On the Resurrection of the Dead
Written in the
year 1732
[This Sermon was
originally written by Benjamin Calamy, D.D., Vicar of St. Lawrence, Jewry,
London. It occurs, p. 275, in a volume of Sermons which bears his name,
published in 1704; and is here abridged and revised by Mr. Wesley. — EDIT.]
“But some man will say, how are the dead raised up? and with what
body do they come?”
1 Cor. 15:35.
The Apostle having, in the beginning of this chapter, firmly
settled the truth of our Saviour’s resurrection, adds, “Now if Christ be
preached that he rose from the dead, how say some among you, that there is no
resurrection of the dead?” It cannot now any longer seem impossible to you that
God should raise the dead; since you have so plain an example of it in our Lord,
who was dead and is alive; and the same power which raised Christ must also be
able to quicken our mortal bodies.
“But some man will say, How are the dead raised up? And with what
body do they come?” How can these things be? How is it possible that these
bodies should be raised again, and joined to their several souls, which many
thousands of years ago were either buried in the earth, or swallowed up in the
sea, or devoured by fire? — which have mouldered into the finest dust, —that
dust scattered over the face of the earth, dispersed as far as the heavens are
wide; — nay, which has undergone ten thousand changes, has fattened the earth,
become the food of other creatures, and these again the food of other men? How
is it possible that all these little parts, which made up the body of Abraham,
should be again ranged together, and, unmixed with the dust of other bodies, be
all placed in the same order and posture that they were before, so as to make up
the very self-same body which his soul at his death forsook? Ezekiel was indeed,
in a vision, set down in a valley full of dry bones, “and he heard a noise, and
behold a shaking, and the bones came together, bone to his bone; the sinews and
the flesh came upon them, and the skin covered them above, and breath came into
them, and they lived, and stood upon their feet.” This might be in a vision. But
that all this, and much more, should in time come to pass; that our bones, after
they are crumbled into dust, should really become living men; that all the
little parts whereof our bodies were made, should immediately, at a general
summons, meet again, and every one challenge and possess its own place, till at
last the whole be perfectly rebuilt; that this, I say, should be done, is so
incredible a thing, that we cannot so much as have any notion of it. And we may
observe, that the Gentiles were most displeased with this article of the
Christian faith; it was one of the last things the Heathens believed; and it is
to this day the chief objection to Christianity, “How are the dead raised up?
With what body do they come?” In my discourse on these words, I shall do three
things: —
I. I shall show, that the resurrection of the self-same body that
died and was buried, contains nothing in it incredible or impossible.
II. I shall describe the difference which the Scripture makes
between the qualities of a glorified and a mortal body.
III.
I shall draw some inferences from the whole.
I. I shall show, that the resurrection of the self-same body that
died, contains nothing in it incredible or impossible.
But before I do this, it may be proper to mention some of the
reasons upon which this article of our faith is built.
And, 1. The plain notion of a resurrection requires, that the
self-same body that died should rise again. Nothing can be said to be raised
again, but that very body that died. If God give to our souls at the last day a
new body, this cannot be called the resurrection of our body; because that word
plainly implies the fresh production of what was before.
2. There are many places of Scripture that plainly declare it.
St. Paul, in the 53d verse of this
chapter, tells us that “this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this
mortal must put on immortality.” [1 Cor.
15:53] Now, by this mortal, and this corruptible, can only be meant,
that body which we now carry about with us, and shall one day lay down in the
dust.
The mention which the Scripture makes of the places where the
dead shall rise, further shows, that the same body which died shall rise. Thus
we read in Daniel: “Those that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake; some
to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt.” And, we may
likewise observe, that the very phrase, of sleep and
awake,
implies, that when we rise again from the dead, our bodies will be as much the
same as they are when we awake from sleep. Thus, again, our Lord affirms,
(John 5:28, 29, ) “The hour is coming in which all that are in
the graves shall hear his voice, and shall come forth; they that have done good
to the resurrection of life, and they that have done evil to the resurrection of
damnation.” Now, if the same body do not rise again, what need is there of
opening the graves at the end of the world? The graves can give up no bodies but
those which were laid in them. If we were not to rise with the very same bodies
that died, then they might rest for ever. To this we need only add that of St.
Paul: “The Lord shall change this vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto
his glorious body. Now, this vile body can be no other than that with which we
are flow clothed, which must be restored to life again.
