Tag Archives: heaven

The Truth Behind Heaven Tourism: Biblical Perspectives | Elizabeth Prata

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There is a social media story going around that alleges a man died in a hospital and spent 11 hours in heaven. It’s an older story, 6 or 7 years old, but getting traction now. The man said he got a full tour, complete with glowing-eyed monsters, demons climbing out of the pit to claw his back, fires, green grass so beautiful and symmetrical, feathered angels hugging him, and Jesus face to face.

Jim was never a religious man. When it came to matters of God and faith, he was ambivalent. But as he lay in the hospital bed, clinically dead for more than 11 hours, his consciousness was transported to the wonders of Heaven and the horrors of hell. When he returned to this world, he brought back the missing peace his soul had been longing for.

He told his story on Youtube, saying he was never particularly religious, if anything, he was agnostic. He said, “I hoped that someone was in charge of the chaos but I never sought it out.”

Stop and think, if the people who Jesus has chosen from the foundation of the world to be one of His, and this man was a Jesus-rejecting sinner, why would Jesus give him, and not others the opportunity to preview what he would be missing if he continued in his unsaved state?

The man has traveled around North and South America, having spoken to about 20,000 people so far.

“James, my son, this is not yet your time. Go back and tell your brothers and sisters of the wonders we have shown you. While he now attends church, Woodford doesn’t affiliate with any denomination, eschewing labels. ‘Labels do not matter to God. He knows your heart better than you do,’ he states. For Woodford, it boils down to living a life of kindness and service. “That’s how simple the love of God is. It requires nothing more of you other than a dedication to doing good for others.” source.

Didn’t the Rich Man in Hades beg Abraham to send his servant Lazarus to his brothers to warn them of their impending doom? And didn’t Abraham say,

‘They have Moses and the Prophets; let them hear them.’ 30But he said, ‘No, father Abraham, but if someone goes to them from the dead, they will repent!’ 31But he said to him, ‘If they do not listen to Moses and the Prophets, they will not be persuaded even if someone rises from the dead.‘” (Luke 16:19-31).

some heaven tourism books, still popular

Was Abraham wrong? This man’s friends will listen to him since he rose from the dead? You see how the contradictions mount up.

It is not your time? Doesn’t the precision of God dictate perfection in birth and death? Was his entrance to heaven a mistake?

The man said that the experience apprised him of how wasteful his life had been, accumulating wealth, being unkind, unhelpful. These are normal things a convert says when truly converted, we recognize that. But the method of his alleged conversion is distinctly false. Jesus is not giving guided tours of heaven, personal messages or warnings, and then sending the person back to their body. In normal life, a near-death experience often changes people, but the change is not sourced from the blood of the Lamb to His elect. It’s a moral decision from inside the person.

And just as it is destined for people to die once, and after this comes judgment, (Hebrews 9:27)

Tim Challies said of one particular book during the height of the heaven tourism era 12 years ago, “I am not going to review To Heaven and Back. It’s pure junk, fiction in the guise of biography, paganism in the guise of Christianity.”

In fact, there came to be such an outcry against the spate of these books being pumped out, that in 2014, “LifeWay Christian Resources has stopped selling all “experiential testimonies about heaven” following consideration of a 2014 Southern Baptist Convention resolution on “the sufficiency of Scripture regarding the afterlife.”

Paul reluctantly, very reluctantly described some of his experience in heaven, not for titillating or self-serving purposes, his trip to third heaven. He refused even to name himself as the ‘traveler’, and he said specifically there were some things man was not even permitted to say.

And yet all these people allegedly return from ‘heaven’ and gush about their experience. And make money off them…

Did Mary and Martha’s brother Lazarus write a parchment and travel around telling his story of being dead for 4 days and his experience of the afterlife? No.

One minute after you slip behind the parted curtain, you will either be enjoying a personal welcome from Christ or catching your first glimpse of gloom as you have never known it. Either way, your future will be irrevocably fixed and eternally unchangeable. Erwin Lutzer, One Minute After You Die

Our eternity should be taken seriously. It is a weighty matter, and not one for merchandising, flippantly joking about, or bearing tales about. Lutzer again,

And so while relatives and friends plan your funeral- deciding on a casket, a burial plot, and who the pallbearers shall be— you will be more alive than you have ever been. You will either see God on His throne surrounded by angels and redeemed humanity, or you will feel an indescribable weight of guilt and abandonment. There is no destination midway between these two extremes; just gladness or gloom.

