SS ‘ SN * IN SON SN SAS . Legs Ceooere ee ie SALE Ls ergs A SAN: \ es o S, Zp yyy eee Se ee LE iggy SS ee LE Le a eee Les Z ee Z Bie Leg, BEE Le (ee oe yp \ \ La ANS WW AN CW ayKR AK WS \\ NON LAYS NS SS NN SANS . peeoes ee oA ee SRR SS SARE We ig, ee ZA Ge 2. Oe on Li ope Re Byes es RRA SANA AANSAALS oe Sip tie LEE (/>* s Le eae Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2022 with funding from | Princeton Theological Seminary Library https://archive.org/details/resurrectionitsiO0down THE RESURRECTION THE RESURRECTION AND ITS IMPLICATIONS An examination of the reason why so many consider it a thing incredible that God should raise the dead. By R. M. Downtz, A.B., M.A. Author of “The Kingdom of Christ, What Is It?” “The Marriage of the Dawn” Etc. We Boston The Roxburgh Publishing Company Inc. a \ iN Copyright, TODA pin By The Roxburgh Publishing Company All Rights Reserved { —_ vi \ FOREWORD By T. B. ANpERsoN, D.D. The following thesis is a thought-provoking, faith-inspiring and heart-comforting discussion of one of the cardinal doctrines of our common Christian Faith—a doctrine, which, however much neglected in the past, has, in these later years, seized the imagination and engaged the attention of an increasing number of thoughtful students of the Bible; viz., the doctrine of the Resurrection. The title of the book, ‘“The Resurrection and Its Implications’, will, at once, appeal to the mind of the reader. It is an attempt, on the part of a thoughtful and conservative layman, to elucidate and set forth the truth in a light, different from that in 8 Preface which it is commonly conceived, and to give it an interpretation differing radically from that held by the great body of Christian believers, as for- mulated and set forth in the Creeds of Christen- dom. ‘The author is not a destructive, but a constructive critic. His aim is not to tear down, but to build up; not to weaken, but to strengthen the credibility of the Christian faith, He would magnify the promised “inheritance of the saints in light” by stripping it of the gross and material interpretations heretofore placed upon it, and, on the contrary, envisaging it in that sublime atmos- phere which pervaded all the teachings of the Great Resurrector. ‘The author frankly admits our inability to see beyond the veil which sepa- rates the present and future life, except by that light which radiates from the features and reve- lations of the Great Light of the Universe. He is thoroughly grounded in the doctrines of the Christian religion. He believes the Bible from Preface 9 lid to lid. He believes the Scriptural accounts of the resurrection of Jesus Christ and of the general resurrection of the dead at the last day, and asks with the Apostle Paul: “Why should it be thought a thing incredible with you, that God should raise the dead?” i But he dissents from the generally accepted view of the nature of the resurrection, and from the generally accepted interpretation of the Scrip- tures, on which that view is based. He holds— and supports his contention by Scripture, science and sound argument—that the resurrection body is a spirit-body, an unmaterial body, suited to the condition and environment of the soul, or person, in a spiritual realm, and that identity or essential sameness consists in spirit personality, and not in mere physical form and structure. He maintains that the physical, corruptible body, the habitation and instrument of the soul during its earthly existence, is not the resurrection body, but, that, 10 Preface at the resurrection, “God giveth it (the soul), a body as it pleaseth Him’ to be its habitation and instrument in the future heavenly state. The author’s aim is, therefore, to combat the gross materialism in religion, increasingly preva- lent everywhere, and even formulated and pro- mulgated in the creeds of Christendom. His pur- pose is to lift this blessed doctrine of the resurrec- tion of the dead to a higher plain, to ennoble and dignify it and give it a setting consonant with the other great spiritual doctrines of the Christian Faith. How far he has succeeded will appear from a careful and candid perusal of his thesis, a critical study of his interpretation of the Scriptures and the arguments he adduces to sustain them. ‘he author’s intention is, not to provoke controversy, but to evoke a thoughtful consideration of an important and vital doctrine of our common Christian Faith, the prevalent and almost uni- Preface II versal conception of which, he conceives to be a misconception, based on erroneous interpretations of Scripture, ancient and modern. The writer of this Foreword believes that the author has made a substantial and helpful contri- bution toward a better understanding of this great subject. His argument is logical and Scrip- tural; his conclusions sane, sound, and valid. Oe Pie + fe ON Pet CONTENTS rs CHAPTER PAGE I “Why is It Judged a Thing Incred- ible with You that God Should Raise tHe ead yeaa crea sisters 15 ‘The. Unmaterial ‘Cosmos®. . 20/230). 23 ihenlworbodiesy cae even 53 Like Unto the Angels ........... 70 The Spirit-Body of Jesus ........ 98 The New Birth and the Resurrection 125 The Better Resurrection ......... 146 Results of Wrong Interpretation of thesResurrectiony oa) wce eee ales 160 The Resurrection and the Return of CON TISE Uy tiat OTR Na FAH PRS Oa Tl 197 CHAPTER ONE “Wuy is It JupGrEp A THING INCREDIBLE WITH You THAT Gop SHOULD RAISE THE DEAD?” In asking this question of King Agrippa, Paul propounded a query that has been ringing in the ears of the world ever since. It is the test- question of the Christian Faith. If the dead rise not the Bible is a fiction. Agrippa believed the Prophets. ‘Therefore he either believed with the Sadducees that there is no resurrection, or, with the Pharisees, that there may be a return to life of the physical body; but in either case he, with those who held with him, would not, or could not believe in the resurrec- tion as Paul interpreted it. It was too great for their grasp. They had not known the risen Christ and therefore could not understand Paul. What- 16 The Resurrection and Its Implications ever their prior belief may have been, Paul’s startling interpretation of it causes Festus to exclaim: “Paul, thou art mad: thy learning is turning thee insane!’ It was a stumbling block to Agrippa also. Agrippa and Festus do not loom alone in their incredulity. Of every generation since that has heard the Gospel offer there have been multitudes who balked at it as being unbelievable. Some, recognizing that it lies at the very heart of the Christian Faith, and being unable to accept it as now taught, have turned a deaf ear to the whole truth of Scripture. Other multitudes have made a pious pretense of believing what their teachers taught them, not that they thought it credible, but because they felt obliged to believe or be lost. “The momen- tum of their belief in Christ’s other teachings carry them over what is otherwise intellectually ungraspable. Accepting that interpretation placed The Resurrection and Its Implications 17 upon the resurrection by Councils and Creeds they pass the matter up as being incomprehensible, and, to them, it is really unbelievable. If the doctrine of the resurrection, as at present embodied in and interpreted by Orthodoxy could be completely dissevered from the Christian system of theology it would have few if any adherents. The assertion that the dust of physical bodies of the dead will be reassembled, reorganized as at death, reanimated and brought forth alive from the grave is not only contrary to all reason and observation but is, we believe, also contrary to the teaching of Scripture. Not only so but it puts a blind of materialism across the only window through which an anticipating glimpse of heaven may be had. The Christian’s concept of what the future world will be certainly is formed from what he knows, or imagines he knows, about the nature of the resurrection body. If that body is a material one, as the Creeds declare the heaven 18 The Resurrection and Its Implications hoped for is a material one, to accommodate it. And if that eternal home of the blest is a physical one, if Jesus ascended in a physical body to a physical heaven, as is so confidently affirmed, his return must be in the same kind of body. And if these be accepted all his teachings must be inter- preted to agree with that doctrine. ‘Therefore the nature of the resurrection body, and what is believed about it, is a determining factor, if not the main interpreting key of the Christian’s belief. But since the resurrection is the great central integrating fact of Christianity it cannot be thus severed from it. Without it hope and confidence toward Christ is, as Paul said, vain. No goal is left. And for this very reason a mistake here holds unmeasured potency for error. ‘Thus we believe that wrong interpretations made in the distant past, and reafirmed by passing generations of leaders of Christian thought have all but ob- The Resurrection and Its Implications 19 scured the outbounding import of that message of the First Risen,— “I AM THE RESURRECTION AND THE LIFE.” Our purpose is to reexamine, in the light of the Scriptures, common sense, and Science these an- cient interpretations. Frankly admitting that there is a phase of this great subject to which human reasoning does not reach, and with which the investigations of Science therefore cannot deal, it still is true that the human mind cannot, under the guise of faith or anything else, accept con- tradictions. It is not made so it can do so, nor does God ask it. “The subject we are discussing does not demand it. And as we pass along we shall see how these ancient interpretations, instead of commending the Christian Faith as the most reasonable thing in the world have raised hurdles in its path. Recently fifty-five hundred of the leading scien- tists of America were, through a questionnaire, 20 The Resurrection and Its Implications asked for their views on the subject of the resur- rection. More than half of them utterly dis- owned belief in it. And with it, we may presume, belief in the immortality of the soul. Many of these are leading professors in our Colleges and Universities. They are wrong, of course, but we believe that they have been betrayed in their thinking to a false starting premise, namely—that any conception whatever of a resurrection neces- sarily implies the return to life of the same physical bodies which are buried. ‘They are not unbelievers from choice, but because the scien- tific mind cannot straddle contradictions. And since Orthodoxy in turn postulates its whole belief in immortality upon its assertion that the physical “bodies of believers do rest in their graves until the resurrection,” to be then reunited to the souls which formerly occupied them, the discrediting of the foundation invites disbelief in all that is built upon it. The Resurrection and Its Implications 21 The physical body is a conscious physical fact, and facts are very stubborn things. Science opens the sealed tombs of the dead, or it analyses the ashes of the crematory, and finds there no body, often not even dust, and therefore refuses to believe in the asserted or implied continuing ex- istence of what no longer actually exists. Not even God can bring owt of a grave anything that is not at the time in it, nor a clean thing out of an unclean. ‘True He could, at the instant create an entirely new body, but this would not be the body that was originally buried, nor would this accord with the commonly accepted theory that “the selfsame bodies of the dead which were laid in the grave, being then again united to their souls forever, shall be raised up by the power of Christ.” (See Westminster Confession of Faith Q. 87 Larger Catechism). Paul, in explaining the resurrection, used illus- trative analogies, drawn from nature and natural 22 The Resurrection and Its Implications processes. He even went so far as to character- ize as a “fool” one who had not before observed these natural processes and their resurrection les-. son. He thus sets wide open the door for the examination of this intensely interesting and im- portant subject. The Resurrection and Its Implications 23 CHAPTER TWO THE UNMATERIAL Cosmos In Paul’s day there were Christians in the Corinthian Church who stumbled at the doctrine of a future resurrection, and, because they could not conceive it possible, they denied that there will be any such thing. Among those who have heard the Gospel mes- sage there are still multitudes of the same kind of people. ‘They cannot conceive of the resurrection of a physical body centuries -after it has been reduced to ashes or turned to scattered dust. Therefore they dismiss the whole question, just as did some of the Corinthians in Paul’s day, by asking what they consider an unanswerable ques- tion,— 24 The Resurrection and [ts Implications “With what manner of body do they come?” When that question was put to Paul he pro- ceeded to answer and illustrate it. The follow- ing pages are a layman’s attempt to make a little clearer what we believe Paul taught. Paul founded his teaching directly upon that of Jesus, the only sure guide that we have. Jesus told His hearers that the sons of the resurrection will be “like unto” or “equal unto the angels.” There is no hint in Scripture that these wonderful beings either exist in a disembodied state, or that, on the other hand, they have bodies of flesh like mortals. However, they are always represented as pos- sessing something which localizes them as to place, that segregates them from other spirits, and from each other. “They exist as distinct persons. “That certain something, since it is not of a physical composition must be of spirit essence. Paul implies that it is even possible for a soul The Resurrection and Its Implications 25 or spirit to exist in a disembodied state, but also that such a condition of nakedness is far from desirable. After His death Jesus went in a physi- cally disembodied form to preach to like disem- bodied spirits in prison, His physical remains being then in Joseph’s tomb. At death there is thus a like complete separation between the soul and that body to which it belonged. To quote Paul :— “For in this we groan, longing to be clothed upon with our habitation which 1s frem heaven: if so be that being clothed we shall not be found naked. ) “For indeed we that are in this bodily frame do groan, being burdened in that we would not be unclothed, but would be clothed upon, that what is mortal may be swallowed up of life. Now He that wrought us for this very thing 1s God, who gave unto us the earnest (foretaste, pledge), of the Spirit.” (II Cor. 5:2). As we understand these inspired words the spirit thus given is an “earnest”? or sample of what that clothing “of life’ will be, for He is 26 The Resurrection and Its Implications not here discussing the soul itself but its future garment, or “house.” He would also assure us that God is fully equal to furnishing such a “house from heaven,’’—one ‘“‘not made with hands, eternal.” In any case he is writing of something separable and distinct from, yet habitable by, a soul. He is rejoicing, moreover, that God made us after such a pattern that this physical body of destroyable flesh, when the soul is done with it, can be dropped, as the larva might drop its im- prisoning shell, in order to take to itself another vestment. But can we indeed, conceive of such a thing as an “immaterial body’? An organized function- ing thing of co-ordinated members and parts? The name we give to jt matters nothing. We may call it a ‘‘body’, a ‘‘garment’’, or a “house” or a “tent’’, but we mean that outer, objective, separable thing whose presence makes any other such covering, domicile or ‘‘tabernacle”’ wholly The Resurrection and Its Implications 27 superfluous and burdensome. Interpreters of the Scripture have rashly assumed that no such thing is possible, and that the resurrected human per- sonality therefore cannot be even conceived of apart from a material body of some sort. In another chapter we shall further discuss this, but before replying directly—let us examine some common and well known natural, or scientifically produced phenomena. But we do not here in- stance these for the purpose of indicating the iden- tical composition of the resurrected body. Paul seemingly could not do this, and why should we attempt any such thing. Our purpose here is merely to prove that there are functioning organ- isms, or bodies, well known to us, that have none of the properties of matter whatever, and, this fact recognized, a strong presumption is thereby established that there may be spirit-bodies, like- wise devoid of every semblance and property of 28 The Resurrection and Its Implications that inert and lifeless thing we know as the material. Charles Kassel (in the North American Review for Oct., 1922) says:— “Tt is a singular truth, and one highly signifi- cant, that the more nearly Science, in its triumphs over nature, has approached to that unseen, un- material world, the more powerful have been the forces that revealed themselves. It is of no small importance that the most tremendous of these energies should come from a region of the Uni- verse hidden from the senses. It was with the discovery and utilization of electricity that Science seemed to pierce beyond the material into a New Universe. Here was a force, apparently inex- haustible, coming seemingly from nowhere, and the nature of which defied all analysis. ‘The savants found themselves baffled in every attempt to explain the phenomena in terms of matter. Science believed this new force to be the last that The Resurrection and Its Implications 29 remained for discovery. No Scientist appears to have then felt the tremendous truth, just dawn- ing upon the world, that we had but touched the fringe of an inner world of energy, out of which electricity, and perhaps many other of our (now) known forces play as perennial fountains, and that farther within were resources of power be- side which steam and electricity were mere toys.” The doors of that unseen, immaterial Universe are now opening wider to us every day the sun rises. It is a Universe where everyone of our five material senses, through which we _ heretofore gained all self-consciousness and knowledge, are numb and dumb. Matter is now seen to be nothing except a temporary means of reflecting back to and through our material senses the light, forces, and facts of a great supersensual world that exists beyond. To such a world the resur- rection, as Jesus illustrated and Paul preached it, | 30 ©The Resurrection and Its Implications will introduce us and we shall have bodies and senses to fit us for its enjoyment. Until within a dozen years both the scientific and the religious world held that “all matter is indestructible.’ Both thought that this theory had been so completely proven that to dispute it was proof of ignorance. If a material thing existed, as for instance a human body, it must, im some form or element endure eternally. The mistake underlying this assumed basis of reasoning was that the major premise of it was false, and, as has now been proved, was and is a pure fiction. Matter is not indestructible. Vari- ous kinds of it have been, as matter, we are now told, completely annihilated and there is no cer- tainty that any material substance or thing known to man may not, as matter, be completely unmade, and resolved back to that nothingness of which God made it in the beginning. The Resurrection and Its Implications 31 ‘That eminent scientist M. L. Poncaire, in T’he New Physics, says: ‘“We shall have to abandon the idea, so instinc- tively dear to us, that matter is the most stable thing in the universe, and admit, on the contrary, that all bodies whatever are a kind of explosive, decomposing with extreme slowness.” Also, Dr. R. K. Duncan, in his late interesting book, The New Knowledge, says: ““Matter has disappeared as a fundamental existence, or at any rate it is explained as (mere- ly) a manifestation of electricity. Mass, a here- tofore supposedly indestructible thing, has dis- appeared with matter, and comes into existence purely as negative electricity.” Charles Kassel (quoted above), says in his dis- cussion of that unmaterial thing, ether: “Tt is this ether, which we have never beheld, which no instrument has ever explored, and which gives to our touch never a sign of its presence, that becomes the fundamental reality.” 32 The Resurrection and Its Implications Matter thus becomes merely the expression of an antecedent untouchable, uwnmaterial energy. We believe that God is the source of it, for there can be found no other sufficient one, and he is Spirit only. Science is thus at least finding room in an incorruptible supersensual world for the doctrine of immortality. ‘The doctrine of immortality therefore has ceased to be (to science) the hostile or indifferent thing it once was. On the con- trary it might almost seem that the theory of a universe of fine and infinitely more potent sub- stance is almost ready to be announced by our scientific thinkers, as the inevitable conclusion from recent discoveries” (Charles Kassel in article above referred to). | In thus asserting that material things have no fixed existence or form, science is but lending plausibility to the Scriptural teaching that all things were originally made out of nothing. It is The Resurrection and Its Implications 33 but discovering that material things are returnable to their source. “This is but another instance of the great general truth, that, correctly inter- preted, Revelation and correct scientific deduc- tions are never in conflict. In all spheres to which both relate the statements of the former are eventually probated by the deductions of the latter. “The same God is the author of both and therefore there can be no ultimate disagreement. Religious dogma, however, has often been obliged to modify itself in the presence of Scientific de- ductions and it is now the turn of Science to admit that its basic theory of physics was all wrong. The mysteries of the spiritual world and those of that supersensual Universe, which Science now freely admits, are but different avenues of ap- proach to what may, in the end, be the same thing. If Science recognizes such a thing as non-material bodies, and a non-material Universe, it but cre- 34 The Resurrection and Its Implications ates a presumption that the same thing exists in the spirit realm. The past few decades have put into the hands of men, as never before, the means of exploring far beyond the reach of their senses. The tele- scope, the microscope, the spectrum, the Réntgen Ray, the Hertzian wave of Marconi, the radio- active transformations of Curie, Becquerel, Ruth- erford and Soddy, Ramsey and Crooks have opened our eyes toa world heretofore unsuspected. Professor Frederick Soddy, speaking at that time about Radium, says: “Had anyone, twelve years ago, ventured to predict Radium he would have been told that such a thing was not only wildly improbable but actually opposed to all the established principles of the science of matter and energy.” In words which were perhaps far wiser than he knew Carlyle said that material things are “the time-vesture of the Eternal.” The Resurrection and Its Implications 35 The Ancients divided all material elements into three classes, earth, air, and water. Later the laboratory found that that analysis would not answer because that each of these supposedly prime elements included innumerable elements common to the others. “This investigation con- tinued until the “Atom” was discovered. “Then the atomic theory was in turn shattered by the discovery of a still more minute’ subdivision, the “electron.”’ One writer in comparing the electron with the atom says that in size it is like a buzzing fly in a barn and that even in the hardest sub- stances it is charged with ever-active physical energy within the atom like a bounding bullet in an otherwise empty gourd. Thus all previously accepted theories about the composition of material substances have been ex- ploded. And with every advance of the explorer new and inerasable marks of the Great Origina- tor’s fingers are found, revealing the unfathomable 36 «©The Resurrection and Its Implications finesse of the Creator’s Art. No human investi- gator can say that he has read all that is written even in a stone. It is not wonderful therefore that as men continue to explore further within the labyrinthine mysteries of the material crea- tion they must from time to time retrace, retract and revise. It is thus indicated that physical energy, the Prime Mover of the physical Universe, is not at all inherent in physical things. ‘Power to Al- mighty God alone doth appertain.” In its last analysis its dynamo is located in the spirit realm, and its manifestations in stream, plant and planet are but the wires by which it is conveyed to the eyes, touch and uses of men. We are only beginning to discover the tremen- dous amount of energy existing in and conserved by the material world. Dr. R. K. Duncan says (Harpers Magazine), “There is enough radiant energy in one ounce of radium to lift 10,000 tons The Resurrection and Its Implications 377 one mile high. ‘This is a tremendous fact, deter- mined by experiment and quite apart from any theory.” Also, as showing the extent to which, all unconsciously to us who move among them, force is located in and conserved by material things, Le Bon, an eminent French scientist, in an article in the Independent, says: “The fifth part of an American (nickel) five- cent piece, if we could entirely disassociate it (its atomic element), in one second would give an energy equal to 6,800,000,000 horse power.” Sir Oliver Lodge, erroneously conceiving of ether as the prime source of energy, however, says: “Every cubic millimeter of space (a cube of about 1/25 of an inch) possesses what, if it were matter, would be a mass of a thousand tons and an energy equivalent to the output of a million horse power station for 40,000,000 years.”’ These things give us a new conception of the 38 The Resurrection and Its Implications phrase “ALMIGHTY GOD”. They give us a concept of the unseen universe wherein He moves and of which He is the great CREATOR and great PRIME MOVER. He is not only a pure Spirit but he is purely spirit. If in the resur- rection men are to come into His likeness and are to partake of His nature, how utterly absurd it 1s to think of them as being “‘burdened”’ (as Paul put it) with a body of lifeless clay. Where he speaks of “the power of His resurrection”, he is not talking about any academic or mystical thing, but of a something as real as the force which brings a plant out of an invisible germ or a sequoia out of a seed. The radio by means of which we hear, in our closed rooms, a speaker or a singer fifteen hun- dred miles away, proves the existence of a non- material body of ether which permeates all physi- cal substance and walls as freely as if they had no existence whatever. The ether-waves, set in mo- The Resurrection and Its Implications 39 tion by a mere human voice and electrically mag- nified, are doing things exactly similar with what Jesus did when He, in His resurrected body, en- tered the upper room, ‘“‘the doors being shut.” The ether in its motion or movement, in wave or volume, knows no such thing as matter in its path. To it matter, be it wall or cloud or mountain, miles thick, does not exist. Yet the presence of it there is as proveable as that of air, water or soil. To it there is no such thing as a physical obstruc- tion. Neither is there to it any such thing as a vacuum. The electric-light bulb, from which every particle of air has been taken, contains no material thing except the incandescent filament; yet that bulb is full of ether, the waves of which, set in motion by the electric current on the fila- ment, pass through the glass in every direction as freely as though it were not there. Aind, in passing, here is a most wonderful analogy. Jesus called Himself “The Light of the 40 The Resurrection and Its Implications World.” John 8:12, and 9:5, etc. And that this was much more than a mere figure of speech is proven by the circumstances under which he used the words. Light involves no material sub- stance. While it has many of the functions and qualities that we ascribe to physical masses and bodies, no one can weigh or define it. It is one of those glowing mysteries within which Christ the resurrected God-man hides himself. It is an out flashing from that unmaterial world, the reality of whose existence He came to prove,—and to pilot us to it. Past my door runs a heavy copper wire. Upon it rests undisturbed a dozen sparrows. ‘To them it is merely a perch. I in turn examine it with each of my physical senses. Standing upon an insulated ladder I can see upon it nothing, hear nothing, feel nothing, taste nothing and smell nothing. Is there then no “body” of anything there? By and by along comes a car which re- The Resurrection and Its Implications 41 quires a motive force equal to that of one hundred horses, physically propelled by what is on that wire. ‘The lamps in the car are lighted from the same invisible, silent, unfeelable, tasteless and odorless unmaterial source of energy. Is there then no “body” of anything upon that wire? I take the storage battery of my radio to a charging station. “The attendant tells me it is empty of all energy. He charges it and charges me a fee. “Then I place the battery upon the counter scales and find that it weighs not one pennyweight more than before, yet he proves to me that into its iron, lead and liquid body he has forced an unmaterial substance or body. The size of this body, for which I pay, is in a sense circum- scribed by the container but it is not measured by its length, breadth or bulk. Is that inducted body of energy a myth or fiction? While I know that that body is as de- void of material substance as anything that can be 42 The Resurrection and Its Implications conceived of, yet I know also that it is as real as if it were made of granite or steel. Again, I let a sun-beam fall upon a dense block of ice,—a foot thick. The ice is in no way af- fected. Beyond the block I hold a lens which concentrates its heat rays upon dry cotton, and a blaze results. “Those rays have traveled 93 mil- lion miles through space so cold that no organic life can exist. “They came straight, and passed through the ice upon an unseen bridge. No material substance has passed through the ice, yet a positive and undeniable physical fact develops. ‘The cotton is burned. My radio is in a closed room, with all windows and doors shut. On the ceiling are a few lengths of copper wire. I put the receiver to my ear and I hear distinctly a man talking from a point a thousand miles away. I can hear him breathing. I hear him say that he has just heard from the outskirts of his audience, in Alaska, Ontario, The Resurrection and Its Implications 43 Georgia, Texas and California. What is that thing which has instantly and simultaneously car- ried his words to every inch of space within ten million cubic miles, over mountain, lake, plain, storm and rumbling city, and into a thousand houses whose walls may be concrete and steel, or to the ears of miners a thousand fathoms beneath the surface of the ground? From that inner sphere of unmaterial energy we might instance other forces just as wonderful, such as attraction, repulsion, inertia, and momen- tum, but let these suffice. In its study of these the scientific mind has laboriously erected its an- tennz upon the shores of a vast, unseen, Un- material Cosmos and it is now almost daily adding proofs of its unplumbed possibilities. None of these forces are subject to the mutations and de- struction common to all material things. Its laws are, so far as men are concerned, self-enforcing, as though Omnipresent Omnipotence stood be- 44. The Resurrection and Its Implications hind every one of them. ‘There is no room here for that grotesque theory of creation, Evolution. It is the outer court of that New Heaven and New Earth which the greatest of all prophets saw as the dwelling place of the sons of the resurrec- tion. It will not necessarily be devoid of physical things but it will be completely under the feet of forces which do not emanate from or reside in the physical. If we conceive of it under the figure of a “Garden” it will have an unfenced Tree of Life but no Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. All those physical temptations, of a thou- sand names, which have arisen out of bondage to material things, material appetites and _ bodies, will have been left in the earth, that physical world toward which they have ever drawn the “carnal” man. ‘They will have died for want of a soil out of which to grow, or a tinder upon which the flames of sinful desire may fasten. All The Resurrection and Its Implications 45 things will have been made new, including the tabernacle of the Soul. The soul of the new man, created after the likeness of the soul of Christ Jesus will be clothed with a newly created body from heaven, perfectly fitted to its deathless tenant; and that body will be like that of the risen Jesus, the first man of a new race, the body He resumed on the resurrec- tion morning, incorruptible, celestial, eternal. It was an apprehension of this which made the hope of the resurrection the center and substance of all Paul’s preaching and writing. The “signs” and “miracles”? which Jesus per- formed after His resurrection differ greatly in purpose and teaching— intent from those He worked during the days of His flesh. He was now become the personal exponent and the ex- amplar of the resurrected life. “Things he now did were signs that He had moved up to a new estate, into a new house. ‘Their purpose was to 46 The Resurrection and Its Implications show the powers which He now possessed and therefore the triumphs which await those who shall be transfigured by the great miracle of a similar resurrection. In the days of His flesh He had astonished His disciples by turning water into wine, walking on the water, exorcising demons by a word, multiply- ing loaves and fishes, and otherwise manipulating material objects with which all were very familiar. True He also performed supernatural acts but He introduced no new elements, properties or uses of these things. While He then short-cir- cuited natural processes He did not annul any of the laws of nature, nor did He introduce any contradictions of them. ‘The natural method of turning water into wine by way of the vine and cluster still remained. Bread was still to be in- creased by planting barley. And all the natural laws of physical change, growth, decay and even The Resurrection and Its Implications 47 physical death remained exactly as they were before. Those former miracles also proved His divinity and showed that He possessed absolute power over the material world. ‘They further showed that all such forces as energy, gravitation and chemical action are not at all resident in the physical, but in the psychical. In a word, He showed that “all power belongs to God.’ Physi- cal things are merely the means which God uses to convey to material beings such as we are a sense of what is wholly and essentially unmaterial, —such things as energy, affinity, repulsion, den- sity, luminosity and inertia, things which have no physical origin or fixed inherence whatever. Unconsciously influenced by the underlying philosophy of Christ’s ultimate teaching the scien- tific mind is now gradually arriving at the true theory of physics. Physical things, things which can be seen and handled are more or less tempo- 48 The Resurrection and Its Implications ral, and pass with their using, but the unmaterial, the essential, the dynamic, alone are eternal. Mat- ter is merely an expression of unmaterial energy. This energy, like the electricity with which a cloud is charged, resides in the hand of the Om- nipotent God and at His will may take any form of creative or destructive potency which he de- sires. But after His resurrection, when the days of His flesh were ended, Jesus ascended to a higher realm. ‘There He called into play things which were entirely new to His disciples. He led them as it were to the shores of a Spirit Cosmos, a new state of being, and by His Spirit gave them a glimpse of the wonders of a Creation entirely new to them. Jesus afterward said: “Behold, I make all things new,” including a new heaven and a new earth. This promise has, primarily, a “spiritual” signification but its meaning has been “spritual- ized” until the real import of it is now all but The Resurrection and Its Implications 49 lost. “This New Creation is no less substantial or real than the one to which Adam and Eve were introduced. It is the house of ampler mansions being made ready for the race of the resurrected, just as the Garden of Eden was prepared for Adam and his posterity; and to the disciples of Jesus this new Creation was just as novel and strange as was the Garden of Eden to Adam and I’ve when they first opened their eyes upon it. But none except the twice-born among the associates of Jesus could see or apprehend this new Cosmos, this new Kingdom, the Kingdom of the heavenly world,—this realm of the risen. Some of the disciples had once questioned Jesus on this curious point,—viz., how it could be that He could reveal himself to them and yet not to others about them. Now that He was risen the time had come when He could measurably ex- plain and exemplify what He then meant. The 50 The Resurrection and Its Implications “signs” which He now performed were demon- strations of the truth of His words. Prior to His resurrection the performance of these latter miracles would have only mystified and confused them to no profit. They could not have then understood them or their import. Lack- ing the impersonation of that resurrected body and life, which Jesus now manifested to them, they could not have sensed His meaning at all. ‘Tney had no eyes to see, no ears to hear and no sense that could be touched by the facts of that new world. But now that the Son of Man was himself passed over to that new spirit-world, and now that He, among other things possessed a spirit-- body it became possible for him to teach things about it to His disciples. “They had now eyes that He could open, yet He must do this in such a way as not to mislead His pupils in regard to other things. He must needs maintain clearly The Resurrection and Its Implications 51 His complete and perfect identification as the very same Person who was born of Mary, who had lived in the flesh, had suffered all its humilia- tions, and had died upon its cross. “To lose this identity would have been to make void all that He had hitherto accomplished. He must not prove too much or too little. He was now the very same Son of Man, but transfigured. He had accomplished that “exodus” at Jerusalem. Indeed He was more than this. He now impersonated transfigured Humanity. Surely no other teach- er ever undertook such a difficult task. Mere words would not convey the truth. It must be dramatized, visualized, actualized to a complete demonstration. Such were the great purposes of all His after-resurrection “‘signs’’. Hence we find Him now visible and in the same instant invisible; now touchable and _ in- stantly untouchable; now entering a closed room like a spirit yet presently eating a piece of broiled 52 The Resurrection and Its Implications fish or a honey comb: now exhibiting the mortal wounds of His body and now vanishing without leaving so much as a trace of His presence, or an indication of where He came from or whither He went. During the days of His flesh His clothes were the labored product of the distaff and loom but now even His garments were produced or in turn annihilated at a wish. Dominion over all things visible and invisible was now come into the hands of the Son of Man, the First-born, the Adam of a new race. The Resurrection and Its Implications 53 CHAT TERY VAREE THE Two Boptes Paul speaks of two distinct bodies. “It is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body. If there is a natural body there is also a spiritual body.” (I Cor. 15:44). ‘Again He says, ‘‘Be- ing therefore always of good courage, and know- ing, that while we are at home in the body we are absent from the Lord . . . we are willing to be absent from the body and to be at home with the Lord . . . Wherefore we henceforth know no man after the flesh: even though we have known Christ Jesus after the flesh, yet now we know him so no more.” (II Cor. 5, and marginal readings. ) 54. The Resurrection and Its Implications In this passage Paul is not writing about the soul, which of course is the more important, but is discussing the house “the outer man,” the taber- nacle, the clothing of that soul, and this in the future state. He hints at the presence of a per- sonality that could be “naked” or “unclothed”’ showing conclusively that he was not here writ- ing about the personality itself but about some- thing distinct and separable from it, its garment. Jesus went, during his grave days, to preach to “spirits in prison,” as we have before noted. Con- ceivably these spirits were also unclothed persons awaiting their resurrection garments. He would announce to them the good news that the death- penalty was now paid, and it is even conceivable that those to whom He preached formed the com- pany of saints that came forth at His own resur- rection some hours later. Paul, when writing to the Corinthians, is looking forward, with present hope, longing and groaning to a time when his The Resurrection and Its Implications 55 soul will no longer be hampered and afflicted by a “bodily frame” but will be clothed with some- thing which will take the place of and serve the same purpose as his then occupied body of flesh. For substance he thanks God that his soul will not always be obliged to live in a house that stands as a bar to closer communion with Christ. Neither will his soul go naked, or houseless, but will be clothed with a vestment that will suit and conduce to that closer fellowship. And here we would call attention to the pledge, the “earnest” or sample, that shows what that new house or clothing will be. ‘This earnest, he says, is nothing other and nothing else than the Spirit of God. That Spirit is not here an earnest of the kind of spirits the redeemed will have, but an earnest of the kind of body those souls will then be clothed with. The gift of the Holy Spirit certainly is a pledge or sample of what our spirits will be like in the future world, but this is 56 The Resurrection and Its Implications not at all what Paul is writing about. He is dis- cussing the clothing, the house, the tabernacle with which our spirits will be garmented in eter- nity. The gift of the Holy Spirit therefore not only implies a regeneration of the soul but is also a pledge and an indication of what the “wedding garment’ of that soul will be. It shows us some- thing of what it means to be baptized in or into the Holy Spirit. It is no wonder then that Paul exclaims: “If any man be in Christ he is a new creature,’ out and out, not an old one patched up. Even the clothes are new. “Old things are passed away: behold they are become new.” (II Cor. 3:17). And while it may be difficult to thus take into our consciousness the sense of a spirit- body, and while this may have been just as diffi- cult for Paul, he believed it, and adds: “All things are of God.” God is equal to this promise. In the regeneration the soul is born anew, and in Ap The Resurrection and Its Implications 57 the resurrection it is given a new body, a new kind of body to suit it. The soul may therefore be domiciled, con- secutively in at least two kinds of body, one of which, the first, may be a natural, “earthy”, body of flesh, blood and bones, like that which Adam had; the other is a spirit-body, a body similar in nature to that which belonged to Christ long ages before His incarnation and which He re- sumed at His resurrection. And after placing the two bodies in the sharpest possible contrast by several similitudes and illustrations Paul asstres us that just as we have borne the image of the First Adam we will, in the resurrection, bear the image of the heavenly, Second Adam. Paul in throwing these two into contrast says: “The first Adam was made a living soul, the last Adam a Life-giving Spirit.” (I Cor. 15:45). Adam’s body was made out of literal dust from the literal earth,—of red earth, as the name 58 The Resurrection and Its Implications signifies. About one tenth of it, chemically and by weight, was solids, such as lime, carbon, etc., the other nine tenths was water. Someone has estimated that such a human body, reduced to its prime elements would be worth about fifty cents. It gains its value only and solely from the fact that for the time being it is locally associated with and houses the spirit. When that spirit leaves it it is no more sacred or valuable than the elements of which it was originally made. ‘This is the “natural” body Paul speaks of. Adam’s body was the first of its kind. And in like manner that in which Jesus appeared on the resurrection morning was the very first of a new kind to be given to a human being. ‘That body was not composed of earth. It could not have been chemically analyzed, dissolved, or resolved into other elements. In Phil. 3:21, Paul again throws these two kinds of body into unmistakable contrast, speaking of the former as our “vile The Resurrection and Its Implications 59 body” and of the latter as being in the likeness of Christ’s “body of glory.” He was not then and we are not here discussing the difference or likenesses of the souls or personalities inhabiting these different kinds of body, but contrasting only the bodies themselves, or the houses in which the individual spirits will be housed over yonder. To understand Jesus’ post-resurrection body and character we must bear in mind that He possessed a heavenly or spirit body from all eter- nity. Before He was made flesh He manifested Himself under various forms and simulations. Now it was under the similitude of a cloud which hung over the Tabernacle by day and night. Through all the wilderness journey it was the visible manifestation or localization of His pres- ence. Again at various times it took the form of a human body, as when he companied with Shad- rach, Meshach and Abed-nege in the super-heated furnace on the plain of Dura. And there, also, 60 The Resurrection and Its Implications according to Nebuchadnezzer, His appearance, as he walked in the midst of the fire, was not only like that of His three human companions, but also differed in that it was like ‘“‘a son of the gods.”’ Isaiah describes it, in another form, as nearly as possible in language and figures familiar to men. The Prophet Ezekiel saw and described it more minutely (Ezek. 1:26), thus :— “And above the firmament that was over their heads was the likeness of a throne, as the appear- ance of a sapphire stone: and upon the likeness of the throne was a likeness of the appearance of aman upon it above. And I saw as it were glow- ing metal, as the appearance of fire within it round about, from the appearance of his loins and upward: and from the appearance of his loins and downward I saw as it were the appearance of fire; and there was brightness round about him, as the appearance of the likeness of the glory of Jeho- vah.” The Resurrection and Its Implications 61 These instances are enough to show that He had of old the power to take on a coat of any or many colors at will, or any outward form that suited His purpose. When he came to earth He for a term of thirty-three years took on the form of a human being—and became bone of our bones and flesh of our flesh. His flesh, bones and blood were His “bodily frame,” His house of clay, His “natural” body. When it was “dissolved” He returned to His house eternal. At His resurrection therefore Jesus but re- sumed his celestial vestment. In it, with added glory, He showed Himself to the disciples, the women, to Stephen, to Paul. And it is worthy of note in passing that the similarity of the vari- ous Old Testament descriptions of His bodily appearance, as compared with those of His post- resurrection appearances in the New, establishes the identity of the two beyond question. ‘The similarity is particularly striking between that 62 The Resurrection and Its Implications body seen by Ezekiel at the River Chebar, as compared with that seen by John on Patmos. It was in such forms only that Moses and Elijah had known Him in the days of their flesh. And doubtless Jesus, on the Mount of Transfiguration, purposely resumed for the hour a like form in order to show to these prophets that He was in- deed, though for the time resident in an humble body, the very same Jehovah that they had known long ago. And Jesus, in that transfiguration scene, may have also intended to show to Peter, James and John that He possessed the ability to at will step out from under the limitations and burden of His physical human body,—as Enoch and Elijah had been permitted to do. “The subject of discussion on the Mount was “‘the exodus (the going out), which He was to accomplish in Jerusalem.” Per- haps He intended that they would afterward, if not immediately, realize that He could renounce The Resurrection and Its Implications 63 the flesh, and could reclothe Himself with His heavenly body at will, and that therefore He was going voluntarily to that body’s excruciating death, for their sakes. He thus showed that, if He so desired, and but for His love for men, and His continuing regard for the obligation which that love had led Him to take, He could have escaped the cross and could have returned for all time to His former glorious heavenly form. If this supposition is true, and we see no reason to doubt it, how it must have impressed his heavenly visitors. How they must have worshipped Him, wondered at His steadfast devotion and loved Him the more exceedingly for it. He could not of course be true to Himself and turn back, but it required a continuing will to face the cross. Paul, in the above quotation from his second letter to the Corinthians, doubtless to make the meaning of his first letter to them more clear and impressive, thus draws a further sharp contra- 64 The Resurrection and Its Implications distinction between the two kinds of body. ‘Tak- ing the two together we learn that the “natural” body, not excepting that of the sinless Christ, was appointed to death, the other is not. “The former one is a cumbering burden, like the shell from which a butterfly might struggle for release. It can be “dissolved”. It can thus be taken out of the way to make room for one which is not mor- tal, and which is not a burden. ‘This latter body fits its celestial owner, and is united with it, its adornment, its glory, its servant. And notwithstanding that death, including the death of the physical body, is a part of the fixed penalty for sin, Paul sees in the resurrection only a divine natural order of advancement upward, an advancement which cannot be made except by complete releasement from the physical. ‘This releasement is accomplished by death. ‘Thus if Paul had been here speaking of two garments, one of them made of the vilest rags, reeking with all The Resurrection and Its Implications 65 loathsomeness and fatal disease, and the other of the most immaculate texture he could not have made the distinction more pronounced. He makes it clear that both suits cannot be worn at the same time. “The rags must be abandoned before the heaven-made garment is donned. The physical body of Christ was human, and only human, and was composed, like ours, of decomposable and destroyable flesh. Had this not been so He could not have suffered hunger, pain and death. If smitten it could quiver. If pierced it could bleed. It had to be defended against thirst with water, against cold with heat. He received it through His human mother. It was, of its kind, perfect, and, like the sacrificial Passover Lamb, without blemish. But this body was given to Him to be sacrificed. It was sacri- ficed. It was a part of the world’s sin-offering. As our great High Priest He offered it and His soul as His complete, His perfect atoning sacri- 66 The Resurrection and Its Implications fice. It was that atonement which had been a thousand times, but incompletely, symbolized by the carcasses of the Passover and_ sin-offering lambs, — which sacrifices were completely de- voured, or consumed to ashes. “This was the body that was nailed to the cross and was after- ward, as lifeless as ashes, placed in Joseph’s tomb. When that body was gone there was no target left for either divine or human wrath. ‘There was nothing more that hatred could do, nothing more which justice could demand. His enemies as well as God had reached the utmost limit of their power. It was His mortal body and as such it was buried, “swallowed up” of the grave. That which came forth from the tomb could not have been smitten or spit upon as was His former one, and could no more have been crucified again than could a ray of sunlight be nailed to a wall. And in the difference between that entombed human body of Jesus and that “body of glory” The Resurrection and Its Implications 67 which He resumed on His resurrection morning, we learn what the rising from the dead means to all believers. It was the first exemplification of that difference which had ever been made. ‘The difference between the two interprets for us the “change” which Paul tells us will, in the twink- ling of an eye, take place in those who still are physically alive upon the earth at the last day. It is the change through which we must all pass from our present mortal state in order to attain immortality. In the case of Christ, no less than in the case of mere humans, that which was born of flesh was flesh. Christ’s “body of glory” was not so born, for it existed before there was any such thing as a human parent. Such a body does not mature through a process of birth and growth. It is instantly perfect, a gift of God. Neither Adam nor Eve were fashioned in a womb, but their bodies, full grown, and perfect, were fash- ioned by the fingers of God and given to them for 68 The Resurrection and Its Implications instant use. Paul indicates that the resurrected will obtain their bodies in the very same way, in the twinkling of an eye, by the act of God the Creator. At the resurrection of Jesus an abyss was fath- omed and bridged for the first time. A chasm across which no living thing had ever before passed had now been spanned, and a highway was there built for the untold millions that were to follow. Jesus is that Bridge, or Way. He is the very personification of it, the Resurrection. When the great railroad bridge at St. Louis was being built years ago it is said that many men, induced by high wages to work under the dan- gerous air pressure required in the deep caissons, lost their lives. Sometimes when the life of one of these workmen was suddenly snuffed out while at work at the bottom of the caisson the body was thrown into the chute through which the silt was being forced out into the river far above. In the The Resurrection and Its Implications 69 strenuous rush of work no account was taken of these bodies and many of them were never re- covered from the discharged sludge. ‘Thankless millions now pass safely over that bridge without a thought or even the knowledge of the terrible toll in human life that it cost. Jesus planned and built an infinitely greater bridge, across an in- finitely greater river, toward an infinitely greater city, at an infinitely greater cost, for an infinitely greater multitude, a bridge that is for all the ages proof against all floods, erosion, or corrosion. It cannot be destroyed. Millions of Christians more or less lightly accept the fact of that High- way without any conception of its infinite cost, and sometimes almost with a feeling that in ac- cepting free passage over it they are doing God a favor. And no traveler now returns from the bourne beyond it, not even its Builder Himself. The return of Jesus will not be a return to the flesh, nor in the flesh. 