Paradise:
Popular Views and Divine Revelation
PARADISE was lost on earth: why should it not be regained on
earth? The Paradise of the past was a land bearing trees and surrounded by
rivers (Gen. 2:8-17): should not the Paradise
of the future be also on the face of this globe?
Popular notions concerning Paradise
are exceedingly confused, but that is not to say that clear and true ideas are
unattainable.
A very popular hymn represents Paradise as the place "where Jesus is",
"Where loyal
hearts and true
Stand ever in the light,
All rapture through
and through
In God's most holy sight."
But God has not promised heaven to the
righteous. Even David has not gone there (Acts 2:34).
Popular theology caught up the Jewish fables
of old, and mixed these with the superstitions of the nations, producing from
them a blend of ideas of a quite unreal kind and bearing no relation to the
Scriptures. The result is that today "Paradise" -- so far as the word
is used at all -- has become a vague and mythical expression for some kind of
future happiness.
Let us turn to the Scriptures direct for
ourselves.
PARADISE IN THE OLD TESTAMENT
Pardes, the Hebrew equivalent in the Old Testament, is said
to be derived from the Old Persian, and means a garden, enclosure or park. It
is only found three times in the Scriptures, viz.: Neh. 2:8, "Asaph the
keeper of the king's forest"; Eccl. 2:5, "I made me gardens and
orchards"; Song 4:13, "Thy plants (O sister-spouse) are an orchard of
pomegranates with pleasant fruits".
The meaning here is sufficiently clear:
Royal parks and gardens; the last quoted passage referring allegorically to the
approaching "marriage of the Lamb", when "the righteous shall
inherit the land and dwell therein for ever" (Psa. 37:29), when it
"is become like the garden of Eden" (Ezek. 36:35).
From the foregoing it will appear that it is
with good reason that the garden of Eden was considered a Paradise
-- "Paradise Lost". The Septuagint translation of the Scriptures into
Greek, which was made in the third century before Christ, used the term
Paradeisos, not only in the three passages quoted, but also in Genesis, 2 and
3, where the garden of Eden is spoken of, and also in other places where
"the garden of the Lord" is referred to (Gen. 13:10; Num. 24:6; Isa.
51:3; Ezek. 28:13; 31:8, 9).
From these passages it may be ascertained
with certainty that Paradise is to be seen in a regenerated earth, and that the
"waste places of Zion" are to be included therein and transformed;
also that its territory is to include the land where anciently the King of Tyre
reigned in glory. In short, Paradise is the Kingdom
of God centrally established in the Holy Land, and bearing rule over all the earth.
PARADISE IN THE NEW TESTAMENT
The New Testament bears out this. Like
pardes in the Old Testament, the word paradeisos is found only three times in
the New Testament -- viz., Luke 23:43, "Thou shalt be with me in
Paradise"; 2 Cor. 12:4, "Caught up to Paradise"; Rev. 2:7,
"To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the tree of life which is in
the midst of the Paradise of God."
Christ's promise to the thief on the cross
was a gracious answer to his astonishing request: "Lord, remember me when
thou comest into thy kingdom". That time is still future; and when it
comes, Jesus will reign where once he was crucified, and the thief will be
remembered.
Paul's "visions and revelations of the
Lord" (2 Cor. 12) are related to the same time, place, and development;
for Paul preached the setting up of the kingdom of Christ
"at his appearing" (2 Tim. 4:1), and rejoiced in prospect of a crown
of righteousness "at that day" (verse 8). "The third
heaven" is a figure of the perfect state upon earth, "the end",
of which he speaks in 1 Cor. 15:24, when death itself shall be destroyed, and
the Father revealed upon earth without mediation. The first heaven may be taken
as the Mosaic economy in Israel
(Deut. 31:1). The second, or "new heavens and a new earth" (Isa.
65:17), is found in Christ's Millennial reign in Jerusalem; during which,
however, death still obtains among the subjects of his kingdom. "The third
heaven" is revealed beforehand in Rev. 21:14, and is the post-millennial
or perfect state, in which there shall be "no more death, neither sorrow
nor crying . . . for the former things are passed away".
Christ's promise to him that overcometh
(Rev. 2:7) is the offer, in beautiful and fitting metaphor, of eternal life in
the Kingdom of God. Compare the similar promises to
each of the seven churches (Rev. 2, 3).
HOW WE MAY ENTER PARADISE
In the end the tabernacle of God will be
with men (Rev. 21:3), and they will enter Paradise, not indeed by going to
heaven and leaving the earth to be burnt up, but by heaven coming to them, that
the earth may be filled with God's glory (Num. 14:21) and abide for ever.
We must have the faith of the thief on the
cross in "the Gospel of the Kingdom", and thereupon be baptized into
Christ's name for the remission of sins: and thence forward, in patient
well-doing in the way of his commandments, pray to be remembered in the day of
his coming.