Whose Heaven?
"Only Rahab the prostitute and all who are with her in her house shall live because she hid the messengers we sent. Then they devoted to destruction by the edge of the sword all in the city, both men and women, young and old, oxen, sheep, and donkeys. Joshua said to the two men who had spied out the land, 'Go into the prostitute's house, and bring the woman out of it and all who belong to her, as you swore to her.' So the young men who had been spies went in and brought Rahab out, along with her father, her mother, her brothers, and all who belonged to her—they brought all her kindred out—and set them outside the camp of Israel. They burned down the city, and everything in it; only the silver and gold, and the vessels of bronze and iron, they put into the treasury of the house of the Lord."Joshua 6:17b, 21-24 NRSV
Creating Heaven in Our Image.
In the prologue of the book Heaven is for Real the four-year-old protagonist informs his parents that Jesus asked the angles to sing to him. One of the songs the angles sang was Joshua Fought the Battle of Jericho. That song is based on the verses above chronicling the total destruction of the people and town of Jericho, with the exception of a prostitute and her family.I read the entire book. It is a sweet but unconvincing story of a child's near death experience. In the book Prostitutes, Virgins and Mothers I repeatedly ask the question, "Does it make sense?" My question here is, does it make sense that the angles are singing about the massacre of human beings? Does it make sense that heaven is exactly like the child has been taught in Sunday School. The father in the book even says, the Sunday School teachers must be doing a really good job. The book works very hard to convince the reader that the child, raised in the home of a Christian minister, attending Sunday School every Sunday could not have gotten his vision from anyplace but a trip to heaven. It is a very physical place. Jesus has very pretty eyes, a rainbow horse and wears purple and white. God even sits on a throne like one pictured in the child's story book.
Who Gets to go to Heaven?
The child in the book is very adamant that there is no admittance into heaven without knowing Jesus. At the funeral of a strangers he exclaims, "He can't get into heaven if he didn't have Jesus in his heart." Using that criteria Mahatma Gandhi, The Dalai Lama, Rabbi Sharon Kleinbaum and Ruth Messinger among a host of others are not going to be there.
What or if there is an afterlife I don't know. I am a Christian and it does not make since to me that an afterlife is a physical place with rainbow horses and angels singing about the destruction of any part of creation.
The four year old couldn't have written the book, so it must have been his father??? And who knows how much "editoralizing" he did with his own beliefs, thinking he was "spreading the gospel". From June
ReplyDeleteGreetings and thank you for commenting on my blog. You are correct the child could not have written the book. It is written as if the father is telling the story but the actual author is Lynn Vincent. She is also the author of Sarah Palin's book, Going Rouge: An American Life.
DeleteLooking forward to reading your book when it comes out in June.
ReplyDeleteThanks June!
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