Brief Synopsis
Eddie lives an insignificant life as a maintenance man for
the rides at the Ruby Pier amusement park. One day a mechanical failure causes
a fatal accident. Eddie rescues a young girl from her death but in the effort,
he is killed. This is when the adventure begins.
Eddie enters heaven and discovers it is not a garden but a
place where he will meet five people whose lives intersected with his in some
significant way on earth, some readily known to Eddie and some unknown to him.
These five explain the meaning of Eddie’s life and the purpose of heaven.
Through this best-seller fictional story, The Five People You Meet in Heaven,
author Mitch Albom teaches us his understanding of the meaning of life.
In heaven, Eddie learns five key lessons from the five
individuals. First, every life is interconnected so each person impacts others
throughout his or her lifetime in ways that may not be recognized. Second, we
should live sacrificing for others, for such acts inevitably lead to good
outcomes. Third, forgiveness is necessary to find inner peace. Fourth, love is
a powerful virtue that lasts eternally. And finally, our life, as insignificant
as it may seem, has a purpose.
Heaven is a place where we find inner peace with ourselves
when we learn these lessons. Through this process, we are cleansed of negative
thoughts and scars we carried in our lifetime and find true inner peace. After
this, we will choose our heavenly dwelling. There we will wait for newcomers
whose lives intersected ours on earth. We will be one of the five people they
will meet as they learn the meaning of their life on earth.
What accounts for the popularity of Albom’s work? He
addresses two life questions that every individual wrestles with and
desperately seeks answers to: What is the meaning of my existence? and What
happens after death? In a creative way, here is a story that offers
significance to each person’s life and hope beyond the grave.
Albom is an excellent writer and is sincere in his effort.
This story causes each one of us to wrestle with these key questions of our
existence and eternal destiny, issues many choose to ignore but must inevitably
face. He also teaches some valuable life lessons. For these reasons, the story is
enjoyable and thought provoking.
But after reading the story, I found that Albom’s answers
fall short of providing satisfactory solutions to every person’s dilemma. In
some ways he gets us closer to the answer, but never really gets there.
Christians will find that he gives us some appetizers, but fails to deliver the
main dish. In what follows, I will present a biblical critique of this story
and explain how Albom scratches the surface but never finishes the quest for
meaning, significance, and eternal hope.
The Quest for Meaning
What is the meaning of my existence? Does my ordinary life
make a difference? Will I look back on my life with regret, feeling that I
contributed nothing significant in my lifetime? These are issues most people
ask throughout their lifetime and seek answers for.
In The Five People You Meet in Heaven, Mitch Albom
teaches that one does not have to be famous or powerful to impact the lives of
others. Every person who has understanding can know his or her life was
worthwhile.
In Albom’s story, the meaning of life comes from
understanding that everyone’s life is interconnected. Therefore, even small
decisions and actions we take can significantly affect the lives of others. In
a CBS interview, Albom stated, “I think the meaning of life is that we're all
kind of connected to one another. I'm living proof of the influence that one
person can have on other people. Look at what Morrie did for me talking to me.
And I wrote a book to try to pay his medical bills and went from one person to
another person and people come up and say your book changed my life. How did
that happen? I'm convinced that everybody has an effect on everyone.”{1}
It is true that our life does affect others, some in very
significant ways. However, we are still left empty at the end of the novel
because Albom’s proposed solution falls short of providing ultimate meaning for
our existence.
In the story, the main character Eddie learns in heaven that
he impacted the lives of others both positively and negatively, often
unintentionally. Knowing our life led to another’s tragedy or greater enjoyment
still begs the question, “So what?” It may feel good temporarily to know I
made a difference, but that will not bring everlasting satisfaction. Why should
we care if our lives affected others? Before we can answer the question, “What
is the meaning of life?” we must first answer the question, “Why were we
created?”