The scriptures are sufficient to tell us how to prepare for the moments after our bodies cease, and our souls go to its place, awaiting judgment and a fitted body for heaven. Failing to prepare, which means failing to repent and believe in the resurrected and ascended Jesus, a person will be fitted with a body for hell.

A way to determine that these stories are false, aside from the time that one author came out and said he had been lying all along, is that the people who claim to have gone to heaven claim to have spoken with grandma or seen family or been hugged by friends, and had been shown green grass and beauty…fail to mention the ONE THING that will capture our attention: Jesus on his throne.

Here is Todd Friel with a one minute comment on that: Auto-start at 5:07- ends at 6:29

For a longer treatment on the issue, here is a biblical talk by Justin Peters, Mysticism: The Deadly Dangers of Trusting Personal Experience Over Biblical Authority

Anytime somebody tells you they’ve been to heaven, do not believe it. This is mysticism. This is trying to get in touch with the divine, with deity through subjective experience and disengaging the mindSource

Just as visions are not happening today, just as God isn’t directly speaking/whispering to anybody today, trips to heaven are not happening. They either come from a lying tongue or a deceived mind.

JANUARY 16 | THE IMPERATIVE OF MEETING GOD

Now it came to pass in the thirtieth year, in the fourth month, in the fifth day of the month, as I was among the captives by the river of Chebar, that the heavens were opened, and I saw visions of God.

—Ezekiel 1:1

Sometimes preachers get carried away and start sermonizing on the great calamities posed by communism and secularism and materialism. But our greatest calamity is the closed heaven, the silent heaven. God meant for us to be in fellowship with Him. When the heavens are closed, men are left to themselves. They are without God.

Ezekiel and all the rest of God’s faithful servants learned something that we must learn. If there is anything worth having, it will have to be something that we get from God Himself. The heavens have been closed since mankind began reasoning God out of our world. What used to be the hand and providence of God is now just natural law….

But in the Christian faith it is imperative that the individual meet God. We are not talking about just the possibility of meeting God. We are not saying just that it would be a good thing to meet God. Meeting God is imperative! MMG119-120

Lord, deliver me from Your absence today; open the doors of heaven and bestow upon me Your presence. May this be imperative in my life, both now and always. Amen.

Tozer, A. W., & Eggert, R. (2015). Tozer on the almighty god: a 365-day devotional. Moody Publishers.

January 5 | Cultivating a Heavenly Perspective

“God … has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places” (Eph. 1:3, emphasis added).

✧✧✧

Christians hold a dual citizenship. We are citizens of earth, but, more importantly, we are also citizens of Heaven.

It’s been said that some Christians are so heavenly-minded, they’re no earthly good. But usually the opposite is true. Many Christians are so enamored with this present world that they no longer look forward to Heaven. They have everything they want right here. The health, wealth, and prosperity doctrine has convinced them that Christians can have it all, so they pursue “the good life” with a vengeance.

Despite the prevalence of such thinking, the old Negro spiritual says well, “This world is not my home, I’m just a passin’ through.”

Paul reminds us of that truth in Philippians 3:20: “Our citizenship is in heaven, from which also we eagerly wait for a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ.” That’s why we must set our minds on heavenly, not on earthly, things (Col. 3:1–2). Our deepest affections and highest aspirations should center there. Our actions and decisions should reflect heavenly priorities, not earthly indulgences.

Even though we live in a sin-stained world and must constantly fight against its corrupting influences, God hasn’t left us stranded. He extends to us all the rights and privileges of our heavenly citizenship. Let that assurance encourage you today to live to His glory and to rely on His heavenly provisions. Take care not to let impure aspirations or trivial pursuits distract you from your heavenly priorities.

✧✧✧

Suggestions for Prayer: Tell Jesus how thankful and full of praise you are because of the place He is preparing for you in Heaven (John 14:1–3). ✧ Pray for a greater awareness of the fleeting value of this world and the surpassing value of the world to come (1 John 2:17).

For Further Study: Read Revelation 4, 5, 21. ✧ What primary activity are the inhabitants of Heaven engaged in? ✧ List some of Heaven’s blessings.1


1  MacArthur, J. F., Jr. (1993). Drawing Near—Daily Readings for a Deeper Faith (p. 17). Crossway Books.

Where Are You On The Issue Of Heaven And Hell | Pastor Jack Hibbs

December 27, 2024

As we step into 2025, there’s one issue that’s more important than anything else you will encounter this year, and that issue is your eternal destination. Where will you spend eternity—Heaven or Hell? Let Pastor Jack encourage you to settle this issue with certainty in today’s episode of Real Life TV!

