Verse 1-2
1 Corinthians 15:1-2. Moreover,
brethren — The resurrection of
the body being one of the great
objects of the faith and hope of
Christians, the apostle in this
chapter sets before the
Corinthians, and all mankind,
the proof by which that joyful
event is rendered indubitable,
namely, that it is a necessary
consequence of the resurrection
of Christ. Wherefore, to lay a
firm foundation for this proof,
he judged it proper to recall to
the remembrance of the
Corinthians the arguments by
which he had proved to their
satisfaction the truth of
Christ’s resurrection, which is
the subject that he first
touches upon. I declare —
γνωριζω, I make known; the
gospel — The principal doctrines
thereof; which I preached unto
you — At the very beginning of
my ministry among you; which
also you received — In faith and
love; and wherein you stand — In
the faith of which many of you
persevere; by which also ye are
— Or shall be; saved finally, if
ye keep in memory — ει κατεχετε,
if ye hold fast; what I preached
unto you — The great truths to
which I bore testimony: that is,
your salvation is begun, and
will be perfected if ye continue
in the faith; unless ye have
believed in vain — Or rather,
rashly, as εικη seems evidently
here to signify, denoting the
disposition of those who do a
thing by chance and lightly,
without knowing for what reason
or end they do it.
Verse 3-4
1 Corinthians 15:3-4. For I
delivered unto you first of all
— Among the first things, and as
the chief articles of the
gospel, that which I also
received, namely, from Christ
himself; that Christ died for
our sins — Made atonement for
them by dying; according to the
Scriptures — Of the Old
Testament, particularly Isaiah
53:5-6; Isaiah 53:12; Daniel
9:26. He proves, first, from the
Scriptures, that the Messiah was
to die for the expiation of sin,
and then from the testimony of a
cloud of witnesses, that Jesus
of Nazareth, who by his miracles
had proved himself to be that
Messiah, had died for men’s sins
accordingly. And that he was
buried — In consequence of his
being certainly dead; and that
he rose again the third day —
His enemies keeping guard about
his dead body in vain. According
to the Scriptures — The
Scriptures which foretold the
resurrection of Christ on the
third day, and to which St. Paul
refers, are Psalms 16:10, (which
Peter, Acts 2:31, expressly
affirmed to be a prediction of
that event,) and Jonah 1:17,
which our Lord himself affirmed
to be a typical prophecy of his
continuing three days in the
heart of the earth, and of his
subsequent resurrection. See
Matthew 12:39-40. Here we see
the apostle delivered to the
Corinthians, from the Lord
himself, not only that he died
for our sins, and rose again the
third day after his death, but
that these things had happened
according to the prophecies of
the Scriptures concerning the
Christ, because by that
circumstance, as well as by his
resurrection, our Lord was
demonstrated to be the Christ.
Verse 5
1 Corinthians 15:5. And that he
was seen of Cephas — As
mentioned Luke 24:34, who saw
him before any of the other
apostles. He appeared, indeed,
after his resurrection, first of
all to Mary Magdalene: but as no
woman was employed to testify
his resurrection to the world,
St. Paul did not think it
necessary, in exhibiting the
proofs of Christ’s resurrection,
to mention any of his
appearances to the women. Then
of the twelve — That company of
apostles so called, though
several of the number were not
present when he appeared.
Macknight thinks, that in this
expression all our Lord’s
appearances to his apostles,
from the time he arose, to the
time he showed himself to the
five hundred brethren at once,
are comprehended; namely, his
appearance to the apostles on
the evening of the day on which
he arose, and on the eighth day
thereafter, and at the sea of
Tiberias, as also every other
appearance to them which the
evangelists may have omitted to
relate; for that they omitted
some is certain.
Verse 6-7
1 Corinthians 15:6-7. After that
he was seen of above five
hundred brethren at once — None
of the evangelists have
expressly mentioned this
appearance, but Matthew seems to
hint at it, Matthew 28:10; for
probably this appearance was
made in Galilee, to which Jesus
commanded his disciples to
repair, promising that they
should there see him; and to
which, in obedience to his
order, the eleven went, and
where, doubtless, many others of
his disciples assembled from all
parts of the country, Christ
having appointed a certain
mountain, probably that on which
he was transfigured, where he
would be seen of them. See note
on Matthew 28:16. “As the
greatest part of our Lord’s
disciples lived in Galilee, it
was highly proper, for their
consolation, that he should show
himself alive there in that
public manner. For thus, besides
the apostles, numbers, who had
often attended him during his
ministry in Galilee, and who
were well acquainted with his
person, having an opportunity to
converse with him, could satisfy
themselves by the testimony of
their own senses concerning the
truth of his resurrection, and
attest it to others on the
surest evidence. These,
therefore, may have been the
five hundred brethren of whom
St. Paul speaks. And their
testimony was appealed to by the
apostle with the greatest
propriety when proving the
resurrection of Christ, because
such a multitude cannot be
supposed to have agreed for so
long a time in publishing a
falsehood to the world, without
any one of them ever betraying
the imposture, or even varying
in their account of the fact.”
Of whom the greater part remain
unto this present — About
twenty-eight years after the
event, constituting a cloud of
witnesses to this glorious and
infinitely important event; but
some are fallen asleep —
Doubtless in Jesus, with whom
they were gone to dwell. After
that he was seen of James —
Of this appearance there is no
mention in the gospels; but the
fathers speak of it, and tell us
that the person thus honoured
was James the Less, or younger,
our Lord’s brother, that is, his
cousin-german, and the author of
the epistle which bears his
name. Eusebius (Chronicles, p.
43) says, this appearance
happened in the first year after
our Lord’s resurrection. But,
from the order in which Paul
hath placed it here, it seems
more probable that it took place
before our Lord’s ascension, at
which all the apostles were
present, as mentioned in the
next clause.
Verse 8
1 Corinthians 15:8. Last of all
— This evidently implies that
our Lord appeared to none of the
disciples after his ascension,
except to Paul; he was seen of
me also — He here no doubt
speaks of Christ’s appearing to
him on the way to Damascus, but
he does not exclude his other
appearances to him. See 1
Corinthians 9:1. As of one born
out of due time — An untimely
birth. It was impossible to
abase himself more than he does
by this single appellation. As
an abortion is not worthy the
name of a man, so he affirms
himself to be not worthy the
name of an apostle. It must be
observed, however, it was not on
account of his being sensible of
any imperfection in his
commission, or of any weakness
in his qualifications as an
apostle, that he gave himself
this name; for he affirms (2
Corinthians 11:5) that he was in
nothing behind the very chief of
the apostles: but he called
himself an untimely birth, for
the reason mentioned in the next
verse, “and because he was made
an apostle without that previous
course of instruction and
preparation which the other
apostles enjoyed, who had
attended Jesus during his
ministry on earth; so that, in
the proper sense of the word, he
was εκτρομα, one born before he
was brought to maturity. That
want, however, was abundantly
supplied by the many revelations
which his Master gave him, after
he had made him an apostle.” —
Macknight.
