Luke 20:27-40 · The Resurrection and Marriage
Setting The Record Straight
Luke 20:27-40
Sermon
by King Duncan
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The Hollywood version of life after death is portrayed in Albert Brooks' movie, "Defending Your Life." Brooks plays the part of Daniel Miller, an advertising man who is killed by a bus. He finds himself in Judgment City along with many other people. They are ushered into the city with all the efficiency of a bus tour. Newly arrived persons are taken to what appears to be hotels and told to sleep because they are tired from their transformation. Their assignment is to spend one week in Judgment City reviewing their lives. A defender is assigned to Daniel Miller who explains the process to him. In a courtroom they will review nine days of his life. Then the judges will decide whether or not he will move ahead or return to earth and attempt to live a better life. The episodes shown on the giant television screen of Daniel Miller's life reveal a man who is often fearful and afraid to take action. The prosecutor recommends that he return to earth to work on conquering his fears.

While in Judgment City he meets a woman named Julia. Julia brings out the best in Daniel. The last scene of the movie shows Daniel boarding a bus back to earth. Julia has boarded another bus to an unknown destination. Daniel sees Julia and runs toward her bus, clinging to the bus window for dear life. At that moment Daniel is able to conquer his fears and is allowed to join Julia. In typical Hollywood fashion, they both are advanced to a better life.

"Defending Your Life" is only one of several recent movies that deals with the subject of life after death. Earlier this year LIFE magazine featured articles on the same subject. Both believers and unbelievers are asking questions about life on the other side. And devout people will forever want to know what heaven will be like. Will the streets really be paved in gold? Will we recognize our relatives and friends? Will they know who we are? Will we be able to watch our loved ones who are still living? We search for answers.

One day a group of Sadducees approached Jesus with a question about life beyond the grave. The Sadducees were members of the priestly, aristocratic party who were very conservative in their theology. Their scriptures consisted only of the first five books of the Old Testament ” those books attributed to Moses. Unlike the Pharisees they did not believe in the resurrection of the dead or angels. Neither did they believe in future punishments or rewards. They believed that when the body died so did the soul. Since there was no mention of the dead being brought back to life in the first five books of the Bible, they concluded that there was no such thing. They were not the least bit open to Jesus' teachings. In fact, they were trying to trap him. They wanted to embarrass him ” to discredit him and expose him as a fraud.

They brought him a complex riddle. If a man married and died before he had any children, it was the custom of the day for his next oldest brother to marry his widow. In their riddle the Sadducees had the widow marry a man who then died, then his next oldest brother, who died, then the next, until she had married and buried seven brothers. "In the resurrection," they asked Jesus, "whose wife will the woman be?" Obviously, the Sadducees hadn't asked this question for edification. They didn't even believe in a resurrection! Their purpose was to trip Jesus up.

In the children's classic, THE PHANTOM TOLLBOOTH, Milo, Tock and Humbug are traveling to the Lands Beyond. They are greeted by the twelve-faced Dodecahedron who is a specialist in problems. "I'm not very good at problems," admits Milo. "What a shame," sighs the Dodecahedron. "They're so very useful. Why, did you know that if a beaver two feet long with a tail a foot and a half long can build a dam twelve feet high and six feet wide in two days? All you would need to build Boulder Dam is a beaver sixty-eight feet long with a fifty-one foot tail." "Where would you find a beaver that big?" grumbled Humbug. "I'm sure I don't know," he replied, "but if you did you'd certainly know what to do with him."

"That's absurd," objected Milo. "That may be true," he acknowledged, "but it's completely accurate, and as long as the answer is right, who cares if the question is wrong? If you want sense you'll have to make it yourself." (1)

The Sadducees' question was that kind of question. It was a test. It was a trap. Jesus, though, saw this as an opportunity to set the record straight. In heaven, he explained, there is no need for marriage, "because they are like angels and are children of God."

HAVE YOU EVER HAD THE OPPORTUNITY TO SET THE RECORD STRAIGHT FOR SOMEONE WHO IS SEARCHING? Many of the people we come in contact with are searching for meaning. They may not ask the right questions. They might even try to trick us or make us look foolish, but they are searching. We have opportunities to set the record straight.

The late Dr. Harry Denman saw every encounter he had with other people as such an opportunity. He traveled frequently and knew that some of the loneliest people on earth could be found in motel and hotel bars. Once while attending a denominational board meeting he went into one hotel bar. That particular night he wanted to speak with the barkeeper, so he positioned himself at the end of the bar. The barkeeper came down and asked, "May I help you?" Dr. Denman put forth his hand and said, "As a matter of fact you can. My name is Harry Denman and I desperately need your prayers." Startled, the barkeeper asked, "What did you say?" Denman repeated his statement. Puzzled, the barkeeper said, "Sir, I am afraid you've come to the wrong place."

