THE RESURRECTION OF THE DEAD, AND ETERNAL
JUDGMENT:
OR, THE TRUTH OF THE RESURRECTION OF
THE BODIES, BOTH OF GOOD AND BAD AT THE LAST DAY:
ASSERTED, AND PROVED BY GOD’S WORD.
ALSO, THE MANNER AND ORDER OF THEIR COMING
FORTH OF THEIR GRAVES; AS ALSO, WITH WHAT BODIES THEY DO
ARISE. TOGETHER, WITH A DISCOURSE OF THE LAST JUDGMENT, AND
THE FINAL CONCLUSION OF THE WHOLE WORLD.
BY JOHN BUNYAN,
A SERVANT OF THE LORD’S
CHRIST.
“Behold, I shew you a mystery; We
shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a
moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for
the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised
incorruptible, and we shall be changed”—(1
Cor 15:51,52).
“Marvel not at this: for the hour
is coming, in the which all that are in the graves shall
hear his voice, and shall come forth; they that have done
good, unto the resurrection of life; and they that have
done evil, unto the resurrection of
damnation”—(John 5:28,29).
ADVERTISEMENT BY THE EDITOR.
This very important treatise, judging from
the style in which it is written, was, probably, one of the
first books composed by Bunyan. The form in which it is
prepared, with minute divisions to assist the memory, and
its colloquial language, indicate that it was first
intended for the pulpit and then enlarged to form a more
complete treatise; while the frequent recurrence of the
words “I say,” shew the unpolished style in
which he was in the habit of committing his thoughts to
paper, when he became an author.
A good copy of what appears to be the first
edition, is in the British Museum, a small 8vo, without
date—and from this, collated with the reprint by C.
Doe in Bunyan’s works, 1691, the present edition is
published. Doe, in his catalogue of all Mr. Bunyan’s
books, appended to the Heavenly Footman, 1690, states that
“The resurrection of the Dead, and eternal Judgment
by John Bunyan, a servant of the Lord’s Christ, was
first published in 1665.” I have not been able to
discover any subsequent edition in a separate
volume.
The resurrection of the body is a subject of
universal and deep importance. It defies our reasoning
powers, while it exalts our ideas of the divine
omnipotence. With God, all things revealed in his word are
not only possible, but certain of accomplishment. The
bodies of the saints, which are a part of the
Redeemer’s purchase will be raised in heavenly and
wondrous perfection; like to the Saviour’s glorious
body. That body, which being transfigured “did shine
as the sun, and his raiment became as the light.”
That body which, after his resurrection, might be touched,
but which could appear and disappear to mortal eyes; in the
room at Emmaus, or in a closed room filled with his
disciples; could be touched, yet vanish away; could eat
with them on the sea shore, and could ascend to heaven from
the mount. Thus it was foretold by the prophet and
reiterated by the apostle—“Eye hath not seen,
nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man,
the things which God hath prepared for them that love
him” (Isa 64:4; 1 Cor 2:9). Not one atom of our dust
can be lost; a bright, a glorious anticipation to the
saints; but how solemn and awful a thought to those who die
without hope. Among Christians it is common to think and
talk of the happiness of the spirits of the just
made perfect; but alas, how seldom do we think or speak of
the perfect bliss of our whole nature, body, soul, and
spirit—incorruptible, undefiled,
glorified—every part equally the object of the
Saviour’s purchase and of his care.
This treatise, which will be ever
new, and ever important, was peculiarly required
in Bunyan’s early days. Under the protectorate, the
minds of men, which had been kept in slavery, became
suddenly emancipated from human creeds and formularies of
public worship. The personal attention of every one was
then directed to the Bible—the Lord’s day was
observed, men were chosen as ministers not from high
connections, but from deep and humble piety. Tens of
thousands became happy in a personal knowledge of divine
truth. At such a period, it must have happened that some
evil spirits would exalt themselves, and that even some
serious inquirers would draw strange conclusions from a
misconception of divine truth; and dimly see “men as
trees walking.” Among these there appeared teachers,
who, unable to comprehend how that body, which had gone to
dust, or in some cases had been reduced by fire to its
primary elements, and dispersed to the winds or waves,
could be again produced. They revived an ancient error,
That the new birth was the only resurrection from death;
and consequently, that to those who were born again, the
resurrection was passed. The individuals who promulgated
these opinions, do not appear to have been associated
together as a sect, or a church. The greater number were
called in derision “ranters,” and some
“quakers.” It is very probable, that this
treatise was intended as an antidote to these delusions. We
must not infer from the opinions of a few unworthy
individuals, who justly deserved censure, that Bunyan meant
to reflect upon the Society of Friends. This treatise was
printed in 1665: but it was not until 1675 that the
Quakers’ rules of discipline were first published,
and they from that time as a sect have been, in a high
degree, conformable to the morality and heavenly influences
of the gospel. But even before this, Fox, Crisp, Penn,
Barclay, and others, who afterwards formed the Society of
Friends, had declared their full belief in this doctrine.
“The resurrection of the just and unjust—the
last judgment—heaven and hell as future
rewards—we believe and confess.” “We
believe the holy manhood of Christ to be in heavenly
glory.” “We acknowledge a resurrection in order
to eternal recompence, and rest contented with that body
which it shall please God to give us.” “We do
firmly believe that besides the resurrection of the
soul from the death of sin, to a life of righteousness
while here, there will be a resurrection of the dead
hereafter, and that we must all appear before the
judgment seat of Christ.” Barclay, in his catechism,
1673, clearly asserts Bunyan’s own ideas of the
resurrection. But in the face of these, and a thousand
similar declarations, the grossest calumnies were asserted
by a fanatic clergyman, Alexr. Ross, in his View of all
Religions:—“The Ranters are a sect of beasts
that neither divide the hoof, nor chew the cud; that is to
say, very unclean ones. They, like the Quakers, oppose
forms and order (the form and order of Common Prayer). To
anatomize this monster: 1st, They hold that God, Devils,
Angels, Heaven, and Hell, are fictions. 2d, That Moses, the
Baptist, and Christ were impostors. 3d, That preaching and
praying is lying.” 8vo., 1696, p. 273. And such wild
slanders were uttered occasionally against all dissenters,
until a much later period. Happily they are now better
known, and the truths of Christianity are more appreciated.
I have been careful to guard the reader upon this subject,
lest it should be thought that Bunyan had in any degree
manifested the spirit of those, who even to the present day
misrepresent the opinions of the Quakers. This may be
occasioned by their distinguishing tenet—That the
work of the ministry is purely a labour of love, and ought
not to be performed for hire—derived from the command
of Christ to his disciples, “Freely ye have received,
freely give.” This, however, is no reason that they
should be, as to their general views of divine truth,
misrepresented and traduced.
Bunyan, at all times solemn and impressive,
is peculiarly earnest and searching in this treatise. The
dead will arise involuntarily and
irresistibly—conscience uncontrolled, must
testify the truth, yea, all the truth to the
condemnation of the soul and body, unless cleansed from sin
by faith in the Redeemer and the sacred influences of the
Holy Spirit. The books will be opened, and every thought
and word and action be seen inscribed in characters legible
to all. Every soul will be able to read and clearly to
understand those mysterious books—God’s
omniscient, his penetrating, his universal sight of all
things from the creation of the world to the final
consummation; and his perfect remembrance of all that he
saw—are one and the same. There is then
no refuge, no escape—the word depart impels
obedience, and the sinner plunges into eternal woe!! O that
the living may lay these awful realities to heart, and fly
for refuge to the bosom of the Redeemer—he only is
able—he is willing to save to the uttermost all that
come unto God by him. And they who find in him a refuge
from the storms of life, shall hear his voice irresistibly
impelling them to heaven, “Come, ye blessed of my
Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the
foundation of the world.”
O glorious hour! O blest abode! I shall be
like and near my God! And flesh and sin no more control The
sacred pleasures of the soul.
May the divine blessing abundantly attend
the reading of these awful or joyful realities.
GEO. OFFOR.
PREFACE.
COURTEOUS READER,
Though this be a small treatise, yet it doth
present thee with things of the greatest and most weighty
concernment, even with a discourse of life and death to
eternity: opening, and clearing, by the scriptures of God,
that the time is at hand, when, there shall be a
resurrection of the dead, both of the just and unjust; even
of the bodies of both, from the graves where they are, or
shall be, at the approach of that day.
Thou hast also in these few lines, the order
and manner of the rising of these two sorts of people,
wherein is shewed thee with what body they shall
then rise, as also their states and condition at this day,
with great clearness.
For here thou shalt see the truth, and
manner of the terrible judgment, the opening of the books,
the examining of witnesses, with a final conclusion upon
good and bad. Which, I hope will be profitable to thy soul
that shall read it. For if thou art godly, then here is
that which will, through God’s blessing, encourage
thee to go on in the faith of the truth of the gospel; but
if thou art ungodly, then here thou mayst meet with
conviction: yea, and that of what will be, without fail,
thy end, at the end of the world: whether thou continue in
thy sins, or repent. If thou continue in them, blackness,
and darkness, and everlasting destruction; but if thou
repent, and believe the gospel, then light, and life, and
joy, and comfort, and glory, and happiness, and that to
eternity.
Wherefore let me here beg these things at
thy hand,
First, That thou take heed of that spirit of
mockery that saith, “Where is the promise of his
coming?” (2 Peter 3:4,5).
Secondly, Take heed that thy heart be not
overcharged with surfeiting and drunkenness, and the cares
of this life, and so that day come upon thee unawares (Luke
21:34,35).
Thirdly, But be diligent in making thy
calling and election sure; that thou in the day, of which
thou shalt read more in this book, be not found without
that glorious righteousness that will then stand thee in
stead, and present thee before his glorious presence, with
exceeding joy. To him be glory in the church by Christ
Jesus, world without end. Amen.
JOHN BUNYAN.
OF THE RESURRECTION OF THE DEAD.
“BUT THIS I CONFESS UNTO THEE, THAT
AFTER THE WAY WHICH THEY CALL HERESY, SO WORSHIP I THE GOD
OF MY FATHERS, BELIEVING ALL THINGS WHICH ARE WRITTEN IN
THE LAW AND IN THE PROPHETS: AND HAVE HOPE TOWARD GOD,
WHICH THEY THEMSELVES ALSO ALLOW, THAT THERE SHALL BE A
RESURRECTION OF THE DEAD, BOTH OF THE JUST AND
UNJUST”—(Acts 24:14,15).
My discourse upon this text, will chiefly
concern the resurrection of the dead: wherefore to that I
shall immediately apply myself, not meddling with what else
is couched in the words.
You see here, that Paul, being upon his
arraignment, accused of many things, by some that were
violent for his blood; and being licensed to speak for
himself by the then heathen magistrate; he doth in few
words tell them, that as touching the crimes wherewith they
charged him, he was utterly faultless, only this he
confessed, that after that way which they call heresy, so
he worshipped the God of his fathers; believing all things
that are written in the law and the prophets, and that he
had the same hope towards God, which they themselves did
allow, that there should be a resurrection of the dead,
both of the just and unjust.
Whence note by the way, that a hypocritical
people, will persecute the power of those truths in others,
which themselves in words profess. I have hopes towards
God, and that, such a hope which themselves do allow, and
yet I am this day, and that for this very thing, persecuted
by them.
