By J. L. Dagg
Chapter 2
Resurrection
THE BODIES OF ALL WHO DIE, WILL BE RAISED FROM THE DEAD, AND RE-UNITED TO
THEIR SPIRITS, FOR THE JUDGMENT OF THE GREAT DAY.[1]
Philosophy and natural religion may attain to an obscure discovery of the
soul's immortality; but we should have remained ignorant concerning the
resurrection of the body, if we had not been instructed by divine revelation.
From God's book we learn that the body is redeemed,[2] as well as the soul; and that the body shall be delivered
from the bondage of corruption. That no doubt may remain on the subject, the
body which is to be raised again, is described as the corruptible, the vile
body, the body deposited in the grave:[3] "This
corruptible shall put on incorruption."[4] "Who
shall change this vile body."[5] "All that are
in their graves shall hear his voice, and shall come forth."[6] Paul urges not to use the members of the body for sinful
purposes, because the body is the temple of the Holy Ghost;[7] and, with reference to the same body he says, "If the
Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, he that raised
up Christ from the dead, shall also quicken your mortal bodies, by his Spirit
that dwelt in you."[8] No doubt can remain that
the Scriptures teach the resurrection of the mortal body, the body that dies,
and enters the grave.
The resurrection of the body is not only taught in the Scriptures, but it is
exemplified in the resurrection of Jesus Christ. The fact that he was raised
from the dead, is testified by many witnesses, who saw him, and conversed, and
ate and drank with him, after his resurrection; and who confirmed the truth of
their testimony by astonishing miracles and sufferings. On this grand fact the
truth of Christianity depends; and therefore the doctrine of the resurrection
is fundamental and vital to the Christian system. If it is not true, Christ is
not risen; and, if Christ is not risen, Paul admits "our preaching is vain, and
your faith is vain, and we are found false witnesses of God."[9]
As the resurrection is a desirable privilege to the just, only, it is treated
of, in some passages of Scripture, as if it appertained to them exclusively:
but other passages teach that it will be universal: "There shall be a
resurrection of the just and of the unjust."[10]
"All that are in their graves shall hear his voice, and come forth, they that
have done good to the resurrection of life, and they that have done evil to the
resurrection of damnation."[11] The only
exception to its universality will be in the case of those who still be found
alive at Christ's second coming. Concerning these, Paul has taught us that
they will undergo a change[12] equivalent to
that which they pass through who shall have died and risen again. Their case,
therefore, is virtually no exception to the general rule: "It is appointed unto
all men once to die."[13] "As in Adam all
die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive."[14]
The power by which the dead are raised, is God's. To the Sadducees, who erred
respecting the resurrection, the Saviour said, "Ye do err, not knowing the
Scriptures, nor the power of God."[15] It is
a work which nothing short of omnipotence could accomplish. The Son of God is
represented as the immediate agent, "Who shall change our vile body, that it
only be fashioned like unto his own glorious body, according to the working
whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himself."[16] Even when he was on earth, weak and despised, he claimed
this power: "The hour is coming when all that are in their graves shall hear
his voice [the voice of the Son of God], and shall come forth."[17] At his command, who said, "Lazarus, come forth," the
dead shall quit their graves, and assemble at his tribunal: and the power which
he will manifest, in bringing them before him, will demonstrate his right to
judge them.
The resurrection, though it will require the same power that created the world
out of nothing, will not be another creation. The glorified body will not be
created out of nothing, but will be formed out of the vile and mortal body
which the spirit once inhabited: "Who shall change our vile body, that
it may be fashioned," &c.[18] The same
body of Jesus which was nailed to the cross and laid in the tomb, was raised
from the dead, and was seen by the disciples ascending from Mount Olivet. It
had been transfigured on Mount Tabor, and rendered glorious in the view of the
disciples who were present; and now it is crowned with glory and honor, in the
presence of all the celestial hosts. It is now the "glorious body," into the
likeness of which he will fashion our vile bodies, when he fits them to inhabit
the mansions that he has prepared.
How the "vile body" will be changed, we know not. We are under no obligation
to suppose that all the gross matter of which it consists, will be included in
the glorious body into which it will be fashioned. The corruptible body is
perpetually losing, in the daily waste which it undergoes, the atoms of matter
which compose it, and having their place supplied by other atoms, received from
the nourishment taken in to supply the waste. The nails are pared away, and
the hair shorn off; and other growth succeeds, to take the place of that which
is lost. The bones, muscles, and all other parts of the body, undergo a change
as real, though not so apparent, and as unceasing. The fluid parts of the body
change more rapidly; and the solid parts are absorbed and renewed by the
deposit of other matter, in the processes of nutrition and assimilation. It is
not necessary to suppose that all the matter thus lost, during a life of
fourscore years, will be gathered again. The identity of the body during life
did not imply an identity of the atoms composing it: and much less is an
identity of atoms necessary to be preserved, when it is changed into the
glorious. Paul's teaching on this point is explicit: "Thou sowest not that
body that shall be, but bare grain; but God giveth it a body as it hath
pleased him."[19] What is deposited in the
ground, is bare grain; but the body which God giveth consists of the blade, the
ear, and the full corn in the ear. The body deposited, dies; that is, it is
decomposed, and ceases to be the bare grain deposited. Part of its matter is
lost, and part enters into the composition of the new plant, and God adds other
matter, constructing such a body as pleases him. Such is the illustration
which this inspired writer gives of the process by which the dead will be
raised; and we are certainly freed by it from the obligation of regarding a
philosophical identity of atoms, as necessary to be preserved in the
resurrection of the dead.
