
PUZZLING
QUESTIONS ABOUT DEATH
THE
late Clarence Darrow, famous criminal lawyer, once held a debate with a rabbi, a
priest, and a minister on the subject of immortality. The clergymen summoned
similes and allegories to set forth the theory that the soul of man is
indestructible, not subject to death. When the lawyer rose he said,
"These gentlemen never once used the Bible to prove their assertions, much
less did they quote from its pages."
We
who preach from a Bible text often wander a long way from Biblical teaching. Yet
in all fairness it may be said that there are some things in the Good Book
"hard to be understood" (2 Peter 3:15, 16). When there is apparent
contradiction or seeming difference of meaning, two things should be borne in
mind. One is that difficult texts should be studied in the light of the general
teaching of the Bible; the other, that all lines of Bible doctrine should run
parallel. For instance, if as the Bible teaches, judgment takes place after
death, then we would be out of harmony if we believed God took good people to
heaven at death and consigned bad people to hell at death, when as yet they had
not been judged.
THE
THIEF ON THE CROSS
Did
not Jesus on the cross say to the penitent thief, "Verily I lay unto thee,
To day shalt thou be with me in paradise"? Luke !3:41 The answer is Yes.
But it must also be noted that Jesus did not go to Paradise that day. Paradise
is where the tree of life is (Revelation 2:7). That is in heaven at the throne
of God (Revelation 22:1, 2). Jesus did not ascend to heaven on His crucifixion
day. To Mary He said at that time, "Touch me not; for I am not yet ascended
to my Father." John 20:17.
What,
then, did Jesus mean by His promise to the thief? Only this: "You ask me to
remember you in my kingdom. I say to you today (in this dark hour), thou shalt
be with me in paradise. The comma in this verse should be after today, not
before it. When Luke wrote the record there were no punctuation marks at all.
Men have supplied these. In this instance the comma is not in the proper place.
I
saw three crosses lifted high;
And
round one cross I saw the light
Of
heaven's own glory beaming bright,
And
from the patient Sufferer's side
A
trembling voice in anguish cried:
'0
Lord, and must I be forgot?
Thou
pitying Christ, forget me not'
"And
then above the din I heard
The
Godlike Sufferer speak the word:
'Thou
shalt be with me by and by,
Beneath
the star bespangled sky,
When
in my kingdom bright and fair
I
reign in endless glory there.'"
-Mrs.
L. D. Avery Stuttle
SHALL NEVER DIE
What
did Jesus mean when He told Martha that those who believed in Him would never
die? The full text makes it clear: "Jesus said unto her, I am the
resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet
shall he live: and whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die."
John 11: 25, 26.
Both
righteous and wicked will be resurrected, but only those who believe in Christ
will live forever. The rest will die the second death (Revelation 20:13,15).
THE
SPIRITS IN PERSON
Some
have thought that Peter believed that Christ, while His body hung on the cross,
went and preached to human spirits in some mysterious prison or purgatory.
The
scripture reads, "By which also he went and preached unto the spirits in
prison; which sometime were disobedient, when once the longsuffering of God
waited in the days of Noah." I Peter 3:19, 20.
This
is a simple statement that Jesus preached unto the wicked people in the days of
Noah, who were in the prison house of sin (Isaiah 61:1). Christ preached to them
by the same Spirit of God that raised, or quickened, Him from the dead (1 Peter
3:18).
SAUL
AND THE WITCH OF ENDOR
Did
not King Saul consult a spirit. medium, and did she not bring up the dead
prophet Samuel? The account is found in 1 Samuel 28.
God
no longer heard the prayer of Saul (verse 6). The king disguised himself and
sought counsel of a spirit medium at Endor (verses 7, 8). The medium was
suspicious, but on promise that the inquirer would not tell King Saul she agreed
to do business (verses 9, 10).
The
woman asked, "Whom shall I bring up?" Saul said, "Bring me up
Samuel." Verse 11.
Now,
if Samuel went to heaven when he died, why not call him down from heaven?
Samuel
was a man of God. But this medium said, "I saw gods ascending out of the
earth." Verse 13. And when Saul asked, "What form is he of?" she
said, "An old man cometh up; and he is covered with a mantle." Verse
14. Saul accepted that as Samuel.
You
clearly see that Satan's old original lie was at work. "Ye shall not surely
die: . . . ye shall be as gods." Genesis 3:4, 5. The spirit medium saw
"gods" coming up, and one of them was Samuel, she said. Yes, this is
the devil's work.
