Sermon 21. The Resurrection
of the Body 
"Now that the dead are raised, even Moses
showed at the bush, when he calleth the Lord the God
of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of
Jacob. For He is not a God of the dead, but of the
living; for all live unto Him." Luke xx. 37, 38.
{271} THESE words of our Saviour show us how much more there
is in Scripture than at first sight appears. God spoke to
Moses in the burning bush, and called Himself the
"God of Abraham;" and Christ tells us, that in
this simple announcement was contained the promise that
Abraham should rise again from the dead. In truth, if we
may say it with reverence, the All-wise, All-knowing God
cannot speak without meaning many things at once. He sees
the end from the beginning; He understands the numberless
connexions and relations of all things one with another.
Every word of His is full of instruction, looking many
ways; and though it is not often given to us to know
these various senses, and we are not at liberty to
attempt lightly to imagine them, yet, as far as they are
told us, and as far as we may reasonably {272} infer them, we
must thankfully accept them. Look at Christ's words, and
this same character of them will strike you; whatever He
says is fruitful in meaning, and refers to many things.
It is well to keep this in mind when we read Scripture;
for it may hinder us from self-conceit, from studying it
in an arrogant critical temper, and from giving over
reading it, as if we had got from it all that can be
learned.
Now let us consider in what sense the text contains a
promise of a resurrection, and see what instruction may
be gained from knowing it.
When God called Himself the God of Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob, He implied that those holy patriarchs were still
alive, though they were no more seen on earth. This may
seem evident at first sight; but it may be asked, how the
text proves that their bodies would live; for, if
their souls were still living, that would be
enough to account for their being still called in the
Book of Exodus servants of God. This is the point to be
considered. Our Blessed Lord seems to tell us, that in
some sense or other Abraham's body might be
considered still alive as a pledge of his resurrection,
though it was dead in the common sense in which we apply
the word. His announcement is, Abraham shall rise
from the dead, because in truth, he is still
alive. He cannot in the end be held under the power of
the grave, more than a sleeping man can be kept from
waking. Abraham is still alive in the dust, though not
risen thence. He is alive because all God's saints live
to Him, though they seem to perish.
It may seem a paradox to say, that our bodies, even {273} when dead, are still alive; but since our Lord seems to
countenance us in saying so, I will say it, though a
strange saying, because it has an instructive meaning. We
are apt to talk about our bodies as if we knew how or
what they really were; whereas we only know what our eyes
tell us. They seem to grow, to come to maturity, to
decay; but after all we know no more about them than
meets our senses, and there is, doubtless, much which God
sees in our material frames, which we cannot see. We have
no direct cognizance of what may be called the
substantive existence of the body, only of its accidents.
Again, we are apt to speak of soul and body, as if
we could distinguish between them, and knew much about
them; but for the most part we use words without meaning.
It is useful indeed to make the distinction, and
Scripture makes it; but after all, the Gospel speaks of
our nature, in a religious sense, as one. Soul and
body make up one man, which is born once, and never dies.
Philosophers of old time thought the soul indeed might
live for ever, but that the body perished at death; but
Christ tells us otherwise, He tells us the body will live
for ever. In the text He seems to intimate that it never
really dies; that we lose sight indeed of what we
are accustomed to see, but that God still sees the
elements of it which are not exposed to our senses.
God graciously called Himself the God of Abraham.
He did not say the God of Abraham's soul, but simply of Abraham.
He blest Abraham, and He gave him eternal life; not to
his soul only without his body, but to Abraham as one
man. And so He is our God, and it {274} is not given us
to distinguish between what He does for our different
natures, spiritual and material. These are mere words;
each of us may feel himself to be one, and that one
being, in all its substantial parts, and attributes, will
never die.
You will see this more clearly by considering what our
Saviour says about the blessed Sacrament of His Supper.
He says He will give us His flesh to eat [Note
1].
How is this done? we do not know. He gives it under the
outward symbols of bread and wine. But in what real sense
is the consecrated bread His body? It is not told us, we
may not inquire. We say indeed spiritually,
sacramentally, in a heavenly way; but this is in
order to impress on our minds religious, and not carnal
notions of it. All we are concerned to know is, the
effect upon us of partaking this blessed food. Now
observe what He tells us about that. "Except ye eat
the flesh of the Son of man and drink His blood, ye have
no life in you. Whoso eateth My flesh, and drinketh My
blood, hath eternal life, and I will raise him up at
the last day." [John vi. 53, 54.] Now there is
no distinction made here between soul and body. Christ's
blessed Supper is food to us altogether, whatever
we are, soul, body, and all. It is the seed of eternal
life within us, the food of immortality, to
"preserve our body and soul unto everlasting
life." [Note 2]
The forbidden fruit wrought in Adam unto {275} death; but this
is the fruit which makes us live for ever. Bread sustains
us in this temporal life; the consecrated bread is
the means of eternal strength for soul and body.