Verses 9-11
1 Corinthians 15:9-11. I am the
least of the apostles, because I
persecuted, &c. — True believers
are humbled all their lives for
the sins they committed before
they repented and believed. But
by the grace of God I am what I
am — A Christian and an apostle;
and his grace upon — Or toward
me, in raising me to so high a
dignity, and so happy a state;
was not in vain — But produced,
in a great measure, its proper
fruit. For I laboured more
abundantly than they all — That
is, more than any of them, from
the peculiar love God had showed
me; yet — To speak more
properly; not I, but the grace
of God which was with me — This
it was which at first qualified
me for the work, and still
excites me to zeal and diligence
in it. As to Paul’s labouring
more than any of the other
apostles, it must be observed
that they confined their
preaching, for the most part, to
the Jews, Galatians 2:9 : but
Paul preached the gospel to all
the Gentile nations, from
Jerusalem, round about to
Illyricum, Romans 15:19, and
also to the Jews who lived in
those countries; and by his
labours he converted great
numbers both of the Jews and
Greeks. Moreover, as his success
in spreading the gospel exceeded
the success of the other
apostles, so his labours, if we
may judge of them from his own
account, 2 Corinthians 11:23-28,
greatly exceeded theirs
likewise. Therefore whether it
were I or they — Whose doctrine
you own and adhere to; so we
preach, and so ye believed — We
agreed in our doctrine
concerning the particulars above
mentioned: all of us spake, and
still speak the same thing.
1 Corinthians 15:12-13. Now if
Christ be preached, By all of
us, and that upon such
infallible grounds as I have
mentioned; that he rose from the
dead, how say some of you — Or
rather, how can some among you
say; that there is no
resurrection of the dead? — With
what face can any who allow of
Christ’s resurrection, pretend
to deny the resurrection of his
disciples, whether it be from an
attachment to Sadducean or
philosophical prejudices? For,
if there be no resurrection of
the dead — If that doctrine be,
in the general, altogether
incredible; then is Christ not
risen — “The apostle hath not
expressed the ideas, by which
the consequent in this
hypothetical proposition is
connected with its antecedent.
But when these ideas are
supplied, [as follows,] every
reader will be sensible of the
connection. Christ promised,
repeatedly, in the most express
terms, that he would raise all
mankind from the dead, Matthew
16:27; John 5:28-29. Wherefore,
if there is to be no
resurrection of the dead, Christ
is a deceiver, whom no person in
his right senses can suppose God
to have raised, and to have
declared his Son. And if Christ
hath not been raised, the gospel
being stripped of the evidence
which it derives from the
resurrection of its Author, the
whole of the preaching of the
apostles, as is observed 1
Corinthians 15:14, is absolutely
false; and the faith of the
Corinthians in the divine
original of the gospel, and of
all Christians, from the
beginning to the present hour,
is likewise false. Such are the
consequences of denying the
resurrection of the dead.”
Verses 14-18
1 Corinthians 15:14-18. Then is
our preaching — In consequence
of a commission supposed to be
given after his resurrection;
vain — Without any real
foundation, and destitute of
truth; and your faith — In our
preaching; is vain — Is grounded
on falsehood and deception; yea,
and we are false witnesses of
God — Having testified that
Jesus of Nazareth is his Son and
the Messiah; that he hath atoned
for sin; hath risen from the
dead and ascended into heaven;
hath obtained for his followers
the Holy Spirit in his gifts and
graces; a resurrection from the
dead, and eternal life; and is
constituted the final Judge of
men and angels; — all which
things, depending on his
resurrection, are absolutely
false, if he be not risen; and,
of consequence, ye are yet in
your sins — Unpardoned and
unrenewed, without either a
title to heaven or a meetness
for it. So that there needed
something more than reformation,
(which was plainly wrought in
them,) in order to their being
delivered from the guilt of sin,
and renewed after the divine
image; even that atonement, the
sufficiency of which God
attested by raising our great
Surety from the grave, and the
influences of the Divine Spirit
procured for us by that
atonement. Then they who are
fallen asleep in Christ — Who
have died for him, or believing
in him; are perished — Have lost
their life and being together.
This sentence shows, that in
this discourse the apostle has
the resurrection of the just
principally in view, and that
what he hath written concerning
the excellent qualities of the
bodies to be raised, is to be
understood of the bodies of the
saints only.
Verse 19
1 Corinthians 15:19. If in this
life only we have hope in Christ
— We, who are exposed to such a
variety of dangers and
sufferings, for his sake; we are
of all men most miserable —
ελεεινοτεροι, most to be pitied;
that is, if we look for nothing
beyond the grave. But if we have
a divine evidence of things not
seen; if we have a hope full of
immortality; if we now taste the
powers of the world to come, and
see the crown that fadeth not
away; then, notwithstanding all
our present trials, we are more
happy than all men. Some have
argued from this verse, that if
there were no future state,
piety and virtue would make men
more miserable in this world
than they otherwise would be.
But, as Dr. Doddridge observes,
it is evident the apostle is not
speaking here of the case of
good men in general, if their
hopes of future happiness should
be disappointed; but of the case
of the first Christians, and
especially of the apostles and
other preachers of Christianity,
amid the hardships and
persecutions to which they were
continually exposed. If they had
not known that there was a state
of immortal felicity and glory
before them, and if they had not
been supported amid their
various sufferings with a
well-grounded and lively hope of
it, they must have been
peculiarly miserable. For
besides all the external
calamities to which they were
exposed, they must have been
perpetually subjected to the
upbraidings of their own minds,
for sacrificing every view of
happiness in this world or
another, to advance what they
knew to be a pernicious
falsehood. It must be observed,
the apostle does not say, that
if there should be no
resurrection of the body, the
Christian could only hope in
Christ in this life; for if the
soul be immortal, and may be
happy after its separation from
the body, that would not follow.