That in all this there is nothing incredible or impossible, I
shall show by proving these three things: — 1. That it is possible for God to
keep and preserve unmixed, from all other bodies, the particular dust into which
our several bodies are dissolved, and can gather and join it again, how far
soever dispersed asunder. 2. That God can form that dust so gathered together,
into the same body as it was before. 3. That when he hath formed this body, he
can enliven it with the same soul that before inhabited it.
1. God can distinguish and keep unmixed from all other bodies
the particular dust into which our several bodies are dissolved, and can gather
it together and join it again, how far soever dispersed asunder. God is infinite
both in knowledge and power. He knoweth the number of the stars, and calleth
them all by their names; he can tell the number of the sands on the sea-shore:
And is it at all incredible, that He should distinctly know the several
particles of dust into which the bodies of men are mouldered, and plainly
discern to whom they belong, and the various changes they have undergone? Why
should it be thought strange, that He, who at the first formed us, whose eyes
saw our substance yet being imperfect, from whom we were not hid when we were
made in secret, and curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth, should
know every part of our bodies, and every particle of dust whereof we were
composed? The artist knows every part of the watch which he frames; and if it
should fall in pieces, and the various parts of it lie in the greatest disorder
and confusion, yet he can soon gather them together, and as easily distinguish
one from another, as if every one had its particular mark. He knows the use of
each, and can readily give it its proper place, and put them all exactly in the
same figure and order they were before. And can we think that the Almighty
Builder of the world, whose workmanship we are, does not know whereof we are
made, or is not acquainted with the several parts of which this earthly
tabernacle is composed? All these lay in one vast heap at the creation, till he
separated them one from another, and framed them into those distinct bodies
whereof this beautiful world consists. And why may not the same Power collect
the ruins of our corrupted bodies, and restore them to their former condition?
All the parts into which men’s bodies are dissolved, however they seem to us
carelessly scattered over the face of the earth, are yet carefully laid up by
God’s wise disposal till the day of the restoration of all things. They are
preserved in the waters and fires, in the birds and beasts, till the last
trumpet shall summon them to their former habitation.
“But,” say they, “it may sometimes happen that several men’s
bodies may consist of the self-same matter. For the bodies of men are often
devoured by other animals, which are eaten by other men. Nay, there are nations
which feed upon human flesh; consequently, they borrow a great part of their
bodies from other men. And if that which was part of one man’s body becomes
afterwards part of another man’s, how can both rise at the last day with the
same bodies they had before?” To this it may easily be replied, that a very
small part of what is eaten turns to nourishment, the far greater part goes away
according to the order of nature. So that it is not at all impossible for God,
who watches over and governs all this, so to order things, that what is part of
one man’s body, though eaten by another, shall never turn to his nourishment;
or, if it does, that it shall wear off again, and, some time before his death,
be separated from him, so that it may remain in a capacity of being restored at
the last day to its former owner.
2. God can form this dust, so gathered together, into the same
body it was before. And that it is possible, all must own who believe that God
made Adam out of the dust of the earth. Therefore, the bodies of men being dust
after death, it is no other than it was before; and the same power that at the
first made it of dust, may as easily re-make it, when it is turned into dust
again. Nay, it is no more wonderful than the forming a human body in the womb,
which is a thing we have daily experience of; and is doubtless as strange an
instance of divine power as the resurrection of it can possibly be. And were it
not so common a thing, we should be as hardly brought to think it possible that
such a beautiful fabric as the body of man is, with nerves and bones, flesh and
veins, blood, and the several other parts whereof it consists, should be formed
as we know it is; as now we are, that hereafter it should be rebuilt when it has
been crumbled into dust. Had we only heard of the wonderful production of the
bodies of men, we should have been as ready to ask, “How are men made, and with
what bodies are they born?” as now, when we hear of the resurrection, “How are
the dead raised up, and with what bodies do they come?”
3. When God hath raised this body, he can enliven it with the
same soul that inhabited it before. And his we cannot pretend to say is
impossible to be done; for it has been done already. Our Saviour himself was
dead, rose again, and appeared alive to his disciples and others, who had lived
with him many years, and were then fully convinced that he was the same person
they had seen die upon the cross.
