Is it natural for plants to die? Is it part of the normal life-cycle of God's creation for animals to die as well? What about humans? Does the "circle of life" mean death is the natural and expected end for everything God creates?
Christians like
Martin Luther and
N.T. Wright have taught that the Biblical answers to the above questions are "Yes." All life, they would say, is like a circle that goes around in a constant loop. Plants, animals, and people are constantly being born and are all ultimately experiencing death. That's natural; it's nature. Plants die, giving life to new plants. Stars die, giving life to new stars. People are born; people die. Death is a part of nature because all of God's creation is
mortal.
However, there is a caveat when it comes to death for human beings. Every single human being has the
potential for immortality. This immortality -
or life that never ends - is not
inherent to human existence. It is the reward from God for a
particular kind of human existence.
Immortality is God's reward for a person who lives life with full, perfect, and sustained obedience to Him.
Humans are the only creatures fashioned in the image of God. The Creator expects us to live our lives as He would live life. Look to Jesus for the example as to the kind of life God expects a human being to live. God promises that if you never deviate, never hesitate, never contemplate anything but loving Him and other people
selflessly and
sacrificially, then He will grant you
immortality as the reward.
There's enough
knowledge of God in every human mind to know how one ought to live (see
Romans 1:18-25). Plants and animals don't have this knowledge of their Creator. That's why they don't have a dynamic and personal relationship with Him. You never see a dog bow its head in prayer before eating its food. Nor will you hear a plant praise its Creator.
But human beings can and do
relate to God and their fellow human beings who are created in the image of God. So, the reward for living life the way God intends a human life to be lived is
immortality.
Let me show you.
The Bible tells us that at the final judgment, God will reward people who have lived a life of full, consistent, and persistence obedience toward Him with
immortal life. Paul says it like this in
Romans 2:6-9:
"God will render (at the judgment) to each one according to his deeds: immortal life to those who by patient continuance in doing good seek for glory, honor, and immortality; but to those who are self-seeking and do not obey the truth, but obey unrighteousness—indignation and wrath, tribulation and anguish, on every soul of man who does evil, of the Jew first and also of the Greek."
God alone is inherently
immortal (
I Timothy 6:16). This is the clear teaching of Scripture, and to deny it is to deny the Word of God.
Every person, plant,
creature,
star, planet, and
living organism that God creates is inherently
mortal. Mortality is normal to all life because all life is mortal.
However, God created mankind alone with the
potential for immortality. The Bible tells us that human beings are the only forms of life
"created in the image of God" (
Genesis 1:27).
Immortality is not
inherent to our existence. Immortality is a
potential for our existence. It is dependent upon our full, complete, sustained and joyful obedience to the Father who made us.
So who among us has lived the kind of life that deserves immortality as a reward from God?
Answer: None of us. Paul takes his readers to this same conclusion.
"As it is written, there is no one righteous or as he ought to be, no not one" (
Romans 3:10).
Since
deathlessness (e.g. immortality) is promised by God as the potential reward for the human life perfectly lived, then we who are human must consider
death as our
enemy. Socrates welcomed death as a friend, but the Savior fought death as an enemy. Those with little or no understanding of death and eternal life will often welcome death as a friend. But those who are acquainted with God's promise to mankind of potential immortality will fight death as their enemy. And that is exactly what the Bible calls
the death of any human being -
the enemy (see
I Corinthians 15:26).
Even more importantly, because "the wages of
sin is death" then sin must also be the enemy of man since it is sin that brings death to those with the potential for
immortality. It's really sad when mankind celebrates what God calls sin.
He who welcomes his enemy as his friend will eventually find the light of his life turned into the darkness of his death.
God made the first man (Adam) and every person who descends from Adam (e.g. the human race) with the potential to be immortal. Adam's potential immortality was predicated on Adam's full, consistent, and persistent obedience to his Creator. But Adam failed in his obedience to God.
When Adam failed, every one of his descendants (e.g. that means you and me) did not lose the potential for immortality, what we lost was the power to meet the standard which has immortality as the reward.
