The Book of Life
The Book of Life
The Book of Life
0
Number 89
The Book of Life
TS: Welcome to the Naked Bible Podcast, Episode 89, The Book of Life. Im your layman, Trey
Stricklin, and hes the scholar, Dr. Michael Heiser. Hey Mike, how are you doing this week?
MSH: Very good, good to hear your voice again.
TS: Welcome back from Colorado. How was that?
MSH: It went well. We had estimates 50-70 people over the course of two nights, nice crowd.
People asked good questions. Theyre real attentive, met lots of nice people so it was fun.
TS: Sounds good, so this week were going to be talking about some heavenly books.
MSH: Yeah, were continuing sort of if you can call a string of unrelated topics a series, this
would be the latest installment of our topical items. And this one comes from a number of
passages actually that actually make reference to things being written in heaven or heavenly
books and, specifically, the book of life. So what I want to do is I want to at least read these
passages and talk about where this idea comes from and sort of how to think about it, how to
parse it, how an ancient person would've perceived this sort of language and what it all meant or
at least could have meant. There's more than one option here because the language is actually
used in different contexts as well find. But just to give people an idea of what it is were talking
about, in Luke 10:20 for example, we read this. Jesus says,
20
Nevertheless, do not rejoice in this, that the spirits are subject to you, but
rejoice that your names are written in heaven.
MSH: So there we get this writing language that somewhere there's some record in heaven of
their names. You get the same idea in Philippians 4:3 where Paul writes,
3
Yes, I ask you also, true companion, help these women, who have
labored side by side with me in the gospel together with Clement and the
rest of my fellow workers, whose names are in the book of life.
MSH: A clear reference there, a number of these are in the book of Revelation, Revelation 3:5
says,
5
The one who conquers will be clothed thus in white garments, and I will
never blot his name out of the book of life. I will confess his name before
my Father and before his angels.
MSH: Revelation 13:8 and Revelation 17:8 are kind of close in what they say, close conceptually,
but 13:8 says,
8
and all who dwell on earth will worship it, everyone whose name has not
been written before the foundation of the world in the book of life of the
Lamb who was slain.
The beast that you saw was, and is not, and is about to rise from the
bottomless pit and go to destruction. And the dwellers on earth whose
names have not been written in the book of life from the foundation of the
world will marvel to see the beast, because it was and is not and is to
come.
MSH: A few more these, Revelation 20:12 says,
12
And I saw the dead, great and small, standing before the throne, and
books were opened. Then another book was opened, which is the book of
life. And the dead were judged by what was written in the books,
according to what they had done.
MSH: Later on in that same passage, in verse 15, it's says,
15
And if anyone's name was not found written in the book of life, he was
thrown into the lake of fire.
But nothing unclean will ever enter it, nor anyone who does what is
detestable or false, but only those who are written in the Lamb's book of
life.
MSH: So this final vision of the heavenly Jerusalem, we have another reference to the book of
life. Now there are more than these. They're actually a number of these kinds of things in the Old
Testament, and were going to be getting to them, but what I want to do is sort of start with the
Ancient Near East and work our way into the Old Testament and then a little bit into the Second
Temple Period then we'll come back to this point in the New Testament and talk about this sort
of language, conceptually how all this would've been parsed, what it means for our
interpretation. So to start off in the Ancient Near East, this idea actually does have a very
ancient precedent.
There are a couple of scholars who made studies of this. One such article just to pick one
at random here, Shalom Paul wrote a book in the Columbia University Ancient Near Eastern
Society Journal called the Heavenly Tablets and the Book of Life. And what Paul's article talks
about are Sumerian and Mesopotamian parallels or I should say precursors to what we'll see in
the Old Testament and what you see later on. So in the Ancient Near East in the Sumerian
Mesopotamian material, their notion of this was that the gods were considered the determiners
of peoples destinies. That's not really a foreign idea, not something that would be unexpected,
but the gods would write their decisions for someone's destiny on what the cuneiform material
refers to as tablets of destiny. So the idea here is not so much, at least in most of the
references, not so much a pre-destined life in terms of the specifics. You'll get up. Youll eat
breakfast.
