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Table of Contents
Big Picture
This study guide consists of 12 sessions that you can tackle alone or
with a group. Either way, we recommend undertaking only one session
at a time, as each comes with a hefty load of recommended Scripture
Our URL is thebibleproject.com reading. If you’re leading a group, visit our website to download tips
for guiding the study.
Let’s begin!
Big Picture
Imagine heaven.
See clouds? A pearly gate? Golden walls? For most
of us, the word “heaven” conjures up a cartoonish
image of a city floating on cotton, even if that’s not
really what we believe God’s dwelling place is like.
Time to forget all that.
In this study, we want you to begin to think about
heaven the way the Bible thinks about heaven.
When we use the words “heaven” and “earth,” we are talking about
two different domains. Heaven is God’s domain. It is ruled by God. In
heaven, God is the one who defines what is good and what is evil. It’s
where God’s will is always done. The biblical authors call this domain
by different names, including God’s kingdom, paradise, eternal life,
and, of course, heaven.
Earth is our domain. On earth, humans have chosen to be the ones who
define good and evil. Biblical authors give this domain a few different
names, too: the world, the present age, and the age of sin and death.
Notice that two of those names imply that humanity’s domain is only
temporary, an age, which, by definition, comes to an end.
The story of the Bible is the story of heaven on earth being ripped
into heaven and earth, followed by God’s glorious mission to reunite
these two realms once again.
The 30,000- The Bible opens with God’s domain and humanity’s domain completely
Foot View overlapping. It was literally heaven on earth—God’s domain flourishing
on our beloved ball of rock and water. In the Bible, this paradise is
represented as the Garden of Eden. But quickly we come to a rift.
Humans rebelled, deciding they wanted a domain where they could
define good and evil on their own terms.
From Genesis 3 onward, the basic tension driving the story of the
Bible is how God is going to rejoin heaven and earth. And that’s
ultimately where the story ends: with a vision, a promise of divine
space and human space united once and for all.
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HEAVEN & EARTH WORKBOOK
What Are “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” The
“the Heavens”? famous opening line of the Bible introduces God as the artist behind
everything we know and love in this world. It tells us that from day one
God split creation into two categories: heaven and earth. It is pretty
clear what earth is. But what should you picture here when you think
of heaven?
The word heaven can have many different meanings in English. When
most people say “heaven,” they are referring to the mystical, spiritual
city where some believe they’ll go after they die. In modern English, we
also use “heaven” as a synonym for “paradise” or “bliss.” We casually
call our vacation destinations or gourmet desserts “heavenly.”
But Genesis 1:1 isn’t talking about either of those things when it uses
the word “heaven.” Instead, the word “heaven” here literally means
“the sky.”
1:1 is ehrets. In modern English, we usually special domain where God lives. Read the familiar words again, and
use the word “earth” to talk about the you’ll immediately see that Genesis 1:1 could just as accurately be
whole planet, but ehrets means “land,” as in
the ground we stand on.
translated as, “In the beginning God created the skies and the land.”
The realm where humans live is “the land,” and the realm above is “the
sky.” As the story goes on, each realm is treated separately so that
even animals are divided up as either sky animals or land animals.
This might feel underwhelming. Maybe you thought Genesis 1:1 was
about God creating the entire universe, the terrestrial ball we call
earth, and the supernatural place we call heaven. That sounds exciting.
But God making the plain old sky and land? I guess that’s cool, but it
doesn’t seem as exciting as God making an otherworldly place where
angels live. After all, apps on our phones tell us what to expect from
the sky every day. We can fly through the sky in giant aluminum tubes
with wings. We can even get Wi-Fi up there.
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HEAVEN & EARTH WORKBOOK
The Sky as Put yourself in the shoes of an ancient Israelite. When you look up
a Metaphor for into the sky, you are overwhelmed with its beauty and majesty. The
God’s Domain skies are one of the most mysterious and awe-inspiring things to
behold. The skies are vast and powerful. They are literally above us,
as in a position of authority, and we depend on them for life. You can
begin to see why the word “sky” became the same word to describe
In Hebrew, the word for “clouds” is pro-
God’s domain, heaven. The skies are a perfect metaphor for the glory
nounced shehaqim. Depending on the
context, this word can also be translated and transcendence of the domain where God reigns and dwells.
as “heaven” or “heavens,” though it is much
less common than shamayim. Because of these parallels, the biblical authors almost always used
the word for “the skies” to talk about the place where God dwells, but
this linguistic tool doesn’t necessarily mean they thought God actually
lived in the sky (we know their perspective was much more nuanced
than that, and we’ll explore it more in session 7). Using the same word
to mean both “the skies” and “heaven” is more a claim about God’s
status and authority than it is speculation about the physical location
of his presence. To say God lives in heaven means that God shares the
same characteristics as the skies. Or, to put it a different way:
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HEAVEN & EARTH WORKBOOK
SESSION 1 — THE HEAVENS AS “THE SKIES” 12
Geek Out
The Three-Tiered Today, we understand that the earth is a planet spinning around a star
View of the Universe in one small section of a vast network of galaxies. However, biblical
(Biblical Cosmology) authors had a much different view of the cosmos than we do. (After all,
they didn’t have telescopes.)
The ancient Israelites and their neighbors understood the universe as
The land is kept from sinking into the three realms stacked on top of one another, which scholars of ancient
waters below by the “pillars of the earth” Near Eastern history describe as three tiers:
(see Psalm 75:3 or 1 Samuel 2:8), and its
flat disc-shape is called “the circle of the TIER 1: THE WATERS BELOW
earth” (see Isaiah 40:22). As far as ancient people could tell, their land was surrounded by water
on every side. They also knew you’d hit water if you dug deep enough.
They imagined all this water was connected as one vast sea all around
The Hebrew word for the dome is raqia. It
and underneath. And for them, the sea represented chaos and was
appears for the first time in Genesis 1:6,
and is best translated as “dome” or “vault,” perceived as dangerous and impossible to rule.
the latter of which captures the dome’s
supposed role of holding back waters high TIER 2: THE LAND
above. When it rains, the water above the Because they perceived all the water to be connected, they imagined
dome are being released through “win-
land as a kind of disc that was floating in the great sea. They believed
dows” (see Genesis 7:11)
all human life existed on this one disc.
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the sun, moon and stars as embedded into the dome itself.
DAY 0 GENESIS 1:2 God’s Spirit hovers over DAY 3 GENESIS 1:9-13 God separates the land
the chaotic and unordered state of the cosmos from the sea, and then summons the land to gen-
before God brings order and beauty to it. erate vegetation.
DAY 1 GENESIS 1:3-5 God creates light and DAY 4 GENESIS 1:14-19 God places the sun,
separates it from darkness. Here “light” is not the moon, and stars in the dome and appoints them
energy that emanates from the sun or is reflected as markers for the passage of time.
off the moon. God calls the light “day,” which is a
period of time, not a physical entity. God depart- DAY 5 GENESIS 1:20-23 God creates the crea-
ing light and dark, day and night, is an ancient tures that live in the sea and the creatures that
Israelite way of saying that God created the fixed live in the sky.
order of time itself.
DAY 6 GENESIS 1:24-31 God summons the land
DAY 2 GENESIS 1:6-8 God separates the to generate creatures, and, finally, he appoints
waters above from the waters below by means humans in his image to rule the land on his behalf.
of the dome, which holds back the waters above.
He calls the dome the “sky.” DAY 7 GENESIS 2:1-3 God rests.
Dig Deeper
In the Old Testament, the English words “heaven” or “heavens”
are almost always a translation of the Hebrew word shamayim,
which you now know means “skies.” But when the authors
wrote shamayim, they weren’t always trying to talk about God’s
domain or dwelling place. In most cases, they were simply
referring to the atmosphere. Let’s practice learning to tell the
difference by looking at the context of some biblical texts.
1. 2.