But to come to my purpose, “There
shall be a resurrection of the dead,” &c. By
these words, the apostle sheweth us what was the substance
of his doctrine, to wit, that there should be “a
resurrection of the dead;” and by these words also,
what was the great argument with his soul, to carry him
through these temptations, afflictions, reproaches, and
necessities he met with in this world, even the doctrine of
a resurrection. I have hope towards God, saith he,
and there is my mind fixed; for there shall be “a
resurrection of the dead, both of the just and
unjust.” The reason why I cannot do what these Jews
would have me; also why I cannot live as do the Gentiles,
it is, because I have in my soul, the faith of the
resurrection. This is the doctrine I say, which makes me
fear to offend, and that is as an undergirder to my soul,
whereby I am kept from destruction and confusion, under all
the storms and tempests I here go through. In a word, this
is it that hath more awe upon my conscience than all the
laws of men, with all the penalties they inflict.
“And herein do I exercise myself, to have always a
conscience void of offence toward God and toward
men” (verse 16).
Now here, seeing this doctrine of the
resurrection of the dead hath that power, both to bear up
and to awe; both to encourage and to keep within compass,
the spirit and body of the people of God; it will be
requisite, and profitable for us, to inquire into the true
meaning and nature of this word, “the resurrection of
the dead.”
And for the better compassing of this
matter, I shall briefly enquire,
First, What in this place is meant by
the dead.
Secondly, What is meant by the
resurrection.
Thirdly, Why the apostle doth here
speak of the resurrection of the dead as of a thing yet
to come—“There shall be a resurrection of
the dead, both of the just and unjust.”
First. The dead in scripture
go under a five-fold consideration; as,
1. Such as die a natural death, or as when a
man ceaseth to be any more in this world, as David, whom
Peter tells us “is both dead and buried, and his
sepulchre is with us to this day” (Acts
2:29).
2. There is a people that are reckoned dead
in trespasses and sins, as those are, who never yet were
translated from darkness to light, and from the power of
Satan to God. Such, I say, who yet never felt the power of
the Word and Spirit of God, to raise them from that state,
to walk with him in the regeneration; making a life out of
Christ, and his present benefits (Eph 2:1,2; John
5:25).
3. There is a death seizeth men often after
some measure of light received from God, and some
profession of the gospel of Christ. These, for the
certainty of their damnation, are said to be
dead—dead, twice dead, and plucked up by the roots
(Jude 12).
4. There is in scripture mention made of a
death to sin, and the lusts of the flesh; this death
is the beginning of true life and happiness, and is a
certain forerunner of a share in Christ, and with him in
another world (Rom 6:6-8; 2 Tim 2:11).
5. Lastly, There is also in the word, a
relation of eternal death. This is the death that those are
in, and swallowed up of, that go out of this world Godless,
Christless, and graceless; dying in sin, and so under the
curse of the dreadful God; who, I say, because they have
missed of the Lord Jesus Christ, the Saviour in this day of
grace: are fallen into the gulf and jaws of eternal death
and misery, in the fire that never shall be quenched (Mark
9:43,44; Luke 16:23-26).
Now then, seeing there is death, or to be
dead, taken under so many considerations in the scripture;
it is evident, that to be dead in Christ, the text is not
meant of them all: I then must distinguish, and inquire
which of these deaths it is, that here the apostle did look
for a resurrection from. (1.) then, It cannot be meant a
resurrection from eternal death, for from that there is no
redemption (Psa 49:8). (2.) Neither is it a resurrection
from that double death; for they that are in that, are past
recovery also. (3.) And as for those that are dead to sin,
it is nonsense to say there shall, or can be a resurrection
from that: for that itself is a resurrection; which
resurrection also, the apostle had then passed through: and
also all the brethren, as he saith, You hath he quickened,
who were dead in trespasses and sins (Col 2:12,13,20). And
again, “If ye then be risen with Christ” (Col
3:1), and again, “Wherein also ye are risen with
him, through the faith of the operation of God, who
hath raised him from the dead” (Col 2:12). (4.) The
dead therefore in this scripture, must be understood of
those that have departed this life, that have body and soul
separated each from the other; and so the resurrection, a
resurrection of the body out of the grave; as Daniel saith,
“Many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth
shall awake” (Dan 12:2). And again, “The hour
is coming, in the which all that are in the graves shall
hear his voice, and shall come forth,” &c. (John
5:28,29).
Second. [What is meant by the
resurrection.] The resurrection of the just, then, is
the rising of the bodies of the just, and the resurrection
of the unjust, the rising of their bodies, at the last
judgment. This also is the meaning of that saying of Paul
to Agrippa, “I stand,” saith he, “and am
judged for the hope of the promise made of God unto our
fathers” (Acts 26:6), which promise at first began to
be fulfilled in the resurrection of the body of Christ
(Acts 13:32,33), and hath its accomplishment, when the
dead, small and great, are raised out of their graves.
Wherefore, though Paul saith in the 13th of the Acts, it is
already fulfilled; yet here he saith, he hopes it shall
come. “Which promise,” saith he,
“our twelve tribes, instantly serving God day
and night, hope to come” (Acts 26:7). As God told
Daniel, saying, “go thy way, till the end be:
for thou shalt rest and stand in thy lot at the end of the
days” (Dan 12:13).
Christ is already risen, and therefore so
far the promise is fulfilled; but his saints are yet in
their graves, and therefore that part of the fulfilling of
it is yet to come, as he saith, “Why should it be
thought a thing incredible with you, that God should raise
the dead?” (Acts 26:8).
Again, That it is the resurrection of the
dead bodies of both saints and sinners that is here
inserted, it is further evident; because the apostle saith,
it is the resurrection, that the very Pharisees
themselves allowed. I have hope towards God, saith he,
which themselves also allow; then what that hope is, he in
the next words sheweth, namely, that there shall be a
resurrection of the dead, &c. Now we know, that the
Pharisees did not allow of a resurrection from a state of
nature, to a state of grace, which is the same with the new
birth; but did confidently allow and teach, that they were
the children of Abraham, according to the flesh. Yea, when
any of them began to adhere, or incline to Christ’s
doctrine in some things, yet the doctrine of the new birth,
or of being raised from a state of nature, to a state of
grace, they would very much stick at; though in the
meantime, they utterly were against the doctrine of the
Sadducees, which denied the resurrection of the body (John
3:1-9; 8:51-56; Acts 23:6-8).
Further, the resurrection here spoken of,
must needs be the resurrection of the body, because it is
called, “a resurrection of the dead, both of the just
and unjust”—that is, of both saints and
sinners, according to the saying of Christ, “The hour
is coming, in the which all that are in the graves shall
hear his voice, and shall come forth; they that have done
good, unto the resurrection of life; and they that have
done evil, unto the resurrection of damnation” (John
5:28,29).
Third. [The resurrection spoken of
is a thing yet to come;] the resurrection here
mentioned, is a resurrection to come, not already
enjoyed, either by saints or sinners—“There
shall be a resurrection of the dead, both of the just and
unjust.” Now, I say, the resurrection here being yet
deferred by the just, and counted also the resurrection of
the dead, both of the just and unjust: it must needs be the
same resurrection that is spoken of by Job, who saith,
“So man lieth down, and riseth not: till the heavens
be no more, they shall not awake, nor be raised out
of their sleep” (Job 14:12).
Having thus, in few words, opened this
scripture unto you, I shall in the next place, for the
further satisfaction of those that are yet wavering, and
for the refreshment of those that are strong and steadfast,
lay down before you, several undeniable scripture
demonstrations of the resurrection of the dead, both of
the just, and unjust.
FIRST, I shall first begin with,
THE RESURRECTION OF THE
JUST.
First, The just must arise, because
Christ is risen from the dead. Christ is the head of the
just, and they are the members of his body; and because of
this union, therefore the just must arise. This is the
apostle’s own argument—“If Christ,”
saith he, “be preached that he rose from the dead,
how say some among you that there is no resurrection of the
dead? But if there be no resurrection of the dead, then is
Christ not risen” (1 Cor 15:12,13). Now, I say, the
reason why the apostle thus argueth the resurrection from
the dead, by the resurrection of Christ, it is, because the
saints, of whose resurrection he here chiefly discourseth,
are in their bodies, as well as in their souls, the members
of Christ; “Know ye not,” saith he, “that
your bodies are the members of Christ” (1 Cor 6:15).
A very weighty argument; for if a good man be a member of
Christ, then he must either be raised out of his grave, or
else sin and death must have power over a member of Christ.
I say again, if this body be not raised, then also Christ
is not a complete conqueror over his enemies; forasmuch as
death and the grave have still power over his members.
“The last enemy that shall be destroyed is
death” (1 Cor 15:26). Now, though Christ in his own
person hath a complete conquest over death, &c., yet
death hath still power over the bodies of all that are in
their graves: now, I say, Christ being considered with
relation to his members, then he hath not yet a complete
conquest over death, neither will he, until they every one
be brought forth of their graves; for then, and not till
then, shall that saying be every way fulfilled,
“Death is swallowed up in victory” (1 Cor
15:53,54).
Second, As there must be a
resurrection of the just, because Christ is their head, and
they his members: so also, because the body of the saints,
as well as their soul, is the purchase of Christ’s
blood. “Ye are bought with a price:” saith
Paul; “therefore glorify God in your body, and in
your spirit, which are God’s” (1 Cor 6:20).
Christ will not lose the purchase of his blood. O death,
saith Christ, I will have them; O grave, I will make thee
let them go; I will ransom them from the power of the
grave, I will redeem them from death. I have bought them,
and they shall be mine. “O death, I will be thy
plagues; O grave, I will be thy destruction” (Hosea
13:14): I say, though the power of the grave be invincible,
and death be “the king of terrors” (Job 18:14),
yet he who hath the keys of hell and of death at his girdle
(Rev 1:18), to him belongeth the issues from death.
“He that is our God is the God of
salvation; and unto God the Lord belong the issues
from death” (Psa 68:20), and we, the price of his
blood, shall be delivered.
Third, As the body is the member of
Christ, and the price of his blood: so it is the temple of
the Holy Ghost, which is in us. “What? know ye not
that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which
is in you, - - and ye are not your own?” (1 Cor
6:19). The body is no such ridiculous thing in the account
of Christ as it was in the account of the Sadducees.
“The body is not for fornication, but for the
Lord; and the Lord for the body” (verse 13), and that
not only in this world, but that which is to come;
wherefore he saith, “God hath both raised up the Lord
[Jesus,] and will also raise us up by his own
power”—that is, as he hath raised up the body
of Christ, so will he raise up ours also by
Christ.
Fourth, The bodies of the just must
arise again, because of that similitude, that must be
betwixt the body of the Lord Jesus Christ and the bodies of
the saints. “When he shall appear, we shall be like
him” (1 John 3:2). Now we have it abundantly manifest
in scripture, that the body of the Lord Jesus, was raised
out of the grave, caught up into heaven, and that it ever
remaineth in the holiest of all, a glorified body (Luke
24:3-7; 36-43; John 20:24-28; Acts 1:2-11; 2:31; 17:30-32;
Mark 16:6,7,19; Heb 7:24-26; 8:1-3; 10:12).
