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Heaven may refer to the physical heavens, the
sky or the seemingly endless expanse of
the
universe beyond. This is the
traditional literal meaning of the term in English. However, since
at least the 11th century, it is typically also used to refer to an
afterlife plane of existence (often held to exist
in another
realm) in various
religions and
spiritual
philosophies, often described as the
holiest possible place, accessible by people
according to various standards of
divinity,
goodness,
piety,
faith etc.
Etymology
The modern
English word
Heaven derives from the word
heven around 1159,
which developed from the
Old English
heofon around 1000 referring to the
Christianized "place where God dwells" but
earlier meaning "sky, firmament" (attested from around 725 in
Beowulf); this is cognate with
other
Germanic languages -
Old Saxon heƀan "sky, heaven",
Middle Low German heven
"sky",
Old Icelandic himinn "sky,
heaven",
Gothic himins, and
existed in variation with a related word having an
-l
suffix:
Old Frisian himel,
himul "sky, heaven", Old Saxon/
Old High German himil,
Dutch hemel, and modern
German Himmel, all of which derive
from the
reconstructed
Proto-Germanic
*
Hemina-.
Basic concepts
While there are abundant and varied sources for conceptions of
Heaven, the typical believer's view appears to depend largely on
his religious tradition and particular sect. Some
religions conceptualize Heaven as pertaining to
some type of peaceful life after death related to the immortality
of the soul. Heaven is generally construed as a place of
happiness, sometimes
eternal happiness. A psychological reading of
sacred religious texts across cultures and throughout history would
describe it as a term signifying a state of "full aliveness" or
wholeness.
In ancient
Judaism, the belief in Heaven and
afterlife was connected with that of
Sheol
(mentioned in
Isaiah 38:18,
Psalms 6:5 and
Job
7:7-10). Some scholars asserted that Sheol was an earlier concept,
but this theory is not universally held. One later Jewish sect that
maintained belief in a
Resurrection of the dead was known
as the
Pharisees. Opposed to them were the
Sadducees who denied the doctrine of
Resurrection (Matt. 22:23). In most forms of
Christianity, belief in the afterlife is
professed in the major Creeds, such as the
Nicene Creed, which states: "We look for the
resurrection of the dead, and the life of the world to come."
The following are examples of the different terminology in the
Bible often considered to reference the concept of "heaven":
the kingdom of heaven
(Matthew 5:3), the kingdom of the Father (Matthew 13:43), life
(Matthew 7:14), life everlasting (Matthew 19:16), the joy of the
Lord (Matthew 25:21), great reward (Matthew 5:12), the kingdom of
God (Mark 9:45), the kingdom of Christ (Luke 22:30), the house of
the Father (John 14:2), city of God, the heavenly Jerusalem (Hebr.,
xii), the holy place (Hebrews 9:12; D.
V. holies), paradise (2 Corinthians 12:4),
incorruptible crown (1 Corinthians 9:25), crown of life (James
1:12), crown of justice (II Timothy iv, 8), crown of glory (1 Peter
5:4)
In
Buddhism there are several heavens, all
of which are still part of
Samsara
(illusionary reality). Those who accumulate good
karma may be reborn in one of them. However, their
stay in the heaven is not eternal—eventually they will use up their
good
karma and will undergo a different
rebirth into another realm, as
humans,
animals, or
other beings. Because Heaven is temporary and part of
Samsara, Buddhists focus more on escaping the cycle
of rebirth and reaching
enlightenment
(Nirvana).
In the native Chinese
Confucian traditions Heaven (Tian) is an important concept, where the ancestors
reside and from which emperors drew their mandate to rule in their
dynastic propaganda, for example.
Some faiths teach that one enters heaven at the moment of death,
while others teach that this occurs at a later time (day of
judgement). Some of Christianity along with other major religions
maintain that entry into Heaven awaits such time as, "When the form
of this world has passed away." (*
JPII) One view expressed in the Bible is that
on the day Christ returns the righteous dead are resurrected first,
and then those who are alive and judged righteous will be brought
up to join them, to be taken to heaven. (I Thess 4:13-18)
Two related and often confused concepts of heaven in Christianity
are better described as the "resurrection of the body", which is
exclusively of Biblical origin, as contrasted with "the immortality
of the soul", which is also evident in the Greek tradition. In the
first concept, the soul does not enter heaven until the last
judgement or the "end of time" when it (along with the body) is
resurrected and judged. In the second concept, the soul goes to a
heaven on another plane immediately after death. These two concepts
are generally combined in the doctrine of the double judgement
where the soul is judged once at death and goes to a temporary
heaven, while awaiting a second and final physical judgement at the
end of the world.(*
JPII, also see
eschatology,
afterlife)
In some early religions (such as the
Ancient Egyptian faith), Heaven was a
physical place far above the Earth in a "dark area" of space where
there were no stars, basically beyond the Universe. Departed souls
would undergo a literal journey to reach Heaven, along the way to
which there could exist hazards and other entities attempting to
deny the reaching of Heaven.
One popular medieval view of Heaven was that it existed as a
physical place above the clouds and that God and the Angels were
physically above, watching over man. Heaven as a physical place
survived in the concept that it was located far out into space, and
that the stars were "lights shining through from heaven".
Several works of written and filmed
science fiction have plots in which Heaven
can be reached by the living through technological means. An
example is
Disney film
The Black Hole, in which a
manned spacecraft found both Heaven (or another dimension) and
Hell located at the bottom of a
black hole.
The Catholic teach the belief that Heaven is a spiritual place,
unreachable by humans and only to be entered after death, although
it can hold physical things, such as the Ascension or
Assumption.
Many of today's Biblical scholars, such as
N. T. Wright, in tracing the concept of Heaven back
to its Jewish roots, see Earth and Heaven as overlapping or
interlocking. Heaven is known as God's space, his dimension, and is
not a place that can be reached by human technology. This belief
states that Heaven is where God lives and reigns whilst being
active and working alongside people on Earth. One day when God
restores all things, Heaven and Earth will be forever combined into
the 'New Heavens' and 'New Earth'.