Youll turn left and turn right and go to work and this and that'll happen. Rather the idea
is how long a person's going to live, the length of their life, when it will end. So the tablets of
destiny idea in the Ancient Near East is really focused on that kind of thing, length of life, how
long youll live, so on so forth. It gets a little more granular because there's also a record of what
you do, good and evil, good or evil, so there are tablets that record misdeeds, errors, crimes,
oaths that you break, and also good things that you do. So the gods are recording what happens
during your life. But there's also this idea that the gods have sort of determined how long you're
going to live. If we could think about it, we have this notion now. There's nothing theologically
aberrant about it. We say God knows how long Im going to live. God knows when it's my time.
God knows when my time is going to be. Well, of course he does, so that idea is not unfamiliar.
But the notion that that is sort of recorded or written down somewhere is very, very ancient,
even prior to what we think of, what we have as our Old Testament.
The issue that isn't so clear is while the gods know how long youre going to live and they
record, notice I'm using these terms deliberately, they know how long youre going to live, when
youre going to die, and they record what you're doing. How do those things accord or not with
the notion of predestination? Honestly, that is not so clear, even in the Ancient Near Eastern
material. Theres another thing to say here that in the Ancient Near East, this idea, at least in
terms of anything that's really specific, is sort of focused on kings. This isnt surprising because
most of the Samarian Mesopotamian literature that was written that has survived is about the
gods and about the people that the gods install as kings because the kings are the ones that pay
the scribes and the scribes, royalty is the patron of the scribe, the scribal trade. You don't get
scribes running around Mesopotamia recording everybody's life or tablets of destiny stories
about them, but it's really focused on the destiny of the king and what the king does or not.
which in Mesopotamian thinking is going to determine whether the gods are happy or not,
whether that king's dynasty is going to survive and bad things happen to the kingdom and so on
so forth.
So a lot of the material that you get from the Ancient Near East is focused on the royal
figure. I want to read an excerpt is that as an example. This is from Andrew George's article.
Andrew George might be familiar to some listeners. This is the guy who produced the latest
critical edition of the Gilgamesh tablets. You can buy his translation in the Penguin Classics
series, his English translation of Gilgamesh. But George in an article in the Iraq Journal entitled
'Sennacherib and the Tablet of Destinies writes about a particular text labeled K. 6177 and K.
8869. Those are the tablet numbers, and he writes this,
Anu, Sin, Samas, Adad, Beletili and !Star of the Bit Kitmuri temple,
the shepherd who makes humble obeisance, the agent of Assur,
his lord. ( 15) [O Assur, father (?)] of heaven, king of the gods,
determiner of destinies, you alone hold in your hands the Tablet of
Destinies of the gods: look after the reign of Sennacherib, king of
Assyria, and determine(?) as my destiny a fine destiny, a destiny
of good health (?) (and) kingship! Exalt my head among all who
reign, and (20) let the base of my throne be secure as a mountain for
long days to come! For me, your provisioner, from east to west
subject [all the foreign lands(?)] to my yoke! Let the human race
beseech [you that my sons,] my grandsons, my dynasty ( 25)
[and my descendants(?) ] endure among
humanity [for all] eternity!"
MSH: So Sennacherib is appealing in this text to this particular god, Assur in this case, asking
the determiner of destinies to give him a good destiny. So there's a bit hear in this text in terms
of the king of asking that something be done is this predestination or not. Well, sort of but if it
was predestined, wouldnt it already exist? Here we have Sennacherib asking for a good
destiny. You could also read it that hes asking for help and the gods are up there thinking well,
okay, do we like this guy or not? In other words, it wouldnt be predestined if you look at it that
way. And the reason I'm getting into the whole predestined or not is the idea behind these
tablets or these books in heaven were going to go into the Old Testament and on through, but it
is the idea of a pre-destined account or a predestined fate. Is that what these tablets or books are
about intrinsically or not? As were going to see, the contexts vary just because these books exist
and are referred to.
I'm not arguing that we get to heaven someday and were taken to a big library and God
pulls a book. Here's your record. This is a metaphor for the fact that God keeps track and God
knows what our destiny is. God knows what we do. So the easiest way in an ancient culture,
whether it's biblical or pre-biblical, is to convey that idea. The easiest way to do it is the scribal
trade because thats what scribes did. So when we see these things mentioned in Scripture, the
overarching point that the biblical writers want us, wants the readers to get is that there's
nothing that you do good or bad that goes unnoticed by God. He is omniscient. He knows all
things. He knows what youre doing, what you didn't do, what you should have done, all that sort
of stuff. And he knows the extent of your life. In some cases it's clear that he knows your birth.
He knows when you're going to die. Is that just knowledge that God has or does that knowledge
require the idea of predestination?
