Will I See My Pet in Heaven?
Several of my friends have had to say goodbye to their four-legged family members recently.
It’s something I’ve also experienced more than a few times over the years. Each time, these losses lead to the inevitable question of whether we will see our pets again. Children, especially, want to know: after all the painful goodbyes, will there ever be another hello?
I know what I’d like the answer to be. I’d like to know that I’ll once again enjoy the company of the animals that have brought such joy to my life on this earth. I’d like to believe that the mistreatment some animals have suffered at the hands of cruel humans will somehow be recompensed with something much better.
That’s what I’d like to know. What I do know is that God is good…all the time. And all the time, God is good. So what does this mean for our pets?
The Bible is an extensive account of God’s dealings with humanity. It tells us what we need to know to be in a restored relationship with the One who created us. But there are things the Bible does not tell us. One of the things it does not spell out for us is what happens to animals when they die.
Now, I know that Jesus did not die for the animal kingdom. He died for people. And I know that many Bible scholars say that heaven is for humans, not animals.
But I also know the Bible tells us “the creation was subjected to frustration, not by its own choice” and that it “will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the freedom and glory of the children of God” (Romans 8:20-21 NIV). Does “the creation” include animals?
Isaiah 11:6-9 mentions animals being present in the millennial kingdom. Wolves, lambs, leopards, goats, calves, and lions. Cows, bears, oxen, and cobras. When Revelation 21:1 speaks of the “new earth,” some Bible scholars believe this restored creation will be everything the Garden of Eden was before sin entered the world. And the Garden contained animals.
Still, there is a difference between animals in general and our pets in particular. Lions will someday lie down with lambs, but that doesn’t mean my boxers, Romer and Lacy, will romp celestial fields with me. Then again, it doesn’t mean they won’t.Bottom line? We can conjecture all we want, but our opinions don’t really matter. What matters is that God is good all the time, and whatever He does will be right…for us and for the animals we love.