The Eternal Prospect
The primary problem in the spiritual lives of modern Christians is eschatological in nature. Eschatology is a fancy theological word for matters related to heaven and the end times.
With each passing second, every person’s life is moving toward eternity. However, most Christians live with very little awareness of their eternal trajectory. Other Christians, as a product of life circumstances such as suffering, death, or a terminal diagnosis, do have an awareness of eternity. Still, they have very little knowledge or structure to offer them meaningful, life-giving direction as they move toward glory.
Consequently, to put it in sophisticated, academic language, one could describe the spiritual lives of many Christians as blah or meh. Perhaps, you can identify with this feeling. Your relationship with Christ lacks the deep joy and abundant life that Jesus offers. You do not experience the soaring hope and steadfast perseverance described in the New Testament accounts. Your service to Christ feels routine and obligatory and does not contain transcendent inspiration or bold resolve.
Of course, God does not promise constant “highs” in the Christian life, and yet you can reasonably expect more than a nondescript relationship with Jesus. God’s grace ‘unmerited favor’ to us in Jesus contains too much richness for such flatness.
A spiritual perspective quietly pervading the modern church involves what the apostle Paul referred to as “earthly mindedness” (see Phil. 3:19). A present-day term for earthly mindedness is YOLO: “You only live once.” In other words, modern Christians often live as if this life is it. There’s no heavenly life beyond. As a result, there’s little to no eternal hope, joy, or purpose in the spirituality of many Christians.
Consequently, people chase fleeting pleasures of this life, which do not satisfy their souls. They freak out when difficulties and trials come their way. They conceive of their purpose and mission for Christ in a manner that elicits little inspiration or boldness.
You may be reading this and thinking, “My heart and mind are anywhere but in this life.” For you, a death, a diagnosis, or a general sense of disenchantment with this world has turned your soul away from this earth. In a general, undirected way, your consciousness has shifted toward eternity. Still, you do not know exactly where to go with these feelings and longings.
Game-changing transformation occurs when we set our hearts and minds “on things above,” as Paul exhorted believers to do (Col. 3:1–2). Life-altering change can happen when we live like citizens of heaven, as Paul characterized believers (see Phil. 3:20) "For our citizenship (commonwealth) is in heaven, from which also we eagerly wait for a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ; who will transform the body of our humble state into conformity with the body of His glory, by the exertion of the power that He has even to subject all things to Himself." Your Christian life can be turned right-side-up when you start to live heavenward. Christ calls us there, and the apostle Paul gives us direction.
A heavenward life means that eternity serves as the backdrop of your everyday consciousness. Heavenly life on the 'new earth' in perfect harmony with your creator is a frequent object of your longings and desires. In a heavenward life, eternity organically and instinctively informs and drives the everyday matters and decisions of your life.
I can tell you from personal experience that you will discover and enjoy great spiritual riches in a heavenward life.
My Friend, the Apostle Paul
A heavenward mindset changed my life after my first wife whom I loved with all my heart and soul divorced me. As the sorrow of grief persisted, ‘heavenward Ness’ provided richer fellowship with Jesus. I had more perspective and more hope. I had more comfort and more patience. I had more focus in ministry, prayer, and evangelism. Life set in relation to heaven felt more hopeful, joyful, and purposeful. Though I was suffering deeply from the loss of my family, God was blessing my inner life in a unique way, like I had never before experienced.
However, I do not know if I would have sustained this heavenward life after the season of grief if I had not met a significant companion on the heavenly journey.
During that year after my wife Karen divorced me, I was thinking about heaven so much that I, in-spite of the deep pain of my loss, I experienced the ‘peace of God that surpasses human understanding’ Philippians 4:7
“A heavenward life means that God's promise of eternal happiness on the 'new earth paradise' serves as the backdrop of your everyday consciousness.”
2 Peter 3:13
"But in keeping with his promise we are looking forward to a new heaven and a new earth, where righteousness dwells."