Now, I say, it would be very strange to me
if Christ should be raised, ascended, and glorified in that
body; and yet that his people should be with him, no
otherwise than in their spirits; especially, seeing that he
in his resurrection, is said to be but “the
first-born from the dead, and the first-fruits of them that
sleep” (Col 1:18; 1 Cor 15:23). For we know, that a
first-begotten doth imply more sons, and that first-fruits
do foreshew an after-crop; wherefore we conclude, that
“as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be
made alive. But every man in his own order: Christ the
first-fruits; afterward they that are Christ’s at his
coming” (1 Cor 15:22,23).
And hence it is that the scripture saith, He
“shall change our vile body, that it may be fashioned
like unto his glorious body” (Phil 3:21). And hence
it is again, that the day of Christ is said to be the day
of the manifestation of the sons of God, and of the
redemption of our body (Rome 8:21-24), for then shall the
saints of God not only be, but appear as their Saviour,
being delivered from their graves, as he is from his, and
glorified in their bodies, as he is in his.
Fifth, There must be a resurrection
of the body of the saints, because the body, as well as the
mind, hath been a deep sharer in the afflictions that we
meet with for the gospel’s sake. Yea, the body is
ofttimes the greater sufferer, in all the calamities, that
for Christ’s sake we here undergo; it is the body
that feels the stocks, the whip, hunger and cold, the fire
and rack, and a thousand calamities; it is the body in
which we have the dying marks of the Lord Jesus,
“that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest
in our mortal1 flesh” (Gal 6:17; 2 Cor
4:11). God is so just a God, and so merciful to his people,
that though the bodies of his saints should, through the
malice of the enemy, be never so dishonourably tortured,
killed, and sown in the grave: yet he will, as further will
be shewn anon, raise it again in incorruption, glory, and
honour: as he saith also in another place, that we who have
continued with Christ in his temptations, that have for his
sake underwent the reproach and malice of the world, to
you, saith Christ. “I appoint a kingdom, as my Father
hath appointed unto me” (Luke 22:28,29). If we
suffer, we shall also reign with him (2 Tim 2:12):
“and he that hateth his life in this world shall keep
it unto life eternal” (John 12:25). All this is to be
enjoyed, especially at the resurrection of the just.
But,
Sixth, There must be a resurrection
of the just, otherwise, there will be the greatest
disappointment on all sides that ever was, since man had a
being on the earth. A disappointment, I say,
1. Of the will of
God—“And this is the Father’s will which
hath sent me,” saith Christ, “that of all which
he hath given me I should lose nothing, [not a dust,] but
should raise it up again at the last day” (John
6:39).
2. A disappointment of the power of
God; for he that hath raised up the Lord Jesus, doth also
intend to raise us up by his power, even our bodies; as
Paul saith, “The body is not for fornication,
but for the Lord; and the Lord for the body. And God hath
both raised up the Lord, and will also raise up us by his
power” (1 Cor 6:13,14).
3. If there should be no resurrection of the
just, Christ also would be wonderfully disappointed of the
fruits of all his sufferings. As I told you before, his
people are the price of his blood, and the members of his
body, and he is now at the right hand of God, “far
above all principalities and powers, and every name that is
named,” expecting till his enemies be made his
footstool (Heb 1:13), and brought under the foot of the
weakest saint; which will not be, until the last enemy
death is destroyed. We know that he said, when he went
away, that he would come again, and fetch all his people to
himself, even up into heaven, that where he is, there we
may be also (John 12:26; 14:1-3; 17:24). But, I say, how
will he be disappointed, if when he comes, the grave and
death should prevent and hinder him, and with its bars,
keep down those, whom he hath ransomed with his blood, from
the power thereof.
4. If the bodies of the just arise [not]
from the dead, then they also will be disappointed.
‘Tis true, the saints departed, have far more
fellowship and communion with God and the Lord Jesus, than
we have, or are not yet capable of having, they being in
paradise, and we in this world (Luke 23:43); but yet, I say
for all that, they are, though there, very much longing for
the day of the Lord’s vengeance, which will be the
day in which they will, and must arise from the dead. This,
I say, is the time that they long for, when they cry under
the altar, “How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost
thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell on
the earth?” (Rev 6:10,11). When they died, they died
in hope to “obtain a better resurrection” (Heb
11:35), and now they are gone, they long till that day be
come; till the day come, I say, when the dead, even all the
enemies of Christ, shall be judged; for then will he give
rewards to his servants the prophets, and to his saints,
and to all that fear his name, small and great (Rev
11:18).
5. If the just arise not, great
disappointment also will be to the saints yet alive in this
world; for, notwithstanding they have already received the
first-fruits of the Spirit, yet they wait, not only for
more of that, but also for the resurrection, redemption,
and changing of this vile body. “For our conversation
is in heaven,” saith Paul, “from whence also we
look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall
change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like to his
glorious body” (Rom 8:20-23; Phil 3:20,21). But now,
I say, if the body riseth not, then how can it be made like
to the glorious body of Christ Jesus: yea, what a sad
disappointment, infatuation, and delusion, are those poor
creatures under, that look, and that by scripture
warrant, for such a thing? They look for good, but behold
evil; they expect to be delivered in their whole man from
every enemy; but lo, both death and the grave, their great
enemies, do swallow them up for ever. But, beloved, be not
deceived. “The needy shall not always be forgotten,
the expectation of the poor shall not perish for
ever” (Psa 9:18). Saith Christ, He that seeth the
Son, and believeth on him that sent him, hath everlasting
life, and I will raise him up at the last day (John
6:40).
6. If the just arise not out of their
graves, then also is every grace of God in our souls
defeated; for though the spirit of devotion can put forth a
feigned show of holiness with the denial of the
resurrection, yet every grace of God in the elect doth
prompt them forward to live as becomes the gospel, by
pointing at this day; as, (1.) ‘Tis this that faith
looks at, according as it is written, “I believed,
and therefore have I spoken; we also believe, and therefore
speak; knowing that he which raised up the Lord Jesus shall
raise up us also by Jesus, and shall present us with
you” (2 Cor 4:13,14). (2.) Hope looks at this.
“We,” saith Paul, “which have the
first-fruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within
ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the
redemption of our body”—that is, we expect this
by hope; “but hope that is seen is not hope: for what
a man seeth,” or hath in present possession,
“why doth he yet hope for?” (Rom 8:23,24). (3.)
The grace of self-denial also worketh by this
doctrine—“If after the manner of men I have
fought with beasts at Ephesus, what advantageth it me, if
the dead rise not?” (1 Cor 15:32). As who should say,
Wherefore do I deny myself of those mercies and privileges
that the men of this world enjoy? Why do not I also, as
well as they, shun persecution for the cross of Christ? If
the dead rise not, what shall I be the better for all my
trouble that here I meet with for the gospel of Christ?
(4.) Both zeal and patience, with all other the graces of
the Spirit of God in our hearts, are much, yea, chiefly
encouraged, animated, and supported by this doctrine; as
James saith, “Be patient, therefore, brethren, unto
the coming of the Lord,” for then shall the dead be
raised (1 Thess 4:16,17). “Behold, the husbandman
waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth, and hath long
patience for it, until he receive the early and latter
rain. Be ye also patient; stablish your hearts; for the
coming of the Lord draweth nigh” (James
5:7,8).
Seventh, The doctrine of the
resurrection of the just, must needs be a certain truth of
God, if we consider the devilish, and satanical errors and
absurdities that must unavoidably follow the denial
thereof; as, he that holdeth no resurrection of our body,
he denieth the resurrection of the body of Christ. This is
the Spirit’s own doctrine—“For if the
dead rise not, then is not Christ raised” (1 Cor
15:16). He that denieth the resurrection of the members,
denieth the resurrection of the head; for seeing the
resurrection of the saints is proved by the resurrection of
Christ, he that doth deny the resurrection of the saints,
must needs deny the resurrection of Christ, that proves it.
Now this error, as it is in itself destructive to all
Christian religion: so it, like an adder, carrieth within
its bowels, many other alike devilish and filthy;
as,
1. He that denieth the resurrection of the
saints, he concludeth, that to preach deliverance from sin
and death, it is vain preaching; for how can he be freed of
sin, that is swallowed up for ever of death and the grave?
as he most certainly is, that is always contained therein,
as Paul saith, “If Christ be not risen,” whose
resurrection is the ground of ours, “then is
our preaching vain, and your faith is also
vain” (1 Cor 15:14), then we preach fables, and you
receive them for truth.
2. This error, casteth the lie in the face
of God, of Christ, and the Scriptures—“Yea, and
we,” saith Paul, “are found false witnesses of
God; because we have testified of God that he raised up
Christ: - - - if so be that the dead rise not” (1 Cor
15:15). Mark, before he said, Christ in his resurrection,
doth prove our resurrection; but now he saith, that our
resurrection will prove the truth of his; and indeed both
are true; for as by Christ’s rising, ours is
affirmed; so by ours, his is demonstrated.
3. The denial of the resurrection, it also
damneth all those that have departed this world in the
faith of this doctrine. “If Christ be not
raised,” (as if he is not, we rise not, then is not
only) your faith vain, ye are yet in your sins (that are
alive,) but “then they also which are fallen asleep
in Christ are perished” (1 Cor 15:17,18).
4. He that denieth the resurrection of the
just, he concludeth, that the Christian is of all men the
most miserable. Mark the words: “If in this life only
we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most
miserable” (1 Cor 15:19). First of all, men the most
miserable, because we let go present enjoyments for those
that will never come, “if the dead rise not.”
Of all men most miserable, because our faith, our hope, our
joy, and peace, are all but a lie, “if the dead rise
not.” But you will say, he that giveth up himself to
God shall have comfort in this life. Ah! but “if the
dead rise not,” all our comfort that now we think we
have from God, will then be found presumption and madness,
because we believe, that God hath so loved us, as to have
us in his day, in body and soul, to heaven: which will be
nothing so, if the dead rise not. If in this life only, we
have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable. Poor
Christian! thou that lookest for the blessed hope of the
resurrection of the body, at the glorious appearing of the
great God, and our Saviour Jesus Christ, how wilt thou be
deceived, if the dead rise not! “But now is Christ
risen from the dead, and become the first-fruits of
them that slept. For since by man came death, by man
came also the resurrection of the dead” (1 Cor
15:20,21).
5. But again; he that denieth the
resurrection of the dead, he setteth open a flood-gate to
all manner of impiety; he cutteth the throat of a truly
holy life, and layeth the reins upon the neck of the most
outrageous lusts; for if the dead rise not, let us eat and
drink; that is, do anything, though never so diabolical and
hellish; “let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we
die” (1 Cor 15:32), and there is an end of us; we
shall not arise again, to receive either evil or
good.
6. To deny this resurrection, nay, if a man
do but say, it is past either with him or any Christian:
his so saying tendeth directly to the destruction and
overthrow of the faith of them that hear him; and is so far
from being according to the doctrine of God, that it eateth
out good and wholesome doctrine even as cankers eat the
face and flesh of a man. How ill-favouredly do they look,
that have their nose and lips eaten off with the canker?
Even so badly doth the doctrine of no resurrection of the
dead, look in the eyes of God, Christ, saints, and
scripture (2 Tim 2:18).
