Dwight
L. Moody
Shall We Meet Our Loved Ones Again?
This is one of the grandest chapters in
the writings of Paul. It is especially grand to those who have lost
friends. No sooner do loved ones pass away than the question arises,
Shall we meet them again?
Paul answers this question and gives a
consolation we can find so clearly stated nowhere else.
What a consolation to know, as we lay our
friends away, that we shall meet them again in a little while!
As I go into a cemetery, I like to think
of the time when the dead shall rise from their graves. We read part of
this chapter in what we call the "burial service." I think it
is an unfortunate expression. Paul never talked of "burial."
He said the body was sown in corruption, sown in weakness,
sown in dishonour, sown a natural body.
If I bury a bushel of wheat, I
never expect to see it again, but if I sow it, I expect results. Thank
God, our friends are not buried; they are only sown! I like the Saxon
name for the cemetery -- GOD'S ACRE.
The Gospel preached by the apostles
rested upon four pillars: the atoning death of Christ, His burial and
resurrection, His ascension, His coming again. These four doctrines were
preached by all the apostles, and by them the Gospel must stand or fall.
In the opening verses of I Corinthians
15, we get a clear statement from Paul that the doctrine of the
resurrection is a part of the Gospel. He defines the Gospel as meaning
that Christ died for our sins, but not that only -- He was buried and
rose again the third day. Then he summons witnesses to prove the
resurrection:
"He was seen of Cephas [Simon
Peter] then of the twelve: After that, he was seen of above five
hundred brethren at once; of whom the greater part remain unto this
present, but some are fallen asleep. After that, he was seen of James;
then of all the apostles. And last of all he was seen of me also, as of
one born out of due time."
Now that is pretty clear testimony,
strong enough to satisfy a candid inquirer. But the Greeks had no belief
in the possibility of the resurrection, and these converts at Corinth
had been reared in that unbelief. So Paul puts the question:
"Now if Christ be preached that
he rose from the dead, how say some among you that there is no
resurrection of the dead?"
It was one of the false doctrines that
had crept into the church at Corinth, because no orthodox Jew would ever
think of questioning it.
To deny the resurrection is to say that
we will never see more of the loved ones whose bodies have been
committed to the clay. If Christ has not risen, this life is the only
one, and we are as the brutes.
How cruel it is to have anyone love you
if this be true! How horrible that they should let the tendrils of your
heart twine around them, if, when they are torn away in death, it is to
be the end. I would rather hate than love if I thought
there will be no resurrection, because then I would feel no pangs at
losing the hated thing.
Oh, the cruelty of unbelief! It takes
away our brightest hopes.
"If in this life only we have
hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable."
IMMORTALITY
Mankind has natural "yearnings after
the infinite." Among the most primitive peoples philosophers have
detected what has been well called "an appetite for the
infinite," which belies the teaching that death ends all.
It is one of the points of difference
between man and beast. Birds of the air and beasts of the field are much
the same today as they were in Eden. They eat, sleep and pass their
lives from sun to sun in unvarying monotony. Their desires and needs are
the same.
But man is always changing. His desires
are always enlarging. His mind is always planning ahead. No sooner does
he reach one goal than he presses towards the next. Not even death
itself can arrest him. A well-known infidel once said, "The last
enemy that shall be destroyed is not death, but the belief of man in his
own immortality."
This presentiment of a future life has
been beautifully illustrated by the feeling which grows within the bird
when winter approaches, impelling it to travel towards the south --
"an impulse mysterious and undefined, but irresistible and
unerring"; or to "the longing of southern plants, taken to a
northern climate and planted in a northern soil. They grow there, but
they are always failing of their flowers. The poor, exiled shrub dreams
of a splendid blossom which it has never seen, but which it is dimly
conscious that it ought somehow to produce. It feels the flower which it
has not strength to make in the half-chilled but still genuine juices of
its southern nature. That is the way in which the thought of a future
life haunts us all."
