A Remarkable Journey From Hell to Heaven

Hollywood, North America, and the European public were touched by the movie “Heaven is for real” released in theaters in 2014. The story of a little boy going to heaven Four-year-old Colton Burpo

Hollywood, North America, and the European public were touched by the movie “Heaven is for real” released in theaters in 2014.

The story of a little boy going to heaven

Four-year-old Colton Burpo is the son of Todd Burpo, pastor of Crossroads Wesleyan Church in Imperial, Nebraska.

Colton says he experienced Heaven during an emergency surgery after having acute appendicitis.

When Colton Burpo’s appendix burst, doctors didn’t think he would survive surgery and warned his parents to expect the worst.

 

Distraught, his dad Todd shut himself in a hospital room and started yelling at God in despair.

 

Colton not only pulled through, against all the odds, but was well enough to go home just 17 days later.

And he told his parents how – while the surgeons were fighting to save him – he visited heaven, sat on Jesus’s lap, patted his rainbow-striped horse and was serenaded by winged angels.

 

The youngster’s extraordinary story was turned into a Hollywood movie called Heaven Is For Real.

And it caused a sensation over Easter in America, taking almost £13million at the box office and trouncing Johnny Depp’s latest film Transcendance.

Heaven is for Real opens in Britain on May 9 and is based on a book Todd wrote about his son’s astounding story.

Devout Baptist Todd – played on screen by Oscar nominee Greg Kinnear – and his wife Sonja at first thought their little boy was ­just repeating stories he had heard during chapel services.

But then Colton stunned his parents with a string of revelations.

He claimed he had met Todd’s grandfather, who had d!ed 30 years earlier.

He said he had a conversation with a sister who revealed she had d!ed while still inside Sonja.

And he even described rising from his own body then seeing his dad shouting at God while his mum wept.

 

Todd and Sonja insist they had never told him any of these things before.

Cynics have dismissed the stories as no more than a child’s fantasy.

And even Todd’s congregation in his tiny Midwestern home-town of Imperial, Nebraska, were sceptical.

But 10 years on, Todd, Sonja and Colton stand by the story of the ­youngster’s visit to the afterlife.

And Colton – now a 14-year-old school wrestling star and budding musician – uses his experience to comfort terminally ill children and their parents.

He said: “It helps the kids realise, ‘Hey, I don’t have to deal with all this pain… I got something better waiting for me.

“It also helps the family. It reassures them because if you go to heaven you’re going to have the time of your life.”

Colton talks to doomed children using live internet link-up Skype and tells them: “I’m not scared of dying because I know where I’m going.”

And as for people who accuse him of peddling fairy tales, he says: “Believe what you want but it won’t stop me from sharing what I saw.”

Part-time fireman Todd, 45, admits he was upset when members of his own congregation ­doubted Colton.

He said: “I expect it from the atheists but when you see a person who claims to be Christian attack you it’s awful.”

He confesses he had scoured the Bible in the hope of finding other accounts of ­experiences of heaven because he initially thought his son must have imagined it.

But that changed when Colton described his great-grandad and the sister lost in a m!scarr!age a year ­before he was born.

Todd recalled how the little boy said his long-d ead relative was known as Pops – and picked out a photo of him as a young man in the 1940s. Todd is adamant he’d never mentioned Pops to his son.

Later Sonja was shocked when Colton claimed he met his unborn sister and said: “She told me she died in your tummy.”

 

Todd and Sonja insist they had never talked about the m!scarr!age because they were so traumatised by it.

Nor did they tell him where they were when surgeons were battling to save his life – another reason Todd is convinced his son didn’t just dream it. The preacher said: “They didn’t think Colton was going to make it. When they tell you people aren’t going to make it, then they don’t.

“I found a small room, slammed the door shut and screamed at God.”

Months afterwards, Colton related how he had seen the whole thing.

The youngster told how he rose off the operating table as angels sang Jesus Loves You to keep him calm.

He claimed he sat on Jesus’s lap in heaven, saw Mary praying at God’s throne and talked to John the Baptist.

Colton said Jesus had “brown hair, a brown beard, a very bright smile and his eyes were just beautiful sea blue”.