Your Life And What Comes After (27): Where Is Heaven?

Adriana pressed her forehead gently against the cool windowpane, watching the trees sway and dance as if whispering secrets to one another. She could see the branches bend, the leaves shimmer, and the grass ripple in soft waves, yet the wind itself remained invisible—always present, always felt, but never seen. As she watched the world move without a visible mover, she wondered how something so real could hide so completely, as if the wind were a shy friend who preferred to speak through the trees rather than show its face.

In the Bible, ‘heaven‘ often simply means the spiritual realm where God lives, not an actual place up in the clouds with angels, pearly gates, and such.

But where is that place where God lives actually located? I like the way N. T. Wright, a Bible teacher, puts it:

Going to Heaven?

Did you know that the Bible never uses the phrases “go to heaven” or “going to heaven” to describe what happens to people when they die? That’s because heaven isn’t a place where people are going someday; it’s a place where God is right now.

Heaven isn’t a place that we go as a reward for being good, like Disneyland. It’s not a location on a map, like Chicago or New York, that we can find directions to or roads that take us there.

So, where is that place where God lives? Well, it’s all around us. It’s next to us, above us, and below us. God lives in the unseen places that surround and fill everything.

Like the wind all around us that we can’t see, yet moving the things that we can see.

We’ve talked about heaven quite a bit; next, we’ll take a little tour of how we should think about hell. Ooooohhhhhh!

Two Questions About God’s Foreknowledge

Is biblical prophecy based on God’s meticulous foreknowledge, or on His power and ability to bend the course of history to His will and grand plan?

If God has predestined everything to happen exactly as it has and will happen, even down to the most minute molecular phenomena, then aren’t we essentially living in a kind of simulation, as some theorists have suggested?

Your Life And What Comes After (26): What Is Heaven?

Where exactly is heaven? Is it up in the clouds? In outer space? On another planet, or in a galaxy far away?

Before we can understand where heaven is, we should first know what heaven is. When heaven is mentioned in the Bible, it can either mean any place above the ground or it can mean the realm in which God lives.

The birds we often see flying above us are in heaven, so to speak.

The stars, clouds, and planets are also above the ground, and there are many verses in the Bible that talk about those things being in the heavens.

Where God Lives

This verse says that our Father, God, is in heaven. Does that mean He’s flying around with the birds that are in heaven? No, of course not.

Here the Bible is talking about a different kind of heaven. This heaven is the realm where God lives—invisible to our eyes, yet very real and near.

The main idea about heaven that we should understand is that it is not a place up in the clouds where we go someday after we die to get wings and play harps if we’re good in this life.

Heaven is a place we can go to now—and every day—in prayer, to be in the presence of our Father, God.

Are You A ‘Non’?

Anyone who knows even a little bit about the Bible and the history of Christianity knows that it was the religious leaders of the time, along with their secular allies, that were responsible for the killing of the prophets, the reformers, and even the Son of God himself, Yeshua our Messiah.

The religious leaders. The wolves in sheep’s clothing. The whited sepulchers. The vipers. The religious leaders.

There is no new thing under the sun. Fallen human nature and the rot of man-made religion hasn’t changed since they murdered the prophets, burned the ‘heretics’, and tortured and crucified our Lord.

That is part of the reason why I do not subscribe to a modern denominational creed of set of doctrines. I don’t think that modern day Evangelicals, or Baptists, or Lutherans, or Catholics are going to burn anyone in the town square – it’s just that I don’t trust organized religion.

I’m non-denominational. I’m a ‘Non’. And there are a lot of others just like me, in fact more and more folks are fleeing traditional ‘churchianity’ every day. Why? More on that in future posts.

Here’s my one and only creed, which I’m happy share with my brothers and sisters in The Fellowship of the Nons:

Creed of the Fellowship of the Nons

Our living God is a loving God and the Bible is His revealed word and will.
Our hope and eternal salvation relies entirely on the work of God’s only begotten son, Jesus Christ, who is the way, the truth, and the life.

A huge part of the purpose and reason for the Bible Rebel blog is stated in our mission:

“To examine and question the assumptions of religious tradition and provide a resource for information and inspiration for people of faith who have become dissatisfied with an increasingly lifeless and empty ‘churchianity’.”

What The Hell: Universal Salvation

Bosch, Hieronymus; An Angel Leading a Soul into Hell; Wellcome Library; http://www.artuk.org/artworks/an-angel-leading-a-soul-into-hell-125754

Bible Rebel is exploring the three major Christian doctrines concerning the theology of hell. Below are some quotes from three prominent theologians/scholars who hold the universal salvation view.

Links to the other views on Bible Rebel
Annihilationism (often called “conditional immortality”)
Infernalism (eternal conscious torment)

David Bentley Hart (Eastern Orthodox theologian)

“If God is the good creator of all, then in the end all shall return to Him—every last rational soul.” —from That All Shall Be Saved (2019)
Hart argues that God’s goodness, freedom, and victory in Christ logically require the ultimate restoration of all people.

J. A. T. Robinson (Anglican bishop and New Testament scholar)

“The Christian faith is universalist in its logic… God’s purpose is the reconciliation of all, and nothing less.” —from In the End, God… (1950)
Robinson was one of the first major 20th‑century Anglican voices to articulate universal reconciliation as the natural conclusion of the gospel.

Thomas Talbott (Christian philosopher)

“If God truly wills the salvation of all and if nothing can finally defeat His redemptive love, then universal reconciliation follows.” —from The Inescapable Love of God (1999)
Talbott’s work is foundational in modern Christian universalism, arguing from Scripture, logic, and the character of God.

Your Life And What Comes After (25): A Tree Or A Volcano?

Culley grinned as he whispered the first sentence to the kid next to him, carefully covering his mouth with his hand like it was a top-secret message. The sentence was simple and harmless—something about a blue bike leaning against a tree—but as it traveled around the circle, giggles popped up, eyebrows lifted, and whispers grew faster and messier. By the time the message reached the last student Culley could barely sit still in his chair.

When the final sentence was spoken out loud, it was nothing like the original: the blue bike had turned into a flying goat, the tree had become a volcano, and somehow a librarian was involved. The class burst into laughter, and Culley laughed too, realizing how easily a message could change when passed from person to person.

A Blue Bike or a Flying Goat?

Our little story here shows how the meaning of words and ideas can change into something different from what was meant at first. It’s how true things become false rumors.

This happens with some of the things God has said in His Word, the Bible—especially things about heaven, hell, and the end of the world. So, we want to be sure that what we hear about the things of God is actually what God really meant when He inspired people to write them down in the Bible.

Was It an Apple?

For example, how many people think that the fruit that Adam and Eve ate in the Garden of Eden was an apple?

But it doesn’t say “apple,” does it? It says “fruit.” Do you see how words and ideas can change?

So, before we dig into what the Bible says about heaven, hell, and the end of the world in the next chapter, let’s be aware of the ideas, words, and pictures we already have in our minds that may or may not be what God actually meant in His Word.

Next: Where Is Heaven?

They Said It: Four Quotes On The Books Of Samuel

Here are four insightful quotes about the Old Testament Books of I and II Samuel.

Your Life And What Comes After (24): See All The People

What is the Church Age?

Have you ever heard the nursery rhyme that goes like this—‘Here’s the church, here’s the steeple, open the doors and see all the people’?

Is the Church Age about church buildings, or is it about people? In the Bible’s New Testament books after the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, the ‘Church’ always refers to the people who believe that Jesus Christ is the Savior and Son of God.

Just as the Old Testament was instruction for the people who lived back in those times on how to walk in God’s purposes, and the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John show us how Jesus lived according to God’s plan, the New Testament books after the Gospels now instruct us today on how to do the same.

Seek God First

Spend some time every morning praying and just enjoying the presence of God, speaking to Him and letting Him speak to you.

Add Value to the World Around You

Do meaningful work. Gain knowledge and learn valuable skills. Help and serve others around you in real ways that meet real needs.

Do Hard Things Without Fear

Don’t ever be afraid of hard work or of doing hard things. God loves you and has already given you great strength and courage.

Fight Darkness with Light

Stand up, speak up, and show up. Dispel the darkness around you by shining forth God’s love and light.

The You Miracle

Always remember that you are a miracle, and that God’s plan includes you in His family and household. See yourself as God sees you: His beautiful child.

Plug into God’s purposes and plan, and your life will be an exciting adventure as a co-worker with the Creator of the universe!

Next, we’ll start our journey into understanding heaven, hell, and the end of the world.

What The Hell: Eternal Conscious Torment

Bosch, Hieronymus; An Angel Leading a Soul into Hell; Wellcome Library; http://www.artuk.org/artworks/an-angel-leading-a-soul-into-hell-125754

Bible Rebel is exploring the three major Christian doctrines concerning the theology of hell.

  • Annihilationism (often called “conditional immortality”) see Bible Rebel post here
  • Infernalism (eternal conscious torment)
  • Universalism (everyone winds up in “heaven” eventually)

Here are some quotes from three prominent theologians/scholars who hold the eternal conscious torment view of hell.

Charles H. Spurgeon (Baptist preacher)
“When thou diest, thy soul will be tormented alone; that will be a hell for it, but at the day of judgment thy body will join thy soul, and then thou wilt have twin hells… every nerve a string on which the devil shall forever play his diabolical tune of ‘Hell’s Unutterable Lament.’”
— Spurgeon vividly affirms conscious, ongoing torment in hell after death, consistent with traditional teaching on eternal punishment.

Denny Burk (Theologian; The Gospel Coalition essay)
“Hell is a place of eternal, conscious torment for everyone who does not trust in Jesus Christ…I t describes unending experience of divine judgment and just retribution for sin.”
— This reflects a contemporary evangelical articulation of the historic doctrine of ECT, emphasizing unending conscious punishment for the unrepentant.

John Piper (Reformed theologian; quoted in public domain margin)
“No one can hide from the Lord… God’s power is present in hell as the One who… maintains suffering…†…† (paraphrased summary of his emphasis that torment in hell is real and ongoing).