righteousness, not only
because it is righteously conferred, but because, without any unrighteous
violence, the wearers will have all the honors and enjoyments of royalty
secured to them for ever. |
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[1] Matt. xxv. 34; Luke xii. 32; John xiv. 2; Col. iii. 4; 1 Thess. iv. 17; Luke xxii. 29, 30; Acts xiv. 22; Rev. iii. 21; vii. 15-17; xiv. 4; 1 Pet. i. 3, 4; Matt. xxv. 21; John xvii. 24; Rev. xxi. 4; xxii. 3. [2] Rom. viii. 24. [3] 1 Pet. i. 3, 4. [4] Col. i. 5. [5] John xiv. 2. [6] 2 Cor. xii. 2. [7] 1 Cor. ii. 9. [8] Eph. i. 14. [9] 1 Cor. xiii. 12. [10] Isaiah lxvi. 1. [11] Matt. v. 8. [12] John i. 18. [13] 1 Tim. vi. 16. [14] John xiii. 7. [15] Ps. xvii. 15. [16] Rom. viii. 29. [17] Col. i. 15. [18] 2 Cor. iii. 18. [19] 1 John iii. 2. [20] Heb. xii. 22-24. [21] Heb. xi. 16. [22] Rev. xxi. 27. [23] Luke xii. 32. [24] Matt xxv. 34. [25] 1 Cor. iv. 8. |