Tag Archives: resurrection

PERSON OF CHRIST: His burial

THE WORDS OF THE BIBLE, THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES, AS FOUND IN THE PROPHECY OF ISAIAH CHAPTER 53, VERSE 9:

53:9  And He made His grave with the wicked, and with the rich in His death; because He had done no violence, neither was any deceit in His mouth.

And He made His grave with the wicked- verses 7 and 8 of Isaiah 53 foretold the way men would treat the Lord Jesus.  They oppressed and afflicted Him, sought to destroy His character, and at last took Him and slaughtered Him on a cross.  In all this it seemed as if they were in control, and that He was the helpless victim of circumstances, but this verse tells us it was not so.  The apostle Peter emphasised this on the day of Pentecost when he declared that the nation of Israel had by means of the wicked hands of the Gentiles crucified Him, and allowed that crucifixion process to continue until He was slain, Acts 2:23; they callously allowed Him to suffer, and only planned to curtail His sufferings because the feast day was near. There was another dimension to this, however, as Peter points out at the same time.  The fact is that He was delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God.  Men were only allowed to do what they did because it was part of God’s plan.  Indeed, the basis of God’s plan.

Now Isaiah 53:10 tells us that the pleasure of the Lord prospers in the hand of the Lord Jesus.  As God’s Firstborn Son, as well as His Only begotten Son, He was charged with the task of administering God’s affairs.  Not in any dispassionate way, but personally, and a major part of those affairs involved Him in suffering of different sorts.  He suffered in life, as earlier verses of the chapter have told us; He suffered in the three hours of darkness, as verse 5 has told us; He suffered injustice and cruelty at the hands of men, as verses 7 and 8 clearly show.  But He not only suffered in these ways, as He carried out the will of His Father, He was in control as He did so.  So, for instance, we find verses 7-9 alternate between passive and active.  He was oppressed…He was afflicted, yet He opened not His mouth.  Passive in oppression and affliction, but active in not opening His mouth.  He is brought…He is dumb.  Men bring Him, and He passively allows this, but He actively remained as dumb.  So also in verse 8.  He is taken…He was cut off…stricken.  But then the active, He made.  Each time the active is the answer to the passive.  So when He made His grave with the wicked, He was responding to something that He had passively allowed, but during which He was totally in control.

The question is, of course, in what way was He in control so that He made His grave with the wicked?  And if He was in control in this matter, why did it not happen?  And how can He make His grave with the wicked and with the rich at the same time?  So tightly interwoven is this prophecy that it can be fulfilled in the experience of only one man.

We need to notice that the word wicked is in the plural, and the word rich is in the singular.  So there are wicked men, and there is a rich man.  The word for wicked used here is an actively bad person.  We know that all have sinned, but not all set out to be actively bad.  We are told in verse 12 that the Lord Jesus was “numbered with the transgressors”, and the word transgressors means persons who have broken away in revolt against just authority.  The words are quoted by Mark when he describes the Lord Jesus being crucified between two thieves.  So we begin to see a picture building up of Christ in some way making His grave with wicked men by being crucified.  He submitted Himself to arrest, trial and execution, knowing that normally the end result of that process was to be flung unceremoniously, (and in company with the others crucified with Him), into a pit dug at the foot of the cross.  But even though it is true that He submitted Himself to the process of arrest and all that followed, nonetheless He was in complete control of the situation.  He did not call for the legions of angels that were at His disposal, Matthew 26:53.  He did not allow His followers to try to prevent His arrest, and rebuked Peter for attempting it, and remedied the damage he had done with his sword.  He could have any moment passed through the midst of them and gone His way, as He had done several times during His ministry when the crowds were hostile.  He did none of these things.  And by thus not resisting He ensured that His grave would be with the others crucified with Him, even though this was a distasteful prospect, and normally to be avoided at all costs.

It is interesting to notice that the words “He was numbered with the transgressors” are quoted twice in the gospel records.  Once by Mark as he records the crucifixion, as we have noted, but prior to that by the Lord Jesus as He is about to leave the Upper Room and make His way to Gethsemane, Luke 22:37.  So these words bracket together the whole series of events from the arrest in Gethsemane, to the crucifixion at Golgotha.

There is a big problem, however, with this situation, and it is this.  It is vitally important that the Lord Jesus be put in an easily identified and publicly-known grave, and, moreover, is put there on His own.  If He is buried at the foot of the cross with the two thieves, who is to know whether He has risen from the dead?  In theory those near of kin to the thieves could even come to the place, remove the body of their relative, and claim he had risen from the dead!  And even if this is unlikely to be attempted, the followers of the Lord could be accused of doing the same, and pretending that He had risen.

There is also the consideration that the psalmist prophesied by the Spirit that God would not suffer His Holy One, meaning the Messiah, to see corruption, Psalm 16:10.  There would certainly be corruption in a grave at the foot of the cross, with the remains of many criminals mingling together there.  Now of course whilst the whole of creation is in the bondage of corruption, nonetheless only humans are morally corrupt.  So the requirement is that the Lord Jesus must be buried in a marked grave, which has had no-one else in it before, and has no-one else in it whilst He is there.  Only in this way can it be sure that the One who was put into it is the One who came out.

How is this situation going to come about?  It will be necessary for this grave to be more than a marked grave in the ground.  It will need to be secure and unused.  This involves expense, and the Lord Jesus had not the material resources to arrange for this to happen.  Yet our passage says “He made His grave…with the rich in His death.”  It is certainly not that He had influential friends who could rise to the occasion in this matter.  His followers were poor, as He was.  And yet in a real sense He does arrange this matter, for our passage says “He made His grave…with the rich”.

In the event, the rich individual pinpointed in this passage was Joseph of Arimathea.  He was not a prominent member of the disciples that followed the Lord.  In fact, he was only a disciple secretly, because he feared the Jews, and what they would think of him.  For he was a counsellor, meaning that he was a member of the Sanhedrim, and as such was one of those spoken of in John 12:42,43, which reads, “Nevertheless among the chief rulers also many believed on Him; but because of the Pharisees they did not confess Him, lest they should be put out of the synagogue: for they loved the praise of men more than the praise of God”.  Luke records that “the same had not consented to the counsel and the deed of them”, Luke 23:51.  The “them” referring to his fellow-members of the Sanhedrim.

He was assisted by a Pharisee, Nicodemus, who also was a secret disciple, and who is designated by John as “he that came to Jesus by night”, reminding us of his conversation with the Lord Jesus in John 3.  He presumably was a member of the Sanhedrim since he is described as a ruler of the Jews, John 3:1.  He seems to have had great influence amongst them as we see from John 7:45-53.  The chief priests and Pharisees had sent officers to arrest the Lord Jesus, no doubt on the pretence that He had interrupted the temple services by crying out, “If any man thirst, let him come unto Me and drink”, verse 37.  The officers returned without Him, and when the Pharisees protested at this, Nicodemus said, “Doth our law judge any man, before it hear Him, and know what he doeth?  Thus he showed himself to be prepared to defend the interests of Christ in a small way, and to appeal for justice to be done.  Things have changed, now, however, for he has to make a decision.  He cannot be neutral about Christ any longer, and something makes him side with Christ publicly, like Joseph of Arimathea.

We might well ask ourselves what it is that convinced them of the genuineness of Christ’s claims.  Remember, our answer must be in line with what the prophet said, which was, “He made His grave…with the rich in His death.  We notice that the words “in His death” are only applicable to His grave with the rich.  The prophet did not say “He made His grave with the wicked in His death”.  So to all intents and purposes He was destined for a grave with the wicked; but in the event, and by His own ordering, His grave was actually with the rich in His death.

We are told several things about the character of Joseph.  First, that he was a good man, the direct opposite of the wicked men between whom the Lord Jesus was crucified.  Second, that he was just man, meaning he was diligent in trying to keep the law, in direct contrast to the transgressors, who rebelled against all law.  Third, he waited for the kingdom of God, showing that he had a longing for the fulfilment of the Old Testament prophecies about the Messiah.  Fourth, he was a rich man, so is a candidate for the role marked out in Isaiah 53.  Fifth, he was an honourable counsellor, which implies that, (as indeed was the case), there were members of the Sanhedrim who were not honourable.  Sixth, he was prepared to make sacrifices, for he gave up his own tomb in favour of the carpenter from Nazareth.  And seventh, he came from secret discipleship to open and bold discipleship at last.

It is the first three qualities that we need to focus on.  Now a reading of the gospel records will show that the whole council, meaning the Sanhedrin, of which Joseph was a member, were present at the first trial before Caiaphas.  Matthew 26:59 reads, “Now the chief priests, and elders, and all the council, sought false witness against Jesus, to put Him to death”.  Here is the first test for Joseph.  He is a just man, and he must ask himself whether justice is being done here.  He is a good man, and must ask himself if the prisoner is being treated respectfully.

The following rules governed the arrest of prisoners, and Joseph must know that already those rules have been broken:

1.  The arrest should have been done voluntarily by those who were witnesses to the crime.  It was illegal for the temple guard acting for the High Priest to make the arrest.
2.  The arrest should not have been at night, and constituted an act of violence.  This is why the disciples were preparing to prevent it.  Malchus was probably one of those foremost in the arrest.  If Peter had been preventing a legal arrest, he should have been arrested.  The fact he was not, showed the authorities knew they were in the wrong.
3.  The prisoner was bound, which was unnecessary violence, since he was surrounded by only a few men, and the arrest party consisted of many.
4.  The prisoner was taken to Annas first, but he was not the proper magistrate.
5.  He was interrogated at night, which was prohibited by law.
6.  He was detained in a private house.
7. He was struck gratuitously before any charges had been brought, John 18:22.

And now the first trial before Caiaphas is taking place, and Joseph has further questions to answer, for he is a member of the body that is conducting this trial.  Consider the following:
1. The trial was conducted at night, which was illegal.  All proceedings of law were prohibited at night.
2.  No trial was allowed on a feast day, under penalty of being null and void.
3.  He was ill-treated in a private house, (Matthew 26:67,68), with Caiaphas not preventing it, and before a proper hearing had taken place.  This was against Jewish law.
4.  The trial was conducted by Caiaphas, who was prejudiced, because he had already said that it was expedient for one man (meaning Christ), to die for the nation, John 11:49-52.
5.   Caiaphas acted as judge and accuser.
6.  He allowed the prisoner to be ill-treated, even though no sentence had been passed, Luke 22:63-65.

