Scripture Paradoxes:
THEIR TRUE EXPLANATION
by
Rev. Dr. Bayley
Minister of Argyle Square Church, King's Cross, London 1868
PARADOX XI:
Man's
Resurrection in his Spiritual Body
For I know that my Redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth: And though after my skin, worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I see God. — Job 14:25, 26.
COMPARED WITH
Now this I say, brethren, flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom God; neither does corruption inherit incorruption. — 1 Corinthians 15:50.
THE real Christian has no
fear of death. But I venture to assume if the question were put to
the first ten thousand persons whom we should meet who bear the Christian
name, we should find that with nine thousand nine hundred and nine-nine of
the number the fear of death is one of the most serious of fears they
have. It would seem to follow from this, that we are in a condition
exceedingly distant from that which was intended to be brought about by
real Christianity.
The fear of death may
perhaps arise not altogether from a sense of sin. There is a fear
always of that which is mysterious and unknown. That of which we
have no clear conception we contemplate with uneasy feelings. It is
quite possible that many thoughtful and earnest souls would fear death
less, if they but understood better the real character of both life and
death. They would have more trust, more of that sense of security
which our Lord evidently intends to give to us all when He says
Whosoever liveth and believeth in Me shall never die. John
11:26.
Let me ask, what is
death? According to the ordinary conception it is a cessation of
life, followed by man knows not what. It is regarded in a state of
most anxious apprehension, as a condition from which most persons shrink.
The legislators of this and most other countries act on the conviction
that death is the most terrible punishment which the law can inflict.
They put their worst criminals to death. Yet nothing can be truer
than the declaration which our Lord made from time to time, that in
reality, the true man, the real Christian, the angel-minded man, never
does die at all. Whosoever keepeth My sayings, the Lord Jesus
says, shall never see death. He that eateth My flesh and drinketh
My blood shall never die, but shall have eternal life, and so in a
great variety of other declarations. The truth which is unveiled to
us in the Sacred Scriptures, is, that although we are changing our mortal
covering every moment, and at length we throw it off altogether, the man
never dies. He passes from this sense below to a higher and nobler
sense in the eternal world, to live more, not to live less. That
this is really the doctrine of the Sacred Scriptures, you will find from
end to end of the hallowed Book. At the commencement of Revelation
it is true that Adam was told Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou
return, but this is evidently spoken only of that which is dust, the body.
The outward form is dust, and returns to dust. The same idea is
given in another part of the Scripture when it is said—that the dust shall
return to the earth whence it was, and the spirit to God who gave it.
This is the doctrine of the whole Scripture.
We pass from this
intimation to the first of whom death is predicated at all, and we come to
that declaration to which our Lord refers when speaking of the
Resurrection, namely, the declaration that was made to Moses in the
wonderful scene at the bush. Now that the dead are raised, even
Moses shewed at the bush, when he calleth the Lord the God of Abraham, and
the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob; for He is not a God of the dead
but of the living, for all live unto Him.—Luke
20:37, 38 The very language in which
death is applied to patriarch after patriarch in the early histories of
the Divine Word would evidently give this idea. It is said of very
few of them that they died; if the term death be mentioned in relation to
one it is immediately added He was gathered to his people. Abraham,
it is said, was gathered to his people, the same is said of Isaac, and the
same is said of Jacob—He was gathered to his people. Thus only
taking notice of the real man, of that which consisted of affections, and
thoughts, and energies; that which gave life to the body, for the body
never was the man, never was the real being, but only his covering useful
for this world, but incapable of entering the other. When you come
to the book of Job you will find that the same idea, is recognized from
time to time, throughout the Book. There is a very early instance of
it in the 4th chapter, where it is said in the 19th verse:—How shall they
do that live in houses of clay. Where the description of the
immortal man is not that he is a house of clay, but that he lives in a
house of clay. As
the cloud is consumed and vanished away. So he that goeth down to
the grave shall come up no more, he shall no more return to his house; he
shall no more be found in his field.—7:9. That which goes down to the
grave was merely the cast off covering of the man; merely the house of
clay in which he lived; a house that had been perpetually renewed, but was
now left behind. Job elsewhere teaches that it is the real man, the
immortal soul in a spiritual form that quits the body at death to enter a
world new to us, but from which he will never return. Thus he refers
to his departure. Before I go whence I shall not return, even to the
land of darkness and the shadow of death.—Job 10:21. Again, when a
few years are come then I shall go the way whence I shall not return.—Job
16:22.