Philosophers have many facts to prove
this universal reaching forward to the life beyond the grave. It is
supposed that many funeral rites and ceremonies, for instance, are due
to it. If the body is once more to be occupied by its spirit, it at once
suggests itself that it must be protected from harm. Accordingly we find
that graves are concealed lest enemies should dig up the remains and
dishonour them.
Livingstone tells how a Bechuana chief
was buried in his own cattle pen, then the cattle were driven about for
some hours until all trace of the grave was obliterated.
But the body must be protected not alone
from ill-usage, but also, as far as possible, from decay; and the
process of embalming is an endeavour in this direction.
Sometimes, indeed, resurrection would be
undesirable, and so we find that dead bodies are thrown into the water
to drown the spirit.
Modern Egyptians turn the body round and
round, it is said, to make the spirit giddy and therefore unable to
retrace its steps.
Certain aboriginal Australians take off
the nails of the hands lest the reanimated corpse should scratch its way
out of its narrow cell.
When the conception of a second life as a
continuation of the present life is held, we find the custom of burying
inanimate things, such as weapons and instruments. The dead man will
require everything beyond -- as he did this side -- death.
Not alone inanimate things, but animals
are killed in order that their ghosts may accompany the ghost of the
dead man. The Bedouins slaughter his camels over the grave of their dead
comrade: indispensable in this world, it will be the same in the next.
From this, one step leads to the
immolation of human beings. Wives follow their husbands; slaves are
slain that they may continue to serve their masters. In the words of a
poet:
They that in barbarian burials
killed the slave and slew the wife
Felt within themselves the sacred
passion of the second life.
THE DOCTRINE OF THE RESURRECTION IN THE
OLD TESTAMENT
We only catch glimpses of the doctrine of
the resurrection now and then in the Old Testament, but the saints of
those days evidently believed in it.
Nearly two thousand years before Christ,
Abraham rehearsed His sacrifice when on Mt. Moriah he obeyed God's call
to offer up Isaac. Referring to this, Paul writes: "Accounting
that God was able to raise [Isaac] up, even from the dead: from whence
also he received him in a figure."
Five hundred years later we find God
saying unto His servant Moses, "I kill, and I make alive."
Isaiah wrote, "He will swallow up
death in victory; and the Lord God will wipe away tears from off all
faces." Again, "Thy dead men shall live, together with
my dead body shall they rise. Awake and sing, ye that dwell in the dust:
for thy dew is as the dew of herbs, and the earth shall cast out the
dead."
Ezekiel's vivid description of the
resurrection of dry bones, setting forth in prophecy the restoration of
Israel, is another evidence.
When David lost his child, he said he
could not call the little one back to him, but that he would go and be
with the child. At other times he wrote, "As for me, I will
behold thy face in righteousness: I shall be satisfied, when I awake,
with thy likeness." And, "God will redeem my soul from
the power of the grave: for he shall receive me."
The Patriarch Job comforted himself with
the same glorious hope in the hour of his deep sorrow. He who had asked,
"What is my strength that I should hope? and what is mine end
that I should prolong my life?" said, "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: Whom I shall see for myself, and mine eyes shall
behold, and not another:"
Job must have firmly believed that his
body was to be raised to life again, hereafter, but not on earth, for he
said again,
"There is hope of a tree, if it
be cut down, that it will sprout again, and that the tender branch
thereof will not cease. Though the root thereof wax old in the earth,
and the stalk thereof die in the ground; Yet through the scent of water.
it will bud, and bring forth boughs like a plant. But man dieth, and
wasteth away: yea, man giveth up the ghost, and where is he? As the
waters fail 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."
In Hosea the Lord declares: "I
will ransom them from the power of the grave; l will redeem them from
death: O death, I will be thy plagues; O grave, I will be thy
destruction."
In the last chapter of Daniel we have
another glimpse of the same truth:
"They that be wise shall shine as
the brightness of the firmament; and they that turn many to
righteousness as the stars for ever and ever."
