by Hollands » Fri Jun 19, 2015 10:27 am
What a fantastic question!
Jesus said a lot about eternal life and eternal punishment.
If you can, I highly recommend reading through one of the gospels a few times and just writing everything that Jesus says about eternal life and death in a separate notebook. It's often said that Jesus is actually the Bible character who talks about hell the most (12 times I think) and that's before we even start talking about eternal life.
I'll stick with Mark and John as they're the two gospels that I know best:
Mark As somebody very helpfully pointed out, Jesus bursts onto the scene in Mark 1, proclaiming that "The time is fulfilled the kingdom of God is at hand, repent and believe in the gospel." This centres Jesus at the very heart of this good news. Why has the time been fulfilled? Why is the kingdom now at hand, because Jesus is here! What an arrogant statement that is. Unless of course Jesus really is God's king. It's a bit like me walking into a party and saying, okay guys, now the fun can really start (which would never happen as I'm not that fun ...).
So ... immediately we know that at the heart of God's "gospel" = "momentous news" is Jesus.
So what about this eternal life business? Interesting in Mark's gospel I think that eternal life doesn't come up that much until Mark 8 (please correct me if I'm wrong!!) You find out in Mark 5 that Jesus has the power to raise people from the dead (young girl dies, it's as easy for Jesus to wake her as from sleep).
Jesus also does a lot of miracles in 1-8 and gives some crazy chat (check it out!), but eternal life doesn't come up in a big way again until Mark 8.
Then in Mark 8, when the thicker-than-two-Redwood-planks disciples finally have God open their eyes to understand that Jesus is God's promised king, all of a sudden Jesus starts saying that he has come to die and then rise again. Not only that, but that if you want to follow him, you have to die too, to quote:
"“If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. 35 For whoever would save his life[d] will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake and the gospel's will save it. 36 For what does it profit a man to gain the whole world and forfeit his soul? 37 For what can a man give in return for his soul? 38 For whoever is ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation, of him will the Son of Man also be ashamed when he comes in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.”
So Jesus very clearly makes an individual's response to him key to their eternal destiny. He makes it a binary choice. Either we follow him and take up our cross - i.e be willing to put our whole lives at his disposal, after all, the only people "taking up their crosses" in Jesus' day were the guys walking to the execution site carrying their own electric chair equivalents. Or, we cling to our own lives now, don't trust him, but then when he returns to judge he will be "ashamed" of us. That doesn't sound good, especially as it's in the category of those who "forfeit their soul".
This sounds like a tough call eh? And it is. The disciples over the next three chapters routinely fail to live up to this most fundamental commandment. They don't seem to pray in Jesus' name to cast out a demon, they are not humbly following Jesus to death, they're still clinging to glory and arguing about who the greatest disciple is (ch.9 and ch.10)!!! On top of that, through chapters 9-10 the requirements of being a disciple get are further elaborated and only seem harder. You need to be rock solid on no-divorce, have the humility of a child, and fascinating of all you have the rich young man.
The rich young man comes with your very question "Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?" Jesus asks him if he's obeyed the commandments (interestingly leaving out the one about coveting), which amazingly the guy is able to claim that he has fulfilled these commandments! So Jesus asks for one more thing, to sell his possessions, give to the poor and follow Jesus. He goes away sad as he has many possessions. The disciples then ask the right question "Who then can be saved??" If even this guy who was so righteous, always honoured his parents, had never stolen etc. if even he can't get in then what hope is there for the rest of us? Jesus response: "With man it is impossible, but not with God. For all things are possible with God."
All of this leads you at the end of 10 to be sure that the disciples, and by extension, any of us, are not worthy of this kingdom, when bam then comes the explanation.
Jesus explains in 10:45 "For the Son of Man [that's Jesus' term for himself] did not come to be served but to serve and give his life as a ransom for many." (my bolding added). Jesus' death will be the ransom. i.e it will buy back these disciples, who cannot earn their own
forgiveness from God.
The rest of the book then has Jesus' pitted against the religious rulers of his day, their plot to kill him, his willingness to die for his people and let them execute him (e.g doesn't run away, doesn't fight it at the trial (despite his innocence)).
Conclusion The whole book climaxes in Jesus death - why? Because this is the main thing that Jesus came to do. He came to ransom all who turn to him.
So what must we do to have eternal life? It's impossible with man, but if you turn to Christ, follow him, trusting in his ransom-death then you can be assured that you have eternal life. If you can trust one guy, you can trust Jesus. Mark heaps up a load more reasons to trust him that I haven't had time for, all his miracles, his great teaching, how he handles those who hate him, his courage, his steadfast love for his people. I highly recommend that you have a go at reading Mark's gospel if you at all can, it's shorter than a Sunday paper!
I was going to try and do John, but I'm over and out for now! Good night.