Of the body, he says
again —As the waters fall from the sea, and the flood decayeth and
drieth up so man lieth down, and riseth not till the heavens be no more.
They shall not awake, nor be raised out of their sleep. Job
14:11, 12.
Till the heavens be no
more, was a Hebraism for that which should never happen.
So that Job's full
doctrine, was, that when the spiritual man left his body, he entered into
another world, whence he would never come back; and his bodily form would
mingle with his native dust, never to rise again, for him.
It is one of the
interesting facts of man's physiology that every moment—not every day or
month, or year only, but every moment—active changes are going on in the
human body. At the beginning of each year a mans body is far
different from what it was at the beginning of the year before.
Every breath we draw, every portion of food we eat, every hour we live,
there is a certain change going on, so that when we all separate this
evening after our discourse is completed, we shall none of us go away with
precisely the same body with which we entered this church. There is
a curious little fact that tends to illustrate this. It may not have
been remarked by every one, at least of the younger portion of my
auditory. It is this. The pauses between one breath and
another are different in length. When we breathe in, we almost
immediately breathe out again, having made a very slight pause. But,
before we take another breath, we pause twice as long. The reason of
this is evident. The breath comes out loaded with cast off material
which has been turned out of the blood in the lungs, and by this beautiful
law of Divine Providence we wait after the breath has gone one, until this
poisoned air has passed away, then we breathe in fresh air again, and so
we proceed every moment. Every breath is thus a medium of continual
change, so that this house of clay, this material structure in which we
live, uses a vast stock of matter. If all were gathered together
that we have made our own, and then put off from the first breath of
childhood down to our expiring breath, we should have accumulated a mass
equal to more than twenty bodies. This makes no difficulty to one
who believes Job, that he who goeth down to the grave shall come up no
more. But to one who thinks that the body must rise again, the
difficulty is serious, indeed. Is all that has been a man's body to
be raised up. If all, what a mass he will be? If only some,
which part, and why a part only. Will it be the first complete body,
or the second, or the middle one, or the last? The last, we must
remember, is the most imperfect of all. Nay, the fact is, some
people never have had a complete body during their whole life.
They are born without eyes, without arms, or without legs: they have only
an incomplete body. Although they have change going on, there is
never a complete form during the whole period of their existence. If
the resurrection body is to be as the old writers used to express it,
precisely the same body, such a person as I described would have to remain
a mutilated man to all eternity. All these difficulties come from
confounding between the body and the man, between the bark and the tree.
All nature, however, as well as all Scripture, illustrates the true
doctrine of the resurrection. Take the caterpillar and the
butterfly. Every one knows that the caterpillar leads its little
obscure life on its leaf. There it creeps and eats, lives and dies
to all appearance. But it is only the outside case that dies. It
breaks open in the spring, then comes forth in far more beautiful form,
the representative of the risen soul. This higher being was within
the other. Thus, too, with a seed; there is the outer part, and the
inner life. The Apostle Paul puts it thus, and expressly likens it
to man and his body. The body thou sowest is not the body that
shall be, but bare grain, it may chance of wheat, or of some other grain,
but God giveth it a body as it hath pleased Him, and to every seed his own
body.—1 Corinthians 15:37, 38. From all this, we learn that man
is an immortal being, tenanting for a time moral body. Divine
Providence places him here, and when he has finished his career, he goes
into the more perfect world with a more perfect body, never to return.
But then comes the
question, what then does Job mean in the language of our first text,
language which is familiarized to every one by its being used at the
ordinary funeral-service. Yet, as we have seen, the doctrine of the
Book of Job appears to be exceeding different from what the passage
expresses. In fact, we venture upon the bold assertion that when the
Book of Job was written, there was no one in the whole world that thought
even of such a thing as the earthly body being raised into the eternal
world. This Book of Job is believed by many, perhaps by most learned
commentators, to be one of the oldest, if not the very oldest, in the
Sacred Scriptures. The early parts of the Book of Genesis are,
doubtless older but this book is far earlier than the time of Moses.
It was a book of the Church, that existed before the Israelitish
dispensation. And, at the time of the Ancient Church, before the
patriarchal times, no one thought of the resurrection of the body.
Even, at the present day by far the largest portion of the inhabitants of
the world never dream of the resurrection of the earthly body.