And his book closes with these words:
"Go thou thy way till the end be:
for thou shalt rest, and stand in thy lot at the end of the days."
And typically, too, resurrection was set
forth in the Old Testament. By the firstfruits offered the day after the
passover-sabbath as a pledge of the whole harvest, the children of
Israel were taught in type of the Messiah who should be "the
firstfruits of them that slept."
Someone has said that the very first
employment of Israel in Canaan was preparing the type of the Saviour's
resurrection, and their first religious act was holding up that type of
a risen Saviour.
AND IN THE NEW TESTAMENT
But what was referred to only at long
intervals in the Old Testament became in the New Testament a prominent
matter of fact and teaching. The word "resurrection" occurs
forty-two times in the New Testament. Many times during His ministry did
our Lord refer to the resurrection of all the dead.
The sadducees once came to Him with a
difficult question about the marriage relation hereafter; and Jesus
said,
"As touching the resurrection of
the dead, have ye not read that which was spoken unto you by God,
saying, I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of
Jacob? God is not the God of the dead, but of the living."
On another occasion Christ said,
"When thou makest a dinner or a
supper, call not thy friends, nor thy brethren, neither thy kinsmen, nor
thy rich neighbours; lest they also bid thee again, and a recompence be
made thee. But when thou makest a feast call the poor, the maimed, the
lame, the blind: And thou shalt be blessed; for they cannot recompense
thee: for thou shalt be recompensed at the resurrection of the
just."
When Lazarus died, Jesus spake the
consoling words to his sisters: "Thy brother shall rise
again."
Martha replied, "I know that he
shall rise again in the resurrection at the last day."
Jesus then said unto her, "I am
the resurrection and the life."
A SPLENDID GUESS
We see then that the belief in a future
life did not begin with Christ.
But though the idea existed before
Christianity, it was at best only "a splendid guess." The
natural man cannot look across the narrowest grave and see what is
beyond. Strain his eyes as he will, he cannot pierce the veil of death.
It is ever before him, blighting his hopes, checking his plans,
thwarting his purposes, a barrier that nothing can break down.
Ever since sin entered the world, Death
has reigned, making the earth one huge graveyard. He has not rested for
a moment. In every age and every country, "Dust thou art, and unto
dust thou shalt return" has been the sentence overhanging mankind.
All the generations of men as they pass across the earth do but follow
their dead.
Many unexpected things happen to us in
this life, but death is not among them. We do not know how or when
it will come, but come it will, if the Lord tarry.
We have heard of doctors who have
performed wonderful cures, but all their skill and knowledge have been
unable to undo the work of Death. In all these six thousand years since
Death entered this sin-cursed earth, human means have failed to win back
a single trophy from Death. Advancing civilisation, increased education,
progress in commerce and art -- none of these things make us superior to
the most degraded savages. Death always triumphs in the end. The flow is
always in one direction -- onward and never backward.
BROUGHT TO LIGHT BY CHRIST
What was unknown by the wisest men on
earth was revealed by Christ. He "abolished death, and hath
brought life and immortality to light through the gospel."
"That undiscovered country,"
spoken of by the poet, "from whose bourn no traveller
returns," is not an undiscovered country to the believer.
Our Lord explored it. He entered the lists against Death in His own
territory and came off more than conqueror.
The sceptre of Death is universal still,
but it is broken and shall one day crumble into dust. The Christian need
no longer speculate about the future: certainty is reached beside the
empty tomb of Christ. "Now is Christ risen from the dead, and
become the firstfruits of them that slept." We can see the
trace of His returning footprints.
TRIUMPH
And so we can join in the triumphant
strain, "Death is swallowed up of victory." The sting of death
is sin, and God has given us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
They which have fallen asleep in Christ have not perished, but we
shall one day see them face to face.