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The post Where Are You On The Issue Of Heaven And Hell first appeared on Pastor Jack Hibbs.

December 20 – The new heavens and the new earth II | Reformed Perspective

“Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and the sea was no more.” – Revelation 21:1 

Scripture reading: Revelation 21:1-8

What will the new heavens and earth be like? We are not told much. That there is no sea is a picture meaning no more turmoil of the nations. It will be a place of peace with God and each other. God will wipe away every tear from our eyes, and there will be no more death or mourning or crying, for the old things have passed away (not to be remembered; Isaiah 65:17).

Everything will be made new. The creation will be refined by fire, as it once was by water. Out of the great cleansing fire emerges a whole new earth, reshaped in righteousness and purity; the same earth, but gloriously reshaped with no evidence of the curse. Even our bodies will be renewed like Christ’s glorious body.

Everything will be in harmony under Christ. Ephesians 1:9ff says He will, when the times will have reached their fulfillment “unite all things in Him, things in heaven and things on earth.” This echoes Colossians 1:19-20, “For in Him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell, and through Him to reconcile all things, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of the cross.”

The sufferings of this present age are not worth comparing with the glory to be revealed in us. Of this glory 1 Corinthians 2:9 says, “No eye has seen, nor ear heard, nor the heart of man imagined, what God has prepared for those who love Him.” What a glorious hope. Lord Jesus, come quickly!

Suggestions for prayer

Praise God for the hope we have in Christ. Pray for the Spirit to prepare us for the day of His glorious return.

Rev. Calvin J. Tuininga was born in Grand Rapids Michigan, but as a PK grew up in different places, mostly in Canada. He served in four churches: Burdett Alberta (CRC), Telkwa, B.C. (CRC), Trinity St. Catharines, Ontario (CRC/URC) and Covenant URC in Pantego, North Carolina. He retired in September 2019, and he and his wife presently reside in Washington, North Carolina. Get this devotional delivered directly to your phone each day via our RP App. This devotional is made available by the Nearer To God Devotional team, who also make available in print, for purchase, at NTGDevotional.com.

Source: December 20 – The new heavens and the new earth II

December 19 – The new heavens and the new earth I | Reformed Perspective 

“Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and the sea was no more.” – Revelation 21:1 

Scripture reading: Revelation 21:1-8

In the book of Genesis we see the devil’s deceit, but here in Revelation we see him thrown into the lake of burning sulphur. Genesis shows man hiding from God, while Revelation shows man restored to fellowship with God. “Now the dwelling of God is with men, and he will live with them. They will be his people and God himself will be with them and be their God.” Here the theme of Revelation comes to light. God has faithfully delivered the salvation He promised in the garden. Christ has crushed the serpent’s head. Christ triumphs and we are delivered from the curse and enter a renewed heavens and earth. Hallelujah!

In Isaiah 65:17 God said, “Behold I will create new heavens and a new earth. The former things will not be remembered, nor will they come to mind.” 2 Peter 3:13 says, “But according to his promise we are waiting for a new heavens and a new earth in which righteousness dwells.” John here sees, in a vision, this happening. As Jesus says, “I make everything new.” What a blessing it will be. As Isaiah 66:22-23 says, “For as the new heavens and the new earth that I make shall remain before me … so shall your offspring and your name remain … all flesh shall come to worship before me, declares the Lord.”

What a marvellous hope we have. All things shall be made new, and the former things (sins) shall not be remembered (Isaiah 65:15).

Suggestions for prayer

Pray that Jesus may come quickly. How we long for the day when sin shall be no more, and all things shall be made new, and we will have perfect fellowship with our Savior and Lord.

Rev. Calvin J. Tuininga was born in Grand Rapids Michigan, but as a PK grew up in different places, mostly in Canada. He served in four churches: Burdett Alberta (CRC), Telkwa, B.C. (CRC), Trinity St. Catharines, Ontario (CRC/URC) and Covenant URC in Pantego, North Carolina. He retired in September 2019, and he and his wife presently reside in Washington, North Carolina. Get this devotional delivered directly to your phone each day via our RP App. This devotional is made available by the Nearer To God Devotional team, who also make available in print, for purchase, at NTGDevotional.com.