But he argues thus: If Christ is
not risen for our justification,
we are yet under the guilt of
sin, 1 Corinthians 15:17; and if
so, both soul and body must
perish after death, 1
Corinthians 15:18; and then the
hope of Christians must
terminate with this life, which
being more especially to many of
them a life of misery, by reason
of the sufferings to which their
faith here often exposes them,
they would of all men be most
miserable. Macknight considers
the apostle as answering an
objection, which he supposes the
reader to have made in his own
mind, namely, this: “The
apostles know that Christ hath
not risen, and that there will
be no resurrection of the dead,
but they preach these things for
the sake of some present
advantage.” “To this Paul
replies, If in this life only we
have hope, &c., we are of all
men the most miserable —
Because, by preaching Christ’s
resurrection, we expose
ourselves to every possible
present evil, and if there is to
be no resurrection of the dead,
there is no future state in
which we can enjoy anything.
This argument is levelled
against the Sadducees, who,
believing the soul to be
material, affirmed that it
perishes with the body; and will
have no existence after death,
the body being never to be
raised. The apostle’s argument
is equally conclusive on
supposition that the soul is
immaterial, and that it will
exist and enjoy [happiness]
after death, although the body
is not raised. For if the
apostles were false witnesses
and impostors, they could look
for no happiness from God after
death.”
Verses 20-22
1 Corinthians 15:20-22. But now
is Christ risen — Here the
apostle declares that Christians
have hope not in this life only.
His proof of the resurrection
lies in a narrow compass, 1
Corinthians 15:12-19. Almost all
the rest of the chapter is taken
up in illustrating, vindicating,
and applying it. The proof is
short, but solid and convincing,
namely, that which arose from
Christ’s resurrection. Now this
not only proved a resurrection
possible, but, as it proved him
to be a divine teacher, it
proved also the certainty of a
general resurrection, which he
so expressly taught. The
first-fruits of them that slept
— The pledge, earnest, and
assurance of the resurrection of
those who sleep in him, even of
all the righteous, of the
resurrection of whom, at least
chiefly, if not only, the
apostle speaks throughout the
chapter. As to the term first-
fruits, in explanation thereof
it may be proper to observe,
that “the Israelites were
commanded to bring on the morrow
after the sabbath, with which
the passover week began, a sheaf
of the first-fruits of their
harvest to the priest, to be
waved before the Lord, who, by
accepting it, made it an example
and a pledge of the future
harvest. In allusion to that
rite, Christ, who arose on the
very day on which the
first-fruits were offered, is
called the first-fruits of them
who slept, because he is the
first who was raised from the
dead to die no more, and because
his resurrection is an example
and an earnest of the
resurrection of the righteous.”
For since by man came death —
Since death came on the whole
human race by means of one man,
who brought mortality on all his
posterity in consequence of one
great and wilful transgression;
by man came also, &c. — That is,
by means of another man came
likewise the resurrection of the
dead — And our happy relation to
him abundantly repairs the
damage we sustain by our fatal
relation to the former. For as
in Adam all — Even the
righteous; die, so in — Or
through; Christ shall all these
be made alive — He does not say
shall revive, (as naturally as
they die,) but shall be made
alive, namely, by a power not
their own. See on Romans 5:18, a
passage which is a good comment
on this verse.
Verse 23
1 Corinthians 15:23. But every
man — Shall be reanimated,
raised, and glorified; in his
own order — Or in his own band,
as τω ιδιω ταγματι more properly
signifies, denoting a band of
soldiers, a cohort, or legion;
the word for order being rather
ταξις. According to this
interpretation, it is here
intimated that the righteous
will be raised by themselves,
and the wicked by themselves;
that is, according to the next
verse, the righteous are to be
raised at Christ’s coming, or
are to be first raised, even
before the living are changed,
and much more before the wicked
are raised. See 1 Thessalonians
4:15-17.
Verse 24
1 Corinthians 15:24. Then —
After the resurrection and the
general judgment; cometh the end
— Of the world, the grand period
of all those wonderful scenes
that have appeared for so many
succeeding generations; when he
shall — Publicly and solemnly;
have delivered up — Greek, οταν
παραδω, when he shall deliver
up; the mediatorial kingdom to
God, even the Father — By whose
commission he had held it, and
to whose glory he had always
administered it; when he shall
have put down — οταν καταργηση,
when he shall have destroyed all
adverse rule, authority, and
power — That had opposed itself
to his government, and shall
have triumphed over all the
efforts which either men or
devils could ever make against
his dominion. This mediatorial
kingdom which Christ will
deliver up, is represented,
Matthew 28:18, to be his
possessing all power in heaven
and in earth; “that is, power
over angels as well as over men.
This kingdom our Lord received
in the human nature, as the
reward of his humiliation, and
was solemnly installed in it
after his resurrection, when he
ascended into heaven, and was
invited by God to sit at his
right hand till he should make
his enemies his footstool.
Further, because it is said,
Colossians 1:17, He is before
all things, and by him all
things consist; and because we
are told, Hebrews 1:3, that the
Son, while he spake the gospel,
upheld all things by the word of
his power; it is believed, that
besides the mediatorial kingdom
which the Son administered in
the human nature, and which he
will deliver up to the Father
after the judgment, he possessed
the government of the universe
from the beginning, in his
character as Creator: and that,
after the mediatorial kingdom is
delivered up, the kingdom which
he holds as Creator, will remain
with him as from the beginning.
So that after the judgment, the
righteous shall enter still into
the everlasting kingdom of Jesus
Christ, as they are represented
to do, 2 Peter 1:11.” —
Macknight. Indeed, the divine
reign, both of the Father and
the Son, is from everlasting to
everlasting. And only so far as
the Father gave the kingdom to
the Son, shall the Son deliver
it up to the Father, John 13:3.
Nor does the Father cease to
reign when he gives it to the
Son, neither the Son when he
delivers it to the Father; but
the glory which he had before
the world began, (John 17:5;
Hebrews 1:8,) will remain even
after that is delivered up. Nor
will he cease to be a king even
in his human nature, Luke 1:33.
If the citizens of the New
Jerusalem shall reign for ever,
(Revelation 22:5,) how much more
shall he!
Verses 25-27
1 Corinthians 15:25-27. For he
must reign — Because so it is
written, Psalms 110:1; till he —
God the Father; hath put all
enemies under his feet — That
is, till he hath utterly subdued
them to Christ, that he may
destroy them. The last enemy
that shall be destroyed is death
— That enemy which continues, in
some measure, to hold the
subjects of Christ under his
dominion, even when the
temptations of the world, and
the malice of Satan, can hold
them no longer, and when every
remainder of corrupt nature and
human infirmity has long since
ceased in the perfect holiness
of the intermediate state.