What a Gospel of joy and hope we have,
compared to that of unbelief! The heathen sorrowed without hope, wrote
Dr. Bonar:
To them death connected itself with no
hope, no brightness, no triumph. It was not sunset to them, for that
bids us be on the lookout for another sun, as bright as that which
set. It was not autumn or winter, for these speak of
returning spring and summer. It was not seed cast into rough soil, for
that predicts the future tree or flower, more beautiful than the seed.
It was pure and simple darkness, all cloud, shadow, desolation.
A shattered pillar, a ship gone to pieces, a race lost, a harp lying
on the ground with snapped strings and all its music lost, a flowerbud
crushed -- these were the sad utterances of their hopeless grief. The
thought that death was the gate of life came not in to cheer the
parting and brighten the sepulchre. The truth that the grave was the
soil and the body the seed sown by God's own hand to call out the
latent life; that the race was not lost, but transferred to another
building and another city to be "a pillar in the house of
God," that the bud was not crushed, but transplanted for fuller
expansion to a kindlier soil and air; that the harp was not broken,
but handed to a truer minstrel who will bring out all the rich compass
of its hidden music: these were things that had no place in their
theology, hardly in their dreams.
AN ESSENTIAL DOCTRINE
Some people claim that the question of a
risen Saviour is not essential. Hear what Paul says:
"If Christ be not risen, then is
our preaching vain, and your faith is also vain. Yea, and we are found
false witnesses of God; because we have testified of God that he raised
up Christ: whom he raised not up, if so be that the dead rise not. For
if the dead rise not, then is not Christ raised: and if Christ be not
raised, your faith is vain; ye are yet in your sins."
I tell you, it is very essential. It is
not a mere speculative question that we are dealing with; it is of the
greatest practical importance. The resurrection is the keystone of the
arch on which our faith is supported.
If Christ has not risen, we must impeach
all those witnesses of lying.
If Christ has not risen, we have no proof
that the crucifixion of Jesus differed from that of the two thieves who
suffered with Him.
If Christ has not risen, it is impossible
to admire His atoning death which was accepted. Someone has said that
the power of Christ's death to take away sin is always conditioned in
the New Testament with the fact of His resurrection.
If Christ has not risen, it is impossible
to admire His words and character. He made the resurrection a test-truth
of His divinity. The Jews once asked for a sign, and He answered -- "Destroy
this temple, and in three days I will raise it up" -- referring
to the temple of His body.
On another occasion He gave the sign of
the Prophet Jonah: "As Jonah was three days and three nights in
the whale's belly, so shall the Son of man be three days and three
nights in the heart of the earth."
Paul says, "Declared to be the
Son of God with power by the resurrection from the dead."
"If He had not been divine,"
says one, "the sins of any one of us would have been a gravestone
too heavy for Him to throw off; the claims of Jehovah's justice would
have been bands of death too strong for Him to burst."
What would Christianity be without the
resurrection? It would descend to the level of any of the other
religious systems of the world. If Christ never rose from the dead, how
do His words differ from those of Plato? Other men besides Christ have
lived beautiful lives and have left behind them beautiful precepts to
guide their followers. We should have to class Christ with these.
"HOW ARE THE DEAD RAISED? AND
WITH WHAT BODY DO THEY COME?"
Turning back to the chapter, we find that
Paul next deals with the question of how the dead can be raised and with
what body they come. He says,
"Thou fool, that which thou
sowest is not quickened, except it die: And that which thou sowest, thou
sowest not that body that shall be, but bare grain, it may chance of
wheat, or of some other grain: But God" -- and all things are
possible with God -- "giveth it a body as it hath pleased him,
and to every seed his own body. All flesh is not the same flesh: but
there is one kind of flesh of men, another flesh of beasts, another of
fishes, and another of birds. There are also celestial bodies, and
bodies terrestrial: but the glory of the celestial is one, and the glory
of the terrestrial is another. There is one glory of the sun, and
another glory of the moon, and another glory of the stars: for one star
differeth from another star in glory."
