We run our website the way we wished the whole internet worked: we provide high quality original content with no ads. We are funded solely by your direct support. Please consider supporting this project.
Will We Get Bored in Heaven?
In this episode Greg argues that heaven will not be boring. “I experience boredom as pain.”

Send Questions To:
Dan: @thatdankent
Email: askgregboyd@gmail.com
Twitter: @reKnewOrg
Greg’s new book: Inspired Imperfection
Dan’s new book: Confident Humility
Subscribe:
Category: ReKnew Podcast
Tags: Afterlife, Heaven
Related Reading

Will There Be Room For Us All In Heaven? The Traffic Question.
In this episode Greg responds to a question from Dan about rush hour traffic. Episode 37 http://traffic.libsyn.com/askgregboyd/Episode_0037.mp3

Will We Get Answers in Heaven? (podcast)
Greg talks knowing and not knowing, and considers eternal learning. Episode 523 http://traffic.libsyn.com/askgregboyd/Episode_0523.mp3

Are you an annihilationist, and if so, why?
Annihilationism is the view that whoever and whatever cannot be redeemed by God is ultimately put out of existence. Sentient beings do not suffer eternally, as the traditional view of hell teaches.I’m strongly inclined toward the annihilationist position. The reason is that it strikes me as the view that has the best biblical support. I’ll…

Podcast: Between Here and Heaven: What are Your Views on Purgatory?
Did we throw the sanctification baby our with purgatorial bathwater? Greg purges his views on purgatory. http://traffic.libsyn.com/askgregboyd/Episode_0340.mp3

Starting to Smell
What happens to you when you die? Do we immediately go to heaven as is commonly thought? What can we learn from near death experiences? In this short video, Greg speaks to what the Bibles says about our future after we die.

Baby Universalism and Reasonable Infanticide
Here’s a perfectly random brain stimulator: In contemporary western Christianity it is almost universally assumed that deceased babies automatically go to heaven. I call this the doctrine of “baby universalism” (similar to “canine universalism” = “all dogs go to heaven”). There are a few scriptural passages that can be used to support this perspective (e.g.…