Benjamin Netanyahu seems to be in position to win a fourth consecutive term as prime minister of Israel.
As of this morning, 97 percent of the votes have been counted in Israel’s parliamentarian election. As I explained yesterday, no party has ever won a sixty-one-vote majority in the Knesset
(their Parliament). The party leader who seems most likely to form a
majority coalition with other parties will be given an opportunity to do
so.
Job
was confident: “I know that my Redeemer lives, and at the last he will
stand upon the earth. And after my skin has been thus destroyed, yet in
my flesh I shall see God” (Job 19:25–26).
While life after death is affirmed in the Old Testament (cf. Isaiah 26:19), Judaism has evolved in its beliefs about the afterlife across the centuries since.
Rabbi Evan Moffic
writes: “Heaven has [an] open door policy: Heaven is not a gated
community. The righteous of any people and any faith have a place in it.
Our actions, not our specific beliefs, determine our fate. No concept
of Hell exists in Judaism.”
Rabbi Tzvi Freeman
believes that “in the afterlife, the soul is liberated from the body
and returns closer to her source than ever before.” During this passage,
“the good deeds and wisdom the soul has gained on her mission below
serve as a protection for her journey upwards.” Then, “at the final
resolution, all souls will return to physical bodies in this world.”
Writing for Haaretz, Elon Gilad
notes that “even today, Jews believe in different, often
irreconcilable, theories of what life after death is like.” For
instance, according to the Talmud (Eruvin 19b), most people go to a place where their sins are purged, then they are ushered by Abraham into heaven.
Additionally,
some Jews do not believe in an afterlife at all. They claim that we
live on through our influence in the world and in the memories of those
who knew us.
Is Mother Teresa in heaven?
To
summarize: Some Jews believe that we simply cease to exist at death.
Others believe that the “righteous” go to heaven, either because they
are considered sufficiently moral or because they pass through a
purgatory-type cleansing process.
Either way, Jews are confident that there is no hell to fear and no atonement necessary.
Apparently, most Americans believe they do not need to trust in Jesus’ atonement for our sins to go to heaven.
What can we say to them?
What Jesus could do that Buddha could not
We know that “God is love” (1 John 4:8). Why, then, doesn’t he forgive our sins just because he loves us? Why did he send Jesus to die for us?
God is also “holy, holy, holy” (Isaiah 6:3; Revelation 4:8).
His heaven is therefore perfect, a place where “death shall be no more,
neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the
former things have passed away” (Revelation 21:4).
For
us to be granted entrance into God’s perfect presence, our sins must
first be removed. The debt we owe for them must be paid.
What is this debt?
“The wages of sin is death” (Romans 6:23; cf. Ezekiel 18:20).
This is because death separates us from the holy God who is the only
source of eternal life. It’s like cutting off a flower to place in a
vase. It may look healthy, but it is dying and its appeal will soon
fade.
Sin
leads to death. This is why the payment for sin must be death. It’s why
sinners are separated from God for all eternity in hell, a place of
living death.
And
it’s why we cannot pay this debt for each other. Because I have
committed sins, I cannot die for yours. It’s as if I owe the hundred
dollars in my pocket to the bank; I cannot use it to pay your debt and
mine.
The
only person who could pay the debt of our sins would be someone who
never committed sins of his own. And only one person in all of human
history has lived a sinless life. Not Muhammad, or Confucius, or Buddha,
or anyone else. Only Jesus (Hebrews 4:15).
What held Jesus to the cross
This is why Jesus could die on the cross for our sins. And it’s why he had
to die on the cross for us to be forgiven for our sins. When we make
him our Lord and depend on his sacrifice to pay our debt and purchase
our salvation, he gives us eternal life. Guaranteed.
D. A. Carson: “It was not nails that held Jesus to that wretched cross . . . it was his love for sinners like me.”
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Jim Denison, Ph.D., speaks and writes on cultural and contemporary
issues. He is a trusted author and subject matter expert in areas where
faith and current events intersect. His Daily Article provides leading
insight for discerning today’s news from a biblical perspective.
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