Entrance into Heaven
Religions that teach about heaven differ on how (and if) one gets
into it, typically in the afterlife. In most, entrance to Heaven is
conditional on having lived a "good life" (within the terms of the
spiritual system). A notable exception to this is the '
sola fide' belief of many mainstream Protestants,
which teaches that one does not have to live a perfectly "good
life," but that one must accept
Jesus
Christ as one's saviour, and then Jesus Christ will assume the
guilt of one's
sins; believers are believed to
be forgiven regardless of any good or bad "works" one has
participated in.
Many religions state that those who do not go to heaven will go to
a place "without the presence of God",
Hell,
which is eternal (see
annihilationism). Some religions believe
that other afterlives exist in addition to Heaven and Hell, such as
Purgatory. One belief,
universalism, believes that everyone will go to
Heaven eventually, no matter what they have done or believed on
earth. Some forms of Christianity believe Hell to be the
termination of the soul.
Many people who come close to death and have near death experiences
report meeting relatives or entering "the Light" in an otherworldly
dimension, which share similarities with the religious concept of
Heaven. Even though there are also reports of distressing
experiences and negative life-reviews, which share some
similarities with the concept of Hell, the positive experiences of
meeting or entering 'the Light' is reported as an immensely intense
feeling state of love, peace and joy beyond human comprehension.
Together with this intensely positive feeling state, people who
have near death experiences also report that consciousness or a
heightened state of awareness seems as if it is at the heart of
experiencing a taste of 'Heaven'.
In the Bahá'à Faith
The
Bahá'à Faith regards the
conventional description of heaven (and hell) as a specific place
as symbolic. The
Bahá'Ã
writings describe heaven as a "spiritual condition" where
closeness to God is defined as heaven; conversely
hell is seen as a state of remoteness from God.
Bahá'u'lláh, the founder of
the Bahá'à Faith, has stated that the nature of the life of the
soul in the afterlife is beyond comprehension in the physical
plane, but has stated that the soul will retain its consciousness
and individuality and remember its physical life; the soul will be
able to recognize other souls and communicate with them.
For Bahá'Ãs, entry into the next life has the potential to bring
great joy. Bahá'u'lláh likened death to the process of birth. He
explains: "The world beyond is as different from this world as this
world is different from that of the child while still in the
womb of its mother." The analogy to the womb in
many ways summarizes the Bahá'à view of earthly existence: just as
the womb constitutes an important place for a person's initial
physical development, the physical world provides for the
development of the individual
soul.
Accordingly, Bahá'Ãs view life as a preparatory stage, where one
can develop and perfect those qualities which will be needed in the
next life. The key to spiritual progress is to follow the path
outlined by the current
Manifestations of God, which Bahá'Ãs
believe is currently Bahá'u'lláh. Bahá'u'lláh wrote, "Know thou, of
a truth, that if the soul of man hath walked in the ways of God, it
will, assuredly return and be gathered to the glory of the
Beloved."
The Bahá'à teachings state that there exists a hierarchy of souls
in the
afterlife, where the merits of each
soul determines their place in the hierarchy, and that souls lower
in the hierarchy cannot completely understand the station of those
above. Each soul can continue to progress in the afterlife, but the
soul's development is not entirely dependent on its own conscious
efforts, the nature of which we are not aware, but also augmented
by the grace of God, the
prayers of others,
and good deeds performed by others on Earth in the name of that
person.
In Buddhism
According to
Buddhist Cosmology the universe is undergoing
cycles and beings are spread over a number of existential "planes"
in which this human world is only one (though important) "realm" of
life.
However, all heavenly beings are regarded as inferior in status to
the
Arhats who have attained Nirvana. One
notable Buddhist paradise is the
Pure Land
of Pure Land Buddhism.
One of the Buddhist
Sutras states that a
hundred years of our existence is equal to one day and one night in
the world of the
thirty-three
gods. Thirty such days add up to their one month. Twelve such
months become their one year, while they live for a thousand such
years.
In Chinese Faiths
Heaven is a key concept in Chinese mythology, philosophies and
religions, and is on one end of the spectrum a synonym of
Shangdi ("Supreme Deity") and on
the other naturalistic end, a synonym for
nature and the sky. The Chinese term for Heaven,
Tian (天), derives from the name of the
supreme deity of the
Zhou Dynasty.
After their conquest of the
Shang
Dynasty in 1122 BC, the Zhou people considered their supreme
deity
Tian to be identical with the
Shang supreme deity
Shangdi, much as
the Romans identified the Greek
Zeus with their
Jupiter. The Zhou people attributed Heaven
with anthropomorphic attributes, evidenced in the etymology of the
Chinese character for Heaven or sky, which originally depicted a
person with a large cranium. Heaven is said to see, hear and watch
over all men. Heaven is affected by man's doings, and having
personality, is happy and angry with them. Heaven blesses those who
please it and sends calamities upon those who offend it. Heaven was
also believed to transcend all other spirits and gods, with
Confucius asserting, "He who offends
against Heaven has none to whom he can pray."
Other philosophers born around the time of Confucius such as
Mozi took an even more theistic view of Heaven,
believing that Heaven is the divine ruler, just as the
Son of Heaven (the King of Zhou) is the
earthly ruler. Mozi believed that spirits and minor gods exist, but
their function is merely to carry out the will of Heaven, watching
for evil-doers and punishing them. Thus they functionas angels of
Heaven and do not detract from its monotheistic government of the
world. With such a high monotheism, it is not surprising that
Mohism championed a concept called "universal
love" (
jian'ai, 兼愛), which taught that Heaven loves all
people equally and that each person should similarly love all human
beings without distinguishing between his own relatives and those
of others. In
Mozi's
Will of Heaven
(天志), he writes:
Mozi criticized the Confucians of his own time for not following
the teachings of Confucius. By the time of the later
Han Dynasty, however, under the influence of
Xunzi, the Chinese concept of Heaven and
Confucianism itself had become mostly naturalistic, though some
Confucians argued that Heaven was where ancestors reside.