And then, the morning comes, and Mark tells us “the chief priests held a consultation with the elders and scribes and the whole council”.  So Joseph must be present at this meeting also.  Now further rules are broken, as follows:

1.  Witnesses should come forward voluntarily, but these were “sought”, after the attempt to find honest witnesses against Christ was unsuccessful, Matthew 26:59,60.
2.  Witnesses who did not speak the truth were to be stoned to death.
3.  If witnesses did not agree, the case was to be dismissed immediately.  (This was to ensure no frivolous accusations were made).  This did not happen.
4. To put a prisoner on oath, and therefore, in effect, to force him to incriminate himself, was illegal.
5.  The confession of an individual against himself should not decide a condemnation.
6.   If accused wished to speak, he was to be given the most profound attention.

Now at some time during these proceedings Joseph made a stand.  We read that he “had not consented to the counsel and deed of them”, Luke 23:51, the “them” meaning the other members of the Sanhedrim.  Their deliberations, and what they had done, both by sins of omission and by commission, he disagreed with strongly.  But there was more than the breaking of rules involved here.  The prisoner is special, and is making dramatic claims.  There was something about the way those claims were made that convinced Joseph.  What that was is told us in the next phrases in Isaiah 53:9.  “He made His grave with the wicked, and with the rich in His death, because He had done no violence, neither was any deceit in His mouth”.  The reason why Joseph came forward to offer his tomb, is because there was no violence with Christ, and because he came to believe that when He testified as to His person, there was no deceit in His mouth.

Peter tells us that “when He was reviled, He reviled not again; when He suffered He threatened not”, 1 Peter 2:23.  There was something about the way Christ presented Himself, His poise, His calm, His answers, and His restraint under the most intense provocation that so impressed Joseph, that he was resolved to distance himself from the decision of the Sanhedrim.  It is too late to resign membership, but he can “bring forth works unto repentance” by honouring Christ in His death, in contrast to the dishonour done to Him in His life.

The testimony of the Lord Jesus revolved around His claim to be the Son of God, and the Messiah, and the Son of Man.  Joseph comes to believe that His claims were true, and resolves to act accordingly.  His mind is made up, he must absolve himself from complicity in the crime of murdering the Son of God, by repentance and faith in Him, as Peter exhorted the rest of the nation to do at Pentecost, six weeks later.

Now this is very powerful testimony from within the council-chamber itself, and from one who was present as a member of that council.  It is also a powerful rebuke for those who remained steadfast in their hostility towards Christ after His resurrection.

So it is that after the Lord Jesus had died Joseph steps boldly forward.  Each of the steps in the burial of the Lord Jesus are carefully documented, and there is no room for doubt to any fair-minded person that He who was put, dead, in Joseph’s tomb, was He who rose the third day.

Consider these steps:

1.  The Jewish authorities demanded that the victims be taken down before the Sabbath began at 6 o’clock in the evening.  Neither Jew nor Gentile authority had any interest in taking down anything other than dead bodies.  The Gentiles because their government and power was involved, and the Jews because they wanted above all else to see Christ dead.  So it is that the soldiers hasten the death of two thieves, but find Christ is dead already.  He must be sure however, so what stops him breaking Christ’s legs? The answer is given to us by the apostle John, who was there as a witness.  It is because the Scripture had said that as the true Passover lamb His bones must not be broken.  But still the soldier must be satisfied, and so must the centurion, for he is soon going to be asked by Pilate if the Lord Jesus is dead.  So it is that the side of Christ is pierced, and the evidence that death has recently taken place is seen in the issuing forth of blood and water, no doubt meaning the watery fluid that surrounds the heart.  So it is that there is a unique body in Jerusalem, a crucifixion victim without broken legs, and with a pierced side.  The other two victims have broken legs and un-pierced sides.

2.  Joseph now goes to Pilate, and begs the body of Jesus.  We now have the remarkable sight of a rich man begging, and his request is granted.  As a rich man, Joseph had longed to be able to gain many things; now his only desire is to be associated with a dead body, for he is a changed man, and the things of earth that money can buy have now lost their attraction.

3.  Pilate is surprised that the victim is dead.  It is more than his position is worth for him to allow a body to be taken down from the cross when it is not dead.  The victim may recover, and thus escape justice.  Pilate may even have faced the death penalty himself if this should happen.

4.  He therefore summons the centurion to him, and verifies it from him as the man in charge of the crucifixion, who, as a professional executioner, will certainly know whether a person is dead or not.  He does not simply ask the centurion to send a message, but has a face to face conversation with him.  There is no possibility of a note being forged and passed off as a message from the centurion, or later, a note passed off as a message from Pilate.  This also ensures that the centurion knows who Joseph is, for both are now before Pilate at the same time.

5.  Pilate is now in a position to grant the body to Joseph, but why should he do so?  It was customary to allow close relatives of the deceased victims to take the body if they wished, but Joseph is not one of these.  So why does Pilate allow it?  Of course, one reason is that the Scripture says that Christ will be with the rich in his death; but Pilate has no interest in furthering the fulfilment of Scripture.  Is it because he has a guilty conscience?  His last conversation with Christ had been on the fact that He was Son of God.  Superstitious Pilate was no doubt fearful lest he had killed a “son of the gods”, and would receive Divine vengeance.  Perhaps this is his feeble attempt to repair the damage his clumsy and cowardly dealing during the trial had resulted in.  In any event, he grants the body to Joseph, in effect signing Christ’s death certificate, and thus proclaiming with all the authority of the world-empire of Rome that Jesus of Nazareth was really dead.  Those who suggest otherwise, (Moslems, for instance,)  must produce their valid reasons for contradicting this.  This they have not done.

6.  Not only does Pilate give Joseph leave to have the body, but he also commands the centurion to put this into effect.  So the jurisdiction of Rome still controls the body until the moment Joseph takes it down from the cross.  Every stage of the proceedings depends on the one before.

7.  So it is that well-known man, with the authority of the centurion and through him of Pilate, takes a body certified as dead down from the cross.  This is possibly the only legal act that has been done in Jerusalem that day.  He does this in full view of everyone, for the place of execution was near a highway, xxx.  He does it in full view of the Roman authorities, and also, no doubt, of the Jewish authorities also, who are anxious to ensure that the bodies are taken down before 6 o’clock that evening, when the Sabbath day will start.  They also are commanded to not allow hanged bodies to remain after nightfall, but to ensure they are buried the day they died, Deuteronomy 21:22,23.
So it is also that He is not taken down by one of His long-time followers, who could be said to have an interest in trying to get Scripture fulfilled.  A new convert, who has not spoken to Christ at all as far as the record goes, is now the centre of the action.

8.  The body is buried in the Jewish manner, which means that strips of linen cloth are wound round the body, with fragrant spices between the layers.  Even if the Lord Jesus were still alive, it would be impossible for Him to extricate Himself from these grave clothes.

9.  All this is done outside the sepulchre, for it is not until the process is finished that the body is placed within, as both Matthew 27:59,60, and Mark 15:46, 47 show.  John seems to go further, for he alone tells us the position of the tomb in relation to the place of crucifixion, but mentions the wrapping in linen before saying where the tomb was, thus suggesting that the wrapping was done near the cross, and then the body was taken to the tomb.  In any event, all is under the watchful eye of unbelieving men.  There is no possibility of bodies being switched in transit, with a disciple substituted for Christ, and disappearing from the tomb, with Christ’s dead body buried in a secret location.  All is open and transparent.

10.  Joseph is of Arimathea, a city of the Jews, as Luke carefully tells us.  (Arimathea was in Samaria in Old Testament times, but with boundary changes it was classed  in New Testament times as a city in Judea).  Luke is a world-class historian, and wants us to have the facts in our minds.  He draws attention to this relatively obscure matter so that we realise he is competent.  We can trust Luke even in apparently inconsequential matters like boundary changes, so we can trust him also in the vital matters also.  Yet Joseph’s tomb is not in Arimathea, but Jerusalem.  This shows his strength of commitment to the things of God, for he wishes to be buried near the centre of Messiah’s kingdom, for which he waited, and yet it is ordered of God so that his tomb is near the place of crucifixion for the burying of Christ.

11.  It is not only important that the body of the Lord Jesus should be immediately identifiable, (which was ensured by the fact that He is the only one of the three persons crucified that day who had unbroken legs and a pierced side), but He must be placed in a readily identifiable tomb.  A tomb, moreover, which has no dead bodies in it before Christ’s dead body is placed there, and no dead body in it until He has come forth.  Moses’ burying place is unknown, no doubt lest it be turned into a shrine.  The tomb of Christ must be known, and yet it was not turned into a shrine.  As we  read the Acts of the Apostles we look in vain for any reference to the sepulchre, apart from when the resurrection of Christ is preached.

12.  So it is that, assisted by Nicodemus, Joseph carries the body and lays it in the sepulchre, and then rolls the stone to the entrance.  This was no doubt a stone like a millstone, in a stone channel which sloped towards the entrance, so it was comparatively easy to roll it down, but more difficult to roll it up and away.

13.  Joseph departs, Matthew 27:60, his task completed.  But the authorities are not satisfied.  The chief priests and Pharisees go to Pilate to make a request.  They do so on the Sabbath day, so the urgency of the matter makes them endanger the sanctity of the day.  They had refused to go in to Pilate because it was the Passover, John 18:28, but they are willing to go to a Gentile’s residence on a day of unleavened bread, even though it may contain leaven.  They have a conscience about Christ even when He is dead.  They even command Pilate to act, and he, also with a guilty conscience, agrees to do as they say, even though at other times he would loathe them.  Pilate’s words are “Ye have a watch: go your way, make it as sure as ye can”.  So they had already organised a watch of the tomb, but now have permission to tamper with a private sepulchre.