Macknight, who renders this
verse, the last enemy, death,
shall be destroyed, observes,
that “the common version of this
passage implies that there are
some enemies who shall not be
destroyed, which is wrong: for
all enemies shall be destroyed,
1 Corinthians 15:25.” Nor is it
true in every sense, that
“because death is called the
last enemy, it is to be last
destroyed: for if the
destruction of death is to be
accomplished by the
resurrection, the devil and his
angels, and wicked men, are to
be judged and punished after the
dead are raised. In Chrysostom’s
opinion, death is called the
last enemy, because he entered
into the world after the devil
and sin entered.” For Satan
brought in sin, and sin brought
forth death. There is a sense,
however, in which it may be
affirmed that death is the last
enemy that is destroyed; for
when Christ engaged these
enemies, he first conquered
Satan, namely, in his
temptation, then sin in his
death, and lastly, death in his
resurrection. In the same order
he delivers all the faithful
from them, yea, and destroys
their power. Death he so
destroys, that it shall exist no
more; sin and Satan, so that
they shall no more hurt his
people. For he hath put all
things under his feet —
Agreeably to what is said,
Psalms 8:6. But — As is
sufficiently evident; when he
saith all things are put under
him — In the last-mentioned
passage, and as is implied in
many others; he — The Father; is
excepted, who did put all things
under him — This declaration
concerning the Father’s not
being subject to the Son, was
intended to prevent us from
interpreting what is said of the
extent of the Son’s dominion, in
such a manner as to fancy that
he is in any respect superior to
the Father.
Verse 28
1 Corinthians 15:28. When all
things shall be subdued — Or,
rather, subjected, (as υποταγη
properly signifies,) unto him,
and there is no longer need of a
prophet to teach, nor of a
priest to make atonement and
intercede, nor of a king to
deliver, protect, and govern
under God, the Father will
resume the government; and then,
even the Son himself shall be
subjected to him who subjected
all things to him, that God — Or
the Godhead; may be all in all —
May be over all beings, in all
places, and the immediate object
of their worship and service. Or
rather, may be all things in and
to his intelligent creatures,
saints, and angels, by a full
communication of himself to
them, and an intimate union with
them. “He saith not,” observes
Dr. Whitby, “that the Father,
mentioned 1 Corinthians 15:24,
but that God may be all in all;
and so he seems to lead us to
that interpretation of the
Godhead which comprehends
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; and
then the import of the phrase,
that God may be all in all, will
be this: That the Godhead may
govern all things immediately by
himself, without the
intervention of a mediator
between him and us, to exact our
obedience in his name, and
convey to us his favours and
rewards, we being then to render
all our duty immediately to him,
and derive all our happiness
immediately from him. So that,
as now Christ, God-man, is all
in all, Colossians 3:11, because
the Father hath put all things
into his hands; does all things
and governs all things by him;
when this economy ceases, the
Godhead alone will be all in
all, as governing and
influencing all things by
himself immediately.” “On
supposition that this is a
proper interpretation of the
passage, and that the Son or
Word, John 1:1, in conjunction
with the Father and the Holy
Spirit, is to govern, two
questions will occur: 1st, How
the apostle came to speak of the
Son’s subjection to the Father,
seeing he is to reign in
conjunction with the Father. 2d,
How the Son, under the
government of the Godhead, can
be subject to himself. To remove
these difficulties, it is
generally said that the Son is
to be subject to the Father in
his human nature only. In the
present state of mankind, it is
suitable to the majesty and
purity of God, that all his
intercourses with them, whether
in the way of conferring
blessings on them, or of
receiving their worship, be
carried on by the intervention
of a mediator. But after sinners
are completely reconciled to
God, and made perfect in
holiness, and are introduced
into heaven, God will bestow his
favours on them, and receive
their worship, immediately,
without the intervention of a
mediator. And thus the offices
of mediator and king, becoming
unnecessary, shall cease. Yet
even in this state, the Son in
[or in union with] the human
nature, though no longer king,
[in the sense in which he was
king before,] will still retain
the glory of having created all
things, described Colossians
1:15; Hebrews 1:2-3, and the
glory of having saved mankind,
and of having destroyed the
kingdom of Satan, and Satan
himself. So that, in respect of
personal perfection, and of the
veneration due to him for the
great things he hath
accomplished, he will continue
superior to the highest angels,
and be acknowledged by them as
their superior through all
eternity. Now this superiority
being considered as a kind of
reigning, it is perhaps what the
apostle meant when, 2 Timothy
2:12, he said, If we suffer with
him, we shall also reign with
him. See also Revelation 3:21.”
— Macknight. So also Doddridge:
“The union of the divine and
human natures in the person of
the great Emmanuel, the
incomparable virtues of his
character, the glory of his
actions, and the relation he
bears to his people, with all
the texts which assert the
perpetuity of his government,
prohibit our imagining that he
shall ever cease to be
illustriously distinguished from
all others, whether men or
angels, in the heavenly world,
through eternal ages.”
Verse 29-30
1 Corinthians 15:29-30. Else, or
otherwise, what shall they do —
What will become of them? what
shall they do to repair their
loss, who are exposed to great
sufferings in consequence of
being baptized for the dead —
That is, say some, “In token of
their embracing the Christian
faith in the room of the dead,
who are just fallen in the cause
of Christ, but are yet supported
by a succession of new converts,
who immediately offer themselves
to fill up their places, as
ranks of soldiers that advance
to combat in the room of their
companions, who have just been
slain in their sight.” Others
say, “In hope of blessings to be
received after they are numbered
with the dead.” Many other
interpretations are given of
this obscure and ambiguous
phrase, υπερ των νεκρων, for the
dead. But perhaps that of Dr.
Macknight is the most probable,
who supplies the words της
αναστασεως, and reads the
clause, who are baptized for the
resurrection of the dead, or are
immersed in sufferings, because
of their believing in, and
testifying the doctrine of the
resurrection of the dead: for
which interpretation he adduces
solid reasons. If the dead rise
not — If the doctrine I oppose
be true, and the dead are not
raised at all; why are they then
baptized for the resurrection of
the dead? And why stand we — The
apostles; also in jeopardy — And
are exposed to so much danger
and suffering; every hour — In
the service of a Master from
whom, it is evident, we have no
secular rewards to expect.
