God’s Country Club?

Heaven is a sparsely populated place. Considering its vast celestial real estate, vis-a-vis the earth, it must be downright lonely. Maybe that’s the way the elect like it.

Official teaching, as it is often called, for many churches is downright brutal for those who dare explore. This past week the sin of Rob Morris, a Lutheran Pastor (Missouri Synod) who had the audacity to pray for the children slaughtered in Newtown, Connecticut in the same room as—gasp—Jews and Muslims, has been in the news. You see, Missouri Synod pastors aren’t allowed to worship with those outside their brand, and the president of the Synod, Matthew Harrison, insisted on an apology from Morris. Never mind the twenty-six coffins in the room. This is about doctrine!

Exclusion is part of what gives religion a bad name. Yes, there are some people who appear evil—I’m glad I’m not often put in the place of judging that. For some Christian sects, however, the gate is very narrow indeed, and the path exceptionally difficult. More than one Christian denomination, presumably those not so good with arithmetic, officially teaches that only 144,000 will be saved. A thousand gross, and not one more. These poor sinners keep hoping they’ll get in without adding up the hundreds of generations standing in line before them. I get the sense that their heaven wouldn’t exactly be paradise for any of the rest of us who happened to slip in. If the world were full of people like me, I think I’d be on the first space shuttle off to parts unknown.

Overlooking the gross insensitivity to the fact that Morris was trying to heal his community after a tragedy where children—children! To whom most religions give a free pass into heaven—were being mourned, we must wonder what the paradise of Missouri Synod Lutherans looks like. A heaven without diversity. Smiles must be rare indeed. And long, long, long naps very common.

For those of us committed to the common good, heaven on those terms is no ideal place. In fact, I doubt that God would be tempted to spend much time there. I think that God was present at the interfaith prayer vigil, and that Rev. Harrison has yet to receive an apology postmarked “Heaven.”

Rules is rules.

Rules is rules.

4 thoughts on “God’s Country Club?

  1. One of the major groups who make a bigt thing of the literal 144,000 iare the Jehovah’s Witnesses and it’s a common misconception that they believe only 144,000 will be saved. In fact, they belive only the 144,000 will reigh with Christ in heaven. In addition to these, there is a “great crowd whom no one could number” (Revelation 7) who will live forever in paradise on earth – after the destruction of “all the wicked” – i.e. virtually the whole of humanity – at the Battle of Armageddon.

    To be sure of a place among this great crowd, you have to believe all and only the doctrines and statements issued by the Wise Old Men of Brooklyn. Er, sorry, I mean the Governing Body of Jehovah’s Witnesses.

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    • Steve Wiggins

      Quite right, Rob. Besides the Witnesses there are quite a few other groups that interpret the 144,000 more or less literally. In any case, if they’re right, they can have heaven and the rest of us will sort it out somehow.

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  2. Please do not call cults Christian or include them in the Christian category. One question pertaining to the following words–“To whom most religions give a free pass into heaven” are you saying that children or the pre-flood world didn’t have to get on the ark to be saved by were killed mercilessly by God via drowning for no reason? Also, that statement contradicts Romans 3:23 and other passages which tell us that all need a savior to get eternal life.

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    • Steve Wiggins

      Thanks for stopping by, theo-arch.

      “Cult” is a term no longer used by any serious student of religion; the main reason is that any religious group can call any other group a cult. The word has lost its meaning. The cult of Christianity has always given special dispensation to children, and if the flood had actually occurred, yes, I’d agree with your statement. Paul was only human, after all!

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