Todd Smith's Blog

A day in the life of Todd Smith

How Old Will I be in Heaven?

This morning my daughter Abby asked how old she would be when she got to heaven?  Uuhh, well, ummm!!   I didn’t know, and told her so.  Whether we are the same age as when we die, 33yrs old (same as Jesus) or some other age, I don’t know.

Have your kids asked you that question?

What did you tell them?

June 11, 2009 - Posted by | Uncategorized

25 Comments »

  1. My kids have never asked me that. Abby is quite the smart cookie! 🙂
    We did, however, have a discussion about this in college in my Modern Theology class. I remember our prof said he thought we’d all be in about our early 30’s. (I can only imagine he guessed that because that is how long Jesus lived on the earth, but I’d be interested to know how he came up with that. I wish he’d given some reference for that…) I remember telling him that I hoped he was wrong because I was in my early 30s then and very pregnant, and said I didn’t care to spend eternity waddling around… although there’s no pain in heaven, so I really shouldn’t complain, I know!

    It DOES make you wonder, though. I’ll be interested to see what others say.

    Abby is quite the deep thinker. Love it!

    Comment by Momma Mango / Susan | June 11, 2009 | Reply

  2. Okay, I’ll take a stab at it: Since age is a measurement of time and heaven will be infinite we won’t have an age. Just as there won’t be sadness or illness there won’t be an age to limit us. We won’t be too young to ride the best rides at the amusement park or too old to run or skip or do cartwheels for fun. We will be perfect and forever with God.

    Comment by Robin | June 11, 2009 | Reply

    • WOW!!!WOW!!!WOW!!!
      That is cool! I love that Thought!

      Patricia

      Comment by Patricia | June 13, 2009 | Reply

    • Wow, this is a great answer, Robin! :]
      Now just how to explain it to sweet little minds?

      Comment by Lauren | June 14, 2009 | Reply

    • So I actually teach 3-6 year olds at church where we take a linear journey through the bible each year. There are many abstract concepts to cover, but I have found that if you can tap into an emotion or feeling that they are familiar with that they can relate. Thus, the examples I gave. What would precious Abby feel standing in line at the amusement park and waiting for an amazing ride only to be told she was too young to go with Daddy? Or how would she feel to play with Grandma and have her not be able to go down the slide because she was too old and couldn’t physically climb the steps?
      Once they feel those feelings then you can parallel how heaven won’t have restrictions or limit us from what makes us feel happy. Then I think they understand how different heaven will be.
      Sounds to me though that if Abby is thinking at that layer she will be able to grasp the answer! 🙂

      Comment by Robin | June 14, 2009 | Reply

  3. I don’t have kids, as I believe you know! 🙂 However, being a elementary teacher and nanny (at times), I am around children quite a bit. Although, I’ve never been asked that one!

    I got your tweet on my phone today, during my Master’s class, and pondered that one for quite some time. Unfortunately, I didn’t come up with an answer, but wanted to thank you for encouraging me to think today!

    Blessings, Todd!
    Jess 🙂

    Comment by Jess :) | June 12, 2009 | Reply

  4. have never been asked that,but I think I would say something like,only Jesus knows how many days on this earth we have.He will take us home when He is ready for us. No matter the age.

    Comment by Laura | June 12, 2009 | Reply

  5. Great question from Abby! I think I’m with Robin and I don’t think we’ll have an “age”; but how do you explain that to a child? Lack of age? I’m not sure I can even really put my mind around it!
    My 3 (almost 4) year old hasn’t asked that exact question, but she does ask a lot of questions about Heaven and says often that she wants to go see God in Heaven. I feel really torn about how to respond to her most of the time. Tough questions from little ones and I wish had more answers.

    Comment by ashley | June 12, 2009 | Reply

  6. My daughter asks that question all the time. She has a sister in heaven, and is hoping that Madison will still be a baby when we get to her…I’m secretly hoping that too. I only got to hold her for four short hours. I want to hold her as a baby again for a long time! I’m sure you all understand that. 🙂

    Comment by Kathy | June 12, 2009 | Reply

  7. sometimes i feel (or wish) that we will all be able to see the person we love in the way that we love them. for instance, i may get to see my grandmother as how i remember her, sweet but elderly. although my grandfather may see her as she was the day he married her. i’m hoping i’m right, but i know that whatever it is or however it happens, it’s going to be amazing!