14.  They went with Pilate’s authority, and seal the stone, and set a watch.  We may be sure that under no circumstances will they seal the tomb without assuring themselves that the body is still there.  They will also be very careful to examine the tomb to make sure that the earthquake that occurred when Christ died, Matthew 27:51,52, and which rent the rocks in the area, has not damaged the rock-hewn tomb of Joseph, thus providing a means of access for disciples without the watch knowing.  (Notice that Matthew is not afraid to tell us about the rending of rocks and the earthquake, which caused graves to be opened.  He is confident that the truth about Christ’s burial and resurrection will not be compromised by those facts).  Having satisfied themselves on these matters, they fasten the stone to the rock-face and place a seal in such a way that any movement of the stone will break the seal.

15.  Despite all these precautions, sometime between 6 o’clock on the Sabbath evening, and 4 o’clock on the first day of the week, (the hour at which it begins to get light in Palestine in April), Jesus of Nazareth, Son of God and Israel’s Messiah, rose triumphantly from among the dead, to die no more.  Death could not hold Him any longer, for He is God’s Holy One.

As  He Himself said,
“Fear not; I am the first, and the last:
I am He that liveth, and was dead;
and behold I am alive for evermore, Amen,
and have the keys of hell and of death”.
Revelation 1:17,18.

COLOSSIANS 2

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COLOSSIANS 2

Structure of the chapter

Verses 1-3 Appreciating the mystery of Christ.
Verses 4-19 Avoiding the error of those who deny Christ.
Verses 20-23 Acting on the truth of association with Christ.

Survey of the chapter
Verses 1-3 are really a continuation of the subject of the greatness of the mystery, beginning in 1:24.

Verses 4-19 contain warning about four ways in which heretics would seek to lead them astray.

Verses 20-23 explain one consequence of being dead with Christ.

Structure of verses 1-3

(a) 2:1

The agony: praying and preaching

(b) 2:2a

The ambition: hearts comforted.

(c) 2:2b

The atmosphere: love

(d) 2:2c

The aim: assurance and understanding

(e) 2:3

The abundance: all the treasures

Verses 1-3
Appreciating the mystery of Christ.

2:1
For I would that ye knew what great conflict I have for you, and for them at Laodicea, and for as many as have not seen my face in the flesh;

For I would that ye knew what great conflict I have for you- Paul agonised in prayer, (the word “conflict” is “agona”, from which we derive the word agony, and is used in Luke 22:44 of Christ’s conflict in Gethsemane), in view of the greatness of the truth he has just written about, and in view, also, of the greatness of the danger that lurked all around them, which danger he is about to write about. Agony is the exertion of the athlete as he strives to attain his objective. Paul is not striving to win for himself, but that the Colossians might do so. He knows that hostile spirit-forces are opposing the believers, seeking to make them go off course. Jericho was a barrier to Israel, the stronghold that prevented them from entering in to the inheritance that God had given them. The word Jericho means “City of the moon”, (the moon being the ruler of the night) and Paul reminds the Ephesians believers that they wrestle against “the rulers of the darkness of this world”, Ephesians 6:12.

Even though we have an intercessor on high, Romans 8:34, and an intercessor within, 8:26, we still need to pray ourselves, for the Spirit helps us as we pray; He does not intercede instead of us but alongside of us. Prayer is a sign of our dependence on God and faith in God.

And for them at Laodicea- some twenty-six years later Laodicea had declined in spirituality, being more interested in material riches than spiritual ones. Both Colosse and Laodicea were near the river Meander. This river gradually silted up, however, and left Colosse poorer commercially, and Laodicea richer. Sadly, however, the greater prosperity affected the Laodicean believers, so that they boasted that they were “rich, increased in goods, and had need of nothing”, but they knew not that they were poor, spiritually, Revelation 3:17. This can easily happen when prosperity comes, for dependence upon the Lord can easily decline and we become self-sufficient. We must remember that even though in Old Testament times financial prosperity was a sign of God’s approval, in this age it is not so. In fact, the apostle writes to Timothy that he should turn away from those who said that gain was a sign of godliness, 1 Timothy 6:5. Melchizedek strengthened Abraham with bread and wine before the King of Sodom came to tempt him with the words, “Give me the persons, and take the goods to thyself”, Genesis 14:21. As the Lord Jesus said, “What is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?”, Matthew 16:26. Starting out on the Christian pathway we should resolve to go in for spiritual things, even if that means less material things. This will be to the profit of our souls. This will prevent the tragedy of looking back on a life spent in worldly pursuits, and asking what, out of the accumulated wealth we have acquired, can we give to buy back the lost opportunities. The answer is, of course, nothing.

And for as many as have not seen my face in the flesh- Paul had an interest in the spiritual progress of all believers, even those he had never seen. It is one of the signs of a true believer that he loves those who are born of God. As John wrote, “every one that loveth Him that begat loveth him also that is begotten of Him”, 1 John 5:1. And the Colossians were marked by this, for in verse 4 of the first chapter Paul can write of their love to all the saints.

We should remember, however, that just because we love a believer it does not mean that we can automatically have fellowship with him, for the apostles’ doctrine and fellowship go together, Acts 2:42. We should only have fellowship with the things and the people that the apostles would have had fellowship with.

2:2
That their hearts might be comforted, being knit together in love, and unto all riches of the full assurance of understanding, to the acknowledgement of the mystery of God, and of the Father, and of Christ;

That their hearts might be comforted- the heart of man is the very centre of his being. “Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life”, Proverbs 4:23. Just as the natural heart is critical to our life, (for “the life of the flesh is in the blood”, Leviticus 17:11), and forth from it is circulated our life-blood, so the centre of the moral being of the believer should be safeguarded and comforted. To be comforted means to be strengthened and fortified. A fort was a stronghold in ancient times. So our hearts need to be protected and strengthened to withstand the attacks of the enemy, for he is active, as the next verses show.

Being knit together in love- Satan loves to divide the people of God. The slogan of many a military strategist has been “Divide and rule”. The apostle is earnestly praying that the Colossians might not be disunited. Love is the major uniting bond of believers; love to God and Christ, love to fellow-believers, all grounded in the love of God’s word, as the apostle will go on to say.

And unto all riches of the full assurance of understanding- this is one of Paul’s complicated phrases. It is best understood by beginning at the end and working backwards. The main subject of the phrase is “understanding”. Then we have the “full assurance of understanding”. Then we have “all riches of the full assurance of the understanding”.

The word understanding as used here means literally “to put together”, and refers to the believer’s ability to relate truth to truth so as to gain a right appreciation of Divine things. This demands effort, concentration and persistence, but it reaps a reward, as the word riches indicates.

Full assurance may be thought of as complete confidence. Many believers lack assurance because they do not allow the truth of the word of God to govern their thinking. Instead of appreciating what God has done for them and in them through Christ, they look to themselves, and find failure and weakness. This only unsettles and disturbs, whereas if we look to what God has done we shall be assured in our hearts. This is not to say that we may be complacent about our failures and shortcomings, but we should remember that the true believer is “accepted in the Beloved”, Ephesians 1:4, and not accepted by God because of anything he has done or been.

No wonder the apostle speaks of “all riches”, for every conceivable blessing has been granted to the believer, Ephesians 1:3, and it only remains to enter in to an appreciation of these things in faith.

To the acknowledgement of the mystery of God- we now learn what it is we should understand. There are three strands to it. First, the mystery of God, then the mystery of the Father, and then the mystery of Christ. (We are told that there are manuscript differences here, but we should expect corrupt documents like the Sinaiticus, Vaticanus and Alexandrinus to have perverted readings, for that is Satan’s way of attacking the person of Christ, and sowing doubt as to whether we can know what the word of God is or not. The manuscripts listed above are the basis of the vast majority of the new translations of the Bible, from the Revised Version onwards).

The word mystery refers to information that is only available to those who are initiated. All believers are introduced by the preaching of the gospel to truth regarding God, for it is “the glorious gospel of the blessed God”, 1 Timothy 1:11. The apostle wrote of the mystery of the gospel, Ephesians 6:19. As the gospel is preached, truths about God are set forth for those who show an interest. As the Spirit works in their hearts, men are persuaded of the truth of the scriptures explained to them. Confronted with the glory of God and their nothingness in His sight, they repent, and believe the truth they hear. The great goal the apostle had as he prayed for these Colossian believers is that they fully acknowledge, or are fully acquainted with, the truths that he, as an apostle, had been entrusted with, and which he had passed on to the saints.

Given that a New Testament mystery is about truths that were unknown in former times, but which are now revealed to the believer, we might ask what some of these truths are. Consider the following:

1. The once-for-all sacrifice of Christ. In the Old Testament times, sacrifices were offered “year by year continually”, Hebrews 10:1. There seemed to be no end of this system, until Christ came, and “by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified”, Hebrews 10:14.

2. Permanent cleasing from sin. Instead of relying on the annual Day of Atonement ceremony for purging from sins nationally, and sin offerings brought in between times for personal sins, the believer now finds that “the blood of Jesus Christ, his Son, cleanseth us from all sin”, 1 John 1:7, with the “us” referring to those who walk in the light, a definition of believers.

3. The indwelling of the Holy Spirit. In Old Testament times, the Holy Spirit came to certain people for certain tasks. So Bezaleel was given the Spirit to make the tabernacle vessels, Exodus 31:1-3; and David was given the Spirit to enable him to reign righteously over Israel, 1 Samuel 16:13. But it was not necessarily the case that the Spirit of God stayed, for David sinned badly, and in one of his repentance psalmist he pleads with God to not take His Holy Spirit from him, Psalm 51:11, for that would mean that he was no longer king. Now things are different, for the Lord Jesus told His own in the Upper Room that He would “pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that he may abide with you for ever”, John 14:16.

4. The blessing of the gospel is available to Jew and Gentile alike. In Old Testament times the path to blessing was through Israel. A man had to become a proselyte to be in the good of God’s favour. Now there is no distinction made between Jew and Gentile, as Peter learnt when he saw the vision of the wild beasts in the sheet, Acts 10:8-16. He realised that God was not dealing exclusively with Israel for the time being, for God has, in his words, “put no difference between us and them, purifying their hearts by faith”, Acts 15:9.