Indeed if we bear in mind that this book relates to a period of a very
ancient time, and that such a thing had never been mentioned in any
revelation, or hinted even in the hieroglyphics of Egypt; that this
passage in the Book of Job is the first in which people suppose anything
was said of the resurrection of the material body, it would be for
thoughtful men to ask, whether they think such a doctrine would be
introduced in this particular language and at that particular time in the
world's history, not as a revelation, but as an incidental expression!
But no! Job in reality
said nothing about the resurrection of the body. Regard the passage
attentively. The words worms and body make us think of the grave,
where the body is associated with the worms. But worms is not
properly in the text at all. It is in italics. And you know
those words were placed in italics by the translators, which were not in
the original text, and do not properly belong to the Bible. Destroy
this body—yes body a person may say body is there. But it is not.
Body is in italics also. The passage has nothing to do either with
worms or body. But then perhaps a person may think it has some
relationship to the supposed last day in which bodies are to be raised
again, because in the verse going before, it says I know that my
Redeemer liveth, and that He will stand at the latter day upon the earth.
But day is in italics. Thus you perceive that all those words which
seem to imply that after the body has been buried it will be raised at
some period; all these words are really in italics, they are not in the
Scripture at all. And, to read the passage correctly, you must read
it without them. You will find then that all the passage states is,
that Job was in the greatest possible distress. He had been
suffering with great anguish in a body worn by ulcers and almost wasted
away with great anxiety of mind. He was permitted by Divine
Providence to be tried to the utmost in order that it might be seen how
man could be purified and chastened by sorrow and affliction, and be
prepared for a higher life and for greater blessing. This is the
object of the whole Book of Job, and what he announces is this, that he
had now scarcely anything left but his skin, nay, he says a little earlier
that he has only escaped by the skin of his teeth. But yet he had
faith in the Lord, and hope that after his skin was gone, he would still
be safe. Destroy this, he says, whatever was under the skin,
and yet in my flesh I shall see God. That is to say, before I
die, I shall see God. God will appear, and vindicate, and deliver
me, yet, while I am in my flesh. The latter day, that is spoken of,
does not mean latter end of the earth, but the latter end of Job, the
latter end of his trial. This hope of his was fulfilled. The
Almighty appeared to him. At the 42nd Chapter, the 5th verse, we have
these remarkable words, after Job held submitted himself and acknowledged
the Divine mercy in every way:—I have heard of Thee by the hearing of
the ear, but now mine eye seeth Thee. The very thing that he
said would come to pass had been realized. He was able to see God as
his deliverer while he was yet alive. And, in a subsequent verse, it
is said, God blessed his latter end more than his beginning, for He gave
him twice as much as he had before, and thus manifested that the Divine
benediction was upon him.
In this way you will
perceive there is no strange doctrine introduced here. The strange
words of the translators are alone responsible for a doctrine which has no
warrant in eternal truth.
In the New Testament,
the teaching both of our Lord and His Apostles, is in harmony with the
plain declaration of our second text: Flesh and blood cannot inherit
the kingdom of God; neither doth corruption inherit incorruption.
Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God. We say. How
can it? The kingdom of God is a spiritual kingdom; it is a kingdom
of thought, of mind, of principle; it is the life-world, and how can flesh
and blood enter into a world of mind? You might just as well suppose
that the arm may enter into the thought. Matter cannot enter into
mind.
It will be well also to
notice the word inherit; it is not said cannot go into the kingdom of God.
The teaching of Scripture is, that the man is raised—the immortal man,
when we put off our outward fleshly covering, advancing to the brighter
and better world. Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of
God, neither doth corruption inherit incorruption. We have said,
mark the word inherit, for the notion to which I have been referring is,
that the bodies are to be brought up again, and then they are to be made
spiritual, and they are to go then into the kingdom of heaven. But
man has a spiritual body now, and if the material body were to be
raised up, and then to be made spiritual, he would have two spiritual
bodies.
The earthly body is to
be changed, it is said, at the resurrection day. What is
meant by changing? When I change sixpence I mean that I put away the
piece that I had, and I get six other pieces instead. But if a body
is to be brought up and then to be changed, why that is only bringing it
up and then putting it away again; putting it away and getting another
instead. Why not have the other at first? Why bring this body
up, and then change it? Bring it up, and put it down.
