Authors: Randy Alcorn
Hence, as we've seen from Isaiah and throughout the Old Testament, the doctrine of the new heavens and New Earth is not some
late-developing afterthought but a central component of redemptive history and intention. It is the paradigm of biblical
perspective—inclusive of but broader than the themes of kingdom, covenant, resurrection, and salvation. As Beale puts it,
"New creation is the New Testament's hermeneutical and eschatological centre of gravity."
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Summarizing theologian William Dumbrell's views of new creation, Beale says, "All of the Old Testament works toward the goal
of new creation, and the New Testament begins to fulfill that primary goal. . . . Redemption is always subordinate to creation
in that it is the means of reintroducing the conditions of the new creation. All events since the fall are to be seen as a
process leading to the reintroduction of the original creation. Dumbrell is correct in under standing new creation as the
dominating notion of biblical theology because new creation is the goal or purpose of God's redemptive-historical plan; new
creation is the logical main point of Scripture."
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The earth's death will be no more final than our own. The destruction of the old Earth in God's purifying judgment will immediately
be followed by its resurrection to new life. Earth's fiery "end" will open straight into a glorious new beginning. And as
we'll see later, it will just keep getting better and better.
WILL THE NEW EARTH BE FAMILIAR . . . LIKE HOME?
The life we now have as the persons we now are will continue in the universe in which we now exist.
Dallas Willard
S
ometimes when we look at this world's breathtaking beauty—standing in a gorgeous place where the trees and flowers and rivers
and mountains are wondrous—we feel a twinge of disappointment. Why? Because we know we're going to leave this behind. In consolation
or self-rebuke, we might say, "This world is not my home." If we were honest, however, we might add, "But part of me sure
wishes it was."
What we really want is to live forever in a world with all the beauty and none of the ugliness—a world without sin, death,
the Curse, and all the personal and relational problems and disappointments they create.
Those who emphasize our citizenship in Heaven—and I'm one of them—sometimes have an unfortunate habit of minimizing our connection
to the earth and our destiny to live on it and rule it. We end up thinking of eternity as a non-earthly spiritual state in
which Earth is but a distant memory, if we remember it at all.
This faulty theology accuses God of failure. Why? Because it assumes he will never accomplish a lasting state of righteousness
on Earth. (Even the Millennium ends in rebellion.) Instead, he finally has to resort to making mankind less human (disembodied)
and destroying the earth he made. God's magnificent sovereign plan of the ages is reduced, in our minds, to a failed experiment.
WHAT OUR HOME WILL REALLY BE LIKE
The correction to the heresyof believing God's plan has failed is the biblical doctrine of the new heavens and New Earth.
Theologian Rene Pache writes, "The emphasis on the present heaven is clearly rest, cessation from earth's battles and comforts
from earth's sufferings. The future heaven is centered more on activity and expansion, serving Christ and reigning with Him.
The scope is much larger, the great city with its twelve gates, people coming and going, nations to rule. In other words,
the emphasis in the present heaven is on the absence of earth's negatives, while in the future heaven it is the presence
of earth's positives, magnified many times through the power and glory of resurrected bodies on a resurrected Earth, free
at last from sin and shame and all that would hinder both joy and achievement."
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Understanding and anticipating the physical nature of the New Earth corrects a multitude of errors. It frees us to love the
world that God has made, without guilt, while saying no to the world corrupted by our sin. It reminds us that God himself
gave us the earth, gave us a
love
for the earth, and will delight to give us the New Earth.
Think for a moment what this will mean for Adam and Eve. When the New Earth comes down from Heaven, the rest of us will be
going home, but Adam and Eve will be
coming
home. Only they will have lived on three Earths—one unfallen, one fallen, and one redeemed. Only they will have experienced,
at least to a degree, the treasure of an original, magnificent Earth that was lost and is now regained.
When we open our eyes for the first time on the New Earth, will it be unfamiliar? Or will we recognize it as home?