Now for those whove read Unseen Realm, you know, I cant remember exactly what
chapter it is, 5,6,7, something like that. I refer people to passages like 1 Samuel 23 where its very
clear that the fact that God foreknows something does not require that that thing was
predestined for the simple fact that in that chapter, you have two things God foreknew that
never happened. By definition, foreknowledge did not necessitate predestination. Now it can.
There are passages like that obviously in the Bible as well but it's not a foregone conclusion and
that same ambiguity is going to apply with respect to the idea of heavenly books. And actually it
is present in even earlier material with heavenly tablets. So in some cases, there might be some
predestination going on, in other cases there's not, and it's not parsed out for us. Now the
fundamental ideas here that enter into this are concepts of sovereignty, foreknowledge,
omniscience, so on so forth. Now a lot of Christians who are listening to this, a lot of people who
are listening are not Christians sort of have a preconceived idea or way that they think of
sovereignty.
And what I've already said to this point might even be in conflict with that, and in fact, it
probably is because we sort of assume that foreknowledge requires predestination but it doesn't.
We want to be cautious and allow for sort of both directions as we proceed through the text that
Im going to bring up here. And as they play out, especially in the Second Temple Period, you're
actually going to get the idea used in a variety of contexts and not all of them require
predestination or even have predestination or anything like that in view. So lets just proceed
here with some Old Testament passages. I think the variety here will become apparent. The
concept is a lot wider than God predestinating something. So lets just start in Exodus 32:32.
This is a passage that probably will occur to many people listening to this. We have Moses saying
to God in response to God's anger against Israel,
32
But now, if you will forgive their sinbut if not, please blot me out of
your book that you have written.
MSH: There's this notion that Moses name is in a book. It's not called the book of life here but
we can sort presume that it is because in the context, it's a life or death issue, its annihilation
versus not being annihilated by God in his anger. So Moses is sort of offering to trade places.
Annihilate me. Get rid of me rather than this people. And we can go back to the passage and
Moses has some other things to say about why, God, why you shouldn't do this, because what
will the nations say and that sort of thing. But for our purses here, this is referenced to a book,
this book thats written. We see it in Isaiah 4, we read,
3
And he who is left in Zion and remains in Jerusalem will be called holy,
everyone who has been recorded for life in Jerusalem,
MSH: Now earlier in Isaiah, the book is going to be about the impending exiles, plural. So we
have this notion of God knows who's going to be left alive in Jerusalem. So there's this book,
theres a record of it. It's a metaphor for the fact that God knows this stuff. Isaiah 65:6-7,
But I will tell you what is inscribed in the book of truth: there is none
who contends by my side against these except Michael, your prince.
MSH: So we get this reference to a book, heavenly book. Daniel 12:1, another one,
At that time shall arise Michael, the great prince who has charge of your
people. And there shall be a time of trouble, such as never has been since
there was a nation till that time. But at that time your people shall be
delivered, everyone whose name shall be found written in the book.
MSH: Malachi 3:16,
16
Then those who feared the LORD spoke with one another. The LORD
paid attention and heard them, and a book of remembrance was written
before him of those who feared the LORD and esteemed his name.
MSH: Psalm 56:8,
MSH: So its this reference to a record of who's going to be in Zion or whos associated with
Zion and whos not. Now all of these references refer to some type of book, some type of record,
things being written down. What I'm suggesting to you is that this is a very I think powerful
metaphor for the idea that God does keep a record in his head or whatever because hes
omniscient. Hes not going to forget something but God knows our destiny. He knows the course
of our life. He knows what we do, good and bad, all that sort of thing. This is not unfamiliar
theology. In fact, it's very familiar but it's actually associated with this sort of record keeping
idea. Now in the Second Temple Period, there are a number of references to the same idea of
heavenly recordkeeping and whatnot, specifically in books like 1 Enoch and the Book of Jubilees,
things like that. Im just going to read a few references to this idea. In the Book of Jubilees 19:9,
we read this.
He did not say a word concerning the rumor which was in the land that
the Lord said he would give to him [MSH: talking about Abraham and
Sarah] and to his seed after him, but he begged a place there so that he
might bury his dead because he was found faithful and he was recorded as
a friend of the Lord in the heavenly tablets.