Besides, if the body
attained the privilege of entering heaven in its changed state, that would
be inheriting the kingdom of God. When we say a person inherits
something, me mean that he had it not before, but that he comes into
possession of it. The Apostle does not say that flesh and blood
cannot enter into the kingdom of heaven, but he says it cannot
INHERIT the kingdom of
heaven. Thus, it is not only not immortal now, but it cannot
ATTAIN immortality. It
not only cannot go into the kingdom of heaven as it is, but cannot in its
own nature be made to inherit the kingdom of God. Besides, why go
the roundabout way of getting the material body up out of the grave, and
then dissolving it, and getting another—a spiritual body—instead, when we
have a spiritual body now? The spiritual body, before regeneration,
is the same as the carnal mind, and is the body dead in trespasses and
sins, which has to be quickened.—Eph. 2:1, 5. It is the
body
of sin, the old man; Roman 6:6, the body of death, Rom. 7:24;
the
body dead, because of sin, Rom. 8:10; the vile body, to be made into
the likeness of the Lord's glorious body.—Phil. 3:25. The
resurrection of this body, is its transformation by the power of the Word,
and the co-operation of faith and love, into the new man, which after God
is created in righteousness and true holiness.—Eph. 4:24. The
corrupt mind (ver. 33.) is the corruptible which shall put on
incorruption, the mortal (or deathly) which shall put on immortality.
And, if we have done this, at the last, when nature ceases with us, the
voice of heaven like a trumpet call will raise us to life, as in the
twinkling of an eye, full of immortality and blessedness. Death
is swallowed up in victory.
The Apostle said he
died daily,—l Cor. 15:13; and so must we die daily to sin if like him,
by any means me may attain to the resurrection of the dead.—Phil.
3:11.
The death and
resurrection to be attained during our life in the world, are the things
indispensable to us all. He that heareth My word, and believeth on
Him that sent Me, hath everlasting life, and shall not came into
condemnation, but is PASSED
from DEATH TO LIFE.—John
5:24.
The great philosopher
Locke remarked to Bishop Stillingfleet, (against whom he maintained the
doctrine which we are now setting forth, that the resurrection of the same
body was never asserted in Scripture), It does seem to be impossible
for anything to come out of the that was not in it. But, earthly
bodies, when the souls have left them, are immediately subjected to the
operation of the general laws of nature, and are very rapidly
disorganized, and ultimately take their place in the general elements of
nature. The gases composing them, pass into new forms, so that the
same matter becomes part of vegetables, animals, human bodies again, and
again and again. They enter into our harvests, and then into our
food, and then into bodies, afterwards into the earth, and so on.
So, that in a century after death, speaking in general terms, the whole
mass of human bodies, is dispersed into its essential elements. The
bodies as a rule are no longer in the graves at all. And if they are
not in the graves they cannot be brought out of the graves.
And, so we may see how
clearly the Divine Providence, in His wondrous laws of nature, has shown
that the matter of dead bodies is not wanted, out of which to make
spiritual bodies. And why? Because spiritual things have
their own body. There is a spiritual body. The soul itself
is in a spiritual body now.
The Apostle Paul so
clearly and directly teaches the whole doctrine of man's spiritual
resurrection, in the chapter before us, that it is wonderful that any
Christian should have overlooked it. In fact, it never would have
been overlooked, only that some nations, in the decline of their spiritual
nature, turned all spiritual views into carnal things.
The Babylonians, who had
been fond of spiritual and symbolic teaching in their early days, a few
centuries before Christ, became carnal and natural, changing their
heavenly ideas into earthly ones. They had known that love in the
early and pure times of their Church was a spiritual fire, and that the
Lord Himself was a spiritual sun. But as they became carnal they
turned the idea of the spiritual sun into that of the earthly sun, and
became sun-worshipers. They turned the idea of spiritual fire into
that of natural fire; and so they made flames in their temples, thought
these were holy, and kept them constantly burning. So, likewise,
they turned spiritual bodies into natural bodies when they thought of the
resurrection. The notion of the body rising again, first
had its rise among these people, the ancient Babylonians, in their period
of degeneration. The Jews, when they went as exiles into Babylonia,
learned it from them, as they learned many other carnal and idolatrous
notions from other Gentile nations. It was not from Divine
revelation, but from Babylonish tradition, and Babylonish superstition,
that the doctrine had its rise.
The Apostle Paul went
through the whole doctrine again. Beginning at the 33rd verse of
this chapter, he said, after speaking about the resurrection of man and
showing that the Lord in this, as well as in everything else, led the way
to renewed certainly on this subject, by His own triumph over death, he
observes, Some men, will say how are the dead raised up, and with what
body do they come?—1 Cor. 15:35. Here, you see, he clearly distinguishes between
the dead themselves, and the bodies of the dead. How are the dead
raised up, and with what body do they come? To talk of wanting the
earthly body up again, at some future time, was so very strange a notion,
one that the Apostle evidently thinks so extravagant, that he applies to
it very vigorous language. He says Thou fool, to a person asking
what body a man is to have? Thou fool, that which thou sowest is
NOT THE BODY THAT SHALL BE.