Look up the following verses and notice In other contexts, “the skies” can refer to
that the use of the word “heaven” simply God’s dwelling place. For instance, Psalm
refers to the sky. (Remember, whether 11:4 says “his throne is in the skies.”
the word is singular or plural depends Here, the authors are using the sky as a
on your translation, but in Hebrew, it’s metaphor to refer to God’s transcendent
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Notes
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HEAVEN & EARTH WORKBOOK
The Garden
Session 2
Temple
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in the cool of the day…
“I dug out a canal from the (river) Upper Zab, cutting through
a mountain peak, and called it the Abundance Canal. I watered the
meadows of the Tigris and planted orchards with all kinds of fruit
trees in the vicinity. I planted seeds and plants that I had found
in the countries through which I had marched and in the highlands
which I had crossed: pines of different kinds, cypresses and
junipers of different kinds, almonds, dates, ebony, rosewood, olive,
oak, tamarisk, walnut, terebinth and ash, fir, pomegranate, pear,
quince, fig, grapevine.... The canal water gushes from above into
the garden; fragrance pervades the walkways, streams of water as
numerous as the stars of heaven flow in the pleasure garden…
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1 For more on ancient gardens, check out Stephanie Dalley’s The Mystery
of the Hanging Garden of Babylon: An Elusive World Wonder Traced (Oxford
University Press, 2013).
An Introduction to In an ancient city, the only site as grand as the king’s garden would
Ancient Temples have been the temple. Ancient temples were designated spaces
where humans could experience the presence of the gods. They were
arguably the most marvelous structures in the ancient world.
The Garden as In order to meet with God you had to go to a temple, which is why the
God’s Temple beginning of the biblical story is so fascinating. God didn’t create
a temple for himself. Instead, he planted a garden where he dwelled
with humans.
The garden was his temple. Humans had full access to God, and
God had full access to humans. No soldiers or scary statues standing
in the way.
We know God saw the garden as his temple not only because he
dwelled there, but also because of a key word used in the Genesis
narrative: “image.” In the inner recesses of every ancient temple, you
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would find a statue of the god that the temple was built to honor. These
The Hebrew word for “image” in the phrase
The Significance The seven-day structure of the creation narrative in Genesis 1:1–2:3
of Seven Days is both confusing and controversial today, but the ancient Israelites
would not have fretted over whether the narrative was accurate or
metaphorical. Instead, they would have heard another message loud
and clear: Creation is God’s temple.
LEVITICUS 8:33–35
The Israelites held a seven-day ceremony to dedicate the sacred
tabernacle in the wilderness.
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EZEKIEL 43:25–27
The prophet envisions a new temple in Jerusalem and foresees a
seven-day ritual dedication.
Geek Out
The Real Meaning On the seventh day of creation’s dedication ceremony, we’re told
of “Rest” that God rested and blessed the day to set it apart. But “rest” in this
context isn’t quite what we imagine as modern English speakers.
So, what did God do after he ceased the work of creation? Well,
for that, we look to another important Hebrew word used to talk
about the meaning of the Sabbath and God’s rest. The verb is spelled
nuakh, and the noun variation is menukhah. The word means “settling
in.” It is used to describe how locusts settle upon a
field to devour it or how a group of people settle in a land. It’s a word
that implies new activities are beginning, activities appropriate for a
new time or place. For instance, in 2 Samuel 7:1, God instructed David
to nuakh in Jerusalem, which meant he could take up the work of
running his kingdom.
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God’s Sabbath was not a withdrawal from the world and its operations.
1. 2.
22
Grab a highlighter. As you read the Reread Genesis 1 and 2, and reflect on
SESSION 2 — THE GARDEN TEMPLE
following passages, mark every single the similarities between the garden
garden, plant, and precious metal you and the buildings you just read about.
come across. A sparkling garden will Consider the effect these spaces had on
grow right in front of you as you read. the Israelites who entered them and why
God would have told the Israelites to
a. Exodus 25–31
incorporate garden images into buildings
(the tabernacle blueprints)
designed to house God’s presence among
b. 1 Kings 6–7
his people.
(the temple designs)
Draw the garden you’ve found!
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HEAVEN & EARTH WORKBOOK
Discussion
The Lord God took the man and put him in the
Garden of Eden to work it and keep it. And the
Lord God commanded the man, saying, “You
may surely eat of every tree of the garden, but of
the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you
shall not eat, for in the day that you eat of it you
shall surely die.”
Genesis 2:15–17 (ESV)
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HEAVEN & EARTH WORKBOOK
Now the serpent was more crafty than any of the wild
animals the Lord God had made. He said to the woman,
“Did God really say, ‘You must not eat from any tree in the
garden’?”
The woman said to the serpent, “We may eat fruit from the
trees in the garden, but God did say, ‘You must not eat fruit
from the tree that is in the middle of the garden, and you
must not touch it, or you will die.’”
“You will not certainly die,” the serpent said to the woman.
“For God knows that when you eat from it your eyes will be
opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.”
When the woman saw that the fruit of the tree was good for
food and pleasing to the eye, and also desirable for gaining
wisdom, she took some and ate it. She also gave some to
her husband, who was with her, and he ate it. Then the eyes
of both of them were opened, and they realized they were
naked; so they sewed fig leaves together and made coverings
for themselves.
Then the man and his wife heard the sound of the Lord God
as he was walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and
they hid from the Lord God among the trees of the garden.
But the Lord God called to the man, “Where are you?”
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had been taken. After he drove the man out, he placed on the
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“like God.” He didn’t just present them with an opportunity to try a
It was this decision that caused heaven and earth to split apart.
Geek Out
The Tree of Life The lead tree in this story is undoubtedly the tree of the knowledge
of good and evil. That’s the tree everyone remembers. But there was a
second symbolic tree in the garden of Eden: the tree of life.
Fun fact: Once Gilgamesh finally found the The tree of life was a popular motif in the literature of Israel’s
plant, it was stolen by a serpent.
neighbors. The famous Babylonian epic of Gilgamesh involves a hunt
for a magic plant that bestows youth and perpetual vitality, and ancient
Egyptian literature refers to a sycamore that’s considered life-giving.
Archaeologists have even discovered old depictions of such a tree,
like this potsherd fragment found in the borderlands between Egypt
and Israel. It dates to the ninth century B.C. and is one of our earliest
depictions of the tree of life.
The tree of life is a strategic prop in the biblical story. It’s hardly
mentioned, but its presence is significant. First, the tree of life is
referenced as standing in the center of the Garden of Eden. Then, at
the very end of the biblical narrative, it’s mentioned again in John’s
vision of the renewed creation: “On either side of the river is the tree
of life with its twelve kinds of fruit, producing its fruit each month;
and the leaves of the tree are for the healing of the nations.”
(Revelation 22:2 NASB)
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The tree of life also gets a nod in Proverbs It’s important to note that Genesis 3 does not suggest the tree of
SESSION 3 — THE GREAT SPLIT
3:18, 11:30, 13:12, and 15:4, where wis- life has magical powers to bestow life independently. The Bible is
dom is described as a life-giving tree that
very clear that God is the giver of life. In the garden, the tree of life
restores divine blessing.
symbolizes the reality that being in close proximity to God’s presence
is life itself. To live near the author and source of all life is to live
forever. To get that point across, the author of Genesis adapted a
symbol familiar to his Israelite readers.
Geek Out
Cherubim After Adam and Eve exited the garden, Genesis 3 tells us God placed
and Swords cherubim and a flaming sword at the entrance to guard the way to the
tree of life.
First, let’s be clear about something, cherubim are not pudgy babies
with wings. Cherubim were intimidating, other-worldly creatures that
haunted the imaginations of the Israelites.
We learned in the last session that ancient temples often had carvings
of large, animal-like statues symbolically guarding the entryway, in
addition to actual soldiers. For example, the Sphinx in Egypt guarded
the main road to the ancient pyramids, which were temple-tombs for
kings who were considered gods. Ancient Babylonian temples were
guarded by statues with eagles’ wings and lions’ bodies.
Well, the cherubim outside Eden were the real deal. This detail at the
end of Genesis 3 is yet another indication that Eden was itself a temple,
and that, by desecrating God’s holy space, humans had been banished
to a domain of their own.
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they were depicted as a combination of several animals, including
Exodus 25:18–22 and 1 Kings 6:23–28
1.