Worship of
Heaven in China continued with the erection of shrines, the last
and greatest being the Temple of Heaven
in Beijing, and the offering of prayers. The
ruler of China in every Chinese dynasty would perform annual
sacrificial rituals to Heaven, usually by slaughtering two healthy
bulls as sacrifice.
In Nahua
The
Nahua people such as the
Chichimecs,
Toltecs and
the
Aztecs believed that the heavens were
constructed and separated into 13 levels. Each level had from one
to many Lords living in and ruling these heavens. Most important of
these heavens was Omeyocan (Place of Two). The thirteen heavens
were ruled by
Ometeotl, the dual Lord,
creator of the Dual-Genesis who, as male, takes the name
Ometecuhtli (Two Lord), and as female is named Omeciuhatl
In Christianity
Christianity has taught "Heaven" as a
place of
eternal life, in that it is a
shared plane to be attained by all the elect (rather than an
abstract experience related to individual concepts of the ideal).
The Christian Church has been divided over how people gain this
eternal life. From the 16th to the late 19th century,
Christendom was divided between the
Roman Catholic view, the
Orthodox view, the
Coptic view, the
Jacobite view, the
Abyssinian view and
Protestant views. See also
Christian denominations.
Roman Catholics believe that entering purgatory a cleanses one of
sin (period of suffering until one's nature is
perfected), during agony in which makes one acceptable to enter
heaven. This is valid for
venial sin
only, as
mortal sins can be forgiven only
through the act of reconciliation and repentance while on earth.
Some within the
Anglican Communion,
notably
Anglo-Catholics, also hold to
this belief, despite their separate history. However, in the
Eastern Orthodox,
Oriental Orthodox, and
Eastern Catholic Churches, it is only
God who has the final say on who enters heaven.
In the Eastern Orthodox Church, heaven is understood as union
(
Theosis) and communion with the
Triune God (reunion of Father and Son through love).
In
Protestant Christian sects, eternal
life depends upon the sinner receiving
God's grace (unearned and undeserved blessing
stemming from God's love) through
faith in
Jesus' death for their sins, see
atonement, his resurrection as the Christ, and
accepting his Lordship (authority and guidance) over their lives.
Some Protestant sects also teach that a physical baptism, or
obligatory process of transformation or experience of spiritual
rebirth, is further required. Also, Protestantism is divided into
groups who believe in the doctrine of
eternal security (once a person becomes a
Christian, s/he remains one forever, also referred to by the slogan
"once saved, always saved") and those who believe that a person who
sins continually without any repentance or penitence was never
saved in the first place. Some sects do believe that those who
continually sin can lose their salvation, though it is generally
believed that it shows that the individual was not fully committed
in the first place.
According to the website "
Religioustolerance.org",
"Conservative and mainline Protestant denominations tend to base
their belief in heaven on the literal interpretation of certain
passages of the Bible, and symbolic interpretations of others. They
arrive at very different beliefs because they select different
passages to read literally."
Early Christian writing
From the early second century, we have a fragment of one of the
lost volumes of
Papias, a Christian
bishop, who expounded that "heaven" was separated
into three distinct layers. He referred to the first as just
"heaven", the second as "paradise", and the third as "the city".
Papias taught that "there is this distinction between the
habitation of those who produce a hundredfold, and that of those
who produce sixty-fold, and that of those who produce
thirty-fold".
In the 2nd century AD,
Irenaeus (a Greek
bishop) wrote that not all who are saved would merit an abode in
heaven itself.
Christians in the first century, such as Paul of Tarsus, believed
that the Kingdom of God was coming to earth within their lifetimes.
They looked forward to a divine future on earth. After the Kingdom
of God did not arrive, Christians gradually refined their hopes, so
that they came to look forward to a reward in heaven after death
rather than to a reward in an imminent, divine kingdom on earth;
while continuing to use the major creeds' statements of belief in
the Resurrection.
In Orthodox Christianity
The teachings of the
Eastern
Orthodox and
Oriental Orthodox
communions regarding the Kingdom of Heaven, or Kingdom of God, are
basically taken from scripture, and thus many elements of this
belief are held in common with other scriptural faiths and
denominations. Some specific descriptions of this Kingdom as given
in the canon of scripture include— (this list is by no means
comprehensive):
- Peaceful Conditions on a New Earth — Is. 2:2–4, 9:7, 11:6–9,
27:13, 32:17–18, 33:20–21, 60:17–18, Ez. 34:25–28, 37:26, Zech
9:10, Matt. 5:3–5, Rev. 21
- Eternal Rule by a Messiah–King — Ps. 72, Jer 31:33–34, Zech
2:10–11, 8:3, 14:9, Matt 16:27, Rev 21:3–4
- an heir of David, Is. 9:6–7, 11:1–5
- Bodily perfection — No hunger, thirst, death, or sickness; a
pure language, etc. – Is. 1:25, 4:4, 33:24, 35:5–6, 49:10,
65:20–24, Jer. 31:12–13, Ez. 34:29, 36:29–30, Micah 4:6–7, Zeph.
3:9–19, Matt 13:43
- Ruined cities inhabited by people and flocks of sheep — Is.
32:14, 61:4–5, Ez. 36:10,33–38, Amos 9:14
Eastern Orthodox cosmology
Eastern Orthodox
cosmology perceives
heaven as having different levels ( ), the lowest of which is
Paradise. At the time of
creation, paradise touched the
earth at the
Garden of Eden. After
the
Fall of man, paradise was separated
from the earth, and mankind forbidden entry, lest he partake of the
Tree of Life and live eternally in a
state of sinfulness ( ). At his
death on
the Cross, the Orthodox believe Jesus opened the door to
Paradise to mankind again ( ), and the
Good
Thief was the first to enter.
Various
saints have had
visions of heaven ( ). The Orthodox
concept of life in heaven is described in one of the
prayers for the dead: "…a place of
light, a place of green pasture, a place of repose, whence all
sickness, sorrow and sighing are fled away."
