The Sadducees were known for trying to trap Jesus with clever questions. They once presented a far-fetched scenario about a woman who married seven brothers in succession and asked whose wife she would be in heaven. Their intent was not curiosity but ridicule, since they denied the resurrection entirely. Jesus responded by telling them they were mistaken because they did not “know the Scriptures.” Using Exodus 3:1–6, He pointed to God’s declaration to Moses: “I am the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.” In Mark 12:26 Jesus emphasized the present tense of “I am,” explaining that God did not say “I was” the God of these patriarchs. By calling Himself their God in the present, God affirmed that they were still alive to Him. My old Greek professor, John Grassmick, noted that God implied the patriarchs continued to live and that His covenant relationship with them remained intact. Jesus concluded that God “is not God of the dead, but of the living” (Mark 12:27). The covenant-keeping God does not abandon His people at death.
This truth reaches into ordinary life more than we sometimes realize. Many live as though today is all there is, pouring energy into pleasures, possessions, and positions that cannot outlast the grave. Solomon wrestled with this dilemma in Ecclesiastes, describing life without eternal perspective as vanity. Even sincere people can drift into a routine that forgets eternity entirely. It is possible to fill calendars, maintain responsibilities, and still feel a subtle emptiness. A gentle chuckle sometimes helps us face reality; if the Sadducees had been correct, their worldview would have been rather bleak indeed. Their refusal to believe in resurrection left them with little hope beyond the present moment. Jesus told them they were “deceiving themselves” (Mark 12:24). When eternity is removed from view, life’s deeper meaning becomes difficult to locate.
The New Testament presents Jesus as the answer to this dilemma. He is the divine Son who came from beyond and returned there, promising life that continues beyond death. In John 14:2–3 He declared, “In my Father’s house are many rooms… I go to prepare a place for you.” Paul affirmed that Christ “has been raised from the dead” and that through Him resurrection becomes a reality (1 Corinthians 15:20). Solomon once asked, “Who knows whether the spirit of man goes upward?” Jesus provides the answer through His own resurrection and promise. God’s faithfulness extends beyond the limits of time, and His covenant with His people includes life that continues in His presence.