    Comment by kristen | June 13, 2009 | Reply

  8. Actually, I was just thinking about this while I was listening to Selah 😉 and taking a bubble bath…like Robin had said – since age is a measurement of time, and our bodies grow with time…and our physical bodies are left here on earth when we pass away and our souls are taken to Heaven with Jesus and God…so do our souls have an age? I don’t think so. They just are. So I don’t believe there is an age in heaven.

    Comment by Lauren | June 14, 2009 | Reply

  9. I don’t care… so long as I’m allowed on the bouncy castle. *grin*

    My kids asked me when God was born. Thankfully, they took the “He just always was” answer.

    Comment by Jen | June 18, 2009 | Reply

  10. I wish I knew. When I my baby went to heaven in April, I kept asking anyone who I thought may know. Everyone seems perplexed by this. I got the perfect “age 33” remark, too.

    My 4 year old son said that when we go the heaven, we can hold our baby girl if she is a baby and HUG her if she is not a baby any more. I thought, wow…he came up with that on his own.

    Comment by Sarah | June 23, 2009 | Reply

  11. Hey Todd,

    This comment really has nothing to do with this post but I just wanted to tell you. I LOVE Selah and think Amy Perry’s voice is beyond amazing (Yours too 🙂 ) and am soooo excited for the new cd. I have been following Angie’s blog since before Audrey was born and it has been a huge blessing.

    When ya’ll came out with the duets album there were two songs on there that were really amazing to me. Faithful One and Glory. They sounded amazing. I sing at my church and really wanted to sing those with someone in my church but at the time there wasn’t anyone there to sing them with me. I had emailed Angie and told her that one day I was going to sing a duet with you. 🙂 Since then we have gotten a new pastor and he sounds very similar to you so we sang them in the Church. I still want to sing with you someday. Your voice is amazing.

    I feel that God is calling me to sing as a “career”. I want to go to Nashville really bad and just see what it’s like. If there is any advice you can give..I will take it. 🙂

    Thanks for allowing God to use you,

    Dani
    godsprincess08.blogspot.com

    Comment by Dani | June 30, 2009 | Reply

  12. You know, that was something we pondered when our Gabriel went home to heaven. I knew that, logically, he couldn’t remain 2 years old forever. However, I had a hard time imagining him as an adult. A priest friend said, “His soul is fulfilled.” I know that however Gabriel “looks” when I meet him again, I will recognize him.

    I have to say that your song “I Will Carry You” and Nicol’s song “71 Days” are so beautiful. I’ve thought for a long time that, perhaps, some artists should make a compilation of songs such as those for those of us who have children in heaven. That actually sounds like a good title for a song, “Children in Heaven”. I know I would treasure such an album.

    God bless your beautiful family.

    Jennifer

    Comment by Jennifer | July 28, 2009 | Reply

  13. My children have never asked that, but my [now 16yr old] son did say when he was 10, that he hoped it would be a long time for rapture because he didn’t want to be a kid for all eternity…..

    Comment by Callie | August 10, 2009 | Reply

  14. There is nothing human or earthly about Heaven. No age!

    Comment by David Waters | August 14, 2009 | Reply

  15. This question was just asked by a 10-year-old girl in our Sunday school department. As was suggested above, we cannot perceive heaven from an earthly viewpoint. It is a spiritual dwelling. I believe there is no specific age in heaven, but rather our level of mature understanding. We will have our glorified bodies, but mainly the “youngest” person there will have perfect knowledge and know just as much as the “oldest” person there.

    Comment by Albert | September 1, 2009 | Reply

  16. Job 33:25 has the answer—we will be brought back to the days of our youth

    I listen to you guys a lot and I like your music. I am very impressed with your lengala and kicongo.

