SHE PROCLAIMS HEAVEN FOR THE RIGHTEOUS
AND HELL FOR THE WICKED
By Reuel Lemmons
An eternal God has provided an eternal reward for the
eternal soul of man. Death isn't the end of it all. Scarce
have the clods closed over us until we will be ushered into an
eternal day. There will be a resurrection of all the dead,
both good and bad. Oblivion isn't the eternal destiny after
graduation from the school of life.
Paul, in the fifteenth chapter of First Corinthians,
explains in detail the nature of the resurrection. "As in Adam
all die, so in Christ shall all be made alive," is his
conclusion. When the resurrection takes place, the righteous,
trailing clouds of glory shall fly to the outstretched arms of
him who went to Calvary that they might go to heaven. The
wicked, unable to sleep, will have to arise to meet a God they
have spurned and a Jesus they have turned down.
The Bible is specific and plain on the subject of Judgment.
There will be a judgment. None will be able to sleep through
it and none will be absent. All of us will meet God in
Judgment. Many passages of Scripture refer to the fact that
the dead, both small and great: both rich and poor; both good
and bad will face God in judgment. We may stay out of church
if we want to. We can live as mean as the Devil as long as we
live if we wish. But there is one rendezvous we are all going
to keep: we will meet God in Judgment (John 5:28-29).
In Matthew 25, Jesus gives us some specific information
about what will take place when the Judgment day dawns. He
says, "When the Son of man shall come in his glory, and all
the holy angels with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of
his glory: and before him shall be gathered all nations: and
he shall separate them one from another, as a shepherd divides
his sheep from the goats: And he shall set the sheep on his
right hand, but the goats on his left" (25:31-33). We have the
same picture in the wording of that powerful hymn:
"There's a great day coming,
A great day coming,
A great day coming, by and by -
When the saints and the sinners
shall be parted right and left -
Are you ready for that day to come?"
That question ought to be seriously considered by all who
read these lines. The same Bible that tells us about heaven
also tells us about Hell. There is no way to take one out of
the Bible and leave the other in.
And there is no third option. All who miss heaven will end
up in Hell. There is no other place to go. The judgment of God
is final, and there is no higher court to which we can appeal
an unfavorable verdict.
It is very final - this judgment. There is no second
chance. There is no purgatory that we can be prayed out of.
There is no possibility that someone else can be baptized for
us after we are dead and effect our escape from the pit.
Whatever reward we receive in the judgment, we will always
have. It is eternal in duration. This is all the more reason
why we ought to make our calling and election sure while we
have the chance to do so (2 Peter 1:10-11).
The entire book of Revelation is given over to picturing
for us, from many viewpoints, the cardinal fact that the lost
will be punished while the redeemed will be richly rewarded in
glory. Hell is designated as the abode of the lost forever,
and Heaven is named as the home of the righteous forever.
We do not like to think about Hell. None of us would want
to go there. If we had a chance to test the reality of Hell
for five minutes we would all, if we had the opportunity, want
to obey the gospel. Hell is described often in the Scriptures
- always as a horrible place where worms don't die, and the
fire is never quenched (Mark 9:48). Jesus put it this way in
Matthew twenty-five; "Then shall he say also unto them on the
left hand, Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire,
prepared for the Devil and his angels." (verse 41).
It would be an awful thing to be shut out from the presence
of God forever. Here in this life we would surely not want to
be banished to a place where God never shows his power or
providence. It would be much worse to have to spend an
eternity in a place where light never comes, and grace and
love and mercy are unknown.
If we were born totally depraved, and incapable of being
saved, we might well blame God; but we were not. We are free
moral agents - capable of choosing to be lost or saved. If any
of us are lost it will be because we chose to be lost. God has
done all He can do. Jesus has done all he can do. The ball is
in our court and the next move is ours. If we are lost it will
be our fault and none other's.
How much more desirable it is to be saved eternally, and to
live in heaven following judgment. We can, you know.
Limited as we are to the vehicle of human speech, it is
completely impossible to adequately describe the glories and
the joys of that celestial world. Eye has not seen; ear has
not heard; nor has it entered into any man's heart what God
has prepared for the re- deemed (1 Cor. 2:9). About all we can
say is that God will wipe away all tears from our eyes
forever. There will be no more sorrow nor sickness, and the
angel says, there shall not be any more death; for these
former things shall have passed away (Rev. 21: 4).
All the tongues of all the orators and the pens of all the
poets cannot do justice to a description of heaven. Only God
can prepare such a place for only God is infinite and
omnipotent. And only God is love.
Dear reader, you have read through this little book. You
have given serious consideration to your soul. You are
convinced of your present state: you are either lost or saved.
You have the hope of heaven or you do not. May we urge you
with all the power of persuasion that we have, to not risk
another day outside of Christ. Life is fraught with too much
danger and uncertainty for you to leave your soul uninsured.
Today is the day of salvation. Be saved while you can.
QUESTIONS
Review the teaching of 1 Corinthians 15 concerning the
resurrection.
Some teach two separate resurrections. Discuss this in
light of John 5:28-29.
What does purgatory mean? What does the Bible say on the
subject?
What are some of the figures used to describe hell?
Discuss the picture of heaven described in Revelation 21
and 22.