Today's Radio Program: Is There Really Such a Thing as Eternity? A Dave and Tom Classic
Tom: We’re
in the second week of going through Dave Hunt’s book, An Urgent Call to
a Serious Faith. The book begins by posing some questions that ought to
grab everyone’s attention. In essence, what is your view of what takes
place after death? And how do you know you can depend on what you
believe?
Dave,
last week we looked at some of the popular views of life after death,
and I want to just briefly review some of the things we covered last
week. The first thought that some people have is, “Well, when you’re
dead you’re dead.” It’s just extinction. When the lights are out, the
lights are out, that’s it. What about that?
Dave: Well,
you can say that about the body, but you can’t say that about the
spirit. We are spirit beings living in a body, and I don’t think very
many scientists today doubt that. I think we’ve quoted – even
Wilder Penfield, one of the world’s top neurosurgeons, experts on the
brain; and, in fact, Herbert Benson from Harvard quotes him favorably,
saying that the mind is something separate and distinct from the brain.
The mind is nonphysical, and it programs the brain, and the brain is
like a computer that the mind uses to operate the body. This man is not a
Christian.
Now
we’ve also quoted – we didn’t quote him last week – Sir John Eccles,
Nobel Prize winner for his research on the brain. He calls the brain a
machine that a ghost can operate, and normally we’re the ghost that
operates it, our spirit. But other ghosts can operate it as well. If you
go into an altered state of consciousness, which we talked about when
we were dealing with the occult (that’s not our subject now), but the
point we made, I think, last week was a man that sticks a gun to his
head and pulls the trigger, he can only be assured he stopped the
functions of the brain cells! The bullet missed his soul and spirit
completely. So, the big question is: where will you spend eternity? So,
when “You’re dead, you’re dead” doesn’t fit. It doesn’t work.
Tom: Right, the brain may be dead, but there is a mind, a spirit, a soul, that continues on.
Dave: Which,
as Wilder Penfield says, is independent of the brain, okay? So, being
independent of the brain, it doesn’t rely upon the brain for its
existence. It does use the brain when we’re in a body, but now it’s
independent of the brain, and it continues.
Tom: Yeah,
and these men that you mentioned – medical doctors, Benson from Harvard
and others – they’re not particularly Christians.
Dave: Oh, by a long shot they are not.
Tom: Right, and so they are relying on the evidence that’s out there.
Dave: Right.
Tom: Well,
there are those who would say then, “Oh fine; I believe that when we
die, our spirits go on to be somewhere.” So they believe in spirit
survival, but there’s a problem with that as well.
Dave: Lots
of problems, but of course they say we move on into graduate school,
we continue to learn our lessons. There’s no judgment, so Hitler is no
worse off than a Mother Teresa. It may take him a little longer to
“evolve” upward. One of the ways that we can identify these spirit
beings that are telling you this – these are not the spirits of the
dead. The Bible says they are either in heaven or hell. They’re not
flitting about on the astral plane, talking with people. So when you go
to séance, it’s not Aunt Jane that’s speaking through the medium; it’s a
demon impersonating her.
Well,
somebody listening says, “Well, that’s an extreme view! How can you
document it? Very simply, we can document it because of the consistency
of the message that comes through. I’ve interviewed people all over the
world on this subject who have had this experience. So, whether you are
on drugs, whether you are under hypnosis with a psychiatrist, whether
you’ve had an out-of-body experience, or what they call a near-death
experience, or you are channeling – there’s a consistency.
I remember being in Australia a number of years ago reading a New Age
magazine, and this is one of the things that the author was talking
about. He said there is an amazing consistency in the messages that are
received all over the world, independently – people who have never been
in touch with one another – and there is a consistency that comes
through. There’s a philosophy that is being taught.
We
could quote a number of the “experts” who have been traveling around
the world ingesting sacred mushrooms and some of these plants,
psychedelic plants, investigating what is going on, and they will tell
you that these things put us in touch, put man in touch with spirit
beings. And what I find significant is these people who are not
Christians, they say the reason is that these spirit entities that we
get in touch with through these drugs are, “trying to teach us
something.” What are they trying to teach us? It conforms exactly to the
Four Lies that the serpent introduced to Eve in the Garden of Eden that
destroyed the human race.