Source: December 19 – The new heavens and the new earth I

December 10 | Your Eternal Future

Scripture Reading: Revelation 22:1–5

Key Verse: Revelation 21:27

But there shall by no means enter it anything that defiles, or causes an abomination or a lie, but only those who are written in the Lamb’s Book of Life.

Do you ever wonder what heaven will be like? John Newton said, “If I ever reach heaven I expect to find three wonders there: first, to meet some I had not thought to see there; second, to miss some I had expected to see there; and third, the greatest wonder of all, to find myself there.”

The Bible tells us that heaven is a very definite place. Jesus said, “In My Father’s house are many mansions; if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you” (John 14:2).

Do you know if you will be in heaven? Do you know how to get there? It is not something you can work to make happen. You cannot earn your way. There is only one way to receive eternal life—accept what Jesus Christ did at the cross.

The Crucifixion is God’s way of making it possible for every single person who believes in Jesus Christ to spend eternity in heaven. The Bible tells us that when you are saved by the grace of God, you become a citizen of heaven. Your name is in the Lamb’s Book of Life (Revelation 21:27).

As His child, God wants you to have a personal relationship with Him now and for eternity. As you anticipate with great joy your eternal future, hunger and thirst to know God more each day.

Lord Jesus, I am speechless at the thought of You preparing a place in heaven for me. I am unworthy. Thank You for dying for me so I could spend eternity with You.1


1  Stanley, C. F. (2006). Pathways to his presence (p. 361). Thomas Nelson Publishers.

Life in a Fallen World – And in the Next | CultureWatch

On being reunited with departed loved ones in the next life:

Just as war was breaking out in Europe, the hit song We’ll Meet Again performed by English singer Vera Lynn was released in 1939. Knowing that loved ones could soon be heading overseas to fight and perhaps never to return was a hard reality to face for so many. The memorable chorus goes like this:

We’ll meet again
Don’t know where
Don’t know when
But I know we’ll meet again some sunny day

Listen to it here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Nzy1cfnKh4

For the Christian, there can be real mixed emotions about where we live. Right now we inhabit a sinful world, but we still find much about it to enjoy. But we also know that this world is not our home, and our true place of residency is still to come. As I just again read in Paul’s second letter to the Corinthians (4:16-18, followed by 5:1-5):

So we do not lose heart. Though our outer self is wasting away, our inner self is being renewed day by day. For this light momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison, as we look not to the things that are seen but to the things that are unseen. For the things that are seen are transient, but the things that are unseen are eternal.

For we know that if the tent that is our earthly home is destroyed, we have a building from God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens. For in this tent we groan, longing to put on our heavenly dwelling, if indeed by putting it on we may not be found naked. For while we are still in this tent, we groan, being burdened—not that we would be unclothed, but that we would be further clothed, so that what is mortal may be swallowed up by life. He who has prepared us for this very thing is God, who has given us the Spirit as a guarantee.

Being holders of two passports, we are always somewhat ambivalent about this matter of where we really belong. Our longing for the next world, and our dislike of this world, in part depends on our personality types – on the sorts of people we are.

I happen to be a bit more melancholic, and I tend to see things more gloomily. I often can see more suffering and evil in this world than good and joyous things. But that is just me. So my daily prayer is for Christ to come – and come quickly. I too often despair of what is going on all around me.

So if folks wanted a brief take on this fallen world, I would reply something like this: it is ugly, demonised, abhorrent, wretched, and full of despicable evil and horrendous suffering. BUT, with Christ there is hope, healing, restoration, forgiveness and a reason to keep going. A simplistic, but accurate account of things – at least as I see it.

All that God made was declared to be good. And it all WAS good. But the Fall negatively impacted everything. When theologians speak of “total depravity” they do not mean that everything and everyone is as bad as can possibly be, but that everything and everyone has been affected by the Fall, so sin and its effects are found everywhere.

Because of God’s common grace there is still plenty of beauty and truth and justice in this fallen world. Because of his grace, non-believers can create beautiful things, say true things, make just decisions, etc. But because of the presence of sin in the world, and the reality of demonic forces, there is great evil and terror in this world. And there is death.

The Christian always lives with some real tension here. On the one hand, we can appreciate all the good things of life, but we also know that a far better world is coming. Then and there all wrongs will be righted, and former relationships will be renewed.

That is for most of us one of the great beauties of heaven: being reunited with friends and loved ones who have already passed away. Sure, being with our Lord and Saviour forever will be the greatest good, but once again being with those who have departed from this life will be wonderful indeed.

