I do not understand your article. Are you separating heaven into the general population and God's throne room? Are you thinking about walking streets of gold and wanting a "mansion that's silver lined" and upstairs somewhere is the throne of God?" To you, all the symbolism in Revelation is heaven? or maybe your headline was just a trick question.
I can’t speak for the author’s intentions, only for what I took from the article. To me, he wasn’t trying to split heaven into different parts or turn the imagery from Revelation into a definition of heaven. I read it as a reminder that our faith is centered on Christ Himself rather than on the benefits we receive from Him. In that sense, the call seemed to be about keeping our focus on knowing and loving God, not about redefining what heaven is or separating it from His presence.
For many believers, longing for heaven is simply another way of longing to be with the Lord, so I didn’t see the article challenging that. It read more like an encouragement to let our relationship with Christ in the present shape how we live, while still holding on to the hope of being with Him forever.
I do not understand your article. Are you separating heaven into the general population and God's throne room? Are you thinking about walking streets of gold and wanting a "mansion that's silver lined" and upstairs somewhere is the throne of God?" To you, all the symbolism in Revelation is heaven? or maybe your headline was just a trick question.
I can’t speak for the author’s intentions, only for what I took from the article. To me, he wasn’t trying to split heaven into different parts or turn the imagery from Revelation into a definition of heaven. I read it as a reminder that our faith is centered on Christ Himself rather than on the benefits we receive from Him. In that sense, the call seemed to be about keeping our focus on knowing and loving God, not about redefining what heaven is or separating it from His presence.
For many believers, longing for heaven is simply another way of longing to be with the Lord, so I didn’t see the article challenging that. It read more like an encouragement to let our relationship with Christ in the present shape how we live, while still holding on to the hope of being with Him forever.
But our relationship with Christ is heaven.