In Roman Catholicism
The Roman Catholic Church bases its belief in Heaven on some main
biblical passages in the Hebrew and Christian Scriptures (Old and
New Testaments) and also the books of the
apocrypha and collected church wisdom. Heaven is
the Realm of the Blessed
Trinity, the
Blessed
Virgin Mary (also called the
Queen of Heaven), the
angels and the
saints.
According to the dogma of
Assumption
of the Virgin Mary, the
Virgin
Mary "having completed the course of her earthly life, was
assumed body and soul into heavenly glory", which implies that
heaven must have some facility to support human bodies as well as
souls or that the experience of heaven is to be understood as a
spiritual (soul) experience while still on earth.
The essential joy of heaven is called the
beatific vision, which is derived from the
vision of God's essence. The soul rests perfectly in God, and does
not, or cannot desire anything else than God. After the
Last Judgment, when the soul is reunited with
its body, the body participates in the happiness of the soul. It
becomes incorruptible, glorious and perfect. Any physical defects
the body may have laboured under are erased. Heaven is also known
as paradise in some cases.
The Great
Gulf separates heaven from
hell.
The
Roman Catholic teaching
regarding Heaven is found in the
Catechism of the Catholic
Church: "Those who die (generally understood as physical death
as opposed to "body level," ego identity) in God's grace and
friendship and are perfectly purified, live forever (defined as
immortality of the body as opposed to eternal aliveness in the
psychological sense). This perfect (divine) life with [God] (Father
Deity rather than concept of "perfect goodness") is called heaven.
[It] is the ultimate end and fulfilment of the deepest human
longings, the state of supreme, definitive happiness, full
aliveness. The Catholic Church teaches that only those baptized by
water (symbol of purification/internal cleansing), blood (symbol of
martyrdom), or desire (explicit or implicit desire for
purification) may enter heaven and those who have died in a state
of grace may enter heaven.
Upon dying, each soul goes to what is called "the particular
judgement" where its own afterlife is decided (i.e. Heaven after
Purgatory, straight to Heaven, or
Hell.) This
is different from "the general judgement" also known as "the
Last judgement" which will occur when
Christ returns to judge all the living
and the dead.
It is a common Roman Catholic belief that
St. Michael the Archangel carries
the soul to Heaven. The belief that
Saint Peter meets the soul at the
"Pearly Gates" is an artistic application of the belief that Christ
gave Peter, believed by Catholics to be the first
Pope, the keys to Heaven.
As Heaven is a place where only the pure are permitted, no person
who dies in a state of sin can enter Heaven. "Those who die in
God's grace and friendship and are perfectly purified live for ever
with Christ. They are like God for ever, for they "see Him as he
is," face to face." (
Catechism of the Catholic Church
§1023)"Those who die in God's grace and friendship imperfectly
purified, although they are assured of their eternal salvation,
undergo a purification after death, so as to achieve the holiness
necessary to enter the joy of God." (
Catechism of the Catholic
Church §1054)
If one were
baptized validly and then died,
one would go directly to heaven (in the Roman Catholic belief, the
sacrament of
baptism dissolves the eternal
and temporal punishment of all sins). If one never committed a
mortal
sin and were absolved of all one's venial
sins just before death, one would go directly to Heaven.
Most people who would enter Heaven do so through
Purgatory (or "process of purification"). In
Purgatory, a soul pays off all temporal punishment one deserved for
the sins he committed in life. This does not always happen though.
If one receives the Sacrament of
Penance
validly, as well as gains a plenary indulgence, and dies, one would
directly go to heaven. There are many ways to get an indulgence, in
various Papal decrees or publications. To receive a plenary
indulgence, one must receive the sacrament of Confession validly,
do one's penance, validly receive Communion, say some specified
number of
Lord's Prayers,
Angelic Salutations and
Minor Doxologies for the intentions of the
Pope, and then perform some act of gaining the indulgence. Of
course, one must remain free from all sin, mortal and venial, while
doing all these things.
In Protestant Christianity
The intermediate state (between death and the resurrection) is
understood in diverse ways in Protestant Christian thought (see the
article on
soul sleep), but the following
is generally concluded about the eternal life which Jesus promised
those who believe in him:
The term Heaven (which differs from "The Kingdom of Heaven" see
note below) is applied by the Biblical authors to the realm in
which God currently resides. Eternal life, by contrast, occurs in a
renewed, unspoilt and perfect creation, which can be termed Heaven
since God will choose to dwell there permanently with his people,
as seen in . There will no longer be any separation between God and
man. The believers themselves will exist in incorruptible,
resurrected and new bodies; there will be no sickness, no death and
no tears. Some teach that death itself is not a natural part of
life, but was allowed to happen after
Adam
and Eve disobeyed
God (see
original sin) so that mankind would not live
forever in a state of
sin and thus a state of
separation from God.
Many evangelicals understand this future life to be divided into
two distinct periods: first, the Millennial Reign of Christ (the
one thousand years) on this earth, referred to in ; secondly, the
New Heavens and New Earth, referred to in Revelation 21 and 22.
This millennialism (or chiliasm) is a revival of a strong tradition
in the Early Church that was dismissed by Augustine of Hippo and
the Roman Catholic Church after him.
Not only will the believers spend eternity with God, they will also
spend it with each other. John's vision recorded in Revelation
describes a
New Jerusalem which comes
from Heaven to the New Earth, which is a seen to be a symbolic
reference to the people of God living in community with one
another. 'Heaven' will be the place where life will be lived to the
full, in the way that the designer planned, each believer 'loving
the Lord their God with all their heart and with all their soul and
with all their mind' and 'loving their neighbour as themselves'
(adapted from Matthew 22:37-38) —a place of great joy, without the
negative aspects of earthly life.
(The Greek "hê basileia ton ouranon", usually translated as "the
Kingdom of Heaven", is indeed more
literally "the rule of the skies (or heavens)", with "the skies (or
heavens)" being a codeword for
God, reflecting
the respect shown for God's name in first century Judaism.)