My mother and father passed away many years ago now. My wife has now been gone for almost a year and a half. A number of my friends and colleagues have also departed for glory. The older you get, the more death and loss you experience. Thus the thought of heaven is a real anchor for the soul. And knowing that you will see those who have already departed certainly helps us to keep on keeping on.

Last month I quoted from the great preacher Charles Spurgeon on the issue of heaven. I made use of the 2011 book We Shall See God: Charles Spurgeon’s Classic Devotional Thoughts on Heaven by Randy Alcorn (Tyndale). It features 50 of the best writings by Charles Spurgeon on the topic, along with some commentary by Alcorn. That earlier piece is found here: https://billmuehlenberg.com/2024/11/10/spurgeon-on-heaven/  

In this article I want to look at just one sermon and bit of commentary, titled Knowing Our Loved Ones in Heaven. The text Spurgeon uses for his 1855 sermon is Matthew 8:11 which reads: “I tell you, many will come from east and west and recline at table with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven.” Here is part of what Spurgeon said:

If we have known one another here, we shall know one another there. I have dear departed friends up there, and it is always a sweet thought to me that when I shall put my foot, as I hope I may, upon the threshold of heaven, there will come my sisters and brothers to clasp me by the hand and say, “Yes, thou loved one, at last you are here.”

Dear relatives that have been separated from you, these you will meet again in Heaven. One of you has lost a Mother—she is gone above. And if you follow the track of Jesus, you shall meet her there.

We shall recognize our friends. Husband, you will know your wife again. Mother, you will know those dear babes of yours—you memorized their features when they lay panting and gasping for breath. You know how you hung over their graves when the cold sod was sprinkled over them and it was said, “Earth to earth. Dust to dust, and ashes to ashes.” But you shall hear those sweet voices once more; you shall yet know that those whom ye loved have been loved by God. (pp. 94-95)

Image of We Shall See God: Charles Spurgeon’s Classic Devotional Thoughts on Heaven (50 Daily Reflections on Eternity from the Prince of Preachers with Additional Insights from Randy Alcorn)
We Shall See God: Charles Spurgeon’s Classic Devotional Thoughts on Heaven (50 Daily Reflections on Eternity from the Prince of Preachers with Additional Insights from Randy Alcorn) by Alcorn, Randy (Author), Spurgeon, Charles H. (Author), Alcorn, Randy (Editor)

Alcorn then offers this commentary on what he said:

Amy Carmichael, a missionary to India in the early 1900s, wrote,

“Shall we know one another in Heaven? Shall we love and remember? I do not think anyone need wonder about this or doubt for a single moment. We are never told we shall, because, I expect, it was not necessary, for if we think for a minute, we know. Would you be yourself if you did not love and remember? . . . We are told that we shall be like our Lord Jesus. Surely this does not mean in holiness only, but in everything; and does not He know and love and remember? He would not be Himself if He did not, and we should not be ourselves if we did not.”

Bible scholar W. G. Scroggie echoes the sentiments of many believers: “If I knew that never again would I recognize that beloved one with whom I spent more than thirty-nine years here on earth, my anticipation of heaven would much abate. To say that we will be with Christ and that that will be enough is to claim that there we shall be without the social instincts and affections which mean so much to us here…. Life beyond cannot mean impoverishment, but the enhancement and enrichment of life as we have known it here at its best.”

Augustine said, “We have not lost our dear ones who have departed from this life, but have merely sent them ahead of us, so we also shall depart and shall come to that life where they will be more than ever dear as they will be better known to us, and where we shall love them without fear of parting.” He also said, “All of us who enjoy God are also enjoying each other in Him.”

Throughout the ages, Christians have anticipated eternal reunion with their loved ones.

Paul tells the Thessalonians that they’ll be reunited with believing family and friends in Heaven: “Brothers and sisters, we do not want you to be uninformed about those who sleep in death, so that you do not grieve like the rest of mankind, who have no hope…. God will bring with Jesus those who have fallen asleep in him…. We who are still alive and are left will be caught up together with them…. And so we will be with the Lord forever. Therefore encourage one another with these words” (1 Thessalonians 4:13-14, 17-18, niv).

Our source of comfort isn’t only that we’ll be with the Lord in Heaven but also that we’ll be with one another. Christ is “the Alpha and the Omega, the First and the Last” (Revelation 22:13, NIV). He alone is sufficient to meet all our needs. Yet God has designed us for relationship not only with himself but also with others of our kind. After God created the world, he stepped back to look at his work and pronounced it “very good” (Genesis 1:31). However, before his creation was complete, he said there was one thing—and only one—that was not good: “It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make a helper suitable for him” (Genesis 2:18, niv). God planned for Adam, and all mankind, to need human companionship.