Who could live this visible life without earthly food?
And in the same general way the Supper of the Lord is the
"means" of our living for ever. We have
no reason for thinking we shall live for ever unless we
eat it, no more than we have reason to think our temporal
life will be sustained without meat and drink. God can,
indeed, sustain us, "not by bread alone;" but
this is His ordinary means, which His will has
made such. He can sustain our immortality without the
Christian Sacraments, as He sustained Abraham and the
other saints of old time; but under the Gospel these are
His means, which He appointed at His will. We eat
the sacred bread, and our bodies become sacred; they are
not ours; they are Christ's; they are instinct with that
flesh which saw not corruption; they are inhabited by His
Spirit; they become immortal; they die but to appearance,
and for a time; they spring up when their sleep is ended,
and reign with Him for ever.
The inference to be drawn from this doctrine is plain.
Among the wise men of the heathen, as I have said, it was
usual to speak slightingly and contemptuously of the
mortal body; they knew no better. They thought it
scarcely a part of their real selves, and fancied they
should be in a better condition without it. Nay, they
considered it to be the cause of their sinning; as if the {276} soul of man were pure, and the material body were gross,
and defiled the soul. We have been taught the
truth, viz. that sin is a disease of our minds, of
ourselves; and that the whole of us, not body alone, but
soul and body, is naturally corrupt, and that Christ has
redeemed and cleansed whatever we are, sinful soul and
body. Accordingly their chief hope in death was
the notion they should be rid of their body. Feeling they
were sinful, and not knowing how, they laid the charge on
their body; and knowing they were badly circumstanced
here, they thought death perchance might be a change for
the better. Not that they rested on the hope of returning
to a God and Father, but they thought to be unshackled
from the earth, and able to do what they would. It was
consistent with this slighting of their earthly
tabernacle, that they burned the dead bodies of their
friends, not burying them as we do, but consuming them as
a mere worthless case of what had been precious, and was
then an incumbrance to the ground. Far different is the
temper which the glorious light of the Gospel teaches us.
Our bodies shall rise again and live for ever; they may
not be irreverently handled. How they will rise we
know not; but surely if the word of Scripture be true,
the body from which the soul has departed shall come to
life. There are some truths addressed solely to our
faith, not to our reason; not to our reason, because we
know so little about "the power of God" (in our
Saviour's words), that we have nothing to reason upon.
One of these, for instance, is the presence of Christ in
the Sacrament. We know we eat His Body and Blood;
but it is our {277} wisdom not curiously to ask how or whence,
not to give our thoughts range, but to take and eat and
profit thereby. This is the secret of gaining the
blessing promised. And so, as regards the resurrection of
the dead, we have no means or ground of argument. We
cannot determine in what exact sense our bodies on the
resurrection will be the same as they are at present, but
we cannot harm ourselves by taking God's declaration
simply, and acting upon it. And it is as believing this
comfortable truth, that the Christian Church put aside
that old irreverence of the funeral pile, and consecrated
the ground for the reception of the saints that sleep. We
deposit our departed friends calmly and thoughtfully, in
faith; not ceasing to love or remember that which once
lived among us, but marking the place where it lies, as
believing that God has set His seal upon it, and His
Angels guard it. His Angels, surely, guard the bodies of
His servants; Michael the Archangel, thinking it no
unworthy task to preserve them from the powers of evil [Note
3]. Especially those like Moses, who fall "in
the wilderness of the people," whose duty has called
them to danger and suffering, and who die a violent
death, these too, if they have eaten of that
incorruptible bread, are preserved safe till the last
day. There are, who have not the comfort of a peaceful
burial. They die in battle, or on the sea, or in strange
lands, or, as the early believers, under the hands of
persecutors. Horrible tortures, or the mouths of wild
beasts, have ere now {278} dishonoured the sacred bodies of
those who had fed upon Christ; and diseases corrupt them
still. This is Satan's work, the expiring efforts of his
fury, after his overthrow by Christ. Still, as far as we
can, we repair these insults of our Enemy, and
tend honourably and piously those tabernacles in which
Christ has dwelt. And in this view, what a venerable and
fearful place is a Church, in and around which the dead
are deposited! Truly it is chiefly sacred, as being the
spot where God has for ages manifested Himself to His
servants; but add to this the thought, that it is the
actual resting-place of those very servants, through
successive times, who still live unto Him. The dust
around us will one day become animate. We may ourselves
be dead long before, and not see it. We ourselves may
elsewhere be buried, and, should it be our exceeding
blessedness to rise to life eternal, we may rise in other
places, far in the east or west. But, as God's word is
sure, what is sown is raised; the earth to earth, ashes
to ashes, dust to dust, shall become glory to glory, and
life to the living God, and a true incorruptible image of
the spirit made perfect. Here the saints sleep, here they
shall rise. A great sight will a Christian country then
be, if earth remains what it is; when holy places pour
out the worshippers who have for generations kept vigil
therein, waiting through the long night for the bright
coming of Christ! And if this be so, what pious composed
thoughts should be ours when we enter Churches! God
indeed is every where, and His Angels go to and fro; yet
can they be more worthily employed in their condescending
care of man, than where good men sleep? {279} In the service of
the Communion we magnify God together with Angels and
Archangels, and all the company of heaven. Surely there
is more meaning in this than we know of; what a
"dreadful" place would this appear, if our eyes
were opened as those of Elisha's servant! "This is
none other than the house of God, and this is the gate of
heaven."