As human beings, we long for home, even as we step out to explore undiscovered new frontiers. We long for the familiarity
of the old, even as we crave the innovation of the new. Think of all the things we love that are new: moving into a new house;
the smell of a new car; the feel of a new book; a new movie; a new song; the pleasure of a new friend; the enjoyment of a
new pet; new presents on Christmas; staying in a nice new hotel room; arriving at a new school or a new workplace; welcoming
a new child or grandchild; eating new foods that suit our tastes. We love newness—yet in each case, what is new is attached
to something familiar. We don't really like things that are utterly foreign to us. Instead, we appreciate fresh and innovative
variations on things that we already know and love. So when we hear that in Heaven we will have new bodies and live on a New
Earth, that's how we should understand the word
new
—a restored and perfected version of our familiar bodies and our familiar Earth and our familiar relationships.
A common misunderstanding about the eternal Heaven is that it will be unfamiliar. But that couldn't be further from the truth.
The following chart compares widespread assumptions about Heaven with biblically based characteristics of Heaven:
What we have assumed about Heaven has reduced it to a place we look forward to only as an alternative to an intolerable existence
here on the present Earth. Only the elderly, disabled, suffering, and persecuted might desire the Heaven we imagine. But the
Bible portrays life in God's presence, in our resurrected bodies in a resurrected universe, as so exciting and compelling
that even the youngest and healthiest of us should daydream about it.
No wonder Satan doesn't want us to learn the truth about Heaven. If we fall in love with the place and look forward to the
future that God has for us, we'll fall more in love with God, and we'll be emboldened to follow him with greater resolve and
perspective.
When we see Heaven for the first time with our own eyes, I imagine our responses may mirror those I've depicted in my novel
Edge of Eternity
when Nick's companions finally pass through the gates of the City of Light (I've borrowed several expressions from C. S.
Lewis):
"This is it . . . the country for which I was
made!"
"At last, the real world!"
"I've been born. All my life on Earth was but a series of labor pains preparing me for this."
"This is joy itself. Every foretaste of joy in the Shadowlands was but the stab, the pang, the inconsolable longing
for this place!"
"How could anyone be satisfied with less than this?"
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The moment we set foot on the New Earth, we'll know it's exactly where we belong. But we don't have to wait until we die
to learn about Heaven.
As a bride lives daily in anticipation of the bridegroom's arrival, coming to take her to the house he's built for her, we
should think daily about Jesus and about Heaven. Instead of feeling abandoned, the bride feels honored because she knows that
she will live in the home the bridegroom has lovingly constructed with her in mind. She may experience some loneliness and
difficulty, but she knows he hasn't forgotten her and what he's doing for her will assure her future happiness. Her present
happiness depends on trusting him, believing that he will come to take her home, where they'll joyfully live together forever.
THE FAMILIARITY OF HOME
When the Bible tells us that Heaven is our home, what meanings should we attach to the word
home}
Familiarity is one. I have countless pleasurable memories from childhood. Even those who endured childhood traumas usually
have some good memories too. When I ride my bike through my old neighborhood (only a few miles away from my current home),
that fond familiarity comes over me like a wave. The hills, the houses, the fences and fields, the schoolyard where I played
football and shot baskets. When I gaze at the house I grew up in, every room in that house, every inch of that property, reverberates
with memories of my father, mother, brother, friends, dogs, cats, frogs, and lizards. When I go past my childhood home, I
step back into a place inseparable from who I was and am, inseparable from my family and friends.
A place with loved ones—that's a central quality of home. The hominess of the house I live in now is inseparable from my wife,
Nanci, and my daughters, Angela and Karina, who are married and have their own homes but often come to visit. The girls' husbands
are sons to us now, and we love having them here. As I write, we're anticipating our first grandchildren, and we're already
preparing the place for them. Memories of extended family and friends who've stayed with us also contribute to the hominess
of this place.
