Afterlife? Will there be many mansions?
Introduction Video:
Hespeler, 23 April, 2017 © Scott
McAndless
John 14:1-7, 2 Corinthians 5:1-10, Psalm 16
O
|
ver five hundred years ago, an
English king by the name of James commissioned the translation of the greatest
book ever written, the Bible, into English. The result was a translation that
was so good, so poetic and so beautiful that, for hundreds of years, it was
essentially the only English Bible that mattered. But five centuries is a very
long time and in all of that time the text of the King James Version never
changed but other things did and that may have caused a few issues.
For example,
in the fourteenth chapter of the Gospel of John – in the King James Version of
the passage that we read this morning – Jesus makes this rather stunning
promise to his disciples. “In my
Father’s house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have
told you. I go to prepare a place for you.” It is the kind of promise that
has a way of capturing people’s attention. What an afterlife to anticipate – a
mansion for me in heaven after I die? Why, I’ll be just like the Beverley
Hillbillies!
But when,
eventually, newer and more modern English translations of the Bible finally
began to appear, some people got extremely upset. You see, when they opened up
their new Bibles and turned to the Gospel of John, they read this: “In my Father’s house there are many
dwelling places.”
“What?
Dwelling places? Is God planning to put me up in a Motel 6 or something? The
King James promised me a mansion and now these fancy new translations say I can
only have a dwelling place? This is a raw deal. I want my mansion!” So said many
critics; so some still say to this day. Of all the complaints against the newer
translations (and there have been many) the complete lack of mansions has got
to be one that comes up most often.
But is it a
valid complaint? Did the more recent scholars really set out to shortchange us
all in heaven with their new translations. Is it some great conspiracy to cool
off some sort of heavenly real estate bubble? Is the Wynne government involved?
Well, I can explain what happened for you if you like. As it turns out, both
the King James Version and the modern translations were absolutely correct
translations. What? How can that be? How can both be correct when they make
quite different promises?
Well, the key
word in what I just said was the word were. You see, in the original
text of the Gospel, what Jesus promises is that there are many monh,
in his Father’s house. And that Greek word, monh,, means
rooms or dwelling places. And when the King James Version was
translated, a common English word for a dwelling place was, in fact, the word mansion. That’s right, when the King
James was first translated, the word mansion didn’t have the same meaning that
it has today.
Five hundred
years ago, rich people didn’t live in mansions. They lived in manor houses or
estates or villas, but not in mansions. So the word didn’t have any of the
meaning of luxury or size that we attach to it. It was only over time that the
word became attached to a particular kind of dwelling. In fact, I wouldn’t be
surprised if it was the King James translation of this particular passage (and
its suggestion that a mansion was a heavenly kind of abode) that prompted
people over time to call big and fancy houses mansions.
But the mere
fact that people get so worked up over the question of whether Jesus was
promising us rooms or mansions after we die is rather telling. It seems as if
the way that people think of or imagine the life that comes after this life is
really important to us. In fact, it’s the kind of thing that people often are
willing to fight over – even kill over.
In some ways,
I suppose, that is not very surprising. For many of us, when we get discouraged
by the ups and downs of this life or when we lose somebody that we love and
miss them terribly, we take great comfort in the promise of an afterlife. But
somehow it is not enough for us just to be reassured that there is another existence beyond this
one. We need to be able to
visualize something whether it be mansions or pearly gates or streets paved
with gold or whatever.
But there is a problem with that. I
believe in an afterlife. I think that there is good reason to believe that the
identity that I call me will still
persist even after I die. I base that belief on many things including and
especially my Christian faith. But I do not believe that I or anyone else has
the language to actually describe what that new life is like.
Whatever it is, the afterlife is an
existence that is completely unlike life as we experience it right now. I mean
if anyone has come close to being able to give a literal description of the
kind of existence that I suspect we are talking about here, it is the
theoretical physicists who can talk about things like multidimensional
universes or quantum nonlocality and can produce some pretty remarkable
mathematical equations, but they can’t draw a picture of any of it.
If you want a picture of the
afterlife, therefore, you are limited to what is called metaphorical language.
In other words, you cannot say what it is,
but you can say what it is like. A
metaphor is a way of describing something that is not literally true, but that
is true in profoundly more important ways.
For example,
when I say, “God is my Father,” that is a metaphor. I do not mean by that that
God is my biological father or that he is the man who raised me and lives in
Toronto. It is not literally true but it is true in far more important ways.
The phrase, God is my Father, tells me very important and very true things
about my relationship with God, about God’s care for me and about so much more.
A good metaphor is like that, it’s not literally true, but it is able to speak
truths that you cannot normally put into words.
And that is
why I would suggest that all of our language, everything we ever say about the
afterlife, is metaphorical. And when I say that, I don’t mean that the
afterlife isn’t real or that what we say about it isn’t true. I only mean that
metaphors are the only way that we have to get at the deeper truth of the
afterlife.
