Study 4: God and Death The Nature of Man | The Soul | The Spirit | Death Is Unconsciousness | The Resurrection | The Judgment | The Place of Reward: Heaven or Earth? | Responsibility To God | Hell | Digressions (Purgatory, Ghosts And Reincarnation, With What Nature Are We Raised?, The "Rapture") | Questions |
4.6 The JudgmentBible teaching concerning the judgment is one of the basic principles of the one faith, which must be clearly understood before baptism (Acts 24:25; Heb. 6:2). Frequently the Scriptures speak of "the day of judgment" (e.g. 2 Pet. 2:9; 3:7; 1 John 4:17; Jude 6), a time when those who have been given the knowledge of God will receive their reward. All these must "stand before the judgment seat of Christ" (Rom. 14:10); we "appear before the judgment seat of Christ" (2 Cor. 5:10) to receive a recompense for our lives in a bodily form. Daniel's visions concerning Christ's second coming, included one of this judgment seat in the form of a throne (Dan. 7:9-14). The parables help to flesh out the details somewhat. That of the talents likens it to the return of a master, who calls his servants and assesses how well they have used the money which he had left them (Matt. 25:14-29). The parable of the fishermen likens the call of the gospel to a fishing net, gathering all kinds of people; the men then sat down (cp. the judgment sitting) and divided the good fish from the bad (Matt. 13:47-49). The interpretation is clear: "At the end of the world the angels shall come forth, and sever the wicked from among the just". From what we have seen so far, it is fair to assume that after the Lord's return and the resurrection, there will be a gathering together of all who have been called to the Gospel to a certain place at a specific time, when they will meet Christ. An account will have to be given by them, and he will indicate whether or not they are acceptable to receive the reward of entering the Kingdom. It is only at this point that the righteous receive their reward. All this is brought together by the parable of the sheep and goats: "The Son of man shall come in his glory, and all the holy angels with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory (David's throne in Jerusalem, Luke 1:32,33): and before him shall be gathered all nations (i.e.people from all nations, cp. Matt. 28:19): and he shall separate them one from another, as a shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats. And he shall set the sheep on his right hand, but the goats on the left. Then shall the King say unto them on his right hand, Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the Kingdom prepared for you" (Matt. 25:31-34). Inheriting the Kingdom of God, receiving the promises to Abraham concerning it, is the reward of the righteous. Yet this will only be after the judgment, which will be at Christ's return. It is therefore impossible to receive the promised reward of an immortalized body before Christ's return; we therefore have to conclude that from the time of death until the resurrection, the believer has no conscious existence at all, seeing that it is impossible to exist in any form without having a body. It is a repeated Biblical principle that when Christ returns, then the reward will be given - and not before:
Jesus bringing our reward with him implies that it has been prepared for us in heaven, but will be brought to us on the earth at the second coming; our "inheritance" of the land promised to Abraham is in this sense "reserved in heaven for you, who are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time" of Christ's coming (1 Peter 1:4,5). Appreciating this enables us to correctly interpret a much misunderstood passage in John 14:2,3: "I (Jesus) go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you (cp. the reward "reserved in heaven"), I will come again, and receive you unto myself, that where I am, there ye may be also". Jesus says elsewhere that he will come again to give us our rewards (Rev. 22:12), and we have seen that these will be given at his judgment seat. He will reign on David's throne in Jerusalem "for ever" (Luke 1:32,33). He will spend eternity here on earth, and where he will be - in God's Kingdom on earth - there we will also be. His promise to "receive you unto myself" can therefore be read as a description of our being accepted by him at the judgment. The Greek phrase, "receive you unto myself", also occurs in Matt. 1:20 concerning Joseph "taking unto himself" Mary as his wife. It therefore does not necessarily refer to physical movement towards Jesus. As the reward will only be given at the judgment on
Christ's return, it follows that the righteous and wicked go to the same place when they
die, i.e. the grave. There is no differentiation made between them in their deaths. The
following is proof positive for this: All this is in sharp contrast to the claims of popular
'Christianity'. Their teaching that the righteous immediately go to heaven at death
destroys the need for a resurrection and judgment. Yet we have seen that these are vital
events in God's plan of salvation, and therefore in the Gospel message. The popular idea
suggests that one righteous person dies and is rewarded by going to heaven, to be followed
the next day, the next month, the next year, by others. This is in sharp contrast to the
Bible's teaching that all the righteous will be rewarded together, at the
same time: The sheep are divided from the goats at the judgment, one
by one. Once the judgment has finished, Christ will say to all the sheep assembled
on his right hand, "Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the Kingdom
prepared for you" (Matt. 25:34). Thus all the sheep inherit the Kingdom at the same
time (cp. 1 Cor. 15:52). At "the harvest" of Christ's return and
judgment, all those who have laboured in the Gospel will "rejoice together"
(John 4:35,36 cp. Matt. 13:39). Rev. 11:18 defines "the time of the dead, that they
should be judged" as the time when God will "give reward unto Thy servants...the
saints...them that fear Thy name" - i.e. all believers together. Hebrews 11 is a chapter listing many of the righteous men
of the Old Testament. Verse 13 comments: "These all died in faith, not having
received the promises" made to Abraham about salvation through entering God's Kingdom
(Heb. 11:8-12). It follows that at their death, these men did not, one by one, go off to
heaven to receive a reward. The reason for this is given in vs. 39,40: They "received
not the promise: God having provided some better thing for us, that they without us should
not be made perfect". The delay in granting their promised reward was because it was
God's plan that all the faithful should "be made perfect" together, at the same
moment. This will be at the judgment, at Christ's return. |