Verses 31-34
1 Corinthians 15:31-34. I
protest by your rejoicing —
Greek, νη την υμετεραν καυχησιν
ην εχω, by the boasting
concerning you which I have,
namely, on account of your faith
in Christ Jesus our Lord. So the
clause is interpreted by some
critics. I die daily — That is,
I am daily in danger of death,
for bearing testimony to the
resurrection of Christ, and to a
general resurrection through
him. If, to speak after the
manner of men — That is, To use
a proverbial phrase expressive
of the most imminent danger; I
have fought with beasts at
Ephesus — With the savage fury
of a lawless multitude, Acts
19:29, &c. What advantageth it
me — What have I gained by such
sufferings; if the dead rise
not? And I have nothing to
expect after death. Let us eat
and drink, &c. — We might, on
that supposition, as well say,
with the Epicureans, Let us make
the best of this short life,
seeing we have no other portion
to expect. Be not deceived — By
such pernicious counsels as
this. Evil communications
corrupt good manners — He
opposes to the Epicurean saying
a well-known verse of the poet
Menander. By evil
communications, is meant
conversation contrary to faith,
hope, or love; or familiar
intercourse with worldly and
carnal people, which tends to
destroy all holiness. Awake — An
exclamation full of apostolical
majesty. Shake off your
lethargy! To righteousness —
Evangelical and divine
righteousness, flowing from the
true knowledge of God, and
implying that the whole soul be
broad awake and watchful: the
righteousness through which
grace reigns unto eternal life,
Romans 5:21; and sin not — That
is, and you will not sin, for
sin supposes sleepiness or
drowsiness of soul. There is
need to press this; for some —
Among you; have not the
knowledge of God — With all your
boasted knowledge, you are
ignorant of what it most
concerns you to know; I speak
this to your shame — For nothing
is more shameful than sleepy
ignorance of God, and of the
word and works of God; to them
especially, it was shameful,
considering the advantages they
had enjoyed.
Verse 35
1 Corinthians 15:35. But some
man possibly will say, How are
the dead raised up — After their
whole frame is dissolved? And
with what kind of bodies do they
come? — From the dead, after
these are mouldered into dust.
By the apostle’s answer to these
inquiries, it appears that he
considered the inquirer as not
so much desiring to have his
curiosity satisfied, respecting
the nature and qualities of the
bodies raised, as suggesting the
impossibility of the
resurrection in question taking
place. He therefore begins with
proving the possibility of the
resurrection, by appealing to
the power of God displayed in
raising grain from seed which is
rotted in the ground, and in
giving to each of the kinds,
when it is grown up, the body
proper to it: also in making
bodies celestial and bodies
terrestrial, each having its own
properties by which it is
distinguished from all others.
And from these instances of the
power of God, he infers that the
resurrection of the dead is
possible, 1 Corinthians
15:36-42. As to the inquiry,
with what kind of bodies men
will be raised, his answer is
given from the middle of 1
Corinthians 15:42-54. But what
he advances respects only the
properties of the bodies of the
righteous, which he contrasts
with the properties of the
bodies which were laid in the
grave. And with respect to the
righteous, who are found alive
on the earth at the coming of
Christ, he declares that their
bodies will be changed in a
moment, and rendered
incorruptible and immortal,
because flesh and blood cannot
inherit the kingdom of God.
Verses 36-38
1 Corinthians 15:36-38. Thou
fool — Greek, αφρον, without
mind, or understanding. Or, thou
inconsiderate and thoughtless
creature, who thinkest a matter
impossible, of the possibility
of which thou hast an example in
the very seed thou sowest.
Macknight thinks the apostle
here addresses the false teacher
at Corinth, “giving him the
appellation of fool in the same
sense, and for the same reason,
that our Lord himself called the
Pharisees fools, namely, on
account of their ignorance and
wickedness, Matthew 22:17.” What
thou sowest is not quickened
except it die — “To illustrate
the possibility of the
resurrection, the apostle
appeals to a thing which men
every day behold, and which is
little less wonderful than the
resurrection itself, the
reproduction of grain from seed
sown, which does not grow unless
it be rotted in the ground. But
after its body is destroyed
something springs out of it,
which, by a wonderful process,
the effect of the power of God,
ends in the reproduction of the
same kind of grain, not bare as
it was sown, but richly adorned
with blades, stalk, and ear.”
Thomas Paine, in his “Age of
Reason,” and some other modern
infidels, have maintained,
against the apostle, “that the
seed does not die in vegetation,
because the germe lives and
expands itself, and only the
extraneous matter corrupts. But
in fact the seed, as such, doth
die: it ceases to be a grain of
corn; though a part of it
springs, as it were, into new
life, by a process which we can
no more comprehend than we can
the manner of the resurrection.
Even Lucretius, the Epicurean
atheist, says, ‘Whatever change
transfers a body into a new
class of beings, may be justly
called the death of the original
substance: for what is changed
from what it was, that dies.’” —
Scott. And that which thou
sowest is not the body that
shall be — Produced from the
seed committed to the ground;
but bare, naked, grain — Widely
different from that which will
afterward rise out of the earth.
But God — Not thou, O man, nor
the grain itself; giveth it a
body — In the course of his
natural operations, by certain
laws of vegetation, with which
thou art entirely unacquainted;
as it hath pleased him — With
such a variety of parts as he
hath thought fit to determine
for that particular species; and
to each of the seeds — Not only
of the fruits and plants, but
animals also, to which the
apostle rises in the following
verse; its own body — Not only a
body of the same sort, but that
which, by virtue of some
connection it had with this or
that individual grain, may
properly be called its own,
though in its form much
different, and much more
beautiful. It is justly observed
by Dr. Macknight here, that,
“having such an example of the
divine power before our eyes, we
cannot think the reproduction of
the body impossible, though its
parts be utterly dissipated. And
although the very numerical body
be not raised, which the apostle
intimates when he affirms that
the grain produced from the seed
sown is not the very body which
is sown, yet the body is truly
raised; because what is raised
being united to the soul, there
will arise in the man, thus
completed, a consciousness of
identity, by which he will be
sensible of the justice of the
retribution which is made to him
for his deeds. Besides, this new
body will more than supply the
place of the old, by serving
every purpose necessary to the
perfection and happiness of the
man in his new state. According
to this view of the subject, the
objection taken from the
scattering of the particles of
the body that die, has no place,
because it does not seem
necessary that the body to be
raised should be composed of
them; for the Scripture nowhere
affirms that the same numerical
body is to be raised. In the
opinion of some, indeed, the
example of the grain which first
dies, and then revives, is
mentioned to intimate, that in
the human body there is a
seminal principle, which is not
destroyed by death; and which,
at the appointed season, will
reproduce the body in a more
excellent form than before,
through the quickening influence
of his power. But is a seminal
principle any thing different
from that power? What occasion
then have we to carry our
thoughts in this matter beyond
God’s power? Besides, as there
is no inextinguishable principle
in plants, the analogy doth not
hold. I therefore suppose this
wonderful, though common
instance, is mentioned, to show
that the resurrection of the
body is not beyond the power of
God to accomplish; and that it
may certainly be expected
according to Christ’s promise.”
