Why Christ Arose
From the Dead
"If
Christ be not risen, then is our preaching vain
and your faith also vain; yea, and we are found
false witnesses of God. ..Then they also which
are fallen asleep in Christ are
perished."--1. Cor. 15:14,15,18
THE FAITH
ONCE delivered to the saints by Jesus and the
Apostles in respect to the resurrection of the
dead has been very generally lost. Christian
people profess a belief in the resurrection,
because they find it stated in the Bible, yet
they are continually in difficulty in their
endeavor to make the Scriptural teaching on the
subject square with some of the unscriptural
theories received into the Church, and
incorporated into many of the creeds during the
"Dark Ages."
St. Paul
warned the Church against these human
philosophies, and called them "science,
falsely so-called," which makes void the
Word of God. These errors have been instrumental
in dividing the faith of God's people into six
hundred denominations, with six hundred different
professions. If God's people could all come back
to the simplicity of the Bible's teaching in
respect to the resurrection of the dead, all of
these differences would speedily disappear. God's
Word would be seen to be beautiful and
harmonious, satisfactory to the consecrated
intellect, as none of our sectarian creeds are.
Really
the doctrine of the resurrection of the dead has
been repudiated by all denominations, not
willingly, not intentionally, but perforce, as it
were. An opposite theory received and entrenched
in the minds gives no place for the doctrine of
the resurrection, as the Bible presents it.
Consequently we have twisted the doctrine of the
resurrection and recite, "I believe in the
resurrection of the body."
Yet even
this perverted view of the resurrection is not
satisfactory to those who hold it. They wish many
a time that the doctrine of the resurrection were
not in the Bible, so much difference does it
cause. For instance, how inconsistent it seems
that they should say, "I believe in the
resurrection of the body," and then say, as
many do, Dying is but going home, getting rid of
the mortal flesh, and being freed from its
limitations. If it is a blessing to die and get
free from the limitations of the body, how could
it be a blessing to be reincarcerated in the
body, and be obliged to keep it through all
eternity? Such is the inconsistency of the
resurrection, however, from the viewpoint of the
creeds of men.
THE BIBLE RESURRECTION
REASONABLE
There is
nothing inconsistent in the Bible presentation of
the resurrection. Not from the Bible, but from
men, comes the suggestion of the resurrection of
the body. The Bible invariably refers to
the resurrection of the soul. It is the soul
that dies; as we read, "The soul that
sinneth, it shall die." Adam was
created a living soul, but his living soul came
under the death sentence because he disobeyed
God. It was his soul that was redeemed
from death, not his body. "I will redeem thy
life from destruction."--Psalm 103:4.
To
accomplish this redemption, we read that Christ
Jesus "poured out His soul unto death";
"He made His soul an offering for sin."
Moreover, we are particularly told that it was
the soul of Jesus that was raised from the dead:
"Thou wilt not leave My soul in sheol.
St. Peter quotes this statement as prophetical of
the resurrection of Jesus, that His soul was not
left in hades; God raised Jesus from the
dead on the third day. With what body do the dead
come? is a totally different question. Some dead
souls, in the resurrection, will come forth with
spirit bodies, and others with human bodies,
according to the Bible. But the important part
is, that it is the soul, the being,
that comes forth, that is resurrected-- not the
body. If the soul dies, as the Bible
declares, then manifestly the soul should be
resurrected.
The
difficulty with us has been that we "have
made void the Word of God" by our
"traditions." We received from the
Grecian philosophers a tradition which Socrates
and Plato both advocated, namely, that when a
human being dies he does not really die. The
soul, it is claimed, cannot die, but, whenever
the soul gets out of the body, the body dies. How
strange it seems that we all, as intelligent,
thoughtful beings, have accepted this heathen
philosophy, without a word of Scripture for its
support, and with hundreds of Scriptures to
condemn it!
We can
see how the heathen philosophers might be led to
conjure up such a theory, because of their desire
to believe in a future life, and because they had
no revelation from God respecting a future life.
They therefore tried their best to convince
themselves that man really does not die--that no
man can die. The Bible theory is the very reverse
of this, namely, that a man does die; that he is
a soul, a thinking, sentient being. Neither is he
a bodiless being, and indeed he cannot be a being
at all without a body. His body may change, as
science declares it does gradually, hour by hour,
until a complete change is effected in seven
years.