Well, but that is the very idea that many persons have been so anxious to
maintain. The body they now have is the body that shall be.
The Apostle says, IT IS NOT.
Indeed, if that which we
sow, that which we put into the earth were the body that shall be, why put
it into the earth at all? Why not take it with us? The Apostle
states the analogy thus, Thou fool, the body then sowest is not the
body that shall be, but bare grain; it may chance of wheat or of some
other grain; and God giveth it a body as it hath pleased Him, and to every
seed his own body. That is to say, the human soul is precisely
like the life in the seed. You place a seed in the ground, there is
the life, and there is a body that covers it. The body, the outside
substance of the seed, begins to corrupt and rot directly. But,
within, the life clothes itself with a new form. The outward husk
dies off, and becomes a part of the earth around, but God giveth it a
body as it hath pleased Him. It is just the same with man.
There is the soul in the body. The body is its clothing. It is
the husk of the man. The husk perishes. The man himself rises
in his own body, that is to say,
THE SPIRITUAL BODY; the embodiment of his love, his thoughts, his
purposes, his virtues, if he has been a good man; and thus he is as
beautiful as he has been good. He is ugly as his vices if he has
been a bad man. God giveth it a body as it hath pleased Him, and to
every seed his own body. It is the man's own form; what he has been
making himself to be from the time when he began to determine his
character. If he has been a noble, thoughtful, wise, loving man,
then within the outward covering there has been induced a noble, heavenly,
gentle, loving form. This inner form has gradually shone more and
more through the covering of clay, and at length stands out when that
covering is put away in all the beauty of an angel, God giveth it a
body as it hath pleased Him, and to every seed his own body.
And, then, supposing
some person to ask, But how is this? The Apostle goes on to
illustrate it. He says it is not a matter for wonder. There
are different kinds of bodies. There are terrestrial bodies, he
says, i.e., earthly bodies; and bodies celestial, i.e., heavenly bodies.
There are different kinds of flesh, even in this world. There is one
flesh, he says, of birds, another of beasts, another flesh of fishes.
He says, there are different kinds of glory; there is one glory of the sun,
there is another glory of the moon, and there is another glory of the
stars. So is the resurrection of the dead. When we pass into
the eternal world, we take a body fitted for that world; we leave the
outward body that is no longer needful, but we have a spiritual body.
There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body.—ver. 44.
The Apostle teaches the
same doctrine in the second epistle to the same people, the Corinthians.
At the beginning of the fifth chapter, you will find he takes up the
subject again, and says, We know that if the earthly house of this
tabernacle be dissolved, WE HAVE
a building of God, not made with hands, eternal in the heavens.—ver. 1. Not, we shall have, but WE
HAVE. If the earthly house, that is, the earthly body, be
dissolved, we have a heavenly body. And he says that he desires to
be clothed upon with his body that is from heaven; he wishes no longer to
be cabined and confined by this earthly matter; he longs to go into the
world where his spirit can ultimate all that he loves. Here,
although the body serves a glorious purpose upon earth, yet we are just
like people that live in small cottages, we have to do our work and to
bring forth the various purposes of our constant life, but under limited
conditions. This is only the place of our training and experimentalizing. The same wise Providence that ordained us to be
born little babies, ordained us to be born in earthly, confined bodies.
Every one will see what an extremely awkward thing it would be if, with
our inexperience and unwisdom, we had been born six feet high. If,
with the waywardnesses of the child, we had the strength of the man, how
little should we have been able to acquire genially and kindly all those
laws of heavenly wisdom and goodness which our mothers teach us, and which
help us to be gradually trained to be more thoughtful, as men, before we
have the power of men. It is just the same with us in our spiritual
being. We are here in order that we may learn to be angels first, in
all the little, comparatively little, exercises of human life. We
should learn to love God and to love our neighbor, and bring ourselves
into obedience to the laws of order, and then pass into the eternal world.