Read Genesis 4:1–14. Consider the
significance of Cain’s banishment
occurring just one generation after
Adam and Eve’s banishment. Pay special
attention to the similarities between
Genesis 3:24 and 4:14.
2.
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HEAVEN & EARTH WORKBOOK
Discussion
39
and all peoples on earth
will be blessed through you.”
Notice the use of “the heavens” here. Remember, the Hebrew word
The tower of Babel was a massive architec- literally means “the skies.” They were building a tower so tall that the
tural structure called a ziggurat. Ziggurats top was in the sky. But also recall that “the skies” was one of the most
were large pyramid-shaped temples with
a staircase or ramp leading to a flat plat- common ways ancient Israelites referred to the place where God
form on top. In the flat deltas of eastern lived and ruled. In the context of this story, the author is clear that the
Mesopotamia, these high places were the
people weren’t just building the tower for a good view; they were
closest people could get to the sky.
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trying to reach the realm of the divine. If they couldn’t experience the
And the Lord said, “Look, they are one people, and they have all one
language; and this is only the beginning of what they will do; nothing
that they propose to do will now be impossible for them. Come, let us go
In Genesis 11, the word “Babel” is playfully
down, and confuse their language there, so that they will not understand
related to the Hebrew word balal which
means “confusion.” We’ll talk about this one another’s speech.” So the Lord scattered them abroad from there
more in the Geek Out section. over the face of all the earth, and they left off building the city.
Then the Lord God said, “Look, the man has become like one of us,
knowing good and evil; and now, he might reach out his hand and take
also from the tree of life, and eat, and live forever”— therefore the Lord
God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the ground from
which he was taken.
Introducing Abram Immediately after the story about the tower, the author launches into
a genealogy that tracks a family affected by the scattering—the family
of a man named Abram.
To Abram, this promise was downright outlandish. He and his wife had
never been able to have children, and they were already in their 70s. It
seemed like God was maybe a tad too late. To make matters worse,
God requested that Abram and Sarai leave their land. You can imagine
Abram making a list of the hurdles that blocked the way to becoming
a great nation: “No children, no land. Are you sure, God?”
But we’re told that Abram was a man of radical faith, and he left his
Read about God renaming Abram in land despite those hurdles, trusting God implicitly. When the family
Genesis 17:1–8.
arrived in Canaan, God gave him a new name—in effect, a new identity
that reflected the promise he bore. He became Abraham.
A Promise That What makes God’s commitment to Abraham truly remarkable was
Is a Gift that the blessing served a strategic purpose: God promised that the
blessing and abundance given to Abraham’s family would overflow to
all the other families of the earth. At that moment, Abraham’s family
became the carrier of the original blessing and vocation given to
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humanity in the garden so that every nation on earth might one day be
“Through you (Abram), all the families of
Humans can’t go back to the garden to get eternal life. They can’t build
up to the sky to attain it. No. Eternal life has only ever been possible
as a gift. And that’s precisely what God wants to give humanity.
God wants his domain and our domain to completely overlap once
more. To make this happen, he graciously calls an unlikely candidate
to spearhead the project. God’s plan through Abraham’s family is to
restore blessings to every nation on earth.
Geek Out
Babel = Babylon, Our English Bibles translate the name of the city and tower in Genesis
Confusing! 11 as “Babel.” This is the Hebrew word babel that occurs 262 times in
the Old Testament, and every other time it’s translated “Babylon.”
We know that when the Babylonians got too cocky, God chose to
confuse their language. The Hebrew word for “confuse” is balal, which
sounds like “Babel.” Here’s the key line with its Hebrew transliteration
to get the point across: “Therefore the city’s name was called babel
because there the Lord balal the language of the land.” (Genesis 11:9)
grandeur. The empire is later responsible for the Israelites’ exile and
You can also see Peter and John’s ref- was described as a larger-than-life enemy. The legacy of Babylon
SESSION 4 — GOD’S RESCUE MISSION
Abraham’s Name When we first meet Abram in Genesis 11:26, his name means “exalted
father.” In Hebrew, his name consisted of two parts:
ab = father, ram = exalted
But then Abram got a new name, and the selection is surprisingly
playful.
In Genesis 17:5 (NRSV), God said, “your name shall be Abraham; for
I have made you the ancestor of a multitude of nations.”
There are two things happening here, and the first is so simple we tend
to overlook it completely. As a sign of his promise to “increase your
numbers,” God increases the syllables in Abram’s name.
The second part of the wordplay isn’t apparent in English. The Hebrew
word for “multitude” is hamon. God takes the first letter of the word for
“multitude” and sticks it into Abram’s name, like this:
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HEAVEN & EARTH WORKBOOK
Dig Deeper
God’s promise to Abraham is not just a promise to one man
and his family. It’s a promise to humanity that God is on a
rescue mission. Let’s take a look at how this promise reappears
throughout Scripture.
1.
Read the following Scriptures, in which
God promises to bless Abraham. Write
down the exact promises God makes.
a. Genesis 12:2
b. Genesis 17:5–8
c. Genesis 18:18–19
d. Genesis 22:15–18
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SESSION 4 — GOD’S RESCUE MISSION
2.
Israel’s prophets promised a day when
people from all nations would become
part of God’s covenant people. Read the
following passages and note how the
prophets describe this promised day.
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HEAVEN & EARTH WORKBOOK
4.
Read Galatians 3 and Romans 4. Notice
that the Apostle Paul firmly believed
God’s new family was not defined by
ethnic lineage from Abraham anymore.
Rather, God’s people were identified as
those who share Abraham’s faith.
Discussion
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father and the God of Isaac; the land on
First things first, we know from the Hebrew words used in the text that
what Jacob saw was a large stone staircase, not a ladder with rungs.
In fact, what he saw was likely very similar to the massive stairways
found on ancient temples that led up to the platforms where worshippers
sought connection with their god.
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a bridge, so to speak, between God’s domain and humanity’s domain.
The key takeaway from Jacob’s dream is that, somehow, God’s domain
and the human domain still overlap, that heaven chases people and
touches down in the most unlikely of places. Jacob thought the spot
where he was sleeping was a mundane space, but his vision helped
him see that there was much more going on. This story is about how
the presence of God, which we thought was left behind in the garden,
comes bursting into the wilderness. There had been a rift between
heaven and earth, and we no longer had access to God’s presence, yet
there it was.
his movement in our lives are often surprising. Heaven is at work much
SESSION 5 — AN UNEXPECTED ENCOUNTER
more than we probably realize. This is a gift, if we have eyes to see it.
Geek Out
Bethel Jacob had this incredible encounter with God, and, in response, he did
something that strikes modern readers as really odd: He took the
stone he’d used as a pillow, propped it up, poured oil on it, and named
Other Israelite memorial markers include the place Bethel.
Rachel’s tomb (see Genesis 35:20), and
Joshua’s renewal of the covenant with Setting up a stone pillar as a memorial marker was common cultural
Israel. (see Joshua 24:25– 27) practice in the ancient world. And, actually, it still is today, though our
modern memorials are polished and professionally engraved with
explanations.
Read about the origins of Israel’s sacred Pouring oil on something or someone was also common. It was a way
anointing oil in Exodus 30:22–29. to consecrate or set something aside for service in Israel’s temple. This
ritual could set apart people or items, like a memorial stone.
While the story in Genesis 28 doesn’t give any details about Jacob’s
intent, his actions seem to fit those patterns of commemoration and
sacred dedication.
What the text does highlight is that Jacob named the location “Bethel,”
which means “house of God” in Hebrew. This story connects with
Read about the temple of Bethel in 1 Kings
an important moment later in Israel’s history when an Israelite temple
12:29–33.
was built in this same spot. The author of Genesis is telling an origin
55
story for the temple of Bethel.
Angels But what if God wanted to reach out to someone who wasn’t looking
(cont.) for him? On a handful of occasions in the Bible, God appears as a
human who walks and talks with people, as in the story of God having
a meal with Abraham. Sometimes, God sends a human messenger
to carry a divine announcement on his behalf. In Israel, these figures
were called prophets, and they acted as God’s spokespeople. And
even though it’s strange to our ears, the prophets were often called
God’s angels, that is, his mal’akim. One of them was even called “my
messenger,” or in Hebrew, mal’aki (we know him as “Malachi”).