Thus have I shown that the resurrection of the same body is by
no means impossible to God; that what he hath promised he is able also to
perform, by that “mighty power by which he is able to subdue all things to
himself.” Though, therefore, we cannot exactly tell the manner how it shall be
done, yet this ought not in the least to weaken our belief of this important
article of our faith. It is enough, that He to whom all things are possible hath
passed his word that he will raise us again. Let those who presume to mock at
the glorious hope of all good men, and are constantly raising objections against
it, first try their skill upon the various appearances of nature. Let them
explain everything which they see happen in this world, before they talk of the
difficulties of explaining the resurrection. Can they tell me how their own
bodies were fashioned and curiously wrought? Can they give me a plain account,
by what orderly steps this glorious stately structure, which discovers so much
workmanship and rare contrivance, was at first created? How was the first drop
of blood made; and how came the heart, and veins, and arteries to receive it? Of
what, and by what means, were the nerves and fibres made? What fixed the little
springs in their due places, and fitted them for the several uses for which they
now serve? How was the brain distinguished from the other parts of the body, and
filled with spirits to move and animate the whole? How came the body to be
fenced with bones and sinews, to be clothed with skin and flesh, distinguished
into various muscles? Let them but answer these few questions about the
mechanism of our own bodies, and I will answer all the difficulties concerning
the resurrection of them. But if they cannot do this without having recourse to
the infinite power and wisdom of the FIRST CAUSE, let them know that the same
power and wisdom can re-animate it, after it is turned into dust; and that there
is no reason for our doubting concerning the thing because there are some
circumstances belonging to it which we cannot perfectly comprehend or give a
distinct account of.
II. I now proceed to the Second thing I proposed; which was, to
describe the difference the Scripture makes between the qualities of a mortal
and of a glorified body.
The change which shall be made in our bodies at the
resurrection, according to the Scripture account, will consist chiefly in these
four things: — 1. That our bodies shall be raised immortal and incorruptible. 2.
That they shall be raised in glory. 3. That they shall be raised in power. 4.
That they shall be raised spiritual bodies.
1. The body that we shall have at the resurrection shall be
immortal and incorruptible: “For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and
this mortal must put on immortality.” Now, these words,
immortal and
incorruptible, not only signify that we shall die no more, (for in that
sense the damned are immortal and incorruptible,) but that we shall be perfectly
free from all the bodily evils which sin brought into the world; that our bodies
shall not be subject to sickness, or pain, or any other inconveniences we are
daily exposed to. This the Scripture calls “the redemption of our bodies,” — the
freeing them from all their maladies. Were we to receive them again, subject to
all the frailties and miseries which we are forced to wrestle with, I much doubt
whether a wise man, were he left to his choice, would willingly take his again;
— whether he would not choose to let his still lie rotting in the grave, rather
than to be again chained to such a cumbersome clod of earth. Such a resurrection
would be, as a wise Heathen calls it, “a resurrection to another sheep.” It
would look more like a redemption to death again, than a resurrection to
life.
The best thing we can say of this house of earth, is, that it is
a ruinous building, and will not be long before it tumbles into dust; that it is
not our home, — we look for another “house, eternal in the heavens;” that we
shall not always be confined here, but that in a little time we shall be
delivered from the bondage of corruption, from this burden of flesh, into the
glorious liberty of the sons of God. What frail things these bodies of ours are!
How soon are they disordered! To what a troop of diseases, pains, and other
infirmities are they constantly subject! And how does the least distemper
disturb our minds, and make life itself a burden! Of how many parts do our
bodies consist! and if one of these be disordered, the whole man suffers. If but
one of these slender threads, whereof our flesh is made up be stretched beyond
its due proportion, or fretted by any sharp humour, or broken, what torment does
it create! Nay, when our bodies are at the best, what pains do we take to answer
their necessities, to provide for their sustenance, to preserve them in health,
and to keep them tenantable, in some tolerable fitness for our souls’ use! And
what time we can spare from our labour is taken up in rest, and refreshing our
jaded bodies, and fitting them for work again. How are we forced, even
naturally, into the confines of death; even to cease to be; — at least to pass
so many hours without any useful or reasonable thoughts, merely to keep them in
repair! But our hope and comfort are, that we shall shortly be delivered from
this burden of flesh: When “God shall wipe away all tears from our eyes, and
there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be
any more pain; for the former things are passed away.” O when shall we arrive at
that happy hand where no complaints were ever heard, where we shall all enjoy
uninterrupted health both of body and mind, and never more be exposed to any of
those inconveniences that disturb our present pilgrimage. When we shall have
once passed from death unto life, we shall be eased of all the troublesome care
of our bodies, which now takes up so much of our time and thoughts. We shall be
set, now undergo to support our lives. Yon robes of light, with which we shall
be clothed at the resurrection of the just will not stand in need of those
careful provisions which it is so troublesome to us here either to procure or to
be without. But then, as our Lord tells us, those who shall be accounted worthy
to obtain that world “neither marry nor are given in marriage, neither can they
die any more, but they are equal to the angels.” Their bodies are neither
subject to disease, nor want that daily sustenance which these mortal bodies
cannot be without. “Meats for the belly, and the belly for meats; but God will
destroy both it and them.” This is that perfect happiness which all good men
shall enjoy in the other world, — a mind free from all trouble and guilt, in a
body free from all pains and diseases. Thus our mortal bodies shall he raised
immortal. They shall not only be always preserved from death, (for so these
might be, if God pleased,) but the nature of them shall be wholly changed, so
that they shall not retain the same seeds of mortality; — they cannot die any
more.