MSH: If you remember this episode from the Old Testament, Abraham buys a field and cave
from the Hittites there to bury his dead. It becomes the ancestral burial place. There's no
reference to heavenly tablets in the Old Testament account. But here in the Book of Jubilees
commenting on that episode we get this phrase, he was recorded as a friend of the Lord. Now,
that comes out of the Old Testament, Abraham being the friend of God. But here we have he was
recorded as a friend of the Lord in the heavenly tablets so you get a reference to this idea that
there is this heavenly record so to speak. So Jubilees 30 we get another reference to this idea.
Jubilees 30 well start around verse 19 or back to 18, this is about Levi by being chosen for the
priesthood.
The seed of Levi was chosen for the priesthood and Levitical orders to
minister before the Lord always just as we do. And Levi and his sons will
be blessed forever because he was zealous to do righteousness and
judgment and vengeance against all who rose up against Israel. And thus a
blessing and righteousness will be written on high as a testimony for him
in the heavenly tablets before the God of all. And we will remember for
1000 generations the righteousness which a man did during his life in all
of the appointed times of the year. And it will be written on high and it
will come to him and his descendants after him and he will be written
down as a friend and a righteous one in the heavenly tablets.
MSH: Again, a very clear reference to the tablets idea. In 1 Enoch, lets just get one from Enoch
here. In 1 Enoch 47, well just start at the beginning and read what it says there.
In those days, the prayers of the righteous ascended into heaven and the
blood of the righteous from the earth before the Lord of spirits. There shall
be days when all the holy ones who dwell in the heavens above shall dwell
together. And with one voice they shall supplicate and pray, glorifying,
praising, and blessing the name of the Lord of the spirits on behalf of the
blood of the righteous ones which has been shed. Their prayers shall not
stop from exhaustion before the Lord of the spirits. Neither will they relax
reverent until judgment is executed for them. In those days, I saw him, the
antecedent of time, while he was sitting upon a throne of his glory and the
books of the living ones were open before him and all his power in heaven
above and his escorts stood before him. [MSH: sounds very similar to
Daniel 7] The hearts of the holy ones are filled with joy because the
number of the righteous has been offered.
MSH: So a pretty clear reference to the heavenly book idea. But you get the idea there are some
references to heavenly tablets and books in this material. Now I picked those references for
specific reason because they convey different ideas. There are actually more references to
heavenly tablets and books in Second Temple material so if you read through that material,
youre going to find a lot more than these. But a lot of the references that you find in Second
Temple Jewish material actually refer to the tablets. So the Jews had this idea, at least one
stream of Judaism had this idea that the Torah, the tablets of the Law were sort of eternal and
they occupied space in heaven before they were given to Moses and then they went back to
heaven and that kind of thing.
So excluding those references and that idea, what I want to focus on here are passages
like the ones I just read to you where theres some recordkeeping of our lives going on. Now in
Jubilees 19:9, lets just think about some of the things that we just read. If we go back here, back
to our Jubilees reference to pick up or just allude to or comment on a few things. In Jubilees
19:9, we have Abraham was recorded as a friend of the Lord in the heavenly tablets. In the
context, it reads as though it's after the fact. So you couldnt read, I suppose it could be forced in
there, but the most sort of natural reading of this is that Abraham lives his life, does these
things, obeys God, responds properly to what God wants him to do, and then it's recorded in this
book that he was a friend of the Lord. So this is sort of a reference to recordkeeping and not
predestination.
Theres no hint really that this is sort of predestined but its recorded after the fact that
Abraham was a friend of God. He was a good guy, that sort of thing. And you get the same feel
for what was said about Levi in Jubilees 30. So we don't have to have the notion of
predestination going on either in Old Testament references, Second Temple references, and
were going to take this eventually to the New Testament and talk about what we see there. Lets
go back though before we hit the New Testament and think about a few of the passages that I
read in both the Old Testament and Im going to try to sort of make some categories here of
what's being talked about and how we can see this in the Old Testament. Its going to be
reflected in Second Temple material, and then when we get to the New Testament, some of the
same categories are going to apply. So in the Old Testament, there were some clear references to
the idea that there's a heavenly record of good and evil, and probably the most obvious reference
for that was the one we read from Isaiah 65:6-7,
Then those who feared the LORD spoke with one another. The LORD
paid attention and heard them, and a book of remembrance was written
before him of those who feared the LORD and esteemed his name.
22
26
But I will tell you what is inscribed in the book of truth: there is none
who contends by my side against these except Michael, your prince.