Within Christianity, there are several notable belief structures on
the means by which Man may enter heaven. See:
Seventh-day Adventist
The
Seventh-day
Adventist understanding of heaven is based on Biblical writings
which set out the following:
- That heaven is a material place where God resides.
- That earth and all the animate and inanimate things therein and
within its celestial space are products of God's creative
work.
- That God sent His Son, Jesus Christ to earth to live as a human
being, but who "perfectly exemplified the righteousness and love of
God. By His miracles He manifested God's power and was attested as
God's promised Messiah. He suffered and died voluntarily on the
cross for our sins and in our place, was raised from the dead, and
ascended to minister in the heavenly sanctuary in our behalf."
.
- That Christ promises to return as a Saviour at which time He
will resurrect the righteous dead and gather them along with the
righteous living to heaven. The unrighteous will die at Christ's
second coming..
- That after Christ's second coming there will exist a period of
time known as the Millennium during which Christ and His righteous
saints will reign and the unrighteous will be judged. At the close
of the Millennium, Christ and His angels return to earth to
resurrect the dead that remain, to issue the judgements and to
forever rid the universe of sin and sinners..
- "On the new earth, in which righteousness dwells, God will
provide an eternal home for the redeemed and a perfect environment
for everlasting life, love, joy, and learning in His presence. For
here God Himself will dwell with His people, and suffering and
death will have passed away. The great controversy will be ended,
and sin will be no more. All things, animate and inanimate, will
declare that God is love; and He shall reign forever." . It is at
this point that heaven is established on the new earth.
Jehovah's Witnesses
Jehovah's Witnesses hold the
belief that Heaven is the dwelling place of
Jehovah God and all of His spirit creatures, the
seat of His power as Sovereign of the Universe, and the place where
144,000 chosen faithful followers of Christ will reside ruling over
the resurrected Earth alongside the anointed King, Jehovah's son
Jesus Christ.
Revelation 14:1, 3: And I saw, and look! the Lamb standing upon the
Mount Zion, and with him a hundred and forty-four thousand having
his name and the name of his Father written on their foreheads.....
And they are singing as if a new song before the throne and before
the four living creatures and the elders; and no one was able to
master that song but the hundred and forty-four thousand, who have
been bought from earth.
Not all good people go to heaven and the ones who remain on earth
can look forward to a happy life in paradise on earth.Acts 2:34:
“David [whom the Bible refers to as being ‘a man agreeable to
Jehovah God’s heart’] did not ascend to the heavens.â€
Matt. 11:11: “Truly I say to you people, Among those born of women
there has not been raised up a greater than John the Baptist; but a
person that is a lesser one in the kingdom of the heavens is
greater than he is.†(So John did not go to heaven when he
died.)
Ps. 37:9, 11, 29: “Evildoers themselves will be cut off, but those
hoping in Jehovah are the ones that will possess the earth . . .
The meek ones themselves will possess the earth, and they will
indeed find their exquisite delight in the abundance of peace. The
righteous themselves will possess the earth, and they will reside
forever upon it.â€
Rev. 21:1-4: “I saw a new heaven and a new earth . . . I heard a
loud voice from the throne say: ‘Look! The tent of God is with
mankind, and he will reside with them, and they will be his
peoples. And God himself will be with them. And he will wipe out
every tear from their eyes, and death will be no more, neither will
mourning nor outcry nor pain be anymore. The former things have
died.’â€
Mic. 4:3, 4: “They will not lift up sword, nation against nation,
neither will they learn war anymore. And they will actually sit,
each one under his vine and under his fig tree, and there will be
no one making them tremble; for the very mouth of Jehovah of armies
has spoken it.â€
Matt. 5:5: “Happy are the mild-tempered ones, since they will
inherit the earth.â€
Matt. 6:9, 10: “Our Father in the heavens, let your name be
sanctified. Let your kingdom come. Let your will take place, as in
heaven, also upon earth.â€
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
The view of heaven according to the
Latter Day Saint movement is based
on Section 76 of the
Doctrine and
Covenants as well as 1 Corinthians Chapter 15 in the King James
version of the
Bible. The afterlife is divided
first into two levels until the Last Judgement; afterwards it is
divided into four levels, the upper three of which are referred to
as "degrees of glory" that, for illustrative purposes, are compared
to heavenly bodies.
Before the Last Judgment, spirits separated from their bodies at
death go either to Paradise or to
Spirit
Prison based on their merits earned in life. Paradise is a
place of rest while its inhabitants continue learning in
preparation for the Last Judgement. Spirit Prison is a place of
anguish and suffering for the wicked and unrepentant; however,
missionary efforts done by spirits from Paradise enable those in
Spirit Prison to repent, accept the Gospel and the
atonement and receive baptism through the practice
of
baptism for the dead.
After the resurrection and Last Judgement, people are sent to one
of four levels:
- The Celestial Kingdom is the
highest level, with its power and glory comparable to the sun.
Here, faithful and valiant disciples of Christ who accepted the
fullness of His Gospel and kept their covenants with Him through
following the prophets of their dispensation are reunited with
their families and with God the Father, Jesus Christ, and the Holy
Spirit for all eternity. Those who would have accepted the Gospel
with all their hearts had they been given the opportunity in life
(as judged by Christ and God the Father) are also saved in the
Celestial Kingdom. Latter-Day Saint movements do not believe in the
concept of original sin, but believe
children to be innocent through the atonement. Therefore, all children who die before
the age of accountability
inherit this glory. Men and women who have entered into celestial marriage are eligible, under
the tutelage of God the Father, to eventually become gods and
goddesses as joint-heirs with Jesus Christ.
- The Terrestrial Kingdom's
power and glory is comparable to that of the moon, and is reserved
for those who understood and rejected the full Gospel in life but
lived good lives; those who did accept the Gospel but failed to
keep their covenants through continuing the process of faith,
repentance, and service to others; those who "died without law" (D
& C 76:72) but accepted the full Gospel and repented after
death due to the missionary efforts undertaken in Spirit Prison.
God the Father does not come into the Terrestrial Kingdom, but
Jesus Christ visits them and the Holy Spirit is given to them.