7. I conclude then, that to deny the
resurrection of the bodies of the just, it
argueth,
(1.) Great ignorance of God, ignorant of his
power to raise, ignorant of his promise to raise, ignorant
of his faithfulness to raise; and that both to himself,
Son, and saints, as I shewed before. Therefore saith Paul
to those that were thus deluded, “Awake to
righteousness, and sin not; for some have not the knowledge
of God. I speak this to your shame” (1 Cor
15:34). As if he had said, Do you profess Christianity? and
do you question the resurrection of the body? Do you now
know, that the resurrection of the body, and glory to
follow, is the very quintessence of the gospel of Jesus
Christ? Are you ignorant of the resurrection of the Lord
Jesus, and do you question the power and faithfulness of
God, both to his Son and his saints; because you say, there
shall be no resurrection of the dead? You are ignorant of
God; of what he can do, of what he will do, and of what he
will by doing glorify himself.
(2.) As it argueth very great ignorance of
God’s power, faithfulness, &c., so it argueth
gross ignorance of the tenor and current of the scriptures;
for “as touching the dead, that they rise: have ye
not read in the book of Moses [saith Christ] how in the
bush, God spake unto him, saying, I am the God of
Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob? He is
not the God of the dead, but the God of the living: ye
therefore do greatly err” (Mark 12:26,27).
To be the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,
it is to be understood of his being their God under a new
covenant consideration; as he saith, “I will be their
God, and they shall be my people.” Now, thus he is
not the God of the dead—that is, of those that
perish, whether they be angels or men (Heb 8:10,11; John
8:42; 1 John 3:8-10; Hosea 6:2; Col 3:4; Eph
1:4).
Now, I say, they that are the children of
God, as Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, they are counted the
living under a threefold consideration—(a.) In
their Lord and head, and thus all the elect may be said to
live; for they are from eternity chosen in him, who also is
their life, though possibly many of them yet unconverted. I
say, yet Christ is their life, by the eternal purpose of
God. (b.) The children of the new covenant, do live
both in their spirits in glory, by open vision, and here by
faith and the continual communication of grace from Christ
into their souls (Gal 2:20). (c.) They live also
with respect to their rising again; for God “calleth
those things which be not as though they were” (Rom
4:17). To be born, dead, buried, risen, and ascended, are
all present with God, he liveth not by time, as we
do—a thousand years to him are but as the day that is
past. And again, “One day is as a thousand
years” (2 Peter 3:8). Eternity, which is God himself,
admitteth of no first, second, and third; all things are
naked and bare before him, and present with him (Heb 4:13;
Isa 46:9,10); all his live unto him. There shall be
a resurrection of the dead, both of the just and unjust
(Rom 8:29-34).
A resurrection—of what? Of that which
is sown, or of that which was never sown? If of that which
is sown, then it must be either of that nature that was
sown, or else of the corruption that cleaveth to it; but it
is the nature, and not the corruption that cleaveth unto
it, that riseth again. And verily, the very term
“resurrection” is a forcible argument to prove
the dead shall come forth of their graves; for the Holy
Ghost hath always spoken more properly than to say,
“There shall be a resurrection of the dead, both of
the just and unjust;” when yet neither the good nor
the bad shall come forth of their graves, but rather
something else to delude the world withal.
Having thus in few words, shewed you the
truth of the resurrection of the dead, I now
come,
SECOND—To the manner of their
rising.
THE MANNER OF THE RESURRECTION OF THE
JUST.
And FIRST of the just.
The apostle, when he had in the fifteenth of
the 1st of the Corinthians proved the truth and certainty
of the resurrection, he descends to the discovery of the
manner of it; and to the end, he might remove those foolish
scruples that attend the hearts of the ignorant, he begins
with one of their questions—“But some
man will say,” saith he, “How are the dead
raised up? and with what body do they come?” (verse
35). To which he answereth,
First, By a similitude of seed, that
is sown in the earth. In which similitude, he inserteth
three things—
1. That our reviving or rising, must be
after death—“That which thou sowest is not
quickened except it die” (verse 36).
2. That at our rising, we shall not only
revive and live, but be changed into a far more glorious
state than when we were sown. “That which thou
sowest, thou sowest not that body that shall be,”
&c. “But God giveth it a body as it hath pleased
him” (verse 38)— that is, he giveth the body
more splendour, lustre, and beauty at its resurrection.
But,
3. Neither its quickening, not yet its
transcendent splendour, shall hinder it from being the same
body—as to the nature of it—that was sown in
the earth; for as God giveth it a body, for honour and
splendour as it pleaseth him, so “to every seed his
own body” (verse 38).
And, indeed, this similitude by which he
here reasoneth the manner of the resurrection of the just,
is very natural, and fitly suiteth each particular; for, as
to its burial—(1.) The corn of wheat is first dead,
and after sown and buried in the earth; and so is the body
of man. (2.) After the corn is thus dead and buried, then
it quickeneth and reviveth to life: so also shall it be
with our body; for after it is laid in the grave and
buried, it shall then quicken, rise, and revive.
Again, as to the manner of its change
in its rising, this similitude also doth fitly suit;
as,
It is sown a dead corn; it is raised a
living one. It is sown dry, and without comeliness; it
riseth green and beautiful. It is sown a single corn; it
riseth a full ear. It is sown in its husk; but in its
rising it leaveth that husk behind it.
Further, though the kernel thus die, be
buried, and meet with all this change and alteration in
these things, yet none of them can cause the nature of the
kernel to cease—it is wheat still. Wheat was sown and
wheat ariseth; only it was sown dead, dry, and barren
wheat; and riseth living, beautiful, and fruitful wheat. It
hath this alteration, then, that it doth greatly change its
resemblance, though yet it hath this power, as still to
retain its own nature. God giveth it a body as it pleaseth
him, “but to every seed his own
body.”
The apostle having thus presented the
manner of the resurrection of the saints by the nature
of seed sown and rising again; he proceedeth,
Second, for further illustration,
to three more similitudes—The first is, to shew
us the variety and glory of flesh. The second is, to shew
us the difference of glory that is between heavenly bodies,
and those that are earthy. The third is, to shew us the
difference that is between the glory of the light of the
sun, from that of the moon; and also how one star differeth
from another in glory: and then concludeth, “so is
the resurrection of the dead” (1 Cor 15:39-43). As
who should say, at the resurrection of the bodies, they
will be abundantly more altered and changed, than if the
flesh of beasts and fowls were made as noble as the flesh
of men; or the bodies of earth, were made as excellent as
the heavenly bodies, or as if the glory of the moon should
be made as bright, and as clear as the glory of the sun; or
as if the glory of the least star was as glorious, and as
shining, as the biggest in the firmament of
heaven.
It is a resurrection indeed, a
resurrection every way. The body ariseth, as to the nature
of it, the self-same nature; but as to the manner of it;
how far transcendent is it! There is a poor, dry, wrinkled
kernel cast into the ground, and there it lieth, and
swelleth, breaketh, and, one would think, perisheth; but
behold, it receiveth life, it chitteth,2 it
putteth forth a blade, and groweth into a stalk, there also
appeareth an ear; it also sweetly blossoms, with a full
kernel in the ear: it is the same wheat, yet behold how the
form and fashion of that which now ariseth, doth differ
from that which then was sown; its glory also when
‘twas sown, is no glory, when compared with that in
which it riseth. And yet it is the same that riseth that
was sown, and no other; though the same after a far more
glorious manner; not the same with its husk, but
without it. Our bran shall be left behind us when we
rise again. The comparison also between the bodies heavenly
and bodies earthly holds forth the same—“The
glory of the celestial is one, and the glory of the
terrestrial is another.” Now mark it; he doth not
speak here of the natures of each of these bodies; but of
the transcendent glory of one above another. “The
glory of the heavenly is one, and the glory of the earthly
is another.” Wherefore I say, at our rising, we shall
not change our nature, but our glory; we
shall be equal to the angels (Luke 20:36), not with respect
to their nature, but glory. The nature also of the
moon is one thing, and the glory of the moon is another;
and so one star also differeth from another in
glory.
A beggar hath the same nature as a king, and
gold in the ore, the same nature with that which is best
refined; but the beggar hath not the same glory with the
king, nor yet the gold in ore, the same glory with that
which is refined. But our state will be far more altered
than any of these in the days when we, like so many suns in
the firmament of heaven, arise out of the heart and bowels
of the earth.
These things thus considered do shew you how
vainly they argue, that say, our human nature consisting of
body and soul, shall not inherit the kingdom of God, and
also how far from their purpose, that saying of the apostle
is, which saith, that “flesh and blood shall not
inherit the kingdom of God.” And now also, because I
am fallen upon the objection itself, I shall not pass it,
but with a short dash at it. Wherefore reader, whoever thou
art, consider that frequently in scripture the words
“flesh” and “blood,” as also in the
place alleged, are not to be understood of that matter
which God made; which flesh cleaveth to our bones, and
blood runs in our veins: but is taken for that corruption,
weakness, mortality, and evil that cleaveth to it; which
weakness and corruption, because it possesseth all men, and
also wholly ruleth where the soul is unconverted; therefore
it beareth the name of that which is ruled and acted by
it—to wit, our whole man, consisting of body and
soul; yet, I say, is a thing distinct from that flesh and
blood which is essential to our being, and without which we
are no men. As, for instance, he that is Christ’s,
saith Paul, “hath crucified the flesh, with the
affections and lusts” (Gal 5:24), Who is so vain as
to think that the apostle by these words, should mean our
material flesh that hangeth on our bones, and that is mixed
with our natural blood, sinews, and veins; and not rather
of that inward fountain of sin, corruption, and
wickedness, which in another place he calleth “the
old man,” with his “deceitful lusts” (Eph
4:22). Again, “The flesh lusteth against the spirit,
and the spirit against the flesh.” Is it our flesh
that hangeth on our bones, which lusteth against the
spirit? and that also against which the spirit lusteth?
Certainly, if the spirit lusteth against our material
flesh, then it is our duty not to nourish it at all,
because, by nourishing of it we nourish that against which
the Spirit of God fighteth, and warreth. Nay, if the spirit
lust against the flesh on our bones simply considered as
flesh; and if it be our duty to follow the Spirit, as it
is, then we must needs kill ourselves, or cut our flesh
from our bones. For whatever the Spirit of God lusteth
against, it must be destroyed; yea, it is our duty with all
speed to destroy it. But wilt thou know, O vain man, that
by flesh here is to be understood, not the nature that God
hath made, but the corrupt apprehension, and wisdom, with
those inclinations to evil, that lodge within us, which in
another place are called the “wisdom of the
flesh,” yea, in plain terms, “flesh and
blood,” where Christ saith, “Flesh and blood
hath not revealed [this] unto thee, but my Father which is
in heaven” (Matt 16:17).
Nay, observe it, all these places, with many
others, do rather point at a corrupt soul, than a corrupt
body; for, indeed, sin and all spiritual wickedness, they
have their seat in the heart and soul of a man, and by
their using this or that member of the body, so defile the
man; the weaknesses of the body, or that attend our
material flesh and blood, they are weaknesses of another
kind, as sickness, aches, pains, sores, wounds, defection
of members, &c. Wherefore, where you read of flesh and
blood, as rejected of God; especially, when it speaks of
the flesh and blood of saints, you are not to understand it
as meant of the flesh, which is their proper human nature,
but of that weakness which cleaveth to
it.
