We’ve all heard of The Five People You Meet in Heaven—a touching story about meaningful encounters in the afterlife.
This is not that.
This is the list of five people where, if I die, open my eyes, and they’re the first thing I see, I’m immediately checking for flames, screaming, or at least a Yelp review of the afterlife because something has clearly gone wrong.
5) Jeffrey Dahmer
You remember Dahmer: 17 victims, plus a résumé that reads like Satan lost a bet.
What you might not remember is that in prison, Dahmer found religion. He met with a minister, got baptized—in what I can only describe as the world’s least relaxing jacuzzi experience—and claimed he found peace in God’s forgiveness shortly before being murdered by another inmate.
So yeah, if I get to Heaven and Dahmer’s there, I’m not immediately comforted. I’m not like, “Ah, yes, paradise.” I’m like, “Cool, cool… quick question: is this the rehabilitation wing of Heaven? Is there a map? A different Heaven? Maybe a Heaven with a background check?”
4) Dutch Schultz
A Prohibition-era mob boss whose hobbies included murder, extortion, and being the human version of a switchblade.
After being shot by rivals, Schultz spent his final hours rambling so wildly that police literally transcribed it like it was the Dead Sea Scrolls of nonsense. He talked about his mom, bean soup, and dropped what might have been the coordinates to buried treasure, which immediately caused half of New York to grab shovels and ruin upstate forests forever.
Then, in a rare moment of clarity, this lifelong Jewish gangster asked for a Catholic priest, got baptized, and received last rites.
So if you see him in Heaven, don’t panic. Just casually ask where the treasure is, because if eternity has taught me anything, it’s that Heaven still doesn’t pay great.
3) Oscar Wilde
Wilde spent most of his life being brilliantly witty, dramatically controversial, and operating at a level of theatrical intensity normally reserved for people who travel with capes.
Then, on his deathbed, he converted to Catholicism.
Some people see that as poetic. I see it as: now I have to spend eternity with the most extra human being ever created.
Meeting Wilde in Heaven would feel like your first day at a new school where the theater kid immediately adopts you. Suddenly you’re in a conversation about velvet, tragedy, and the soul of wallpaper, and all you want is to find someone who owns a normal shirt.
2) Rudolf Höss
Look, when I picture Heaven, I’m thinking clouds, peace, maybe a harp. I am not thinking “high-ranking Nazi.” That’s just not in my top ten.
Höss wasn’t just any Nazi; he ran Auschwitz. That’s not a side quest. That’s the main storyline of human horror.
And yet, before his execution, he reportedly returned to Catholicism, confessed, and received last rites. So yes, technically, there’s a version of events where you arrive in Heaven and that guy is already there.
I’m not saying theology is wrong. I’m just saying if I see him, I’m immediately asking for a supervisor angel and maybe a different cloud.
1) Bob Dylan
Okay, this one is personal. I’m glad Dylan found faith. I hope he lives forever. I hope he writes a thousand beautiful songs praising God.
I just hope—deeply, spiritually, urgently—that he does not sing them.
Because imagine eternity: a perfect heavenly choir, voices like crystal… and then Dylan steps up like a goat with a harmonica and just crowbars his way through every hymn.
And because it’s Heaven, nobody can be rude. No one can say, “Hey Bob, maybe sit this one out.”
So it just goes on. Forever.
And suddenly Hell isn’t fire; it’s being stuck in the front row of that concert with no exits.
If Heaven has sections, I’m requesting one that’s slightly less… surprising.
April 27, 2026 at 11:36 am
Well done!
April 27, 2026 at 10:10 pm
Thanks.
April 27, 2026 at 4:19 pm
Ha – the most extra person ever! That is funny.
April 27, 2026 at 10:11 pm
thank you.
April 28, 2026 at 8:44 am
Well…maybe if Dylan is in heaven, he’ll be given a new voice. One can only hope.
April 28, 2026 at 8:48 am
“and then Dylan steps up like a goat with a harmonica and just crowbars his way through every hymn.” 😆😆🤣🤣🤣
April 28, 2026 at 9:30 am
I imagine a room and a door. We are given the great gift of opening the door to Heaven for anyone who asks. However, we cannot ask for ourselves. We can only await the invitation to enter.
The person we refuse, is the reason we are not yet invited in. Either we trust in the absolute and infinite nature of God’s justice and mercy, or we do not.
The whole of salvific history is a story telling us over and over again (because apparently we need it) to trust in God’s love over our own understanding and preferences. After all, God loves us despite our not side quests, despite our distractions and extraness, despite our poor singing voices.
And yes, I know this was a light piece, but I’ve been thinking about this fundamental reality a lot lately, because people seem to be convinced they know who has been convicted and condemned –and that is not something the church proclaims. It only proclaims those who we find compelling evicence proving they are in paradise, building the kingdom of God.
April 28, 2026 at 4:03 pm
Those late in life conversions can raise eyebrows, but we’re reminded in the 20th chapter of Mathew of the landowner’s (God’s) generosity in compensating the end of day laborers the same as the workers who started much earlier.
The Unmasking of Oscar Wilde by Joseph Peace is an outstanding insight into Wilde’s seemingly contradictory conversion.
Wilde once wrote: “We’re all in the gutter, but some of us are looking up at the stars.”
April 28, 2026 at 4:40 pm
As an example, perhaps we should be less concerned with the salvation of the abortionist who killed thousands and repented of it, and much more anxious regarding the salvation of the guy at the cocktail party in 1973 who proclaimed he was ‘personally opposed to abortion, but what a woman wants to do with her body is her own business.’
I suspect the soul of the repentant abortionist is in much less danger than that of the cocktail party-goer who spent decade after decade never repenting his own intellectual laziness and moral cowardice.
April 30, 2026 at 12:26 pm
I like to think of John Henry “Doc” Holliday, an adulterer, gambler, drunkard, gunslinger, and dentist. He converted to Catholicism on his deathbed.