Thus a
man, a soul, a sentient being, may in a life of
fifty years have sloughed off gradually
sufficient matter to have composed seven bodies.
But the moment the sloughing off of this dying
matter and the substitution of living matter
ceases, we have death; and as soon as the body
dies the soul dies--that is, the intelligent
being ceases. There can be no thinking without a
brain, no breathing without lungs, no maintenance
of life in any sense of the word without a body.
This
would have been a total destruction of the soul
had not God specially provided, as the Prophet
declares, that He would redeem man's life from
destruction, through the redemptive work
accomplished by Jesus in giving His soul an
offering for man's sin, and thus making possible
man's resurrection from the dead.
It is in
consequence of this Divine provision through
Christ for a resurrection of humanity that the
Scriptures speak of death as merely a falling
asleep for a time, to wait for the new body in
the resurrection, rather than to speak of us as
dying as the brute beasts. The word implies that
in the Divine purpose a future life is intended,
and will eventually be given.
"BUT NOW IS CHRIST
RISEN"
St. Paul
does not leave the matter of Christ's
resurrection undecided. He positively affirms
that, "Christ is risen from the dead,"
and that, thus risen, "He is the
First-fruits of those that slept," which
implies that when He was raised the others still
slept. Jesus slept during a part of three days,
from the time He died until the Father raised Him
from the dead, from hades, from sheol,
from the tomb, on the third day. He, as the
First-fruits of the sleeping ones, is an example
and a guarantee of the fulfilment of the Divine
promise, that "there shall be a resurrection
of the dead, both of the just and of the
unjust."
It
behooves us to take a decided stand, either with
the Grecian philosophers and their theories, or
with the Bible. The two are in conflict and
whoever attempts to hold both is in confusion. If
the dead are not dead, then no human being is
dead. And if no one is dead, how could there be a
resurrection of the dead?
The
inconsistency of the theory held respecting the
resurrection of the body has invited a
very reasonable and just criticism. The skeptic
asks, "How could the body be resurrected,
after it has gone to dust and after the dust has
been scattered to the four winds?" They tell
us of a grave that was opened near an apple tree,
and it was found that a root from the tree had
entered the coffin and practically absorbed the
corpse, from which it had produced thousands of
apples, which in turn had been shipped to various
parts of the world, some of the poorer grades
being fed to hogs, whose hams were cured and sent
abroad and thus passed into other human beings,
to become parts of still other human bodies. The
question is a proper one, but it is an
unanswerable one from the standpoint of our
former misbelief and our poor attempt to combine
human philosophy and Divine Revelation.
But such
a question brings no consternation to the Bible
student who follows the Scriptures alone. The
Scriptures never speak of the resurrection of our
bodies. They do tell of the resurrection of the
soul, and that in the resurrection God giveth it
(the soul) a body as it pleaseth Him.
How
reasonable it will be for the world to be
awakened in practically the condition in which
they went down into death! And these will
experience, if willing and obedient, a gradual
resurrection or raising up to the image and
likeness of Father Adam in his perfection. But
some in the resurrection will receive spirit
bodies like unto the angels, and some like unto
the body of Christ in His resurrection, which
Saul of Tarsus beheld--"shining above the
brightness of the sun at noonday."
The class
that is promised a resurrection in spirit bodies
is the Church--the saintly few who walk in the
footsteps of Jesus. The begetting of the Holy
Spirit which comes to these changes their nature
from earthly to spiritual. If they are faithful
to their covenant their resurrection will be to
glory, honor and immortality, as explained by St.
Paul in the context, saying, "It is sown in
weakness, it is raised in power; it is sown in
dishonor, it is raised in glory; it is sown an
animal body, it is raised a spirit body."
This is a
description of the resurrection which God has
promised to all the members of the Body of
Christ, which is the Church. St. Paul declares
that the members of this Body fall asleep to
awaken in the glorious morning of the New
Dispensation. But he adds, "We shall not all
sleep"--some will be alive and remain till
the second coming of Jesus. These, however, will
not take precedence over the sleeping ones, for
"The dead in Christ shall rise first; then
we which are alive and remain" "shall
be changed in a moment, in the twinkling of an
eye," ...because "flesh and blood
cannot inherit the Kingdom of God." As the
death of Jesus was absolutely necessary as the
atoning price for human sin, so the resurrection
of Jesus was absolutely necessary, that He might
not remain dead through all eternity, but be
glorified, and in due time come again to effect
the resurrection of His Church and, subsequently,
the awakening and uplifting of all the families
of the earth.
