Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking up into heaven? This Jesus, who was taken up from you into heaven, will come in the same way as you saw him go into heaven” (Acts 1:11). Today, men in white robes, heavenly messengers, address us with the same words. The Son of God has accomplished the work of salvation for which he took on human nature. Jesus Christ, the God-man, fulfilled the promise that the Creator made in the earthly paradise to the first people after sin: “I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and her offspring; he will crush your head, and you will strike his heel” (Genesis 3:15). Christ finally triumphed over Satan; redeemed man from the slavery of sin at the price of his most precious blood; and when he rose from the dead, he opened the gates of heaven for us. Now Jesus Christ, the God-man, takes our human nature to heaven, to the Father’s house, and shows that the ultimate goal and fulfillment of human life is eternal happiness, heaven.
But do we really want to go to Heaven? Are we aware that eternal happiness is worth striving for? How often do we ask the Lord God in our prayers to help us reach heaven? Or are our intentions, efforts and plans more connected to securing happiness in this life? The temporal equivalent of happiness is paradise. The ultimate fulfilment of human life in eternity is heaven. Today, let us ask ourselves whether we desire heaven or paradise more. Are our daily efforts directed towards creating paradise on earth, or are they intended to lead us to heaven? What is the highest value of life for me? ‘For where your treasure is, there your heart will also be’ (Matthew 6:21).
The Creator placed Adam and Eve in an earthly paradise. They were given perfect conditions for life and development. They were given a clear command by the Lord to develop, be fruitful and enrich themselves: ‘Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it’ (Genesis 1:28). According to God’s plan, life in paradise was to be one of love and peace, free from disease, suffering, cataclysms and injustice. Humanity was to develop harmoniously and subdue the earth. Unfortunately, the sin of pride and disobedience deprived the first humans of their earthly paradise. ‘Therefore […] through one man sin entered the world, and death through sin’ (Romans 5:12). Man was deprived of paradise, and life forces each of us to work hard for our daily bread and face adversity and human weakness. We all experience the imperfections of human nature through illness, suffering and death. However, through hard work and sacrifice, we conquer the earth and strive to build a replacement for the biblical Garden of Eden here on earth. We are trying to build a paradise on earth. Each of us wants to be happy, fulfilled, and secure in life. We all have different ideas about what makes us happy, but that is what we are all about in our everyday lives..
Although many people do not want to admit it, it must be acknowledged that our lives are getting better and better thanks to hard work and effort. People complain all the time. However, the amazing fact is that the more a person has, the more they invent and demand. The desire to live in an earthly paradise will never be satisfied. Material things will never make a person fully happy. We will always want more. The rush for the lost paradise is happening before our eyes. People have never lived as well as they do now, and I do not know if they have ever been as greedy and demanding as they are today. We want paradise here on earth. Yet we do not fully know what that paradise should be. Yet we push away the truth about spiritual life, human transience and the completion of human life in eternity.
The outstanding film director Andrei Tarkovsky said: ‘If a person lives without knowing the reasons for their existence, without knowing why they came into the world or why they have to live here for several decades, then the world will reach the position in which we are now.’ Since the Enlightenment, humanity has become excessively interested in material things and has allowed the desire for knowledge to dominate it’Therefore,. If, at the same time, humanity had yearned for spiritual values, it would have developed in a more harmonious way, guided by spiritual principles. Today’s civilisation has reached a dead end. People and politicians have become slaves to the system they themselves created. Computers have taken power over people. To stop this process, we need spiritual work and enlightenment from above. Only this can save us.
We live very comfortably and in abundance. We never go hungry. Perhaps most of all, however, we lack gratitude and appreciation for everything we have and have achieved in life, and the joy that should accompany them. However, despite all the beauty in this world, we mustn’t forget that heaven awaits us — eternal happiness after our temporary life ends. Everyone who comes to this world will someday leave it. In death, no one will replace us. We cannot take the earthly paradise with us. So let us enjoy life and not lament, but instead enjoy the fruits of our labour. At the same time, let us work for heaven. Let us not forget eternity. Let us undertake spiritual work with faith in order to achieve eternal salvation. We were called to life and came to this world primarily to achieve this. We will leave the paradise we have laboriously built over time. We will leave everything we have gathered behind. Everyone knows this, yet many people are reluctant to acknowledge this truth. This cannot be done. Even the death of their loved ones will not convince them. Neither will their own fatal illness. It is a drama that the Lord Jesus speaks about in the parable of the rich man and Lazarus: ‘If they do not listen to Moses and the prophets, they will not be convinced even if someone rises from the dead’ (Luke 16:31).
Therefore, St Paul prays: ‘May the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of him’ (Ephesians 1:17). Let us strive to be wise in life. Just as we are prudent in temporal matters, so should we be wise in matters of the spirit. ‘May the eyes of your heart be enlightened so that you may know what is the hope of his calling and what are the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the saints (Ephesiansit 1:18). Let us strive to see the hope of our calling to eternal happiness. Jesus Christ atoned for our sins by dying on the cross. When he rose from the dead, he opened the gates of heaven. St Paul says of this: ‘No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who love him’ (1 Cor 2:9).
No earthly paradise, however perfect, will ever satisfy the desires of the human heart. We all experience this truth. We earn, buy, furnish and repair, and then we start thinking about what new things we could introduce into our lives. Material possessions, work achievements, entertainment and pleasures will never make a person truly happy. What each of us needs most is love. Those who have found love no longer search for it but enjoy the stability and fulfillment that it gives. Without love, an earthly paradise becomes hell. Conversely, where there is love, even in modesty, paradise is created.
Heaven is infinite, loving happiness. ‘We who have believed have come to know the love that God has for us. God is love, and those who abide in love abide in God and God abides in them’ (1 John 4:16). It is good that we conquer the earth. However, we will never build a paradise here that satisfies our desires. We must remember this. Jesus’ ascension to heaven shows us the ultimate purpose of human existence. Heaven is the communion of the saved people with God in the Holy Trinity, one forever and ever. Therefore, let us strive for heaven more than for an earthly paradise. The earthly paradise will pass away, but heaven will be eternal. Amen.