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About Stephen Nielsen

I'm an author, a self publisher, and a painting contractor. I live in beautiful Minnesota, USA . Welcome to my blog site.

In Heaven We Will Have Perfect Glorified Bodies – Part 2

Here are three things, in regard to our new bodies, that will be different in heaven.

There will be no marriage. There is only one Scripture passage that addresses marriage in heaven; it is in Matthew 22:30. There Jesus addresses the Sadducees, telling them that in the resurrection we will not marry, because we will be like the angels. Angels, as we know, do not die and do not propagate. Therefore, they have no need for marriage. This then will also be true of us. And if you are thinking that there are other reasons for marriage; yes, that is true. But in heaven we will all have perfect relationships, even better than our marriage relationship now. We will all love and encourage each other with a perfect fellowship. I guess we will just have to trust God on that.

As for our gender, the gender we have now is part of who we are—it is in our DNA, and so it will be transferred into our new body. We will remain that way. Also, if you remember all the occurrences of Jesus after His resurrection, we know that He remained as a male. When Mary saw Him shortly after He arose and supposed that He was the gardener—a man’s occupation—she spoke to Him as “Sir” (Jn. 2 0:15). Also, the two men who met Jesus on the road to Emmaus did not see Him as not being male (Lu. 24:13-27), nor did Peter see Him any differently (Jn. 21:15-23).

We will have perfect knowledge. In 1 Corinthians 13:12 Paul writes, “For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face; now I know in part, but then I will know fully just as I also have been fully known.”

The Greek word here for knowledge, epiginosko, is used several times in the New Testament; but I think here in 1Corinthians 13:12, we really get the feel of what this full knowledge in heaven will be like. It will be perfect, or full. There will be no more confusion or ignorance about our understanding of things. When God speaks to us about something, we will understand Him. In fact, I will hear and understand Him (what He says to me) just as He understands me.

And I think we will also have this kind of knowledge/communication with angels. What great conversations we will have together. I have always been a slow reader. How great it will be to not only speed read with comprehension, but to very quickly hear and understand everything.

But we will never have absolute knowledge (omniscience) as God has. Yet it will be as complete as we need it to be or ever desire it to be for eternity.

We will have supernatural powers. I think the best way to look at this is to look at what Jesus did after His resurrection, because we will have the same kind of body and the same supernatural powers. So, I looked at three of the gospels, Mark, Luke, and John for this information. In Mark 16:12 it is recorded that “He appeared in a different form to two men walking.” I take it that they were going to a village named Emmaus, as Like 24:13 records. I also noticed that in Luke’s gospel it says that “their eyes were prevented from recognizing Him.” So, we have a bit of a difference in the way Mark and Luke heard of the occurrence. Either way, they were prevented from seeing who He was.

I’m not sure that we would have any occasion to have this kind of power in heaven, but maybe we will during the Millennial kingdom—if we didn’t want a mortal person to know who we were. This particular power may suggest that we will be much like the angels; for we know that they occasionally have appeared in a different form as mere men (Heb. 13:2). We will see.

In Luke’s gospel (Lu. 24:31), after the two men invited Jesus to their home, as they were about to eat, and after Jesus took bread, blessed it, broke it, and passed it to them, they suddenly recognized Him and He vanished right before their eyes. So, this was the second power we see.

The third power is in John 20:19 and 26. On two different occasions, the disciples were in a room together with the door having been shut, and Jesus appeared to them and stood in their midst. Apparently, locked doors could not keep Him out. He simply walked right through the walls, or He just appeared! Hence, like Jesus we will be able to move through solid matter as if we were just a spirit—yet with a visible and supernatural body. And like in the earlier story, we will be able to also disappear at will.

In John MacArthur’s book, The Glory of Heaven, he brings up the fact that our home in the heavenly city will be 1500 miles cubed and we won’t be using an elevator to get to our residence—if it happens to be on the top floor. He said that we will either have the ability to fly or to simply be transported in an instant at will.2

I don’t know about you, but I can’t wait to explore the heavens. I wonder if it will be anything like our solar system today. I just wonder if we will actually be able to travel through the heavens by the speed of thought, millions of miles in a second. And what will we see?


2 John MacArthur, The Glory of Heaven (Wheaton, Illinois: Crossway Books, 1996), pp. 133-134.

In Heaven We Will Have Perfect Glorified Bodies

There is so much to cover in this section. Here are two things that we know will be true concerning our heavenly bodies.