- The Telestial Kingdom is
comparable to the glory of the stars. Those placed in the Telestial
Kingdom suffered the pains of Hell after death because they were
liars, murderers, adulterers, whoremongers, etc. They are
eventually rescued from Hell by being redeemed through the power of
the atonement at the end of the Millennium. Despite its far lesser
condition in eternity, the Telestial Kingdom is described as being
more comfortable than Earth in its current state. Suffering is a
result of a full knowledge of the sins and choices which have
permanently separated a person from the utter joy that comes from
being in the presence of God and Jesus Christ, though they have the
Holy Spirit to be with them.
- Perdition, or outer darkness, is the
lowest level and has no glory whatsoever. It is reserved for Satan,
his angels, and those who have committed the unpardonable sin. This
is the lowest state possible in the eternities, and one that very
few people born in this world attain, since the unpardonable sin
requires that a person know with a perfect knowledge that the
Gospel is true and then reject it and fight defiantly against God.
The only known son of Perdition is Cain, but it
is generally acknowledged that there are probably more scattered
through the ages.
In Hinduism
According to
Hindu cosmology, above
the earthly plane are six heavenly planes:
- Bhuva Loka
- Swarga Loka, a heavenly paradise of pleasure, where most of the Hindu gods
(Deva) reside along with the king of gods,
Indra.
- Mahar Loka
- Jana Loka
- Tapa Loka
- Satya Loka
Below the earthly plane are seven nether planes:
- Atala
- Vitala
- Sutala
- Talatala
- Mahatala
- Rasatala
- Pataal
Below these are 28 hellish planes (according to
Bhagavata Purana), below which is the
Garbhodaka ocean with waters of devastation. Depending on good and
bad activities (
karma) on an earthly plane, a
soul either ascends up to enjoy heavenly delights or goes down to
fiery hellish planes depending on sins performed which are judged
by the god of death & justice,
Yama, who
presides along the 28 hells. After the results of good and bad
deeds (
karma) are delivered, souls return to
the earthly plane again as human or animal depending on desires and
karma. Thus the cycle of birth and
death.
Eternal liberation or freedom from the cycle of birth and death is
called
Moksha, which can be obtained only in
human life by turning attention inwards for uniting the soul with
the Supreme Being (
Parabrahman,
Bhagavan,
Ishvar,
Krishna) through
Yoga -
Karma Yoga,
Jnana Yoga,
Bhakti Yoga etc.
Liberation (
Moksha) is of five types as
described in Puranas:
- Sayujya: Merging into the oneness with the impersonal aspect of
the Lord, and hence freedom from all material anxiety.
- Salokya: Attaining residence in the eternal abode of the Lord,
called Vaikuntha, beyond material
universal creation, beyond the six material heavens, a place where
only surrendered devotees of the Lord go.
- Saristi: Attaining same opulences as the Lord in His
abode.
- Sarupya: Attaining same beautiful form as the Lord in His
abode.
- Samipya: Attaining close association of the Lord in His
abode.
This abode of Lord is briefly described in the
Bhagavad Gita (15.6), "That supreme abode of
Mine is not illumined by the sun or moon, nor by fire or
electricity. Those who reach it never return to this material
world". Further descriptions of
Vaikuntha
are in the Puranas where the Lord's devotees reside eternally in
loving relationship with the Lord.
Furthermore,
Vaikuntha residency has
following categories:
- Shanta Rasa: In neutral relationship of great awe, reveration
and constant thinking of the Lord.
- Dasya Rasa: Serving the Lord personally to please the Lord as
master and soul as servant.
- Sakhya Rasa: Serving the Lord as an intimate friend (formal,
informal, and many other types).
- Vatsalya Rasa: Serving the Lord from a superior position as a
caretaker (like motherly or fatherly relations).
- Madhurya/Sringara Rasa: Serving the Lord as an intimate
conjugal lover including all previous rasas, the most sweet of all,
with many further categories.
The Lord lovingly relates to every soul in a multitude of modes and
varieties of relationships as desired by the soul. The Lord from
there sometimes descends into material universe, along with His
associates, to redeem suffering souls and perform His pastimes. He
comes either Personally (
Svayam
Bhagavan) or as His part incarnations (kala, amsha) or sends
His messengers/prophets. There are many incarnations of the Lord
mentioned in scriptures, 10 of which are famous, the most popular
ones are
Rama Avatar and
Krishna Avatar.
In Islam
The
Qur'an contains many references to an
afterlife in Eden for those who do good deeds. Heaven itself is
commonly described in the Qu'ran in verse 35 of Surah Al-Ra’d: "The
parable of the Garden which the righteous are promised! Beneath it
flow rivers. Perpetual is the fruits thereof and the shade therein.
Such is the End of the Righteous; and the end of the unbelievers is
the Fire." Since Islam rejects the concept of
original sin, Muslims believe that all human
beings are born pure. In Islam, therefore, a child who dies
automatically goes to heaven, regardless of the religion of his or
her parents. The highest level of heaven is
Firdaus (ÙØ±Ø¯ÙˆØ³)-
Paradise
(پردیس), which is where the prophets, the martyrs and the most
truthful and pious people will dwell.
Although sharing some similarities, the concept of heaven in
Islam is different in many respects to that
found in
Judaism and
Christianity. Chiefly, Heaven (
Jannat) is described in physical terms, using
jewellery, and food. The Islamic texts describes life for its
immortal inhabitants, one that is happy — without hurt, sorrow,
fear or shame — where every wish is fulfilled.Their life is
including: wearing costly robes, bracelets, perfumes; partaking in
exquisite banquets, served in priceless vessels by immortal youths;
reclining on couches inlaid with gold or precious stones. Other
foods mentioned include fruits, milk, poultry, scented wine and
clear drinks bringing neither drunkenness nor rousing quarreling.
Inhabitants will rejoice in the company of their parents, wives,
and children (provided they were admitted to paradise) — conversing
and recalling the past. Texts also relate "pure consorts" (
houris), created in perfection, with whom carnal joys
are shared — "a hundred times greater than earthly pleasure". A key
feature of life in Heaven, according to Islam, is that no desire
would go unfulfilled, nor would it take time for them to be
fulfilled. Everything would be granted instantaneously.
