What Happens After We
Die?
Luke 20:27-40
©Copyright
March 13, 2011 by Rev. Bruce Goettsche SERIES: Walking with Jesus
The
question of “What happens after we die?” is a question that every one of us
needs to address. The question is intensely relevant when we stand in a
cemetery by the casket of someone who is precious to us; or when we are facing
the stark reality of our own death.
There
are basically two groups of people in the world. The first group is made up of
those who believe this life is all there is. We live, we die, and that is all
there is. Most major religions have some notion of life beyond the grave. Jesus
taught that there will be a time of judgment and reward followed by eternal life
commensurate with the results of that judgment.
This
morning we are going to see these two viewpoints faceoff in another
confrontation between Jesus and some of the religious leaders of the day. This
conversation takes place in the last week leading up to the cross. The
religious leaders have been peppering Jesus with questions looking for some justification
to discredit and arrest Jesus. It is likely that this conversation is also in
the temple area.
27 Some of the Sadducees, who say there is no
resurrection, came to Jesus with a question.
The Sadducees
The
Sadducees were a smaller group than the Pharisees and had a close association
with the temple and the priesthood. Consequently, they would have been most
directly offended when Jesus overturned the tables of the merchants in the Temple
court.
Sadducees
accepted only the Scriptures as authoritative (the Pharisees also embraced oral
tradition or manmade rules). They gave greatest weight to the first five books
of the Old Testament (the Law) than they did the rest of Scripture. The
Sadducees did not believe in a resurrection, eternal life in Heaven, or angels
and spirits. You have probably heard the little ditty that I have always found
helpful. The Sadducees did not believe in the resurrection of the body and that
is why they are Sad-you-see?
The Sadducees
believed that man determines his own destiny. (The Pharisees believed God is guiding
the universe). The Pharisees looked for the promised Messiah. The Sadducees
were not really eager for a Messiah because he would disrupt the status quo
because they were generally wealthy and had great power. The Sadducees did not
believe in a Day of Judgment.
Making Fun of Eternal Life
The
Sadducees came to Jesus with a hypothetical situation,
28 “Teacher,” they said, “Moses wrote for us that if a
man’s brother dies and leaves a wife but no children, the man must marry the
widow and have children for his brother. 29 Now there were seven
brothers. The first one married a woman and died childless. 30 The
second 31 and then the third married her, and in the same way the
seven died, leaving no children. 32 Finally, the woman died too. 33
Now then, at the resurrection whose wife will she be, since the seven
were married to her?”
The
question is anchored to a teaching in the first five books of the Law. In
Deuteronomy 25:5-6 we read,
5 If brothers are
living together and one of them dies without a son, his widow must not marry
outside the family. Her husband’s brother shall take her and marry her and fulfill
the duty of a brother-in-law to her. 6 The first son she bears shall
carry on the name of the dead brother so that his name will not be blotted out
from Israel.
The
practice was not new to Deuteronomy. Back in Genesis 38 we read the story of
Judah’s daughter-in-law, Tamar. She married Judah’s son Er.
We are told he was wicked and the Lord put him to death. Judah told Er’s brother Onan to father a
child with Tamar in the name of his brother. Onan
didn’t mind being intimate with Tamar but he refused to father a child by her.
Tamar was then promised that the next son would “fulfill his obligation” when
he was old enough. (That never happened). The purpose of the practice was to keep a family
from dying out and to keep the family inheritance intact.
Another
example of this is the story of Ruth. Boaz (the man who married Ruth) said to
another near relative,
Boaz said, “On the
day you buy the land from Naomi and from Ruth the Moabitess,
you acquire the dead man’s widow, in order to maintain the name of the dead
with his property.” (Ruth 4:5)
The
Sadducees affirmed this law. In this case they used that law to ridicule (they
thought) the notion of a resurrection. If a woman’s husband died and she
followed the law by marrying the brother and he also died without providing a
child she married the next brother and this continued through seven brothers
(they are taking the issue to the absurd). The question is: in the resurrection
which brother will she be married to?
The
contemporary counterpart to this would be a woman who had a husband (or two)
who died. She remarries again and then she died. Suppose she was very happy in
every marriage. The question is: “In the resurrection who will she be married
to?”