Our heavenly body will be basically the same as our natural body except that it will be glorified. I’m sure you know that when Jesus was resurrected He looked the same—except that He was glorified. He did things that He didn’t do in His earthly body. He walked through solid walls; He appeared and disappeared; and when He ascended to heaven He just flew up!

But concerning why we will be the same person as we are now, except glorified, I don’t really have a good answer, except that God designed it that way. He planned that our genetic code will be transferred from our old dead body into our new resurrected body—like a dead seed that is planted grows into a living plant. Hence our DNA will be identical except greatly regenerated and empowered. But don’t ask me how!

Our New body will be like Jesus’ resurrected body. We have already mentioned that we will be able to do the same supernatural things that Jesus did; we will be glorified just as he was after His resurrection. As for the biblical teaching on this, I think it would be best to look at a few verses and to comment briefly.

Romans 8:29

 For those whom He foreknew, He also predestined to become conformed to the image of His Son, so that He would be the firstborn among many brethren;

Here it tells us that we believers were predestined (or chosen in advance) to be conformed to His image—not just to His appearance but in every aspect of Him, including His glorification. And this term, “firstborn among many brethren” is critical. It means that we were to follow after Him as our leader and example. Hence, we were called and designed to be in every way like Him, even in His glory.

1Corinthians 15:44-49

It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body. If there is a natural body, there is also a spiritual body.  45 So also it is written, “The first MAN, Adam, BECAME A LIVING SOUL.” The last Adam became a life-giving spirit. 46 However, the spiritual is not first, but the natural; then the spiritual. 47 The first man is from the earth, earthy; the second man is from heaven. 48 As is the earthy, so also are those who are earthy; and as is the heavenly, so also are those who are heavenly. 49 Just as we have borne the image of the earthy, we will also bear the image of the heavenly.

Here we have described for us two prototypes: the natural body of Adam, and the heavenly body of Christ. And it has been designed for every believer to have both kinds of bodies: an earthly (natural) body, and then a heavenly (spiritual) body. And this has been made possible for us by God. When we believed in Him, the blood of Christ paid for our sins and delivered us from eternal death to entrance into heaven by the miraculous resurrection to glory—having a new glorified body.

Philippians 3:21

Who will transform the body of our humble state into conformity with the body of His glory, by the exertion of the power that He has even to subject all things to Himself.

Here is how our glorification is accomplished: By His power! It is the same power that He uses to subject everything to Himself.

1 John 3:2 1

Beloved, now we are children of God, and it has not appeared as yet what we will be. We know that when He appears, we will be like Him, because we will see Him just as He is.

Here, it seems, is the occurrence of our change. We will be instantly glorified when we see Him, that is, when He comes for us in the clouds (1 Thess. 4:16). We (the dead first and then the living) will be taken up into the air to meet Him. And then, as soon as we see Him we will be instantly glorified like He is—because in that moment “we will see Him just as He is.” In that moment God will cause us to see all of His holiness and it will be infused into us. A wonderful moment! Suddenly, our faces will shine like the sun in glory and strength just like His (see Revelation 1:16).

In Heaven We Will Be Holy And Sinless

We will be absolutely holy and sinless. That concept is very appealing to me, and I suppose to all of us who struggle with sin and have a longing to be free of it. Romans 6 has much to say about sin and how we sometimes find ourselves becoming slaves to sin; then also about how we may be free from sin and slaves of righteousness and live in sanctification.

Well, after we die, or after we are raptured, our struggle is over. We will receive absolute victory over sin—because God will give us a brand-new body without sin. Let’s look at two different verses and see what they say.

Philippians 3:20-21

For our citizenship is in heaven, from which also we eagerly wait for a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ; 21 who will transform the body of our humble state into conformity with the body of His glory, by the exertion of the power that He has even to subject all things to Himself.

The part we want to examine here is that He, the Lord Jesus Christ, will transform our old natural body into a body like His own glorious body. A body without sin.

1 Corinthians 15:42-44

 So also is the resurrection of the dead. It is sown a perishable body, it is raised an imperishable body; 43 it is sown in dishonor, it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in power; 44 it is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body. If there is a natural body, there is also a spiritual body.

