Before I left Jordan a few weeks ago, I had a cool experience
that I wanted to share on this blog. I’m interested in sharing it because it helps
illustrate the truth behind one of religion’s most controversial issues: how
“to get into heaven.”
So, most religions make claims of an afterlife – something
after death. Basically, we go on living in some state or another after we die,
and religions generally make an attempt to describe that state. That there is
indeed an afterlife I am certain. Not 100% scientifically certain, but then
again not even scientists are 100% certain of anything. There is always an
error term, no matter how small. Suffice it to say that I’m pretty sure that
this life isn’t the end of the road. But there’s a common understanding of the
monotheistic description of the afterlife that doesn’t sit right with me.
To put it simply, most major world religions – and certainly
all three of the monotheistic ones (Islam, Judaism, Christianity) – claim there
are two worlds that exist, heaven and hell, and that we will all be sent to one
or the other after we die. Heaven is a good place – you want to go there. Hell
is not. You don’t want to go there. How do I know which one I’m destined for?
Well, religions try to answer that question, and basically it comes down to
this: if you’re a member of the correct
religion (i.e. ‘ours’), and you’re a reasonably good person, you go to heaven.
Otherwise, you’re hell-bound.
It’s as if there are certain conditions you have to fill –
like boxes you have to check off on a “to-do list” – in order for some austere
God to let you pass the “gates of heaven.” It’s almost like God is an
immigrations officer at an airport, carefully checking your passport for all
the requisite stamps, visas, etc, and making sure you haven’t been to Las Vegas
too often, before letting you into the country.
Some of my friends have asked me how such a view of God is
consistent with the often-heard claim that he is loving, caring, compassionate,
and devoid of any hateful feelings or desire to harm. How can such a being
thrust someone down to hell? I
mean, isn’t hell endless torment? I wouldn’t wish that on anybody, so how could a loving God do such a thing?
These are very good questions. My recent experience might
provide some illumination.
So I lived in Amman, Jordan, during this past summer. Jordan
is a predominantly Muslim country – though there are a few Christians and other
religious minorities too. The Muslims in Jordan tend to be quite conservative
and practice their religion, at least more faithfully than many Christians in
the West do. Anyway, the month of Ramadan was ongoing at the time, which means
that Muslims don’t eat or drink from sunup to sundown each day. As soon as the
sun goes down, they have a huge meal called iftar,
after which they sit around for hours enjoying their favorite vices (coffee,
cigarettes, etc – many of them don’t drink, as it’s forbidden in Islam) while
generally shooting the breeze and relaxing. It’s fairly challenging to fast all
day for an entire month, so as soon as the sun goes down Muslims tend to reward
themselves for their abstinence with a larger-than-normal amount of their
favorite pleasures – food, coffee, tea, sweets, cigarettes, talking, joking,
sitting around and generally relaxing.
I got invited to iftar
by a couple generous brothers – both about my age – whom I had met just the day
before. There were a number of young men at their house – maybe 15 or 20 of us
in all – and we were sitting outside in the garden shooting the breeze after
the meal was finished. The house was quite large, especially for Jordan (a
relatively poor country); my friends’ father was clearly someone important and
influential.
I didn’t have to wait long to learn more about him though,
as he soon entered the garden from the street. As soon as he did, the
atmosphere changed completely. Everyone put out their cigarettes, set down
their coffee, and stood up. There was complete silence, except the quiet sound
of this man’s steps as he approached our group. I have never experienced the
word “patriarch” quite like this before. He was a middle aged man, dressed in a
long white robe (a ‘dishdash’ in the local dialect) which came up to a collar
that buttoned at his neck. His arms were hidden in his billowing sleeves, so
that all you could see of his body were his face, hands, and sandal-clad feet.
He had a kind, pleasant face with a bright smile, and he
greeted each of us in turn, shaking our hands. All of us remained completely
silent while this was going on, and only sat down when he finally did. In a
quiet voice (he didn’t need to speak loudly, as there were no other sounds to
speak over) he politely asked about those of us whom he didn’t yet know. No one
spoke unless spoken to, and then each responded quietly, modestly, and
respectfully. After inquiring about iftar
and wishing us a happy evening, he arose and entered the house.