Paul in another place, reckoneth up the
works of the flesh, in many things, as in witchcraft,
hatred, variance, strife, emulation, fornication, and many
others. But can any imagine, that he there should strike at
that flesh which hangeth on our bones, or rather at that
malignity and rebellion that is in the mind of man against
the Lord, by reason of which the members of the body are
used this way, and also sometimes that, to accomplish its
most filthy and abusive deeds (Gal 5:17-21). “They
were - - enemies in [their] mind by wicked works”
(Col 1:21).
Thus you see that “flesh and
blood” is not to be taken always for the flesh that
is upon our hands, and feet, and other parts of our body;
but for that sin, weakness, and infirmity, that cleaveth to
our whole man.
Further then, touching our real substantial
flesh, it may be either considered as God’s creature
purely, or as corrupted with sin and infirmity. Now if you
consider it as corrupted, so it shall not inherit the
kingdom of God: but yet consider it as God’s
creature, and so all that God hath converted to himself,
through Jesus Christ, shall, even with that body when
changed, inherit the kingdom of God. The woman whose
clothes are foul, can yet distinguish between the dirt and
the cloth on which it hangeth; and so deals God with us.
‘Tis true, there is not one saint, but while he
liveth here, his body is arrayed and infected with many
corrupt and filthy things, as touching bodily weaknesses;
yea, and also with many sinful infirmities, by reason of
that body of sin and death that yet remains in us: but yet
God, I say, distinguisheth between our weaknesses, and his
workmanship, and can tell how to save the whole man of his
people, while he is destroying the corruption and weakness
that cleaveth to them.
And now to return to the place
objected—“Flesh and blood shall not inherit the
kingdom of God.” It cannot be truly understood, that
that flesh which is man’s nature shall not enter the
kingdom; for then, as I said before, Christ must lose his
members, the purchase of his blood, the vessels and temples
of his Spirit; for all this is our body. Again, then Christ
also, in that his body, which is also our flesh and blood,
is not in glory, contrary to the whole current of the New
Testament (Heb 2:14,15; 7:24,25; 8;3,4; 10:10-12; Rev 1:18;
2:8).
Yea, it would be nonsense to say, there
should be a resurrection, and that our vile body
shall be changed, “and made like to the
glorious body of the Son of God;” if this body do not
at all rise again, but some other thing, which is not in
us, and our nature. But to be short; the apostle here, when
he saith, “Flesh and blood cannot inherit,”
&c., speaks properly of that mortality and weakness,
that now attends our whole man, and not of our real
substantial body itself. For after he had said,
“Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of
God,” he adds, “neither doth corruption inherit
incorruption,” which two sayings are answerable to
what he presently adds, saying, “Behold, I shew you a
mystery; we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be
changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the
last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the
dead”—mark, “the dead shall be raised
incorruptible”—that is, the dead shall be so
raised as that in their rising, incorruption shall possess
them instead of corruption, and immortality instead of that
mortality that descended to the grave with
them,—“for this corruptible”—mark,
this corruptible—“must put on incorruption, and
this mortal must put on immortality.” Mark, I
say, it is this corruptible, and this mortal, that must be
raised, though not corruptible and mortal, as it was
buried; but immortal and incorruptible; it shall leave its
grave- clothes of corruption and mortality behind it (1 Cor
15:50-53).
THIRD. The manner of which their rising, the
apostle doth more distinctly branch out a little above in
four particulars, which particulars are these that
follow—1. It is sown in corruption; it is raised
in incorruption. 2. It is sown in dishonour, it is
raised in glory. 3. It is sown in weakness, it is
raised in power. 4. It is sown a natural body, it is
raised a spiritual body (1 Cor 15).
1. It is raised in incorruption. We
are brought into this world by sin and corruption;
corruption is our father, and in sin did our mother
conceive us (Job 17:14; Psa 51:5). And hence it is that we
have our life, not only like a span, shadow, or post, for
shortness, but also, that it is attended with so much
vanity and vexation of spirit. But now being raised from
the dead incorruptible, which is also called a begetting
and birth, these things that now in our life annoy us, and
at last take away our life, are effectually destroyed; and
therefore we live for ever, as saith the
Spirit—“And there shall be no more death,
neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more
pain: for the former things,” that is, all our
corruptibleness, “are passed away” (Rev
21:4).
There shall be in our resurrection no
corruption, either of body or of soul; no weakness, nor
sickness, nor anything tending that way; as he saith, He
will present us “to himself a glorious church, not
having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing” (Eph
5:27). Therefore, when he saith it is raised in
incorruption, it is as if he had said, It is impossible
that they should ever sin more, be sick more, sorrow more,
or die more. “They which shall be counted worthy to
obtain that world, and the resurrection from the dead,
neither marry, nor are given in marriage;” though
‘twas thus with them in this world; “neither
can they die any more, for they are equal unto the angels;
and are the children of God, being the children of the
resurrection” (Luke 20:35, 36).
2. It is raised in glory. The
dishonour that doth attend the saint at his departing this
world, it is very great—“he is sown in
dishonour;” he is so loathsome at his death, that his
dearest friends are weary of him, stop their noses at him,
see no beauty in him, nor set any price upon him, (I speak
nothing here how some of them are hanged, starved,
banished, and so die, torn to pieces, and not suffered to
be put into graves,) but it is raised in glory. Glory is
the sweetness, comeliness, purity, and perfection of a
thing. The light is the glory of the sun, strength is the
glory of youth, and grey hairs are the glory of old
age—that is, it is the excellency of these things,
and that which makes them shine (1 Cor 15:40,41; Prov
20:29).
Therefore, to arise in glory, it is first to
arise in all the beauty, and utmost completeness that is
possible to possess a human creature; I say, in all its
features and members, inconceivably beautiful. Sin and
corruption have made mad work in our bodies as well
as in our souls. ‘Tis sin commonly that is the cause
of all the deformity and ill-favouredness that now cleaveth
to us, and that also rendereth us so dishonourable at our
death; but now at our rising, we being raised
incorruptible, we shall appear in such perfections, and
that of all sorts, belonging to the body, that all the
beauty and comeliness, sweetness and amiableness, that hath
at any time been in this world, it shall be swallowed up a
thousand times told with this glory. The Psalmist saith of
Christ that “he was fairer than the children of
men” (Psa 45:2), and that, as I believe, in his
outward man, as well as in his inward part. He was the
exactest, purest, completest, and beautifulest creature
that ever God made, till his visage was so marred by his
persecutions; for in all things he had and shall have
the pre-eminence (Isa 52:14; Col 1:18). Why, our bodies at
our resurrection will not only be as free from sin, as his
was before he died, but also as free from all other
infirmities as he was after he was raised again. In a word,
if incorruptibleness can put a beauty upon our bodies when
they arise, we shall have it. There shall be no lame legs,
nor crump shoulders, no bleared eyes, nor yet wrinkled
faces—He “shall change our vile body, that it
may be fashioned like unto his glorious body” (Phil
3:21).
Again, all the glory that a glorified soul
can help this body to, it at this day shall enjoy. That
soul that hath been these hundreds or thousands of years in
the heavens, soaking in the bosom of Christ, it shall in a
moment come spangling into the body again, and inhabit
every member and vein of the body, as it did before its
departure. That Spirit of God also that took its leave of
the body when it went to the grave, shall now in all
perfection dwell in this body again; I tell you, the body
at this day will shine brighter than the face of Moses or
Stephen, even as bright as the sun, the stars, and angels.
“When Christ who is our life, shall appear,
then shall ye also appear with him in glory” (Exo
34:29,35; Acts 6:15; Dan 12:3; Matt 13:43; Luke 20:36; Col
3:3,4).
3. It is raised in power. While we
are here, we are attended with so many weaknesses and
infirmities, that in time the least sin or sickness is too
hard for us, and taketh away both our strength, our beauty,
our days, our breath, and life, and all (Job 38:17). But
behold, we are raised in power, in that power that all
these things are as far below us as a grasshopper is below
a giant; at the first appearance of us the world will
tremble.
Behold, the gates of death and the bars of
the grave are now carried away on our shoulders, as Samson
carried away the gates of the city (Judg 16:3). Death
quaketh, and destruction falleth down dead at our feet:
What, then, can stand before us? We shall then carry that
grace, majesty, terror, and commanding power in our souls
that our countenances shall be like lightning3
(Compare Luke 20:16 with Matthew 28:2,3). “For this
corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal
must put on immortality. So when this corruptible shall
have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on
immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying that
is written, Death is swallowed up in victory” (1 Cor
15:53,54).
4. It is raised a spiritual body.
This is the last particular, and is indeed the reason of
the other three; it is an incorruptible body, because it is
a spiritual one; it is a glorious body, because it is a
spiritual one; it doth rise in power, because it is a
spiritual body. When the body is buried, or sown in the
earth, it is a body corruptible, dishonourable, weak, and
natural; but when it ariseth, it doth rise incorruptible,
glorious, powerful, and spiritual; so that so far as
incorruption is above corruption, glory above dishonour,
power above weakness, and spiritual above natural; so great
an alteration will there be in our body, when raised again.
And yet it is this body and not another; this in nature,
though changed into a far more glorious state, a thousand
times further than if a hoggard4 was changed to
be an emperor. Mark, “it is sown a natural
body;” a very fit word; for though there dwell never
so much of the Spirit and grace of God in it while it
liveth, yet so soon as the soul is separate from it, so
soon also doth the Spirit of God separate from it, and so
will continue while the day of its rising be come.
Therefore, it is laid into the earth a mere lump of
man’s nature—“It is sown a natural
body;” but now at the day when “the heavens
be no more,” as Job saith (14:12), then the trump
shall sound, even the trump of God, and, in a moment, the
dead shall be raised incorruptible, glorious, and spiritual
(1 Cor 15:52; 1 Thess 4:16,17). So that I say, the body
when it ariseth, will be so swallowed up of life and
immortality, that it will be, as if it had lost its own
human nature; though, in truth, the same substantial real
nature is every whit there still. ‘Tis the same
it that riseth, that was sown; “It is
sown,” “it is raised;”
“it is sown,” “it is
raised,” saith the apostle. You know, that things
which are candied, by the art of the apothecary, they are
so swallowed up with the sweetness and virtue of that in
which they are candied, that they are now, as though they
had no other nature, than that in which they are boiled:
when yet, in truth, the thing candied doth still retain its
own proper nature and essence; though by virtue of its
being candied, it loseth its former sourness, bitterness,
stinking, smell, or the like. Just thus, at the last day,
it will be with our bodies: we shall be so candied, by
being swallowed up of life, as before is shewed, that we
shall be, as if we were all spirit, when in truth, it is
but this body that is swallowed up of life. And it must
needs be, that our nature still remain, otherwise it cannot
be us that shall be in heaven, but something
besides us. Let us lose our proper human nature, and we
lose absolutely our being, and so are annihilated into
nothing. Wherefore it, the same it, that is
sown a natural body, it shall rise a spiritual
body.
