Donna Green - 20 July 2008 12:41 PM
In an attempt to answer praying to ‘dead’ people. Robert is so right when he says that those in Heaven are more alive than we are. They have completed the race.
Let’s look at the Rich Man and Lazarus - Luke 16:19-31: Here we not only have an example of the dead being able to communicate but also the existence of a place where we are purified. Abraham was somewhere - he was not in Heaven as the gates were not yet open. Jesus went and preached to the imprisoned spirits when he died so that they could here the gospel. These spirits were not in Hell. Call it whatever you like. Catholics call it purgatory.
What about the crowd of witness we have cheering us on (Hebrews). Look at Rev 5:1-14. Those prayers are not prayers of those already in Heaven. No need to pray in Heaven. We just worship in Heaven. Prayers are for the living on earth. I could quote from Maccabees and Tobit, however, protestants removed those books from the Canon as a result of Luther, so that would not be an argument you would even consider.
Sorry to butt in here, Donna, but as an aside, what protestants call the apocryphal books of the bible weren’t actually formally included in the canon until the Council of Trent, which was after the advent of Luther’s reformation. It was not Luther who removed them, rather it was Rome who formally added them and made anyone who refused to accept their authority anathema. Prior to this time, their authority was by no means a done deal within the church.
There are a few issues with your use of Luke 16:19ff: firstly, it was a parable taught by Jesus prior to his death and resurrection, so you must keep in mind that those events are still to come in this narrative. The “even if” of verse 31 is not a statement of whether it is possible for the dead to communicate with the living, or vice versa - it is a rhetorical device to illustrate the point. By his parable, Jesus is calling people to repent and believe in himself, believe in the Word of God (which “Moses and the prophets” refers to) before it is too late. Verse 31 is a foreshadowing of Jesus’ own resurrection, and the fact that even with his own return from the dead, people still refuse to believe in him. The purpose of the whole parable is to point to the finality of death, and the inability to change anything once you are there. The rich man cannot remove himself from torment. His opportunity passed when he ceased to be alive.There is no opportunity for him to “work off” his sins (see verse 26 - no-one is able to cross the chasm). Neither is Lazarus in a state of purgatory.
To claim this parable as evidence for being able to communicate with or pray to the dead is an exegetical fallacy. In reality the parable gives no evidence other than to say the dead can talk to each other.
Also, Revelation 5:1-14 has nothing about dead people “cheering us on”, it appears rather that the elders(v8), angels (v11), and every creature (v13) are solely focussed on worshipping God and the Lamb. There’s no cheering the christians on earth there.
Edit: Sorry, just realised you were referring to Revelation 5:8 - the “prayers of the saints”. We take saints to mean all people who are followers of Christ (I can give you biblical justification for this view). So we are part of the general worship of God in verse 13, and our prayers are symbolically depicted here as incense before the throne. I still don’t see any strong biblical justification for the RC practice of praying to the saints.