Revelation 21:1-27 · The New Jerusalem
Five Minutes After Death
Revelation 21:1-27
Sermon
by Robert Allen
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There is an old Arab parable about a merchant in Bagdad who sent his servant to the market one day. Before very long, the servant returned, white and trembling with fear. There was great agitation in his voice as he said: "Master, down in the market place I was jostled by someone in the crowd. When I turned around, I saw that it was Death who had jostled me. She looked at me and made a threatening gesture. Master," he said, "please lend me your horse, for I must hasten away to avoid Death. I will ride to Samara and there I will hide, and Death will be unable to find me."

The merchant lent his horse and the servant galloped away in a great hurry. Later, the merchant went down to the market place and saw Death standing in the crowd. He went over to Death and asked: "Why did you frighten my servant this morning? Why did you make a threatening gesture?"

"That was not a threatening geture," Death replied. "It was only a start of surprise. I was astonished to see him here in Bagdad, for I have an appointment with him tonight in Samara."

Each of us has an appointment in Samara. We all realize that death is a realistic fact that comes to everyone. It comes to the king in his palace ... to the beggar beside the road ... and to the animal hiding in its hole.

But what happens to us after death? Are we like candles blown out in the wind? What happens to us after this life?

I visited a young man who had suffered with a terminal illness for quite some time. He was in the hospital intensive care unit for well over 100 days. I suppose that he was hooked up to almost every machine known to medical science. His total existence during that 100 days was that small eight by ten room in the intensive care unit.

Most of the time, communciation with him was difficult. He was on a respirator to assist his breathing, and he could not talk. All that he could do was shake his head up and down for "yes" or right to left for "no."

On a few occasions, when I went to see him, he was off the respirator and breathing on his own. During these short periods, he was able to speak. Once, as we were talking, he looked at me and said, "Robert, I know it is just a matter of time until I die. I’ve come to terms with that and death no longer frightens me. But, what happens next? What happens to us five minutes after death?"

What happens five minutes after death? This is a question which has been in the hearts and minds of people since the beginning of time. We want to get a glimpse across the threshold, so that the unknown will not be so frightening. We have no blueprint which enables us to know very clearly what happens five minutes after we cross the threshold of death. All that we possess are the promises of our faith ... the lovely language of imagery ... the beautiful phraseology of pictures. The New Testament only gives us appetizing hints about the life to come. In Revelation chapter 21, the writer said:

And I saw a new heaven and a new earth: for the first heaven and the first earth were passed away: and there was no more sea. And I, John, saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven ...

That is a vivid allusion! But, it is still only an allusion; it is still only a picture; it is still only an imagery; and it leaves so much to the imagination. Perhaps this is exactly what God intended. Perhaps it is enough for us to believe in a Savior who has gone to prepare a place for us. The Apostle Paul, attempting to sum up his thoughts of what will happen to us in the world to come, said:

... The eye has not seen, nor the ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God has prepared for them that love him ... (1 Corinthians 2:9)

Instead of trying to claim any personal insight into what will happen five minutes after death, I want to lift up some of the great images of our faith.

I. Five minutes after death there will be no more pain or sorrow or hurting. There will be grieving in the hearts and lives of those left behind. When we lose someone whom we love, there is a vacant spot left in our hearts ... an aching within our lives ... a sorrow that never really goes away.

There was a letter to the editor in the local paper that was very touching. A mother wrote the letter because that day would have been her son’s eighteenth birthday. One year ago he had been killed in a tragic incident, and she was writing to express the pain she still felt. She was writing to express how the sorrow would come out of the blue and tears would fill her eyes. She was writing to express the grief she felt when she thought of a seventeen-year-old boy who never got a chance to fulfill his potential.

Most of us know something of what she was talking about. We have lost those we love, and the sorrow and pain is very real. But the promise of the writer of Revelation is that five minutes after death there will be life that will never end ... a life of beauty and peace and love ... a life in which there will be no more pain ... no more sorrow, nor tears ... nor crying ... nor parting ... nor death after death. This is the eternal hope of the New Testament.