But again, as I said, concerning things that
are candied; our body, when thus risen, it shall lose all
that sourness and stink, that now, by reason of sin and
infirmity, cleaveth to it: neither shall its lumpishness,
or unwieldiness, be any impediment to its acting after the
manner of angels. Christ hath shewed us, what our body at
our resurrection shall be, by shewing of us, in his word,
what his body was, at and after, his resurrection. We read,
that his body, after he was risen from the dead, though it
yet retained the very same flesh and bones that did
hang upon the cross, yet how angelical was it at all times,
upon all occasions! He could come in to his disciples with
that very body, when the doors were shut upon them: He
could, at pleasure, to their amazement, appear in the
twinkling of an eye, in the midst of them: he could be
visible and invisible as he pleased, when he sat at meat
with them: in a word, he could pass and repass, ascend and
descend in that body, with far more pleasure and ease, than
the bird by the art of her wing (Luke 24:31,32,36-42,50,51;
John 20:19,24-26; Acts 1:1-12; Mark 16:19; Eph
4:7-10).
Now, I say, as we have in this world borne
the image of our first father; so, at that day, we shall
have the image of Jesus Christ, and be as he
is—“As is the earthy, such are
they also that are earthy: and as is the heavenly,
such are they also that are heavenly. And as we have
borne the image of the earthy, we shall also, (at our
resurrection,) bear the image of the heavenly” (1 Cor
15:48,49). It is so in part now, but shall so be in
perfection then.
To mount up to heaven, and to descend again
at pleasure, shall, with us, in that day, be ordinary. If
there were ten thousand bars of iron, or walls of brass, to
separate between us, and our pleasure and desire, at that
day, they should as easily be pierced by us, as is the
cobweb, or air by the beams of the sun: And the reason is,
because to the Spirit, wherewith we shall be
inconceivably filled at that day, nothing is
impossible (Matt 17:20); and the working of it at that
day, shall be in that nature and measure as to swallow up
all impossibilities. He “shall change our vile body,
that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious
body,”—now mark, “according to the
working whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto
himself” (Phil 3:21). As who should say, I know that
there are many things, that in this world hinder us from
having our bodies like the body of Christ; but when God
shall raise us from the dead, because he will then have our
body like the body of his Son; He will stretch forth such a
power to work upon, and in our body, that he will remove
all impossibilities and hindrances.
Nay, further, we do not only see what
operation the Spirit will have in our body, by the carriage
of Christ, after his resurrection; but even by many a saint
before their death. The Spirit used to catch Elijah away,
no man could tell whither. It carried Ezekiel hither and
thither: It carried Christ from the top of the pinnacle of
the temple into Galilee; through it he walked on the sea;
the Spirit caught away Philip from the eunuch, and carried
him as far as Azotus (1 Kings 18:11,12; 2 Kings 2:11; Eze
3:14; Luke 4:14; Matt 14:25; Acts 8:39,40).
Thus the great God hath given us a taste of
the power and glory that is in himself, and how easily it
will help us, by its possessing 5 of us at the
resurrection, to act and do like angels; as Christ saith,
They that shall be counted worthy of that world, and of the
resurrection from the dead, they shall not die, but be
equal to the angels (Luke 21:36).
Further, as the body by being thus
spiritualized, shall be as I have said; so again it must
needs be, that hereby all the service of the body, and
faculties of the soul, must be infinitely enlarged also.
Now “we shall see him as he is,” and now we
shall know even as we are known (1 John 3:2; 1 Cor
13:12).
First, Now we shall see him; to wit,
Christ in his glory; not by revelation only, as we do now,
but then face to face; and he will have us with him
to this very end (John 17:24). Though John was in
the Spirit when he had the vision of Christ, yet it made
him fall at his feet as dead (Rev 1:17); and also turned
Daniels’ beauty into corruption (Dan 10:8). It was so
glorious, and so overweighing a glory, that he appeared in;
but we shall, at the day of our resurrection, be so
furnished, that we shall with the eagle, be able to look
upon the sun in his strength: we shall then, I say,
“see Him as he is,” who now is in the light,
that no eye hath seen, nor any man can see till that day (1
Tim 6:16).
Now we shall see into all things; there
shall not be anything hid from us; there shall not be a
saint, a prophet, or saved soul, small or great, but we
shall then perfectly know them. Also, all the works of
creation, election, and redemption, and shall see and know
as thoroughly, all the things of heaven, and earth, and
hell, even as perfectly, as now we know our A, B, C. For
the Spirit, with which we shall in every cranny of soul and
body be filled, I say, “searcheth all things, yea,
the deep things of God” (1 Cor 2:10). We see what
strange things have been known by the prophets and saints
of God, and that when they knew but “in
part.”
Abraham could, by it, tell to a day, how
long his seed should be under persecution in Egypt (Gen
15:13); Elisha, by it, could tell what was done in the king
of Assyria’s bed-chamber (2 Kings 6:12); Ahijah could
know by this, Jeroboam’s wife, so soon, yea before
her feet entered within his door, though he saw her not (1
Kings 14:1-6).
The prophet of Judah could tell by this,
what God would do to Bethel, for the idolatry there
committed; and could also point out the man by name that
should do the execution, long before he was born (1 Kings
13:2). What shall I say, Enoch by it could tell what should
be done at the end of the world (Jude 14,15). How did the
prophets, to a circumstance, prophesy of Christ’s
birth, his death, his burial, of their giving him gall and
vinegar, of their parting his raiment, and piercing his
hands and feet! (Isa 53). Of his riding on an ass also; all
this they saw, when they spake of him (John 12:41). Peter
also, though half asleep, could at the very first word,
call Moses and Elias by their names, when they appeared to
Christ in the holy mount (Luke 9:33). He is very ignorant
of the operation of the Spirit of God, that scrupleth these
things. But now, I say, if these things have been done,
seen, and known, by spiritual men, while their knowledge
hath been but in part, how shall we know, see, and discern,
when that which is perfect is come? Which will be at the
resurrection; “It is raised a spiritual
body.”
Thus, in few words, have I shewed you the
truth of the resurrection of the just, and also the manner
of their rising. Had I judged it convenient, I might have
much enlarged on each particular, and have added many more;
for the doctrine of the resurrection, however questioned by
heretics, and erroneous persons; yet is such a truth, that
almost all the holy scriptures of God point at, and centre
in it.
God hath, from the beginning of the world,
shewed to us, that our body must be with him, as well as
our soul, in the kingdom of heaven. I say, he hath shewed
us, how he will deal with those that are alive at
Christ’s coming, by his translating of Enoch (Gen
5:24), and by taking him body and soul to himself (Heb
11:5); As also, by his catching of Elias up body and soul
into heaven, in a fiery chariot (2 Kings 2:11),
and,
Secondly He hath often put us in
remembrance of the rising of those that are dead, at that
day, as, (1.) By the faith he gave Abraham, concerning the
offering of his son: for when he offered him, he accounted
“that God was able to raise him up,
even from the dead; from whence also he received him in a
figure” (Heb 11:19). In a figure of the resurrection
of Christ, for Abraham’s justification; and of
Abraham’s resurrection by Christ at the last day, for
his glorification. (2.) By the faith he gave Joseph
concerning his bones; which charge, the godly in Egypt, did
diligently observe, and to that end, did keep them four
hundred years; and at length, carried them, I say, from
Egypt to Canaan, which was a type of our being carried in
our body, from this world to heaven (Heb 11:22).
Besides, how oft did God give power to his
prophets, servants, and Christ Jesus, to raise some that
were now dead, and some that had been long so; and all, no
doubt, to put the present generations, as also the
generations yet unborn, in mind of the resurrection of the
dead. To this end, I say, how was the Shunammite’s
son raised from the dead? (2 Kings 4). The man also at the
touching of the bones of Elisha? (2 Kings 13:20,21).
Together with the body of Lazarus, with Jairus’s
daughter, and Tabitha, and many others, who, after their
souls were departed from them, Lazarus lying in his grave
four days, were all raised to life again, and lived with
that very body out of which the soul, at their death, had
departed (Luke 8:53-56; John 11:43,44; Acts 9:40,41). But
above all, that notable place in Matthew, at the
resurrection of the Lord Jesus, gives us a notable
fore-word of the resurrection of the just. Saith the text,
“And the graves were opened; and many bodies of the
saints which slept arose, and came out of the graves after
his resurrection, and went into the holy city, and appeared
unto many” (Matt 27:52,53).
When the author to the Hebrews had given us
a catalogue of the worthies of the Old Testament, he saith
at last, “These all died in faith.” In the
faith of what? That they should lie and rot in their grave
eternally? No, verily; this is the faith of Ranters, not of
Christians. They all died in faith, that they should rise
again; and therefore counted this world not worth the
living in, upon unworthy terms, that after death
“they might obtain a better resurrection” (Heb
11:13,35).
It is also worth the considering, that of
Paul to the Philippians, where he saith that he was
confident that that God that had begun a good work in them
would “perform it until the day of Jesus
Christ” (Phil 1:6). Which day of Christ, was not the
day of their conversion, for that was passed with them
already, they were now the children of God; but this day of
Christ, it is the same which in other places is called the
day when he shall come with the sound of the last trump to
raise the dead. For you must know, that the work of
salvation is not at an end with them that are now in
heaven; no, nor ever will, until (as I shewed you before)
their bodies be raised again. God, as I have told you, hath
made our bodies the members of Christ, and God doth not
count us thoroughly saved, until our bodies be as well
redeemed and ransomed out of the grave and death, as our
souls from the curse of the law, and dominion of
sin.
Though God’s saints have felt the
power of much of his grace, and have had many a sweet word
fulfilled on them; yet one word will be unfulfilled on
their particular person, so long as the grave can shut her
mouth upon them: but, as I said before, when the gates of
death do open before them, and the bars of the grave do
fall asunder; then shall be brought to pass that saying
that is written, “Death is swallowed up of
victory;” and then will they hear that most pleasant
voice, “Awake and sing, ye that dwell in dust: for
thy dew is as the dew of herbs, and the earth shall
cast out the dead” (Isa 26:19). Thus much touching
the truth of the resurrection of the just, with the manner
of their rising.
Now you must know, that the time of the
rising of these just, will be at the coming of the Lord:
for when they arise, nay, just before they are raised, the
Lord Jesus Christ will appear in the clouds in flaming
fire, with all his mighty angels; the effect of which
appearing will be the rising of the dead, &c.
“For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with
a shout,” saith Paul, “and with the voice of
the archangel, and with the trump of God, and the dead
shall rise” (2 Thess 1:8; 1 Thess 4:16; 1 Cor
15:52).
Now at the time of the Lord’s coming,
there will be found in the world alive both saints and
sinners. As for the saints that then shall be found alive,
they shall, so soon as all the saints are raised out of
their graves, not die, but be changed, and swallowed up of
incorruption, immortality, and glory; and have the
soul-spiritual translation, as the raised saints shall
have; as he saith, “We shall not all [die, or] sleep,
but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling
of an eye, - - for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead
shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be
changed” (1 Cor 15:51,52). And again, “For the
Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with
the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God: and
the dead in Christ shall rise first: then we which are
alive and remain shall be caught up together with
them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so
shall we ever be with the Lord” (1 Thess 4:16,17). As
he saith also in another place, he “shall judge the
quick and the dead at his appearing and his kingdom”
(2 Tim 4:1).