Name and level of Heaven:
- Firdaus or Paradise
- 'Adn
- Na'iim
- Na'wa
- Darussalaam
- Daarul Muaqaamah
- Al-Muqqamul Amin
- Khuldi
In Judaism
Judaism offers no clear teaching about the
destiny which lies in wait for the individual after death and its
attitude to life after death has been expressed as follows: "For
the future is inscrutable, and the accepted sources of knowledge,
whether experience, or reason, or revelation, offer no clear
guidance about what is to come. The only certainty is that each man
must die - beyond that we can only guess."
While the concept of heaven (
malkuth hashamaim מלכות
השמי×, the
Kingdom of Heaven) is
well-defined within the
Christian and
Islamic religions, the
Jewish concept of the afterlife,
sometimes known as
olam haba, the World-to-come, is not so
precise. The
Torah has little to say on the
subject of survival after death, but by the time of the rabbis two
ideas had made inroads among the Jews: one, which is probably
derived from Greek thought, is that of the immortal soul which
returns to its creator after death; the other, which is thought to
be of Persian origin, is that of resurrection. The
Mishnah says, "This world is like a lobby before the
World-To-Come. Prepare yourself in the lobby so that you may enter
the banquet hall." Jewish writings refer to a "new earth" as the
abode of mankind following the resurrection of the dead.
Originally, the two ideas of immortality and resurrection were
different but in rabbinic thought they are combined: the soul
departs from the body at death but is returned to it at the
resurrection. This idea is linked to another rabbinic teaching,
that men's good and bad actions are rewarded and punished not in
this life but after death, whether immediately or at the subsequent
resurrection.
In Kabbalah Jewish mysticism
Jewish mysticism recognizes
seven heavens.
In order from lowest to highest, the seven Heavens are listed
alongside the
angels who govern them:
- Shamayim: The first Heaven, governed by
Archangel Gabriel,
is the closest of heavenly realms to the Earth; it is also
considered the abode of Adam and
Eve.
- Raquie: The second Heaven is dually
controlled by Zachariel and Raphael. It was in this Heaven that
Moses, during his visit to Paradise,
encountered the angel Nuriel who stood "300
parasangs high, with a retinue of 50
myriads of angels all fashioned out of water and fire." Also,
Raquia is considered the realm where the fallen angels are
imprisoned and the planets fastened.
- Shehaqim: The third Heaven, under the
leadership of Anahel, serves as the home of the Garden of Eden and the Tree of Life; it is also the
realm where manna, the holy food of angels, is
produced. The Second Book of
Enoch, meanwhile, states that both Paradise and Hell are
accommodated in Shehaqim with Hell being located simply " on the
northern side."
- Machen
: The fourth
Heaven is ruled by the Archangel Michael , and according to Talmud Hagiga 12, it contains the heavenly Jerusalem
, the Temple, and the Altar.
- Machon: The fifth Heaven is under the
administration of Samael, an angel referred
to as evil by some, but who is to others merely a dark servant of
God.
- Zebul: The sixth Heaven falls under the
jurisdiction of Sachiel.
- Araboth: The seventh Heaven,
under the leadership of Cassiel, is the
holiest of the seven Heavens provided the fact that it houses the
Throne of Glory attended by the Seven Archangels and serves as the
realm in which God dwells; underneath the throne itself lies the
abode of all unborn human souls. It is also
considered the home of the Seraphim, the
Cherubim, and the Hayyoth.
In Polynesia
In the creation stories of
Polynesian mythology are found various
concepts of the heavens and the underworld. These differ from one
island to another. What they share is the view of the universe as
an egg or coconut that is divided between the world of humans
(earth), the upper world of heavenly gods, and the underworld. Each
of these is subdivided in a manner reminiscent of
Dante's
Divine Comedy,
but the number of divisions and their names differs from one
Polynesian culture to another.
MÄori
Among the
MÄori, the heavens are divided
into a number of realms. Different tribes number the heaven
differently, with as few as two and as many as fourteen levels. One
of the more common versions divides heaven thus:
- Kiko-rangi, presided over by the god
Toumau
- Waka-maru, the heaven of sunshine and
rain
- Nga-roto, the heaven of lakes where the
god Maru rules
- Hau-ora, where the spirits of new-born
children originate
- Nga-Tauira, home of the servant
gods
- Nga-atua, which is ruled over by the
hero Tawhaki
- Autoia, where human souls are
created
- Aukumea, where spirits live
- Wairua, where spirit gods live while
waiting on those in
- Naherangi or Tuwarea, where the great
gods live presided over by Rehua
The MÄori believe these heavens are supported by pillars.
Other
Polynesian peoples see them being supported by gods (as in Hawai'i
).
In one
Tahitian
legend, heaven is supported by an octopus.
Tuamotus
The
Polynesian conception of the universe and its division is nicely
illustrated by a famous drawing made by a Tuomotuan
chief in 1869. Here, the nine heavens are
further divided into left and right, and each stage is associated
with a stage in the evolution of the earth that is portrayed below.
The lowest division represents a period when the heavens hung low
over the earth, which was inhabited by animals that were not known
to the islanders. In the third division is shown the first murder,
the first burials, and the first canoes, built by
Rata. In the fourth division, the first coconut tree
and other significant plants are born.
In Theosophy
It is believed in
Theosophy that each
religion (including Theosophy) has its own individual Heaven in
various regions of the upper
astral
plane that fits the description of that Heaven that is given in
each religion, which a
soul that has been
good in their previous life on Earth will go
to. The area of the upper astral plane of Earth in the upper
atmosphere where the various Heavens are located is called
Summerland (Theosophists believe
Hell
is located in the lower astral plane of Earth which extends
downward from the surface of the earth down to its
center). However, Theosophists believe
that the soul is recalled back to Earth after an average of about
1400 years by the
Lords of
Karma to incarnate again. The final Heaven that souls go
to billions of years in the future after they finish their
cycle of incarnations is called
Devachan.