The seed that the first Adam implanted within each of us is
the disposition toward rebellion against God. We are all the children of the first Adam. We will all die because of our
inherent sin nature as well as our
individual sin performance.
"For the wages of sin is death" (
Romans 6:23).
Perfect, complete, persistent, sustained, joyful obedience to God is still the standard for
immortal life, but because Adam sinned, we received from him a nature to sin. We hopelessly and consistently fall
short of that standard which God intends us to live (
Romans 3:23). Again, if you want to see the standard clearly, look at the life of Jesus Christ. He met it.
Nobody else is.
Each of us is similar to a track and field athlete who stands 5-foot tall trying to get over an 8-foot high jump bar. It's impossible. The standard is too high because of the athlete's shortcomings. The standard God set for Adam (man) in the beginning wasn't too high (full obedience to the Creator), and His standard hasn't changed over time. Mankind continues to spiritually shrink, infected with a disposition and tendency toward sin and rebellion against God. Instead of loving Him and others He creates, we love ourselves.
None of us likes to think we are in this pickle of death because of the actions of another person, so very few people accept that we're sinners because of the actions of that first Adam. So why don't you take Adam out of the equation in terms of our lives and in relation to God's promise of immortal life? Each of us is still promised by God the gift of immortal life as a reward for fully, consistently and persistently obeying Him during our lifetimes.
God's promise of immortality, conditioned upon us living our lives like Christ lived His, seems impossible. In my experience, it is impossible. I've already failed.
However, for a
sinful human being - like each of us is - death is not necessarily
the end of one's life altogether. Here comes the Good News.
Immortality remains a possibility for sinners.
Jesus Christ, the unique God/Man, has done for human beings what we seemingly cannot do for ourselves. He has "fulfilled the law" of sin and death, and obtained for sinners the rewards of full obedience, which includes immortality (e.g. eternal life), for sinners.
Thus, eternal life is
gifted by God to sinners who "embrace the Son" (
Psalm 2:12). That's right. Eternal life (e.g. immortality) comes as a
gift (not a reward) to sinners. That life eternal begins the moment Christ is embraced. Along the sinner's journey of faith in Christ during this life, many enemies will be faced (e.g. sin and death,
Romans 8:2)). Christ empowers the sinner to conquer his enemies, including the last enemy of physical death (
I Corinthians 15:26).
Christ will resurrect every sinner from the grave. That's right, there is coming a general resurrection of all human beings who have died. The Creator will raise people from death. After this resurrection, those who have embraced Him will be
gifted with
immortality.
The resurrection of the dead is the unique doctrine of Christianity, taught by Jesus and His Apostles, and it is clearly articulated in both the Old and New Testaments. Other religions refute the Christian doctrine of the resurrection. For example, spiritualists speak of spirits leaving the body and continuing to live even after people die, denying the necessity of personal resurrection. Some religionists refer to the reincarnation of life forms into various and sundry other life forms after death, so that a person today may be a tree tomorrow. Atheists believe in nothingness after death.
But Jesus Christ teaches
the resurrection from the dead of individual human beings.
Resurrection is the apex of Christian doctrine. Resurrection is the future of
every human being, whether or not they know of Jesus Christ. Resurrection is at the very heart of Christian teaching.
"If there is no resurrection of the dead, then not even Christ has been raised. And if Christ is not raised from the dead, our preaching is worthless and so is your faith." (I Corinthians 15:13, 14).
Scripture teaches us that at the return of Christ every person who has died will be raised up. The Old Testament clearly speaks of it in
Isaiah 26:19 and
Daniel 12:2. The New Testament contains more abundant proof of it,
John 5:25-29;
6:39,
40,
44;
11:24,
25;
I Corinthians 15;
I Thessalonians 4:13-17;
Revelation 20:13
The Bible's focus on human resurrection from the dead leads right into the Bible's teaching of the
final judgment of human beings:
- The Judge will be Jesus Christ (see Matthew 25:31-32; John 5:27; Acts 10:42; Philippians 2:10).