But there’s a third way that God could reach out to people. It’s one step
removed from a personal appearance, but it’s more direct than sending
a prophet. This is our traditional concept of angels, God’s heavenly
messengers. They’re not human, but they’re not God either. They share
characteristics of both. They are creatures who inhabit God’s domain,
and essentially they serve as his executive staff team. Sometimes, they
simply carried messages; other times, they performed miracles
1. 2.
Read Moses’ encounter with God at Read the story about Joshua near
the burning bush in Exodus 3. Observe Jericho in Joshua 5:13–15.
similarities between this story and
Jacob’s dream. Notice in verse 5 how
the space around the bush is called
“holy ground,” as in physical space that
is marked by God’s presence.
3.
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Check out the encounter Moses and
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who brought them out of Egypt so that I might
For context, though, here’s what you need to know: Jacob had a
lot of children, and those children had a lot of children. Within just
See Exodus 1–14 for the full story. a few generations, Abraham’s descendants grew into a small nation.
After they had lived in Egypt for some time, Pharaoh decided to make
them all slaves to the native Egyptians. God appointed an ineloquent
murderer named Moses to lead an extraction operation; then rained
plagues on Egypt until Pharaoh agreed to let the Israelites go. When
Pharaoh changed his mind and had his soldiers pursue the Israelites,
God parted a sea for his people and drowned their captors.
God Formalizes His At this point in the story, God gives Israel the blueprints to build an
Promise and Presence elaborate tent, which would serve as a type of temple. This tent paved
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First, the tabernacle was to be set up in the center of Israel’s camp and
built of the finest materials. The curtains were to be held up by golden
posts, and the whole space was to be decorated with gold, silver,
brass, animal skins, furs, and jewels. All of this fanciness symbolized
something profound. Hosting the Creator God was one of the greatest
privileges you could imagine, like hosting a king. The only materials
fitting for such an honor are the ones listed in Exodus 25. This was to
be a tent like no other.
The tabernacle was truly a gift. God’s presence was not somewhere
else, far away in the skies or in another land. No, now God would dwell
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among his people once more. They could build their lives around the
Average Israelites could visit the outer court of the tabernacle, but
first they had to sacrifice vital possessions, such as grain, wine, or
livestock. They also had to undergo certain purity rituals, such as
bathing and abstaining from touching things associated with death.
Even then, average Israelites did not have access to the hot spot of
God’s presence, which was a room at the center of the tabernacle
Repeating a word, as in “Holy of Holies,” is called “the Holy of Holies.” Only priests were allowed to enter this
a Hebrew way of adding emphasis (think room, and only once a year. Priests were a special group of people
of “King of Kings” or “Song of Songs”). To
call a place the “Holy of Holies” indicated whose role was to represent the entire Israelite community before
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it was the holiest place imaginable. God. This important job required attention to ritual details and a
SESSION 6 — THE TABERNACLE
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Geek Out
Israel’s Priests Another important aspect of the tabernacle was the personnel
team that performed all the important rituals. We call them “priests.”
In Hebrew, they were called kohanim. They were real people—Aaron
Read about the priestly family and
the requirements they had to meet in and his descendants—but their role was much larger than their
Leviticus 8–10 and 21–22. individual identities.
This small team represented all of Israel before God, and their role
required a unique way of life that set them apart to work in God’s
holy presence. Israel’s priests were required to live by extremely high
standards of ritual purity. They were to avoid contact with anything
associated with death or decay, such as mold or dead bodies. They had
to maintain a perpetual state of holiness.
“Say to Aaron: ‘For the generations to Their actual bodies were symbols, too. To qualify as a priest, you had to
come none of your descendants who has a
be a descendant of Aaron and could not have any physical disabilities
defect may come near to offer the food of
his God.’” (Leviticus 21:16) or misshapen features.
This goes against the grain of the modern western view of the
universe. Doesn’t the image of God in every human make them of equal
value before God? Yes, and amen! That is a deeply biblical idea found
in the book of Genesis. However, to impose that concept upon the
priesthood is to miss the cultural symbolism.
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The role of Israel’s priests also spoke to a bigger, deeper issue in the
biblical story. If God’s domain and humanity’s domain were ever
to be fully joined again, humans needed some kind of mediator, a
go-between who could represent humanity in its most ideal state. We
needed a human who fulfills God’s calling and purpose for humanity,
and who could represent God to us. This is precisely the way the
The concept of Jesus as a high priest earliest Christians thought about Jesus, as the ultimate priest and
permeates the New Testament book of mediator. In Jesus, we see perfect humanity as well as perfect deity,
Hebrews, especially chapters 5–10.
combined in one wise and loving person.
The Literary Location The construction of the tabernacle begins in Exodus 25 and extends
of Leviticus all the way to the end of the book. The only story found in this sea
of architectural blueprints is the sad story of Israel’s idolatry in making
The story of the golden calf is found in and worshipping a golden calf idol. After that tragedy, we come to
Exodus 32–34. the construction of the tent, and you would think this should be
For Moses’ inability to enter the taberna- awesome. And it is. It’s the glorious moment when God comes to live
cle, see Exodus 40:35–40. among his people. But what happens? Moses, the main character
and Israel’s representative before God, cannot enter the space. How
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anticlimactic! Israel’s sin in casting the golden calf created yet another
1.
First, read Exodus 19:1–6. What does
it mean for Israel to be a “kingdom of
priests” or “priestly kingdom”? How do
the laws spelled out in Exodus 20–23
help in this calling? Then read 1 Peter
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3.
Read Matthew 4:23–25 and Matthew
5:13–16. Jesus came announcing God’s
kingdom and called his followers to
“good works” for others to see. How
is this connected to God’s covenant
with Israel?
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4.
Read 1 Peter 1:13–16 and 2:9–10.
Notice how Peter uses the language
of the tabernacle and priesthood to
describe this same vocation of Jesus’
followers. Why is this significant?
Discussion
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HEAVEN & EARTH WORKBOOK
But will God really dwell on earth? The heavens,
even the highest heaven, cannot contain you.
How much less this temple I have built!
1 Kings 8:27 (NIV)
But remember the first session, where we looked at many biblical texts
that associated God’s presence with the sky. The idea of the sky, or
the heavens, as God’s domain is found from the beginning to the end of
the Bible, alongside the idea that God’s presence is in the tabernacle.
This creates some confusion. Did the Israelites believe God lived in
the tabernacle or in the sky? Was God’s presence in the tabernacle
only symbolic, or was God’s presence actually stronger in the
tabernacle than it was anywhere else?
In this session, we’re taking a break from the narrative about the
reunion of heaven and earth to explore the fascinating question of
where God lives.
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What the Ancient We know ancient Israelites associated God’s presence with the sky
SESSION 7 — GOD'S CONFUSING PRESENCE
Israelites Thought because of shared qualities, such as vastness, majesty, power, and
mystery. But it’s not so clear that they believed that’s where their
God actually lived. It’s more likely that all of this “sky” imagery is a
statement about God’s status and authority rather than a claim about
God’s actual location.
What we know for sure is that the biblical authors didn’t think God
dwelled only in the sky. As we established in the previous session, they
also believed God dwelled in the tabernacle. Israelites also knew God
could appear on earth outside the tabernacle in surprising moments,
such as when he spoke to Moses through a burning bush or visited
Jacob in a dream.
Beyond using physical metaphors to reflect God’s character, biblical
authors rarely addressed God’s location. However, a key passage in
1 Kings sheds light on how King Solomon conceived of God’s presence.
“But will God really dwell on earth? The heavens, even the highest
heavens, cannot contain you. How much less this temple I have built!”
Solomon believed the divine presence was too magnificent for his
temple or even for the vast and majestic skies.
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Psalm 139 includes one of the most beautiful expressions of this belief
So, while we don’t know for sure what most ancient Israelites believed
about the location of God’s presence, we do know that a number of
leaders clearly considered his glory too great to be limited to the sky or
the tabernacle.
