The PASSPORT of the HEAVENLY Jerusalem

THE HERMENEUTICAL QUILL

bvthomas.com  •  Biblical Theology & Exposition

The Passport of the Heavenly Jerusalem

Kingdom Immigration and the Terms No One Is Preaching

b.v. thomas

Walk into any embassy on earth and you will feel it immediately — the weight of a jurisdiction that does not belong to the street outside. The flag on the wall, the seal above the consul’s desk, the forms in triplicate, the queue, the scrutiny, the stamp that either opens a door or closes it. Embassies do not apologize for their requirements. They do not whisper their regulations. They publish them. They enforce them. A nation that cannot define who belongs to it ceases to be a nation at all.

We live in an age when every ism on the earth — communism, nationalism, liberalism, capitalism — has its manifesto, its politburo, its membership criteria, its border enforcement. The wealthiest among us chase golden passports, shelling out fortunes to purchase citizenship in places that offer security, mobility, and privilege. The world understands, with brutal clarity, that belonging somewhere costs something.

And then there is the Kingdom of Christ.

The most real, most ancient, most consequential polity ever constituted in the history of the cosmos — and somehow, in the hands of a comfortable, sentimental Christianity, it has been reduced to this: “Just believe. You’re in. Don’t worry about the rest.” The passport handed out like a party favour at the door. No scrutiny. No terms. No understanding of what the document actually requires of the one who carries it.

This is not the gospel. This is a counterfeit stamped to look like one.

“But our citizenship is in heaven, from which we also eagerly wait for the Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ.”  — Philippians 3:20, NKJV

Paul did not use the word politeuma — citizenship, commonwealth, colony — loosely. His audience in Philippi knew exactly what it meant. Philippi was a Roman colony: Roman law, Roman customs, Roman loyalties, planted in foreign soil. When Paul said “our citizenship is in heaven,” he was invoking the full architecture of civic identity. We are a colony of the heavenly Jerusalem. We live under a foreign jurisdiction. And that jurisdiction has rules.

ARTICLE I

The Issuing Authority

No passport is valid without a legitimate issuing authority behind it. The Heavenly Jerusalem has one: the Triune God — Father, Son, and Holy Spirit — operating through the sole Mediator, the Lord Jesus Christ. There is no consulate on a street corner. There is no secondary issuing office. There is no appeal to heritage, lineage, sentiment, or religious performance apart from what Christ has secured.

“Jesus said to him, ‘I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me.’”  — John 14:6

The exclusivity of Christ is not theological narrowness. It is the nature of authority. A Kyrgyz passport is issued by Kyrgyzstan. A British passport is issued by the Crown. The passport of the Heavenly Jerusalem is issued by Christ, and by no other, and through no other channel. To imagine that sincerity, religious affiliation, moral effort, or cultural Christianity can produce a valid document is to imagine that you can print your own currency and expect the central bank to honour it.

The Father elects. The Son mediates and seals. The Spirit authenticates. The document, when legitimately issued, is irrevocable — but the process of acquisition is not what most pew-warmers think it is.

ARTICLE II

The Entry Stamp: Justification

Let us be precise, because imprecision here has cost millions their eternal standing without them knowing it.

Justification is the entry stamp. It is not the passport itself. It is the moment at the border when the document is examined, found valid, and the officer presses the seal: Approved. Righteous before God. Penalty paid. This is the work of the cross, received by faith. It is entirely God’s act. It is not earned. It cannot be lost by stumbling. It is the judicial declaration that the sin-debt has been discharged in full through the blood of Christ.

“Therefore, having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.”  — Romans 5:1

This is glorious. This is the foundation. But a foundation is not a house. The entry stamp is not the journey. The moment of justification is the beginning of a life, not the conclusion of one. And modern evangelicalism, in its terror of anything that sounds like ‘works,’ has collapsed the entire journey of the believer into that single moment and then sent people home to live however they please, clutching their ticket as though the destination is already reached.

It is not.

Justification declares you righteous. Sanctification makes you righteous in practice. Glorification perfects you in the age to come. To know the first and despise the second is to hold an entry stamp for a country you have never entered and do not intend to.

ARTICLE III

The Residency Terms: Sanctification

Every nation that grants you entry also defines the terms of your continued residence. You do not simply arrive and then do as you please. There are obligations, alignments, and expectations that come with the privilege of belonging.