5. The believer’s inheritance is in heaven. For the Jew, the inheritance was Canaan. And in the future, Canaan under their Messiah. At the present time the inheritance is in heaven, reserved and watched over by God, 1 Peter 1:4.

6. The believer is a citizen of heaven. For Israel, their citizenship was on earth, as subjects of the Messiah. Now the believer is a citizen of heaven, Philippians 1:27, (where conversation is citizenship); and 3:20, (where conversation is “city-state”).

The eternal life we receive when we believe not only enables us to know God initially, but it empowers us to get to know Him increasingly. This is the highest goal set before us, and the life we have been given enables us to achieve it, in dependence upon God. To have the knowledge of God in this way will mean that we have God alone as our object; all other knowledge will recede. Believers will be totally absorbed with who and what God is, in eternity. Moreover, with that knowledge will come insight into all that is mysterious now. Those many things which seem so puzzling will be resolved then, as we are enabled to fathom to some degree the inner secrets of God’s purpose. We should strive for that now, but it will only be fully realised in eternity, when all that hinders us will have been removed.

And of the Father- there was a mystery about God as Father that has now been disclosed to believers. The Lord Jesus, when He prayed to His Father as recorded in John 17, was able to say “I have declared unto them thy name, and will declare it”, verse 26. So the name, (meaning the person), of the Father had been declared by the Son by His life down here. God had not been addressed as Father by any in the Old Testament. The psalmist had used a figure of speech when he wrote of God pitying His children as a father does, Psalm 103:13, but the revelation of God as Father was only given when the Son came to reveal Him. This revelation was so complete that He could say, “He that hath seen me, hath seen the Father”, John 14:9. And as the apostle John wrote, “And we know that the Son of God is come, and hath given us an understanding, that we might know him that is true, and we are in him that is true, even in his Son Jesus Christ”, 1 John 5:20. As a result, when He went back to heaven He ascended back to one who is not only His Father, but ours too, John 20:17.

And of Christ- the name Son tells us of His nature, and His relationship with the Father. The word Christ, however, is a title, and relates to an office. The word means “anointed”, and marks out the Lord Jesus as the long-promised Messiah. There is a further dimension to His Christ-hood, however, as indicated by Peter on the Day of Pentecost. He declared that “God hath made that same Jesus, whom ye have crucified, both Lord and Christ”, Acts 2:36. The Jews knew that the Christ or Messiah would be their King; now they learn that He will have another way to exercise His office, for as the Ascended One He unites His people with Himself in a way that can be likened to the way in which the human body is joined to its head. It was the special task of the apostle to set these things out; it remained for the Colossian believers to enter into an understanding of them.

2:3

In whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.

In whom are hid- not in the sense of being hidden out of reach to believers, for the apostle is encouraging us to access them. The treasures are, however, out of reach of heretics like the gnostics.

All the treasures of wisdom and knowledge- the claim of the gnostics to have superior knowledge must be spurious, since all the truth resides in Him. (As He Himself said, “I am…the truth”, John 14:6). Since they knew not Christ, they knew not the wisdom that is in Him.

Something of the spiritual excitement of the apostle as he thought of this wisdom and knowledge is conveyed to us by the word treasures. To him, the knowledge Christ gives is worth more than earth’s riches. We read about wisdom in the Book of Proverbs, and there wisdom is personified, (an anticipation of the coming of Christ as the Wisdom of God, 1 Corinthians 1:24), and speaks like this,

“I love them that love me;

and those that seek me early shall find me.

Riches and honour are with me;

yea, durable riches and righteousness.

My fruit is better than gold;

yea, than fine gold;

and my revenue than choice silver.

I lead in the way of righteousness,

in the midst of the paths of judgement:

that I may cause them that love me to inherit substance;

and I will fill their treasures”. Proverbs 8:17-21.

Wisdom is insight into the true nature of things, and knowledge is the information we need to put that wisdom into practice in our lives, so that we may live intelligently to God’s glory, and are able also to resist the teachings of heretics.

(iii) 2:4-19

The enemies of the truth about Christ

Structure of the section

(a) Verses 4-7 Those who beguile

Antidote: Faith in Christ

(b) Verses 8-15 Those who spoil.

Antidote: Truth after Christ

(c Verses 16,17 Those who judge.

Antidote: Reality of Christ.

(d) Verses 18,19 Those who deprive.

Antidote: Support from Christ.

(a) Verses 4-7

Those who beguile

Antidote: Faith in Christ

2:4

And this I say, lest any man should beguile you with enticing words.

And this I say- this introduces a new section, in which the apostle is more specific in his warnings about false teachers. Verse 5 can be considered as a parenthesis, so “this I say” connects with “as ye have therefore” in verse 6.

Lest any man should beguile you with enticing words- having presented the truth as to the person of Christ, Paul is now protecting the minds of the believers from error. In 1:28 he had spoken of warning and teaching. To beguile means to deceive by false reasoning. This is why the apostle prayed that the believers at Colosse might be given wisdom, so that they might discern what was false. “Enticing words” is a description of the persuasive speech of those who promote error. Not having the Spirit of God in their hearts, they have to rely on natural eloquence. Paul writes elsewhere of those who “by good words and fair speeches deceive the hearts of the simple”, Romans 16:18. This is not to say that preachers and teachers should be hard to listen to, or awkward in their presentation of the truth, but it must be done in the power of the Spirit of God and not of the flesh. Ecclesiastes 12:9-10 reads, “And moreover, because the preacher was wise, he still taught the people knowledge; yea, he gave good heed, and sought out, and set in order many proverbs. The preacher sought to find out acceptable words: and that which was written was upright, even words of truth”.

2:5

For though I be absent in the flesh, yet am I with you in the spirit, joying and beholding your order, and the stedfastness of your faith in Christ.

For though I be absent in the flesh, yet am I with you in the spirit- Epaphras, (who was from Colosse), had given a faithful report as to conditions in the assembly in that city, and he had endeared the believers to the heart of the apostle. It was a company the apostle would have been happy to associate with, and in his spirit he did so. Every assembly should strive to be the sort of company in which Paul would be happy. Two things are next mentioned as being pleasing to the apostle, namely their order, and the steadfastness of their faith.

Joying and beholding your order- every assembly should be marked by order, the spiritual order of those who keep in step with one another by a mutual love of the word of God and its instructions. In many ways the assembly at Corinth was in disorder, so the apostle had to exhort them to do everything decently and in order, 1 Corinthians 14:40.

And the stedfastness of your faith in Christ- their order was more collective, as they met together, but the steadfastness of their faith is especially seen in their personal lives as they lived by faith day by day, refusing to allow circumstances to move them. Note the connection between order and faith. Disorder prevents faith flourishing, for the distractions are too great. By constantly exposing their souls to the truth of Scripture, their faith would be strengthened, and they would not give way when error about Christ was presented to them.

2:6

As ye have therefore received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk ye in him:

As ye have therefore received Christ Jesus the Lord- they had received Him by faith, and that initial faith should continue to mark them. John writes of those who “believe on his name”, John 1:12, the sense being, “who keep on believing on his name”. “The just shall live by faith” is the phrase that Paul quotes three times in his epistles to show that justification is by faith. But as found in Habukkuk 2:4, the phrase is, “the just shall live by his faith”. So the initial faith that results in justification, is the same faith by which the justified one lives subsequently. His life is governed by his faith.

He is Christ Jesus, implying that He is exalted to heaven with Divine approval; there is no deficiency in Him, therefore, that needs to be made up by the suggestions of the heretics. He is Lord, and therefore those He authorises to expound the truth, the apostles, should not be set aside in favour of unauthorised false teachers.

So walk ye in him- their unseen Lord should be their guide, not the unbelieving false teachers, no matter how plausible their arguments seemed to be. There are those who use this expression to support their view that things like the Lord’s Supper, and baptism, are not necessary, since they involve things we can see, and, they say, faith and sight are not compatible. This is not the case, however, for faith is necessary in baptism, as even our chapter will show in verse 12, “the faith of the operation of God”. Baptism is a response in faith to the work of God in raising Christ from the dead. So to walk in faith includes being baptised.

2:7

Rooted and built up in him, and stablished in the faith, as ye have been taught, abounding therein with thanksgiving.

Rooted and built up in him- the apostle uses a variety of figures of speech to illustrate what he is teaching. Having spoken of walking in the previous verse, he now uses descriptions of a healthy plant. First of all it is rooted. This reminds us of verse 5, where he spoke of the steadfastness of their faith in Christ. They were not like the stony ground hearers of the parable of the sower, who had begun well, but after a while had withered because, as the Lord said, “these have no root”, Luke 8:13. On the contrary, these were firmly settled in Christ by true and lasting faith.

A plant also needs to grow if it is to be fruitful. Again the secret is “in Him”, for spiritual growth comes when we take advantage of all the resources available to those who are in Christ. This growth would be jeopardised if they listened to the poisonous doctrines of the false teachers.

And stablished in the faith- as a plant grows, it puts out an ever-increasing network of roots, which enable it to draw nutrients from a wide area for the support of its structure. This the believers should do, as they explore the richness of the truth in Christ which nourishes their souls, causing them to grow more into His likeness. Roots also give stability to a plant so that it can withstand the wind. There are hostile winds of doctrine blowing around the believer, and he needs stability to withstand their force, see Ephesians 4:14.

All three of these words, “rooted”, “built up” and “stablished” are perfect participles, which means they express action which is ongoing, and not once-for-all. Believers need to constantly grow and develop in the things of Christ, for eternal life is not a static thing, but progressive and forward-looking.

As ye have been taught- they should continue as they had begun, having been faithfully taught by Epaphras and others, 1:7. They should not be tempted by the novel ideas of the gnostics. As the apostle John exhorted, “Let that therefore abide in you which ye have heard from the beginning”, 1 John 2:24.

Abounding therein with thanksgiving- whilst it is true that the Lord Jesus cursed the fig tree because it bore no fruit, only leaves, nevertheless foliage is necessary for a plant to flourish.