Denman probed, "You mean you can't pray for me?" The young man paused a moment and said, "Sir, I can't even pray for myself. How can I be expected to pray for you?" Denman responded, "You mean you can't even pray for yourself?" Conviction settled on the handsome young man. It was as if his life suddenly paraded before his eyes. He became aware that he had strayed so far from God that he could not pray for himself. Before leaving the bar Dr. Denman had the young man's home address, knew the name of his wife and their anniversary date, and the name of their child. He used that information to keep up a steady stream of correspondence and materials. (2)

You and I are surrounded by people who are searching. That is why Hollywood and popular magazines and books are giving us so many goofy stories about the nature of the world beyond and angels and the demonic. People really want to know if this world is all there is. Even the Sadducees probably had a deep hunger for some reassurance about these important matters. They posed this riddle for Jesus. "Whose wife then will she be?

Notice how Jesus answers. In heaven there is no need for persons to marry "because they are like angels and are children of God." In other words, NOT ONLY IS THERE LIFE AFTER DEATH, BUT HEAVEN WILL BE FAR MORE WONDERFUL THAN WE CAN EVEN IMAGINE.

You can't make assumptions about heaven on the basis of what life on earth is like, Jesus is saying. As wonderful as marriage is, you still can't compare it to the quality of relationship we will have in God's presence.

"Does that mean when I get to heaven I will not know my husband or wife?" you ask. "Will our relationship be dissolved?" Those are good questions, sincere questions, but heaven is so grand that earthly comparisons simply are inadequate.

Father Andrew Greeley asserts: "We will love one another in the resurrected life even more intensely, even more joyfully than we do in the present life. It is utterly unthinkable that there would not be between those who work closely with one another on earth an even more powerful and more rewarding intimacy in the life of the resurrection." (3) You and I have much to look forward too. Heaven is more beautiful than we can ever imagine.

Humorist Garrison Keillor in his delightful descriptions of the people in his fictional hometown of Lake Wobegon tells how difficult it will be for some of us to deal with that kind of perfection. He writes, "My people aren't paradise people. We've lived in Minnesota all our lives and it took a lot out of us. My people aren't sure if we'll even like paradise: not sure that perfection is all it's cracked up to be. My people will arrive in heaven and stand just inside the gate, shuffling around. `It's a lot bigger than I thought it was going to be,' we'll think. We'll say, `No, thank you, we can't stay for eternity, we'll just sit and have a few minutes of bliss with you and then we have to get back.'

"We were brought up to work, not complain, accept that life is hard, and make the best of what little we have, so when we come to the grandeur and grace of an eternal flower garden ringed by mountains beside a pale blue coral sea under the continuous sun, we naturally say, `Oh, no thanks, it's too much, really, I don't care for it, just give me some ice, please.'" (4) All of us will be a little like that. Heaven will be far more wonderful than we can ever imagine.

IN ORDER TO PREPARE FOR SUCH A PLACE, WE NEED TO GET A LITTLE OF HEAVEN IN US HERE AND NOW. We need to experience the presence of the living God in our lives today!

James Loder describes a transforming moment in his life when he felt the living presence of God. Twenty-two years ago he and his family set out for a family vacation in Canada. As they were driving through New York state he noticed a woman on the side of the road waving a handkerchief. He stopped to help. The woman had a flat tire. As he was jacking up the car on the side of the highway, another driver who had fallen asleep behind the wheel struck the car. The impact dragged Jim Loder underneath the car for fifty feet. He was badly injured. He writes, "As I roused myself from under the car, a steady surge of life was rushing through me. I knew how deeply I felt love for those around me, especially my family. My two daughters sat crying on the embankment, and a deep love reached out of me toward them."

His wife telephoned her father who pastored a church near Chicago. "We'll all pray for him right now," her father replied. Loder reflects, "I didn't know that several people were praying for me just about the time I entered surgery; but I knew that the power of life from beyond me once again rushed into my body." As he was taken to surgery he felt the presence of God. The surgical staff looked solemn, thinking this would be another life and death struggle. "I found humor on the tip of my tongue," Loder recalls, "and began to assure them that I was soon going to be well. It did not seem inappropriate in that joyful Presence to invite the staff to join me in a hymn of praise before the surgery began...The atmosphere of the room seemed to quicken, the humor became contagious even in the aseptic surroundings, and before long, the personnel were smiling and laughing with me." (5)

And why shouldn't they smile and laugh? And why shouldn't we? Not only is there life ” indescribably beautiful life ” beyond the grave, but even more important, heaven is present here and available to each of us. For wherever God is, there is life. There is heaven.


1. Norton Juster, THE PHANTOM TOLLBOOTH (New York: Random House, 1964), p. 20.

2. H. Eddie Fox & George E. Morris, FAITH-SHARING (Nashville: Discipleship Resources, 1986), p. 96.

3. William E. Phipps, "Jesus on Marriage and the Afterlife," THE CHRISTIAN CENTURY, April 3, 1985, p. 328.

4. Garrison Keillor, LEAVING HOME (New York: Viking, 1987), pp. 217-218.

5. James E. Loder, THE TRANSFORMING MOMENT (Colorado Springs: Helmer & Howard, 1989), pp. 9-13.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan