What happens to a believer after death?

What happens to a believer after death?
Redemption Theology

TL;DR:

Believers go immediately to be with Christ in joy and rest after death. But the ultimate hope is still ahead—the resurrection and eternal life with Him.

from the old testament

  • The Old Testament provides no details to distinguish the afterlife of the wicked from that of the righteous. Instead, it refers to all going to “Sheol,” the region of the dead (for example, Genesis 37:35 and Psalm 16:10).
  • Though the Old Testament does not give much specificity of Sheol, we are told that those in Sheol are conscious (Isaiah 14:9–10). The implication is that believers are consciously aware of where they are and of the presence of other believers and Jesus. Note that no clarity is provided on whether they are aware of events on Earth.
  • The Old Testament acknowledges that Sheol is an “intermediate state,” noting that there will be a final judgment at which time the wicked and righteous will have different eternal states (Daniel 12:2).

from the new testament

  • Paul expressed confidence that he, as a believer, would immediately be in the Lord’s presence at death (Philippians 1:23). This fact is supported by Jesus telling the believing thief he’d be with Jesus in paradise that evening (Luke 23:43) and the story Jesus gave of Lazarus being in Abraham’s bosom right after he died (Luke 16:22). Therefore, we can confidently say that believers who are currently dead are with Jesus at this moment. It’s a time of rest from the cares of life (Luke 16:25) and thus implicitly a time of great joy.
  • However, we also get hints that it is not as good as things will get for the believer. For example, in Revelation we read that “the souls of those who had been slain for the word of God and for the witness they had borne … cried out with a loud voice, ‘O Sovereign Lord, holy and true, how long before you will judge and avenge our blood on those who dwell on the earth?’” (Revelation 6:9–11). Though they were with God and at rest, they still feel that things are incomplete. They were killed, but had not yet been avenged for their wrongful deaths. The implication is that believers are with Christ, yet things have not yet been put right. That is supported by the fact that it is not until Revelation 21, after the final judgment, that God wipes away every tear from the believers’ eyes (Revelation 21:4). Taken together, this implies that the current state is wonderful but not yet perfect.
  • That feeling of a lack of completion likely extends to the sense that the believers were created to be a unified body and soul, and yet are now separated from their bodies (2 Corinthians 5:1–4; cf. Ecclesiastes 12:7). That said, the limited insights we get from Luke 16 and Revelation 6 may indicate that discomfort is mitigated with temporary bodies.
  • Our hope is in Jesus' final return and our resurrection (1 Corinthians 15:42–44). At that time we will be unified with Jesus and living eternally with Him in the perfect heavens and Earth (Revelation 21:1–4).

implications for today

“When we all get to heaven, what a day of rejoicing that will be… when we all see Jesus, we’ll sing and shout the victory.” That hope is not just a future celebration—it is meant to shape how we live right now. Because Jesus has already defeated death (1 Corinthians 15:55), we no longer have to fear it; instead, we can face life’s hardships with confidence, knowing they are temporary and purposeful. When we remember that death leads immediately to being with Christ, we can hold loosely to the pressures, pain, and uncertainties of this world and rest in Him even now.

At the same time, we don’t settle for simply enduring life—we live with anticipation and certainty in Christ. We fix our hearts on what is still to come: the resurrection, the restoration of all things, and life in a world where sin, suffering, and death are gone forever (1 Thessalonians 4:16; Revelation 21:3–4). We seek to live out God's kingdom values as we await that day.

Our certain future fuels present faithfulness, calling us to walk in obedience, invest in what is eternal, and encourage others with the same hope. We grieve differently, endure differently, and even rejoice differently because we know the end of the story. So we live today with eternity in view—letting the certainty of our future shape our reality today.

understand

  • Believers immediately go to be with Christ when they die.
  • Though our souls go to be with Jesus, our bodies await resurrection.
  • When Christ returns, believers will be raised bodily and live forever with Him in the new heavens and Earth.

reflect

  • How does knowing that you will immediately be in Christ's presence at death change the way you think about your own mortality?
  • How are you challenged or encouraged by understanding what happens after death and what is still to come?
  • How does the reality that believers who have died are with Christ right now affect the way you grieve the loss of fellow believers in your own life?

engage

  • How might the Christian doctrine of bodily resurrection shape the way believers think about death, burial practices, and the ultimate destiny of the physical body?
  • What does the progression from the intermediate state to the resurrection to the new heavens and Earth reveal about God's ultimate intention to restore His creation?
  • How should the certainty of future resurrection and life in the new heavens and Earth influence the way we prioritize what truly matters in our lives?