On the other hand, if the dead bodies of Christians
are honourable, so doubtless are the living; because
they have had their blessedness when living, therefore
have they in their sleep. He who does not honour his own
body as something holy unto the Lord, may indeed revere
the dead, but it is then a mere superstition, not an act
of piety. To reverence holy places (right as it is) will
not profit a man unless he reverences himself.
Consider what it is to be partaker of the Body and Blood
of Christ. We pray God, in our Church's language, that
"our sinful bodies may become clean through His
body;" and we are promised in Scripture, that our
bodies shall be temples of the Holy Ghost. How
should we study, then, to cleanse them from all sin, that
they may be true members of Christ! We are told that the
peril of disease and death attends the unworthy partaking
of the Lord's Supper. Is this wonderful, considering the
strange sin of receiving it into a body disgraced by
wilful disobedience? All that defiles it, intemperance or
other vice, all that is unbecoming, all that is
disrespectful to Him who has bought our bodies with a
price, must be put aside [Note 4]. Hear St.
Paul's {280} words, "Christ being raised from the dead,
dieth no more
likewise reckon ye also yourselves
to be dead unto sin
let not sin therefore reign in
your mortal body, that ye should obey it in the lusts
thereof." [Rom. vi. 9-12.] "If the Spirit of
Him who raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, He
that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken
your mortal bodies by His indwelling Spirit
If ye,
through the Spirit, do mortify the deeds of the body, ye
shall live." [Rom. viii. 11.]
Work together with God, therefore, my brethren, in
this work of your redemption. While He feeds you, prepare
for the heavenly feast; "discern the Lord's
body" when it is placed before you, and suitably
treasure it afterwards. Lay up year by year this seed of
life within you, believing it will one day bear fruit.
"Believe that ye receive it, and ye shall have
it." [Mark xi. 24.] Glorious, indeed, will be the
spring time of the Resurrection, when all that seemed dry
and withered will bud forth and blossom. The glory of
Lebanon will be given it, the excellency of Carmel and
Sharon; the fir tree for the thorn, the myrtle tree for
the briar; and the mountains and the hills shall break
forth before us in singing. Who would miss being of that
company? Wretched men they will then appear, who now for
a season enjoy the pleasures of sin. Wretched, who follow
their own selfish will, instead of walking by faith, who
are now idle, instead of trying to serve God, who are set
upon the world's vanities, or who scoff at religion, or
who allow themselves in known sin, who live in anger, {281} or
malice, or pride, or covetousness, who do not continually
strive to become better and holier, who are afraid to
profess themselves Christians and take up their cross and
follow Christ. May the good Lord make us all willing to
follow Him! may He rouse the slumberers, and raise them
to a new life here, that they may inherit His eternal
kingdom hereafter!
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Notes
1. John vi. 51.
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2. "In the Supper of the Lord there is no vain
ceremony, no bare sign, no untrue figure of a thing
absent; but as the Scripture says,
the communion
of the Body and Blood of the Lord, in a marvellous
incorporation, which by the operation of the Holy Ghost
... is through faith wrought in the souls of the
faithful, whereby not only their souls live to eternal
life, but they surely trust to win their bodies a
resurrection to immortality."Homily on
the Sacrament, Part I.
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3. Jude 9.
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4. 1 Cor. vi. 20.
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