Tag: fiction

  • A Picture of Heaven – Chapter 9

    A Picture of Heaven – Chapter 9

    The born again crowds all seem to have a plan for our salvation and confident assurance of a place in Heaven… I just don’t see it in most of their lives.

    I see people who talk about Jesus and Heaven differently in different places. I don’t even think that they understand the salvation they preach.

    Some are always happy to be alive and can’t wait for Heaven. Some are sorry to be alive and can’t wait for Heaven.

    Some celebrate as if Heaven can be claimed on earth.

    (I doubt that they are really looking forward to failing health and open caskets as part of our Heaven on earth.)

    And I have met just a few who talk about Heaven as if they live there, instead of here. They seem to be here though, as if it had something to do with Jesus.

    Somehow all of these pictures of Jesus didn’t paint a clear picture for me. But yesterday, a little girl seemed to have a simple answer. in a clear picture, of some things of Heaven I had been ignoring for a long time.

    Our serial story on Grief, salvation, and being born again from death to eternal life in heaven will resume NEXT Monday.

    In case you missed an earlier episode, here is a link to the beginning of our story.

  • A Picture of Heaven – Chapter 8

    A Picture of Heaven – Chapter 8

    My eyes drew back from their distant stare to gaze away from the picture. I gazed back from yesterday and looked intently toward the cross at the front of the church.

    I wondered: How does Jesus fit into all of this?

    I had never quite seen the connection between Jesus and all of the pictures of Heaven.

    Yea, I knew what the cross meant; but it just didn’t connect the pictures of Heaven I had ever since my earliest visits to one church or another.  Not only was it not connected, but what I did know didn’t seem to make any sense.

    I guess my biggest pictures of heaven had come more from Christmas than Easter.

    My picture of Heaven was like the Christmas Eve broadcasts of Papal majesty with smoke and robes… and singing of the Hallelujah Chorus to God by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.

    Then, of course, there was the seasonal hope of an angel who just wasn’t quite good enough to earn his wings until he could save George Bailey.

    And Catholics worship Mary, too… and Saints (with a capital “S”): Christopher, Valentine, Patrick (Irish Saint of parties), Francis and lots of statues.

    The angels in paintings and windows of their churches and Cathedrals all seemed to paint a picture of Heaven with a rather mythological glow.

    And the Mormon’s… (Aren’t they called: The Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints?), with Joseph Smith and multiple wives.

    How are they any different than the followers of the Prophet Mohammed who had multiple wives?

    (Is that OK with God?)

    They celebrate Christmas and Heaven big time; just like the Catholics, with their old established church worship.

    (I think Catholics call it ‘liturgy’ and I know it used to be in Latin.)

    Mormons seem  like a modern christian church with a new “Book of Mormon” instead of the Bible to explain all this.

    Seems kind of like the two young men working out their own salvation at your door, with their magazine to explain the Bible.

  • A Picture of Heaven – Chapter 7

    A Picture of Heaven – Chapter 7

    I once went to a church with a friend, where eventually everyone was jumping up and down to the music. They were smiling and shouting like they were in heaven on earth.

    Thing is though, that we couldn’t stay there. My friend, as I recall, had a pretty tough time of it in ordinary life on regular days of the week.

    It really didn’t help me with my picture of Heaven. Her crayon drawing still looked like Rorschach’s black ink to me.

    Another friend had once taken me to Sunday school at their more formal church. (Why anyone would want to get up earlier go to Sunday school, when we already HAD to go to school five days a week, I never did figure out.)

    Anyway, they had something they studied called a ‘catechism’ (or something like that). I thought about the first question and answer I had seen on their list:

    “What is the chief end of man?”

    The answer given is, “Man’s chief end is to glorify God, and to enjoy Him for ever.”

    I guessed that since Heaven is where God is supposed to be, that it must be where we sing with choirs of angels and glorify God forever… IF we ever get there.

    I was never too excited about the prospect. ‘Isn’t there anything better to do,’ I thought?

    In any case, I had to come up with an answer for her, so finally I said,

    “Those stars by your Mommy look like a choir. I’ll bet they’re angels, singing to God.”

    There. I had said it. And we both stared at her picture of Heaven.

    Then I managed a smile as I added this childish afterthought:

    “Does your mommy have wings?

    “NO. Of course not. She’s my mommy.”

    “My mommy doesn’t have wings. She’s NOT an angel; she’s just in Heaven with them. See this?”

    ‘What?’ I thought, as I looked toward the small dot on her picture to which she pointed.

    “That’s an angel with wings,” the little girl explained. An angel is different.”

    (I didn’t see it.)

    Then she further pointed out of these small dots (that all looked like stars to me):

    “These are angels. SEE? They’re all one color. But THESE are souls of humans who have died. I made them all different colors, but not the same as angels.”

    “Wow,” I acknowledged. “I didn’t know that.”

    “I’ll bet your Mommy is shining brighter because she is so proud of you.”

    “No.” And she looked to her daddy, whose lap she crawled up on.

    “Daddy is proud of me too; but right now, he doesn’t feel so much like shining.”

    (Children can be brutally honest sometimes, and I was a little embarrassed to have been the cause of her honesty.)

    “Besides,” she continued, “Mommy always shined brightly when she talked about Jesus.”

    (Where did Jesus come into the picture, I wondered.)