In this group of verses we have come in the middle of a discussion about resurrection and what our resurrection body will be like. In verses 36-38, Paul compares our dead body and our resurrection body to a dead seed that sprouts new life. Just as a dead seed sprouts new life, God gives new life to the body of a believer who dies. It will be a body just like the old one, but will be a new resurrection body.

In verses 42-44 Paul tells us how the new body is different from the old one. The body we have now is perishable—we get old, sick, and eventually die. But our new body will be imperishable—it will never get sick or diseased; and it will never die. Our present body is dishonorable—because of the way we have treated it; we have sinned against it. Bur resurrection body is a body of glory and honor. Thirdly, our present body is weak and frail and subject to temptation and sickness. But out new body will be strong and powerful. This old body is a natural body, but our new resurrection body will be a spiritual body, that is, a supernatural body having no natural limits.

In Revelation 21:8, 27 and 22:15 we are given a description of people who won’t be allowed into heaven. Combining these verses together, we come up with people who are unclean, cowardly, abominable, liars, murderers, idolaters and sorcerers. And as Revelation 21:27 infers, these people’s names will not be written in the Lamb’s book of life.

So here we see the great contrast. All those who are excluded from heaven (and are not written in the book of life) have remained in their sins—because they have rejected God’s salvation; hence their sins remain with them forever. But those who are saved, they have been forgiven of all sins and cleansed by His blood.

Now I want to take a little time trying to describe what being holy and sinless will be like in heaven. But that’s going to be very hard, because none of us has experienced it. We have always been sinful. I suppose the best we can do is try remembering when we have been less sinful.What it was like. Okay, I’ll try. Way back when I attended an all-day Christian conference (this was when I was about twenty-five years old), I remember being so uplifted by all the excellent bible teachers; and even more, by speaking to so many smiling, fellow believers about all their wonderful Christian adventures. That entire day was like experiencing heaven on earth. Sin was the last thing on my mind.

Attending church hasn’t always been pleasant for me. Some churches I have attended were nothing but a drag. But the church I am attending now is so blessed. I enjoy the fellowship with so many fellow believers, and I so look forward to singing the hymns and courses and all the worship.

Putting these two things together, I would say that when I have been in Christian fellowship and surrounded by good bible teaching and the worship of God, my sin is at a low point—and that is why I feel so uplifted.

I’m thinking that being holy and sinless in heaven for eternity will be at least a thousand times better than at any low point of sin on this earth. It will be so glorious. We will be surrounded by believers and the fellowship will be wonderful. Awe! Breathing the fresh clean air will be so good. And feeling the heavenly light on our faces will be blessed. We will walk in His light forever and enjoy His wonderful fellowship—never thinking about sinful temptation ever again.

In Heaven We Won’t Be Disturbed by the Existence of Hell

Just as the former things (of this world) will not be remembered or come to mind (Isa. 65:17), we won’t be affected in any way by the existence of hell. I don’t think the suffering of those in hell will even come to our mind. John MacArthur indicates in his book, The Glory of Heaven, according to Isaiah 66:22-24, “The destruction of the wicked will ultimately be something for which we will worship God.”1

Yes, I can’t believe we will suffer in the least over those in hell. God will shield our mind and emotions from any suffering. And He has said to us through David in Psalms 16:11,

You will make known to me the path of life;

In Your presence is fullness of joy;

In Your right hand there are pleasures forever.

Hence, if we are full of the joy of His presence and of the pleasure He gives us, how can we at the same time think about and suffer for sinners in hell. It seems to me that God will separate believers from any contact with unbelievers. In Revelation 21:8 and in 22:15, God tells us that those who have chosen an unbelievers life (with all the sins they commit), they will have a special place separated from believers. It is a place that God has designed for them with Satan and all his demons. And we should not be sorry for them or think that God is unjust. He gives them what they deserve. And we all deserve it; but God reached down to all of us and gave His Son to die for us and save us. All we had at do was believe in Him. We who believe have eternal life. But those who chose not to believe and obey Him will not see life, but the wrath of God abides on them (Jn. 3:36).


1 John MacArthur, The Glory of Heaven (Wheaton, Illinois: Crossway Books, 1996), p. 98.

Heaven Will Be A Life of Rest

Our rest is written about in Revelation 14:13, where John says,

And I heard a voice from heaven, saying, “Write, ‘Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from now on!'” “Yes,” says the Spirit, “so that they may rest from their labors, for their deeds follow with them.”