So,
I think that pretty well identifies who these entitles are. Just for
example, some listeners might remember Bishop James Pike, bishop of
California, Episcopal bishop of California. And his son, James, Jr.,
committed suicide. He was homosexual and apparently in great conflict
over this – committed suicide. James Pike, Bishop Pike, with his
mistress, was visiting his apartment, the dead son’s apartment in
London. Some strange things happened – things moved about, they left
themselves in a certain pattern. He was convinced his dead son was
trying to talk to him, the spirit of his dead son. He went to a medium,
Anna Twig, and what do you know? She made contact with Jim, Jr.! I mean,
the things, the sound of the voice, the things that he said that only
father and son knew about that she couldn’t possibly have known about.
But here’s what the spirit of Jim, Jr., said: “Dad, I’m not here for
just a pleasant afternoon’s conversation. I have a mission, and part of
my mission is to tell you that there is no death . . . ”
Well,
that’s one of the lies of the serpent. “. . . that there’s no judgment
Dad! We just continue to learn our lessons, and we continue to evolve
ever higher. Now, I want you to know [that] Jesus is not the Savior. I
haven’t met him yet. He’s on a higher level, but I’ve heard about him,
and he’s a higher level than I am, which I will evolve up to. And, Dad, I
want you to know: God is not personal, he’s a force.”
Okay,
these are the lies of the serpent, and these are demons who are
impersonating the dead, and there is just no doubt as to their identity.
So, we can prove not only are we are spirit entities; there are other
spirit entities out there.
Tom: Dave,
at the least, what we are trying to encourage people here, particularly
people who have some of these views about extinction, about spirit
survival – what are they – if they’re depending on this, what’s the
basis for depending on it? That’s what we are trying to encourage them.
Dave: Amen, they don’t have any solid basis.
Tom: Right.
Another view, which we haven’t gotten to, we didn’t talk about last
week, but we can pick up today, is the popular view of reincarnation.
That is, there’s an Eastern world view about it, and transmigration, and
there’s a very popular Western view, the idea that, “Well, we’re going
to come back. Maybe in a former life I was even Napoleon or some . . .”
It’s usually a great figure, someone highly esteemed, but “now I get to
go through it again.” What’s the basis for that?
Dave: There isn’t
any basis. Well, it comes out of Hinduism, and you would find that in
the Bhagavad-Gita, you would find it in some of the Hindu Vedas. This
was the teaching of the gurus. This has caused the caste system, for
example, one of the most horrible things you could imagine in India,
beginning with the Untouchables at the bottom who have no status
whatsoever. And you move up through the four castes of Hinduism –
finally you reach the top caste, the Brahmans, and then you can launch
off into godhood. And the goal of yoga, of course, is to escape time,
sense, and the elements to reach moksha to escape this world and finally reach this godhood.
But
there’s no basis for it. Furthermore, we can prove very simply that
it isn’t true. In contrast to spirit survival, there is a judgment but
it’s senseless. It’s not just, there’s no basis for it. Well, let me
give you—there are three simple things about reincarnation. In fact, I
was talking to a very bright woman sitting next to me on the plane the
other day. She was leaning in the direction of reincarnation. It didn’t
take me two minutes to disabuse her of this idea!
There
are three things about reincarnation: It’s amoral, it’s senseless, and
it’s hopeless. It’s amoral, because if I am a husband who beats his wife
in this life, karma, the law of cause and effect, says I must come back
in the next life as a wife beaten by her husband. That means that my
husband in the next life must come back in another life as a wife beaten
by her husband, and on and on it goes forever. So that the perpetrator
of every crime must become the victim of the same crime, which means
there must be another perpetrator, which then there must be another
victim, another perpetrator. So, far from solving the problem of evil,
karma and reincarnation perpetuate evil. There is no solution to evil,
there’s no justice, there’s no one to pay a penalty. You just keep going
on and on and on. It leads to horrible stuff, Tom. For example, if I
pick someone up out of the gutter in Calcutta, clean them up, put them
in a clean bed, I have not helped them; I have interfered with their
karma!
Tom: Right,
you’re not allowing them to work off this problem that they have and
they have to have for all eternity unless it’s taken care of through the
law of karma.
Dave: In
the next life they’re going to have to end up back in that gutter in
that same situation, ok? So it’s amoral. Then, it’s senseless! Is the
world getting better?
Tom: Dave,
this is amoral because if you committed a crime, then someone else
would have to commit a crime against you through the next process, so
that you can pay that off.
Dave: Right,
it’s amoral. Now, it’s senseless also. Is the world getting better?