"Then I saw “a new heaven and a new earth,” for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and there was no longer any sea." Revelation 21:1
Meanwhile, I began reading the letters of the apostle Paul in my devotional life. As I read these New Testament books, I noticed heaven popping up all over the place! I used a golden-yellow highlighter (like the heavenly streets of gold) to mark every reference to heaven and eternity in Paul’s letters. My Bible was covered with yellow highlights in the Pauline epistles.
When he talks about suffering, he mentions the resurrection of the body or being at home with God. When he considers morality and ethics, the heavenly realities of the kingdom of God appear. When Paul thinks about serving God, seeing Christ on his judgment seat motivates him. Heaven pervaded the consciousness and life of the apostle Paul. In one sense, he lived as a person whose life was constantly moving toward glory. In another sense, Paul lived as if he were already there.
I had found a friend, someone who had thought about heaven in an even more intense, constant, and peculiar manner than I had.
What I discovered is that my life had been moving heavenward since the day of my conversion as a thirty-eight-year-old man. God used the fact that my children and my estranged wife also needed to know the ‘Good News’ in order that they too would live in glory, and that hope served to awaken me to the present heavenly realities of my salvation. Paul did have circumstances that probably aided his heavenly awakening. He characterized his life as “often near death” (2 Cor. 11:23). In his letter to the Philippians, one gets the impression that Paul was not sure if his imprisonment would end in death or deliverance (Phil. 1:18–26). In 2 Corinthians, he mentions being beaten nearly to death five times and adrift at sea for a full day and a full night after a shipwreck (2 Cor. 11:25).
However, the realities brought about through Jesus’s life, death, resurrection, and ascension (known as the Christ Event) more likely drove and sustained Paul’s heavenward life.
Paul viewed the Christ Event as the arrival of heaven on earth. The Christ Event signified the beginning of the age to come, a new heavenly age on the new earth, which Jews had anticipated for centuries. Paul’s letters clearly assert that the conversion of believers means that they are instantly transferred into the kingdom of God, and they live as citizens of that Kingdom realm where Christ reigns in his glory.
As I continued to study God’s Kingdom principles, I found other heavenward friends along the way in the writings and music of church history. The early church fathers, Christian mystics, Puritan theologians, British poets, slaves of the American South, and others all became heavenward companions. From these sources, I found other people who were consumed with heavenly promises to various degrees.
In this season, my life changed radically. I would earnestly want this change for you too.
When you understand the implications of the coming of Christ and the fullness of your salvation, heavenly realities naturally start to sink deeper and deeper into your heart and mind. You start to realize that, in the spiritual realm, you live with a foot in heaven-ruled Kingdom and a toe on earth. The more eternity sinks into your soul, the more your thoughts, life, actions, and longings move in a heavenward direction. When you realize that God has blessed you in Christ with “all the spiritual blessings in the heavenly places,” greater joy enters your relationship with Jesus. When you digest how eternally blissful your life in the new earth will be, the more you will persevere in the trials and sufferings of this temporary life. When you think about offering your life as a worshipful gift before the judgment seat of Christ, the more inspiring and convicted your purpose in life becomes.
The apostle Paul’s theology of heavenly living offers promise and hope in these various areas. All these eternal benefits and blessings are on offer to you right now in the gospel.
“Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, set your hearts on things above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things. For you died, and your life is now hidden with Christ in God. When Christ, who is your life, appears, then you also will appear with him in glory.” Colossians 3:1-4
"Turn to the Lord for help in everything you do, and you will be successful." Proverbs 16:3
We see references to eternal life in our new body in the new earth in both the Old and New Testaments (Isa 65:17-19, Isa 9:7, Isa 11:6-9, Rev 21:1-5). Our resurrection bodies will be physical bodies but not like the ones we have today (1 Cor 15), and we will dwell in a physical new earth, a place where there is no sin, sickness or death. The Bible does not speak at length about what these bodies will be like, but we do have a description of Jesus’ resurrection body. People touched him; he ate a piece of fish (Luke 24:37-42). This is not a new teaching; the Church has taught this for 2,000 years.