2.
Our bodies shall he raised in glory. “Then shall the righteous
shine as the sun in the kingdom of their Father.” A resemblance of this we have
in the lustre of Moses’s face, when he had conversed with God on the mount. His
face shone so bright, that the children of Israel were afraid to come near him,
till he threw a veil over it. And that extraordinary majesty of Stephen’s face
seemed to be an earnest of his glory. “All that sat in the council, looking
steadfastly on him, saw his face as it had been the face of an angel.” How then,
if it shone so gloriously even on earth, will it shine in the other world, when
his, and the bodies of all the saints, are made like unto Christ’s glorious
body! How glorious the body of Christ is, we may guess from his transfiguration.
St. Peter, when he saw this, when our Lord’s face shone as the sun, and his
raiment became shining and white as snow, was so transported with joy and
admiration, that he knew not what he said. When our Saviour discovered but a
little of that glory which he now possesses, and which in due time he will
impart to his followers, yet that little of it made the place seem a paradise;
and the disciples thought that they could wish for nothing better than always to
live in such pure light, and enjoy so beautiful a sight. “It is good for us to
be here: Let us make three tabernacles;” — here let us fix our abode for ever.
And if they thought it so happy only to be present with such heavenly bodies,
and to behold them with their eyes, how much happier must it be to dwell in such
glorious mansions, and to be themselves clothed with so much brightness!
This excellency of our heavenly bodies will probably arise, in
great measure, from the happiness of our souls. The unspeakable joy that we then
shall feel will break through our bodies, and shine forth in our countenances;
as the joy of the soul, even in this life, has some influence upon the
countenance, by rendering it more open and cheerful: So Solomon tells us, “A
man’s wisdom makes his face to shine.” Virtue, as it refines a man’s heart, so
it makes his very looks more cheerful and lively.
3. Our bodies shall be raised in power. This expresses the
sprightliness of our heavenly bodies, the nimbleness of their motion, by which
they shall be obedient and able instruments of the soul. In this state, our
bodies are no better than clogs and fetters, which confine and restrain the
freedom of the soul. The corruptible body presses down the soul, and the earthly
tabernacle weighs down the mind. Our dull, sluggish, inactive bodies are often
unable, or backward, to obey the commands of the soul. But in the other life,
“they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up
with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; they shall walk, and not
faint:” Or, as another expresses it, “they shall run to and fro like sparks
among the stubble.” The speed of their motion shall be like that of devouring
fire in stubble; and the height of it, above the towering of an eagle; for they
shall meet the Lord in the air when he comes to judgment, and mount up with him
into the highest heaven. This earthly body is slow and heavy in all its motions,
listless and soon tired with action. But our heavenly bodies shall be as fire;
as active and as nimble as our thoughts are.
4. Our bodies shall be raised spiritual bodies. Our spirits are
now forced to serve our bodies, and to attend their leisure, and do greatly
depend upon them for most of their actions. But our bodies shall then wholly
serve our spirits, and minister to them, and depend upon them. So that, as by “a
natural body” we understand one fitted for this lower, sensible world for this
earthly state; so “a spiritual body” is one that is suited to a spiritual state,
to an invisible world, to the life of angels. And, indeed, this is the principal
difference between a mortal and a glorified body. This flesh is the most
dangerous enemy we have: We therefore deny and renounce it in our baptism. It
constantly tempts us to evil. Every sense is a snare to us. All its lusts and
appetites are inordinate. It is ungovernable, and often rebels against reason.