The
message came through. "To morrow shalt thou and thy sons be with me,"
1 Samuel 28:19. That is, one day you and your sons will die and come where I am.
If righteous Samuel were in heaven, how could rejected Saul go there?
Again,
if Samuel were actually in heaven, would God permit him to go talk to the
God-rejected Saul, and at the request of a spirit medium that Saul knew was
condemned of the same God! Hardly, we think.
The
simple fact is that Samuel was dead, and knew not anything. Saul went to a
medium and received a mixture of truth and error. He heard what God had already
told him, and he no doubt believed that Samuel actually sent a message. Saul was
deceived.
THE
RICH MAN AND LAZARUS
In
the parable of Luke 16:19-31 the rich man died and went to hell. "Being in
torments," he called to the beggar Lazarus, who had also died and was in
Abraham's bosom. Read the account. First, let us observe that God sometimes
speaks of the future as present. "God . . . quickeneth the dead, and
calleth those things which be not as though they were." Romans 4:17.
However, the story of the rich man and Lazarus is a parable, and cannot be
regarded as literal. It comes in a long series of parables. Parables often teach
some main lesson but should not be held to every detail. (See Judges 9:6-20.)
Jesus sought to rebuke the covetous Pharisees (Luke 16:14) by showing that the
rich may fare well here but not hereafter. He used one of their own traditions.
.
Let
us first consider Lazarus and then the rich man. Lazarus is represented as being
carried by angels to Abraham's bosom. However, it is at the second coming of
Christ, not at death, that the angels gather the elect (Matthew 24:31).
Furthermore Abraham would find it
difficult to hold all the redeemed in his bosom. So this cannot possibly be
literal.
There
was another Lazarus, a literal one, who died (John 11:14-44). He was the brother
of Mary and Martha. For four days he lay dead. When Jesus called him to life He
said, "Lazarus, come forth," He did not say, "Come from Abraham's
bosom." Jesus simply gave this literal Lazarus life, and he came forth from
the grave. We note also that this literal Lazarus had nothing to say about
Abraham's bosom. He had nothing to say about anything that occurred during those
four days. "The dead know not anything." It is perfectly clear that
when a literal Lazarus dies "his thoughts perish." It is evident that
the Lazarus of the parable cannot be taken literally.
Of
the rich man we read, "The rich man also died, and was buried; and in hell
he lift up his eyes, being in torments." He further stated, "I am
tormented in this flame."
The
word "hell" used in this connection is the word hades, the grave.
Since there is no fire in the grave, we here have still further evidence that
this parable cannot be taken literally. The real lesson of the parable is that
prosperity here does not guarantee prosperity hereafter. And also this life is
the only lime we shall ever have to prepare for the next. "For the grave
cannot praise thee, death can not celebrate thee: they that go down into the pit
[grave] cannot hope for thy truth." Isaiah 38:18. There is no second
chance. "Behold, now is the accepted time; behoId, now is the day of
salvation." 2 Corinthians 6:2. The little boy who wanted to be the rich man
while he lived and Lazarus when he died, expressed the wish of many, but it is a
wish that can never come true.
The
story is told that when a maiden of the Seneca Indians died, her family
imprisoned a young bird and held it captive until it began to sing. Then,
loading it with caresses and messages, they released it over the maiden's grave.
They believed that the bird would fly directly to spirit land and deliver their
messages of affection to the loved maiden.
Now
is the time to speak words of kindness. Today is the day to do deeds of love.
This is the life in which decision is to be made as to where we shall spend
eternity. All who would live forever with God must now learn to enjoy the things
of God.
Susan
Ertz, in Anger in the Sky, has aptly said, "Millions long for immortality
who do not know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon."
How miserable such people would be if penned up in heaven for endless ages. It
would be a prison house of eternal longing for the whirl of a sinful world.
Someone
has said, "The more of earth we want, the less of heaven we'll get."
During
World War II Col. Warren J. Clear was asked by his superior, officer to leave
Corregidor just before it felt He was to board a submarine at midnight. In his
orders were these words "Be ready to go aboard. No personal baggage."
When
we embark for heaven we can take only our character. That is the righteous
character of Jesus Christ, imputed to us in forgiveness (justification) and
imparted to us through the Holy Spirit and the Word of God in sanctification.
"Reconciled
by His death for my sin, Justified by His life pure and clean, Sanctified by
obeying His word, Glorified when returneth my Lord."
F. E. BELDEN
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