If God Is Everywhere, God’s presence in all of creation doesn’t cancel out the fact that God
Why a Temple? came to the tabernacle and, later, to the temple in Jerusalem in a
unique way. The biblical authors don’t ever explain how that works in
detail; they just claim that this is the case. Of course, the Creator God
is present in all of his creation, and of course the God of Israel lives
among his people in a special way. And because the Creator is the God
of Israel, these two claims about his presence sit alongside each other
without much explanation.
Even if the Israelites couldn’t explain exactly how God could be present
everywhere and right there in the temple, the divine presence was
a source of confidence and assurance for the Israelites—a reminder
The people of Israel had a sacred habit of that he really was on their side. They could see the mysterious cloud
praying at fixed hours of the day, and the hovering above it. They would even direct their prayers toward
practice was to face the temple, no matter
your location. Even Daniel, hundreds of the temple, much as Muslims direct their prayers toward Mecca.
miles away in Babylon, directed his prayers
to the temple. (see Daniel 6:10)
But it was more than that. God’s special presence in the tabernacle
and the temple was a symbol of future hope—a promise that, one day,
God’s full and unlimited presence would fill all of creation. Though
God was already everywhere, surely the Israelites sensed that his
presence in creation wasn’t what it could be, what it was meant to be.
This special experience of the divine presence in the temple ought to
be more accessible to more people than just those living in Jerusalem.
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The temple was a potent symbol of God’s desire for heaven and earth
to be reunited, and the Jerusalem temple was where it would start.
SESSION 7 — GOD'S CONFUSING PRESENCE
So, let’s tie all these ideas together. Did God live in the tabernacle
and the temple? Yes, sort of. In the skies? Yes, sort of. Does he live
everywhere? Yes, also, sort of. God is not contained or limited to any
of those spaces, but each one conveys a specific meaning about
his presence. The skies tell us God is King of all. His presence out in
creation tells us God is Creator of all. And his presence in the temple
tells us he stubbornly created and maintained an overlap between
heaven and earth despite human rebellion. Together, these focal points
of his presence foreshadow a day when a new king will reunite all of
heaven and earth and flood all creation with God’s glorious presence.
Geek Out
The Highest Heavens Think back to the first session when we learned about the three-tiered
view of the universe.
This concept of the heavens above the heavens shows up in the New
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“I know a man in Christ who…was caught Testament, too, in Paul’s letter to the Corinthians. In 2 Corinthians
1.
Read Isaiah 6, in which the prophet has
a vision of God in the temple. Notice
Isaiah’s descriptions of God’s robe as
filling the temple and heavenly creatures
attending from above. Consider what
this visual teaches about God’s presence.
2.
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Discussion
“See, I will create They will build houses and dwell in them;
new heavens and a new earth. they will plant vineyards and eat their fruit.
The former things will not be remembered, No longer will they build houses and others live
nor will they come to mind. in them,
But be glad and rejoice forever or plant and others eat.
in what I will create, For as the days of a tree,
for I will create Jerusalem to be a delight so will be the days of my people;
and its people a joy. my chosen ones will long enjoy
I will rejoice over Jerusalem the work of their hands.
and take delight in my people; They will not labor in vain,
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the sound of weeping and of crying nor will they bear children doomed
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earth through Abraham’s descendants.
Read about the split of the Israelite king- But after Solomon’s death, conflict split the nation in two—Israel in the
doms in 1 Kings 11–12. For the destruc- north, Judah in the south—and both kingdoms spiraled into internal
tion and exile of Israel, check out 2 Kings meltdown. They utterly failed to keep the terms of the covenant, so
24–25.
God allowed foreign empires to conquer their land, destroy the temple,
and take the Israelites into exile.
What? I thought this nation was going to play a role in the reunion of
heaven and earth. But, instead, they no longer have their own land to
call home, and the temple is destroyed. Did God give up on them? This
is the question the Israelite prophets were intensely interested in.
The Prophetic Hope of The next stop in our quest to see Scripture through the lens of heaven
New Creation and earth is the dense Hebrew poetry of the prophets. These books
were written leading up to, during, and after the Israelites’ exile
The books of the prophets make up nearly from their land. These books are challenging to read, but crucial for
25 percent of the entire Bible and nearly
understanding the biblical story and Jesus’ role within it.
one third of the Old Testament.
Prophets were people who had experienced God’s presence in a
unique way, like Jacob did through his dream at Bethel. And these
unique moments marked the prophets and changed their lives forever.
It resulted in a heightened awareness of God’s presence and purpose.
The prophets saw connections that other people didn’t see, and
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they looked at Israel’s history in a different way. They saw God’s hand
at work in the tragedy of Israel’s exile, viewing defeat as God’s way of
SESSION 8 — THE PROPHETIC HOPE
The prophets didn’t only speak of judgment and doom. They deeply
believed that God was still going to fulfill his ancient promises to
Abraham, despite Israel’s failure. They preached a message of hope,
that somehow God would still use Israel to bring his blessing to the
world. They foresaw that God would fulfill the promise through a
future king, the Messiah, who would lead the people back to God. The
prophets promised that Israel would one day return to their ancestral
land and rebuild the temple, so God could dwell among them once again.
They imagined this future time as an age of world peace and harmony,
when all the nations would rally around Jerusalem, and they described
God’s presence as filling the earth in a special way. In short, they
envisioned God’s domain rejoining with our domain in a new creation—
or, as Isaiah said, “new heavens and a new earth.” (Isaiah 65:17)
Wading Through The language of the prophets is poetic, imaginative, and, frankly, really
the Language challenging for some modern readers. Wine dripping from mountains?
Ferocious animals playing with babies? Weapons melted into farm
equipment? Well, that last one is pretty cool.
It’s essential that we don’t make this poetry do more than it’s meant
to. For instance, it’s tempting to analyze whether Isaiah 65:20 (“The
one who dies at a hundred will be thought a mere child; the one who
fails to reach a hundred will be considered accursed”) and ask why the
prophet is talking about aging and death in the new creation. But that’s
the wrong question. The point is that life’s limits as we experience
them in our world will be broken through. New horizons will open up
that were previously unimaginable. Turning 100 will be child’s play.
To make the passage say more that this, as if it’s offering biological
information, is to forget we’re reading poetry.
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Looking Ahead Understanding this prophetic hope of new creation is important
Jesus’ announcement that God’s kingdom had arrived was based on this
hope. When the apostles spread the word that Jesus had died and was
Jesus spoke of the “renewal of all things” in raised from the dead, it was the fulfillment of this hope.
Matthew 19:28, and Peter announced that
In Jesus, God had finally acted again, moving the world one step closer
the “restoration of all things” would happen
when Jesus returned (see Acts 3:19–21). to the new creation. It’s a creation where heaven and earth come back
In Romans 8:23, Paul’s expressed hope is together, a world that will be recognizable in some ways, and in
that “creation itself will be set free from its
bondage to corruption.”
others unimaginable.
Geek Out
Death: The Great Enemy The tree of life in Genesis 2 represented proximity to God, the source
and Creator of all life and beauty and joy. To be near him is to truly live,
and so access to his presence is also access to eternal life.
This sense of tragedy is why the Old Testament offers such a rich and
poetic portrayal of the grave. It’s the anti-Eden, the opposite of God’s
desire for humanity.
The Hebrew word for “grave” is she’ol, the place to which humans
descend upon death. But only rarely does it simply refer to dirt. More
often, she’ol is described with poetic imagery that explores the meaning
of death within the biblical story and within the three-tiered universe
There’s an old debate about the original
meaning of the Hebrew word she’ol. A envisioned by the biblical authors.
common suggestion connects it to a
Since death is the very opposite of God’s desire to create life, the
similar Hebrew word sha’al, which means
“ask” or “inquire.” This word sometimes spatial location of the grave under the ground is often emphasized as a
describes the ancient practice of necro- contrast to the heavens in the sky. If the heavens are God’s space and if
mancy, or asking the dead to predict the
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future, and so some scholars think she’ol God is the source of life, then the grave must be the farthest place
from the heavens. This is why the biblical poets sometimes talk about
SESSION 8 — THE PROPHETIC HOPE
Not only is the grave at the opposite end of the cosmos in relation to
God’s domain in the heavens, but it also stands for the opposite of the
delights and joys that come with God’s presence. She’ol is the ultimate
For more on these details about she’ol, pointless, painful conference that never ends. The biblical authors
read Psalm 6:5, Psalm 31:17, Psalm 116:3, describe she’ol as a place where people can’t praise God or even speak
Ecclesiastes 9:10, and Isaiah 14:9-11.
at all. In she’ol, everyone sleeps in regret and agitation.