Now when the saints that sleep shall be
raised thus incorruptible, powerful, glorious, and
spiritual; and also those that then shall be found alive,
made like them: then forthwith, before the unjust are
raised, the saints shall appear before the judgment-seat of
the Lord Jesus Christ, there to give an account to their
Lord the Judge, of all things they have done; and to
receive a reward for their good according to their
labour.
They shall rise, I say, before the wicked,
they being themselves the proper children of the
resurrection; that is, Those that must have all the
glory of it, both as to pre-eminency and sweetness; and
therefore they are said, when they rise, to rise from
the dead; that is, in their rising, they leave the
reprobate world behind them (Luke 20:35,36; Acts 3:15;
4:10; 13:30; John 12:1,9,17). And it must be so, because
also the saints will have done their account, and be set
upon the throne with Christ, as kings and princes with him,
to judge the world, when the wicked world are raised. The
saints shall judge the world; they shall judge angels; yea,
they shall sit upon the thrones of judgment to do it (1 Cor
6:2,3; Psa 122:5). But to pass that, [we come THIRD, to the
examination the just must undergo, and the account they
must give to the Lord the Judge; or,]
THE JUDGMENT OF THE JUST.
Now when the saints are raised, as ye have
heard, they must give an account of all things, in general,
that they have done while they were in the world; of all
things, I say, whether they be good or bad.
FIRST, Of all their bad; but mark,
not under the consideration of vagabonds, slaves and
sinners, but as sons, stewards, and servants of the Lord
Jesus. That this shall be, it is evident from divers places
of the holy Scriptures:
First, Paul saith, “We shall
all stand before the judgment- seat of
Christ,”—we saints—“For it is
written, As I live, saith the Lord, every knee shall
bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to God. So then
every one of us shall give account of himself to God”
(Rom 14:10-12). Again, “Wherefore we labour, that,
whether present or absent, we may be accepted of him. For
we must all appear before the judgment-seat of Christ; that
every one [of us] may receive the things done in
his body, according to what he hath done, whether it
be good or bad” (2 Cor 5:9,10).
It is true, God loveth his people, but yet
he loveth not their sins, nor anything they do, though with
the greatest zeal for him, if he be contrary to his word;
wherefore as truly as God will given a reward to his saints
and children for all that they have indeed well done; so
truly will he at this day distinguish their good and bad:
and when both are manifest by the righteous judgment of
Christ; he will burn up their bad, with all their labour,
travel, and pains in it for ever. He can tell how to save
his people, and yet take vengeance on their inventions (Psa
99:8).
That is an observable place, in the first
epistle of Paul to the Corinthians, and the third chapter,
“If any man build,” saith he, “upon this
foundation [Christ] gold, silver, precious stones, wood,
hay, stubble; every man’s work shall be made
manifest: for the day shall declare it, because it shall be
revealed by fire; and the fire shall try every man’s
work of what sort it is. If any man’s work abide
which he hath built thereupon, he shall receive a reward.
If any man’s work shall be burned, he shall suffer
loss; but he himself shall be saved; yet so as by
fire” (1 Cor 3:12-15). Now observe,
1. As I said before, the foundation
is Christ (verse 11).
2. The gold, silver, and precious stones
that here are said to be built upon him, are all the
actings in faith and love, according to the word, that the
saints are found doing for his sake in the world (1 Peter
1:7; Rev 3:18).
3. To build on him wood, hay, and stubble,
it is to build, together with what is right in itself,
human inventions and carnal ordinances, fathering them
still on God and his allowance.
4. The fire that here you read of, it is the
pure word and law of God (Jer 23:29; John
12:48).
5. The day that here you read of, it is the
day of Christ’s coming to judgment, to reveal the
hidden things of darkness, and to make manifest the
counsels of the heart (1 Cor 4:5).
6. At this day, the gold, silver, precious
stones, wood, hay, and stubble, and that of every man,
shall be tried by this fire, that it may be manifest of
what sort it is; the wind, the rain, and floods, beat now
as vehemently against the house upon the rock, as against
that on the sand (Luke 6:48,49).
Observe again,
(1.) That the apostle speaks here of the
saved, not of the reprobate—“He himself shall
be saved.”
(2.) That this saved man may have wood, hay,
and stubble; that is, things that will not abide the
trial.
(3.) That neither this man’s goodness,
nor yet God's love to him, shall hinder all his wood,
hay, or stubble from coming on the stage, “Every
man’s work shall be manifest: the fire shall try
every man’s work, of what sort it
is.”
(4.) Thus, a good man shall see all his
wood, hay, and stubble burnt up in the trial before his
face.
(5.) That good man then shall suffer loss,
or, the loss of all things that are not then according to
the word of God—“If any man’s works shall
be burnt,” or any of them, “he shall suffer
loss; but he himself shall be saved; yet so as by
fire”—that is, yet so as that all that ever he
hath done, shall be tried, and squared by the word of
God.
From all which, it must be unavoidably
concluded, that the whole body of the elect must count with
their Lord for all things they have done, whether good or
bad, and that he will destroy all their bad, with the
purity of his word, yea, and all their pains, travel, and
labour that they have spent about it. I am persuaded that
there are now many things done by the best of saints, that
then they will gladly disown and be ashamed of; yea, which
they have and do still do with great devotion. Alas, what
gross things do some of the saints in their devotion father
upon God, and do reckon him the author thereof, and that he
also prompts them forward to the doing thereof, and doth
give them his presence in the performance of them! Yea, and
as they father many superstitions and scriptureless things
upon him; so they die in the same opinion, and never come
in this world, to the sight of their evil and ignorance
herein.6
But now the judgment-day is the principal
time wherein everything shall be set in its proper place;
that which is of God in its place, and that which is not,
shall now be discovered, and made manifest. In many things
now we offend all; and then we shall see the many offences
we have committed, and shall ourselves judge them as they
are. The Christian, is in this world, so candid a creature,
that take him when he is not under some great temptation,
and he will ingeniously confess to his God, before all men,
how he hath sinned and transgressed against his Father; and
will fall down at the feet of God, and cry, Thou art
righteous, for I have sinned; and thou art gracious,
that, notwithstanding my sin, thou shouldest save me. Now,
I say, if the Christian is so simple and plain-hearted with
God, in the days of his imperfection, when he is
accompanied with many infirmities and temptations; how
freely will he confess and acknowledge his miscarriages,
when he comes before his Lord and Saviour; absolutely
stript of all temptation and imperfection. “As I
live, saith the Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every
tongue shall confess to God” (Rom 14:11; Phil
2:10,11). Every knee shall bow, and reverence God the
Creator, and Christ the Redeemer of the world; and every
tongue shall confess, that his will alone ought by them to
have been obeyed in all things; and shall confess also, and
that most naturally and freely—I mean, the saints
shall—in how many things they were deceived,
mistaken, deluded, and drawn aside in their intended
devotion and honour to God.
[Second.] But yet take notice, that
in this day, when the saints are thus counting for their
evil before their Saviour and Judge; they shall not then,
as now, at the remembrance and confession of sin, be filled
with the guilt, confusion, and shame that now through the
weakness of faith attendeth their souls; neither shall they
in the least be grieved or offended, that God hath before
the angels and the rest of their holy brethren, laid open
to a tittle their infirmities, from the least and first, to
the biggest and last. For,
1. The God to whom they confess all, they
will now more perfectly than ever see he doth love them,
and free them from all, even when and before they confess
and acknowledge them to him; and they shall, I say, have
their soul so full of the ravishing raptures of the life
and glory that now they are in, that they shall be of it
swallowed up in that measure and manner, that neither fear,
nor guilt, nor confusion can come near them, or touch them.
Their Judge is their Saviour, their Husband, and Head; who,
though he will bring every one of them for all things to
judgment, yet he will keep them for ever out of
condemnation, and anything that tendeth that way.
“Perfect love casteth out fear,” even while we
are here; much more then, when we are with our Saviour, our
Jesus, being passed from death to life (John 5:24; 1 John
4:18).
2. The saints at this day, shall have their
hearts and souls so wrapped up in the pleasure of God their
Saviour, that it shall be their delight, to see all things,
though once never so near and dear unto them; yet now to
perish, if not according to his word and will. “Thy
will be done,” is to be always our language here
(Matt 6:10); but to delight to see it done in all things,
though it tend never so much to the destruction of what we
love; to delight, I say, to see it done in the height and
perfection of delight; it will be when we come to heaven,
or when the Lord shall come to judge the world.
But,
3. The sole end of the counting of the
saints at the day of God, it will be, not only for the
vindication of the righteousness, holiness, and purity of
the word, neither will it centre only in the manifestation
of the knowledge and heart-discerning nature of Christ
[though both these will be in it, (Rev 2:22,23)]. But their
very remembrances and sight of the sin and vanity that they
have done while here; it shall both set off, and heighten
the tender affections of their God unto them; and also
increase their joy and sweetness of soul, and clinging of
heart to their God. Saints while here, are sweetly sensible
that the sense of sin, and the assurance of pardon, will
make famous work in their poor hearts. Ah, what meltings
without guilt! what humility without casting down! and what
a sight of the creature’s nothingness, yet without
fear, will this sense of sin work in the soul! The sweetest
frame, the most heart-endearing frame, that possibly a
Christian can get into while in this world, is to have a
warm sight of sin, and of a Saviour upon the heart at one
time. Now it weeps not for fear and through torment, but by
virtue of constraining grace and mercy, and is at this very
time, so far off of disquietness of heart, by reason of the
sight of its wickedness, that it is driven into an ecstasy,
by reason of the love and mercy that is mingled with the
sense of sin in the soul.
The heart never sees so much of the power of
mercy as now, nor of the virtue, value, and excellency of
Christ in all his offices as now, and the tongue so sweetly
enlarged to proclaim and cry up grace as now; now will
Christ “come to be glorified in his saints, and to be
admired in all them that believe” (2 Thess
1:10).
Wherefore, though the saints receive by
faith the forgiveness of sins in this life, and so are
passed from death to life; yet again, Christ Jesus, and God
his Father, will have every one of these sins reckoned up
again, and brought fresh upon the stage in the day of
judgment, that they may see and be sensible for ever, what
grace and mercy hath laid hold upon them. And this I take
to be the reason of that remarkable saying of the apostle
Peter, “Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that
your sins may be blotted out, when the times of refreshing
shall come from the presence of the Lord; and he shall send
Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto you: whom the
heaven must receive until the times of restitution of all
things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy
prophets since the world began” (Acts
3:19-21).
If a sense of some sin, [for who sees all?
(Psa 19:12)], and a sight of the love of God, will here so
work upon the spirit of the godly: what will a sight of all
sin do, when together with it they are personally present
with their Lord and Saviour?
Yea, if a sight of some sins, with a
possibility of pardon, will make the heart love, reverence,
and fear with guiltless and heart-affecting fears; what
will a general sight of all sin, and together with them an
eternal acquittance from them, work on the heart of the
saint for ever?