Hearken
to the special promise made to the Church:
"Blessed and holy is he that hath part in
the First Resurrection; on such the Second Death
hath no power, but they shall be priests of God,
and of Christ, and shall reign with Him a
thousand years." (Rev. 20:6.) Also note the
promise of the world's resurrection: "There
shall be a resurrection, both of the just and the
unjust." (Acts 24:15.) Again, "They
that have done evil" shall come forth, that
they may enjoy a resurrection effected by
"judgments," disciplines,
chastisements, which will develop in them
character; and the glory which will be attained
will be perfection--a raising up to all at first
possessed by Father Adam, lost through
disobedience, and redeemed by the precious blood
of Christ.--John 5:28,29, R.V.
"A KIND OF
FIRST-FRUITS"
Every
Sunday is a memorial of the resurrection of our
Lord from the dead, and if a proper conception of
the Master's resurrection were kept in mind we
would not think of quarreling with the expression
"Easter Sunday." But alas, this name
Easter is associated with heathen philosophies
and idolatries, which did so much to make the
Word of God of none effect; and the fact should
be noted that it is the name of a Greek goddess.
The compromising spirit induced some of the early
Church to admit the heathen philosophies and to
commingle with these the inspired teachings of
the Bible; but now there is the loud call to true
Christians to rid themselves of science and
philosophy "falsely so-called," and to
return to the Biblical simplicity of the Divine
Revelation.
Of this
Revelation alone St. Peter declares, "It is
able to make you wise unto salvation," and
to "give you an inheritance among all them
which are sanctified." And again, "The
Word of God is sufficient, that the man of God
may be thoroughly furnished unto every good
work." Let us today, then, rejoice in Him
who died for our sins and who rose on the third
day for our justification.
Let us
rid our minds of the foolish thought that He did
not really die, that He only seemed
to die--that when the Roman soldiers crucified
Him, He simply got out of His body, laughed at
them, and said, "I have not died at all; I
could not die; you could not kill Me." Let
us remember rather the Divine Word on the
subject: "Christ died for our
sins"; "He poured out His soul unto
death"; "He made His soul an offering
for sin." Let us remember the assurance of
the Bible that eventually "He shall see the
fruits of the travail of His soul and shall be
satisfied." Let us rejoice also in the
assurance of the Apostle that His soul was not
left in hades, sheol, death, but that God
raised Him from the dead on the third day.
NOTE AN ADDITIONAL PROOF
If Christ
did not die, then the death penalty upon Adam and
his race has not been met. Those who claim that
He did not die, that merely His body died, are
illogical. They profess to believe that Jesus
accomplished for us a redemptive work, that He
died, "The Just for the unjust." If
Christ, the Redeemer, "poured out His soul
unto death," and if His resurrection meant
the recovery of His soul or being out of death,
wherein is the logic in the declaration of some
that it is not thus with the Church nor with the
world? If Jesus did not go to Heaven when He
died--if He went into hades, into the
grave, into sheol, into death, who has the
temerity to say that others go direct to Heaven
or Hell or Purgatory? Let us be consistent. The
wages of sin is not Purgatory, nor a Hell of
torture, in some far-off place. On the contrary,
"The wages of sin is death." The
Redeemer died and rose; and this is the
assurance, that He who raised up Jesus from the
dead will raise us up also, by Jesus, through His
spirit and power; and not only so, but also the
world of mankind, all who were involved in the
death sentence upon the first man.
Therefore,
the entire world is included in the death payment
made by the Great Redeemer, that "As by man
came death, by a man also shall come the
resurrection of the dead; for as all in Adam die,
even so all in Christ shall be made alive."
But, says the Apostle, while every man who will
come into Christ shall be made alive, each will
come forth "in his own order." The
Christ company shall come forth first--"the
Church of the First-born, whose names are written
in heaven." Afterwards will come those who
will become His at, or during, His presence
--during the thousand years of His Kingdom glory.
The opportunity of that thousand years will mean
to every man the privilege of coming into
fellowship with the Redeemer and King, Emmanuel.
Whoever will accept the opportunity will receive
the blessing of an admission to Messiah's family.
As the Apostle says, they will become His. Under
His heavenly guidance and blessing and
regenerating influence, all such may attain again
to a full image and likeness of God, lost in
Eden, redeemed at Calvary.
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