The change in the atmosphere was again as sudden as when he
had entered the garden. It felt as if the very air had been holding its breath,
trying not to make a sound, out of respect for this man; as if his presence
required everything around him to exist in perfect order and peace; as if he
couldn’t tolerate disorder or chaos, and wherever he went these things fled, or
else were temporarily held in obedience.
After he left, you could almost feel the group of us sigh in
relief, slouch down in our seats a little more, light up cigarettes again, and
resume our casual jokes and conversation.
As soon as things went back to normal, the thought crossed
my mind that what had just happened was somewhat analgous to being in God’s
presence, in heaven.
I want to make a few observations that I think are pivotal
to understanding this concept of “getting into heaven.” First, there was
nothing compulsory, or forceful, about my friends’ father. To use a favorite
phrase of mine from the Doctrine and Covenants (a book of scripture of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints), his effect on us occurred
“without compulsory means” (D&C 121:46). He didn’t force us to stop talking,
put out our cigarettes (I’m speaking for the group – I don’t actually smoke),
and stand up as he walked over. He didn’t even ask us to. We did it naturally,
on our own. We chose to behave that
way out of respect for the kind of man he was.
Second, being in this man’s presence was ennobling. It
brought out the best in each of us, and made us wish we were nobler than we
were. it also made us wish we had more to show for our twenty-some-odd years on
Earth. It was clear that my friends’ father was evaluating what we had done
with our lives so far. This judgment was anything but severe – he inquired
respectfully about each person he didn’t know and never expressed disapproval.
But the sense of assessment, of evaluation, was unshakable.
Finally, being around that man was hard. What exactly do I mean by that? Well, as I said before, being
around him made us want to be our best – and that takes hard work! It really
does. It means you have to suppress decisively the impulse to settle for
something less than what you’re capable of. When he left, the collective sigh
of relief was quite audible (after he was out of earshot, of course). We each
slumped back down to the mediocre state we spend most of our lives living in.
It was kind of like an electron in an excited state. An
electron in an excited state has more energy – and therefore more potential –
than it does in the ground state, but it doesn’t last there for long. Nature
prefers lower energy states (the lower the better), and systems tend to move
that direction over time in the absence of an external source of energy.
Similarly, you and I have more energy to be the kind of
person we know we should be – and that, deep down, we really want to be – when
we’re under the influence of an ennobling force. But it takes real effort to
remain there, fighting the urge to just accept mediocrity and give up on
excellence. To be honest, our group of twenty-somethings was perfectly happy to
slide back down to our ground state, so to speak, as soon as the patriarch
left.
So what does all this have to do with “getting into heaven”?
Quite simply this: there are no walls around heaven designed to keep people
out. If there are walls and a gate, they are purely cosmetic – and the gate is
open 24/7. Anyone who wants to come to heaven can, and no one will stop her –
except, perhaps, herself. You see, the catch is this: to live in heaven, you
have to be able to endure it.
It isn’t easy living with God. He brings out the best in us,
and giving him anything less is unacceptable. Not because he would expel us if
we didn’t, but because we would expel ourselves before we dared. Anything that
isn’t pure, honest, virtuous, kind, true, and noble can’t endure God’s presence
and would rather flee than be less than he knows we can be.
So we have two simple choices: conform to the holy order
that his presence requires, or live according to our own personal preferrences
somewhere else. Those who don’t live in heaven don’t live there because they chose not to live there. In fact, God
begs, persuades, and cajoles all of us to come
to heaven, and throws the gates wide open. But some of us will decide that they
would rather live elsewhere – because they can’t live up to the caliber of man
that he is, and couldn’t possibly feel comfortable being anything less around
him.
There is a simple principle taught in the Doctrine and
Covenants that beautifully summarizes what I’ve tried to explain. And small
wonder: it’s the reason I believe what I do. “For he who is not able to abide
the law of a celestial kingdom cannot abide a celestial glory.”
I guess I’ll finish with one final question and answer as
food for thought: how do we become able to abide a celestial glory? We learn
how here, on Earth. The things we experience here, during our mortal lives, are
preparing us to be able to endure the loving, ennobling, glorious presence of
God.
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