Yea, I say again, if a sight of sin, and the
love of God, will make such work in that soul where yet
there is unbelief, blindness, mistrust, and forgetfulness:
what will a sight of sin do in that soul, who is swallowed
up of love, who is sinless, and temptationless; who hath
all the faculties of soul and body strained by love and
grace, to the highest pin of perfection, that is possible
to be in glory enjoyed and possessed? Oh the wisdom and
goodness of God, that he at this day, should so cast about
the worst of our things, even those that naturally tend to
sink us, and damn us, for our great advantage! “All
things shall work together for good,” indeed,
“to them that love God” (Rom 8:28). Those sins
that brought a curse upon the whole world, that spilt the
heart-blood of our dearest Saviour, and that laid his
tender soul under the flaming wrath of God, shall by his
wisdom and love, tend to the exaltation of his grace, and
the inflaming of our affections to him for ever and ever
(Rev 5:9-14).
It will not be thus with devils; it will not
be thus with reprobates; the saved only have this privilege
peculiar to themselves. Wherefore, to vary a little from
the matter in hand: will God make that use of sin, even in
our counting for it, that shall in this manner work for our
advantage? Why then, let saints also make that advantage of
their sin, as to glorify God thereby, which is to be done,
not by saying, “Let us do evil, that good may
come;” or, “Let us sin, that grace may
abound;” but by taking occasion by the sin that is
past to set the crown upon the head of Christ for our
justification; continually looking upon it, so as to press
us, to cleave close to the Lord Jesus, to grace and mercy
through him, and to the keeping of us humble for ever,
under all his dispensations and carriages to us.
Now, having counted for all their evil, and
confessed to God’s glory, how they fell short, and
did not the truth in this, or that, or other particulars,
and having received their eternal acquittance from the Lord
and Judge, in the sight of both angels and saints;
forthwith the Lord Jesus will make inquiry,
SECOND, into all the good and holy
actions and deeds they did do in the world. Now here
shall all things be reckoned up, from the very first good
thing that was done by Adam or Abel, to the last that will
fall out to be done in the world. The good of all the holy
prophets, of all apostles, pastors, teachers, and helps in
the church; here also will be brought forth and to light,
all the good carriages of masters of families, of parents,
of children, of servants, of neighbours, or whatever good
thing any man doth. But to be general and short,
First, here will be a recompense for
all that have sincerely laboured in the word and
doctrine—I say, a recompense for all the souls they
have saved by their word, and watered by the same. Now
shall Paul the planter, and Apollos the waterer, with every
one of the their companions, receive the reward that is
according to their works (1 Cor 3:6-8).
Now, all the preaching, praying, watching,
and labour thou hast been at, in thy endeavouring to catch
men from Satan to God, shall be rewarded with spangling
glory. Not a soul thou hast converted to the Lord Jesus,
nor a soul thou hast comforted, strengthened, or helped by
thy wholesome counsel, admonition, and comfortable speech,
but it shall stick as a pearl in that crown “which
the Lord the righteous Judge, shall give thee at that
day” (2 Tim 4:7,8). That is, if thou dost it
willingly, delighting to lift up the name of God among men;
if thou doest it with love, and longing after the salvation
of sinners, otherwise thou wilt have only thy labour for
thy pains, and no more. “If I do this thing
willingly, I have a reward: but if against my will, a
dispensation of the gospel is committed to my
charge” (1 Cor 9:17; Phil 1:15). But, I say, if thou
do it graciously, then a reward followeth; “For what
is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing?
Are not even ye,” saith Paul, “in the
presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming? For ye are
our glory and joy” (1 Thess 2:19,20). Let him
therefore that Christ hath put into his harvest, take
comfort in the midst of all his sorrow, and know that God
acknowledgeth, that he that converteth a sinner from the
error of his way, doth even save that soul from death,
“and covereth a multitude of sins” (James
5:20). Wherefore labour to convert, labour to water, labour
to build up, and to “Feed the flock of God which is
among you, taking the oversight thereof, not by
constraint, but willingly; not for filthy lucre, but of a
ready mind;—and when the chief Shepherd shall appear,
ye shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth not
away” (1 Peter 5:2,4).
Secondly, And as the ministers of
Christ’s gospel shall at this day be recompensed; so
shall also those more private saints be with tender
affections, and love looked on, and rewarded for all their
work and labour of love, which they have shewed to the name
of Christ, in ministering to his saints, and suffering for
his sake (Heb 6:10). “Whatsoever good thing any man
doeth, the same shall he receive of the Lord, whether he
be bond or free” (Eph 6:8). Ah! little do the
people of God think, how largely and thoroughly, God will
at that day, own and recompense all the good and holy acts
of his people. Every bit, every drop, every rag, and every
night’s harbour, though but in a wisp of straw, shall
be rewarded in that day before men and
angels—“Whosoever shall give to drink unto one
of these little ones a cup of cold water only in the
name of a disciple, verily I say unto you,” saith
Christ, “he shall in no wise lose his [a
disciple’s] reward” (Matt 10:42). Therefore
“When thou makest a feast,” saith he,
“call the poor, the maimed, the lame, the blind: And
thou shalt be blessed; for they cannot recompense thee: for
thou shalt be recompensed at the resurrection of the
just” (Luke 14:13,14). If there be any repentance
among the godly at this day, it will be, because the Lord
Jesus, in his person, members, and word, was no more owned,
honoured, entertained, and provided for by them, when they
were in this world: For it will be ravishing to all, to see
what notice the Lord Jesus will then take of every
widow’s mite. He, I say, will call to mind, even all
those acts of mercy and kindness, which thou hast shewed to
him, when thou wast among men. I say, he will remember, cry
up, and proclaim before angels and saints, those very acts
of thine, which thou hast either forgotten, or, through
bashfulness wilt not at that day count worth the owing. He
will reckon them up so fast, and so fully, that thou wilt
cry, Lord, when did I do this? and when did I
do the other? “When saw we thee an hungered, and fed
thee? or thirsty, and gave thee drink? When
saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in? or naked,
and clothed thee? Or when saw we thee sick, or in
prison, and came unto thee? And the King shall answer and
say unto them, Verily I say unto you, inasmuch as ye have
done it unto one of the least of these my brethren,
ye have done it unto me” (Matt 25:37-40).
“The good works of some are manifest
beforehand; and they that are otherwise cannot be
hid” (1 Tim 5:25). Whatever thou hast done to one of
the least of these my brethren, thou hast done it unto me.
I felt the nourishment of thy food, and the warmth of thy
fleece. I remember thy loving and holy visits when my poor
members were sick, and in prison, and the like. When they
were strangers, and wanderers in the world, thou tookest
them in. “Well done, thou good and faithful
servant; - - - enter thou into the joy of thy Lord”
(Matt 25:21-23; 34-47).
Thirdly, Here also will be a reward
for all that hardness, and Christian enduring of affliction
that thou hast met with for thy Lord, while thou wast in
the world. Here now will Christ begin from the greatest
suffering, even to the least, and bestow a reward on them
all: from the blood of the suffering saint, to the loss of
a hair: nothing shall go unrewarded (Heb 11:36-40; 2 Cor
8:8-14). “For our light affliction, which is but for
a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding and
eternal weight of glory” (2 Cor 4:17). Behold by the
scriptures how God hath recorded the sufferings of his
people, and also how he hath promised to reward
them—“Blessed are they which are
persecuted for righteousness’ sake: for theirs is the
kingdom of heaven. Blessed are ye, when men shall
revile you,” and speak “all manner of evil
against you falsely, for my sake. Rejoice,” leap for
joy, “and be exceeding glad: for great is your
reward in heaven” (Matt 5:11,12; Luke 6:22,23).
“And every one that hath forsaken houses, or
brethren, or sisters, or father, or mother, or wife, or
children, or lands, for my name’s sake, shall receive
an hundred-fold, and shall inherit everlasting life”
(Matt 19:29).
Fourthly, There is also a reward at
this day, for all the more secret, and more retired works
of Christianity. 1. There is not now one act of faith in
thy soul, either upon Christ, or against the Devil, and
Antichrist; but it shall in this day be found out, and
praised, honoured and glorified, in the face of heaven (1
Peter 1:7). 2. There is not one groan to God in secret,
against thy own lusts, and for more grace, light, spirit,
sanctification, and strength to go through this world like
a Christian: but it shall even at the coming of Christ be
rewarded openly (Matt 6:6). 3. There hath not one tear
dropped from thy tender eye against thy lusts, the love of
this world, or for more communion with Jesus Christ, but as
it is now in the bottle of God; so then it shall bring
forth such plenty of reward, that it shall return upon thee
with abundance of increase. “Blessed are ye
that weep now: for ye shall laugh” (Luke 6:21).
“Thou tellest my wanderings: put thou my tears into
thy bottle; are they not in thy book?” (Psa
56:8). “They that sow in tears shall reap in joy. He
that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed, shall
doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves
with him” (Psa 126:5,6).
Having thus in brief shewed you something
concerning the resurrection of the saints, and that
they shall count with their Lord at his coming, both for
the burning up what was not according to the truth, and
rewarding them for all their good. It remains, that I now
in few words,
FOURTH, Shew you something also of that with
which they shall be rewarded.
THE REWARD OF THE JUST.
First then, those that shall be found
in the day of their resurrection, when they shall have all
their good things brought upon the stage; they I say, that
then shall be found the people most laborious for God while
here; they shall at that day enjoy the greatest portion of
God, or shall be possessed with most of the glory of the
Godhead then. For that is the portion of saints in general
(Rom 8:17; Lam 3:24). And why shall he that doth most for
God in this world, enjoy most of him in that which is to
come? But because by doing and acting, the heart, and every
faculty of the soul is enlarged, and more capacitated,
whereby more room is made for glory. Every vessel of glory
shall at that day be full of it; but every one will not be
capable to contain a like measure; and so if they should
have it communicated to them, would not be able to stand
under it; for there is “an eternal weight in the
glory that saints shall then enjoy” (2 Cor 4:17), and
every vessel must be at that day filled—that is, have
its heavenly load of it.
All Christians have not the same enjoyment
of God in this life, neither indeed were they able to bear
it if they had it (1 Cor 3:2). But those Christians that
are most laborious for God in this world, they have already
most of him in their souls, and that not only because
diligence in God’s ways, is the means whereby God
communicates himself; but also because thereby the senses
are made more strong, and able, by reason of use, to
understand God, and to discern both good and evil (Heb
5:13,14). To him that hath, to him shall be given, and he
shall have more abundance (Matt 13:11,12). He that laid out
his pound for his master, and gained ten therewith, he was
made ruler over ten cities; but he that by his pound gained
but five, he was made ruler over but five (Luke 19:16-19).
Often, he that is best bred in his youth, he is best able
to manage most, when he is a man, touching things of this
life (Dan 1:3,4); but always he that is best bred, and that
is most in the bosom of God, and that so acts for him here;
he is the man that will be best able to enjoy most of God
in the kingdom of heaven. It is observable that Paul saith,
“Our - affliction - - worketh for us a far more
exceeding and eternal weight of glory” (2 Cor
4:17). Our afflictions do it, not only because there is
laid up a reward for the afflicted, according to the
measure of affliction; but because afflictions, and so
every service of God, doth make the heart more deep, more
experimental, more knowing and profound; and so more able
to hold, contain, and bear more (Psa 119:71). “Every
man shall receive his own reward, according to his own
labour” (1 Cor 3:8). And this is the reason of such
sayings as these—Lay up for yourselves a good
foundation against the time to come, that you may lay hold
on eternal life (1 Tim 6:19), which eternal life, is not
the matter of our justification from sin in the sight of
God; for tha