We should never neglect to thank God for the instruction He gives to us through the teachers Christ has given to the body of Christ for our instruction. Those teachers have a difficult and stressful task, as they labour to bring the word of God to us. The apostle will seek the prayers of believers in 4:3 that his ministry might be effective. If an apostle needed prayer, how much more those who are not apostles.

(b) Verses 8-15

Those who spoil.

Antidote: Truth after Christ

2:8

Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ.

Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit- the figure changes, and now the apostle likens false teachers to the wolves that come to snatch away sheep. The Good Shepherd Himself made clear that none can pluck the sheep from either His hand or the hand of His Father, John 10:27-29, nevertheless the threat of damage to the spiritual life of the sheep is real, and the apostle warns of the danger false teachers pose. They use philosophy, which is the product of the human mind, and which has been condemned by God through the cross, as 1 Corinthians 1 makes clear. Christ is the wisdom of God, and all the resources we need to inform our minds and govern our practice are in Him. The wisdom of the world is foolishness with God, but it has an attraction for the carnal mind. We should not confuse this wisdom with the use of logic, which is everywhere used by the apostle in his writings, drawing conclusions in a reasoned way. That logic must be based on Scripture, and not on human speculation which has no authority.

Allied to this philosophy is vain deceit; dealing in error as they do, the false teachers cannot rely on the truth to make their case, but need to employ deceptive methods to promote their cause. The consequence of this is vain, empty and devoid of positive good, and detracts from Christ.

After the tradition of men- Christian traditions, those things handed over to us by the apostles and the Lord Himself, are to be kept faithfully, but the writings of those who oppose the truth should be rejected. There are writings called the New Testament Apocrypha. These writings do not have the sanction of the apostles, being written after they had passed from the scene. Jude can write of the “faith once (for all) delivered unto the saints”, Jude 3, so the body of Christian doctrine, known as the faith, was complete in his day. So the promise of the Lord Jesus had come to pass, for he said, speaking of the Holy Spirit as the Spirit of truth, “he shall guide you into all truth”, John 16:13. It is important to notice that those who attacked the scriptures after the apostle were gone never attacked the apocryphal writings, for they knew they were not part of what Christians believe. Any additions to this body of truth are to be regarded with great suspicion.

There is a lack of discernment about this in our day, and outrageous and often blasphemous writings are made into films and books, and deceive people into thinking that they represent Christian truth, which they do not. The Lord Jesus censured the rulers of His day for the way in which they elevated the traditions of the Jews above the Scriptures, saying, “Ye make the word of God of no effect by your tradition”, Matthew 15:6.

After the rudiments of the world- this expression was used by the apostle in Galatians 4:3,9 in relation to the basic and simple truths that the law was able to impart, but which did not represent the full truth as found in Christ. It seems that the false teachers attacking the Colossians were mixing gnostic speculation with Judaism, to make a combination of ideas that would appeal both to those impressed by intellectualism on the one hand, and those impressed by ritualism and asceticism on the other. Whatever the doctrines were, the apostle is clear that they are of the world, and therefore are not helpful to the believer, who has life from heaven.

And not after Christ- this is the decisive thing which condemns false doctrine. It does not conform to what Christ teaches, nor does it give a correct view of Him personally. We need to ask about any teaching, or proposed action based on teaching, whether it relates well to Christ, or whether it is contrary to Him. He is always the test, as He Himself indicated to the Jews with the question, “What think ye of Christ”, Matthew 22:42.

2:9

For in him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily.

For in him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily- Christ is the reference point, for the reason Paul now gives. The reason why everything must centre in Christ is because He is the one through whom the Godhead expresses itself. The word “fulness” was greatly used by the gnostics, and in their teachings it represented the sum total of all the qualities of God which they said were to be found spread around amongst an endless array of minor spirit-beings. This was a total misuse of the word, for the reason stated here. The fulness is in Christ, not in a multitude of lesser beings. Nor is the fulness in Him temporarily, but as a resident, as is indicated by the word “dwelleth”, which is in the present tense.

Every attribute of Deity resides permanently in Christ, and is happy to do so, again as the word “dwelleth” indicates. There is nothing lacking in Him, and He is able to manifest God fully. He left nothing of His Deity behind when He came down from heaven; He left nothing of His manhood behind when He went back to heaven. Hence the fullness dwells bodily.

Early in the history of the world man lost the concept of the One True God, who had every attribute and quality enshrined within Himself. Forsaking this knowledge, man invented false gods, each of whom they believed had some virtue, but none of them possessing every virtue. Satan was only too ready to position himself behind these ideas through his evil agents, and hold man in bondage.

2:10

And ye are complete in him, which is the head of all principality and power:

And ye are complete in him- believers are “in Christ”, reckoned by God to be positionally where Christ is. He is beyond death, and so, in principle, are believers. He is seated in heaven, so are believers, Ephesians 2:6. He is sure of the approval of His Father, so are believers. No wonder the apostle says they are complete “in Him”. Their position is one of full acceptance, full provision, full salvation. And this is heightened by the fact just noticed that He embodies within Himself all the fullness of the Godhead. All that fulness ensures the complete welfare of His people. And this includes the constant nourishment of their souls by means of the truth. He has all fulness and they have no lack.

Clearly, then, they have no need of the heretics, who come along claiming to be able to take them beyond what there is in Christ. This was the strategy of Satan in the Garden of Eden. He did not tempt Eve to murder Adam, or any such thing. He tempted her with the prospect of being as gods, knowing good and evil, Genesis 3:5. In other words, to advance her in knowledge beyond what God had said. She fell, but the Colossians should learn the lesson, and not fall into that trap. Beware of any religion that claims to give the knowledge of God apart from reference to Christ as the Son of God, equal with the Father. “What think ye of Christ? Whose Son is He?”, is always the test, Matthew 22:42. Many profess to think well of Christ, so both questions need to be answered.

Which is the head of all principality and power- He is far above angels because of His Deity, (for He is the creator of angels, 1:16); and also because of His ascension, for He is raised “far above all principality and powers, Ephesians 1:20,21. Verse 15 will tell us He defeated evil spirit-powers at Calvary. So no spirit can override what Christ teaches, for He is above and in control. All teaching must come from Him; He does not delegate this to angels. Indeed, Paul warned the Galatians that even if an angel came and preached to them, they were to think of him as cursed, Galatians 1:8. The Gnostic theory of an almost endless stream of lesser deities linking man to God is a fabrication. See 1 Timothy 1:4, with its reference to “endless genealogies”.

2:11

In whom also ye are circumcised with the circumcision made without hands, in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the circumcision of Christ:

In whom also ye are circumcised with the circumcision made without hands- not only are believers complete in Christ, they are separated unto Him from the sphere where error flourishes. Christ cannot link sinners with Himself, so He must cut them off from their links with Adam if He is to join them to Himself. This He did at the cross, where He dealt with all that Adam represented.

When God made a covenant with Abraham, He made physical circumcision the sign of that covenant. Abraham was now special to Himself, and had the mark on his body to prove it. Such a rite is no longer relevant, so that the apostle described physical circumcision as “concision”, a cutting off and a maiming, Philippians 3:2, whereas believers are now the true circumcision, properly cut off by God from their links with Adam’s world. This means they are cut off from the sphere where heretics operate, for such men are of the world, being unbelievers, and as such have no contact with the things of God.

When he is dealing with the case of the Jew in his epistle to the Romans, the apostle shows that true circumcision is a heart matter, “For he is not a Jew, which is one outwardly; neither is that circumcision, which is outward in the flesh: but he is a Jew, which is one inwardly; and circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit, and not in the letter; whose praise is not of men but of God”, Romans 2:28,29. This is why Stephen was justified in calling the Jews who were about to stone him, “uncircumcised in heart and ears”, Acts 7:51.

In putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the circumcision of Christ- we have seen there was the circumcision of Abraham. There was also the circumcision of Moses, for under his leadership the people became cut off to God nationally by the covenant of the Law given at Sinai. Further, there was the circumcision of Joshua, when the people crossed the Jordan and it was found that some had not been circumcised during the desert journey. All these variations were of physical circumcision, but the circumcision of Christ is spiritual in character. It has to do with the whole person; in other words, it is not limited to part of the body as with the physical ceremony; this circumcision separates the whole person for God. Clearly this is a radical thing. And only the crucifixion of Christ can effect it. It is in His cutting off that the believer is cut off, and that not partially, but wholly.

What is cut off is the body as the vehicle by which sins of the flesh are conceived and committed, the flesh being the sinful self, which is resident in the body. Paul calls the body “the body of sin” in Romans 6:6. He is there concerned with the sin-principle within, whereas here it is the sin-practice that is in view; nonetheless the idea is that the body is the base of operations from which sins proceed. As far as God is concerned, that body has been cut off so that it may be brought over into resurrection conditions to be used for God. That which is called “the body of sin” in Romans 6:6 can be presented to God as a living sacrifice in Romans 12:1, for God has wrought upon it to His glory.

2:12

Buried with him in baptism, wherein also ye are risen with him through the faith of the operation of God, who hath raised him from the dead.

Buried with him in baptism- having cut us off by associating us with Christ in His cutting off by crucifixion, the process is confirmed by “burial”. Just as our circumcision is not literal, so our burial is not either, for it is burial in water, not the earth. When immersed by the act of baptism, the believer is placed in a watery grave, and this is after the likeness of Christ’s state when He was in the tomb, being what the apostle calls “the likeness of His death”, meaning His state of death when He was in the tomb, Romans 6:4.

We can clearly see the error of infant sprinkling, from this verse. How can the sprinkling of a few drops of water on a person even remotely be called a burial? And how can it be said that the baby rises afterwards? And how can the so-called “baptism” of an infant be justified, when the apostle here speaks of “the faith of the operation of God”? The candidate for baptism must have faith, and must be immersed, and must re-emerge, or else the procedure is invalid.