Geek Out
For descriptions of the irreversible nature The most disturbing thing about death for the biblical poets was
of the grave, see Psalms 49:7–9 and
its inevitability and irreversible nature. In the view of the biblical
89:47–48.
authors, humanity was on a one-way path toward death unless God
intervened. They knew that if humans were ever to recover the divine
gift of immortality, it wouldn’t be because humans fixed the problem. It
would have to be a gift from heaven, which is exactly what’s described
in the book of Isaiah. Watch how God reverses the despair of the grave:
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with abundance, joy, and celebration.
The point of all these poetic descriptions is not to speculate about the
fate or experience of the dead. Rather, the writers were painting a
vivid contrast: Death is the opposite of what God wants for humans.
And they believed that someday God would do something about that.
He would bring about the death of death.
Dig Deeper
The prophet Ezekiel seems to have been fascinated with the Garden
of Eden. He mentions Eden repeatedly in his poetry, and much of
his hope for renewed creation was inspired by the garden temple.
Let’s explore the garden imagery in his writings.
1.
Read Ezekiel 28:13, 31:9, and 36:35.
Note each time the prophet references
the garden.
2.
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Discussion
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your will be done,
For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him,
and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether
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What does he say? Knowing he may not visit your town again, what’s
the one message he prioritizes above everything else?
Once your radar is alerted to Jesus’ core concern for the arrival of
God’s kingdom, you can’t un-see it. It’s everywhere. For instance,
consider the Lord’s Prayer. Jesus teaches his disciples to ask God to
bring his kingdom to earth before they ask for anything else. Heaven
invading earth was Jesus’ top priority, and he wanted it to be the
disciples’ too.
What did it mean that the kingdom of God had arrived? Clearly, God
had not thoroughly renewed all of creation. Yet, somehow, Jesus
signaled a new arrival of God’s domain overcoming and settling into
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our domain.
Jesus presented himself as the king the prophets had hoped for—
the king bringing divine rule to Israel. But he would not bring his rule
through military might or coercive power. Rather, Jesus taught
Mark 10:43–45: “Whoever wants to that the most powerful members of his kingdom were the slaves and
become great among you must be your the rejects. God’s kingdom is a strange one, where all of our normal
servant, and whoever wants to be first
must be the slave of all, for the Son of Man ways of living and thinking are turned upside-down—or right-side up.
didn’t come to be served, but to be a sev-
ant and give his life as a ransom for many.”
That right-side-up reign of God exists fully in God’s domain, and
with the arrival of Jesus, it began moving into ours. Jesus taught his
followers to pray every day that God’s kingdom would advance
farther into earth, that God’s domain would reclaim more and more
of humanity’s domain.
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SESSION 9 — HEAVEN INVADING EARTH
The Kingdom When Jesus talked about the kingdom of God, he often did so
Through Parables through parables. Parables are short, fictional tales that help people
understand challenging revelations about this right-side-up kingdom.
One day, Jesus told a parable about how the kingdom of God was
like a tiny mustard seed that grew into a huge tree and became a
For the parable of the mustard seed, see home for many birds. This visual would have been very familiar to his
Mark 4:30–32. audience, which was mostly made up of subsistence farmers and day
laborers. They understood that even the tiniest seed had immense
potential. They knew a single seed could nourish one bird for a few
hours or grow into a tree that sheltered and fed thousands of birds.
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The Kingdom On another occasion, some religious leaders asked Jesus when
For this story, see Luke 17:20–21. But Jesus told them they wouldn’t notice the coming of God’s kingdom.
It would be inconspicuous, hidden in plain sight. Only those with eyes
to see it would know. In fact, he said, they’d already missed it. The
kingdom of God was “in their midst.” This was a not-so-subtle way of
pointing to himself and saying, “The kingdom is talking to you now.”
“Kingdom” by “Kingdom” is one of the most frequent words Jesus speaks in the
the Numbers Gospels. Taking note of the word count is a lesson in itself:
THE GOSPEL OF MARK
Jesus brings up the kingdom of God nearly 20 times in chapters 1–14.
(That’s 1.5 times per chapter.)
LUKE’S GOSPEL
Jesus mentions God’s kingdom nearly 45 times in chapters 4–22.
(That’s 2.5 times per chapter.)
MATTHEW
It is even more frequent. Jesus mentions the kingdom over 50 times in
chapters 3–24. (That’s 2.6 times per chapter.)
Of Heaven In Matthew, Jesus not only talks about the kingdom more than in the
other Gospels, but he also talks about it differently. Most often we find
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You can see Matthew’s point most clearly when you compare
Jesus’ first public words in Matthew 4:17, “the kingdom of heaven
has come near,” with his final words to the disciples in 28:18: “all
authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.” From first to
last, Matthew portrays Jesus as the one who brings God’s heavenly
kingdom here to earth.
Geek Out
The Present-Future An interesting puzzle that has exercised the imaginations of Bible
Kingdom of God readers for a long time is the diversity of the language Jesus used to
talk about the kingdom of God.
In many of his teachings, it’s clear that Jesus believed God’s heavenly
reign was a clear and present reality. He said it had “arrived” in himself,
and that by following him and living by his teachings a person could
See “enter” in Matthew 5:20, “seek” in “enter” or “see” or “seek” or even “receive” God’s kingdom. These
Matthew 6:33, “see” in Mark 9:1, and
phrases indicate that God’s heavenly reign is an earthly reality that
“receive” in Mark 10:15.
can be experienced here and now.
But Jesus also talks about the kingdom as it if hasn’t arrived yet—at
least not completely. When he taught his disciples to pray, he said,
See Matthew 6:10 and 16:28. “May your kingdom come,” implying that it was not present, but future.
He talked about his future return after the resurrection as “the Son of
Man coming in his kingdom.”
It seems that Jesus’ answer was “yes and yes.” One minute Jesus
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portrays the kingdom as something you pray will come; then a few
moments later he talks about the kingdom as something you can “seek”
2 See George Ladd, "Gospel of the Kingdom" (Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, MI, 1990).
Dig Deeper
The heaviest concentrations of Jesus’ teaching on God’s kingdom
are found in the Sermon on the Mount and in a collection of Jesus’
parables found in Matthew 13. Let’s dig deeper into these teachings.
1.
Read Matthew 5–7 and 13. Highlight
the words “kingdom” and “heaven.”
2.
Scan through these teachings again and
answer some questions:
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Discussion
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word The true light that gives light to everyone was
was with God, and the Word was God. He was coming into the world. He was in the world, and
with God in the beginning. Through him all though the world was made through him, the
things were made; without him nothing was world did not recognize him. He came to that
made that has been made. In him was life, and which was his own, but his own did not receive
that life was the light of all mankind. The light him. Yet to all who did receive him, to those
shines in the darkness, and the darkness has who believed in his name, he gave the right
not overcome it. to become children of God— children born not
There was a man sent from God whose name of natural descent, nor of human decision or a
husband’s will, but born of God.
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was John. He came as a witness to testify
concerning that light, so that through him all The Word became flesh and made his dwelling
had spoken.
SESSION 10 — JESUS AS THE TEMPLE
It was common for merchants to sell animals near the temple during
Passover. Some Jews traveled from distant villages to visit the temple
for the holiday, and they often did not bring animals with them on
their journey.
It was also common for money changers to set up shop among the
vendors. After all, those visitors from all over the region wanted to
There are a handful of passages in later
buy animals for sacrifice. These businessmen made a hefty profit
Jewish texts (called the Talmud and the
Mekhilta) that preserve a memory of exchanging their clients’ foreign cash for local coins.
