
Eye has not seen, nor ear heard, nor have entered into the heart of man the things which God has prepared for those who love Him.
1 Corinthians 2:9
On a rainy Monday morning during summer break, as I was driving my son to his play rehearsal, we came upon a road that sometimes floods. As we approached, we talked about that possibility, and he joked, âWell, if we die, weâll learn our lesson! And if we die, we won’t do it again because weâll be in heaven.â
He continued by pointing out that in heaven we donât need cars. âWe can probably just teleport or something.â
I replied, âBut in heaven, weâll always be where we want to be.â
He proposed an alternative view. âBut you might be in the arcade and then you want to go to the donut shop.â
I smiled thinking for a moment about how pointless arcades and donut shops would be in heaven. Being in the presence of God will be all we want. I said, âDo you think maybe in heaven we wonât care about things like arcades and donuts so much because in heaven, somehow, everything will be even better than those things, even though right now we canât imagine how?â
Somewhat overlooking my point he replied, âYeah, in heaven the donuts will taste even better!â
Now, in our town, the very best donuts come from a locally owned shop with the simple name, âBest Donuts.â My son said that in heaven we wouldnât just have âBest Donuts.â We would have âBest Heavenly Donuts.â I laughed in agreement, unable to think of a better name for heavenâs donut shop.
Then he added, âAnd if you go to H-E-Double-Hockey-Sticks, when you bite into a donut, itâs poison, or it has spikes in it, or cockroaches come out of it and you end up eating a cockroach!â
We were still debating whether cockroaches would be in heaven or hell or possibly both (he had a theory on that) when we pulled up to the theater. âLove you!â he called over his shoulder as he jumped out of the car and ran through the rain with his script tucked underneath his shirt.
What will heaven be like? Itâs natural that kids imagine heaven as a place where you have everything you want, just the way you want it. But as we mature we should probably be inching away from that notion.
The joy we will have in heaven is not primarily based on the happiness of being with loved ones or the pleasure of games and snacks. Joy in heaven is centered around worshiping God in His direct presence.
If that sounds boring to you, or if it seems disappointing, like a bait-and-switch, donât feel too bad. It is in fact very hardâ impossible, Paul says âto imagine how it will be. âEye has not seen, nor ear heard, nor have entered into the heart of man the things which God has prepared for those who love Him,â (1 Corinthians 2:9). Having everything we want is the heaven that we CAN imagine. The real heaven will be something we canât imagine; something even better than having the things we want here.
Here on earth we so rarely get exactly what we want, yet that tends to be what we pursue. If we knew of something better than getting what we want, would we pursue that instead?

In heaven we wonât be in these physical bodies. Weâll be in our best âspiritual bodies,â bearing the image of the best âheavenly Man,â Jesus (1 Corinthians 15:44, 49). And I donât think a spiritual body is going to crave donuts or get bored and want to go to the arcade. A spiritual body is going to crave spiritual delights.
But spiritual delights are not restricted to heaven. As we walk more and more in the Spirit and not after the flesh, perhaps we can begin to understand in this life, on a very small scale, the âlife and peaceâ (Romans 8:5-6) that we will have in heaven.
For now, I find myself thankful for the blessing of having a ten-year-old son who thinks about heaven and keeps his play script dry under his shirt as he runs in the rain.
Dear heavenly Father, I thank you for all the physical blessings and pleasures of earthly life. But please change my heart so that it craves spiritual joy more and more. Give me a longing just to be in Your presence, through worship and fellowship now, and for eternity in heaven through Christâs sacrifice. I praise You, Almighty God, in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.
by Christie Cole Atkins


4 responses to “Thoughts On Heaven From A Ten-Year-Old”
Your essay reminds me of what I heard that St. Thomas having said after experiencing his illumination in his older age that all of his writings and ruminations up to that point were not worth the soiled straw in a barn (or something to that effect) compared to what he had just experienced. Meaning, we cannot possibly imagine what true happiness is with God. Not in any sense am I aloof to considering what Heaven is like, but rather I am content to consider that without attaching anything I can experience in my earthly life to our eternal life, it has to be something literally unimaginably beautiful. I don’t worry or ponder whether I will meet up with my beloved wife, or how earthly generations of relatives can possibly interact or anything similar. I am content knowing that if I do enter paradise from acting properly while on earth, that what will be experienced is pure perfection. Which also includes that my soul has been overhauled to cleanse it of any aspect of sin (Dr. James Patrick smiled when he told me that he thought Purgatory might be akin to an automobile repair shop where everything is made good again!)Â
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Above is by Robert Geraci
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I replied to this on your website. This is what I wrote
Your essay reminds me of what I heard that St. Thomas having said after experiencing his illumination in his older age that all of his writings and ruminations up to that point were not worth the soiled straw in a barn (or something to that effect) compared to what he had just experienced. Meaning, we cannot possibly imagine what true happiness is with God. Not in any sense am I aloof to considering what Heaven is like, but rather I am content to consider that without attaching anything I can experience in my earthly life to our eternal life, it has to be something literally unimaginably beautiful. I don’t worry or ponder whether I will meet up with my beloved wife, or how earthly generations of relatives can possibly interact or anything similar. I am content knowing that if I do enter paradise from acting properly while on earth, that what will be experienced is pure perfection. Which also includes that my soul has been overhauled to cleanse it of any aspect of sin (Dr. James Patrick smiled when he told me that he thought Purgatory might be akin to an automobile repair shop where everything is made good again!)
Best,
Bob
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