Wherein also ye are risen with him through the faith of the operation of God- baptism has two aspects. It is a burial, and it is a resurrection. Just as surely as the believer, when under the water, is like Christ was in death, so he is like Christ is in resurrection when brought up out of the water. And this is an act of faith, for it something that the believer is responsible for getting done. When Ananias said to Paul, “Arise, and be baptised”, he used the Middle Voice, so the sense was “Get thyself baptised”. Whilst it is true that evangelists are commanded to baptise, they cannot force this on people. After all, evangelists are commanded to preach, but they cannot force people to believe. It is the responsibility of men to believe when the gospel is preached in their hearing; it is the responsibility of believers to get themselves baptised. In fact, the Lord Jesus said, “He that believeth and is baptised shall be saved”, Mark 16:16, so all the time a professed believer remains unbaptised, there is a question-mark over the reality of his profession. This is not to say that baptism contributes to salvation, or else the Lord would have said, “He that believeth not and is not baptised shall be damned”, but He did not.

Notice that the faith that moves the believer to get baptised is faith in the operation of God; it is not faith in baptism. The virtue lies in what God did through Christ by His death, burial and resurrection, not in the process of baptism, as if that is a means of grace.

Who hath raised him from the dead- so baptism is a very positive thing, not only in its practice, for the believer comes up out of the water, but also in its principle, for it is response to the God who raised up Christ. By association with Him we are linked to that which is clear of death and judgement. All that opens up for Christ because He is risen, opens up for believers too.

2:13

And you, being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh, hath he quickened together with him, having forgiven you all trespasses;

And you- having established that the believer is a person in a new situation altogether through the resurrection of Christ, the apostle now reviews what it is that he has been delivered from. By so doing he will expand on the expression “the operation of God” of the previous verse. He turns his attention particularly to those who were Gentiles before conversion, for that was, no doubt, the situation with most of the Colossian believers to whom he is writing the epistle.

Being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh- not only were they devoid of response to God, being dead, and demonstrating this by sinning, but also they were uncircumcised, for they had not the separating advantages that God had given to the Jews. He had placed a hedge around that nation, but no such restrictions were known by the Gentile. He was left to walk in his own way, as Paul told the idol-worshippers of Lystra, Acts 14:16. Their backs were turned to God and their faces were turned to sin and the world. They were uncircumcised physically and morally. Note it is the uncircumcision of the flesh, not just of the physical body; the whole tendency of the sinner to commit sin, whether of mind or body, is in view, for the flesh is the self-principle and the sin-principle in man.

Hath he quickened together with him- to quicken means to make alive. Paul is showing that this operation is all of God. No credit attaches to the sinner. He is dead, and totally reliant on life from God if he is to live in any real sense of the word. Being dead in sins, he has no stock of merit by which to claim blessing from God. But God is rich in grace, and is pleased to associate those who believe with His Son in His death and resurrection experience.

Having forgiven you all trespasses- nothing contrary to God can be taken over into resurrection. The just basis of this forgiveness is the death of Christ, the subject of the next few phrases.

2:14

Blotting out the handwriting of ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us, and took it out of the way, nailing it to his cross;

Blotting out the handwriting of ordinances that was against us- clearly, by the use of the word “us” as opposed to the “and you” of verse 13, the apostle now turns his attention mainly to those believers who were formerly Jews. Not exclusively so, however, for the Gentiles had the law written in their hearts, according to Romans 2:15, and the Jews had the law, not only written on tables of stone by the finger of God, but in the book of the law written by Moses. But it is as if Moses did not write with permanent ink, for here we learn that what was written was blotted out. The law is not the rule of life for the believer. Believers who try to please God by keeping the law will always be defeated, and therefore miserable, as Paul found in Romans 7. The example of Christ is our model, and the Spirit of God encourages us in that.

Which was contrary to us- note the double assertion that the law was not on our side. It was not only against us rather than for us, but also it was “contrary to us”, attacking us relentlessly because of our sinfulness. Paul found that “sin, taking occasion by the commandment, deceived me, and by it slew me”, Romans 7:11. Clearly, we need someone to deliver us from the law and its demands.

And took it out of the way- the commandments of the law would represent a stumblingblock to the believer as he seeks to walk the pathway of faith. God has taken this hindrance out of the way, so the path is cleared of obstacles. This is not to say that the Law of God has been disposed of; that cannot be. But it is removed as a means of pleasing God. Believers please God by living like Christ. When they so live, they fulfil the righteousness of the law, meaning all that the law demanded as being right, Romans 8:4. The law as a means of obtaining righteousness has been ended by Christ, Romans 10:4. He is the end of “law for righteousness”, but not the end of the law.

Nailing it to his cross- the subject of the verbs used here is God. So He has quickened, forgiven, blotted out, taken out of the way, nailed, and in verse 15 He is said to spoil, make a show, and triumph. Eight mighty acts that God has performed on the basis of the death, burial, resurrection and ascension of Christ.

It is as if God placed the handwriting of the law into the hands of Christ, and the nails went through not only his hands, but also the manuscript, fastening it to the cross so that it could not be active against the believer. And since it is nailed to the cross, it cannot be re-written. Remember that the law was written in a book as well as on tables of stone, Exodus 24:7.

2:15

And having spoiled principalities and powers, he made a show of them openly, triumphing over them in it.

And having spoiled principalities and powers- the believer has other enemies, and their power must be broken too. The gnostic heretics made a great deal of supposed intermediaries between the believer and God. This verse exposes such mediators as being none other than evil spirit-forces, fallen angels who are still allowed to influence men’s thinking. God has spoiled them through Christ, however, and they are powerless now as far as the believer is concerned. To spoil means to “strip off the armour”. Their protection has been removed, and they are defenceless and defeated foes. The believer is more than a match for them as long as he puts on the armour provided for him by God, Ephesians 6:13. When men asserted that the miracles of Christ were accomplished by the power of Satan, amongst other things the Lord said in reply, “When a strong man armed keepeth his palace, his goods are in peace: but when a stronger than he shall come upon him, and overcome him, he taketh from him all the armour wherein he trusted, and divideth his spoils”, Luke 11:21,22. Satan is the strong man, and Christ is the stronger than he. Satan’s defences are taken away, and he is vulnerable to attack.

He made a show of them openly- God has raised up His Son, not only from the grave, but also to His throne, as Peter declared on the Day of Pentecost in the words, “”By the right hand of God exalted…the Lord said unto my Lord, ‘Sit Thou on my right hand'”, Acts 2:33, 34.

Paul refers to Christ’s ascension with the words of the psalmist, “When he ascended up on high, he led captivity captive, and gave gifts unto men”, Ephesians 4:8. The initial reference in the psalm is to the ascension of David to the throne of Israel after he had defeated his enemies. So the gifts mentioned were in large part the spoils of war, as a reading of 2 Samuel 8:9-12 will show.

Three ideas therefore come together in the verse quoted. First, the absolute triumph of Christ, as indicated by the fact that having been crucified on a cross, He has now ascended to the very throne of God. Second, the utter defeat of Satan and his forces, crippling them to such an extent that, even though they are allowed a certain amount of latitude, they are easily defeated by means of the resources Christ gives. Third, the bestowal of gifts in grace, to enable believers to grow.

In the expression “He led captivity captive”, captivity is personified to represent all that had held unbelievers captive, and which would try to lead them captive as believers. (It has nothing to do with any supposed transfer of souls from hades to heaven). Such is the triumph of Christ that He can move through the sphere of the prince of the power of the air unhindered. In Daniel 10:12,13 we read of the way in which the progress of the angel Gabriel was hindered by an evil angel-prince, and he had to be assisted by Michael the archangel. No such delay is suffered by Christ, who rises to heaven with “angels and authorities and powers being made subject unto Him”, 1 Peter 3:22.

It is clear from Scripture that the Lord Jesus has defeated the enemy in all of his guises:

The Prince of this world came to Christ when He was down here, yet He could say he “hath nothing in me”, John 14:30. As a result of Calvary the prince of this world will certainly be cast out in the future, John 12:31.

As the Devil, and wielding the power of death, he has been utterly defeated by the death and resurrection of Christ, Hebrews 2:14.

As god of this age he is defeated every time a blinded mind is made to see the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ, 2 Corinthians 4:4-6.

As Satan he is defeated when Christ intercedes for His own, Luke 22:31,32.

As the Devil, the accuser, he is defeated by Christ our advocate, 1 John 2:1.

Triumphing over them in it- the apostle returns at the end of the sentence to the event which started off this sequence. The cross is the ground on which God has defeated the powers of evil. If the Son of God can humble Himself even to the death of the Cross, and be crucified in weakness, (as 2 Corinthians 13:4 puts it), and yet rise again and ascend to God’s throne, He must be superior to any force. And so He is. The Devil is defeated, and so, therefore, are his evil hosts, which he uses to infiltrate the minds of men with error, the “doctrines of demons” that Paul refers to in 1 Timothy 4:1.

(c) Verses 16,17

Those who judge

Antidote: Reality of Christ

2:16

Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of an holyday, or of the new moon, or of the sabbath days:

Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink- the word “therefore” shows that the apostle is about to apply the truths he has just set out, especially with regard to the handwriting of ordinances, which detailed the ceremonies God expected the Israelites to carry out. He lists various features of the Old Testament tabernacle and temple system, which were ordained of God for Israel. The meat would be the flesh of animal sacrifices, some of which the offerer and the priest could eat. The drinks would either be the drink offerings, which were all poured out, but nonetheless were binding on the Israelite to bring, or the prohibition of wine as far as the Nazarites were concerned. The idea is of material things that the Law demanded, but which the apostle will show are out of date. The Colossian heretics were apparently teaching that these things were binding on believers. The apostle warns them not to allow these false teachers to judge or criticise them for not participating in Jewish rituals.

Or in respect of an holyday, or of the new moon, or of the sabbath days- these are the prescribed days in Israel’s religious calendar by which their religion was regulated. A holy day was a day during the set feasts; the new moon was the starting point for the month, determining when the feast began; the sabbath days were the weekly ordinance in Israel, in which all unnecessary work ceased, so that the day could be set apart for sacred purposes. There was also a sabbath during the Feast of unleavend bread, Leviticus 23:7, and at the end of the Feast of Tabernacles, on the eighth day, Leviticus 23:39.

2:17

Which are a shadow of things to come; but the body is of Christ.