The law in our members wars against the law of our mind. When the spirit is
willing, the flesh is weak; so that the best of men are forced to keep it under,
and use it hardly, lest it should betray them into folly and misery. And how
does it hinder us in all our devotions! How soon does it jade our minds when
employed on holy things! How easily, by its enchanting pleasures, does it divert
them from those noble exercises! But when we have obtained the resurrection unto
life, our bodies will be spiritualized, purified, and refined from their earthly
grossness; then they will be fit instruments for the soul in all its divine and
heavenly employment; we shall not be weary of singing praises to God through
infinite ages.
Thus, after what little we have been able to conceive of it, it
sufficiently appears, that a glorified body is infinitely more excellent and
desirable than this vile body. The only thing that remains is,
III. To draw some inferences from the whole. And, First, from
what has been said, we may learn the best way of preparing ourselves to live in
those heavenly bodies; which is, by cleansing ourselves more and more from all
earthly affections, and weaning ourselves from this body, and all the pleasures
that are peculiar to it. We should begin in this life to loosen the knot between
our souls and this mortal flesh; to refine our affections, and raise them from
things below to things above; to take ‘off our thoughts, and disengage them from
present and sensible things, and accustom ourselves to think of, and converse
with, things future and invisible; that so our souls, when they leave this
earthly body, may be prepared for a spiritual one, as having beforehand tasted
spiritual delights, and being in some degree acquainted with the things which we
then shall meet with. A soul wholly taken up with this earthly body is not fit
for the glorious mansions above. A sensual mind is so wedded to bodily
pleasures, that it cannot enjoy itself without them; and it is not able to
relish any other, though infinitely to be preferred before them. Nay, such as
follow the inclinations of their fleshly appetites, are so far unfit for
heavenly joys, that they would, esteem it the greatest unhappiness to he clothed
with a spiritual body. It would be like clothing a beggar in the robes of a
king. Such glorious bodies would be uneasy to them, they would not know what to
do in them, they would be glad to retire and put on their rags again. But when
we are washed from the guilt of our sins, and cleansed from all filthiness of
flesh and spirit, by faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, then we shall long to be
dissolved, and to be with our exalted Saviour; we shall be always ready to take
wing for the other world, where we shall at last have a body suited to our
spiritual appetites.
2. From hence we may see how to account for the different
degrees of glory in the heavenly world. For although all the children of God
shall have glorious bodies, yet the glory of them all shall not be equal. “As
one star differeth from another star in glory, so also is the resurrection of
the dead.” They shall all shine as stars; but those who, by a constant diligence
in well-doing, have attained to a higher measure of purity than others, shall
shine more bright than others. They shall appear as more glorious stars. It is
certain that the most heavenly bodies will be given to the most heavenly souls;
so that this is no little encouragement to us to make the greatest progress we
possibly can in the knowledge and love of God, since the more we are weaned from
the things of the earth now, the more glorious will our bodies be at the
resurrection.
3. Let this consideration engage us patiently to bear whatever
troubles we may be exercised with in the present life. The time of our eternal
redemption draweth nigh. Let us hold out a little longer, and all tears hall be
wiped from our eyes, and we shall never sigh nor sorrow any more. And how soon
shall we forget all we endured in this earthly tabernacle, when once we are
clothed with that house which is from above! We are now but on our journey
towards home, and so must expect to struggle with many difficulties; but it will
not he long ere we come to our journey’s end, and that will make amends for all.
We shall then be in a quiet and safe harbour, out of the reach of all storms and
dangers. We shall then be at home in our Father’s house, no longer exposed to
the inconveniences which, so long as we abide abroad in these tents, we are
subject to. And let us not forfeit all this happiness, for want of a little more
patience. Only let us hold out to the end, and we shall receive an abundant
recompence for all the trouble arid uneasiness of our passage which shall be
endless rest and peace.
Let this especially, fortify us against the fear of death: It is
now disarmed, and can do us no hurt. It divides us, indeed, from this body
awhile; but it is only that we may receive it again more glorious. As God,
therefore, said once to Jacob, “Fear not to go down into Egypt, for I will go
down with thee, and will surely bring thee up again;” so may I say to all who
are born of God, “Fear not to go down into the grave; lay down your heads in the
dust; for God will certainly bring you up again, and that in a much more
glorious manner.” Only “be ye steadfast and unmovable, always abounding in the
work of the Lord;” and then let death prevail over, and pull down, this house of
clay; since God hath undertaken to rear it up again, infinitely more beautiful,
strong, and useful.