70 The Resurrection and Its Implications CHAP PERT LOUR: LIKE UNTO THE ANGELS We have two original sources of information concerning the resurrection and the resurrection body. We find both of these in the Scriptures. For although we may draw largely upon nature and its analogies for illustration, and for the purpose of establishing presumptions, as did Paul, yet we must depend finally upon the inspired words of Revelation for reliable and exact in- formation. Life and immortality and the only real knowledge we have of them were brought to light by Jesus Christ through the Gospel. Until He came neither of these things were or could be understood. The Resurrection and Its Implications 71 ‘These two sources overlap and are mutually interpretative, and must be considered each in the light of the other. ‘The first though not the greatest of them is what is told us in regard to the bodies of angels. The second and greater of these sources is the account of the life and actions of Jesus during the forty-day period between His resurrection and His ascension. During this period although His recorded words are very few, and although He was visibly present to His disciples but a few hours all told, yet the little He did and said, when interpreted in the light of the Scriptural accounts of angel visits speaks volumes. In a double sense the angels roll away for us the very great stone from the door of the Sepulcher. They introduce Christ the Spirit to the world. The many references which Jesus had formerly made to the prowess and character of the angels aid us now in understanding what He himself did during those forty days. or 72 The Resurrection and Its Implications We are deeply indebted to the Sadducees for their unintentionally calling forth from Jesus that specific declaration which throws a flood of light upon what the resurrected will be like. He tells them that in the future state the redeemed will be “equal unto,” or “like unto the angels.” We understand this to mean that they will be similar to them in nature, have bodies like theirs and will be capable of doing what they do. Paul tells us that the saints will even be superior to them. “Know ye not that we shall judge angels.” (Ti @or7623)% This declaration of Jesus therefore gives a most interesting and far reaching meaning to the Biblical story of angelic appearances, visits and activities. And the correspondencies, which we may notice in passing, between their recorded actions and those of Jesus after His resurrection enable us to confidently interpret the above pro- nouncement. It is the first and only of its kind The Resurrection and Its Implications 73 in the Scriptures, and gives us a key to our subject. For reasons which Paul clearly indicates the Bible contains no direct information as to what or where heaven will be. He leaves us to infer that it will be more of a condition than of place. Jesus could be in heaven while on earth. ‘The most we may know about that subject is therefore to be gathered from what we will be, or be like, rather than where we will be. The angels which appeared at various times to men came from heaven. ‘Those who appeared at the tomb were from heaven. “That was their common residence. They are ministering servants who attend upon the throne of God in heaven. ‘They had to temporarily clothe themselves seemingly with garments of earth to get into conscious touch with men. ‘They adopted for the time the manners and limitations of men in order to be sociable. One cannot read the many accounts of their 74. The Resurrection and [ts Implications visits to earth without becoming conscious of this fact. Jesus, after His resurrection, did the very same thing. He did not eat because He was hungry, nor drink with His disciples because He was thirsty. He was merely stooping to their level of apprehension. Let us then recall a few representative exam- ples of angelic visits. To Abraham. On one occasion three angelic persons suddenly appeared to him and his wife. Abraham had seen “visions” at various times but this was now an actual appearance of human-like individuals in the daytime, both he and Sarah being wide awake. It was no dream, or mere mental apparition. It was not a diorama but a literal occurrence, as shown by all the circum- stances, and by its connection with and permanent effect upon material things. The angels appeared and acted like ordinary The Resurrection and Its Implications 75 men,—are in fact referred to as “men” at the beginning of the narrative. Abraham offered them common human hospi- tality—and thereby entertained heavenly visitors unawares, as he later discovered. ‘[hey ate of the sumptuous repast which he and his wife pre- pared for them, just as “men” might have done. But one of the three is, later in the narrative, called Jehovah, the Christ of both Testaments and in eating of Abraham’s dinner he did only the like of what He did several times after His resurrection. “Therefore his eating and drinking with his disciples after His resurrection does not prove that He was at this latter time in the flesh any more than His eating with Abraham proved it. It simply shows that, although a spirit being when He dined with Abraham and Sarah, He could and did for that passing occasion assume all the corporeal appearances and properties of a man in the flesh,—just as He afterward did upon 76 The Resurrection and Its Implications ten or a dozen occasions after His resurrection. During or after the feast Jehovah delivered to Abraham and his wife a most important message, and did it in common humanly audible language. Sarah, standing back in the tent, overheard it and laughed with amusement. She did not know that she was actually laughing at the words of the Son of God,—so completely did He imperson- > ate a man. She was a very matter-of-fact old lady as shown by her comment about her own and her husband’s ages. She was not at all renowned for seeing things that required spiritual insight. Abraham and his wife were themselves no more substantially or physically present than were, for the time, their three visitors. “Their eating and drinking proved this. And can we believe that these angels needed, on their own account, to either bathe their feet, or to eat or drink? On the contrary they simply accepted the hospitality of Abraham in the friendly spirit in which it was The Resurrection and Its Implications 77 offered. ‘They met him on the level of his own life, in physical form, among physical environ- ments, in order to leave no doubt in his mind then or thereafter of the reality of their presence. And doubtless the circumstances of Christ’s visit to Abraham afterward came to the minds of His disciples as an additional “infallible proof’ that He who appeared to them after the resurrection, and ate and drank in their presence, was actually the Old Testament Jehovah of Abraham’s day, as well as the very same Person they had com- panied with for three years. Indeed this would at the same time prove to them that He was not only the same Person, but that their resurrected Lord was also showing them what powers they in turn would possess by and by. It would at once put them in a class with Abraham in un- shakable faith. Even though attested by the angels all the disciples that first morning “dis- believed” that Jesus had risen from the dead. 78 The Resurrection and Its Implications Something, possibly this very story of Christ’s visit to Abraham, eame to their mind to convince them of the truth, and this would once for all convince them also that though Jesus had now passed out of the flesh He had taken His sociable human nature with Him into that new Realm. During or after the meal Abraham discovered that two of the “men” were really serving angels. Later all four departed on foot like ordi- nary travelers, toward Sodom. Jesus at a point remained with Abraham, perhaps upon some promontory overlooking the Vale of Siddim, and held a further conversation. When the confer- ence was over the record is that “Jehovah went his way,” probably vanishing into invisibility just as Jesus at a later time did at Emmaus. Upon a previous visit of this same Person to Abraham and his wife the record is that at part- ing “God went up from Abraham,” probably just as Jesus did at His ascension from Olivet. And The Resurrection and Its Implications 79 let us recall in this connection that all through His ministry Jesus felt it necessary to impress upon His disciples that He was the Jehovah of the Old Tetament. He often quoted the prophets and Psalms to make this clear, but they would not or could not yet believe it. And so it was that, after His resurrection, He must needs prove a double identity as we have noted—first that He was the great Teacher and miracle worker of recent months, the One who had chosen the disciples, had been crucified to the death, and second that He was the very same One who had of yore appeared to Abraham, Moses, Isaiah, Ezekiel, and others. “Thus in eating with His disciples after His resurrection He did just what He had done with Abraham long ago, thereby removing from the minds of the disciples any doubt about His being both the Old Testament Jehovah, and the Jesus of Nazareth. And that His followers understood this is shown conclu- 80 The Resurrection and Its Implications sively—for a single example—by Stephen’s ser- mon (Acts 7:37). To Lot. The two angels which left Jehovah and Abraham in conversation journeyed on down the Vale to Sodom. Meantime Jehovah and Abraham had entered into an _ understanding which was to determine the conduct of the now distant angels in regard to that city. And as a side light upon the nature of angels and those like them it might be here noticed that without any physical means of communication, whatever, such as a radio or telephone, they were in instant touch with the will and wish of their Lord all the time; for otherwise the understanding with Abraham, later arrived at, might have miscarried. JHere is wireless telephony and the radio anticipated by 4000 years. The angels were received and entertained by Lot, at supper, eating a second human meal. ‘The people of Sodom mistook them for ordinary way- The Resurrection and Its Implications 81 faring men, and indeed, as such, offered them the vilest indignities. Even in these insults there is circumstantial proof that there was nothing about the clothes, appearances, actions, or words of these spirit-beings to indicate to these debauches that they were anything more than defenseless humans. But that they were not mere men is shown by their presently manifested power to destroy the city with a motion of the hand, prov- ing conclusively that they had temporarily as- sumed completely the form and physical appear- ances of men merely for the effect it would have upon Abraham and Lot. But though spirits they had power over physical things, physical power greater than any merely human being could exer- cise. And this reveals the important truth else- where noted that the levers which control and manipulate all material things and forces belong, not in the physical but in the unseen spirit realm. This is one of the great lessons to be drawn from 82. The Resurrection and Its Implications what Moses, without sword or spear, did to Egypt in liberating the Hebrews. May it not be that in the future world those whom Jesus raises up and endows with that new body, life and in- telligence, will be able to do with the material world things now utterly impossible for them. ‘They may indeed also then find in this material world, and in a million others, endless beauties and utilities not now even suspected. ‘The two angels, after making Lot safe, called from the clouds a rain of burning sulphur. A large area of country was at their beck turned into a seething furnace, simultaneously kindled at a thousand places, with heat so fierce that not a man, beast or tree was left. It would not do to trust sinful emotional men with such powers. Witness what they did in the late war; but in that sinless warless realm of good will and love to which the resurrection will introduce Christ’s people it will be impossible for men to abuse such The Resurrection and Its Implications 83 power or the confidence of God. Furthermore such destructive power as the angels exercised at Sodom and Gomorrah would be absolutely futile as against spirit-beings. Jesus walked with Shad- rach, Meshach and Abed-nego in a furnace hotter than the smoking plains of Sodom and took no hurt; but of course a miracle was performed in the case of His three human companions. But our point is the power of spiritual beings over physical things. True we cannot easily imagine a realm peopled with beings capable of wielding such tremendous forces; but perhaps it will only then be realized why man was original- ly made but “little lower than God.” ‘The re- deemed and resurrected will then come into their originally planned heritage of dominion over the physical creation, and perhaps more. What was undone at the fall will be then more than re- trieved through the Seed of the woman. This limitless physical universe was not made 84 The Resurrection and Its Implications for an uninhabitable waste. “The size and mag- nificence of it is prophetic of its purpose. “here must have been some correspondingly great ulti- mate design in its creation, and that purpose certainly involves the glory of the Redeemer and the future enjoyment of the redeemed. All height, all depth and every other creature will be theirs to use, govern, employ and enjoy. Every few days we are startled with some newly dis- covered beauty or utility in material things, and every such discovery uncovers clues to still others, —without end. Under the spirit-guided intelli- gence of men the world has been reborn in the last generation and the fact that all great dis- coveries and inventions are the product of Chris- tian countries, is progressive proof that the mate- rial universe with all its unmined possibilities is the intended future heritage of those who have the Spirit of Christ. We may therefore safely say that it is through the perfection of his spiritu- a “ The Resurrection and Its Implications 85 al nature that man will come into his birthright of dominion. ‘This physical universe will prove neither too great or too grand for the use and pleasure of those for whom Jesus laid down His priceless life. To Gideon. An angel appeared to Gideon in the days of the Judges. Like Abraham he offered his visitor hospitality. He appears not to have recognized the angel as such until after the latter had drawn fire out of the rock to consume the offered flesh and cakes. The angel then “‘de- parted out of his sight”? in such a manner as to reveal his angelic character. “This indicates that he did not walk away as would a human being, but that he probably ‘‘vanished” just as Jesus did at His ascension. From this and many other like instances we may therefore confidently assume that the angels have power to clothe themselves at will with physical bodies, just as Jesus did several times during His post-resurrection stay 86 The Resurrection and Its Implications among His disciples. «In doing so they were but preparing the minds of men for apprehending the acts and character of the Perfect Man when He should afterward appear. To Manoah. In this instance an angel appears, under the guise of a man, ‘‘a man of God,” as Manoah’s wife calls him. She probably thought him one of the sons of the prophets. Her hus- band being told of the visit prayed that the same “man’’ might come again, all on the supposition that he was an ordinary human. Manoah asked his name. ‘The hospitality of a meal is offered, but declined. At the angel’s suggestion the food is then offered as a sacrifice to God, and the angel then surprised them by going up toward heaven in the flame or smoke of the sacrifice. This re- vealed to Manoah the true but unsuspected char- acter of their visitor, showing that he was nei- ther God, or man, but an angel, purely a spirit being. He disappeared from their sight in the The Resurrection and Its Implications 87 same manner that a cloud of smoke or mist dis- solves into transparency. His ability to do this was to Manoah and his wife a confirmation of the strange things he had told them. ‘They reasoned that one who possessed such unusual power might easily have super-natural wisdom. ‘To a like purpose and to a greater degree the very manner of Jesus’ ascension was an irrefutable confirmation of everything He had said. None present at His ascension ever afterward questioned either His identity, His Messiaship, or His almighty power. He was Master of all worlds, material and spirit- ual, visible and invisible. Let us in passing consider for a moment what is proven by the manner of Christ’s ascension. In addition to the much deeper spiritual truths implied, it, as compared with His pre-resurrec- tion life, shows that He was now absolutely superior to every physical force, claim, or barrier. One who could thus ‘‘ascend” without any physi- 88 The Resurrection and Its Implications . cal means or assistance could roam the material universe at will, could surmount without at all violating them, any law of matter, or any thing or force which is subject to material law. Only a short distance above the earth’s surface the at- mosphere becomes so heatless that no physical life can exist. A little farther up there is neither air nor oxygen, and physical breathing becomes both useless and impossible. External atmospheric pressure is removed so that a body, such as we possess, held together by such pressure, would burst like a soap bubble in a vacuum. In His post-resurrection days Jesus did not need to even breathe in order to live, for otherwise the height to which He could ascend (in the absence of a continuous miracle) would have been limited to a few miles. When it is recorded that Jesus, after His resurrection, “breathed”? upon His disciples, something other than exhaled air is symbolized and meant. ‘This is shown by what He said and The Resurrection and Its Implications 8g by its effect as well. The plain inference from all the circumstances is that there was no sug- gestion of a “miracle” at His ascension. The death of His physical body stripped Him of every- thing upon which death in any form could fasten its fangs. Physical death was left behind in a world-where it is still needed, but it has no tooth or tallon which can make a prey of Him or them. No physical law was set aside. Physical death is still as much a master in the physical world as it was before Christ came. “The victory over death which Jesus achieved was the power to bestow upon His redeemed a nature, body and soul which death cannot reach. To Jesus, at His resurrection, all these destruc- tive physical instrumentalities, such as heat, cold, “storm, fire, water, poison, light, darkness and electricity became mere servants, not masters, as formerly. Every miracle which He performed during his previous ministry was a side-light, a 90 The Resurrection and Its Implications fore-running prophecy and herald of the time when, by his resurrection, he would have subdued ALL things to himself as the Son of Man. In this He was the Progenitor, the Prince, and Rep- resentative of a New Race. While discussing with His disciples His essen- tially spirit nature (John 6:62) He had asked them, “What and if ye shall see the Son of Man ?” He now answers the question and ex- ascend plains by His acts what they could not then understand, namely that He was heir to a nature, and to a body and blood that He could even share with His people as their food and drink. He had now ascended as the Son of Man and as the Rep- resentative of a regenerated race, had carried Human Nature with Him. At His resurrection He simply slipt out from under all the tools with which death had hitherto plied his trade, and soared away like a bird escaped from a futile snare. His triumph as Son of Man The Resurrection and Its Implications 91 was universal, complete, proved, eternal, and it is now His to bestow as He will. And the ability to do the same things with the forces of nature is a part of that unspeakable future heritage left to His followers. Paul senses this when he says, “All things are yours,’ life, death, height, depth, things present and things to come. It means that beginning with the conquest of material things the sovereignty of redeemed spirits extends on into the unseen, the invisible, the eternal. It means that a rift has been made and an inclosable pathway opened through the physical into a realm utterly beyond the reach of death or corruption. His disciples saw Him pass through the door and heard Him say, “Follow me.’ ‘Thus He has lured aloft the vision of mankind and has started men to thinking in the A B CS of another language, another life, another world. From being mere worms of the dust, He 92 The Resurrection and Its Implications has made of them aspirants for celestial realms of unspeakable glory. He remained upon the earth, subject to all of its forbidding environments and humiliations just long enough to irremovably fasten upon Himself the questioning eyes of a representative number of the race, and then took His flight toward a realm of a character hitherto unsuspected by men. And in doing so He planted in men’s minds a new hope, a new and supreme aspiration, a new goal. No man has ever even suggested a higher enterprise than following Him to that place and condition to which He has gone. The little com- pany He left gazing cloudward “over against Bethany” was symbolic of a later “host that no man can number.” And despite the question of the angels that then appeared to the disciples, de- spite the objections of physical science, of incre- dulity, of doubt and unbelief, the whole world is still gazing at the physical vacancy into which The Resurrection and Its Implications 93 He disappeared. And though the Christian world is still echoing the previous plaints of Thomas “we know not whither thou goest, and how can we know the Way” its very questioning is uncon- sciously lifting it toward the new firmament to which He is even now piloting a New Race. Jesus had promised that if He be lifted up He would draw all men unto Himself. Men thought He referred only to the manner of His death, but what He afterward did explains that reunfolding promise and amplified its meaning a hundred fold. He is fulfilling that pledge in a way never sus- pected at the time of its utterance, and no man can now or ever measure all He meant. In draw- ing men to Himself He draws them into His own spiritual character, His own capacity for enjoy- ment, His own personal likeness, His own “‘life’’, His own liberty, as well as into His own un- bounded loyalty to God and godliness. And withal He is drawing them not only toward a 94 The Resurrection and Its Implications freedom from sin, and toward freedom from even its temptation, but toward a freedom from all the ills to which the flesh is heir. Before closing this chapter, and passing by many other angelic visits, let us briefly recall the experience of Elisha’s servant. He and his master were surrounded in Dothan by a host of Syrian soldiers, horses, and chariots. “They being un- armed and physically defenseless the servant thought they would be taken prisoners or killed. Elisha, who was an eminent type of Christ and a great miracle worker, asked God to open His servant’s eyes for a glimpse of their invisible protectors. “This done, the trembling young man saw that the mountain was full of horses and chariots of brightness. Elisha knew beforehand that these defenders — were there. Having spiritual vision he could see spirit things which his servant could not. “Those defenders were as real as were the walls of the The Resurrection and Its Implications 95 near-by city of Samaria or as were the horses and chariots of the Syrian host. All that was needed was ability to see what already existed. Jesus during His earthly life had invisible protectors of the same kind and for that matter every child of God has them. We may now see them by faith only, perhaps, but that faith does not create them. Though invisible to us they are no less real than the friends through whose ministry they often act. Faith thus gives us a new sense, that of actual- ly seeing what is otherwise invisible, not merely imagining it; for imagination is not, of itself, faith. Indeed Paul seems to warrant the belief that our faith, even though feeble, may even now by exercise over-reach all our physical senses and carry us into conscious touch with another world. Our faith thus becomes a present prophet and prophecy of what we will be and what we will be able to do and enjoy. “The defenders which the young man saw were of spirit-substance, not ma- 96 The Resurrection and Its Implications terial entities at all, for otherwise they would have been visible before. ‘They had the physical form of horses, chariots, and of men, probably assuming those particular shapes then and there for the suggestive and more impressive efiect the sight of them would have upon the on-lookers. ‘Two journals of international repute, one in America and the other in England, each recently gave prominence to what they considered a worth- while “poem on the monotony of heaven.” ‘The writers deplored the tiresomeness of “a perpetual program of praising God.” ‘The suggestion is not new. It springs from false teachings and from the gross misconceptions of Christian leaders of thought. It is foolish and more than foolish—it is wicked. It is of a kind with the belittling and - cowardly report which ten of the twelve viewers brought back to the Israelites from the promised land, only a thousand fold less excuseless. We believe that with every additional power The Resurrection and Its Implications 97 and sense which the spirit world will give to us a new depth and variety and a new and amplified world of enjoyment will open before the enrap- tured vision of the redeemed. ‘The infinity of space, the starry heavens and the fathomless mys- teries of the Milky Way are all suggestive proph- ecies of this. At the right hand of God are “rivers” of pleasures and personal rapturous gratifications doubtless of varieties and depths greater than any earthly imagination can even picture. And they will be summed up in prais- ing that Ineffable Being whose Love has provided all of them. Every pleasure felt will be but a perfectly natural expression of ecstatic praise to the Giver of it all. 98 The Resurrection and Its Implications CHAPTER FIVE ‘THE Spirit-Bopy oF JEsSus Perhaps some reader will object that there is no such thing as a body composed of spirit-sub- stance,—that the word involves a direct contra- diction of terms. And no doubt to many the phrase does at first sound like speaking of white black, cold heat, dry water, or illuminating dark- ness. But is it after all such a contradiction of language? or what is much more important, Is the phrase warranted by Scripture? or does it really imply a contradiction of facts? Is there such a thing as a body composed of spirit? a liv- ing, acting sentient organism without physical parts? The Resurrection and Its Implications 99 While the question we have raised, or rather recognized (for it is an old one), concerns the resurrection body, it has a far wider reference. ‘The correct answer to this question lies at the very base of an intelligent apprehension of the Christian religion. At heart the question is whether God is actually able to give us such a body. Before Adam was created doubting angels might, with as much propriety, have questioned whether He could make such a being as a physi- cal body. Being purely spirit such a being would contradict their own personal experience. We are all conscious of the fact that in many minds the Christian religion is very largely an unreal thing. T’o many it exists mainly as a system of imaginary or unreachable ideals, great and noble, but vague and without real substance. Religion is therefore relegated to the region of the unnatural, the visionary, the ghostly, the super-natural. Belief, then and therefore, be- 100 The Resurrection and Its Implications comes indefinite. God is at least a far off Spirit that is unknowable, and His kingdom is likewise ethereal, transcendental, intangible, and, after all, may have no fixity of existence except as a misty conception. From the beginning to the very end of His ministry Jesus was obliged to endure the contradiction of sinners in this particular matter. They could not realize spirit-things and spirit- values. “They were “carnal”, and persisted in weighing His words in material scales. As examples of this, how often even His most sympathetic disciples gave His utterances the blank stare of incredulity. On one occasion He told them that He had meat to eat that they knew not of. ‘Their after conduct and words show that they did not at all comprehend Him. They thought, as millions since have thought, that He was simply dealing in mysticism or with a mental abstraction and not with a tremendous literal fact. When he told them that, “Except The Resurrection and Its Implications 101 ye eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink His blood ye have not life in yourselves,” they thought that He was just trying perhaps to startle them with some sort of a paradox. When he said, “He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternal life and I will raise him up at the last day, for my flesh is meat indeed and my blood is drink indeed,’ He must needs preface the declara- tion with a double asseveration “Verily, verily I say unto you.’ (John 6:53). And at that even then His disciples did not believe what he told them. ‘They thought he was talking about His literal physical flesh and blood. ‘They could not conceive of His having any other than a physical body. “They could not as yet rise to the concep- tion of a spirit-body a thousand times more really real than the physical one they saw before them, —a body of which they could actually partake without injuring or diminishing it, a life blood of which they could all drink without committing 102. The Resurrection and Its Implications the crime of leaching His life away. ‘The miracle of the multiplication of bread of the day before was the illustration of what He now meant. AIl- though He said “Verily, verily,’ they did not think He was talking of a verity at all. They came back with the question, “How can this man give us His flesh to eat ?” We have cited these passages and incidents, some of which we have previously noted, for a double purpose. First we would point out how impossible it is to understand the teaching of Jesus, and that of the Christian Faith without first apprehending the objective reality of a super- world, a world of which the present material one is a mere subjective suggestion, a dim shadow. Our second purpose is to gather from them a definite idea of the spirit-nature of Christ’s res- urrection body, which in turn and therefore in- dicates the spirit-nature of the bodies of those which He will raise up at the last day. The Resurrection aud Its Implications 103 It is Carlyle, we believe, who says that ‘‘custom makes dullards of us. Habits of thought hood- wink us.” ‘They betray our judgment into old grooves. “They hold the mind in a coma. Be- cause God in this present life reveals Himself to His children by such things as sensation, time, motion, and matter, we conceive that there are no other ways. We limit God to the finite. We unconsciously challenge Him to have thoughts higher than ours. Because we have but five senses we think that no more are possible, even if we must verily contradict our intelligence to prove it. In reading the Scripture we see the type only and miss what it means. We try to put the universe into a mud-hut. Perhaps blind earthworms may for some such reason discredit the facts of sunlight and clouds, and we are like them. In a word we lack faith to follow Jesus in what He said and did. But the Scriptures make all allowances for dull 104 The Resurrection and Its Implications pupils. They are therefore full of kindergarten lessons. “They ask us, if we cannot understand what Jesus said to believe Him for His work’s sake. ‘hese were things which the disciples could not then understand but which were to be made plain later. It is doubtful whether the fifteenth chapter of First Corinthians could have been written sooner than it was, or by any save one like Paul,—one who had been caught up to the third heavens, and had seen unutterable things. Nor do we always need to deny our senses or go beyond them to find proof of the existence of this upper spirit world. Jesus Christ, who is essentially Spirit, and God equal with the Fa- ther, became flesh and dwelt among us. Origin- ally He was not flesh, but spirit. During the days of his flesh he was seen, handled, fondled, and He in this way humbled Himself to human capacity and apprehension, so as to make visible to men the otherwise Invisible God. At His baptism the The Resurrection and Its Implications 105 otherwise invisible Spirit descended and _ visibly rested upon Him. At the Pentecost that same invisible Spirit visibly rested upon a large com- pany of people. “Chis was not a seeming, but a literal fact. Not only did those present see this manifestation with their physical eyes but they heard with their physical ears the approach of the Spirit. Each one of them was physically and mentally as well as spiritually thus made aware of His presence. “They were each not only im- mediately conscious of the truth which the Spirit brought to them but they instantly found them- selves for the occasion transported as it were to the precincts of a new world. Nothing now ap- peared the same to them. Unlearned Galileans spoke languages that they had never heard and no doubt uttered truths of which they had no pre- vious knowledge. ‘They were all under the hov- ering pervasive influence of the Holy Spirit,—a Spirit made sensible to their eyes by the semblance 106 The Resurrection and Its Implications of tongues of fire,—for the purposes of the hour. Therefore when we are told, Rev. 1:7, that the return of Jesus will be visible to every eye it is not necessary to conclude that He must appear in a material body like that which was nailed to the cross. Indeed the fact that He will appear simul- taneously both to the physically dead and to the physically alive would prohibit the possibility of its being merely a physical appearance. Both the dead and the alive will hear the same voice, at the same time. ‘Both the just and the unjust will hear it. Ears whose nerves and drums have been dust for ages will tingle at the call of that voice, not because they have been re-created in material form, but because that sense for which ears stand continues to exist in spirit-form. These things could be true only of a spirit voice that can penetrate the world of spirit and cause spirits to apprehend. ‘Therefore, just as surely as there is a physical body there is also another one, a different The Resurrection and Its Implications 107 one, a spirit one. Even here nature furnishes us with an illustrative analogy. Science has proven, as already noted, that all space and all material things are pervaded with a substance, which, for want of a better name it calls ether. ‘To it, and that which it bears, no physical thing offers any bar or resistance. There is no vacuum from which it can be excluded. More dense than a block of lead it permits all material bodies to circulate within its mass. It is as it were the all-pervading spirit of the physical world, yet it has none of the properties of matter, whatsoever. That great primary creation of which Adam was a part reached its climax of glory in the creation of man. “The human body exhibited, as it were, His highest skill in physical things. If the Creator be regarded as an Artisan the pro- duction of the first pair of human beings was His then crowning achievement. It was a greater act than the creation of a solar system. ‘Chat it was 108 The Resurrection and Its Implications such is proved by a dozen sciences. In all the range of material things there is nothing equal to it. ‘There is no other thing so much admired for its beauty and comeliness and which has been studied more. To obtain food, shelter, comfort, gratification, health, and training for it, has been the chief occupation of men in all countries and in all ages. Our modern civilization centers in its welfare, and indeed there appears to be in this life no such thing as a general moral advance- ment apart from advancement of the physical welfare and vigor of the race. “Those sent forth to proclaim the first advent of Christ and the immanence of His kingdom were commissioned to heal also all manner of bodily diseases. It is therefore evident that the natural body, such as the first Adam had, was designed for a great and noble purpose, greater perhaps than has been realized. Its intended uses were legion, but the principal one was that it might serve as a fit temporary temple or domicile for the living soul, The Resurrection and Its Implications 109 —that part of man that was made in the image of God. ‘That body was made to suit its tenant, just as a house is built, not for beasts or fish, but for humans. ‘Therefore occupancy and govern- ment of that body by the spirit of man is the primary form of the Kingdom of God, to demon- strate and cultivate the lordship of his spirit. But with all that, this was not God’s greatest creative work. Adam, physically, was not His finished ideal. He was a failure. God afterward said that He even “repented Him that He had made man.” And the reason assigned was that man, following the verve and earthward pull of his flesh-born lusts, was as naturally inclined earthward as are the sparks to fly upward. It was to release mankind from this gravity of the flesh that Jesus came, and He preached a kingdom in which this release would surely take place. We recall that in “the days of His flesh” the Jews directed the attention of Jesus to the mag- 110 The Resurrection and Its Implications nificent Temple at Jerusalem, the Temple he had tried in vain to cleanse. His disciples pointed with pride to the great stones of which it was built, and possibly to its roof of gold. It had, in fact, required in its building an average lifetime. But He astonished his hearers by telling them that if it were destroyed He could build it again in three days. It is then explained, however, that while they thought He was speaking of Herod’s ‘Temple He was really using it only as a sym- bolism or figure of His own human body. ‘There was, therefore, an important and distinct sense in which the two things, his then body and the then ‘Temple, stood for the same thing. What was the analogy? In what way were they identical? How far we are warranted in carrying the analogy we do not know, but there must have been some very impressive and instructive reason for His identifying the two as one. Did the fact that one of them could be “destroyed” (as all . The Resurrection and Its Implications 111 recognized) suggest also that the other could also be destroyed? Did the fact that one of them was shortly to be razed to the dust and never rebuilt conceal within it a lke prophecy concerning the other? or did He mean to say that the Temple which He would afterward rear up in three days would thenceforth serve the purpose of both? that He would build a new Temple and take to himself another body, neither of which could be defiled or destroyed? Later on He told His disciples that this great Herod Temple would be thrown down, that not one stone would be left upon another. As a Temple it would be completely anihilated. (Matt. 24:21). And it is worth while noting also that there is no rightly interpreted prophecy that this material temple will ever be rebuilt. History agrees that it has not been. Its great purpose was fully served before its destruction by Titus and Vespasian, just as the physical body of Jesus had 112 The Resurrection and Its Implications served its full purpose before and in its death. True there was to be eventually a new creation, but no such Temple. When John was afterward shown a vision of the Holy City, symbolizing that new creation, he says: “And I saw no ‘Temple therein.’ (Rey. 21:22). How could this won- derful statement be even symbolically true if in heaven the Lamb is clothed in a body of flesh and bones? ‘The former things were to pass away. All things were to become new. ‘The new body and the new ‘Temple are one in kind,—one in fact. “The LAMB is the Temple thereof.” But coming back to Paul’s declaration and its illustration (I Cor. 15, 44), we are assured that there will be a spiritual body just as certainly as there is now such a thing as a “natural” one. But the word here rendered “natural” in our trans- lations does not really express the meaning of the Greek word which Paul uses. For the word which Paul uses, and which the translators have The Resurrection and Its Implications 113 rendered natural is in the marginal rendering, “psychical”, He could have used a Greek word which is the exact equivalent of our word natural, but he did not do it. Why? Neither does he use the equivalent of our word “physical”. Nor does our word “material”? convey this meaning. Indeed he wished to express something not exactly conveyed by any English word that we know of. Hence it is necessary to understand the meaning of the Greek word he uses before we can under- stand precisely what he means. We cannot sense the contrast he draws without this. One thing is quite clear. If he had been contrasting two bodies of the same kind of substance he would not have used the illustrations which he appends to this declaration. He is contrasting a ‘“‘natural” with a “spiritual” body. It is sown a natural body but is raised something entirely different. What is the difference? What constitutes the essence of the distinguishment? In order to un- 114. The Resurrection and Its Implications derstand Paul’s answer to this question we recur to the finely discriminative distinction which he makes. The Greek word here rendered “natural” is, in the margin, as we have stated, translated “psychical”, meaning a body habitable by a psyche or spirit-being, or soul, as distinguished from a body like that of an ape, not habitable by a soul or spirit. Our translators wisely refrained from using this word “psychical” in the main text of the translation. It is of Greek derivation, is little used in English, and would therefore have been confusing to the average reader. On the contrary the word “natural” is well understood to mean just such a body as we all now possess. It is the body which “dies’’, is “sown” in the grave, as distinct from the one that God will give us at the “resurrection.” The point which we are making, as brought out by the American Revision, and by it fully The Resurrection and Its Implications 115 indicated in the marginal rendering, is that the “natural” body which is placed in the grave was in life more than a mere corporeal anatomy. It was not merely a material substance, like a stone or like the carcass of an animal. It was, on the contrary, a body which had been for a time the recognized domicile of a human soul, a sou/ that has been even born again and which is conse- quently now the heir of immortal life. It had been for years the instrument of a deathless spirit. It was the body of flesh in which the soul of Jesus dwelt for thirty-three years, and yet for all this it is not that body nor the kind of body that believers will have at the resurrection. Other- wise Paul would not have placed it in such out- standing contrast with a “spirit” body. Yet this latter, the spirit body, will, in the resurrection, serve a purpose exactly analogous with that of the discarded “psychical” or “natural’’ body. Both are houses in which a spirit may dwell, 116 The Resurrection and Its Implications yet they are different from each other. ‘the one has been the habitat of a living, yet mortal soul, such as Adam had, while the other is to be the tabernacle of a soul that cannot die. Moreover a body which would suit the ‘first Adam’ would thus, in Paul’s belief, not serve as a fit residence for the spirit of one like the Second Adam. Sin, disease, corruption and fire could attach to the first or psychical, or ‘‘natural’” body, but they cannot kindle within or upon the second. Paul is here laboring to distinguish clearly between two kinds of bodies, and not between the spirits or souls which inhabit them. “The one he is trying to define will therefore not be a physical body, nor even a psychical one, but an entirely different one, a spirit one,—of spirit substance. There is, therefore, though we have difficulty in apprehending it, such a thing as a body in which spirit-substance takes completely the place of physical substances. The phrases ‘‘metaphysical The Resurrection and Its Implications 117 essence” and “denaturalized substance” have been coined to express the idea. Others have used the word “substance”, as distinct from the mere appearance of substance, as though substance, in its last analysis, is not matter at all, but spirit. ‘Taken together they are an attempt to express, in terms of human experience, a thing that is well outside the range of all physical sense or physical science. “The suggestion of such a body was originally lodged in the human mind by the visits and actions of angels, which are purely spirit, and was later confirmed by the miracles performed by them and by Christ. These latter were however simply “‘signs’”’ of the prior existence of an empire of invisible substances and forces, none the less real because human eyes, ears, and fingers could not sense it. Not only has this Invisible Empire its prophets in Scripture but it now also has them in nature, as already observed. ‘These are all seers of a world which lies outside the five senses 118 The Resurrection and Its Implications we now have. It is impossible therefore, to deny its existence. But while it involves one of those great myste- ries of the Kingdom of heaven, hid since the foundation of the physical universe, it and the sublime purpose of it came to light only through Christ. “Therefore the Christian faith is, in the ery last analysis, the final interpreter of even the physical world in which we live. It is the begin- ning and the end of physical science. He who sees or pretends to see a conflict between Scrip- tural truth and scientific fact is ignorant of one of them, perhaps both. ‘This physical universe has a spirit, an inner reason for its existence, and to ignore this when pursuing scientific investigation is, to say the least, foolish. Therefore after we have fully recognized all the dignity and grace that can be attributed to the present physical human body we must recog- nize that even it is of the earth earthy. All its The Resurrection and Its Implications 119 greatness is not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in, to, and through the resurrected. “Theirs will be “celestial” bodies as contrasted with the “‘terrestrial.”’ Adam’s body and all it stood for, while perfect of its kind “was subjected to vanity, not of its own will, but by reason of [im who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself (that human spirit which dwells within and behind it), also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the liberty of the glory of the children of God.” The body which displaces that physical body, must be the complete antithesis of the old. It will not be subject to the “vanity” or vanishment of the for- mer one, but will be free to go where the old could not endure, see, hear, feel and enjoy things utterly impossible to the former one. It will be at the call and service of a spirit set free to roam the infinite universe of God. It will not depend upon any material means of subsistence or assist- 120 The Resurrection and Its Implications ance, any more than did Christ, after his resur- rection, depend on them. It will have the spirit senses of which Paul speaks, and will, therefore, not depend upon any physical means of communi- cation, for enjoyment or protection. It may be normally invisible to physical sight, for Paul tells us that the things which are not seen are the eternal. But however this may be it will be just as visible to spirit-vision as physical objects are to our natural eyes. As to what that spirit body will be, we are again thrown back upon our only sure source of information, the resurrected body of Jesus. He -was the complete and perfect Adam of a new creation, the progenitor of a new race, a new kind of human. . The fleshly body of Jesus, as we have said, was a human body, and except that it was sinless it was in composition no wise different from that of Adam’s body or ours. He was bone of our The Resurrection and Its Implications 121 bones and flesh of our flesh. ‘Since then the children are sharers in flesh and blood, He also in like manner took part in the same; that through death (of these) He might bring to naught Him that had the power of death, that is the devil.” (Hebrews 2:14). And this body was prepared for Him. (Ps. 40:6 quoted in Heb. 10:5). It was “offered once for all” as a com- plete and perfect sacrifice. “This body is spoken of as a “‘veil’, as though it concealed within or beyond itself something more important. It was symbolized by the veil of the Temple which hung between the holy and the most holy, between this life and the next, between the material ‘and the spiritual, between the imperfect and the perfect. This veil had indicated to the worshippers that the way into the holiest of all was not yet opened, but at the moment when Christ’s physical body was forsaken of its spirit an unseen hand rent that veil from top to bottom. It is a curious thing 122 The Resurrection and Its Implications that the rending of that veil, said to have been six inches thick, without hands, at the hour of the evening sacrifice, did not cause the ‘Temple priests to stop, look and think what the rending meant. That. Temple is gone. That veil is gone. That material body which they symbolized is gone. “Wherefore we henceforth know no man aiter the flesh; even though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now know Him so no more. Wherefore if any man is in Christ he is a new creature.’ (II Cor. 5:16). And Paul here in following sentences assigns a deep philosophic reason for all this. It is that humans may be raised to a nature that can be “reconciled” to God,—made one with Him. God, as manifested in the Son of Man, for the time humbled Him- self to the nature and level of the Human. He took upon Himself all the limitations of the race of flesh. But this was not permanent. For doing this humble service ‘God also hath highly exalted ( BS ics A The Resurrection and Its Implications 123 Him.” (Phil. 2:9). In that exaltation the Son of Man carried human nature up to such a com- munity of life with God that a reconciliation be- tween them is possible, and even natural. And to this end men are stripped of their former gar- ments of flesh and are given bodies “like unto Christ’s glorious body.” The reader may, in opposition to our argu- ment, cite Paul’s statements in— Rom. 8:11: “But if the spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwelleth in you, he that raised up Christ Jesus from the dead shall give life (vitality) also to your mortal bodies through his Spirit that dwelleth in you.” Rom. 8:23: “Ourselves also, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan with- in ourselves, waiting for our adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body.” Or, over against this,— I Cor. 6-13: “Meats for the belly and the belly for meats, but God shall destroy both it and them.” 124 The Resurrection and Its [Implications Verse 19: “Or know ye not that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit which (Spirit) 1s in you which ye have from God.” None of these passages necessarily refer to the future life. ‘The redemption of our body” evi- dently means its transfer from the service of sin- ful passions to the service of God, in this life, and not to the resurrection. ‘The three successive Jewish temples, from which Paul takes his figure, were each totally destroyed. The Resurrection and Its Implications 125 CHAPTER SIX THE NEw BIRTH AND THE RESURRECTION The New Birth and the Resurrection are so closely related that they mutually shed light upon each other. “That which finds life in the new birth is that which participates in the resurrection which awaits the twice-born, and in the blessed- ness that follows. “The soul which can prove to itself that it has been reborn thereby proves con- clusively that it will have part in the resurrec- tion of the just. Can one say with assurance “I love God ?”—the evidence is complete. Can he say likewise “Jesus is Lord’? He may know on the authority of the Divine Word that he does so only because he is born of and possessed by the 126 The Resurrection and Its Implications Spirit. Can he say truly that he loves his fellow men,—he has added another proof; but can he say with Job “I know that my Redeemer Liveth?” then he can also say with that ancient saint “Without my flesh I shall see God.” What then is regeneration, the New Birth? In that third chapter of John’s Gospel Jesus ex- plains it to Nicodemus, and His whole definition turns upon the declaration that “that which is born of the flesh is flesh but that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.” The Great Teacher here draws a generic dis- tinction, both as to source and essence, between two distinct kinds of beings, and also between the earthly tabernacle in which the soul for the time lives and that “house from heaven” which God will give to it at the resurrection. “The natural body is of clay and at death returns to its native element. “The other body is not of clay and therefore cannot return to dust, or become dust. The Resurrection and Its Implications 127 It cannot for it is not composed of any element reducible to or which will combine with dust. The natural body, according to Paul, and as evidenced by common experience, can be “dis- solved”, but no such term is ever applied to the reborn. ‘Tio the thief upon the cross Jesus prom- ised that he would be, that very day, with Him in Paradise. “That promise had no reference, near or remote, to the fleshly frame of either of them. The body of the one went to Joseph’s tomb, the other to the Potters Field. And in passing let us note the prayer of the thief, ‘““Lord, remember me when thou comest into thy Kingdom.” ‘That prayer was doubtless in- spired by the mockery of the crown of thorns on His head, or by the superscriptions of contempt nailed to the cross above it. Through glazing eyes from which every earthly hope had fled the thief saw the reality ;—that Jesus was indeed a King of an unseen and unearthly kingdom, and 128 The Resurrection and Its Implications he had faith to believe that sooner or later He would come into possession of it. It is one of the shortest, most comprehensive and most effective prayers ever offered. It appealed directly to the very heart of Christ for it showed that here was at least one person who had fully sensed His great ultimate purpose in coming to the earth. It specifically implied that he who uttered the prayer knew that Jesus would continue to live, and in doing so would come into possession of a kingdom composed of repentant sinners such as he was. No one can pray that prayer unless prompted to do so by the Holy Spirit. (I Cor. 12:3). The prayer marked one who has been already regene- rated, reborn. One is tempted to believe there- fore that it is a realizing sight of Jesus as Lord, as King, that regenerates the soul, for the ability to see Him as such is proof of Spirit perception. Peter in his Pentecostal Sermon, when three The Resurrection and Its Implications 129 thousand persons were converted, had for his theme Jesus as “both Lord and Christ.’ And the same thought is expressed by him on a later occasion, “Him did God exalt at His right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour, to give repentance to Israel and remission of sins.” ‘The prayer of the thief was answered even while his legs were being broken, his torn physi- cal body yet hanging on the cross, or perhaps being thrown to the dogs; but he himself, his complete personality, was with Jesus in Paradise. And can anyone suppose that that thief would ever want to see again that sin-sodden and sin- scarred body? In any case that body was not necessary to his being in Paradise. All that was savable or worth saving of that man, his regene- rated soul, was with his Saviour in a realm where such bodies, and the memories they inspire, are wholly out of harmony. Paul would have said of that malefactor that he must be free from that 130 The Resurrection and Its Implications disfigured and degraded body in order to be “pres- ent with the Lord” in paradise. Let us get before us as clearly as possible just what Jesus uttered into the mind of His night- time pupil on this subject. Nicodemus was a thoughtful student of the Scriptures. He wanted to know how it would be possible for him: to gain admission into that wonderful kingdom which Jesus had been describing in His talks in Galilee. Nicodemus was from the same country in which Jesus began His Public preaching— Galilee; and had probably heard Jesus on many occasions. He was himself a Rabbi, a teacher. He was a Pharisee and therefore believed that any resurrection must be a physical rejuvenation. The teaching of Christ must have appealed to him very forcibly and he, like other millions since who have believed as he did, must have had dif- ficulty in apprehending how that body of his could be in the resurrection collected from the The Resurrection and Its Implications 131 dust and made to live again; and he may have wondered what use it would be even if so col- lected. He doubtless felt that his soul was indis- solubly united with it and that any future ex- istence awaiting him must include it. But_his belief in that physical resuscitation could not be reconciled with Jesus’ teaching. Even if his weak, sin-smitten body could be raised and clothed with eternal life, how could it be made to com- port with that infinitely more refined, higher, holier, happier realm which Jesus described as the Kingdom of Heaven? His hope and questioning brought him to the only person on earth at that time who could give him light. Jesus replied to his question before it was put into words. Except one be born anew he cannot see, much less enter, the kingdom of God. Nicodemus was staggered at this declaration. ’ He had never before heard of such a thing. And believing as all literalist Pharasees then believed, 132 The Resurrection and Its Implications and still believe, it is no wonder he exclaimed, “How can these things be? How can a man be born when he is old?” It is altogether likely that this is one of the questions which also afterward staggered Paul the scholar, and that sent him away into the solitudes of Arabia in search of a solution. How could one be born afresh? ‘The fact is this astounding proposal in its very suggestion proves Jesus divine. No human ingenuity could have invented it. It bases salvation upon Divine Fa- therhood, the heritage of a new nature, the gift of a fatherly affection. One might indeed say that if that fatherhood is once bestowed the love that is implied in that most intimate relationship obliges God to save the subject of it. He could not be true to His own nature and leave His own child to perish. Many ere this had believed academically and speculatively, in the transmigration of souls, but The Resurrection and Its Implications 133 here was something infinitely greater, absolutely new, and with a philosophic foundation in estab- lished fact. It involved the creation of an abso- lutely new body and the re-creation of the spirit. It meant the implantation of a new life, a new germ which in the event would drop the old like a forsaken shell and develop into a new kind of being; or, as Paul calls it, a new creation. Nicodemus was shocked, and, but for the teach- ing of the Spirit, who of us would not have been? Science and the wisdom of men are absolutely dumb before this declaration of Jesus. It leads out into a realm into which physical science, or even psychological research cannot enter. “These can no more reason of it or about it than about the nature, substance or origin of /ife itself. It is a heaven-born truth. It came from Heaven with Jesus, and came to earth because He came. ‘That new being cannot be apprehended with material senses. Like the wind which cannot be seen with 134. The Resurrection and Its Implications the eye its presence can be realized only by the effects it produces. Nicodemus being an elderly man may have re- flected that his mother’s body was dead and de- cayed. How could he enter a second time into her womb or into any other and be born again? Impossible. His questions show that his belief regarding his body stood in the way of his seeing what Jesus was trying to teach him about his very self, just as the same belief, or rather unbelief, to-day is blinding the world in regard to the most important and the most wonderful doctrine of the Christian faith—regeneration, and the imperative necessity of it. But Jesus points out to him and to us all, that that which apprehends the bare fact of a King- dom of God is not this old body of clay, its in- tuitions, its physical senses, nor even its intellect, but a new intelligence, a new creature, one born of the Spirit of God; and therefore is, itself, of a The Resurrection and Its Implications 135 spirit-substance like its Parent. Nothing Human can either realize within itself the heaven that Jesus preached, or go to it, except it be endowed with a spirit nature, like His. Jesus makes it pertectly clear, not only by inference, but by complete silence about His physical body, that the regeneration about which He was talking to Nicodemus does not apply to it at all. And here we can see how a failure to under- stand Christ’s teaching in regard to the resurrec- tion of the body: has opened the door to foolish speculation or worse. For example, note the great religious importance often placed upon the dead human body, and its preservation, as though it is necessary to a future admission to heaven. ‘The sprinkling of “holy water’ upon a dead corpse and the assumed necessity of depositing it in a “consecrated” graveyard is here seen to be merely pious mummery. It implies a belief that the identical physical elements composing that body 136 The Resurrection and Its Implications will, at the resurrection, be recovered, reassem- bled and used of God in constructing that “house not made with hands.” And yet, upon the theory _ of a physical resurrection, and provided that there is warrant for believing that the sprinkling will in some mysterious way accomplish its pretended purpose, the custom is a perfectly reasonable one. But there is no such warrant; and while the ceremony does neither good or ill to the deceased, the solemn administration of the rite is finely calculated to impress living observers with the — feeling that the person who performs it is in some unexplainable way possessed of divine power over the eternal destiny of the dead. ‘This belief ac- cepted, or even suspected, logically calls for belief in an intervening purgatory, the escape from which becomes in turn an absolutely unbeatable means of priestly revenue. Who would not give up a few dollars to get a loved relative or friend out of the fire as quickly as possible? ‘Thus we The Resurrection and Its Implications 137 see how a whole system of false pretense, fraud and imposture springs out of the apparently harmless theory that the dust that is buried will be the body that will be raised. Is it not easier to believe that God, who made our present tem- porary yet destructible ones, will be at the time able to furnish us with bodies eternally incorrupt- ible, bodies suited to the purposes and pleasures of our re-born and regenerated spirits? A remarkable thing about the world with which We are surrounded is that the spirit or life of every sentient thing is clothed with a body which exactly suits it, and that it is also placed in an environment exactly suited to its ultimate needs and enjoyments. ‘The clam has its shell and the mud. ‘The eagle has its feathers and the ex- panse of the empyrean blue. Why should there be an exception in the case of that particular object that God loves, that holy thing which bears His image, that thing expressly created for 138 The Resurrection and Its Implications God’s most intimate society and eternal fellow- ship? If any part of this world is to be de- stroyed, annihilated, why should it not rather be that through which sin originally entered it? Paul associates regeneration with the resurrec- tion. In his mind the former conditions the lat- ter and the latter perfects the former. In First Corinthians fifteenth, to which we have referred, he uses a planted grain of wheat for the illustra- tion. The entire material substance of the planted seed dies and rots away. Nothing more is heard of it. To use the word which Paul applies to the body that is buried it is “dissolved.” It is as completely lost sight of as if it had never existed. It returns to and unites with the elements of which it was at first formed. No part of it re- appears in the new plant. Within that seed, however, there is an invisible germ, a wholly unapprehendable life principle which is no part of that material seed. It is merely resident for the The Resurrection and Its Implications 139 time within it. That it is separable from its temporary container is shown by the fact that through the process which we call germination it leaves its old residence for an entirely new one, and never returns. “Yhough it cannot be seen, touched, weighed, tasted, nor by any human hand isolated, this germ or life finds its secret way into and produces the “new creature,” and abides and there becomes active by the act of God. ‘This is true in a stalk of wheat, true of all trees and seeding plants. It is through this unmaterial impalpable life germ that the identity, personality, and individuality of the seed is perpetuated and carried up to a new sphere of existence. “The phenomenon therefore is a simulation, common in our every day experience, of the greatest wonder- ment of all the ages, of what takes place in the resurrection. This wheat germ is not a material thing. It is in fact the spirit of the planted seed. It is 140 The Resurrection and Its Implications purely life, a direct creation of God. Resident within our mortal bodies is a like principle, the life, which Paul elsewhere says is hid with Christ in God. From time immemorial men have tried to find the location of this elusive principle in the human anatomy, but all such attempts have failed and will fail. No man need search for what God purposely conceals. Biology calls it a cell, a germ, or a plasm, but this merely conceals igno- rance by a camouflage of words. It has neither length, breadth, or thickness. It has neither color, shape, or weight, or any other property that can be apprehended by any of our five present senses, nor by any precision-instrument which man can devise. The abyss which separates matter from spirit has never been bridged by human hands or human ingenuity and never will be. The Scrip- tures, under penalty of death forbade even the attempt to do so, not that there is any fear of anyone succeeding, but to discourage the fraud The Resurrection and Its Implications 141 and imposture upon which any claimed success would necessarily be founded. The psychic phe- nomena produced by trance mediums are no more an evidence of established communication with the spirit world than is the barking of a dreaming pup. The fact that men attempt it shows the grossest misapprehension of what the spirit world is. ‘Ihe distance between these two worlds is not measurable in miles, like the distance to a moun- tain or a star, but is a distance of character and nature. “The foolishness of these attempts is a direct result of a misconception of the resurrection and its implications. And yet this spirit realm is there. It exists. There is in all the realm of established fact noth- ing more firmly fixed than the fact of life, and its residence in plant, animal and man. ‘That life or spirit also is the most really real and at the same time the most valuable thing about our personality. It is our personality. It is that part 142 The Resurrection and Its Implications of us without which our bodies are worthless. It is a matter of common knowledge that through it we continue our identity, our separate individ- uality, memory, intelligence, affections and char- acter,—everything of value about us. And in its transference to a new world, and to a new body of God’s own providing, it carries with it no more of the substance of its old clay domicile than the germ of the seed carries up unto the new plant. It does not carry up with it even the odor of the decayed root or the corruption out of which it emerges. This process illustrates, perhaps as nearly as the process can be illustrated for us, what takes place in the rebirth. ‘The life, the personality which was resident in the kernel is what is reborn to a new existence. Nicodemus, though an ac- knowledged teacher had never noticed this, or at least had never applied the analogy to himself. It taxed his credulity and also that of the dis- The Resurrection and Its Implications 143 ciples, but when discovered it fired the zeal and enthusiasm of Paul until he could see nothing but a hastening advantage to himself in having his body mobbed, stoned, or thrown to the beasts at Ephesus. He longed for the time when he could, with God’s permission, drop his burden of flesh. It is God’s holy one that cannot see corruption. It is God manifested, perhaps for the time, in human flesh. It is that within us which can see God and call Him Father. It is our very self. As we write these words we learn that Caruso the great singer is dead. “They mean that his physical bedy is consigned to its native element. His wonderfully trained voice is also silenced, but the melody of it lives on, and memory records will carry and perpetuate it in every land. “That of him which was seen by great thrilled audiences only visualized the tent in which the musician lived. “That which was not seen was the real, the enduring melodist. “The harp has fallen to 144. The Resurrection and Its Implications pieces, but the melody cannot, for there is noth- ing about its thrilling cadences which the destroy- ing angel can strike. “This is a meager and im- perfect illustration but it suggests what we would say. Jesus informed Nicodemus that nothing can go to heaven except that which comes down out of heaven, through the fatherhood of the Spirit of God. Adam’s body was made by God, of red earth, not born of Him. All flesh is grass. “The wind of dissolution passes over it and it is gone, and the place thereof shall know it no more. But such things cannot be said of that which 1s born of God, that which is spirit, as He is spirit. “Che “flesh”? and all that is symbolized by it is enmity against God, for it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be, but the mind of the Spirit is life. It is therefore the spirit, the soul, that is reborn, not the body. And the body which that reborn spirit is to inhabit for all eternity will The Resurrection and Its Implications 145 be at the time born of and given to it of God, soon as it is needed,—at the resurrection. Each such spirit will have “its own body.” It will not be a body made of the dust of the earth nor will it be born of the will of man. It will be a new creation, fresh from the hand of God, and exact- ly suited to all the purposes, pursuits, and pleas- ures of the twice born soul. It will be in sub- stances and composition like the bodies of the Angels, like the body which Jesus had after His resurrection. 146 The Resurrection and Its Implications \ CHAPTER SEVEN THE BETTER RESURRECTION In Scripture the word resurrection is applied to two distinct things. Both, with an indication of their fundamental difference, are mentioned in a single verse, Hebrews 11:35, ‘““Women received their dead by a resurrection; and others were tortured, not accepting the deliverance, that they might obtain a better resurrection.” The first of these is a mere recalling to life of the physical body and a temporary return to it of the recently departed spirit. Men were some- times the instruments of performing such resur- rections. “The second form of it, here called “a better resurrection’ is that which was for the The Resurrection and Its Implications 147 first time, and completely, exemplified by Jesus when He rose from the dead. Such resurrections as the latter belong only in the spirit realm, and take place by the exercise of Divine Power alone. No human hand can perform it. It is a personal act of Divine Creative Power, one which forever places the subject of it absolutely beyond the reach of death. It is performed only by Him who is the Sole Creator and Author of LIFE. Power to raise the body, or to call back the spirit to it, might indeed be delegated, but the power to con- fer that new kind of body remains with Him who is LIFE,—_-THE CREATOR. The recorded instances of the former kind are, omitting that of Samuel and the Shunammite’s son: First. The Son of the Sidonian widow. I Kings 17:22. Elijah, while a man of like passions with any other human, was an eminent type of Christ. What he did on this occasion fore- shadowed to a degree some of the miracles which 148 The Resurrection and Its Implications Jesus afterward performed. But even the faith of Elijah could not place the widow’s son beyond the eventual grasp of death. We repeat that none save God can do that. Jesus performed no resurrections of the Jatter kind until after He Himself had been raised from the dead. It was probably this incident in the experience of Elijah, and his power over physical death, which caused the Jews to suspect that Jesus upon the cross was calling upon Elijah to save his body. Jesus knew that it would have availed nothing to accept deliverance from physical death at that time, even if His great purpose had permitted Him to do it. Sooner or later His human body, like all other human bodies, would be claimed by death in some form, and it would not have served His great ultimate purpose if an Elijah or an Elisha had appeared, or had afterward arrived at Joseph’s tomb to call His spirit back to the same body. ‘There is no evidence that the widow’s son did The Resurrection and Its Implications 149 not again die. Furthermore the Sidonian mother would not have understood, nor, probably, would she have appreciated any but a resuscitation of her son’s body. Immortality had not yet been brought within the human grasp, nor was it until Jesus rose from the dead. Second. ‘The corpse of the man which acci- dentally came into contact with that of Elisha. II Kings 13:21. This was also a physical resur- rection. Third. ‘The son of the widow of Nain. Luke 7:15, by Jesus. Fourth. ‘The ruler’s daughter, Luke 8:55, by Jesus. Fifth. Lazarus at Bethany, John 11:44, by Jesus. Sevih. \ Worcas, Actsi9 :40;) by Peter: Seventh. Eutychus, Acts 20:10, by Paul. Peter and Paul made no pretense of bestowing endless life. 150 The Resurrection and Its Implications All of these returned to the grave. There were at the time no representations to the contrary. In the case of the three performed by Jesus they might be taken to show that He possessed power over physical life and death in any form. Par- ticularly was this true in the case of Lazarus. And since physical death was the only kind of which men in the flesh could at that period be experimentally familiar the act of Jesus was to them a proof that He was the Lord of physical life, some few reasoned from this that He could also bestow eternal life. If He could give life to a dead physical body, why not also life to a dead soul. “The raising of Lazarus was, however, a proving of all that could be experimentally proven prior to His own resurrection. Something more than any or all of these examples was needed to prove beyond controversy that He was “The Resurrection.” It is doubtful whether Jesus himself, until after his own resurrection, had The Resurrection and Its Implications 151 power to perform the real, the “better” resurrec- tion. He had not yet paid the price. His veil of flesh had not yet been rent away from Him. He that held the power of death had not yet been unthroned. Of the “better resurrection” of which the au- thor of Hebrews speaks we have two outstanding examples. First. That of Christ Himself, which we do not here discuss. Second. ‘That of the saints who, immediately after the resurrection of Christ, came forth from their graves and appeared to many in the Holy City, Matt. 27:52. Here was a great “sign”, performed without warning, words, or explanation. It is recorded only by Matthew though the other evangelists must have known of it. Possibly they did not understand it or its tremendous ultimate signifi- cance, 152 The Resurrection and Its Implications On the face of it Matthew’s narrative seems to imply that those who came forth from their tombs appeared in their former physical bodies, but the text does not say so. Men have read that into it. “To our mind it is more consonant with other Scriptures to believe that they came forth in bodies like that in which Jesus appeared to the disciples,—without that flesh and blood which Paul says “cannot inherit the Kingdom of Heav- en; that they appeared in glorified spirit-bodies of God’s providing, and that they went home to heaven as advance heralds. Possibly angels had been trying to look into the profound mystery of Christ’s visit to the earth. If so here was the answer, the explanation, and in a form that would set the courts of heaven ringing with plaudits for Him who had done this mighty thing. That they as pure spirits could have been seen by mortal eyes is believable when we remember that angels, who are likewise purely spirit, had The Resurrection and Its Implications 153 often been seen by men in the flesh, as for in- stance those who that very morning had appeared to the women at the empty tomb. It is not necessary therefore to assume that these saints appeared clothed in flesh in order to make them- selves visible to the followers of Jesus in Jerusa- lem. “Chey had bodies like the resurrection body of Jesus. “hey came out of their graves just as He came out of His. Jesus had told His disciples in advance that “‘the sons of the resurrection” would “be equal to the angels.’”’ Here was the proof. If these resurrected saints appeared in the same kind of bodies as those possessed by angels here would be the infallible proof, not only of the fact of an accomplished resurrection, but also proof that what Jesus had told them was absolutely true. It would also show conclusively that mere men, such as these ancient saints, could certainly be reborn to a higher sphere of existence. Here 154 Ihe Resurrection and Its Implications were saints clothed in light, garmented in robes such as the angels wear, and possessing natures which the grave could not longer hold. And here also was the forever undeniable proof that the resurrection by which the sinless Jesus escaped from the clutches of death applied also to sinful men long after their bodies had turned to the dust out of which they were created. On the other hand if those resurrected saints had appeared in bodies of flesh and blood those who saw and bore testimony ,of their presence might have suspected that their resurrection was but a temporary one, like that of Jairus’ daugh- ter for example, or that of Lazarus. “This would have beclouded the great spirit-reaching scope of Christ’s matchless work. It occurred immediately after the resurrection of Jesus, as though He might have been proving to Himself that He had indeed triumphed over His last enemy, death. ‘These were trophies of His victory. ‘They were The Resurrection and Its Implications 155 exhibited to those who afterward proved to be the “witnesses of His resurrection.” In any case here was the infallible proof, for all men and for all time, that the ancient prison house of death had been invaded by One who possessed power to break the shackles from the souls of many that had been long held captive there. Such men as Job, Abraham, Moses, Da- vid, Elijah, Elisha and Daniel may have been among them, their faith now triumphantly vin- dicated. One almost regrets that the names are not given, or that they did not delay to tell some- thing of their experience. Possibly they like Paul could not have uttered it into human ears. But in order that the proof be infallible it was wholly reasonable that the conclusive evidence of it be presented in a way that would appeal direct- ly to the senses of men and women still in the flesh, for the benefit of flesh-bound believers in all after ages. “Those resurrected were seen, and 156 The Resurrection and Its Implications recognized as well. We are not told whether they walked on the ground as mortals do, how they were clothed, whether they delayed their visit, where they went, nor how. We are not told that they said anything to any one. Possibly their sudden release had stricken them dumb with amazement and joy. However, the sole fact of their appearance told their errand. And what a volume of information is contained in the mere fact of their having exhibited themselves, if but for a moment. It showed that the resurrection was not only for those who should die in the future, but also that it was retroactive back to the days of Eden when it was promised that the Seed of the woman should bruise the head of the serpent. It also showed that the death-penalty for sin was not eternal. And their mere appear- ance so soon after the resurrection of Jesus, while the rocks were yet rending and the earth quaking, all in the immediate locality of and almost syn- The Resurrection and Its Implications 157 chronous with the resurrection of Jesus, left no possible doubt as to the Author of it. Their mere appearance bore silent and therefore the more unanswerable testimony to the fact that the pris- on door had been actually broken down, and that the sealed death-crypts had been opened. Here was conclusive evidence from beyond that death does not end all, and that it has no power to defend against the imperative summons of the Great Resurrector and Judge. If spiritualist would have proof that the dead live again, here it is. That proof will never be gotten through human incantations or wizardry. “The Witch of Endor was miraculously permitted to surprise herself but proved nothing. It is fortunate such power is not given to men,—that ‘‘The Tree of Life was fenced on every side by a flaming sword.” Jesus was, while human, also Divine. If there had not occurred this proof of His power to raise those long dead His own resurrection might not 158 The Resurrection and Its Implications have proved all that was needed to be established. Men might have afterward reasoned that the res- urrection might mean one thing to his Divine Self and a different thing to mere men, that He might be able to do for mankind in general what He had done for Lazarus or Jairus’ daughter, but no more. In those cases the subjects needed per- sonal assistance, needed to be released, fed, and otherwise physically cared for. And in their res- urrected form they apparently in no wise differed from what they were before. Lazarus was not understood to be gifted with any such thing as undestroyable life, for the Jews even planned to kill him. But in the case of these resurrected saints there is an entire absence of any suggestion of such things. In a word the resurrection of these saints was necessary to supplement that of Jesus and to prevent the latter from proving either too much or too little. And withal there is between these two groups, The Resurrection and Its Implications 159 those who were seen, and those who saw them, a most eloquent silence. They apparently observed each other across a chasm as yet unbridged for the latter. “They occupied separate worlds, the one physical, the other spirit; the one yet under the power of physical death, the other not; the one still filled with doubt, pain, hunger, and sor- row, the other absolutely free forever from all these. The one group continued to be hampered by the impediments of physical things, the other free to roam unhampered the limitless fields of joy and light. ‘The one group were still like Jesus the weary, foot-sore, hungry Man of Sor- rows, the other like Jesus the Risen One. ‘The difference between Lazarus after his resurrection and these resurrected saints was the difference between the two resurrections. 160 The Resurrection and Its Implications OD es Dee 4 DETAR NN CS OE RESULTS OF WRONG INTERPRETATION OF THE RESURRECTION If the theory of a physical resurrection could be confined to a mere passive belief it would be comparatively harmless. But the theory once accepted vitally influences one’s whole view of the heaven-wrought plan and goal of salvation. It not only displaces the heaven of the Scriptures with a human fiction but it makes way for and invites many other blighting errors. “Theories springing out of it have become a sort of blinding obsession. “These in their second and third gene- ration have given rise to such grotesque cults as Islamism, Mormonism, and a host of other mon- grel beliefs. (See Note, page 236.) The Resurrection and Its Implications 161 Take for example Mohammedanism, at best a bloody, sensual travesty upon the Christian Faith. It accepts a great part of the Old Testament and assumes to worship the very same Divine Being as do Christians. But it has distorted the great spiritual hope of the Bible and puts in its place a future world adjusted to the flesh and its lusts. The sensuous delights which it pictures necessarily pre-suppose the future existence of a physical body, without which the sensuality it offers could have no existence and therefore no appeal. “This morally insane appeal has drawn to its commun- ion more than one-seventh of the world’s popula- tion. Spirituality is lost sight of and animality is enthroned in its place. The barbarity of the Turk grows naturally out of his religion, and is a part of it. “Therefore it is not to be wondered at that he should attempt its defense and propagation by physical force and the sword. Read this para- graph from the Koran, the words of the founder 162 The Resurrection and Its Implications of Islamism. It is the present day gospel of Mohammedanism. “I, therefore, the last of the prophets, am sent with the sword. Let those who promulgate my faith enter into no argument nor discussion, but slay all those who refuse obedience to the law. Whoever fights tor the true Faith, whether he fall or conquer, will assuredly receive a glorious reward. “The sword is the key of heaven and hell; all who draw it in the cause of the Faith will be rewarded with temporal advantages; every drop shed of their blood, every peril and hardship endured by them, will be registered on high as more meritorious than even fasting or praying. It they fall in battle their sins will at once be blotted out, and they will be transported to Para- dise, there to revel in eternal pleasures in the arms of blackeyed houris.”’ As we write these words there come to our ears from the victorious Turkish Army another threat of a “holy war’, assumed to be backed by 200,000,000 devotees who have as much faith in The Resurrection and Its Implications 163 the above pronouncement of Mohammed as we have in the words of Jesus of Nazareth. With a heaven dedicated to the enjoyment of physical appetites it holds out to its followers the hope that in the resurrection they will be re- warded with unlimited harems. Hence the culti- vation of animalism becomes in the present life the practice of what is, to the follower of the “Prophet”, the only true religion. We believe that this monstrous system of faith is one of the “three unclean spirits like frogs which proceed out of the mouth of the Dragon, the False Pro- phet and the Beast.” It has done more to sub- merge and withstand the Christian Faith and Christian civilization than any other single system of the devil’s invention. It has its seat in the Turkish Empire, at the cross-roads of the world, and is at this hour controlling the international policy of England, France and Italy in the Le- vant. No one can contemplate its recent unspeak- 164 The Resurrection and Its Implications able atrocities in Armenia and Smyrna without a shudder. But, subtract from the Islamic religion the one element of belief in a physical resurrection, and it would die for want of a motive; yet so long as Christianity itself endorses, in another form and degree, that future-world materialism which underlies Mohammedanism what hope is there of overthrowing that system? Another example of the same ilk is found in Mormonism, of which latter polygamy here and hereafter is the main prop. It, like its suggesting prototype, Mohammedanism, had to pretend a new revelation from God to warrant it. Joseph Smith was the Prophet of American Mohammedanism. The Book of Mormon and the Koran are of the same class. Its remarkable growth only testifies to the strong appeal which sensualism has when clothed in the garb of religious sanctity. The principal difference between these two systems is The Resurrection and Its Implications 165 that while the Koran reduces Jesus Christ to the status of a mere human teacher the Book of Mor- mon makes of Him a sensualist, with a harem composed of Mary, Martha and other women. Without the concept of a bodily resurrection, whereat the male “saints” shall have exclusive power to call up their “sealed” earthly female consorts, “the Church of Christ of the Latter Day Saints” could not exist. “That its whole sys- tem of faith rests on the hallucinations of an ignorant horse-trader makes no difference. Any religion which panders to the appetites of the flesh will seek its justification and propagation by phys- ical means. “The “Mountain Meadow Massacre” was simply a letting loose in Utah of the spirit and motives of Mohammed. ‘The fact that Mor- monism now holds the balances of political power in eleven states of this country is, in its last analysis, due to the preaching of a physical resur- rection to a future physical heaven. 166 The Resurrection and Its Implications Those who visit Salt Lake City may find on the hillside, overlooking the former residence of Brigham Young and his fourteen wives, his grave. ‘That grave is supposed to be protecting his physi- cal body for its future resurrection. Over it is a great stone slab, in turn guarded by a stout iron railing, the whole walled in against possible theft or molestation. If that body is wanting on the resurrection morning his fourteen wives will not be called up. What a travesty! An interesting heresy trial occurred within a few weeks. According to the Literary Digest Bishop William M. Brown, of the Protestant Episcopal Church, was tried at Cleveland, Ohio, for heresy. ‘The court was composed of eight other Bishops of highest standing in that church. While testifying in his own defense he stated that “astronomy had upset his orthodoxy altogether.” He stated that he had set his heart on getting to heaven, but that in view of the physical resurrec- The Resurrection and Its Implications 167 tion in which his church categorically believes, he had asked himself the reasonable question: C is 1 . ° How could I go through space for millions of years, at 240 degrees below zero, even if I trav- eled at the rate of light, 186,000 miles per second, and get to heaven.” It is significant that at the beginning of this ereat ecclesiastical trial, so important that special reporting wires were run to the court room, Bishop Brown joined with the judges, who later convicted and expelled him, in solemnly repeating the Apostles Creed. ‘This Creed among other things contains this :—“‘I believe in the (physical) resurrection of the body.” In a word Bishop Brown for substance asserted on the stand that it was a belief in the above quoted sentence from that ancient Creed of his church, which had made a heretic of him. He further stated in his testimony that when he had found himself getting into doctrinal difficulty with 168 The Resurrection and Its Implications his church, he had consulted, among others, a brother Bishop, and that that brother had point- edly reproved him for not knowing and taking refuge in the “Einstein Theory,’—‘“which theo- ry,’ the brother Bishop told him, “would teach him that he could go somewhere without going anywhere.” If it were not for the tragedy of the trial it would be a comedy. ‘The eight judges voted unanimously for deposing the too realistic churchman. The literature of orthodox Christianity is ev- erywhere saturated with a quasi-endorsement of this materialistic view. It is not in any con- troversial spirit but rather for the purpose of setting Scriptural truth and naked error squarely face to face that we make reference to some cre- dalisms, ancient and modern. We believe that they, unconsciously, obscure the hope that fired the soul of the great Apostle. At best they are trying to make old bottles hold the new wine. The Resurrection and Its Implications 169 They are in a way still embalming mummies, like the Egyptians of four thousand years ago. In an Easter number of the Sunday School ‘Times, for example, there is raised for editorial reply the categorical question:—‘‘Are our bodies to go to heaven?” After a somewhat lengthy argument the answer is summed up in these words :—‘“The physical bodies of believers are to be raised from the dead and are to be dwelt in by believers in the Kingdom of God.” In order to substantiate this view it assumes that Jesus, the Forerunner, took to heaven with Him the same material body of flesh and bones in which He was crucified, and that therefore His followers will do likewise. ‘This reasoning would be good if there were any Scriptural proof that Jesus did so ascend in a physical body. But there is not a word in the New Testament to prove this. It is true that Jesus said to the dis- ciples: ‘‘A spirit does not have flesh and bones as 170 The Resurrection and Its Implications you see me have.” But this dces not prove any- thing except that Jesus was upon that passing occasion doing everything possible to convince doubters like Thomas. ‘There were some doubt- ers even among the five hundred who saw Him on the mountain in Galilee, near the end of His stay on earth. He knew precisely the difficulty with .them and He attempted to remove it by assuming for such occasions a physical body, a replica of the one He had before. One readily gains from the editorial above referred to the impression that the question is raised largely for the ulterior purpose of creating an inferential presumption in favor of Premil- lennialism. ‘The inference clearly is that if the redeemed will, at their resurrection, be reinvested with their former “earthly tabernacles” it is but reasonable to assume that Jesus will meet and receive them in a like material body, or vice versa. And indeed we frankly admit the logic of these The Resurrection and Its Implications 171 assumptions. If Jesus went to heaven in a physi- cal body His saints will do the same. But if He did not, they will not. In the last analysis there- fore the whole Premillennial doctrine rests upon what we believe is a grossly mistaken view of the resurrection; for if the resurrection be not a rising again of the material bodies of the dead Premillennialism has not an inch of ground on which to stand. ‘These theories, false as we believe them to be, are not only of great future moment, but they have also a present inescapable force in determin- ing every day conduct. One cannot accept the Premillennial theory without letting it influence his attitude toward the great practical problems of social life. His very notion of what the Kingdom of Christ is or is to be, here or hereafter, will inevitably be molded by what he believes concerning the nature of Christ’s return. If it be believed that that return is to be a physical 172 The Resurrection and Its Implications one, to take physical control of the earth, before His Millennial Kingdom can be manifested, why should men spend time and effort preparing the way for it? Jesus will do all that when He arrives. It is easier to sit down and wait. Such a program not only argues that the Spirit of Christ 1s not equal to the task of converting the world, but it makes the redemption of the world cataclysmic, outward, materialistic. Professor Rall, in his late admirable book, “Premillennialism and the Christian Hope,’ apt- ly says:—‘‘This doctrine conceives of the coming Kingdom in terms of Oriental autocracy, the dominance of sheer physical power. Premillen- nialism is not an unrelated theory at one point in theology, but is a complete doctrinal system, one that cuts deeper than the differences which sepa- rate the great Protestant bodies to-day.” It presumes that mere material force, or the exhibition of it, can create righteousness and that The Resurrection and Its Implications 173 it is possible for the physical to give birth to the spiritual. It would hold on to that through which sin entered the world, that which ever since has carried on a constant warfare against the Spirit, —that in which Paul said he had no confidence, and that of which Jesus Himself said: ‘The flesh profiteth nothing.” (John 6:63). A recent issue of the “Christian Century” says: “A. scandal of division threatens Chinese Mis- sions. “here are in the Protestant camp two distinct groups, one emphasizing the second physi- cal coming of Christ, and, therefore, the futility of many items of educational and philanthropic work: and the other, adhering to a Gospel of social service. It is a struggle between the Pre- millennialists and the less literal group of the Church, transferred to foreign soil, and the effect upon the native population seems to be what neither would wish. “With the missionary problem in China be- 174 The Resurrection and Its Implications coming more difficult by reason of a changing attitude of the Chinese themselves, the tragedy of this divisive movement within the Christian group is marked. With devotees traveling over China, spending ten minutes between trains to declare that ‘Jesus is coming’ the intelligent Chinaman may be expected to mock. He has no background in his thinking for a catastrophic second coming. The denominational leaders may continue to get up big ‘drives’ as a means of unifying the Chris- tian forces, but what the Christian Church of to-day needs more than anything else is some honest thinking on fundamentals.” But the Sunday School ‘Times is by no means primarily responsible for these Premillennial views nor by any means their only protagonist. Chris- tian thought is honycombed with them. The theological basis for them was unconsciously laid long ago in orthodox creeds, confessions, and in hypostatized doctrinal statements. ‘Their authors The Resurrection and Its Implications 175 could not have foreseen, perhaps, that the doc- trine of a physical resurrection would eventuate in that system of physical theology which must make room for Premillennialism and the many other vagaries which have grown out of it. The ““Thirty-Nine Articles” of the Church of Iengland declares: “Christ did truly rise again from death and took again His body, with flesh, bones, and all things pertaining to the perfection of man’s nature, wherewith He ascended into heaven, and there sitteth until He returns to judge all men at the last day.” (See Article 4.) The Westminster Assembly of Divines also, in their answer to Question 52, Larger Catechism, says :—‘‘Christ was exalted in his resurrection, in and that, not having seen corruption in death having the very same body in which he suffered, with the essential properties thereof, really united to his soul, He rose again from the dead the third day by His own power.” ‘The only Scripture 176 The Resurrection and Its Implications proof given for the above statement is Luke 24— 39, where Jesus declares that ‘‘a spirit hath not flesh and bones as ye see me have.” Seemingly it did not occur to those who cited this proof ref- erence that this use of Jesus’ words would just as readily prove that Jesus was not a Spirit at all. Again Question 86, concerning the communion of the saints in glory with Christ replies: “Im- mediately after death . . . their souls are made perfect in holiness, and are received into the highest heavens, where they behold the face of God in light and glory, waiting for the full redemption of their bodies, which even in death continue united to Christ, and rest in their graves as in their beds, till at the last day they be again united to their souls.” “The Scripture proof given for this statement is Job 19:26. “The Revised Version however turns that passage of Scripture directly against the above doctrine. Question 87, concerning the Resurrection, re- The Resurrection and Its Implications 177 plies: “The self same bodies of the dead which were laid in the grave, being then again united to their souls forever, shall be raised up by the pow- er of Christ.” ‘The Scripture proof cited for this declaration, which we notice elsewhere at length, does not anywhere say that the self same bodies will be raised. The same conception of the future state is: voiced in the so called ‘Apostles’ Creed.” ‘That ancient baptismal formula, however, bears no evi- dence that the Apostles ever saw or endorsed it. Many, through their reverence for that which is ancient, are influenced by it in their thinking. But these Creeds are not infallible. They can- not claim authority except as they are founded upon what is revealed in the inspired Word of God. Our contention here is not that it is wholly incredible that God should raise dead physical bodies but that the above statements are not warranted by Scripture. Let us briefly analyze 178 The Resurrection and Its Implications them. ‘Taken together they assume these physical facts to be continually present from the date of the death of each human body until the time of its resurrection. ; First. A grave in which the body was de- posited. Is it commonly true that graves remain undisturbed? Millions of bodies, however, have had no graves at all, and other millions of graves have been excavated and the earth composing them scattered and re-scattered, the same materials perhaps forming other graves. Can we possibly conceive that the resurrection of the bodies de- posited in them is conditioned upon the reassem- bling of their original receptacles? How can a physical body rest in a physical bed which does not exist? Or one which perhaps never did exist ? Second. ‘These creedal statements imply the continuous organized corporal presence, some- where of each physical body. If this implication The Resurrection and Its Implications 179 is based upon fact there ought to be somewhere some evidence of it. Millions of bodies have been completely destroyed (or as Paul put it,. dissolved”), at the time of death; burned, fed to beasts or otherwise absolutely anihilated as organized physical bodies. “The decomposed ele- ments of those buried bodies have been taken up by plants, going thence into the composition of other human bodies, or those of beasts, in endless cycle. Can we believe that their resurrection depends upon the reassembling of these identical physical atoms or elements? What if the same identical atoms of carbon, lime, iron and water have in the meantime successively entered into the composition of a dozen or a hundred other dead human bodies? ‘These statements visualize a resurrection which is indeed “incredible.” Nei- ther Jesus, Paul, John or Peter say one word about the care or preservation of the dead human body. 180 The Resurrection and Its Implications We prefer to go straight to Paul for a credible definition. We do not find anywhere in the Scriptures a direct statement to the effect that Jesus took a body of flesh and bones to heaven, nor are we anywhere taught that when He rose from the dead He had “the very same body in which He suffered.”’ That is merely an inference. On the contrary, Paul draws a perfectly clear distinction between Christ’s body of “humilia- tion,’ that in which He suffered, that body which was buried, and “His glorious body,” the one in which He appeared to himself and to John. The blood, which was the very life of that physical body, was shed, poured out, not in any meta- ‘phorical sense, but actually shed—“for many for the remission of sins.” It was literally spilled upon and absorbed by the ground, and unless by a miracle, of which we have no slightest intima- tion, it could not have been collected from the air The Resurrection and Its Implications 181 and soil and returned to His veins—or buried with Him in Joseph’s tomb. Not a few able expositors, including Barnes, feeling it necessary to account for the “empty tomb,” believing that that empty tomb is zeces- sary to prove the fact of the resurrection, and yet admitting that Christ’s Ascension body was not a physical one, have invented the theory that be- tween the date of the resurrection and the time of His ascension the physical body of Jesus under- went a gradual metamorphic change. It is un- necessary to point out the fact that there is in Scripture no ground for such a suggestion. On the very day of His resurrection Jesus ‘“‘vanished”’ out of sight of the two disciples at Emmaus. He also did the like that same evening in the upper room at Jerusalem. “Those vanishments were, as it turned out, temporary ones. Otherwise they were the same in character as His disappearance on the morning of the ascension. 182. The Resurrection and Its Implications Remarking briefly upon this trumped up the- cry the empty tomb was not necessary to prove the resurrection and did not prove it. “The Chief Priests countered at once with the like absurdity that the disciples had stolen the body while the soldiers slept. “The proof of the resurrection was positive, not negative; and this, and the character of it, which ts the all-important thing, were proved beyond all quibble by what He showed himself to be. The “many infallible proofs’ which Peter refers to were not negative but positive and among the greatest of these was what He could do and did do with His resurrection body. Transubstantiation ‘The assumption that His poured-out blood was at the time literally and physically recovered, was returned to His body and, for all future time, retained by Him, and by Him taken to heaven, involves an absurdity, if not a contradiction, that The Resurrection and Its Implications 183 has led to endless confusion. This assumption, taken with the Apostles’ Creed, paves the way for such errors as the doctrine of Transubstantiation (“the change of the whole substance of the bread, and the whole substance of the wine into the body and blood of Christ’’), in the administration of the Lord’s Supper.. This doctrine, held by the Roman Catholic Church, and by many others, by implication turns the sacrament into a continuous- ly repeated miraculous sacrifice. Peter (I Peter 3:18) says, as if to confute in advance this antici- pated error :—‘‘Christ also suffered for sins once, the righteous for the unrighteous, that He might bring us to God; being put to death in the flesh, but made alive in the spirit, in which also He went and preached unto the spirits in prison.” And Paul (Romans 6:9) says: “Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more —death hath no more dominion over Him. For the death that he died, He died unto sin once for 184 The Resurrection and Its Implications all; but the life that He liveth He liveth unto God.” The sacrificial work of Christ was com- pletely accomplished when He cried out, “‘It is finished.” But the doctrine of Transubstantiation, based upon the assumption of a physical survival, a physical ascension and the physical continuity of Christ’s body, in effect asks us to believe that in partaking of the Lord’s Supper we also partake physically and literally of the material compo- nents of the fleshly body of Christ. “This act we cannot possibly perform unless that physical body somewhere or other exists, or unless it is even now and continuously capable of being ‘‘divided”’ among the communicants at each observance of the ordinance. Furthermore it is in such case necessary for us to believe that, at each observ- ance, blood enough to distribute is either miracu- lously created by the administrator at the time, or is directly drawn from His veins. ‘This is The Resurrection and Its Implications 185 asking us, in either case, to believe that the bread is really human flesh and that the wine is actually blood sis deny. Men may indeed pretend or assume which our senses and all chemical analy- and assert that they believe this, while in fact they do not. This in reality makes of the com- municants prevaricators about a very sacred thing; and all because the above doctrine attempts to give a physical meaning to words which Christ said “are spirit and they are life.” ‘The wine which Jesus gave to the disciples, at the institu- tion of the Supper, was simply the blood of grapes, physically nothing more. Had He so desired he could have converted it, by a miracle, into blood, but it would have added no further significance to the act if He had done so. It would not even then have been blood from His veins. His blood, all of it, was still flowing in Flis arteries when He uttered these words. The ‘“‘Scape-goat’, a most significant type of 188 The Resurrection and Its Implications last analysis ‘they stood for that body and that blood which is in very fact the “true meat’ and the “true drink,” by which the spirits of Christ’s spirit children are nourished. ‘They were that body and that blood of which Jesus spoke when He said: “Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of Man, and drink His blood, ye have not life in yourselves. He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood abideth in Me and I in Him... . This is the bread which came down out of heaven. He that eateth this bread shall live for- ever.” (John 6:53). Jesus’ physical body did not come down out of heaven. It was born of the Virgin Mary, so He must have meant some other body. And as though He was referring to other than an earthly thing He said to Nicode- mus: “‘No one hath ascended into heaven but He that descended out of heaven.” True that literal body and His literal blood were on the morrow to be actually offered, but The Resurrection and Its Implications 189 that physical body was not yet broken and its blood was not yet spilled when He uttered the words. ‘The body that was broken on the mor- row and the blood that was poured out, were materially real. But behind and beyond them was what has been called the “mystical body of Christ.’ The word ‘mystical’ is not Scrip- tural word at all. It conveys the idea of unreali- ty like the word “mist” or “insubstantial.” In none of His talks about himself did Jesus use any such word and we have no warrant for doing sO. On the contrary He labored often to clear from the minds of men that very misleading conception of Himself. That spirit-body which He offered as ‘“‘meat indeed” was just as real, more real if that is possible, than the physical body that went to the grave. His physical blood was poured out upon and mingled with the physical dust and His physical body was borne to a physical sepulcher and never again seen. It went out to the invisible, 190 The Resurrection and Its Implications the unknown wilderness like the scapegoat. But from that grave came forth that “celestial” spirit body, the one that Paul refers to as “His glori- ous body.” ‘The grave was a dressing room where the physical was put off and the spirtual put on, and in this Christ illustrated exactly what takes place with believers. “This latter “body” of Christ is the “bread of God that cometh down from heaven,” the ‘‘flesh” which He told His disciples He would give for the life of the world (John 6:51). “That flesh and blood can be di- vided, eaten and drunk without even the sugges- tion of cannibalism. It is the true bread, the “Manna”, the great ‘“What is it?” of the Chris- tian faith. | That wonderful address which Jesus made to the half-believing Jews that followed Him across the sea to Capernaum (John 6) was not under- stood by them at that time nor is it yet by many Christians. “They had seen the miracle of the The Resurrection and Its Implications 191 loaves and fishes of the day before and had actually eaten and digested the food which was so miraculously multiplied. They realized that the miracle was somewhat lke but infinitely greater than that of the “manna” in the wilderness. It was multiplied in the dividing, created in the consumption. And when Jesus indicated to them that the bread which they had eaten the day be- fore was, with all that, but a mere type or sym- bolism of a better bread, and was by comparison not worth striving for, they could not understand Him. He then tells them repeatedly that His “body” is that bread, but despite all His efforts to make the matter clear to the contrary they persisted in construing His words to mean His literal physical body. ‘They finally come back with the question: “How can this man give us His flesh to eat?” Many of his disciples joined the Jews in stumbling at His words and some of them “went back and walked no more with 192 The Resurrection and Its Implications Him.” But as if in answer He tells them that the flesh they hud! in mind, His literal flesh, “profiteth nothing.” “It is the spirit that giveth life.’ “He that eateth,, He shall live by Me, eeu TOrEversn In common with the Jews and the disciples of that day many Christians persist in interpreting these words as hyperbolical. They think He did not mean what he said. When He spoke of “meat indeed” and of “drink indeed” they think He did not indeed mean anything of that sort. They cannot grasp the fact that He had then and has now a spirit body of which their spirits can eat and live just as certainly as the five thousand ate and were filled by the seaside. “To them His words are merely a figure of speech, and at best their perception stops at the figure and refuses the spirit substance that lies beyond it; or else they take the only other alternative and try to believe that Jesus was all the while verily speak- The Resurrection and Its Implications 193 ing of that body of flesh which was nailed to the cross and was afterward placed in Joseph’s tomb. In this way the Christian world comes short of apprehending what is perhaps the greatest and most vitally real and important fact of the Chris- tian faith. ‘The spirit or the soul which does not actually partake of Christ’s spirit will starve to death, just as certainly as will a physical body which receives no food. Even the manna that God sent down from heaven for the Hebrews, being a physical substance, melted, bred worms and stank, a thing which would have taken place in the case of Christ’s body had not God taken it, —as in the cases of Enoch and Elijah. It was only a far-off symbol of the true bread, yet, as Jesus explained, it was not the “true bread.” ‘Those who ate the manna died. It was not diving bread. It did not give life. But there is a “bread”’ of which if a human soul eats, it will in the eating partake of food that will become part of itself, 194 The Resurrection and Its Implications that will live in it, and will cause it to live eternally. Faith which is not founded upon ac- tual fact is dead. Being merely imagination it profits nothing. Jesus meant exactly what He said. He was talking of profound realities. He had a body which could not be nailed to any wooden cross, and blood that could not either stagnate or decay. “These were the “meat indeed” and the “drink indeed”’ of which He spoke. ‘These He symbolized by His physical body in order to bring an apprehension of His profound inner meaning within their grasp. A spirit world, conceived of in accordance with the Scriptures, while it does not abate, but rather increases the mysteries of the Kingdom of Heav- en, eliminates many of the contradictory inter- pretations with which the different schools of theology have mystified the Christian faith. “The human mind is so constituted of God that it is utterly impossible for it to accept and believe, at The Resurrection and Its Implications 195 the same time, two opposing statements of con- scious fact. If the feat is attempted the inevitable result is that state of doubt and uncertainty which the Word of God condemns. Men can believe in that which is supernatural, or that which is above material nature, but they cannot believe contradictions, nor can they believe both of two statements which do not each make room for the other. “To ask them to do so is to sub- stitute a vague transcendentalism for rationality. It challenges reason at its very source. “That is precisely what some of these ancient doctrinal statements do. Faith can accept things which it cannot see but it was never intended to supplant rationality nor to found convictions either upon fictions of the mind nor upon irreconcilable state- ments. It is true, as we have before noted, that there is in our wonderful religion a field into which human Science, either true or false, cannot enter. “That field lies outside of and beyond the 196 The Resurrection and Its Implications horizon of physical phenomena, fact, and mundane experience. Science thas no business there. But there is a field occupied by religion which does lie within that horizon of human knowledge and reason, a field of which the scientific spirit does and must take knowledge. It is the field of known fact, of perfectly conscious human experi- ence, and to introduce transcendentalism into this field, and to assert contradictions of fact there, is to discredit the whole Christian Faith. ‘To expose the spirit truths of the Scriptures to this none too pious scientific spirit is to furnish it with a football to kick at. The Christian faith is founded upon eternal and immovable facts, just as is all true science, and therefore any inter- pretation of the former which denies this inevi- tably draws the scoffing of the latter, and deserves to do so. The Resurrection and Its Implications 197 CHAPTER NINE ‘THE RESURRECTION AND THE RETURN OF CHRIST That Jesus will come again there is not any doubt. His coming is that great epochal event toward which the whole present order moves rapidly. That coming will be’ to a universal judgment, and a restoration of all things (Acts 3:21). And He will come in the manner that was foretold by the angels at the time of His departure from Olivet, that was foretold by Him- self, that is foretold by Paul and John. ‘This Jesus who was received up from you into heaven shall so come in like manner as ye beheld Him going into heaven.” (Acts 1:11). 198 The Resurrection and Its Implications Premillennialism bases everything on this text, and on the word ‘manner’; and in order to justify its theory of a physical return of Christ, it avers that the word “manner” has reference to the kind of a body in which He departed, perhaps also to the direction which He took, and even to the place from which He ascended. And if there- fore it can be shown that Jesus did not ascend in a body of flesh, blood and bones, the whole in- vented theory falls to the ground. As to the exact manner of Jesus’ ascension we have very meager details. Let us recall that of the four Evangelists only two, Matthew and John, were actually present at the ascension, and that both are absolutely silent about it. ‘The great importance of the event, and the fact of His departure out of this world suggests that if there were indeed present any visible or record- able circumstances these historians would have described them. “Iwo other New ‘Testament Lhe Resurrection and Its Implications 199 writers, Peter and James, were present, yet in their Epistles they say nothing about the manner, or attending circumstances of the ascension. Another Evangelist, Mark, who was not pres- ent at the ascension passes by the event with the simple statement that “He was received up into heaven and sat down at the right hand of God.” Some of the older manuscripts of Mark’s Gospel omit even this statement. Even if the statement belongs to Mark’s original account he is but re- cording what Jesus had foretold of himself. If the observable circumstances or “manner’’ of the as- cension were vital to the record why does he not mention them? Luke, who is the only one of the Evangelists who records any of the circumstances, says that “A cloud received Him out of their sight.” But Luke was not present, not an eye witness of the ascension. Paul, in I Tim. 3:16, says that “He was received up into glory” and this is, for 200 The Resurrection and Its Implications substance just what Luke writes, and it embraces the only essential fact. Luke’s statement may therefore have been copied from Mark, or from Paul’s words, or may have been coined from what Jesus said to the women on the resurrection morning—‘I ascend to my Father.” Or it may have been drawn from that other reference to His resurrection which Jesus had made, ‘‘What and if ye shall see that Son of Man ascend up where He was before?” All the Evangelists must have known of this post-resurrection prophecy as well as of several others of like import, and there remains therefore no question about the fact itself. In any case the principal part of Mark’s statement, viz., that “He was seated at the right hand of God,” was not an observable occurrence. "The statement of Luke that “a cloud received Him out of their sight” may have been, to an absentee, an inferential one, for any observable body going continuously up- The Resurrection and Its Implications 201 ward from the earth would naturally disappear at the limit of their eyesight. ‘That there was a visible body with the disciples on their way to Olivet “over against Bethany” there is no ques- tion. ‘That it was Jesus’ body there is no doubt. That he blessed them at His farewell there re- mains no doubt. ‘That it was a formal leave- taking there is no doubt. ‘That that visible body did not accompany the disciples back to Jerusa- lem there is no doubt, but that that body was a physical one there is no conclusive evidence in any of the accounts or statements. ‘The fact is Luke’s record might be paraphrased to read that “He was received up into invisibility and sat down at the right hand of the Invisible God,” all without changing its essential meaning a particle. What appeared to be and was, a physical body had been assumed for the occasion, and with the occasion served it vanished. As elsewhere stated we believe that His ascen- 202 The Resurrection and Its Implications sion, so far as there was any external observable manifestation of it, was simply a departure into invisibility. He formally withdrew from their physical sight, touch and conscious presence just as He had long before gone up from Abraham’s presence. After His resurrection He was mani- fest to His friends and followers, and to them only, and not even to them all the while. He was not so manifested to the world at large. In this He answered the question of Judas, ‘Lord, what is come to pass that thou will manifest thyself unto us and not unto the world?” (John 14:22). On several of these post-resurrection occasions He was seen by his friends in Jerusalem, and on these visits He may have indeed invisibly rubbed elbows as it were on the streets of Jerusalem with Annas, Herod, Pilate, or members of the San- hedrin. But there is no hint that after his resur- rection His presence was, on any of these occa- sions, revealed to any save to His friends, and for The Resurrection and Its Implications 203 the very simple reason that they alone had the spirit-vision that would enable them to see Him. These enemies did not now belong in the world in which He lived, moved and had His being. Even if they had been given the will and liberty to do so they could not have even touched Him. Prior to His ascension He had promised to be © always with His witnesses as they proclaimed the Good News. We may confidently assume that He made that promise good, and that He was in spirit as really present with His disciples as they returned from the Ascension as He was when leading them out to the Mount of Olives, only that He was now definitely and finally beyond their sense of physical discernment. And _ this great promise extended to all His witnesses unto the ages of the ages. What shall we say there- fore of the testimony of those who claim that His return and presence, in order to be real must be a physical one? Is there not danger here of testi- 204. The Resurrection and Its Implications fying to what is not true? And may we not venture the further suggestion that this kind of testimony is only mystifying a world that has lost its way? For it is in effect denying that He has fulfilled or is fulfilling now His promise of a constant presence. We have referred to some of the many isms which have sprung from this misconception, and which, in their very nature could not have arisen if the truth had been told. The Jews, at Christ’s first coming looked for the establishment of a physical kingdom and we have but to look about us to see what a terrible blun- der they made. “Those who will have no other than a second physical coming are, we believe, simply repeating that disastrous mistake. We make a most gross mistake when we try to make all heavenly things fit into our small earthly apprehension. ‘There are some things even upon this earth that can only be discerned by spiritual senses, and the Risen Christ is their exemplifica- The Resurrection and Its Implications 205 tion and personification. If conversions were now dependent upon a physical sight of a physical Christ who would be saved ? Jesus Himself illustrates or describes His re- turn as far as it is possible to do so in similitudes of earth. He likens it to a flash of lightning, “that cometh forth from the East and is seen even unto the West. So shall the coming of the Son of Man be.” (Matt. 24:27). ‘This indicates that it will be instantaneous and everywhere pres- ent at the same instant, a thing spiritually possible but a thing physically impossible. We say im- possible, not from God’s standpoint but from the human. ‘To make it possible the human race would at that time, need organs of physical sight that could either see half way round the physical earth or pierce its diameter. There is perhaps no other thing in nature by which He could have so well conveyed the idea of universal suddenness. An electric current of 206 The Resurrection and Its Implications comparatively low voltage will go round the earth in less than a second. A flash of lightning with its incomparably higher voltage would be instan- taneous. Except by a complete suspension of natural law a material person cannot be physically visible or present at more than one place at the same time. ‘To claim that the literal Mount of Olives, or a person standing on it, could be seen from all parts of the physical earth at the same instant of time is an absurdity of monumental proportions. No one can believe it without cast- ing all earthly knowledge of God’s physical laws, all reason, experience, and common sense to the winds. It is like quoting Baron Munchausen or the Arabian Nights’ Entertainment as authorities on Physical Science. Is it therefore only in the spirit sense that omnipresence can exist, or, rather, the term omni- presence can be applied only to God, who is spir- it? “This was one of the terms by which the Old The Resurrection and Its Implications 207 ‘Testament prophets frequently designated Him (Jer. 23:23 and 24). And to localize the return of One who “fills heaven and earth’ to a single spot is to fairly deny His divinity. It conceives of His incarnation as being a perpetual humila- tion to the limitations of the flesh, and of his glorification as being something far beneath what He had before he took our nature. In scaling a high mountain in mid-summer, and while we were flooded with brightest sun- light, instantly, and without warning we found ourselves enveloped in a snow cloud so dense we could see but a few feet. A few steps up the path our heads emerged from the cloud as though we were coming up out of a lake; and as far as the eye could carry we saw an undulating sea of dazzling snow afloat in the air beneath us. “That snow cloud did not have to come over us from elsewhere. “The air was almost motionless. It simply developed from the atmosphere surround- 208 The Resurrection and Its Implications ing us, doubtless produced by some change in temperature or electrical conditions. “The inci- dent suggests how the Omnipresent Jehovah, upon the striking of the hour that limits His enveloping mercy, can show to all men every- where, in an instant, the face of stern justice and make them hear the call to judgment, the