I love the rhythm of the week that finally winds down into a sleepy Saturday. With our two little girls, it’s the one day we get to sleep late. Since Sundays are usually full at church, we try to keep our Saturdays slow and easy.
Saturdays can be deceptive, though. We trudge through the early weekdays getting ready for school and work and think, “How great it will be when every day is Saturday. When we don’t have to get kids to school and when there’s no office to rush toward. Won’t that be heaven!”
The answer is, “No, that actually won’t be heaven at all.”
In his voluminous work HEAVEN, Randy Alcorn points out that many of our concepts about heaven are completely unbiblical and wrong. The Bible actually has quite a bit to say about the afterlife, and much of it is quite the opposite of what we’ve imagined.
First, forget the puffy clouds and becoming an angel. Heaven is not up in the sky, and people don’t become angels when they die.
Others think we will be disembodies spirits in heaven, devoid of matter and feeling. That’s actually closer to Plato’s teachings than Scripture. Jesus’ resurrected body is the archetype for what we will be like in heaven. He was still flesh and blood, able to talk and eat fish with Peter on the beach. And yet despite the damage done by the cross, He was completely healthy and walls presented no barrier for Him entering a room.
The same will be true for us. We will be flesh and blood, quite material, yet without physical limitations.
So yes, you will know your loved ones, for you will recognize them. They will be the best, most perfect version of themselves, freed of both physical illness and psychological neuroses that held them back on earth.
But one of the biggest misconceptions of heaven is the absence of work. Most people picture heaven as one big vacation with nothing special to do. Others spiritualize that vacation, saying it will be one long worship service. While there is definitely worship pervading heaven, and God is worthy of eternal worship, He has angels to do that in infinite repetition.
Humans were not made for infinite repetition. We are not machines. Just like the rhythm of our work weeks, it is the variety in our routines that may our Saturdays so special. Trust me, if everyday were Saturday, you’d get sick and tired of nothing to do.
This is the reason for most Christian’s unspoken unease with the concept of heaven. Most of what we’ve heard preached about it sounds terrifically dull. Because in our heart of hearts, we know an eternal series of Saturdays sounds more like a curse than a blessing. There is no rhythm of the week, no accomplishments, and no sweet relief from our schedule when Saturday comes.
It’s actually a job that’s not fulfilling and unreasonable bosses we don’t like. Work is a good thing. It’s what makes Saturday so sweet. And we will work in heaven, and we will find great fulfillment in it!
Remember, the curse God put on us after the Garden of Eden was not work, but that our work outside the Garden would be frustrating and unfulfilling (Gen. 3:17-19). God’s original plan for us in the Garden was “to work it and take care of it” (Gen 2:15). But the New Heaven and New Earth that God establishes in the book of Revelation is actually a return to the Garden of Eden – the Tree of Life is actually smack dab in the middle of it again! So heaven will be a return to God’s perfect plan – a place with no sickness, no injustice, with exciting, purposeful work that fulfills our days!
Honestly, I can’t imagine the afterlife being fun without being able to write and compose music anymore. I can’t think of a place being heavenly without woods that I can hike and explore. But the great truth about heaven is the work I love will continue, just now unhindered by my sinful nature and limitations. And with a New Heaven and New Earth, I’ll have so much endless newness around me to discover and enjoy! God’s endless creativity will be a never-ending delight!
Actually, a pointless, purposeless existence is more what that other eternal destination will be. So maybe it’s time to stop thinking retirement and no schedule will be heavenly. As for me, I plan to be endlessly creative, just like my Father, and take all eternity to go on endless adventures with Him.
Then I’ll rest on Saturdays, taking a moment to reflect on my amazing exploits. It will be my work serving Him that will make Saturday’s rest so sweet.