    Comment by Robert Williamson | November 20, 2009 | Reply

  17. I love the question your little girl asked about heaven. I’ve always believed we’ll be the perfect age; in our prime; maybe in our early 20’s (who knows). Age is a “time-thing” and in heaven there is no time as we know it. I often wondered how we would recognize each other once we get their either by death or rapture… I hope its the same way we would recognize our precious Lord and Savior; by His amazing love & the relationship we’ve had with him. I don’t know much, but I do know it will be exciting, amazing, and very very REAL. I’m looking forward to seeing my future home & hugging all those who have already taken the trip across the Jordan River! Love your ministry in music. Always makes the Lord seem so close! That’s what its all about.

    Comment by pam t | March 20, 2010 | Reply

  18. I have often wondered that question myself…especially after recently loosing a baby to stillbirth and triploidy. Will she still be a baby?

    My daughter hasn’t asked me that question, but she did ask me when do you die IN Heaven. And obviously, I told her that we don’t die IN Heaven…when we get to heaven we have eternal life and live forever. In her 5 1/2 year old way of being smart said, forever and ever and ever and ever and ever??? 🙂

    Comment by Sara | May 2, 2010 | Reply

  19. I honestly believe you can be any age up, there, i mean if there are any dimensions and dreams that we dream on earth, heaven would supply that. For example, if your an 80 year old man, you could be 6 if you wanted to, just think about it, and your in that form, same with dying on earth at age 50, you could be 25 years old again.

    Comment by david | December 10, 2011 | Reply

  20. Oh the questions that our children ask in full confidence that we will know
    The things they bring to us trusting we will help them grow
    And yet we stumble with the smallest questions to find our own reply
    At such times it always reminds “Let’s pray and ask God to give that question a try.”

    My son has asked some bewildering things now at the smallest age of four
    Among them he has asked why his brother lives with God and not with us any more
    Sometimes the only answer I have to give
    Is no worries my child, your brother DOES live

    And as I pray that I relay to him words that will help his spirit grow
    I thank my heavenly father above who always provides us with the wisdom we must know
    Oh the faith of my small child makes me leap for joy
    When I rattle off an answer to a question that should simply not be posed by such a small boy

    Sometimes of course I forget this source that I have to reach out too
    And instead of going in prayer to Him, the answer myself try to stumble through
    If only I took all my questions and concerns to Him with the confidence my child always brings to me
    I’d feed far fewer fish with my tears in the sea.

    For those of us that have a child up above
    We must never forget that we can even ask our heavenly father to give our child all of our love
    For that love came first from Him anyway
    So surely we can ask him to pass along a hug and kiss to our child when we pray.

    And so when our children here ask about age and things up above
    I believe all we really need to tell them, is that nothing matters but that we will still, as we do now, have our Savior’s most amazing love.

    Comment by Megan Nicholson-Oakley | October 23, 2012 | Reply

  21. d

    Comment by Megan Nicholson-Oakley | October 23, 2012 | Reply

  22. I usually tell my son who is 13, but at a much younger level, that God desides whether we’re gonna be 4, 10, 15, 20 or even 70. It’s not up to us to deside and God knows what our ages really are.

    Personally i feel that God let’s grown ups that have had a very hard time be children in heaven cause i feel He want’s to nurture them.
    But my experiences are that God is not into “you’re 6 and he is 10” just cause He tells you to be.
    I have experienced that no matter how old i am He is always with me and watches over me while i rest at our safe place in my mind.
    I meet Jesus every so often in my head while He plays with me, while He watches me sleep or lie in the grass feeling the warmth and softness of the grass.
    It is my place to relax and meet Jesus when i need it.
    On the other hand God visits me while i sleep.
    When i’m scared to death He watches over me and guards me all night long.
    I once have grabbed His arm and cried that my Daddy shouldn’t leave me.
    It shocked my, He was my Daddy?!? Did i really trust Him to be my Daddy?!?
    He is and will always be my Daddy and i do trust Him.

    This is my reason for feeling that God doesn’t tell you to be a certain age or be a grown up cause He want’s you to be.
    He looks at who you’re really agewise.

    Comment by Selah Rocks | September 25, 2015 | Reply


Leave a reply to Robert Williamson Cancel reply