The Kingdom of Christ is no different. The Sermon on the Mount is not a list of suggestions. The letters of Paul are not optional lifestyle content. The commands of Christ are not the fine print you skip before clicking “I Agree.” They are the residency terms of the Kingdom — the shape of what it looks like to actually live as a citizen of the heavenly polity while stationed in this present age.

“But as He who called you is holy, you also be holy in all your conduct, because it is written, ‘Be holy, for I am holy.’”  — 1 Peter 1:15–16

Sanctification is not a second-tier Christianity for the spiritually ambitious. It is the normal trajectory of every person who has genuinely received the entry stamp. The one who has truly been justified by faith will hunger for holiness — not to earn standing, but because the nature of the issuing authority has begun to reshape the holder of the document.

The one who is justified and then returns wholesale to the old life — who loves the world, who nurses the old appetites, who has no appetite for the Word, no grief over sin, no longing for God — has not been sanctified. And the uncomfortable question that the church has stopped asking is whether, in such a case, the justification was genuine at all.

“By this we know that we know Him, if we keep His commandments. He who says, ‘I know Him,’ and does not keep His commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him.”  — 1 John 2:3–4

John is not soft about this. He never was.

ARTICLE IV

The Register: The Lamb’s Book of Life

Every nation maintains a population register. Every valid passport corresponds to a real name in a real record. The Heavenly Jerusalem maintains its own: the Lamb’s Book of Life. This is not a metaphor for church membership rolls, denominational records, or the list of names on a baptismal certificate. It is the register of those who have been genuinely born from above — justified, sealed by the Spirit, and walking in the newness of life to which they have been called.

“And anyone not found written in the Book of Life was cast into the lake of fire.”  — Revelation 20:15

“But there shall by no means enter it anything that defiles, or causes an abomination or a lie, but only those who are written in the Lamb’s Book of Life.”  — Revelation 21:27

The sobering implication is this: the register is not maintained by human institutions. It is not updated by water baptism, confirmed by confirmation, or secured by signing a card at an evangelistic meeting. The name in the Book corresponds to a reality in the person — a genuine work of regenerating grace, evidenced by a life being progressively conformed to the image of the Son.

The self-deceived carry a counterfeit. And many will not discover the counterfeit until the final border crossing.

ARTICLE V

The Counterfeit Passport: Self-Deception and Easy Believism

Christ Himself raised the alarm. He did not leave us to discover the problem only at the end. He named it, described it, and placed the warning at the very center of His most famous discourse.

“Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven. Many will say to Me in that day, ‘Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Your name, cast out demons in Your name, and done many wonders in Your name?’ And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness.’”  — Matthew 7:21–23

Note who is being described here. These are not atheists. These are not nominal pagans with no religious interest. These are people who called Christ Lord, who prophesied, who operated in supernatural gifts, who did works in His name. They had the vocabulary. They had the activity. They had the confidence. And they had a counterfeit.

The counterfeit passport is issued by the self, endorsed by a Christianity that has stopped preaching repentance, stamped by sentimentality, and carried with complete assurance into the final day. It is perhaps the most dangerous document in existence: it looks real, it feels real, and it fails at the border where it matters most.

Easy believism — the reduction of salvation to a single moment of cognitive assent, detached from repentance, discipleship, and the ongoing work of the Spirit — is the great passport-forgery operation of our age. The presses have been running for decades. The product is everywhere.

“Even the demons believe — and tremble!”  — James 2:19

Belief alone, separated from the obedience of faith, separated from repentance, separated from the regenerating work of the Spirit, produces a document that demons could carry. Belief is the first breath of saving faith — not the whole of it.

ARTICLE VI

The Border Crossing: The Final Judgment

Every journey culminates at a border. And the final border of the age is not a formality. It is the most rigorous immigration process in the history of existence.

Scripture speaks of two distinct judgments that the student of the Word must hold without confusion. For the believer, there is the Bema Seat — the judgment seat of Christ — where not guilt is assessed, but stewardship. The entry has already been secured. What is examined here is the quality of the life lived within the Kingdom’s terms: the gold, silver, precious stones of faithfulness — or the wood, hay, and stubble of a wasted residency.

“For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, that each one may receive the things done in the body, according to what he has done, whether good or bad.”  — 2 Corinthians 5:10

This is the accounting of the citizen who arrived legitimately. The passport was real. The name was in the Book. But how was the residency lived? What was built? What was sacrificed? What was laid at the altar of the Kingdom’s purposes versus consumed on the altar of personal comfort?