"So also," continues
Paul, "is the resurrection of the dead. It is sown in
corruption; it is raised in incorruption: It is sown in dishonour; it is
raised in glory: it is sown in weakness; it is raised in power: It is
sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body. There is a natural
body, and there is a spiritual body. And so it is written, The first man
Adam was made a living soul; the last Adam was made a quickening spirit.
Howbeit that was not first which is spiritual, but that which is
natural; and afterward that which is spiritual The first man is of the
earth, earthy. the second man is the Lord from heaven. As is the earthy,
such are they also that are earthy: and as is the heavenly, such are
they also that are heavenly. And as we have borne the image of the
earthy, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly."
We see the truth of Paul's illustration
in the world around us. The analogy of nature does not indeed furnish a proof
of the resurrection, but it affords illustrations of many things that
are just as hard to explain -- yet we do not deny the facts.
Take a little black flower seed and sow
it. After it has been planted some time, dig it up. If it is whole, you
know that it has no life; but if it has begun to decay, you know that
life and fruitfulness will follow. There will be a resurrected life, and
out of that little black seed will come a beautiful fragrant flower.
Here is a disgusting grub, crawling along
the ground. By and by old age overtakes it, and it begins to spin its
own shroud, to make its own sepulchre, and it lies as if in death. Look
again, it has shuffled off its shroud, it has burst its sepulchre open,
and it comes forth a beautiful butterfly, with different form and
habits.
So with our bodies. They die, but God
will give us glorified bodies in their stead. This is the law of the new
creation as well as of the old: light after darkness; life after death;
fruitfulness and glory after corruption and decay.
Thank God, we are to gain by death. We
are to have something that death cannot touch. When this earthly body is
raised, all the present imperfection will be gone. Jacob will leave his
lameness. Paul will have no thorn in the flesh. We shall enter a life
that deserves the name of life, happy, glorious, everlasting -- the body
once more united to the soul, no longer mortal, subject to pain and
disease and death, but glorified, incorruptible, "fashioned like
unto his glorious body," everything that hinders the spiritual
life left behind. We are exiles now, but then we who are faithful shall
stand before the throne of God, joint heirs with Christ, kings and
priests, citizens of that heavenly country.
A bright young girl of fifteen was
suddenly cast upon a bed of suffering, completely paralyzed on one side,
and nearly blind. She heard the family doctor say to her parents as they
stood by the bedside, "She has seen her best days, poor
child!"
"No, doctor," she exclaimed,
"my best days are yet to come, when I shall see the King in His
beauty."
OUR HOPE
That is our hope. We shall not sink into
annihilation. Christ rose from the dead to give us a pledge of our own
rising. The resurrection is the great antidote for death. Nothing else
can take its place. Riches, genius, worldly pleasures or pursuits, none
can bring us consolation in the dying hour.
"All my possessions for a moment of
time," cried Queen Elizabeth when dying.
"I have provided in the course of my
life for everything except death, and now, alas! I am to die
unprepared" were the last words of Cardinal Borgia.
Compare with these the last words of one
of the early disciples: "I am weary. I will now go to sleep. Good
night!" He had the sure hope of awaking in a brighter land.
At the Battle of Inkerman a soldier was
just able to crawl to his tent after he was struck down. When found, he
was lying upon his face, his open Bible before him, his hand glued fast
to the page by his life blood which covered it.
When his hand was lifted, the letters of
the printed page were clearly traced upon it; and with the ever-living
promise in and on his hand, they laid him in a soldier's grave. The
words were: "I am the resurrection and the life: he that
believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live."
I want a religion that can comfort even
in death, that can unite me with my loved ones. Oh, what gloom and
darkness would settle upon this world if it were not for the glorious
doctrine of the resurrection! Thank God, the glorious morning will soon
break. For a little while God asks us to be the watchtower, faithful to
Him and waiting for the summons. Soon our Lord will come to receive His
own, whether they be living or dead.
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