If we are a cosmic accident as Darwinian evolutionary theory
teaches, there is no intended purpose for our existence. Therefore, our lives
have no ultimate meaning, and impacting the lives of others is meaningless, for
our final destiny is extinction.
If God created us for a purpose, then we need to find out
why He created us. The answer to the meaning of life is directly tied to the
origins question. Since Albom does not answer the origin question, he cannot
provide an adequate answer for the meaning of life question. The Bible teaches
that we were created by God to love Him, love others, and fulfill His calling upon
our lives. Any answer that does not include God as a centerpiece of the answer
will fall short, and Albom basically leaves God out of his version of heaven.
Albom’s Heaven
Could the traditional Christian view of heaven be wrong?
Albom gives us a very different picture. Albom developed his idea from a story his
uncle, Edward Beitchman, told him when he was a child. One night his uncle was
lying near death and woke up to see his deceased relatives standing at the foot
of the bed. When asked, “What did you do?” his uncle responded, “I told them to
get lost. I wasn’t ready for them yet.”{2} Albom remembered this story and
began to develop his concept of heaven for the story.
Albom states, “Somewhere, swimming in my head, was the image
my uncle had given me around that table, a handful of people waiting for you
when you die. And I began to explore this simple concept: what if heaven was
not some lush Garden of Eden, but a place where you had your life explained to
you by people who were in it—five people—maybe you knew them, maybe you didn’t,
but in some way you were touched by them and changed forever, just as you
inevitably touched people while on earth and changed them, too.”
His idea that heaven is a reunion with five people who
explain the meaning of your life is masterfully pictured in this work. With
each encounter the main character Eddie is taught a new lesson that puts the
pieces of his earthly life together so that it begins to make sense. Some
lessons bring joy, others bring remorse, but the pain is a cleansing process
that results in inner peace. After this, individuals will choose their happiest
moment on earth and that will be their eternal abode where they await the
opportunity to teach a recently deceased newcomer the meaning of that person’s
life.
If heaven was a place similar to Albom’s story, we would be
very disappointed, for it is too small and shallow. Our souls are much bigger
than this. How quickly we would get bored once we discovered the impact our
life made and then spent eternity in a heaven we dream up for our pleasure.
Earthly pleasure becomes painful when we get too much of it. The heaven
described in the Bible is very different from this earth. Our joy is not
wrapped in repeating earthly pleasures but is found in a person, Jesus Christ,
who is the center of all creation. Our present earth is fallen and suffers the
effects of sin. In heaven, sin and its consequences are not present.
God is the main focus in heaven, but unfortunately, in
Albom’s story, God plays a very small role. Psalm 16:11 states, “You have made
known to me the path of life; you will fill me with joy in your presence, with
eternal pleasures at your right hand.” Only a heaven created by and centered on
God will be big enough for our soul.
Do All People Go to Heaven?
Albom’s bestseller presents a new and creative vision of
heaven. I agree with Albom that there is a heaven and
an existence beyond the grave. However, it appears that Albom implies
that everyone will go to heaven, and with this I disagree.
Albom portrays realistic characters in his story, none of
whom lived a perfect life. All are guilty of some sin and negative behaviors
that have consequences, some greater than others. There is some remorse when
individuals in heaven learn how their actions caused negative results, but
there is not a just payment for their sin.
Albom appears to assume that everyone will eventually find
peace when they learn their lessons from the five people they meet. Although
this is a comforting note, it is not what the Bible teaches. Albom’s story
doesn’t reveal the dilemma facing all human beings: sin, failing to perfectly
live up to God’s perfect standard. It is because of sin that the Bible teaches
that not everyone can enter heaven. Jesus states in Matthew 7:13, “Enter
through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and
broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But
small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find
it.”
The reason is found in the
biblical understanding of human nature and God’s nature. Man is sinful while
God is holy, perfect, and without sin. The Bible teaches that all are guilty of
sin and cannot enter into the eternal presence of a holy and just God. Romans
6:23 states, “For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is
eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.” What is required is a perfect savior who will pay the price for sin. Albom does
not deal with the true nature of God, man, heaven’s purpose, man’s dilemma of
sin, and the solution that God freely offers.