From this verse we may affirm that the souls of all those who die in the Lord (and also, all those who are raptured) will be at rest from all labor and strife of being in an ungodly world and of the sins of the world. But, in contrast (from verse 11), all those who are not believers will have no rest day and night for eternity. Here, in the context, it speaks of those unbelievers during the Tribulation who receive the mark of the beast; but it will be the same for all unbelievers—they all will have no rest, only torment and strife. Therefore, this rest we speak of here (in verse 13) is a serenity of the soul, a peacefulness of a life made perfect in holiness by the blood of our Savior. And it is even that way now when we confess our sins and resolve to obey Him. He lets us rest in Him and we are at peace; thus, for all of eternity in heaven we will have that same rest—and an even greater rest.

In Heaven Everything will Be New and Different

I suppose, when we arrive in heaven in our new bodies, the first thing we will notice with great joy and thankfulness is that everything is new and different. All the old things of the flesh and of the old world will be gone—or will we even give it a thought? There will be no more sadness, only joy. There will be no more death, only life. There will be no more mourning, only joy and rejoicing. There will be no more crying, only laughing and praising God. There will be no more pain, only peace and pleasure.

I think it will be worthwhile to go through all of these five points (from Revelation 21:4) and try to get a better grasp of the changes.

No more sadness. All through one’s life there is always some degree of sadness. Some people seem to be sad all the time for one thing or another. Others appear to be happy most of the time; but perhaps they have found ways to hide their deep-down sadness. Nonetheless, when we see Jesus and we are instantly made like Him, all our tears will disappear. He will wipe them all away. And then we will say with Paul, “He has given us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ” (1 Cor. 15:57). And we will know that He has accomplished it by His own suffering and death on the cross. As the prophet Isaiah has written, “Surely our griefs He Himself bore. And our sorrows He carried…and by His scourging we are healed” (Isa. 53:4-5).

No more death. The impending death of a loved one and news of our own death is always grievous. We can do nothing about it. We may delay it for a while, but soon it will come. But Christ has abolished that enemy forever. By His death and resurrection, He has established victory over death—for Himself and for all who believe in Him. Now we may say with Paul, “Death is swallowed up in victory. “O DEATH, WHERE IS YOUR VICTORY? O DEATH, WHERE IS YUR STING” (1 Cor. 15:54-55)?

This victory will be absolutely confirmed for us in heaven. We will forever not feel the doom or the pain of it. It is no more.

No more mourning. Mourning is a deep-down brokenness over our own sin and failure. Because we are all sinners, we all go through mourning. But mourning is particularly prevalent with those that want to be closer to God, with those who regularly humble themselves when

they feel pride creeping up in themselves. Hence, in their obedient humility they will be miserable and mourn over their sin (Ja. 4:8-9).

Though mourning is something we ought to do now because of our condition, in heaven we won’t have to mourn since we will have no sin. In fact, the absence of mourning will be a constant reminder that God has removed our sins from us, having forever cleansed us of all sin and put us on the wonderful path of light and joy forever.

No more crying. Crying is not necessarily bad for us. It is a very natural way a baby expresses his or her needs when feeling hungry, tired or feeling discomfort—since they can’t communicate any other way. For an adult, it isn’t a matter of communication, but more of an outlet of strong emotions in times of sadness or feelings of rejection or pain—but sometimes even of happiness.

I don’t know if there will be absolutely no crying in heaven. We may cry out of extreme happiness or thankfulness to God. But never out of sadness or pain or discomfort. All that will be gone. Christ will have taken care of that on the cross. It will have all been paid for. We will be free from it all. All our emotions then will be only of joy, and laughter, etc.

No more pain. Certainly, Christ bore much pain on the cross for us. He bore all the pain in payment for our sins. We still have pain now since we still sin. But when we see Jesus and He turns our body into glory, our pain will vanish. Where sin is present there is pain. But when sin goes away, so does pain. It will be forever gone.

These are the five things that are listed in Revelation 21:4 as being “no longer.” But I wonder if maybe there are other things that would be included. Yes, I’m sure that in addition to these five things that are at the top of the list, there are many things that are from the flesh, from sin, and from the devil that will be no more. And we won’t ever have to worry about them popping up into our minds ever again; for as the prophet Isaiah has written (in Isaiah 65:17), “For behold, I create new heavens and a new earth; and the former things will not be remembered or come to mind.”