Yet, let us observe the relation which the glorious body has to the vile body.
It is not another body, but the vile body changed. In Paul's illustration, he
says: "God giveth it a body as it hath pleased him, and to every seed his own
body."[20] So, every man who rises from the
grave, will come forth with his own body. However changed, he will recognise
himself, and will be recognised by others, as the same. When wheat, rye,
barley, and other grains, are sown in the ground, a grain of each may be
deposited in the same bed; and when they spring up together, though all have
bodies differing from the bare grain that was sown, they differ also from each
other. Every seed has "his own body;" and it may be determined with certainty
which is the wheat, which the rye, which the barley, &c. The illustration
is doubtless incomplete: but the wisdom of inspiration has given it, to assist
our conceptions of this mysterious subject; and our faith, without presuming to
be wise above that which is written, should thankfully receive the instruction
graciously imparted.
What will be the form and the properties of the glorified body, it is
impossible for us to know. Even the beloved disciple who lay on the bosom of
Jesus did not claim to know this:- "Beloved, it doth not yet appear what we
shall be: but we know that when he
shall appear, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is."[21] It ought to satisfy us that we shall be
fashioned like the glorious body of Christ. But though this general
information ought to be sufficient, the Scriptures, while they do not attempt
to describe a glorified body, have given us some information respecting it.
It is incorruptible. Our bodies here undergo perpetual decay and perpetual
renewal; and they finally suffer decomposition, and return to dust. The
glorified body will suffer no decomposition, no waste, and, therefore, will not
need renewal. The process of nutrition by food, and the organs of digestion,
will not be needed. "Meats are for the belly, and the belly for meats; but God
shall destroy both it and them."[22] The
glorified body will be adapted to all the purposes for which it will be used;
but, as our mode of life will be entirely different, corresponding changes will
be made in the members and organs, to adapt the body to the mode of life into
which it enters.
It will be spiritual. Paul affirms this. He says, "It is sown a natural body,
it is raised a spiritual body. There is a natural body, and there is a
spiritual body."[23] What a spiritual body is,
we are unable to say. We shall not be pure or uncompounded spirit, as God is;
for we shall have a "body," which God cannot be said to have. But that body
will be "spiritual," as distinguished from the natural or grossly material
bodies that we now possess. It will be freed from the inactivity, the
ponderableness that now binds us to the earth; and will be fitted for swift
motion, similar to that of which angelic spirits are capable.
It is immortal. "Now this mortal must put on immortality."[24] As there will be no need to supply a daily waste in each
individual body, or to preserve it from corruption, so there will be no need to
supply a waste of the race by death. "They neither marry, nor are given in
marriage; neither can they die any more; for they are equal unto the angels."[25] In a state of being so different from the
present, we shall need bodies of far different construction and properties;
and, from the likeness which we are to bear to the angels, we may infer that
our spiritual bodies will resemble, to some extent the spirituality of these
holy and immortal beings. The true and perfect pattern to which we shall be
conformed, is the glorious body of the Redeemer, who, though once dead, now
liveth for ever, and who will give us to share his own immortality. "Because I
live, ye shall live also."[26]
With what body the wicked will come, and to what likeness they will be
conformed, the Scriptures do not tell us. As they will be raised, to stand in
the judgment, and receive the sentence under which they will suffer everlasting
punishment, in the fire prepared for the devil and his angels; we may conclude
that, both in body and spirit, they will be fitted and capacitated for the
everlasting endurance of the torments inflicted. We know that their bodies
will not be "glorious," for their resurrection will be "unto shame and
everlasting contempt."[27] Conjecture, on
points which revelation has not enlightened, must be unprofitable. |
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[1] John v. 28, 29; Dan. xii. 2; Job xix. 25-27; Ps. xvii. 15; Acts iv. 2; xxiv. 15; xxvi. 8; Rom. viii. 11; 1 Cor. xv. 12-54; 1 Thess. iv. 14-17; Rev. xx. 6, 12, 13. [2] 1 Cor. vi. 20 [3] John v. 28. [4] 1 Cor. xv. 53. [5] Phil. iii. 21. [6] John v. 28. [7] 1 Cor. vi. 19. [8] Rom. viii. 11. [9] 1 Cor. xv. 14, 15. [10] Acts xxiv. 15. [11] John v. 28, 29. [12] 1 Cor. xv. 52. [13] Heb. ix.27. [14] 1 Cor. xv. 22. [15] Matt. xxii. 29. [16] Phil. iii. 21. [17] John v. 28. [18] Phil. iii. 21. [19] 1 Cor. xv. 37, 38. [20] 1 Cor. xv. 38. [21] 1 John iii. 2. [22] 1 Cor. vi. 13. [23] 1 Cor. xv. 44. [24] 1 Cor. xv. 53. [25] Luke xx. 35, 36. [26] John xiv. 19. [27] Dan. xii. 2. |