Caiaphas the high priest allowing mer-
chants and money changers into the What was new that year was that the high priest had recently decided
temple precincts. This is precisely what to relocate all this business from outside the temple walls to inside the
Jesus seems to be reacting against.
sacred courtyard—the latest in a recent series of corrupt decisions on
the part of Israel’s high priest. This space was supposed to be set aside
for worship, repentance, and prayer. Now it was a place for merchants
to make serious cash.
Jesus loved the temple, as did all faithful Jews. It was the place where
There had also been issues with corruption heaven had overlapped with earth, the place God made his presence
hundreds of years earlier, and many Old available to his people. So when Jesus found that it had become a
Testament passages pointed to the need
for its purification, including Zechariah corrupted shell of the beautiful symbol it once was, he overflowed with
14:20–21 and Malachi 3:1–4. It seems that righteous anger.
these texts were part of Jesus’ motivation
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for his startling actions. Jesus came in swinging. Armed with a homemade whip, he turned
over the tables of the money changers, scattering coins all over the
Jesus was behaving like one of Israel’s ancient prophets, who would
often perform outrageous public stunts to generate controversy and
draw attention to their message. He was not only staging a protest,
he was enacting a symbol. By bringing the sacrificial system to a halt
at least for a little while, and declaring it all corrupt, he was declaring
God’s justice on the temple. This becomes clear by the conversation
that follows.
Jesus Responds The Jewish leaders immediately confronted Jesus, asking what
With a Riddle authority he had to waltz in and act like he owned the place. As a
challenge to Jesus, the leaders demanded that he perform a sign to
prove he was a prophet. Instead, he responded with a riddle:
“Destroy this temple, and I will raise it again in three days.”
Huh? What does this have to do with anything? Why is he talking about
temples being destroyed? And what is the “three days” referring to?
This is how John and the other disciples eventually came to see
Jesus as well, and that’s why John begins his Gospel with that famous
line in 1:14, “The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among
us.” The Hebrew word translated as “dwelling” is the same word for
“tabernacle” in the Old Testament.
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announcing that people’s sins are atoned for simply because he said so.
With this riddle, Jesus was saying the only sign that would prove his
authority was his voluntary death and miraculous resurrection. The
body of the risen Jesus would be the new temple, the fulfillment of the
promise spoken of by the ancient prophets.
Geek Out
The Messiah’s Zeal Jesus’ angry outburst in the temple may seem a bit extreme for
for the Temple modern readers. But his response had an ancient pedigree among
Israel’s prophets, and this helps us understand what Jesus thought
he was doing with that whip.
The temple was considered a royal institution—a place that was built,
overseen, and protected by kings. Kings also appointed priests. In
ancient Jerusalem, Solomon’s temple stood next to the royal palace.
In Zechariah 14:21, the prophet wrote: “And on that day there will
Zechariah lived in the period after the exile no longer be a Canaanite in the house of the Lord of Hosts.” The
SESSION 10 — JESUS AS THE TEMPLE
He was that future king. And on that day in the temple, he kicked out
the merchants, just like the prophets said he would.
Geek Out
Israel vs. Outrage at the temple establishment didn’t start or end with Jesus.
The Establishment We know from other historical sources that Jesus was not alone in
his disgust for what was happening there. At this time in history, the
position of the high priesthood was sold to the highest bidder, and
prone to corruption.
One community in particular stands out for their pushback against the
temple establishment. A breakaway sect lived in the desert near a
place that today is called “Qumran.” Here lived a radical Jewish group
known for producing the Dead Sea Scrolls. The community’s leadership
The Dead Sea Scrolls were preserved for
2,000 years in clay jars and discovered in included a number of former priests who had withdrawn to the
1948. wilderness to protest the temple’s corruption.
Not long before Jesus’ time, the group’s leaders had even sent a letter
to the priests in Jerusalem debating the technicalities of how the
sacred worship rituals were being performed. (Think Marin Luther’s 99
This letter is known today as “4QMMT.” theses, but without a Reformation.) The group was also responsible for
crafting a collection of commentary text on Old Testament Scriptures.
One of these, which focused on the short book of Habakkuk, called the
high priest in Jerusalem, “the wicked priest.”
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About 30 years after Jesus’ death, the Jewish people in and around
Jerusalem revolted against the Roman Empire. One of the rebels’ first
1.
Read Colossians 1:19 and 2:9. Note the
different uses of the word “dwell,”
which is a key temple word associated
with God’s temple presence.
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2.
Read Colossians 1:20 and 2:13–14.
SESSION 10 — JESUS AS THE TEMPLE
4.
Read 1 Peter 2:4–7 and Ephesians
2:21–22. How is Jesus described here?
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5.
Take a moment to draw all these texts
and their metaphors together: Sacrifices
took place in the temple where God’s
presence dwelled. How does all this help
us understand what happened when
Jesus died and was raised?
Discussion
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Acts 2:1–4 (NIV)
The night before his execution, Jesus told his disciples that he
See John 14:16–17 and 20:21–22. was leaving, and that he would send them the Holy Spirit as a guide
to continue his kingdom mission.
After his resurrection, Jesus breathed that Spirit onto his circle of
12 disciples. Then, in Acts, we see the Holy Spirit coming to all of Jesus’
The Spirit arrived on the day of Pentecost,
which was a Jewish festival celebrating followers. They were together in a house when they heard the sound
the end of the harvest. For more about of violent wind and saw what appeared to be tongues of fire descending
Pentecost, check out Exodus 34:22 and
on each of their heads.
Deuteronomy 16:10.
Wind? Tongues of fire? What is going on here?
Wind and Fire In the Old Testament, when God first came to dwell in the tabernacle,
Symbolize Presence his presence appeared in the form of wind and fire settling over
the Holy of Holies. The same thing happened at the dedication of
For the tabernacle, see Exodus 40:34–35. Solomon’s temple.
For the temple, see 1 Kings 20:18–21.
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God’s arrival at his holy houses wasn’t the only time his presence
appeared as flames. Moses met God in a burning bush and later
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The Holy Now, remember, entering God’s temple required ritual cleansing—
Spirit Purifies ever since God came to dwell in the tabernacle after rescuing the
Israelites from Egypt. It had been essential to keep symbols of death
and decay out of the temple.
For purity laws, check out Leviticus 12–15. If Christians are God’s new temple, do they have to uphold the same
purity laws?
Well, no and yes. Followers of Jesus are not bound to any one city,
much less ancient Jerusalem with its temple. So, “no,” we don’t have
to carry out the sacrificial rituals and the holiness rites specific to the
ancient Israelite culture.
Peter’s use of temple imagery to describe This is why Peter surrounds his discussion of the church as the new
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Jesus’ followers can be found in 1 Peter temple with challenges to a new way of life: “Rid yourselves of all
2:1–11.
malice and all deceit, hypocrisy, envy, and slander of every kind.” And
SESSION 11 — HUMANS AS GOD’S TEMPLE
then later, “Abstain from sinful desires, which wage war against
your soul.”
The Spirit and There is a remarkably close connection between the Holy Spirit and
the Temple God’s temples in the Bible, and it goes well beyond the wind and fire
symbols we explored earlier in this session.
On page one of the Bible, the author of Genesis introduces the Spirit
as the key agent through whom God created the universe as his
See Genesis 1:2. temple, saying the Spirit of God was hovering over the chaos. From the
very beginning, the Spirit was closely linked to the creation of temples.
“Spirit” was also how the Old Testament authors talked about the
personal, invisible, and powerful presence of the Creator God at work
within the world. In Hebrew, the word for “Spirit” is spelled ruakh, and
refers to “wind” or “breath.” This word is repeatedly used by biblical
authors to identify God’s energetic presence in the world long before
Jesus came on the scene.
A great example of this comes from Exodus, when a man named Bezalel
was commissioned by God as the lead designer of the tabernacle.
We’re told he was “filled with the Spirit of God, with wisdom and
Read about Bezalel and his Spirit empow- understanding.” Similar to Genesis 1, God’s Spirit was at work in the
erment in Exodus 31:1–11. world to create a temple, but this time through an empowered human
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agent designing a mobile tent.
Later in Israel’s story, after the Jerusalem temple had been destroyed,
Old Testament passages like these from Ezekiel were foundational for
the statements of Jesus, Peter, and Paul establishing the new covenant
people of God as the new temple.