Which are a shadow of things to come- there cannot be a shadow unless there is an object to cast a shadow when the light is shone upon it. That object is Christ; the Old Testament ordinances were but shadows. The things of which they spoke were “to come”, in those days, but now they are come. We may study them to see how they spoke of Christ, but now He is come, there is no need for them. To continue with them is to show ignorance of the principles of Christianity. Christendom does indeed continue with these things, and mixes with them the unholy practices of paganism, to produce a system of things which is obnoxious to God. Believers should beware of being unwittingly drawn into these practices, for instance by celebrating Christmas and Easter, which are almost entirely pagan in origin and meaning. The policy of the Emperor Constantine to amalgamate heathenism and Christianity has been a blight on Christian testimony for sixteen cnturies. To go along with it is to perpetuate the tragedy.

But the body is of Christ- the fact that He is the body which casts the shadow is testimony to His pre-existence. It is also a testimony to the fact that He has always been the centre of God’s purpose, even in the days of the tabernacle rituals.

The sacrifice of Christ has rendered animal sacrifices obsolete, Hebrews 10:8,9. He brings real joy, not the figurative joy of the drink offering, 1 John 1:4. In Him the festivals of Israel either have or will have been fulfilled, 1 Corinthians 5:7; 15:23; every day may be held sacred to the Lord, Romans 14:6; the passing of time, as measured by the moon’s phases, is irrelevant, for the believer is in touch with eternal realities, Hebrews 9:12,15:13:20; and as far as the believer is concerned, true rest has been found in Christ, Matthew 11:29. No legalistic celebration of a day can replace or improve on that.

(d) Verses 18,19

Those who deprive

Antidote: Support from Christ

2:18

Let no man beguile you of your reward in a voluntary humility and worshipping of angels, intruding into those things which he hath not seen, vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind,

Let no man beguile you of your reward- those who run the race of faith, and who wish to win the reward of a prize, must see to it that no-one and nothing distracts them. Allegiance to Christ demands that we focus on Him. Satan does not want this, so he tries to attract us with other things to stop us concentrating on the things of Christ.

In a voluntary humility and worshipping of angels- the heretics claimed that God was unapproachable, and men need the agency of angels to bridge the gap. This seems to be a humble position, but in fact it ignores the fact there is one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, 1 Timothy 2:5. The humility that finds its roots in the human will or volition, (which is the sense of “voluntary humility”), is spurious. In response to the supposed intervention of angels, the worship of angels began to be practised. There was a temple in honour of Michael the archangel in Colosse, so the apostle’s warnings were very relevant. Today, men worship Mary and the saints, and are likewise condemned by God. Even the apostle John was tempted to worship an angel, but was severely rebuked by him with the words, “See thou do it not…worship God”, Revelation 22:9. If an apostle was tempted, how careful we as ordinary believers should be, for our God is a jealous God, Exodus 20:5.

Intruding into those things which he hath not seen- the unknown spirit-world has a fascination for the natural mind. God has forbidden any attempt to contact the world of the spirits. Through Isaiah He said, “And when they shall say unto you, ‘Seek unto them that have familiar spirits, and unto wizards that peep and that mutter’; Should not a people seek unto their God? For the living to the dead? To the law and to the testimony: if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them”, Isaiah 8:19,20. That these things continue is seen from the warning of the Lord Jesus to those who will pass through the time of tribulation that, “if they shall say unto you, ‘Behold he is in the secret chambers’; believe it not”, Matthew 24:26. The spiritist séance, or anything remotely like it, is no place for a believer. It would be appropriate to say that Halloween is anything but hallowed, but is devilish, and the believer should have no association with it in any shape or form, however innocent looking.

Vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind- far from showing true humility, these men are in fact puffed up in pride, claiming to have superior knowledge, and access into higher realms not open to the “ordinary” believer. Their minds are governed by the flesh, being unregenerate persons, and this leads them astray. Their pride is vain and empty pride, based on nothing substantial or spiritual, but rather the imaginings of their own thinking.

2:19

And not holding the Head, from which all the body by joints and bands having nourishment ministered, and knit together, increaseth with the increase of God.

And not holding the Head- Christ is the head of the church, which is His body. He is far superior to any real or supposed spirit-powers. To give way to the heresy-mongers is to not “hold the “Head”, that is, to not give Him His proper and supreme place, especially in the matter of building up His people. The heretics did not hold the head, but believers must be careful to do so. A body does not have to hold on to the head to maintain its position in the body, (so union with Christ is not the responsibility of believers, but His), but it does have to rely on the head to govern the supply of nourishment for its maintenance and growth.

From which all the body by joints and bands having nourishment ministered- nourishment is ministered from the head, not from any external sources, least of all devilish ones. No good angel can supply us, either, for all administration is entrusted to Christ as Head. In Ephesians 4:11,12 the apostle writes in similar vein, and there explains that the apostles and prophets with their written ministry, and pastors and teachers with their spoken ministry, are the channels of supply to us directly from our head. To ignore the ministry of the word is to ignore the ministrations of the Head, to our loss, and His dishonour.

And knit together- the joints and bands of our body not only give strength and structure, but also serve as means of supply to the whole body. What is true of the human body is also true of the body of Christ, the church. Much if not all of the disunity and fragmentation of believers could be avoided if there was a response to the teaching the Head sends down. This would not only build up, but bind together.

Increaseth with the increase of God- a body that does not grow is a tragedy, but the church grows and develops with the increase of God. This may be taken to mean the increase God supplies through Christ, or, alternatively, the increase that God is looking for, and the Epistle to the Ephesians makes it clear that what God is looking for and working towards is a likeness to Christ in His people. The language of that passage is as follows:

“till we all come in the unity of the faith,

and of the knowledge of the Son of God,

unto a perfect man,

unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ:

that we henceforth be no more children,

tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine,

by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness,

whereby they lie in wait to deceive,

but speaking the truth in love,

may grow up into Him in all things,

which is the head, even Christ:

from whom the whole body fitly joined together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth,

according to the effectual working in the measure of every part,

maketh increase of the body

unto the edifying of itself in love”

Ephesians 4:13-16.

2:20

Wherefore if ye be dead with Christ from the rudiments of the world, why, as though living in the world, are ye subject to ordinances,

Wherefore if ye be dead with Christ from the rudiments of the world- one of the things the believer died to in association with the death of Christ is the ordinances of the law. These have no jurisdiction over dead persons. We are “dead to the law by the body of Christ”, Romans 7:4. In other words, the process the body of Christ went through, namely, death, burial and resurrection, is the process we have been associated with. The elementary and rudimentary matters that the law of Moses set out were for the life of Israel on the earth. They do not fit for heaven. They were symbolic things, having great meaning, indeed, but now set aside by Christ. As such they are not relevant to those who are linked to Him in His heavenly place.

Why, as though living in the world, are ye subject to ordinances- believers live in the world by physical necessity, but not moral necessity. They are not of the world, but are sent into it as witness-bearers. They should live as though they are citizens of heaven, as indeed they are, Philippians 3:20, and not as though citizens of the world. Those who were God’s earthly nation in Old Testament times had ordinances to keep, which were appropriate to being on earth. Such things are not relevant to those who are linked to heaven. After all, Paul has told us that the ordinances were blotted out, and then the manuscript was nailed to the cross so that it could not be re-written.

2:21

(Touch not; taste not; handle not;

Touch not- the apostle sums up the ordinances of the law in three short phrases. They are all negative, which is characteristic of the law. The commandments were given by God to prevent sins being committed, and “Thou shalt not” is a constant refrain. The Levites were not allowed to touch the vessels of the tabernacle; the ordinary Israelite was not allowed to touch the altar. The whole nation were forbidden to touch Mount Sinai, but to fence it off and keep away. This was indicative of the fact that closeness of approach to God was not possible under the law.

Taste not- Israel was given dietary laws by God not only for their physical welfare, but also to mark them out as different to the nations. This is why the command to eat prohibited food was so significant to Peter, as he is about to meet Cornelius, a Gentile, in his house, Acts 10:27-29. There were those in the church, especially those who had been Jews, who were reluctant to eat other foods, and the apostle Paul deals with that matter in Romans 14:1-4,6.

Handle not- the first verb “touch” is more strong than this one, which means that there is a progression. First, close contact is forbidden by the law; then less strong contact, as expressed by the words “taste not”, and now the final verb prohibits the slightest contact. Such is the nature of the law, it admits no compromise or slight deviation.

We might contrast these two ideas of not touching and not tasting with the fact that believers can hold and taste. The word used here is the same as that of John 20:17 when the Lord Jesus said to Mary Magdalene, “Touch me not, for I am not yet ascended to my Father”. The implication being that, strangely, after He was gone back to heaven she would be able to touch Him. And so she could, as all believers can, for they are joined to Him vitally. And that in a way not possible under the law.

We may taste, too. When David was hungry, and went into the tabernacle to ask the priest for food, he was given the shewbread that had been replaced that sabbath day with hot bread, 1 Samuel 21:1-6. When he wrote about this later, David exhorted his readers to “taste and see that the Lord is good”, Psalm 34:8. When Peter alludes to those words he writes, “if so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious”, 1 Peter 2:3. He is writing to believers as Christian priests, and just as the Aaronic priests had shewbread to taste, so the believer feeds upon Christ the Living Bread. But David was not an Aaronic priest, but was of the tribe of Judah. Nonetheless, since the Lord is gracious, he was allowed the loaves.

2:22

Which all are to perish with the using;) after the commandments and doctrines of men?

Which all are to perish with the using)- all those things that are prohibited under the law are material things, which one day will be dissolved, 2 Peter 3:10. Why be occupied with things that are passing and material, when that which is eternal and spiritual is available to us?

After the commandments and doctrines of men? Originally the things of which Paul is speaking were commandments from God, but they do not come to us in that way, for they are not binding on believers of this age. The false teachers were trying to impose them upon the Colossian believers, however, and as such they had become the commandments of men, and the substance of their doctrine.

2:23

Which things have indeed a show of wisdom in will worship, and humility, and neglecting of the body: not in any honour to the satisfying of the flesh.

Which things have indeed a show of wisdom in will worship- to the carnal mind these things seemed the right thing to do, for man is a religious being, and even though he rejects God’s word, he still is inclined to some sort of religious activity. This is true of men universally. The worship the heretics were professing to offer to God was the product of their own will, and was not Divine worship at all.