Criticism of the belief in Heaven
Atheists reject the existence of heaven.
Some atheists have viewed the notion of heaven as an "
opiate of the masses"—tool employed by
humans to cope with their lives' misery—or "opiate
for the
masses"—a tool employed by authorities to bribe their subjects into
a certain way of life by promising a reward after death.
The
anarchist Emma
Goldman expressed this view when she wrote, "Consciously or
unconsciously, most atheists see in gods and devils, heaven and
hell; reward and punishment, a whip to lash the people into
obedience,
meekness and
contentment."
Many people consider
George Orwell's
use of
Sugarcandy Mountain in
his novel
Animal Farm to be a
literary expression of this view. In the book, the animals were
told that after their miserable lives were over they would go to a
place in which "it was Sunday seven days a week,
clover was in season all the year round, and lump
sugar and
linseed cake
grew on the
hedges". Fantasy author
Phillip Pullman echoes this idea in the
fantasy series
His Dark
Materials, in which the characters finally come to the
conclusion that people should make life better on Earth rather than
wait for heaven (this idea is known as the
Republic of Heaven).
Some atheists have argued that a belief in a reward after death is
poor motivation for moral behavior while alive , arguing that "It
is rather more noble to help people purely out of concern for their
suffering than it is to help them because you think the Creator of
the Universe wants you to do it, or will reward you for doing it,
or will punish you for not doing it. [The] problem with this
linkage between religion and morality is that it gives people bad
reasons to help other human beings when good reasons are
available."
Scientific theory that posits the existence of Heaven
The
Omega Point is a term used by
Tulane
University
professor of
mathematics and physics Frank
J. Tipler to describe a
scientific theory regarding what
he maintains is a necessary
cosmological state in the distant future
of the
universe.
Tipler has identified this final
singularity and its state of
infinite
information
processing capacity with
God. The
implication of this theory for people today is, basically, their
resurrection. It would be
brought about by an ultimate cosmic computer running computer
simulations of all intelligent life that had ever lived (by
re-creating simulations of all possible
quantum brain states within the master
simulation).
According to Tipler's
Omega Point Theory, as the universe
comes to an end at a
singularity in a particular form
of the
Big Crunch, the
computational capacity of the universe would
accelerate faster and faster. In principle, then, a
program run on this
universal computer
could continue
forever in its own terms,
even though the universe would last only a finite amount of
proper time--this simulation (
virtual reality environment) will, according
to Tipler, be Heaven. Dr. Tipler suggests that in Heaven, each
person will have their own
alternate
universe that pleases them the most.
Researcher Anders Sandberg
[1749]
has stated his view of this theory as: "Tipler claims that Omega
will resurrect everyone into an immortal life in what could only be
called paradise."
Heaven in christian culture
Computer games
- Afterlife is
a god game released by LucasArts in 1996 that places the player in the
role of a semi-omnipotent being known as a Demiurge, with the job of creating a functional
Heaven and Hell to reward or punish the
citizens of the local inhabited
planet. In order to do so, the player must keep tabs on these
citizens' sins and good deeds.
Film
- Made in
Heaven is a 1987 feature film
which concerns two souls who cross paths in
Heaven and then attempt to reconnect once they are reborn on
Earth.
Literature
Works of
fiction, especially in the modern
fantasy genre, have included
numerous different conceptions of Heaven and Hell.
- Piers Anthony in his series
'Incarnations of Immortality' portrays examples of Heaven and Hell
via Death, Fate, Nature, War, Time, Good-God and Evil-Devil.
- C. S.
Lewis offers a description of Heaven at
the end of his Narnia sequence
in the 'Last Battle'.
- Lois McMaster Bujold
suggests five Gods 'Father, Mother, Son, Daughter and Bastard in
her 'Chalion' series with a mention of Heaven and a more graphic
version of The Bastard's Hell as formless chaos.
- Michael Moorcock is one of many
who offer Chaos-Evil(-Hell) and Uniformity-Good(-Heaven) as equally
unacceptable extremes which must be held in balance; most evidently
in the Elric and Eternal Champion series.
Panelology
Poetry
- The two most famous descriptions of Heaven are given in the
following two works:
Role-Playing
Games
- In the Role-playing game In Nomine
Heaven is the home location for all Angels. It is divided into
several subdivisions called Cathedrals, each run by one or more
Archangels. Interesting enough, a area called Higher Heaven exists,
where God and Souls seeking their Ultimate reward go. Most Angels,
save the eldest ones, have never seen it and anyone who goes, does
not come back down.
Notes
References
Print
- Barnhart, Robert K. (1995).
The Barnhart Concise Dictionary of Etymology. HarperCollins ISBN 0062700847
- Bunyan, John. The Strait Gate: Great Difficulty of Going to
Heaven Liskeard, Cornwall: Diggory Press, 2007. ISBN
978-1846856716.
- Bunyan, John. No Way to Heaven but By Jesus Christ
Liskeard, Cornwall: Diggory Press, 2007. ISBN 978-1846857805.
- Craig, Robert D. Dictionary of Polynesian Mythology.
Greenwood Press: New York, 1989. ISBN 0313258902. Page 57.
- Ginzberg, Louis. Henrietta Szold (trans.). The Legends of
the Jews. Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society of
America, 1909–38. ISBN 0801858909.
- Hahn, Scott. The Lamb's Supper: The Mass as Heaven on
Earth. New York: Doubleday, 1999. ISBN 978-0385496599.
- Jorgensen, Rene. "Awakening After Life - A Firsthand Guide
through Death into the Purpose of Life". BookSurge, 2007, ISBN
1-4196-6347-X / ISBN 978-1419663475
- Moody, D.L. Heaven. Liskeard, Cornwall: Diggory Press,
2007. ISBN 978-1846858123.
- Young, J.L. "The Paumotu Conception of the Heavens and of
Creation", Journal of the Polynesian Society, 28 (1919),
209–211.
Documentaries
External links