fact which until that instant had been everywhere present but hidden by His waiting grace. We believe then that the angels, in promising that Jesus would return “in like manner” had primary reference to what Jesus was at the time of His ascension, a spirit being and not a physical one. And so far from telling the disciples that He would return in physical form they meant exactly the opposite. ‘They would assure the disciples that His resurrection character, as they had witnessed it during the previous weeks, was not a temporary manifestation merely, but would continue for all time; that He would not go back The Resurrection and Its Implications 209 to the form He had when He trudged back and forth from Galilee to Jerusalem, foot-sore, hun- gry, and thirsty. “They would say to these wist- ful gazers that He will reappear out of this physically invisible realm to which He went just as He had but now disappeared. And that this is a correct interpretation seems certain for they gave the disciples this promise as a reason why they should no longer stand futilly gazing up into the physical clouds. ‘Vhey need not wait on Mount Olivet, for no matter where they would be they would see Him just as surely as if they waited there. This is the way John understood the words for he later went far away into Asia Minor. So Peter also, for he went far in the op- posite direction, to Babylon, Paul to Rome and probably to Spain, and all the Apostles scattered abroad. And there is no intimation whatever, in any subsequent history of the apostles that any of them ever went back to Olivet to watch for their 310. The Resurrection and Its Implications Lord’s promised, and at that time, constantly expected return. It would therefore seem clear that none of the Apostles or others present even thought of a physical return, and what they thought, said, did, or wrote would certainly have reflected the meaning they attached to this great promise of the angels. | We have in another connection referred to Paul’s first apprehension of Jesus on the Damas- cus road. All of his Epistles should be read in the light of that experience. It interpreted to him the reality of the Christian’s great eternal hope. ‘That first glimpse had blinded him physi- cally. “Fhe shock smote him bodily to the earth. For days. lhe was so overcome, so amazed, that he neither ate a bite, nor drank a drop. “That vision transformed Paul spiritually, and. if the world could but visualize what Paul saw it too would be transformed: “The world can have that vision any time it will look for it in the right place. The Resurrection and Its Implications 211 And any Christian teacher who will do aught to obscure or blur that vision is, we believe, throw- ing a smoke screen over a world that Jesus would save by the effulgence of His glory. John, the beloved disciple, on the Isle of Pat- mos afterward saw Jesus in His glorified form (Rev. 1:13). This was not a mere disembodied appearance, as of a ghostly apparition. It was not an Imaginative picture of a phantasy. It was an actual sight of Jesus Himself, in His real spiritually tangible body. What simulations John uses in his attempt to convey his impressions, hair like snow for whiteness, eyes like flames of fire for brightness, feet like burnished brass for glow- ing beauty, a voice like the musical murmur of many waters, a countenance like the mid-day sun. What similitudes! But the descriptions them- selves, be it noted, are only approximate like- nesses. ‘[Lhey are not an actual description of Jesus. It was not possible, in language of the 212 The Resurrection and Its Implications earth, to describe One who dwells in unapproach- able light. It is a’statement of mere similitudes or similarities from which each reader must con- struct the picture. No wonder John fell down at His feet as one dead; not, we may suppose, with fright so much as with inexpressable admiration, for John had that love which casts out fear. He had known Jesus well in His earthly body, in pre-crucifixion days; but Jesus was now manifesting Himself in His glorified body. ‘The contrast between the two bodies overwhelmed him. He had seen Jesus many times during the days of His humiliation, days when He carried the likeness of sinful flesh, days when His visage was marred with sorrow and suffering. He had been with Him on His many journeys. He had seen those hands and feet torn with the cruel nails, that hair matted with blood from the crown of thorns. What a The Resurrection and Its Implications 213 contrast! And that contrast explained to him again the resurrection. He had also been with and had seen Him on the Mount of Transfiguration when for an hour the indescribable brightness of His Divine nature shone out through His human physique. But here he sees the embodiment not only of the glorified Christ, but also of glorified humanity, a person- ated prophecy of the glory which awaits the sons of the resurrection. Jesus had now passed through the door, its transfiguration, its transformation, into the New Realm. He represents the citizen- ship of the celestial kingdom, a kingdom of which He is the Creator, and that heavenly citi- zenship to which Paul refers when he writes. “For our citizenship is in heaven, whence also we wait for a Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ ; who shall fashion new the body of our humiliation that it may be made like unto the body of His glory” (Phil. 3:20). 214 The Resurrection and Its Implications And in that connection, as before noted, Paul goes forward to say for substance that this is Christ’s customary way of subjecting things to Himself,—creating them anew. ‘There is no room here for evolution. ‘There is nothing from which such a glorious thing can be evolved. “That new body is, like the old one, a creation of God. And why, of all things, should He make an excep- - tion of our vile, diseased, deformed, decrepit, unsightly, sin-sodden human frame? Why should that body forever hang round our necks like a murdered corpse to remind us of the slime pit from whence we shall have been rescued? ‘To embrace such doctrine, such a shuddering horror, as a principle of faith, is surely a terrible price to pay for being a materialist. We recall a story told of Brigham Young dur- ing his miracle-working days (?). One of his dupes had lost a leg in an accident and had re- quested that another be made to grow in its place. The Resurrection and Its Implications 215 Brigham, having his eye upon Gentile doubters, replied that he could readily make another grow in its place, but reminded the applicant that if he should now do so he would, at the resurrection, have three legs instead of two. Mr. Young was not alone in recognizing that a physical resurrec- tion has its difficulties, absurdities, and limita- tions. How much better it is to listen to John and Paul and, most of all, to Him who could and did speak experimentally and intimately of heav- enly things. 216 The Resurrection and Its Implications CHAPTER TEN ““THE IMAGE OF THE HEAVENLY” “Tf a man die shall he live again?” Job but voiced a question as old as the human race. No people have yet been found that do not harbor the hope of some sort of prolonged existence. ‘There have been here and there persons who have tried to flout the idea, have tried to reason it out of existence, but it remains. All the negations of unbelief leave the truth just as it was. ‘This common hope is thus intuitive, and is in fact a prophecy ineffaceably graven upon the human soul. It is a native thirst which even the uni- versal fact of death cannot quench. Life abhors oblivion. ‘This is because the living soul was in The Resurrection and Its Implications 217 the beginning made in the image of a deathless God and that unbelief can satisfy that native thirst no more than can a vacuum appease hunger. Job’s question may be and is unconsciously asked in a hundred forms. What will I be? for the question is always personal and subjective. Where shall I spend the never ending cycles of duration? Or is it possible that the fountain of time itself may cease to flow? At what shall I be employed, or shall I simply have an impassive existence in some great Nirvana? Shall I have volition and liberty of selection as I do here? Will I be hampered by time, space, and material things as here? What means of, and most of all, what capacity for gratification and enjoyment shall I possess? Shall I have senses correspond- ing to those I now have, or shall I have many more, or finer? Will sweet be sweeter, beauty more beautiful and gladness more gladsome? Will memory continue to accumulate its records 218 The Resurrection and Its Implications for all time, or shall I be able at will to blot out the disagreeable thing which I do not wish to retain in mind? Shall I have power to reason, or will I only feel? Will I meet and recognize those I loved upon earth, or shall I grieve with sorrow for those I do not find there? Will I be privileged to resume any of the pursuits, studies, or enjoyments that were cut short by death? Such questions as these no doubt have been. at the back of the mind of every one who has had the patience to follow our discourse. We regret that to many of these questions only speculative an- swers can be given. Many of, them, however, were answered when Jesus rose from the dead. Others were answered by Paul and still others are doubtless replied to by the Spirit-guided hopes of the Christian world. Will it, in the event, be according to our faith? Is it possible to hope for too much? But how far, even with the light of Divine The Resurrection and Its Implications 219 Revelation to aid, can the human mind peer into the future world, or was it specifically intended that revelation should not definitely reveal,—to the end that (as Paul parenthetically hints and as many have contended), we might be compelled to walk by faith only? Why does not the Bible tell us plainly the location and character of the “place” to which Jesus went to prepare for His friends? What, indeed, did He mean by “place’”’? Is it located upon and confined to this planet, as some of our materialistic friends would have us believe, or does it at all involve, as necessary, the existence of physical areas of plain, river, and mountain? Do the physical conditions and things among which we now live hold any clue, analogy, or similitude of the heavenly world? for the going away and the promised return of Jesus certainly implies. a separating distance of some sort. Is that dividing space a physical distance, as between two countries or planets, measureable 220 The Resurrection and Its Implications in miles and leagues, or is it in reality simply a separation of condition—a spacing into which space does not enter, like the immeasureable abyss between even a pebble and the oyster that lies beside it in the mire? With every advance of civilization, vaguely understood to bring us nearer to some as vaguely defined Utopia, human life becomes more and more multiplex and burdensome. ‘This goes on without end. What were mere accessories of com- fort or utility yesteryear are the prime necessities of this, and with the coming of each life becomes more strenuous until human advancement threat- ens to be smothered to death by its own trappings, dunnage and stress. One half of mankind lives upon the artificial wants of the rest. Socrates was content with a booth, a pot, a gourd, and a wooden spoon. Compare this with the modern doctor of philosophy or even with the furbish- ments of the pupils who sit at his feet. Yet all The Resurrection and Its Implications 221 attempts to return to simpler modes of existence are resisted to the utmost. The Son of Man, though carrying forward the greatest educational undertaking of all time did not possess a cabin, a pillow, or a farthing. The birds and the foxes had more of the common physical accessories of life and comfort than He. Though He breathed the same air as did His disciples He lived His real life in an atmosphere above all these things. He had a “life” that was more than meat and a body that was more than physical raiment, even here where His physical body required to be fed and clothed. While talking to Nicodemus he referred to Himself as being even at that moment in heaven. But in his resurrection he threw off all earthly needs and even the very appearance of needing. He rose beyond them. In a word he became the example or illustration of that heav- enly form we are to bear. “Therefore, we have in Him a glimpse of that perfect life and state to 222 The Resurrection and Its Implications which He opened the way. And from these glimpses we learn that we will not be burdened with a single one of the physical needs or limita- tions which belong to this earth. “That life will be in itself so intrinsically and so inherently com- plete, so self-sustaining, that it will be independ- ent of all conditions except the love of God which gives it being. That life to which the resurrection makes us heir will therefore be so perfect that the body in which it may be said to be housed will be an eternal component part of itself, and these will correspond in kind and substance. Its owner will not be conscious of it as a weighting hindrance. ‘The joy of its possession will be as untrammelled, and as instinctive with that life, as are our un- conscious heart and lungs. In a word the body will fit the occupant for we cannot believe that that soul or life will be conditioned, as here, or its power or pleasures in any possible way cur- The Resurrection and Its Implications 223 tailed to accommodate a house of flesh and bones, or of clay. Here “we groan” as Paul expresses it, “being burdened” like a snail which must carry everywhere its cumbering house of bone upon its back. Why should this continue, or rather is there a word of Scripture to warrant believing that it will continue? ‘This general reply to the foregoing questions finds confirmation and is to a degree exemplified by what we read of human life before the fall. There is no hint that while they retained their innocence Adam and Eve had a single wearying want or need, even although these persons were the “earthly” whom Paul contrasts with the “heavenly.” Want came with the knowledge of physical things and experience of physical evil, and no evil, external or internal, can ever enter the Holy City. Until then they did not even know that they were naked. The future had no anxiety,—that Nemesis which is on the track of 224 The Resurrection and Its Implications every physical being. ‘Their comfort, like that of the birds that sang to them, was a part of their existence. They did not mortgage the mor- row for the means of enjoying to-day. ‘The cur- rent of life flowed full and free in a straight channel because it was at perfect peace with everything which touched it. Yet the heavenly world will be an infinite advance even upon the Garden of Eden. It is remarkable that nowhere in the Scripture is the latter referred to as a symbol or simulation of that place which awaits the redeemed. Paul) ati.al pointe (Cor. 1-7 )atakesaupatoe discussion of the future life of the Christian and hints that at least some general characteristics may be known. He speaks of it as a “mystery”, a mystery that was foreordained to be such before the worlds were created, a mystery “hidden from the rulers of this world,” yet one that is now revealed through the Spirit. Lacking the Spirit The Resurrection and Its Implications 225 it could not be revealed ;—and by way of showing how the future was sealed to even the greatest of the Old Testament Prophets, he gives us a rather free translation of a passage of Isaiah (64:4). To quote his translation :— “Things which eye saw not, and ear heard not, and which entered not into the heart of man, whatsoever things God prepared for them that love Him.” But let us note particularly that Paul follows this with a declaration whose force is not always recognized. ‘The old prophets had the Spirit but there were things yet hidden from them. Christ was not yet come, not raised, not glorified, and therefore the Spirit in His fulness was not yet given to men. As yet there was therefore no way of explaining, no way of illustrating or carrying to men an adequate concept of what the future world holds in store. ‘The gate was not yet set ajar. Even the power to see was not yet ac- 226 The Resurrection and Its Implications quired. Men’s eyes were not yet opened. ‘The way into the holiest of all was not yet revealed. Isaiah knew and knew of the Old Testament Jehovah. In the year that King Uzziah died he saw the Lord upon His throne and beheld His glory. But that was the as yet unrisen, not the risen Christ—the Resurrected One. So Paul continues :— “But unto us God revealed them through the Spirit; for the Spirit searcheth the deep things of God.” He is here preparing us in advance for what he still later writes in the fifteenth chapter. Furthermore Paul believed that the Holy Spirit had come to Christ’s earthly followers to stay, to be their Guide, and that Christ’s parting promise of Spirit-guidance would be literally fulfilled as the years went by. Doubtless he remembered also that this particular promise was made while Jesus The Resurrection and Its Implications 227 was discussing this very subject. (See John 14.). Is it therefore going too far, or wandering into unwarranted fields to suppose that in the collec- tive hopes and aspirations of the millions who have been baptized into or in the name of the Holy Spirit there may be read much that God would have us know? That Spirit is to-day brood- ing over the collective faith, hope, heart, endeavor and longing of the multitude of such as shall be saved. ‘True, faith cannot create, but it can sense and see what is otherwise unknowable. What then is the true conviction of the com- mon Christian belief in this matter? “The world is much larger than in Paul’s day, and the means of investigation and comparison of ideas have been multiplied a hundred fold. Science has not confined its explorations to the earth’s surface nor to the minerals beneath it, nor even to the planets above. It has been looking within. Psychology is a greater science then Geology or Astronomy, 228 The Resurrection and Its Implications and while its findings have been mostly negative in character they are none the less valuable in the ultimate. ‘This being so, have the combined investigations and experiences of men, Christian or Pagan, scientific or otherwise, located in any material thing, place or condition, an adequate reply to the prime hunger of the human spirit-life? In the whole field of research has anyone discovered or pretended to have discovered in material things an avenue toward any ultimate goal of human happiness that does not lead to a blind alley, or to a stone wall of defeat,—a vacant darkness? Every new generation, fired with fresh hopes has imagined palaces of untold material wealth, tem- ples of deathless fame, the grasp of limitless pow- er over men and things, bowers where every physical sense may revel in unrestrained delight, gardens walled against all want, disease and suf- fering, and perennial springs of unalloyed joy. The Resurrection and Its Implications 229 And while the very fact that such hopes spring eternally in the human heart, proving the pres- ence of a universal thirst, their universal defeat all but proves that the spring for the quenching of that thirst does not exist and cannot exist in material things. King Solomon, after running the whole gamut of earth’s offerings wrote that “all is vanity,” and the collective experience of men from then until now may be summed up in that wise man’s words. Solomon died an experi- mental failure. At the very noontide of his ma- terial magnificence he was outshone by a flower- ing weed of the field. Ponce de Leon searched the wilds for the fabled fountain of perpetual youth, all to die at last from the mere scratch of a poisoned arrow. ‘There is no grotto of earth, no laboratory of science, and no branch of biology which has not been searched in vain for the elixir of physical life. It does not exist. Not that material things are in themselves an 230 The Resurrection and Its Implications evil, not at all. They are serving a wonderful kindergarten purpose. “They are a foil, a back- ground, a contrast for bringing into relief the exceeding glory of an infinitely higher world. Yet there is no vital communion or connection between these two worlds. ‘The one cannot be adequately sensed or described in terms of the other. “These material things do not belong with the spiritual. They only clog, or at best amuse like the playthings of the nursery. In all change there is ultimately a steady progression from the lower to the higher, from the good to the better, from the lesser to the greater, from the imperfect to the perfect, from the unknown to the known, from the high to the higher, from the gross to the refined, from the “natural” to what has been erroneously deemed above nature: and, as regards mankind, taken by and large, the progress has been from the material to the spiritual. There is no other direction in The Resurrection and Its Implications 231 which the human entity can grow, and if in any individual case it will not grow in that direction ° it inevitably shrivels and shrinks like a burned out lamp, like a fruit that has ripened into rottenness. The culture of the human physique stops at a limit soon reached. ‘That of the intellect breaks down, often with its own weight. Therefore the only part of man capable of unlimited growth, expansion, culture and happiness is the soul, the spirit. Paul recognizes this inherent order of advance- ment and in fact applies it directly to the subject under discussion. In I Cor. 15:42 we read :— “So also in the resurrection of the dead. It is sown in corruption, it is raised in incorruption; it is sown in dishonor, 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. So also it is written. The first man Adam be- came a living soul. The last Adam became a 232 The Resurrection and Its Implications life-giving spirit. Howbeit that is not first which is spiritual, but that which is natural: then that which is spiritual. The first man is of the earth, earthy; the second man is of heaven. As is the earthy (man, Adam), such also are they that are earthy; and as is the heavenly, such also are they that are heavenly. And as we have borne the image of the earthy we shall also bear the image of the heavenly. Now this I say, brethren, that flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God; neither doth corruption inherit incorrup- tion.” There is no statement in Scripture more pro- found, or more deeply fraught with personal in- terest than that which Paul here makes. ‘We shall bear the image of the heavenly.” We can grasp only the fringe of the truth he here sets forth. It is too dazzling for human eyes to see clearly. ‘The expanse is too great, the magnifi- cence too much. And perhaps there is a good The Resurrection and Its Implications 233 reason for this. If we had the ability to fully visualize his meaning we might be in a constant agony of discontent. Every pain and discomfort would be multiplied many fold in its endurance. Men would pray for death instead of for the prolongation of this life. Realizing that they cannot be at home in the body and +e present with the Lord as Paul writes, they could not but feel an unconscious contempt for that which bars them from entering at once upon their priceless and eternal inheritance. But we can now see only as through a glass darkly that which hope, faith, and love tell us we shall one day realize face to face. The body of the first Adam was made of clay. It was taken out of the dust. When it had served its purpose it returned to its native element. A spirit was breathed into him by his Maker, and he thus became ‘‘a living soul.” It was only through possession of that spirit that he became an 234 The Resurrection and Its Implications image of God. Still, an image may be far from a perfect replica. Adan even before his fall was far from a perfect image. But at his regenera- tion man is not again made into a mere image of God but is born of Him; and at his resurrection ‘he is not again given or continued in a body like that of Adam but in both body and spirit he is born anew. He is supplied with a body fit for God’s own child, a child of the Deathless Lord of Life. It is a body which Paul says (Romans 8:29) was foreordained to be made like to the image of His Son. And the reason assigned by the great apostle is that Christ might be the first- born among many brethren. It is in the light of these latter assurances, and based upon them, that Paul rises to the very cli- max of confidence in the eternal love of God. Recognizing that God has done all this he asks, “Who shall separate us from the love of Christ ? Shall tribulation, or anguish, or persecution, or The Resurrection and Its Implications 235 famine, or nakedness or peril or sword? . Nay, in all these things we are more than con- querors through Him that loved us. For I am persuaded that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.” “But as for me I know that my Redeemer liveth, and at last He will stand upon the earth. And after my skin, even this body, is destroyed then, without my flesh, shall I see God: whom I, even I, shall see, on my side, and mine eyes shall behold, and not as a stranger.” (Job. 19:25 R.V.) THE END. 236 The Resurrection and Its Implications Note (Page 160)—Mormonism already holds the balance of power eleven States of the Union. It has now four members in Congress. It claims to be the Kingdom of God. Its phenominal growth is due to its sanctimonious appeal to physical sensuality here and hereafter. It has ingeniously invented a theology to suit this theory, and yet appeal to Christians who already believe in a future physical heaven. ‘That belief makes Mor- monism plausible. On December 16, 1913, at Phoenix, Arizona, Joseph F. Smith, the present Living Oracle of Mormonism, said, as widely repeated in the papers :— “God is a being with body, parts and passions. His Son, Jesus Christ, grew and developed into manhood the same as you and I, as likewise did God His Father grow and develop to the Supreme Being he now is. God the Father was born of a woman. Adam, our earthly parent, was born of a woman (God’s wife), the same as you and I.” bo ae i He ee yah | Il 1 1012 01145 2028 | ——— eens )/ SS [a fe icaceetes (6 arene = ee _ pieimeaer 2 QE —_— SSS > eee oo 5 eee Oo SS ( =a AW