I hadn’t noticed that. How many people—if reincarnation were true, do
you remember all your past lives? Do I? Does anybody? Now you’ve got a
person here and there—déjà vu, you know, “Oh, I showed up in this little
village, and I have a recollection of being here,” or something. You’ve
got a few little things like that, but that’s not going to help anyone.
In order for reincarnation to make any sense, I should remember the
mistakes of my prior life. I should remember the lessons that I have
learned, so that I could improve. What’s the point of coming back again
and again if I’m not improving?
In
fact, I don’t remember. Nobody remembers! And far from improving, the
world is getting worse. So it’s senseless to keep coming back again and
again. This is why Gandhi himself, who believed in it, said,
“Reincarnation is a burden too great to bear.” I’ve got to keep coming
back again and again, but I don’t know whether I am improving.
Then,
finally, it’s hopeless. The fact that you and I are sitting here right
now making this radio program, Tom, is the result of karma that we built
up in a prior life. Everything that happens to someone in this life is a
result of karma built up in a prior life. So in this life we’re trying
to work off the karma we built up from a prior life, but in the process
of working off the karma from a prior life we build up more karma. So
then we’ve got to live another life to work off that karma, but in the
process of working that off, we build up more karma! We can’t help it.
So then we’ve got to live another life and another life, it never ends!
This is why they call it “the wheel of reincarnation.”
Tom: Don’t the Hindus call it samsara, “the wheel of sorrow”? Because it’s a bad deal, no matter how you look at it!
Dave: It is, and the only way to get off of it is through yoga, so they say, but nobody can prove that.
Tom: Dave,
that’s the Eastern view. Now we have sort of Americanized or
homogenized or Westernized this. We buy it at another level here today.
Dave: We’ve
revised it. They make it sound like it’s good, it’s going to give you
another chance. That’s the whole idea. “Isn’t that wonderful? I’ll have
another chance,” and so forth. It doesn’t work, but, Tom, going back
into the past – now, sitting here—this is the result of
the
karma of the prior life. But that prior life is the result of karma of
the prior life, and that was the result of the karma of a prior life,
and a prior life, and a prior life. You go back into the past as far as
you can go, you reach the point where the three gunas,
it’s called, of the godhead – were in perfect balance in the void. And
something happened to cause an imbalance in the godhead, and because of
this imbalance in the godhead, the prakriti, it’s called, the “manifestation” began, and we are all reaping the result of bad karma that began in the godhead.
Tom: So that’s where the evil began.
Dave: And
it’s built in the fabric of the universe! You can’t escape it; there’s
no hope. So, it’s amoral, it’s senseless and it’s hopeless, and I hope
we have delivered a few people out there from believing in
reincarnation. I remember a young man that came to me late one night,
because he knew I stayed up very late, and he knocked on my door,
probably about one in the morning. He just wanted to tweak me, I think,
because he had been a professing Christian; in fact he had been in a
Bible study of mine. And he said, “Dave, I want you to know I believe in
reincarnation now.”
And I said, “Oh, really? Tell me, what’s reincarnation going to do for you?”
“Well,” he said, “you could become a bug or a tree, or you might move upwards, you know.”
And
I said, “Look, you’ve go to be kidding. You’ve got no basis for this,
first of all; you have turned away from Jesus Christ, who loves you so
much that He died for you on the cross. He offers you eternal life, he
offers you a wonderful life, where He will guide you and bless you, and
instead of that, you want to put yourself in the hands of an impersonal
‘law’ that can’t even think and could turn you into a bug, and there is
no justice! I think you’re crazy! It doesn’t make sense.”
Now,
in contrast to karma, reincarnation, and so forth, and this poor guy in
the gutter in Calcutta, the God of the Bible loves us so much [that] He
came down to where we were. He suffered in our place. He took the
penalty for our sins on the cross so that God can be just and yet
forgive sinners if they will believe in Him and accept the pardon that
He offers on this just basis – not paying for it themselves, not doing
anything, not claiming that they’re “not so bad,” but accepting that we
are sinners and turning to God in repentance and believing in Jesus
Christ, who paid the penalty for our sins. I mean this is good news, but
this other, karma and reincarnation, that’s not good news.
Tom: Dave,
I remember when you were on a radio program – well, no, it was a TV
program – a while back, and you had an audience, and, as I remember
it, weren’t there some women in the audience who had been to one of your
meetings? Well, you can explain that one.
Dave: Yeah,
this was Good Morning, LA, I think, in Los Angeles, and as I walked
into the studio going in where the guests go, somebody came by me, going
into where the audience goes – a young woman. She said, “Oh, Dave, I
heard yesterday morning. Good to see you. My father was a Baptist
minister. I really loved what you had to say!”
