What will our resurrection bodies will look? The issue of the afterlife is a complicated one, but we can be sure of what the Bible tells us about certain aspects of heaven, says evangelist and author J.John
Some of us who struggle with our waistlines have concerns that we will still be overweight in heaven. We are worried about having to choose the low-calorie option at the wedding supper of the lamb (Revelation 19:9) and wearing a tight white robe for all eternity. Actually, while it might seem flippant, it’s not a trivial question. It raises very important issues: what will we look like in heaven? Will we have crooked teeth, bald heads and knobbly knees? And what about those with lost limbs, scars or deformities?
Heaven is a real, solid place and we will be equally real and solid
These are important and sensitive issues, but they are also tricky ones. The Bible talks a lot about believers being raised from the dead and going to be “with the Lord” forever but it offers us few details. Our best information comes from the descriptions of Jesus after the resurrection and from teaching in the letters, especially by Paul in 1 Corinthians 15. Given our limited data, the safest answer to most questions to do with heaven is simply “we don’t know”. Nevertheless, some things can be said. Let me suggest five certainties that I find in the Bible that are helpful.
Joyful
First, heaven is going to be a joyful place of fulfilment and perfection where we who have followed Christ will experience the full presence of God and spend an eternity safe from any form of anxiety, pain, grief, suffering or evil. And ‘evil’ includes fear, shame, disgust and self-loathing.
Real
Second, heaven is a real, solid place and we who, thanks to Jesus, get there are going to be equally real and solid. Any idea of faint, transparent spirits holding harps and sitting on fluffy clouds should be ignored. In heaven we will have bodies that are more solid than those we have at the moment.
Different
Third, in heaven we will be very different to what we are now; as different, Paul says, as a seed and the plant or tree that it grows into (1 Corinthians 15:36–37). That extraordinary change may explain why we are told so little about the resurrection body: it would be hard to explain to a tadpole what it’s like to jump like a frog, or to a caterpillar what it’s like to fly like a butterfly.
Perfect
Fourth, our new bodies will be perfect and glorious. Now although that’s an idea that greatly appeals to me when I look in the mirror, step on the scales or go to the doctor, neither I, nor anybody else, knows exactly what that means. Nevertheless, what we will have will be a definite improvement on the disintegrating bodies we have now. Those of us who follow Christ are not going to merely get some cosmetic makeover, but a whole-body upgrade!
Wholly us
Fifth, despite this extraordinary change we will, however, keep our identity in heaven. If you have put your faith in Jesus, then it is you personally who will be in heaven. The disciples were in no doubt that the Jesus who met with them after the resurrection was the same man they had followed for three years. The same principle will apply in heaven: despite our upgraded bodies you will still be you and I will still be me.
Because heaven is a place of perfection, I think we will each have a perfect body in shape and size. We will be whole and healthy, with no pains, aches or diseases. And with 20:20 vision as there will be so much to see.
Will I be fat in heaven? No! I will be happy and content with everything.
Will I be Fat in Heaven? And Other Curious Questions by J.John is available to pre-order from canonjjohn.com