Faith

Testimonies of Heaven

Dr. Gary Scott Smith chairs the history department at Grove City College and is a fellow for faith and the presidency with The Center for Vision & Values.  […]
Dr. Gary Scott Smith chairs the history department at Grove City College and is a fellow for faith and the presidency with The Center for Vision & Values. He is the author of “Faith and the Presidency From George Washington to George W. Bush” (Oxford University Press, 2009) and “Heaven in the American Imagination” (Oxford University Press, 2011).
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Earlier this year I went to the WPXI television studio in Pittsburgh to tape an interview. The technician who escorted me inquired, “What are you here to discuss today?” When I replied, “heaven,” he asked, “Have they found it?” As he correctly reasoned, the discovery of heaven would indeed be newsworthy. Thoughts of heaven are on the minds of millions of Americans as we celebrate the birth of Jesus and cope with the tragedy at Newtown, Connecticut.

Speaking at the Sandy Hook Interfaith prayer vigil, President Barack Obama quoted words of Scripture to console the grieving: “For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all” (II Corinthians 4:17). He asked God to “bless and keep those we’ve lost in His heavenly place.”

In the face of both national calamity and personal loss, many find consolation in their hope of heaven. For centuries, people have claimed to have had near-death experiences that corroborate the Bible’s teaching that heaven exists. However, in the last decades such testimony has exploded. Don Piper’s “90 Minutes in Heaven,” published in 2004, has sold five million copies. Todd Burpo’s “Heaven Is for Real: A Little Boy’s Astounding Story of His Trip to Heaven and Back” has been a best seller for the last two years.

In the last seven months, two physicians have described their near-dear experiences in phenomenally popular books: Mary Neal’s “To Heaven and Back: A Doctor’s Extraordinary Account of Her Death, Heaven, Angels, and Life Again” and Eben Alexander’s “Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon’s Journey into the Afterlife.” Recently Piper, Burpo, Neal, and Alexander have been interviewed on leading television talk shows, and “Newsweek” and “Christianity Today” have included feature articles about the afterlife.

The brisk sales of these books and the tremendous interest in heaven testify to the human desire to live beyond this world and to know what the afterlife is like. For Christians, the teachings of the Bible and the resurrection of Jesus provide the primary reason for believing in heaven. Nevertheless, many Christians find first-person accounts of journeys to heaven to be fascinating and reassuring. These experiences confirm Scriptural teaching that they will be reunited with loved ones and have a more intimate relationship with God.

Meanwhile, numerous neurobiologists, psychologists, philosophers, and theologians are accepting the legitimacy of near-death experiences. In “Evidence of the Afterlife” (2011), for example, scientist Jeffrey Long, after gathering and analyzing hundreds of near-death experiences, provides nine proofs for life after death.

Other Christians are not convinced, however, that these experiences are genuine or credible. These accounts, they protest, are contradictory and theological suspect and divert attention from the church’s mission to save souls and help the hurting. Those who have had near-death experiences disagree about whether they saw tunnels of light, pearly gates, gardens, and angelic beings or heard music. They describe God in various ways, some of which are inconsistent with biblical teaching. In many near-death accounts, God accepts people unconditionally regardless of whether they affirmed Christ as God and savior or how they acted on earth. Some also protest that focus on heaven—“pie in the sky bye and bye”—distracts Christians from their more important calling to improve this world.

As a result, some Christians reject these experiences as either hallucinations (which can be explained scientifically) or the work of the Devil. However, since orthodox Christians have written many of the recent best-selling accounts, skepticism about their credibility has diminished somewhat among Christians. Moreover, many near-death experiencers become more loving of and caring toward others.

Defenders of these near-death experiences also emphasize that those who have them are not theologians and are trying to describe things that words are inadequate to explain. That people interpret their near-heaven experiences in light of their own religious and cultural backgrounds is not troubling. They have no other lens or language with which to describe what they saw and heard. Moreover, while the content of these experiences may differ, their nature and their impact on those who have them are remarkably similar across cultures and time periods.

It is striking that in our acquisitive, secular age, when many in the academy and media attack Christianity and try to remove or limit its public influence and as the number of people who claim no religious affiliation grows,that interest in the afterlife is increasing. It suggests that no level of affluence or material comfort is ultimately satisfying to most people. We yearn for something more—to spend eternity in a beautiful, serene environment, bereft of the world’s problems, in the presence of our Creator, surrounded by family and friends. Their glowing descriptions of encounters with God and loved ones help make these near-heaven experiences so compelling, comforting, and popular.