MSH: Now, is this book of truth a sort of pre-extant plotting out of human history that, let's go
look up and see what's going to happen. Or is it a record that's made as things happen? There's
some ambiguity there. Psalm 87, look at that again,
At that time shall arise Michael, the great prince who has charge of your
people. And there shall be a time of trouble, such as never has been since
there was a nation till that time. But at that time your people shall be
delivered, everyone whose name shall be found written in the book.
MSH: That language, that verb tense makes it seem like all the names were written in there
previously. You can certainly read it that way. What I'm getting to is that there is ambiguity in
the Old Testament texts. We talked about the same thing happening in the wider Ancient Near
Eastern world where we can't really nail it down. And the answers probably both. It just
depends on the passage, on the context, both can be true. And for those of you have read Unseen
Realm, you know that I'm comfortable with that because that's ultimately sort of where I land in
the book.
Nevertheless, do not rejoice in this, that the spirits are subject to you, but
rejoice that your names are written in heaven.
MSH: The question comes up, when were they written down? Were they written down when
they responded to the call of Jesus and embraced him as who he said he was, the Messiah, or
was that all predetermined? Were not actually told in the verse and the concept, heres the
point. The concept of this being recorded or known in heaven doesn't require based on these
earlier references in the Old Testament. It doesn't require that we read Luke 10:20 in an
exclusively predestinated sense. You could but there's nothing in the text that requires it and
there's nothing in Old Testament antecedents to this idea that requires it. It's a possibility but
that's all it is, its a possibility. Its an interpretive option. It's not a required perspective.
Philippians 4:3, lets go back to this one. We have here Paul writing and he says,
3
Yes, I ask you also, true companion, help these women, who have
labored side by side with me in the gospel together with Clement and the
rest of my fellow workers, whose names are in the book of life.
MSH: The same question, are the names in the book of life because that was predestined or
were they recorded "in real-time when they believed? Were just not told and we know from
earlier antecedents, earlier examples that you could go either way with that. Revelation 3:5, the
reference to the whole blotting out, the same idea. The two most I guess difficult verses, if you
recall from the way we began the episode, Revelation 13:8 and 17:8, these verses are often used
for a really hard and fast predestinarian perspective. But lets just go back there and read them,
Revelation 13:8, talking about the image of the beast, verse 8 says,
8
and all who dwell on earth will worship it, everyone whose name has not
been written before the foundation of the world in the book of life of the
Lamb who was slain.
MSH: So you look at that and we have a reference here to before the foundation world. That
sounds predestinarian. And Revelation 17:8, lets just go there quickly, has very similar
language.
8
The beast that you saw was, and is not, and is about to rise from the
bottomless pit and go to destruction. And the dwellers on earth whose
names have not been written in the book of life from the foundation of the
world will marvel to see the beast, because it was and is not and is to
come.
MSH: Now here's the question. Is the phrase, from the foundation of the world, does that refer
to the book that exists? Does it refer to the memory of God, which exists before the foundation
of the world, or does it also refer to the act of writing the names? You might think, well, thats
splitting hairs. Actually it's not. These are legitimate questions because if this is a metaphor for
God knowing things, well then God always noticed things. He knows all things real and possible
and he knows what's going to happen, what could happen. He knows all this. But the fact that he
foreknows everything, an event that will happen versus an event that won't happen, by
definition you can't have a hard and fast line to predestination there because of the things that
don't happen.
The things that do happen, they could be predestined, some of them, some of them
maybe not. It could go either way. So when you read a verse like Revelation 13:8, Revelation
17:8, just the fact that there is a record mentioned, that doesn't require predestination because
you have to ask yourself well, if all this refers to God's memory, it has to be around before the
foundation of the world. So then the second option, the second question becomes important. Is
this also a reference to a person's destiny in eternity past, so to speak, or is God making a record
when things happen, because we've seen from other passages that that is the feel you get for this
recording idea when things happen. Then things sort of get entered into the book or they
become part of the basis for how God is going to judge you. Its hard to know. Even in a passage
like this that has this qualifying phrase, before the foundation of the world, we can't necessarily
tell what precisely it refers to, especially if this is a metaphor for God's knowledge because the
fact that God does something ahead of time doesn't require that be predestined but it could
mean that. So were sort of left with this ambiguity.