We are to live in a world of mind; where every love can go out and find
its words and its works, and all its circumstances in complete harmony
with itself. Here we all feel that we are confined by the laws and
circumstances of the body. The mind is always far beyond what the
body is. Who is there that has not found a hundred and a thousand
times that while he has had a strong wish to bring out some truths that
have glanced into his mind, and which he perceives, he has not got words
wherewith to express himself. He can think a grand idea, but he
cannot yet utter it. It is just the same with purposes. We can
intend great things; we can earnestly desire them; but as yet we cannot
bring them into act; we can neither express nor do the hundredth part of
what we wish. We are here in training; and if we are trained to have
an angels love and an angels thought when we pass into the other world, we
shall have an angel's power, an angel's wisdom, and an angel's form, and not
till then.
The bad man is cabined
also by various hindrances that keep him bound in various ways. He
cannot bring out half or a thousandth part of the vice that is in him.
Hence the importance of taking care that this life witnesses his
conversion and regeneration.
The angel has no thought
but what he can express, no purpose but what he can work out, no object
but what he can ultimate and diffuse around. The Lord will say to
every good man, Well done, good and faithful servant, thou hast been
faithful over a few things, I will make the ruler over many things; enter
thou into the joy of thy Lord. The good man has, by the Lord's
help, been faithful over a few things. He has been faithful as far
as he could over the inward motives and purposes of his heart and mind; he
has complained when he has desired to do good that he has had so little
power. He has not had money, not had influence enough. But in
the other life, world of mind, all these things will be in perfect order.
His face, his form, his hands, his home, his whole circumstances,
everything, will express the real character of his disposition. He
will have a palace, just the representative of himself, as beautiful as he
is good. All around him, his thoughts and affections will be
represented in forms of loveliness. He will be able to do whatever
he wants to do. There, other minds will be responsive to his mind;
there, substance will be plastic to his will and thought; he will be made
ruler over many things; all things, in fact, will be given him by the Lord
richly to enjoy, so that he will be perfect without, as well as perfect
within.
Let us, then, take this
glorious doctrine, and animate one another with the feeling that when we
pass away from earth, we are not going to non-existence, nor
half-existence. We are not going to inhabit the clay of the grave,
to be food for worms, it is only what we cast off that does this.
When Socrates was about
to die, and he had many of his friends around him, great numbers of them
spoke of the sorrow that they would experience, but of the great care that
they would take of him after death, he said, Oh, but you must catch me
first. The great law respecting the good is that proclaimed by
the angels at the Lord's grave, He is not here, He is risen.
The flesh and blood left behind,—the outward form, are not the man.
He is not here, He is risen. You look, it may be, at
the graves of those you value, because the body is there in which your
loved ones dwelt, but do not suppose that they are there now. They
are not here, they are risen. Angels have been near you all your
life; never fear when death comes, they will not forsake you. There
is only one death you need to fear, and that is, dying to goodness, to
wisdom, to faith, and to love. Be careful that righteousness does
not die with you. As to everything else, we never do die. We
live more and more by every glorious purpose, by every advance in the
regenerate life. Our youth is renewed like the eagle's. The
appearance of decay in old age is not a decay in anything of a heavenly
character. We decay in the remembrance of words sometimes, for words
are losing their value to us: we are rising to ideas. We decay in
the knowledge of outward facts, in the power of doing many physical
things, because our life is drawing inwards. We are soon coming to
have nothing to do with the world in any way. It is with us as it is
with corn. As its blade grows up at first young in the field, it has
the outside full of vigor; the stem stands upright, but there is little in
it. As the plant ripens, the pith and substance gather within, and
form a bulb in the center, full of nutriment and full of use. The
outside becomes shriveled, weak, and dry, ready to be put away as chaff.
Well, let it be put away,—the ripened corn is gathered into the barn, and
goes to feed, to comfort, and to bless mankind. So is life in us.
In youth our outside life is vigorous, in age the hair may whiten, the
cheek may be wrinkled, the outward form be less and less, but if we have
been going on in real love to God and love to man, in true effort
constantly to become more and more heavenly, our youth is renewed, real
wisdom, real faith, real firmness in what is good, real angelic beauty,
become more and more developed within us until the time comes that our
companion angels beckon us hence. The death we thought was a
skeleton about to strike us with his spear, is really a herald of heaven
about to touch us with his scepter. He says, Come up hither.
Like the Lord to His dying companion on the cross, it will be said to you,
Today shalt thou be with Me in paradise.—Luke 23:43. The dim
atmosphere of nature opens, and we behold angelic faces, we enter angelic
company, and hear the angelic song, Oh death where is thy sting?
Oh grave where is thy victory?
LESSONS
(select lesson to review)
|