- Those who will be judged by Christ are those who are not "in Christ" or whose names are not found in "The Book of Life" (see Revelation 20:12). In other words, those who are not in union with Christ, a union that is evidenced by their faith in Him and/or the Spirit's work within them while alive on earth (see Matthew 12:36-37; Revelation 20:12), will be judged by Christ from the record He keeps of what they have done in this life. Those in Christ are not part of this final judgment, having been rescued from "this coming wrath" by Jesus (I Thessalonians 1:9-10). When you read the word "wrath" in the Bible in relation to Christ's judgment, don't think of your drunk uncle at a family reunion. Christ's wrath is holy, just and warranted; it's as much a part of His Person as His love, and both are good attributes. You want a Judge who is angry with evil, not a judge who laughs at it.
- This final judgment occurs after the resurrection of the dead, a resurrection that encompasses every human being (see John 5:28; Revelation 20:12-13).
- Christ judges those who are not "in Him" according to their deeds on earth. His judgment will be just, and the punishment Christ dispenses for selfish, harmful, and unloving acts on earth will be personal and proportional (see Matthew 10:15). The final end every person judged by Jesus Christ at the final judgment will be "the second death" (see Revelation 2:11; Revelation 20:6, 14; Revelation 21:8) where there is no hope of resurrection or immortal life.
- The gift for those who die "in Christ" is immortal life through the obedience of Jesus Christ and our faith in Him (Romans 6:23).
The Good News of Jesus Christ is that He came to meet the standard of immortality for sinners. He came to live the life that has immortality as the reward. In Him was no implanted sin of the original Adam, for He was born of a virgin. In Him was no outward sin, because He lived His life in perfect obedience to the Father. The Bible says of the Messiah:
"He was tempted in all ways just like we are, yet without sin" (Hebrews 4:15).
Yet without sin. Amazing.
The wages of sin is death, but Jesus never sinned. Yet He died. Why? He died fulfilling the law regarding sin.
He died in the place of sinners. That's what is called "Christ's passive obedience on the cross." But it's through His life that we obtain deliverance from death, that is immortality. The reward for Christ's perfect obedience as a human being is immortal life. This is what is called Christ's active obedience.
eJesus lived His life on earth perfectly for us. Amazing.
This is Good News.
When a human being who falls short of God's standard in this life
trusts in Jesus Christ - the One who actively and perfectly fulfilled the Father's will
in the very areas I've failed in mine - then the "perfect righteousness" of Jesus Christ is "credited to my account" by God (
Romans 4:20-24). I am gifted with eternal life that Christ has earned for me..
"For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord" (Romans 6:23).
Christ has obtained for me what I could not attain for myself.
He is my righteousness. He is my reward. He is my salvation. He is my sanctification.
"I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me" (
Galatians 2:20).
I want to know Christ.
"But whatever were gains to me I now consider loss for the sake of Christ. What is more, I consider everything a loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them garbage, that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ—the righteousness that comes from God on the basis of faith. I want to know Christ—yes, to know the power of his resurrection and participation in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, and so, somehow, attaining to the resurrection from the dead." (Philippians 3:7-11).
Application for the Christian:
1. Christ is my life, both now and forever.
2. This life of mine will soon become immortal, a gift for Christ's obedience.
3. The last enemy I will face in this life is death.
4. I will rise from the dead at the time of Christ's coming unless I'm alive when He comes.
5. From the perspective of those who have died, the resurrection is immediate at death.
6. From the perspective of those still living, the resurrection is still coming and blessed hope.
7. The resurrection of the wicked should be a source of dread for there is "the wrath to come" which is Christ's holy and just punishment for a person's sins in this life.
8. Since no person is inherently
immortal, after the appropriate and proportional punishment given to the wicked for their sins, Christ will turn them over to "the lake of fire" to experience the second death. The wicked are not given the gift of immortal life.
9. A person who is in Christ should never boast about his or her personal holiness because "our righteousness" is like filthy rags. If we are going to boast, let us boast in Christ (
II Corinthians 10:17).
10. "For God so loved the world, that He gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in Him, should not perish, but have immortal life" (
John 3:16).