Verses 39-41
1 Corinthians 15:39-41. All
flesh, &c. — As if he had said,
There is an immense variety in
the works of God, even in those
which fall under the inspection
of our senses, feeble and
limited as they are, while we
dwell in flesh and blood. For we
see even earthy bodies differ
from earthy, and heavenly bodies
from heavenly. What wonder then
if heavenly bodies differ from
earthy? or the bodies which rise
from those that lie in the
grave? “As in the preceding
verse,” says the author last
quoted, “the apostle directs us
to consider the greatness of the
power of God, displayed in the
production of that endless
variety of vegetable substances
for food to man and beast, with
which we are surrounded; so in
this verse he directs our
attention to the same power of
God displayed in that wonderful
diversity of animal substances,
which it hath formed into
different sorts of organized
bodies, each with members
properly adapted to the
instincts of its inhabitant, and
to the manner of life for which
it is designed;” men, beasts,
fishes, fowls. There are also
celestial bodies, &c. — As if he
had said, The greatness of his
power God hath likewise showed,
in the formation of other bodies
which are inanimate, both
celestial, as the sun, moon, and
stars, and terrestrial, such as
fossils and minerals. But the
glory of the celestial is one,
&c. — Different indeed is the
glory of the one from that of
the other, and the brightest
lustre which the terrestrial can
have, falls very short of that
of the celestial. There is one
glory of the sun, &c. — Yea, and
the heavenly bodies themselves
differ from each other. From the
whole of these principles, the
apostle draws this conclusion; —
that since God’s power has been
so “gloriously manifested in the
greatness and variety of the
material substances which he has
already formed, and in the
diversity of their
configuration, that person must
be a fool indeed, (1 Corinthians
15:36,) who takes upon him to
affirm that God cannot raise up
bodies for his saints at the
last day, in form and use
similar to their present bodies,
and perfectly adapted to the
faculties of their minds, and to
the new world in which they are
to live.” This last observation
is peculiarly worthy the
reader’s attention. Our new
bodies, what qualities soever
they may possess, will doubtless
be perfectly adapted to the
faculties of our minds, and to
the new world in which we shall
be placed: as our present bodies
are adapted to the faculties we
now possess, and to the world in
which we now live; and as we see
the bodies of all creatures are
suited to the instincts God hath
given them, and to the element
or place in which they have
their abode, whether fish in the
water, fowls in the air, or
cattle and creeping things on or
within the dry land.
Accordingly, when any living
creature is destined to change
the place of its abode, it
receives a new body, adapted to
its new situation: as, for
example, the silk-worm, when it
is no longer to be confined to
the leaves of the mulberry-tree,
but to have the freedom and
pleasure of roaming at large in
the spacious regions of the air,
is furnished with a new and
winged body, adapted to its new
state and element. And here
arises a question: Is it not
probable that at least one
important reason why we are to
receive new bodies, and are not
always to remain disimbodied
spirits, (as we shall be in the
intermediate state between death
and judgment,) is, because we
are destined to remove into a
new world, far more perfect and
glorious than this fallen and
disordered one in which we now
are? — a world in which there
will be no more curse, but the
throne of God and of the Lamb
shall be in it, and his servants
shall serve him, and shall see
his face. In this new world,
God, who never sinks, but always
rises to higher and higher
perfection in his works, will
certainly make a far more
glorious display of his wisdom,
power, and goodness, and other
attributes, than he has done in
this present world; and it is
therefore necessary that we
should have bodies furnished
with senses and other members
adapted to that world, and
enabling us to hold connection
and intercourse with it, and to
apprehend, enjoy, and be
instructed in the further
knowledge of our glorious
Creator, by the excellences of
it, so superior to any we had
witnessed in this present earth,
the abode of our infancy and
childhood. But suffice it at
present to have given a hint of
this.
Verses 42-44
1 Corinthians 15:42-44. So also
is the resurrection of the dead
— So great is the difference
between the body which fell and
that which rises. It is to be
observed, that in this and the
following verses, the apostle is
giving an account of the
righteous only. It is sown — A
beautiful word; committed as
seed to the ground: and the
apostle thus expresses the
burial of the body, because he
had illustrated the possibility
of its resurrection,
notwithstanding it rots in the
grave, or is otherwise
destroyed, by the example of
grain sown in the earth, which
after it rots produces grain of
the same kind with itself; a
comparison intended to
illustrate only the possibility
of the resurrection, but not the
manner of its being effected.
For certainly the body to be
raised will not be produced by
any virtue in the body buried,
as plants are produced by a
virtue latent in the seeds that
are sown. For we are carefully
taught in the Scriptures, that
the resurrection of our bodies
will be effected merely by the
extraordinary and miraculous
power of God, and not at all as
either plants or animals are
produced, in a natural way, from
their seeds. In corruption —
Just ready to putrefy, and by
various degrees of corruption
and decay, to return to the dust
from whence it came. It is
raised in incorruption — Utterly
incapable of either dissolution
or decay. It is sown in
dishonour — Shocking to those
who loved it best: human nature
in disgrace! It is raised in
glory — Clothed with robes of
light, fit for those whom the
King of heaven delights to
honour. See on Matthew 13:23;
Philippians 3:21. It is sown in
weakness — Deprived even of that
feeble strength which it once
enjoyed: it is raised in power —
Endued with vigour, strength,
and activity, such as we cannot
now conceive. It is sown in this
world a natural body — Or
rather, an animal body, as σωμα
ψυχικον more properly signifies,
supported by food, sleep, and
air, as the bodies of all
animals are: it is raised a
spiritual body — Of a more
refined contexture, needing none
of those animal refreshments,
and endued with qualities of a
spiritual nature like the angels
of God. These alterations to be
produced in the contexture of
the bodies of the righteous are
indeed great and wonderful, but
far from being impossible. For,
as Dr. Macknight justly
observes, “to illustrate great
things by small, we have an
example of a similar, though
very inferior transformation, in
the bodies of caterpillars,
which in their first state are
ugly, weak, and easily crushed,
but in their second state become
beautifully winged animals, full
of life and activity. This shows
what God can do in greater
instances.”