And then there is the Great White Throne — the final reckoning for those outside Christ. No entry stamp. No name in the register. The counterfeit passport examined and found wanting. This is not a harsh technicality. It is the inevitable conclusion of a self that chose, over an entire lifetime, to hold a document it never actually possessed.

ARTICLE VII

Full Citizenship: The Glorified State

And for those whose document is real — for those in whom the work of justification, sanctification, and perseverance has been genuinely wrought by the grace of God — the final border crossing is not terror. It is homecoming.

“Beloved, now we are children of God; and it has not yet been revealed what we shall be, but we know that when He is revealed, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is.”  — 1 John 3:2

Full citizenship in the Heavenly Jerusalem is not the mere avoidance of hell. It is the inheritance of the age to come: co-heirs with Christ, governing with Him, bearing the full weight of the glory for which we were created. The passport was not a fire-insurance policy. It was the first document of a destiny that stretches into the eternal ages — that in the coming ages He might show the exceeding riches of His grace (Ephesians 2:7).

The Heavenly Jerusalem descends as a city because it is a city: a real polity, a real government, a real jurisdiction, a real population of real people who were genuinely changed, genuinely redeemed, genuinely formed into the image of their King. This is not a metaphor. This is where history ends and where the real story begins.

THE KINGDOM PASSPORT: A SUMMARY FRAMEWORK

A theological framework for what the passport of the Heavenly Jerusalem actually entails:

PROVISION

KINGDOM EQUIVALENT

Issuing Authority

The Triune God — through Christ alone, the sole Mediator (John 14:6; 1 Tim. 2:5)

Document

The Lamb’s Book of Life — the definitive register of the genuinely redeemed (Rev. 21:27)

Entry Stamp

Justification by faith — the judicial declaration of righteousness; peace with God (Rom. 5:1)

Residency Terms

Sanctification — the progressive conformity to Christ; obedience of faith (1 Pet. 1:15–16)

Citizenship Rights

Co-heirs with Christ; inheritance of the coming age; governing with the King (Rom. 8:17)

Authentication Mark

The indwelling Holy Spirit — the seal and down-payment of the inheritance (Eph. 1:13–14)

Border Control

The Bema Seat (for citizens) and the Great White Throne (for the stateless) (2 Cor. 5:10; Rev. 20:11–15)

Destination

The Heavenly Jerusalem — the city that descends; the eternal polity of the redeemed (Rev. 21:2)

Counterfeit Signal

Belief without repentance; profession without transformation; the lawless who called Him Lord (Matt. 7:21–23)

Final Status

Full citizenship in the age to come: glorification, full conformity to Christ’s image (1 John 3:2)

CLOSING WORD

Stop Taking the Passport for Granted

The golden passport hunters of this world understand something the comfortable church has forgotten: belonging costs something, means something, and demands something. They part with fortunes because they understand that citizenship in a stable, prosperous nation transforms your life, your options, and your future.

The passport of the Heavenly Jerusalem is not for sale. It cannot be purchased with religious performance, moral effort, or theological correctness. It is received, by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone. But it is not free of cost to the one who carries it. It costs you your old life. It costs you your allegiance to the world. It costs you the right to be the final authority over your own existence. It costs you, in the end, everything — and in return, it gives you everything that lasts.

Stop assuming you have it because you said a prayer once. Examine the document. Not with terror, but with the sober clarity of a traveller who knows that only one border crossing in eternity matters, and that border is not impressed by church attendance, charismatic gifts, or the fervency of your self-confidence.

Is the name real? Is the seal genuine? Is the life being lived consistent with the terms of the citizenship you claim? Is there fruit? Is there hunger? Is there the unmistakable mark of the Spirit at work — producing, pressing, convicting, conforming?

“Examine yourselves as to whether you are in the faith. Test yourselves.”  — 2 Corinthians 13:5

That is not a verse for the faint-hearted. It was written to a church. To people who thought they knew. To people very much like the ones in the pews today who have booked a ticket they have never actually examined.

The Kingdom of Christ has policies. It has terms. It has a register. It has a border. And it has a King who will not be fooled by a counterfeit.

The Heavenly Jerusalem is accepting applicants. The consulate is open. The Mediator is at the right hand of the Father. But the terms have not changed, and the Book is not amended by wishful thinking.

Get the real passport. Carry it with trembling and gratitude. Live worthy of the citizenship it represents.

— b.v. thomas

The Hermeneutical Quill  •  bvthomas.com