Page:Heaven Revealed.djvu/68
Now compare the Old with this New doctrine concerning heaven, and note the contrast. The former teaches that heaven is a place, into which people may be admitted arbitrarily—suddenly—by an act of immediate Divine mercy; the latter says it is a state of life into which people come gradually, and only through voluntary obedience to the laws of that life revealed in the Divine Word. The one teaches that admission into it is granted as a reward for certain acts done or refrained from here on earth; the other, that entrance is effected through the normal opening of the interiors by religious obedience to the God-given laws of the soul. The one presents it as a desirable locality to which the souls of the pious will be transferred when they leave the body; the other, as a certain kind of life that each one must carry with him—obscured though it be, and but partially developed here below. In the light of the Old doctrine, therefore, heaven seems to be an arbitrary gift of God, conditioned, it is true, on the receiver's faith and repentance; while the New doctrine reveals an organic and necessary connection between heaven and earth—be-