Showing posts with label heaven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heaven. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Heaven is for Real by Todd Burpo with Lynn Vincent


First published in November 2010, Heaven is for Real is now on its 61st week on the New York Times Best Seller List. As with many “faith” stories, reviews of the book are mixed. When Burpo’s son Colton was almost four, he had a near death experience in the hospital and later told his family that he had been in heaven for that time, with Jesus. He described some things that seemed to tally with Biblical accounts of heaven, and some things that the Bible does not mention, such as Jesus having a multi-colored horse. Todd Burpo, a minister, relates how matter-of-factly Colton surprised him and his wife with these pronouncements about what happened to him. Like other children that age, Colton is not trying to tell any story, he only shares details or convictions that seem to be triggered by what he’s watching or what is happening around him – whether it be a television show or a funeral at their church.

Some of the information that Colton shares is about events his parents say they did not tell him about, like the fact that he had a baby sister who had died before being born. He told them that she came up to him in heaven and kept hugging him. And he said that his father’s grandfather introduced himself to Colton while he was there. What was striking to his father was that none of the pictures he had of his grandfather were of him as a young man, but Colton knew who it was when Todd had an early picture sent to him. Perhaps Colton was guessing who this unidentified man was supposed to be. Some readers have suggested that since Colton’s dad Todd is a minister that Colton had absorbed many ideas of the things that he said happened to him. The story is told as though Colton just came out with these “revelations” bit by bit, and that his parents were careful not to react too strongly to his statements.

What we are left with is the impact of the impression his experience had on Colton. How he keeps telling everyone how much Jesus loves children (until his family almost says, okay, we GET it) and how concerned he is about whether a dying parishioner really does love Jesus or not. And what about the little girl in heaven who kept hugging him? About a year later, when Colton is being baby-sat, he starts crying and saying he misses his sister. Why does he think of her then? His mother has just had a baby, giving him a younger brother – maybe with his parents gone, he was lying there and remembered her and suddenly felt –really experienced – the distance between them. Many times children “know” something, but it takes a certain time and place for them to realize it.

Perhaps when Colton grows up, he’ll let us know that he kind of made the book up. But I tend to doubt it. Even though the family (and their church) has had a windfall from the book’s popularity, it’s hard to see the story as being man-made. It’s a slight, airy book, just wafting through your consciousness and not disturbing much of anything, unless you spend some time thinking about it. And that’s probably the secret of its success.

Click here for the catalog listing

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

90 Minutes in Heaven / by Don Piper


In 1989, Pastor Don Piper of South Park Baptist Church in Alvin was driving home from a minister's retreat north of Houston when his car was struck head on by a prison delivery truck. He was killed instantly. In the same instant that his body died, his soul, all of his conscious awareness and self-possession, were reconstituted in heaven. For the roughly 90 minutes he was within his celestial body, Piper very simply portrays his amazing and beautiful revelation--although he's very quick to stress the profound difficulty in translating his experiences into words. He was greeted by family members such as his great grandmother, his grandfather, and a childhood friend who died young. Simultaneously he was assimilated into a choral assembly which moved forward towards the gates of heaven (which he did not enter). Following this, Piper miraculously regained consciousness within his terrestrial body. Only by then everyone, including the paramedics who'd concluded their examinations and were simply waiting on the coroner, knew he was dead because well, he was dead. It took a great and overwhelmingly paradoxical compulsion on the part of a man named Dick Onereker, also a pastor on his way home from the same retreat as Piper, to convince the onsight medical personnel to allow him to pray for Piper's condition. The rest is (still) history.

From a fundamentalist Christian perspective (and of course in other spheres of belief), there are more of these than you might think. And as many of them that describe heaven also talk about the other place (i.e., 23 Minutes in Hell by Bill Wiese). Many of them are very reputable and thorougly authenticated and there are others which are maybe not so much. Now-deceased heart surgeon and author Dr. Maurice Rawlings has seen and experienced his fair share of death and near-death experiences (NDE's) and is a good individual resource to check out. Stories like this aren't excluded from Biblical reference (2 Corinthians 12:1-4, Luke 16:19-31, etc.) nor are they absent from modern and medieval history. But many of the contemporary resurrection stories and NDE's fail to present a carefully documented, biblically-accurate rendition of their experiences, something which, truth of fiction, leads to questions over quality and validity among both scoffers and believers. Piper's book is very much the truth. It isn't a perfect or even preferrable narrative--he's not a very interesting writer and he spends the overwhelming portion of the text describing his excruciating recovery and the current pain he still lives with--but few will doubt that the author's tale. Readers wanting to bolster their faith, curious about the afterlife or just in the mood for a true modern tale of miraculous occurrences will want to read this book. Further info about Piper and his story can be found here. (231.73092 PIPER)