The men
believed they had Jesus in a no-win situation. They figured he had to either
make some kind of arbitrary choice or He had to declare the resurrection was
not true (to their delight and the consternation of many who were listening.)
There
will always be those who ridicule the notion of eternal life. These people
consider themselves to be hard-core realists. They say, “I believe we live and
then we die . . . that’s it.” I always wonder what motivates them to get up in
the morning. If they are right, life is really meaningless; a mad dash nowhere.
I wonder where they would get any motivation to do what is good and right. You would
think they would just live for themselves for as long as they have (and some do
exactly that).
Unfortunately,
this is not only a cry that comes from the secular world. I heard a Pastor one
Easter Sunday say something like this: “This is the day that we celebrate the
fact that the words and message of Jesus live on in the hearts and lives of His
followers. We too know that even after we die we live on in the hearts of our
loved ones forever.” I responded as I hope you respond hearing those words. I
whispered to the person next to me, “Did that Pastor just deny the real
resurrection of Christ and those who follow Him?
It is
possible that I misunderstood what the Pastor was saying. But I don’t think so.
I know that people say these things all the time. “You loved one will live
forever in your memories.” That’s not a true statement! Memories diminish over
time. At best you and I will be remembered for a couple of generations . . .
perhaps into a third or in rare cases a fourth generation. Only if you did
something incredible in history will your life and deeds be recalled in history
books.
The
Bible teaches that there is real life
following death. Let’s be clear: anyone (whether they sit in front of a pulpit
or stand behind it) who denies the resurrection of the dead is not a Christian!
Jesus’ Teaching on Heaven
Jesus’
answer to the Sadducees was unexpected. Jesus says: “You are asking an invalid
question”
34 Jesus replied, “The
people of this age marry and are given in marriage. 35 But those who
are considered worthy of taking part in that age and in the resurrection from
the dead will neither marry nor be given in marriage, 36 and they
can no longer die; for they are like the angels. They are God’s children, since
they are children of the resurrection
Jesus
pointed out that these men were viewing Heaven as if it were a continuation of
earth. He said there is no marriage in Heaven because people no longer die (we
don’t need to perpetuate the race). Jesus said we will be like the angels. This
does not necessarily mean that we will have wings; it simply means that we will
live forever in the presence of the Lord and will spend our lives serving Him.
We will no longer sin. We will know the will of God, and we will do it
perfectly and joyfully.
Obviously
this teaching runs contrary to that of the Muslims (who look forward to getting
many virgins in Heaven), and the Mormons who say marriage is “celestial” to
enable us to populate various worlds as we ascend to divinity.
This idea
that there is no marriage in Heaven is a great disappointment to some (and a
great relief to others, I suppose). Many of us look forward to being with our spouse
and family in Heaven. Will that relationship be different in Heaven? Yes it
will. But it will not be worse!
Marriage
is a unique relationship of intimacy in this world. I believe Jesus is saying every relationship in Heaven will
surpass the marital relationship in Heaven! We will know each other fully. We
will love each other intelligently. We will know an intimacy that is greater
than that which can be achieved by sexual union. This is not a bad thing . . .
it is a good thing!
Understanding the Bible’s Teaching
37
But
in the account of the bush, even Moses showed that the dead rise, for he calls
the Lord ‘the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.’ 38
He is not the God of the dead, but of the living, for to him all are
alive.”
39 Some of the teachers
of the law responded, “Well said, teacher!” 40 And no one dared to
ask him any more questions.
Jesus not
only made this declaration of what Heaven will be like, He went back to the Old
Testament (and in this case He went back to the book of Exodus and the very Law
the Sadducees revered) to show that the teaching about the resurrection is
found throughout the Old Testament.
Jesus
referred to the story of the burning bush in Exodus 3. (Jesus does not give the
reference because references were added much later for our benefit). Jesus
referred to verse 6 and pointed out that God did not say, “I was the God of Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob.” He said “I am (present tense)
the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob (who had died a long time before this).”