Comments (7)

  • yanki161
    Posted on January 12, 2013 at 9:28am

    Another book that came out around 1978 was Dr. Raymond A. Moody’s “Life After Life”. He was a teacher that taught on death and dying, going over such books as Elizabeth Kubler-Ross’s book on the five stages of death. So many students came to him after class to talk about their near death experience that he began to compile and compare these first hand experiences. It leads the reader to believe that the experiences are so similar that it cannot be a hallucination. Very compelling. I highly recommend to anyone interested in the subject.

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    yanki161  
  • gladwing
    Posted on January 7, 2013 at 8:58am

    Their is no doubt in my mind that God exists. I have had a near life experience. Or I should say a near light experience! “In the beginning was the Word and the Word was With God and the Word was God.” ….And the Word was made flesh and dwelt in (me) us, and (i) we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father) full of grace and truth.” I, like John bare witness of that light (energy) that lighteth every man that cometh into the world. “Behold I make all things new”. “I am Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountain of water of life freely.” These are not just words to me but a regenerating experience.

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    gladwing  
  • The Third Archon
    Posted on December 29, 2012 at 4:12pm

    “It is striking that in our acquisitive, secular age, when many in the academy and media attack Christianity and try to remove or limit its public influence and as the number of people who claim no religious affiliation grows,that interest in the afterlife is increasing. It suggests that no level of affluence or material comfort is ultimately satisfying to most people. We yearn for something more—to spend eternity in a beautiful, serene environment, bereft of the world’s problems, in the presence of our Creator, surrounded by family and friends. Their glowing descriptions of encounters with God and loved ones help make these near-heaven experiences so compelling, comforting, and popular.”
    Want in one hand, **** in the other–see which one fills up faster.

    Funny how people in a culture that ISN’T dominated by Christian religious traditions have near-death experiences that lack Jesus, pearly gates, etc.

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    The Third Archon  
  • universalphilos
    Posted on December 28, 2012 at 4:45pm

    Here is one man’s testimony of heaven, which follows heaven’s testimony to man. http://youtu.be/Dz0NnUrAK7s

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    universalphilos  
  • anothercomment
    Posted on December 28, 2012 at 1:33pm

    Many cultures believe in an existence after death. Hindus believe we are actually reborn, and furthermore are connected to a beloved one for seven lifetimes. A Chinese woman explained to me that a birthmarks or other significant marking (at birth) on the body, enables the loved ones of that person to be able to locate them once they are reborn (my child has a lock of black **** in a head full of silky white blonde ****). So many cultures believe in heaven, rebirth, and reincarnation, I do to believe that we came from an ethereal existence into a bodily existence, and eventually will return to an ethereal existence. Personally, and I do not demand anyone accept this version, I believe my afterlife includes the Christian God. I believe the cycle of life is so complex that it could not simply “be”, or simply become “nothingness” at death.
    ;-P And I consider Mark Twain among my favorite authors (he is consider the first American political pundit), but I have never read this particular opinion. I do know he was a man in great pain once his beloved daughter died, reportedly suffering an asthma attack and drowning in the water she was running for a bath.

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    anothercomment  
  • AndYetItMoves
    Posted on December 28, 2012 at 1:25pm

    ‘We yearn for something more—to spend eternity in a beautiful, serene environment, bereft of the world’s problems, in the presence of our Creator, surrounded by family and friends.’

    An adequate distillation of the Freudian wish-thinking that is the impetus behind all religion. It doesn’t take a genius to recognize that Christianity is the child’s impulsive fear of death writ large.

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    AndYetItMoves  
  • DeavonReye
    Posted on December 27, 2012 at 12:01pm

    Interesting article. Do I believe those who have had these “experiences”? Not sure. They did experience something. Some of them MAY have been more about writing a book that sells. But it would seem that people buy up what they feel would benefit them. Self preservation has become an ingrained instinct. Understandable. Death is scary to some. It shouldn’t be. You didn’t exist before you were born, . . . and were not inconvenienced by it one bit. *Tip of the hat to Samuel Clemens”.

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    DeavonReye  

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