I stood once by the side of a bed in one of our hospitals where an old man lay dying. He was racked with pain and had difficulty breathing. As he looked up into my face, he held my hand tightly. He was so weak ... so frail ... that I was surprised at the stength with which he held on to my hands. In a voice that tembled with emotion, he said: "There are so many things we don’t understand. I don’t know why the Lord lets us suffer like this, but I know I won’t be suffering much longer. I know that everything will be all right because I’m going home ... I’m going home ... and I wish I were there now...."

And he was right! In just a short time, he crossed over that threshold and went to that place where he did not have to suffer anymore. He went to that place where he did not have to struggle for a breath of air. He went to that place that was promised by Jesus. He went to enjoy the rest and peace and joy of those who die in the Lord.

II. Five minutes after death there will be a reunion with loved ones. The promise of Jesus to the thief on the cross was very clear: "Today, you will be with me in paradise." They were suffering in this world together. But when they went into the next, they not only would not be suffering, but they would be together. This I believe, is at the very heart of the Gospel ... the promise of a reunion ... the promise that we will be together again ... the promise that death cannot eternally separate us from those we love.

Do you believe that right now? Do you believe that God will never allow a life to slip through his fingers? If you believe that, then you know that the hope for a reunion with those loved ones who have gone before you is not something utterly insane.

When I was in high school, there were four teenage girls killed in a car wreck. The four girls had been to Dallas and they were coming home late that evening. They were traveling on a new highway that was still under construction in a few sections. Apparently, as a practical joke, someone removed the barriers where a bridge was to be built over the Trinity River. The first driver that came along was able to slam on his brakes and stop his car just before he went over the edge of the cliff and down into the river.

The man who stopped his car saw another car coming; he jumped out of his car and tried to flag it down to stop them before they went over the edge. But, the four girls must have been frightened when they saw the man trying to get them to stop. Instead of slowing down, they speeded up and sailed over the edge of the cliff. All four girls were killed instantly.

A shock-wave of grief and sorrow swept over that community. High school students - who believed that they were invincible - were suddenly confronted with the deaths of four of their own. We had seen grandparents pass away, we had seen graphic pictures of car wrecks on the news and in our Driver’s Education classes, but, there was not a one of us who had really believed it could happen to us.

Along with a large group of other students, I went to the funeral services. Even though better than twenty years have passed since that spring afternoon, I still remember the Episcopal priest looking out at the families and saying in a very gentle voice, "I know that you are hurting right now. But, I can assure you that these girls are not gone forever. I know that you will see your daughters once again. You will be reunited with them one day."

I have no documentary evidence to support such a hope. There is no way to prove what happens to us at death. I realize now, as surely as he did then, that philosophical and theological hope must support such an assertion of faith. But, I want you to know that in the sanctuary of my soul, I believe that the hope and promise of our faith is that five minutes after death there will be joy and happiness throughout the heavens as we are reunited with those loved ones who have gone before us.

III. Five minutes after death we will be in the presence of God. I believe with everything that is within me that we are in the presence of God right now. Across the centuries, no experience has been more universal than the sense of Someone greater than ourselves dwelling with us. However, no one has ever seen the presence of God. But no one has ever seen an idea ... No one has ever seen the truth ... No one has ever seen a thought ... No one has ever seen love ... We haven’t seen them, but we know they exist. The deepest forces of our lives can’t be seen, but they are real. It is the same with the presence of God. We can’t see his Divine Presence, but it is real.

There is a lot which we do not understand about death and eternal life. But when death comes, why should death sever that tie binding our spirits to God? It doesn’t! Death does not separate us from God’s presence. Death simply makes his presence more real to us!

I believe that five minutes after death, we will be in the presence of God. We will be resting in the bosom of Jesus.

If you have committed your life to Jesus Christ, this belief ... this hope ... can be yours.

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Greatest Passages Of The Bible, The, by Robert Allen