The Bible also teaches that there
is a price for rejecting God’s gift of grace, Jesus Christ. Jesus states, “For
God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the
world through him. Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does
not believe stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of
God's one and only Son” (John 3:17-18). All who reject Christ cannot stand
before a holy God, and will be separated from Him eternally in Hell.
Fiction can often teach principles that are true. However in
this work, Albom’s foundational idea of heaven misses the mark because he does
not present a proper understanding of human nature and God’s holiness.
The People You Will Meet In Heaven
Who will we really meet in heaven? Our answer is revealed
in the Bible, the Word of God. The Bible is proven to be God’s inspired word
through miraculous confirmation and the testimony of Jesus Christ the Son of
God. Jesus confirmed His claim to be God through His miraculous life and
resurrection, and He affirms the authority of the Bible. The truth about heaven
then is revealed not in a novel but in this divine revelation.
The Bible teaches several events will occur at death. First,
our immaterial essence, our personality—intellect, soul and spirit—separates
from the body and enters fully conscious into a new state of existence (Luke 16
& 2 Cor. 5:8). Here we are in agreement with Albom, but our agreement is
short lived. Following this, we will find ourselves in a setting not familiar
to us but foreign to us because we will find ourselves in the glorious presence
of the King of all creation. The Bible teaches that the glory of God shines
forth in a way that is more brilliant than the stars or the sun (Rev. 21:23,
22:5). Throughout the Bible, when saints caught a glimpse of God’s majestic throne,
they were awestruck and fell down in worship.
Once we comprehend the majesty of where we are and who
stands before us, we will meet Jesus Christ, the ruler over all creation. He
is the first person we will meet after death. He will execute His
judgment determining our eternal destiny. Some will enter into God’s presence,
while those who have rejected Christ will suffer eternal torment in Hell.
The next people we will meet in heaven are the saints of all the ages past (Rev. 7:9
and 19:1). There will be more than five; there will be a multitude! Along with
them will be the angelic host.
Will we understand the meaning and see the impact of our life on earth? We will know everything about our life and much more. We will come to a full understanding of God's plan for all of creation. Only then will we see how our lives played a role in God’s
overall plan. We will see things from a renewed perspective because our minds
will be transformed and freed from the limitations that resulted from sin. 1
Cor. 13:12 states, “Now we see but a poor reflection as in a mirror; then we
shall see face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I
am fully known.” If we knew the glory of the real heaven, we would say Albom’s,
and any human attempt to describe heaven, is too small.
Notes
- CBSNews.com, The Early Show, "Five People You Meet In Heaven," Sept. 25, 2003, http://www.cbsnews.com.
- The Five People You Meet in Heaven Web site, http://www.albomfivepeople.com/abouteddie.htm, 5/25/2005
© 2005 Probe Ministries
About the Author Patrick Zukeran is a research associate with Probe Ministries. He has a B.A. from Point Loma Nazarene University, a Master of Theology from Dallas Theological Seminary, and a doctorate from Southern Evangelical Seminary. He is an author, radio talk show host, and a national and international speaker on apologetics, comparative religions, Bible, and theology. Pat hosts a nationally syndicated radio show “Evidence and Answers” (www.evidenceandanswers.org) which also airs throughout Asia. Before joining Probe, Pat served for twelve years as an Associate Pastor. He can be reached via e-mail at
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. Pat currently resides in Plano, Texas.
What is Probe? Probe Ministries is a non-profit ministry whose mission is to assist the church in renewing the minds of believers with a Christian worldview and to equip the church to engage the world for Christ. Probe fulfills this mission through our Mind Games conferences for youth and adults, our 3-minute daily radio program, and our extensive Web site at www.probe.org. Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by contacting us at: Probe Ministries 1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100 Richardson, TX 75081 (972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
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