It may not be improper to add
here, what is justly observed by
the same author, that,
notwithstanding this great
difference between the bodies
raised, and the bodies committed
to the ground, those raised
will, in a sound sense, be the
same with the bodies that were
buried; inasmuch as they will
consist of members and organs of
sensation in form and use
similar to the members and
organs of the present body: that
is, as far as their new state
will admit; a limitation this,
absolutely necessary to be made,
because the Scripture itself
mentions two particulars, and
reason suggests others, in which
the bodies raised will
essentially differ from those
which died. 1st, We are told (1
Corinthians 6:13) that God will
destroy both the belly,
(including both the stomach and
bowels,) or the use of that
member, and meats. 2d, Our Lord
assures us, that they who shall
be accounted worthy to obtain
that world, and the resurrection
from the dead, neither marry nor
are given in marriage, for they
are equal to the angels. From
these texts it follows, that
none of the members necessary to
eating, and drinking, and
marriage, will make part of the
glorified bodies of the saints;
and that none of the appetites
and passions which are gratified
by these members, will have any
existence in their minds:
consequently, the joys of the
heavenly country, though in part
they are to arise from bodily
senses, will have no affinity
with the pleasures of a
Mohammedan paradise. 3d, Reason
directs us to believe, that to
the similarity or sameness of
the body which is raised, with
the body that was buried, it is
by no means necessary that the
imperfections in the members of
the buried body, should take
place in the raised body. On the
contrary, the restoration of all
the members to their proper
form, place, and office in the
body, instead of making it a
different body, will render it
more perfectly the same. 4th,
Besides the differences
mentioned, there may be other
differences likewise in the
glorified bodies of the saints,
suited to the difference of
their state, of which at present
we can form no conception. For
if the raised body is to be
endowed with new powers of
action, and new senses, these
may require additional members;
and notwithstanding the
addition, the raised body may,
on account of its general
similarity to the body that was
buried, be still considered as
the same. To conclude, the
Scripture speaks consistently
when, in describing the state of
the righteous after the
resurrection, it represents them
as having their mortal bodies
refashioned like to the glorious
body of Christ, and informs us,
that after their whole persons
are thus completed, they shall
be carried to a heavenly
country, where every object
being suited to the nature of
their glorified bodies, they
shall live unspeakably happy to
all eternity.
Verse 45-46
1 Corinthians 15:45-46. And so
it is written — With respect to
the animal body, Genesis 2:7.
The first Adam was made a living
soul — God gave him animal life,
in many respects resembling that
of other animals; the last Adam
was made — Rather was, or is,
for there is nothing in the
original for made; a quickening
Spirit — Having life in himself,
and quickening whom he will:
imparting even a more refined
life to men’s bodies at the
resurrection, than that which
they formerly possessed. Christ
is called Adam, because
believers receive their
sanctified, spiritual nature,
and their immortal bodies, from
him, (see Ephesians 5:32,) just
as mankind have derived their
corrupted nature and mortal
bodies from the first Adam. He
is also called the last Adam,
because he is posterior in time
to the first Adam, or because
there shall be no restorer and
head of the human race after
him. Howbeit that was not first
which is spiritual, &c. — That
is, as the first Adam existed
before Christ was sent to assume
our nature, and become our
Saviour, so must we first wear
that animal body, which we
derive from the one, before we
put on that spiritual body which
we receive from the other. Here
we are taught that the plan of
the divine government is to lead
his creatures from a lower to a
higher state of perfection.
They, therefore, who contend
that things should be as perfect
at the beginning as at the
conclusion of his
administration, are wiser than
God.
Verses 47-49
1 Corinthians 15:47-49. The
first man is [was] of the earth,
earthy — Being from earth, and
having forfeited his immortality
by sin, he became subject to
corruption and dissolution, like
the earth from which he came.
The second man is the Lord from
heaven — St. Paul could not well
say, “is of, or from heaven,
heavenly:” because though man
owes it to the earth that he is
earthy, yet the Lord does not
owe it to heaven that he is
glorious. He himself made the
heavens, and by descending from
them, showed himself to us as
the Lord. Christ is called the
second Adam in this respect,
that as Adam was a public person
who acted in the stead of all
mankind, so was Christ; and as
Adam was the first general
representative of men, Christ
was the second and the last: and
what they severally did,
terminated not in themselves,
but affected all whom they
represented. As is the earthy —
The first Adam after his fall;
such are they also that are
earthy — Who continue without
any higher principle; they are
sinful, mortal, corruptible
creatures: such a body as Adam
had, have all his posterity
while they remain on earth. And
as is the heavenly — Man,
Christ, at present; such are —
Or rather, shall be; they that
are heavenly — Who are united to
Christ by the quickening and
regenerating influences of his
Spirit. That they may live with
him in heaven, they shall at
last have glorious bodies like
his. And as we have borne the
image of the earthy — As
assuredly as we are now sinful,
afflicted, and mortal men, like
the first Adam; we shall also
bear the image of the heavenly —
So surely shall we be brought to
resemble Christ in holiness,
glory, and immortality.
Verses 50-52
1 Corinthians 15:50-52. Now this
I say, brethren — This I offer
to your consideration as a great
and important truth, that we
must first undergo an entire
change; for flesh and blood —
Such as we are now clothed with;
cannot inherit the kingdom of
God — Cannot enter that happy
place which Christ hath gone to
prepare for the reception of his
people, (John 14:7,) cannot
possess that kingdom which is
wholly spiritual, because it
affords no objects suited either
to the senses or to the
appetites of such a body.
Neither doth corruption — This
corruptible body; inherit
incorruption — That
incorruptible kingdom. Spirits,
clothed with corruptible bodies
like our present bodies, cannot
enjoy objects that are
incorruptible. They are not
capable of enjoying the divine
vision, nor of performing the
exalted services, nor of
relishing the pure pleasures,
which constitute the glory and
felicity of the kingdom of God.