She
went into the audience, and the pastor – actually, it was the assistant
pastor; the pastor was away – before he introduced me, he had his aunt,
his aged aunt, stand up and he said what a godly woman she was, and
what an influence she had on his life, and so forth.” She was in the
audience also. There was a host and a hostess – I think it was the
hostess – said, “Before we begin this program, why don’t we see who is
on whose side. How many of you believe in reincarnation?”
Both
of those ladies, the young one and the elderly one, raised their hands.
Now you can’t believe in reincarnation and resurrection, so I was just
absolutely staggered that here we had two professing Christians, and
they believed in reincarnation.
Tom: Yeah,
I think a lot of the reason – and I think I mentioned this last week –
Dave, you tend to buy into some things, and superficially
they sound right, and, you know, you don’t follow through to really
understand what it’s all about, but you pick it up as part of your
theological baggage.
Dave: That’s
why we encourage people to search the Scriptures daily, because if they
would search the Scriptures, they would know that reincarnation is
absolutely contrary to the Word of God.
Tom: Now,
the closest thing in the Scriptures to something like the Law of Karma
would be Galatians 6:7: “Be not deceived, God is not mocked, for
whatever a man soweth that shall he also reap . . .” But there’s a big
distinction between . . .
Dave: There’s
a “but”: “That which you sow, you reap . . . but Christ paid the
penalty, and there is forgiveness with God. In Karma and reincarnation,
there’s no forgiveness, there’s nowhere to turn to forgiveness. This is
an inexorable law that just grinds you down!
Tom: You
know, our subject here is “eternity,” and we’re asking lots of
questions about it – there are things that people try to avoid looking
into, but they do at their, really destruction. I mean, we plan for a
lot of things, but rarely for eternity. But, Dave, aside from the Bible
teaching it, why should anyone believe that there is an eternity ahead?
Dave: Well,
we know, for example that the universe has not been here forever. If it
had been, the sun would have burned out by now. The same for the stars.
We know there was time when they didn’t exist. Now, of course,
the scientists try to say it all began with a big bang, but they have no
explanation of where the bang came from, where was the energy? why did
it happen? and so forth. There was, in fact, we know, a time when
nothing physical existed – out of nothing came everything. Now we know
that it had a beginning. You can’t say that there was some matter
existed back there, because matter doesn’t last forever, Second Law of
Thermodynamics. So there couldn’t have been matter that began this
thing. There had to be a time when there was nothing.
Therefore,
there must have been not some thing but some one who exists, who always
existed – no beginning, no end – who had the capability to bring out of
nothing everything that exists. Okay? Now, this God speaks to us
through His Word, and we can prove that the Bible is God’s Word. Now He
tells us that this universe is going to end and He’s going to bring a
new universe, but He says that He made man in His image. Man became a
living soul – spirit and soul in a body. And bodies wear out, but we
don’t have any reason – there’s absolutely no scientific evidence that
souls and spirits cease to exist.
Now
God warns us that we will either be with Him in His presence, or we
will be separated from Him forever. And Jesus talked more about hell
than He talked about heaven, actually. He taught more about it than
anybody. “Oh, well, Jesus is so loving and kind!” Yes, that’s why He
warned us.
So
the most important question – that’s why we begin the book talking
about death. Death is certain – the death of the body – but the most
important question we can face is “Where will I spend eternity?” Because
we are made in the image of God, who is eternal, we are eternal beings,
and we will be either in His presence, enjoying His love, or we will be
experiencing His wrath against sin, because God is holy and just, and
He cannot condone sin. There’s no escape from this, and, in fact, the
Bible warns us, “How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation?”
Tom: Right,
and He offers us salvation as a free gift. I’m sure there are people
out there thinking, Well, why would God do this? Why would God do that?
The point we’re trying to underscore here is He has made salvation
available for all as a free gift for those who will come to Him.
Dave: Tom,
you can’t even play a game without rules, and somehow or other we
recognize that, but we don’t allow God to have any rules! It would be
like an NBA or NFL player complaining that the referee is narrow minded
and dogmatic because he’s enforcing the rules, or saying that he’s
extreme or intolerant. God has rules! There are rules for the physical
universe – we know there must be moral and spiritual rules. We know that
in our conscience. We don’t have to violate them; He’s provided
salvation for us. If we would accept it, we’d have forgiveness. If we
don’t, the justice of God is going to be meted out.