If
someone comes to you and says, “I was your father’s (or your mother’s) friend,”
it may be because your parent is dead or there has been a change in their
relationship. But if someone said, “I am your father’s (or mother’s) friend,”
two things are implied: the existence of your parent and the ongoing
relationship they have with your parent. So when God said, not “I am the God of Abraham”,” he declares not
only Abraham’s existence, but his ongoing relationship with him. You can’t have
an ongoing relationship with one who is gone.[1]
The Old
Testament is filled with other references to life beyond the grave let me give
you a few examples,
“Multitudes who sleep
in the dust of the earth will awake: some to everlasting life, others to shame
and everlasting contempt. Those who are wise will shine like the brightness of
the heavens, and those who lead many to righteousness, like the stars forever
and ever.” (Daniel 12:2, 3)
But
your dead will live; their bodies will rise. You who
dwell in the dust, wake up and shout for joy. Your dew is like the dew of the
morning; the earth will give birth to her dead. (Isaiah 26:19; cf. 25:8)
You
guide me with your counsel, and afterward you will take me into glory. (Psalm
73:24; cf. vv. 25–28)
“I know that my Redeemer lives, and that in
the end he will stand upon the earth. And after my skin has been destroyed, yet
in my flesh I will see God; I myself will see him with my own eyes—I, and not
another. How my heart yearns within me!” (Job 19:25–27)
The
point Jesus is making is solid. The Sadducees who said they revered the
Scriptures alone did not understanding this plain teaching of Scripture. The
Bible affirms life beyond the grave from its very earliest chapters.
Conclusions
There
have been some very popular books out about life after death. Two of them, “30
minutes in Heaven” and “Heaven is for Real” are books widely embraced in the
Christian community. The first was written by a Pastor who was in a serious car
accident. Rescuers left him for dead. The Pastor revived and tells of hearing wonderful
music and meeting relatives and friends who had died.
The
second book is a captivating story about a four year old little boy who tells
of sitting on the lap of Jesus, of meeting a miscarried sister of whom he had
no knowledge, and a meeting with a young version of a Grandfather he had never
met. His story is a great encouragement that there is indeed a life beyond the
grave for those who believe.
As
captivating as these stories are, our real confidence in life beyond the grave
comes from the Bible and from the lips of Jesus. Jesus talked about being the
Resurrection and the life, He told the story of the Rich man and Lazarus giving
us a vivid description of the eternal states before the door of Heaven was
opened by the resurrection of Christ. And Jesus gave us teaching such as this passage
before us to affirm that not only is there life beyond the grave; it is a life
that is wonderful and different.
The
exclamation point for life beyond the grave is the resurrection and post death
appearances of Jesus Himself. As Bill Gaither has written, “Because He lives, I
can face tomorrow”. I am persuaded that we can confidently live this life knowing
we shall live again.
We should
look forward to seeing loved ones who have gone before us. The threat of our impending
death should be tempered by the reality of a future reunion. But the real glory
of Heaven is being in the presence of Jesus.
Todd Burpo (author of Heaven is for Real) tells about a time he
took his four-year old with him to visit a man who was dying in the hospital.
Todd prayed for the man and then turned to talk to the family. As they talked,
his son Colton moved toward the man.
As we watched, Colton
reached up and grabbed Harold’s hand. It was an E. F. Hutton moment. Everyone
watched intently, listening. Colton peered earnestly up into Harold’s face and
said, “It’s going to be okay. The first person you’re going to see is Jesus.”
(Todd Burpo Heaven
is for Real- p. 119)
If we
embrace the Bible’s teaching of life beyond the grave and embrace the truth of what
Jesus says to us then we need to ask ourselves a question: How would we live if
we believed what the Bible affirms about life beyond the grave?
A
belief in eternal life, heaven and hell is not just a theological issue. It is
intensely practical. If we believe the words of Jesus it will impact everything
we do from this day forward. Despair will be replaced by hope; drudgery will give
way to anticipation; indifference will be replaced by living with focus.
Believing in a real eternity will quite frankly change everything!
The
Sadducees were trying to trip up Jesus and show to the world He was not worth
following. Instead, I hope they have encouraged you, like they have encouraged
me, to follow Him more fervently, joyfully, and expectantly.
©Copyright
March 13, 2011 by Rev. Bruce Goettsche SERIES: Walking with Jesus
[1] Hughes, R. K. (1998). Luke : That you may know the truth. Preaching the Word (276). Wheaton, Ill.: Crossway Books.