Jesus rebuked the religious leaders for imagining they could love God without loving people (Luke 10:27-37). The spiritual-sounding “I will love just God and no one else” is not only unspiritual; it’s impossible. If we don’t love people, who are created in God’s image, we can’t love God (1 John 4:8).

Puritan Richard Baxter, whom Spurgeon regarded as a pastoral mentor, looked forward to being with Christ first, but he also anticipated being reunited with dear friends: “I know that Christ is all in all; and that it is the presence of God that makes Heaven to be Heaven. But yet it much sweetens the thoughts of that place to me that there are there such a multitude of my most dear and precious friends in Christ.”

On the New Earth we’ll experience the joy of familiarity in old relationships and the joy of discovery in new ones. As we get to know one another better, we’ll get to know God better. And as we find joy in one another, we’ll find joy in him. (pp. 95-97)

All that sounds good to me. I will seek to be of use in this life, and as far as possible, enjoy what good there is. But I will forever long for the next world. No more death and dying and sin and suffering. But many wonderful reunions will occur instead. That is worth getting excited about.

[1901 words]

The post Life in a Fallen World – And in the Next appeared first on CultureWatch.

December 1 | A Bright Beginning

Scripture reading: Acts 1:1–14

Key verse: Acts 1:8

You shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be witnesses to Me in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth.

The Crucifixion left the disciples stunned and bewildered. When they were sure all hope was gone, Jesus came to them. All that He had told them was true! He was with them again, only this time it was even better. Then came the day that He returned to heaven.

The Bible tells us that the group gathered at Christ’s ascension stood gazing into heaven. Do you wonder what they were thinking? Whatever it was, God knew they needed immediate direction and hope.

Two angels appeared and spoke to them, “Men of Galilee, why do you stand gazing up into heaven? This same Jesus, who was taken up from you into heaven, will so come in like manner as you saw Him go into heaven” (Acts 1:11).

As they dispersed and went back to their homes, Jesus’ last words filled their thoughts: “You shall be witnesses to Me in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth” (Acts 1:8).

They had heard the words of Christ and understood His desire, yet it took angels from heaven to move the disciples to the next step.

Don’t let the disappointments of this world discourage you. What you see as an ending, God sees as a bright and glorious beginning. Therefore, as you go, share His love and hope with everyone.

Dear heavenly Father, I thank You for endings that are really new beginnings. Help me move on by faith to take the next step.1


1  Stanley, C. F. (2000). Into His presence (p. 352). Thomas Nelson Publishers.

4 OCTOBER | Our Ministering Angels

That in the dispensation of the fulness of times he might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven, and which are on earth; even in him. Ephesians 1:10

suggested further reading: Hebrews 1

In this text you see why, in Jacob’s dream, God stood on top of a ladder that stretched from heaven to earth and the angels went up and down on it (Gen. 28:12). As that ladder, the Lord Jesus Christ is the true living and eternal God who touches both heaven and earth, because in Christ God has joined together his own divine essence and the nature of man.

You see that heaven is opened so that the angels may begin to acquaint themselves with us, even becoming our servants, for as Hebrews 1:14 says, the care of our souls is committed to them. So also Psalm 34 says, they encamp about us and watch us and are our guardians.

You also see how our Lord Jesus Christ once more unites us with the angels of paradise. That is why Christ says, “From henceforth you shall see the heavens open and the Son of Man coming down in his majesty with his angels” (John 1:51). By this we understand that heaven was formerly shut against us, and we were unworthy to find any favor at God’s hand, but now Christ has come to be our head and has made atonement between his Father and us. He has taken the office of mediator and has become the head, not only of the faithful, but also of the angels, and has gathered all together in such a way that, whereas the devils make war against us and cease not to plot our destruction, the angels are armed with infinite power to uphold us (Col. 2:10).

Though we do not see these angels with our eyes, yet we may certainly believe that they watch us for our salvation.

for meditation: The care that angels have for God’s children is a subject about which we have little information in the Bible. Nevertheless, they do care for us, and we should not neglect to thank God for these messengers whom he sends. What a great comfort this offers!1


1  Calvin, J., & Beeke, J. R. (2008). 365 Days with Calvin (p. 296). Day One Publications; Reformation Heritage Books.