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SESSION 11 — HUMANS AS GOD’S TEMPLE
Geek Out
An Enlightened Sect The concept of a human as a temple was not common in the
Jewish culture of Jesus’ day. But he wasn’t the only person who had
such an idea.
Remember that sect that lived in the desert, the ones who produced
the Dead Sea Scrolls and wrote commentaries on Old Testament
Scripture? They too shared Jesus’ anger at the corruption of the
temple and railed against its priesthood.
They reflected on the same prophetic text that inspired Jesus, and
so they too discerned that the new temple promised by the Old
Testament prophets would not necessarily be a building, but could
be a “sanctuary of humans.”
All of the Dead Sea Scrolls are categorized In a document scholars call “4QFlorilegium,” this sect of strictly
in the following way: observant Israelites expounds on this idea, writing that this future
· A number indicating in which of the “sanctuary of humans” would “offer sacrifices before God, namely
11 caves the scroll was found. obedience to the Torah.” They believed that their small, obedient
· An abbreviation of the location. For
community was, in fact, the new temple, not the corrupted monstrosity
instance, “Q” stands for “Qumran.” standing in Jerusalem. Their hope was for a future king to drive
corruption out of Jerusalem and invite their community to become
· A summary title of the scroll’s con-
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tents, often in Latin. For instance, Israel’s new temple leaders.
“florilegium” is a Latin term for a
This is fascinating because it shows that Jesus was not alone in
1.
Read 1 Peter 2:4–10, and underline
all the words associated with “house,”
“temple,” and “stone.” Why is Peter
calling humans “stones”?
2.
Peter quotes from Isaiah 8:14, 28:16,
and Psalm 118:22. Read each verse and
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3.
Read all of 1 Peter 2:4–10 again, this
time underlining all the words related to
“priests,” “sacrifice,” and “praise.” Why is
Peter emphasizing the priesthood?
Discussion
How do you experience the Holy Spirit
purifying you on a daily basis?
Notes
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The New Heavens
Session 12
and The New Earth
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twelve tribes of Israel. And everyone who has
left houses or brothers or sisters or father or
Jesus’ apostles shared this simple hope. They believed Jesus had
started that recreation process and raised a new temple, but it was
clear that not all of creation had been renewed.
When Paul reflected on this future hope, he said the world would one
See Romans 8:21. day be “liberated from its bondage to decay”—a glorious freedom we’re
still waiting for today.
At this present moment, the earth is cut off from the full life of heaven.
To use a biblical metaphor, it groans like a woman in childbirth. But
the new creation is here, taking form even when we can’t see it. We do
sense hints of it now and then, though, just like we might make out an
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elbow or foot poking from within a pregnant woman’s belly. One day it
will be pushed forth into life, like a new baby emerging from the womb.
So, is God making all things new, or is he making all new things?
But the resurrected Jesus was also different. Really different. Some of
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the disciples didn’t even recognize him at first glance. And while Jesus’
In John 20:19, the risen Jesus appeared
SESSION 12 — THE NEW HEAVENS AND THE NEW EARTH
body was physical, it was physical in a way that was clearly different
suddenly in a room with a locked door. See
Luke 24:31 and 24:36 for similar surprises. from ours. He inexplicably appeared and disappeared from rooms,
baffling the disciples. There were no categories that prepared them for
this moment, so all they could do is tell the odd stories we find in the
New Testament.
John’s vision about the new creation is in John first described the new creation as a marriage of heaven and
Revelation 21:1–5. earth. Heaven is represented as both a city and a bride, coming down
out of God’s heavenly domain and landing on earth, much like the
staircase Jacob saw in his dream. John called the city-bride a “new
The precious stones John lists to describe Jerusalem.” It was so marvelous that he could only describe it in terms
the new Jerusalem are taken from the list
of brilliant stones.
of jewels that decorated the high priest’s
breastplate in Exodus 28:15–21. Jerusalem itself was a powerful symbol for John. It was the first and
only city where God resided in a permanent holy house, the first city
where kings worshiped the true Creator. At the heart of the Israelites’
Promised Land, Jerusalem represented the ultimate Promised Land: all
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of restored creation.
Literally John was a master of the Hebrew Scriptures, and his vision of the new
Metaphorical creation is a kaleidoscope of images drawn from the biblical poets
and prophets. His goal was to create a visual collage of Old Testament
metaphors that forces us to reckon with the meaning of these images.
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using two distinct Old Testament references to craft a deeper meaning.
Let’s break this down:
Do We Go to Heaven We’ve established that the main focus of the biblical story is the union,
When We Die? split and future reunion of God’s domain and our domain. We know
heaven and earth aren’t simply separate living quarters, but they are
The phrase “go up to heaven” is found in representations of spaces where God rules and defines good and evil
the Bible, but it doesn’t relate to afterlife. and where humans have staked out their own realm and define good
Rather, it’s used to describe something
that is impossible for humans to find.
and evil for themselves.
Even if humans could go up into the skies
But, so far, our dive into this story hasn’t addressed one of our most
(which, in biblical times, was impossible),
you couldn’t find what you’re looking for. common and pressing questions: What happens after we die? Don’t
(For examples, see Deuteronomy 30:12 or followers of Jesus “go to heaven?” Isn’t going to heaven one of the main
Proverbs 30:4.)
things a Christian should hope for?
There is not even one passage in the Bible that talks about “going
to heaven” after you die. The phrase “go to heaven” doesn’t appear
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This doesn’t mean the Bible has nothing to say about what happens
to God’s people after they die. It just means that “going to heaven”
isn’t the way biblical authors thought about it. Let’s look at the
New Testament passages that speak to what Jesus’ followers will
experience after they die. They all use the same phrase: Our hope is
about being “with Jesus.”
LUKE 23:42–43
Jesus spoke to the repentant criminal being crucified next to him,
saying, “Today you’ll be with me in paradise.”
PHILIPPIANS 1:21–24
Paul discussed his possible execution in a Roman prison, and he said
death wouldn’t be so bad. It would make the Philippians sad, but he
would get to be “with Christ.”
2 CORINTHIANS 5:6–9
Paul talked about the true hope that drives Christian faithfulness,
even in the face of death. The result of death, he said, was being “with
the Lord.”
Geek Out
Both Jesus and Paul believed that not even death could separate
people from God’s love, and that Jesus’ followers would be with him
after death.
See Philippians 3:20–21, Romans 6:4–6 However, Paul does not envision this disembodied mode of existence
and 1 Corinthians 15:20–28.
as permanent, or even desirable. In 2 Corinthians 5:2 (NIV), Paul
wrote that in this world “we groan, longing to be clothed with our
heavenly dwelling.” He’s referring here to a resurrected body believers
will inherit when they are finally made like Jesus. For Paul, the end
goal is not disembodied bliss in heaven, but rather a restored physical
existence, which is a gift from heaven.
But what about the interim period, when our mortal bodies rot in
For uses of “falling asleep,” see Acts 7:60,
the ground?
1 Thessalonians 4:13, John 11:11, 2 Peter
3:4, and 1 Corinthians 15:20. Paul describes this interim experience as “falling asleep.” And he wasn’t
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alone in using sleep as a metaphor for death. It was common in Jewish
Whichever view you hold, the takeaway is clear: Death is not the end
for followers of Jesus. Just as he went through death and came out the
other side in a transformed physical existence, so also his people can
hope for the same. Our ultimate hope is to inhabit reborn creation with
the one who died was reborn on our behalf.
Dig Deeper
We’ve learned a lot in these 12 sessions, and that new
information is likely to reshape the way you read Scripture. Let’s
revisit the Bible’s bookends:
1.
Read Genesis 1–2, which describes the
original heavens and earth. Then, read
Revelation 21–22, which describes the
reborn heavens and earth.
Write down every image that appears in
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What’s different?
2.
Do it again. You’ll notice new things.
We promise. And as you do, you’ll be
invited into the brilliance of John’s
mind as he crafted his vision of the
renewed creation.
Discussion
What questions do you have about what
the new creation will be like?
Notes
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Conclusion
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