Last thought with respect to these two verses, those whose names are not written before
the foundation of the world, does that statement refer to all people who have ever lived or does it
refer to the people in view in this passage? In other words, when these events start playing out
with respect to the beast and the image of the beast and taking the mark of the beast and all that
sort of stuff, what's written here in Revelation, does it refer to those people at that time, in that
place, in that circumstance? It has to at least refer to them. But does it refer to anyone who's
ever lived? Well, you can read it that way and many have. But the question arises does it have to
be read that way? The answer to that is no. It doesn't have to be read that way. So we're left with
a bit of ambiguity going on there. But to wrap up, lets just go to Revelation 20:12, which is the
passage we sort of think about this,
12
And I saw the dead, great and small, standing before the throne, and
books were opened. Then another book was opened, which is the book of
life. And the dead were judged by what was written in the books,
according to what they had done.
MSH: Now, there are some who read this passage and say this teaches that you get to heaven or
not based upon your works. We don't have to read it that way and frankly, we shouldn't read it
that way because of a hundred other passages in the New Testament that talk about salvation by
grace through faith and not of works. If you actually look at the passage and think about some of
the Old Testament precedents for this,
12
And I saw the dead, great and small, standing before the throne, and
books were opened. Then another book was opened, which is the book of
life. And the dead were judged by what was written in the books,
according to what they had done.
MSH: Look whos judged. Ill read it again. The books were opened, books plural, then another
book was opened, which is the book of life. The ones who were judged are actually being judged
not by the book of life. Theyre being judged on the basis of the books, plural, what was written
in the books and that is a record, as we seen from Old Testament precedent, that's a record of
their sin. God knows your sins. So it's true that those who are not written in the book of life are
going to be judged on the basis of their sin. Why, because salvation is by works? No, they're
judged on the basis of their sin because their sin has not been covered. Their sin has not been
erased. Their sin has not been removed. Think about what Paul says in Colossians 2:14. This is
the reference where Paul talks about the canceling of the record of debt that stood against us
with its legal demands.
This Jesus, God, set aside, nailing it to the cross. If you don't have the benefit of, I'll use
just sort of an evangelical aphorism or phrase, if you dont have the benefit of having your sins
covered by the blood, then they are still outstanding. That record has not been canceled. That
record still stands. And that record is the record referred to here in Revelation 20:12 because the
books, plural, that are there are the ones that are used to judge the dead and the dead do not go
to everlasting life with the Lord. Those who are in the book of life have that destiny but the ones
who are not in the book of life, the ones who are in the other books, the record of their sins and
those sins have not been taken care of, then we know their destiny. And so that's the idea. Its
not that were saved by works after all. It's that no, if your sin has not been dealt with because of
your response to the gospel, then that record still stands and God will not forget it.
So to summarize the whole concept of the heavenly books, the books of life, heavenly
books provide the basis for negatively not having eternal life. In other words, the sins are
recorded. It's a metaphor. God knows that you sin. God knows what we do and therefore,
because he knew that, he sent Jesus. This is the whole reason for the gospel, maybe not every
reason. The significant major reason is that this has to be taken care of. They will always be on
your account until the cross cancels your debt and the only way that can happen is by embracing
the gospel. So the book of life, the heavenly books idea reinforces the believer's destiny in one
direction and the unbeliever's destiny in the other. Secondly, I would say the metaphor also
reinforces the point that God does indeed watch. God does indeed watch and take note, not like
God's a heavenly accountant, good deeds and bad deeds, but as we read in one passage in Psalm,
God sees all the circumstances of our life. He can emphasize with our suffering because he does
know the things that we endure.
He knows the things that we enjoy. He knows the things that cause us suffering. He
knows all of it. And so the whole concept of the heavenly books, the book of life, is bigger than
tallying sins that can still be held in the unbeliever's account. Its bigger than that. Its that God
knows everything and a God that knows everything is able to respond and sympathize with us.
It's not just that Gods a cold calculating detached accountant that knows your story, not just a
record of little individual acts that you do or things that you failed to do. Its bigger than that.
And third, our ultimate destiny, I think that this whole idea tells us, our ultimate destiny is in
God's hands. And frankly, we read one passage that expands to the nations, actually read a
couple of passages that expands the whole idea to God knowing what goes on on a geopolitical
level, if we can use that term, on a national scale, a nation scale. In other words, nothing
happens whether to the individual person or to people en-masse. Nothing happens that is
beyond the reach of his own acts and his own decisions, his own judgment, and his own
sympathy. So all of these things need to be factored into how we think about this notion of a
record and have this whole idea of heavenly books.