Everything here speaks of time spent with significant people: playing together, talking together, eating together, reading
together, crying together, praying together, charting the course of our lives together. Home is where we're with the ones
we love
The resurrection of the body . . . declares that God will make good and bring to perfection the human project he began in
the Garden of Eden.
TIMOTHY GEORGE
Heaven will be just like that. We'll be with people we love, and we'll love no one more than Jesus,who purchased with his
own blood the real estate of the New Earth. It wont be long before we settle in there. Because we've already lived on Earth,
I think it will seem from the first that we're coming home. Because we once lived on Earth, the New Earth will strike us as
very familiar.
Home is a place where we fit right in. It's the place we were made for. Most houses we live in on Earth weren't really made
just for us. But the New Earth will be. When Nanci was pregnant with each of our girls, she and I prepared a place for them.
We decorated the room, picked out the right wallpaper, set up the crib just so, and selected the perfect blankets. The quality
of the place we prepared for our daughters was limited only by our skills, resources, and imagination.
In Heaven, what kind of a place can we expect our Lord to have prepared for us? Because he isn't limited and he loves us even
more than we love our children, I think we can expect to find the best place ever made by anyone, for anyone, in the history
of the universe. The God who commends hospitality will not be outdone in his hospitality to us.
A good carpenter envisions what he wants to build. He plans and designs. Then he does his work, carefully and skillfully,
fashioning it to exact specifications. He takes pride in the work he's done and delights in showing it to others. And when
he makes something for his bride or his children, he takes special care and delight.
Jesus is the carpenter from Nazareth. He knows how to build. He's had experience building entire worlds (billions of them,
throughout the universe). He's also an expert at
repairing
what has been damaged—whether people or worlds. He does not consider his creation disposable. This damaged creation cries
out to be repaired, and it is his plan to repair it. He's going to remodel the old Earth on a grand scale. How great will
be the resurrected planet that he calls the New Earth—the one he says will be our home .. . and
his.
NEW SONG, NEW CAR, NEW EARTH
By calling the New Earth
Earth,
God emphatically tells us it will be earthly, and thus familiar. Otherwise, why call it Earth?
When Scripture speaks of a "new song," do we imagine it's wordless, silent, or without rhythm? Of course not. Why? Because
then it wouldn't be a song. If I promised you a new car, would you say, "If it's new, it probably won't have an engine, transmission,
doors, wheels, stereo, or upholstery"? If a new car didn't have these things, it wouldn't be a car. If we buy a new car, we
know it will be a better version of what we already have, our old car. Likewise, the New Earth will be a far better version
of the old Earth.
The word
new
is an adjective describing a noun. The noun is the main thing. A new car is first and foremost a car. A new body is mainly
a body. A New Earth is mainly an Earth.
The New Earth will not be a non-Earth but a real Earth. The Earth spoken of in Scripture is the Earth we know—with dirt, water,
rocks, trees, flowers, animals, people, and a variety of natural wonders. An Earth without these would not be Earth.
The Greek word translated "earth" is
ge,
from which we get "geology." It is used of land, soil, and the world itself. Walter Bauer defines
ge
as "the surface of the earth as the habitation of humanity."
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Ge
connotes physicality. It's not a figurative, airy, symbolic, or abstract word. It's tangible, concrete. It speaks of an earthly
realm where there are physical human beings, animals, vegetation, and natural resources.
Many of the Scripture passages using
ge
contain references to people, who dwell on the earth. Mankind and Earth are inseparable. The New Earth will be populated by
redeemed people. Without people, the earth would be incomplete. Without the earth, people would be incomplete.
We're told the "first earth" will pass away (Revelation 21:1). The word for "first" is
prote,
suggesting a vital connection between the two Earths. The first Earth serves as the prototype or pattern for the New Earth.
There's continuity between old and new. We should expect new trees, new flowers, new rocks, new rivers, new mountains, and
new animals.
{New,
not
non-.)
As our current bodies are the blueprints for our resurrection bodies, this present Earth is the blueprint for the New Earth.