Behold, I show you a mystery — A
truth hitherto unknown, and not
yet fully revealed to any of the
sons of men. We — Christians:
the apostle considers them all
as one in their succeeding
generations; shall not die —
Suffer a separation of soul and
body; but we shall all — Who do
not die; be changed — So that
this animal body shall become
spiritual; in a moment — Amazing
work of omnipotence! in the
twinkling of an eye, at the last
trump — Blown by the divine
command. For the trumpet shall
sound, &c. — At the giving of
the law from Sinai, there was
heard a great noise, like the
sounding of a trumpet, exceeding
loud, which sounded long, and
waxed louder and louder. In like
manner, at the descent of Christ
from heaven, a great noise
called the trump of God, (1
Thessalonians 4:16,) will be
made by the attending angels, as
the signal for the righteous to
come forth from their graves.
And this noise being made at
Christ’s command, it is called
by himself, his voice, John
5:25. After the righteous are
raised, the trumpet shall sound
a second time; on which account
it is called here the last
trumpet. And while it sounds,
the righteous who are alive on
the earth shall be changed. And
the dead shall be raised
incorruptible — Though this
expression be general, yet, as
appears from 1 Corinthians
15:51, and indeed from the whole
latter part of the chapter, it
is evident it must be restricted
to the dead in Christ, of whom
alone the apostle is
discoursing. Besides, as appears
from 1 Thessalonians 4:16, the
wicked are not to be raised at
the same time with the
righteous.
Verse 53-54
1 Corinthians 15:53-54. For this
corruptible — This human nature,
which is corruptible; must — In
order to its partaking of the
above-mentioned glory; put on
incorruption — Be endued with
such qualities as shall continue
in perpetual vigour, not subject
to any alteration; and this
mortal must put on immortality —
So as to be no longer subject to
diseases or death. The word
ενδυσασθαι, here rendered to put
on, literally signifies to go
into a place, or metaphorically,
to put on, or go into clothes.
But the metaphorical meaning
must not be insisted on here, as
implying that our corruptible
body shall have one that is
incorruptible put over it for an
outward covering. These ideas
are incongruous, and therefore
the meaning is, the corruptible
must be changed into one that is
incorruptible, as mentioned 1
Corinthians 15:51; the
righteous, who are alive at the
coming of Christ, instead of
dying and rising again immortal,
shall, by the power of Christ,
have their corruptible, mortal
bodies, changed in a moment,
into incorruptible, immortal
bodies, and by that means be
fitted for inheriting the
kingdom of God, equally with
those who are raised from the
dead incorruptible. So, when
this corruptible shall have put
on incorruption, &c. — When this
glorious and long-expected event
shall be accomplished; then
shall be brought to pass what is
written, (Isaiah 25:8,) Death is
swallowed up in victory — Is
totally conquered or abolished
for ever, as the original
phrase, εις νικος, may be
translated, being often used by
the LXX. in that sense. This
circumstance likewise shows,
that in this discourse the
apostle had the resurrection of
the righteous only in view. For
it cannot be said of the wicked,
who are to suffer the second
death, that death is swallowed
up in any sense with respect to
them, or that God hath given
them the victory over it, (1
Corinthians 15:57,) by the
resurrection.
Verse 55
1 Corinthians 15:55. O death,
where is thy sting? — Which once
was full of hellish poison. O
grave — αδης, O hades, the
receptacle of separate souls;
where is thy victory? — Thou art
now robbed of thy spoils; all
thy captives are set at liberty.
“The word hades literally
signifies the invisible world,
or the world where departed
spirits, both good and bad,
remain till the resurrection,
Job 11:8; Psalms 139:9; Isaiah
14:9; and especially Psalms
16:10, Thou wilt not leave my
soul in hades. The place where
the spirits of the righteous
abide, the Jews called paradise;
the place where the wicked are
shut up they called tartarus,
after the Greeks. There many of
the fallen angels are said to be
imprisoned, 2 Peter 2:4. “In
this noble passage the apostle
personifies death and the grave,
and introduces the righteous
after the resurrection, singing
a song of victory over both. In
this sublime song, death is
represented as a terrible
monster, having a deadly sting,
wherewith it had destroyed the
bodies of the whole human race,
and the invisible world as an
enemy who had imprisoned their
spirits. But the sting being
torn from death, and the gates
of the invisible world set open
by Christ, the bodies of the
righteous shall rise from the
grave, no more liable to be
destroyed by death, and their
spirits, being brought out of
paradise, the place of their
abode, shall reanimate their
bodies; and the first use of
their newly-recovered tongue
will be to sing this song, in
which they exult over death and
hades, as enemies utterly
destroyed, and praise God, who
hath given them the victory over
these deadly foes through Jesus
Christ. Milton hath made good
use of the apostle’s
personification of death, book
2. ver. 666.” — Macknight.
Verses 56-58
1 Corinthians 15:56-58. The
sting of death is sin — Which
arms it with its greatest
terrors, and is attended with a
foreboding of future misery, as
the effect of the divine
displeasure. And the strength of
sin — Which constitutes its
malignity, and gives it those
killing weapons; is the law — As
is largely declared Romans 7:7,
&c.; or, that it is a
transgression of the divine law.
But thanks be to God, who giveth
us — Who believe on the Lord
Jesus with our hearts unto
righteousness; the victory —
Over sin, death, and hades;
through our Lord Jesus Christ —
Through his sacrifice and
intercession, and the supplies
of his grace; through his dying
to atone for sin; his rising
again to show us that his
atonement was accepted, and that
he had obtained justification
for believers, the Holy Spirit
to raise them to newness of
life, and a state of immortal
glory. Therefore, my beloved
brethren, be ye steadfast — In
faith, hope, and love, and in an
uninterrupted course of
well-doing; Colossians 1:23;
Romans 2:7; Galatians 6:9;
unmoveable — By any temptations
from within or without; from
persons or things; from visible
or invisible enemies; always
abounding in the work of the
Lord — In every service you are
capable of performing for the
glory of God, the good of your
fellow-creatures, or your own
salvation; the work of faith, or
the labour of love to God and
man. Forasmuch as ye know — On
the surest evidence; that your
labour shall not be in vain in
the Lord — But that you shall
receive a full reward in that
day of final recompense for
whatever ye do for his sake. Let
us endeavour, therefore, by
cultivating holiness in all its
branches, to maintain a lively
hope of this felicity in all its
spirit and energy, longing for
that glorious day when, in the
utmost extent of the expression,
death shall be swallowed up for
ever: and millions of voices,
after the long silence of the
grave, shall burst out at once
into that triumphant song, O
death, where is thy sting? O
hades, where is thy victory? And
when we shall join in
everlasting thanksgivings to God
for giving us the victory
through Jesus Christ our Lord. |