It is also clear from the Bible that we will work in the new earth. Work was something Adam was made to do: “God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to work it and take care of it” (Gen 2:15).
Many believe that work is a curse, but the reality is that God made work, and it was part of the very good earth before Adam’s fall from grace. It is only after Adam’s sin that work is cursed; it is the curse that makes work often difficult (Gen 3:17-19).
Russell Gehrlein writes:
In your job today, you will likely experience the “thorns and thistles” that have come as a result of the Fall; the reality is that work will be difficult until Christ returns. But what happens to work when Jesus comes back, and Adam’s curse from Genesis 3:16-19 is no more, as it states in Revelation 22:3: “No longer will there be any curse”?
In Revelation 22:3, when describing the “new earth,” it says “No longer will there be any curse.” The curse that came through sin was lifted because of Jesus. Though Adam had sinned, and because of his sin, all mankind was cursed, because Christ did not sin, yet died willingly for us, he has provided a way for the curse to be lifted.
Russell goes on to describe what work will be like in the new earth:
Just imagine what our work could be like in the New Creation without the pain, frustration, stress, difficulty, unpredictability, sweat, and interpersonal conflict between sinners that we currently experience in our labor due to the Fall.
The possibility that there will be work for us to do is implied in the scriptures. The prophet Micah suggests that we don’t just lay down our weapons, we will pick up instruments of work: “They will beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks” (Mic 4:3).
Michael Wittmer writes in his book Becoming Worldly Saints that God’s plan for the world’s future is not destruction, but restoration:
God did not say, “I am making new everything!” but rather “I am making everything new!” He does not promise to make new things to furnish the new earth, but to renew the things that are already here.
Darrell Cosden in his book The Heavenly Good of Earthly Work begins to address our last question: “Will any of the things we have today carry over to the new earth?”
Our sanctified imaginations can only suggest what we think God’s promise to make all things new might mean… There will be, no doubt, some specific products of our work that through judgment will be transformed and incorporated into the “new physics” of the new creation. I am quite hoping that Handel’s Messiah will be regularly in concert in the New Jerusalem.
Paul Stevens, in his book Work Matters: Lessons from Scripture, states one thing he knows for sure. The work that we do in this restored, sinless world will be important to God and fulfilling for us because this is what God originally intended.
By inspiration the apostle Paul wrote:
"in the future there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to me on that day; and not only to me, but also to all who have loved His appearing." 2 Timothy 4:8
That is something to look forward to.
Christians will then live on this earth during the one thousand year kingdom in which Christ reigns.
After the one thousand year kingdom, this earth will be destroyed with intense heat.
A New Heaven and Earth
"But the day of the Lord will come like a thief, in which the heavens will pass away with a roar and the elements will be destroyed with intense heat, and the earth and its works will be burned up." 2 Peter 3:10
The new heaven and new earth will be created for Christians to live in perfect unity and love.
"But according to His promise we are looking for new heavens and a new earth, in which righteousness dwells." 2 Peter 3:13
The .new earth. will be the eternal perfect earth paradise in which Christians will live forever, in harmony and loving fellowship with our creator and our God.
(Isaiah 11:6-9)
6 " The wolf will live with the lamb,
the leopard will lie down with the goat,
the calf and the lion and the yearling together;
and a little child will lead them.
7 The cow will feed with the bear,
their young will lie down together,
and the lion will eat straw like the ox.
8 The infant will play near the cobra’s den,
and the young child will put its hand into the viper’s nest.
9 They will neither harm nor destroy
on all my holy mountain,
for the earth will be filled with the knowledge of the Lord
as the waters cover the sea. "
(Isaiah 11:6-9) NIV
" I solemnly charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead, and by His appearing and His kingdom: preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort, with great patience and instruction. "
(2 Timothy 4:1-2) NIV
"Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who does not need to be ashamed and who correctly handles the word of truth."
2 Timothy 2:15 NIV
Page created by Peter Brenner Saturday February 15, 2025
- Updated Thursday Nov.27, 2025 -