But one thing
that means is that it is probably meaningless to fight over the particular
metaphors that are used when talking about the afterlife. Does it matter,
ultimately, whether I imagine that Jesus has prepared for me a room or a
mansion in his Father’s house? After all, I hardly expect that things like
architecture or interior design or, for that matter, space or time or
dimensions have the same meaning in the afterlife that they do here. So, when
Jesus calls it a dwelling place, how can we have even a clue what he is trying
to describe? It is actually a little bit frustrating trying to understand what
he means once you start to break it down.
And I think
that some of the disciples (or at least one of them) felt that frustration
because he spoke up right after Jesus said this. Thomas
said to him, “Lord, we do not know where
you are going. How can we know the way?” In other words, Thomas is saying,
we can’t really grasp the concepts you talking about here, how are we supposed
to join you in this place where you say you are going. I think that there are
many who struggle with that very issue. If they cannot have a description of
what the afterlife looks like that corresponds to the physical realities of
this world, how are they to take comfort in it?
But I think that Jesus’ response to Thomas shows a remarkable
understanding of his frustration. “I
am the way, and the truth, and the life,” Jesus says. “No one comes to the Father except through me.” Jesus is telling
him that it is not about the place or about what it looks like. “I
am the way,” he is saying. If you trust me, I will get you to the
destination. You don’t need to know what it looks like when you get there or
how you’ll know when you have arrived. The afterlife is about trust more than
it is about place.
All you really
need to know is that, after you die, you will be in the hands of a gracious and
loving God – the God revealed to us in and through Jesus. (That’s what he means
when he says, “If you know me, you will
know my Father also.”) When you know that you have a heavenly Father that
you can trust, you really don’t need to worry about details like how many
theoretical square feet you will have to live in. This, above all, is the
message we need to keep in mind in all our thinking about the afterlife; it will
help immensely when it comes to dealing with any worries or fears about death.
And, keeping
that in mind, let us look a little closer at the promise Jesus gives his
disciples (and us) at the Last Supper in the Gospel of John. If we can assume
that he is not actually describing the heavenly housing market and that he is
using a metaphor to get some idea of the afterlife over to his disciples, what
is he really saying?
The image he
is using is actually would have been pretty clear to anyone listening to him in
the first century. The first clue is when he uses the words “Father’s house.” I
think that it is important to note that the phrase “Father’s house” or “God’s
house” is never used anywhere else in the Bible as a term for heaven. In fact,
the phrase “God’s house” always and only means one thing everywhere else in the
Bible – it is another name for a very earthly temple in Jerusalem. And
Jesus clearly wasn’t talking about that temple when he said this, so I think
that people would have understood that he was using a different and very human
metaphor to describe what the afterlife with God was really about.
Everyone would have had a picture in their mind of what a
father’s house with many rooms would have looked like because, in that world,
it was very common for large extended families to live together in a house
under the leadership of one patriarch or father figure. The centre of these
households was an open courtyard where much of the common family life was lived
out. Around this courtyard various buildings and rooms would be built including
a kitchen and dining room but also rooms for the various smaller units of the
families.
When a young son of the family would get married, for example,
he would go out into the world and find his bride in her father’s household. He
would seek the permission of her father to marry her (given that this was,
after all, a very patriarchal society) and then he would leave her there for a
time while he returned to his father’s house. There he would build another room
onto the courtyard of his family home and when it was finished he would return
to his bride and take her home to live in that room in his father’s house. This
was, in fact, the normal pattern in marriage in that world.
So when Jesus describes his Father’s house with many rooms (or
dwelling places or what they called mansions back in the sixteenth century)
that is the kind of image that everyone would have had in their minds. For that
matter, when he says, “I go to prepare a place for
you? And… I will come again and will take you to myself, so that where I
am, there you may be also.” They also had a clear image in mind. Jesus is
speaking as if he is a groom who is telling his bride that he is going to his
father’s house to build a room onto it for her before he returns to take her
home as his wife. It is a metaphor for marriage and that is actually the
primary thing that we need to understand in this passage.
You see, it
turns out that when, in this passage, Jesus is trying to comfort his disciples
by talking about the afterlife, he is not talking about a place (at least not
in the way that we usually talk about places in terms of space or dimension),
he is talking about a marriage
between himself and the believers. He is talking about relationship more than
place which is why he can also say that he himself is the way to get there. So
maybe, if we are going to try and imagine what the afterlife is like, that is
where we should start too.
The promise of
life beyond this present one is real. Even if our limited minds cannot
comprehend it, we can still have a sense of the comfort that the promise gives
us because of our relationship with the promiser. That is where it all starts.
That is what it is all about.
#140CharacterSermon Jesus
promised his Father’s house had many rooms. This is not about a place in heaven
so much as a relationship with God
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