And humility- they displayed a mock humility, claiming to be so abased before God that they could not approach Him directly. The true believer has “boldness and access with confidence” to God, but only “by the faith of Him”, that is, by faith in Christ who introduces believers into the presence of the Father, and pleads His worth, not theirs, Ephesians 3:12.

And neglecting of the body- the strange doctrine of some was that if you starved and abused the body, then nearness to God might be achieved. We are to mortify the deeds of the body, reckoning the death of Christ to apply to it, in principle, Romans 8:13. We are not required to mortify the body itself. Christianity alone gives the proper place of honour and dignity to the body, and brings about circumstances whereby it may be presented to God as a living sacrifice, Romans 12:1. Needless to say when the apostle said he kept under his body, and brought it into subjection, 1 Corinthians 9:27, he was not saying he abused his body, but that he refused to allow any licence to his body to commit sin

Not in any honour to the satisfying of the flesh- as far as God is concerned, these practices, far from pleasing Him, are reckoned to be dishonourable, however much men might approve of them. All these ideas did was satisfy carnal minds; they did not satisfy God, which should be our main aim.

 

 

 

 

THE RESURRECTION OF THE BODY

THE SCRIPTURAL DOCTRINE OF THE RESURRECTION OF THE BODY

The Biblical doctrine of resurrection is both exciting and encouraging for all who love God, for eventually all that have ever gone into death will be raised from the dead, whether they died as the just or the unjust, and in this way God shall be glorified.  This is guaranteed because of who God is.  He is the living God, and as such cannot allow death to thwart Him.  He must, and will, triumph in this matter.  This triumph is assured through His Firstborn Son, into whose hand He has committed all His affairs, John 3:35.  Because the pleasure of the Lord prospers in His hand, Isaiah 53:10, we know that all that are in the graves shall hear His voice and come forth, John 5:28,29. 

When God made man He first of all made his body from the earth as a potter forms a vessel, Genesis 2:7.  He then breathed into that lifeless body the breath of life, “and man became a living soul”.  He was a tripartite being by Divine design, and whether in life or in resurrection he will always be a tripartite being.  Only when in a state of death is man divided into his parts, with the body going to the dust, (“for dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return”, Genesis 3:19), the spirit going back to God that gave it, Ecclesiastes 12:7, and the soul going out into its appropriate place awaiting its appropriate resurrection moment.  As we shall see, even after Abraham had died he still lived unto God, Matthew 22:32.  His body was dead because the spirit had been withdrawn, but that spirit does not die.  Because Abraham was a believer he could still be said to live unto God. 

The word resurrection does not occur in the Old Testament, but the idea is certainly there, for the dead were raised in the Old Testament times.  In the New Testament the main word used means “a raising up, a rising”, (Grimme.)  The thought being the reversal of what happened when a person fell in death, and was lowered into a grave.  It has to do with the body, for souls and spirits cannot die.  Just as death is defined as “the body without the spirit” in James 2:26, so resurrection has to do with the return of the spirit to the body, and the rising of that body from the dead by Divine power.  In the book of Ecclesiastes we read, “then shall the dust return to the earth as it was: and the spirit shall return unto God that gave it”, Ecclesiastes 12:7.  This is an echo of the word to Adam, “In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground; for out of it wast thou taken: for dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return”, Genesis 3:19.  Now Adam’s spirit did not come from the dust, but from God breathing into his nostrils.  His body did, however, come from the dust of the ground, for he was “of the earth, earthy”, 1 Corinthians 15:47.  Only this part of him, therefore, can return to the ground.  And what is true of Adam is true of all who have him as their head, for in Adam all die, 1 Corinthians15:22.  Or as Romans 5:12 puts it, “By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin, and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned”.  The proof that death has passed upon all is that all have sinned in their experience, showing that they have the sin principle within them from Adam.  The wages of this sin principle is death, Romans 6:23.
When a person dies, their spirit returns to the “God of the spirits of all flesh”, Numbers 16:22, awaiting the moment of resurrection.  When that resurrection is, depends on what their relation to God was at the moment of their death.  For the believer, there is “the resurrection of life”, John 5:29, also called the “first resurrection”, Revelation 20:5,6; for the unbeliever there is the “resurrection of damnation”, John 5:29.  The time of that resurrection as far as believers are concerned also depends on which age they lived in, whether the Old Testament era, the New Testament, or the Tribulation period.  Hopefully these things will become clear as we proceed.

We should remember that there is a distinction between existence and life.  There are many things that exist that have no life.  But man has life, and when he dies he exchanges that state of existence for another, called death.  He still exists, whether believer or unbeliever, but he now exists in death, as before he existed in life.

As a result of the sin of Adam our first-father, the sin-principle has been passed on to us.  As Romans 5:12 says, “by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin: and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned”.  In other words, by sinning, all men show they have a sin-principle within them.  Because they have that sin within, they die physically, for “the wages of sin is death”, Romans 6:23. 

God is not defeated by this situation, for He is the Living God, and His Son manifest this attribute when He declared, after learning that His friend Lazarus had died, “I am the resurrection and the life”.  By Him not only eternal life may be known as to the spirit, but resurrection as to the body.  These things were but dimly seen in the Old Testament, but we shall notice various scriptures showing that Old Testament saints were not entirely ignorant on the matter of resurrection.

Resurrection and Abraham
We begin with Abraham.  To Him God said, “I will give unto thee, and to thy seed after thee the land whereon thou art a stranger, all the land of Canaan, for an everlasting possession: and I will be their God”, Genesis 17:8.  Now we learn from Hebrews 11:13 that Abraham, Isaac and Jacob all “died in faith, not having received the promises”.  This means they did not receive the fulfilment of the promises.  Yet God had made His promise to Abraham personally, not just to Abraham’s seed.  And since the fulfilment of the promise involves living on the earth under the reign of the Messiah, (“ye shall see Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and all the prophets, in the kingdom of God”, Luke 13:28), it follows that these men must be raised from the dead to come into the good of God’s promise to them.  For the same promise was given to Isaac in Genesis 26:2-5, and Jacob in Genesis 35:12.

That Abraham believed that God could raise the dead is seen in Genesis 22:5 when he said to his young men, as they travelled to Moriah, “I and the lad will go yonder and worship, and come again to you”.  It was not that Abraham simply believed in resurrection as an event in the future; he believed that God could raise the dead at any time of His choosing.  So it is that Hebrews 11:19 says he received Isaac from the dead in a figure.  Abraham’s faith was such that he believed God could raise Isaac from the dead immediately, so that he could come down with him from the mountain.

No doubt Abraham was encouraged in his faith by the fact that he already had experience of God producing life from the dead.  His body, at 100 years old, was dead as far as having children was concerned, and so was Sarah’s, at age 90.  Yet God had given them a son, and thus showed that he could produce life out of dead conditions, a fact which the apostle Paul uses in Romans 4:17-25.

We should notice, however, that the apostle Paul assures us that when Abraham believed God, he believed in Him as the one who quickens the dead, Romans 4:17, and this is before Isaac had been produced out of the “dead” bodies of Abraham and Sarah.  So his belief in the God of resurrection came before the birth of Isaac, suggesting that he had realised that the promise that he would live in Canaan under the Messiah was to be brought about after his resurrection. 

So it is that the apostle Paul, giving his defence before Agrippa, was able to say, “And now I stand and am judged for the hope of the promise made of God unto our fathers: unto which promise our twelve tribes, instantly serving God day and night, hope to come.  For which hope’s sake, King Agrippa, I am accused of the Jews.  Why should it be thought a thing incredible with you, that God should raise the dead?” Acts 26:6-8.  So not only did Abraham, Isaac and Jacob believe in the resurrection of the dead, but Jacob’s twelve sons, and the tribes that came from them, did so also.  Why else would Paul link the hopes of the twelve tribes with resurrection?  He had not mentioned the resurrection of Christ up to that point in his conversation with Agrippa, nor does he mention it until the very end of his remarks, 15 verses later, (although his reference to the Lord speaking to him on the Damascus road does imply it).

When Moses was being commissioned to lead the people of Israel out of Egypt, he heard the voice of God from the midst of the burning bush saying, “I am the God of thy father, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob”, Exodus 3:6.  The Lord Jesus pointed out the deep significance of this statement when He was questioned by the Sadducees at the end of His ministry on earth, Matthew 22:23-33.  They did not believe in resurrection, so the situation they recounted to the Lord, that of seven brothers who all had the same wife in succession, was designed to trip Him up.  They thought that the question of whose wife she would be in the resurrection was not capable of an answer, and they thought they would thereby disprove resurrection, and discredit Christ who taught resurrection. 

The Sadducees had ignored the fact that when the first six brothers died, their marriage to the woman was at an end, for “the woman that hath an husband is bound by the law to her husband so long as he liveth; but if the husband be dead, she is loosed from the law of her husband”, Romans 7:2.  This was why she was free to marry the successive husbands.  But when the last husband died, she was no longer married to any one of them.  So if the question is “Whose wife shall she be”? the answer is “No-one’s”, because death has ended her marriages, and also, as the Lord said, “in the resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage”.  Because the brothers’ marriages were ended, they would have to marry again to have the woman to wife.  But in the resurrection the men do not marry, and women are not given in marriage, but are as the angels of God in heaven, who do not marry.  The reason they do not marry being that they have no bodies.  This is why the question is about the resurrection state; the intermediate state between death and resurrection is one in which the person does not have a body- there is no possibility of marriage then anyway.

Having confounded the Sadducees by His teaching, the Lord goes on enforce the truth of resurrection further.  He used the incident of the burning bush, and the statement made by God quoted above from Exodus 3:6.  The Sadducees were prepared to accept the five books of Moses, but rejected the rest of the Old Testament.  They cannot make the excuse that the quotation is from a part that they do not recognise as the Word of God.  By saying, “I am the God of Abraham”, God was using the present tense.  Abraham had been dead for many years at this point, yet God declared “I am the God of Abraham”.  In other words, although dead as to the body, Abraham lived on in relationship with God as to the spirit.  He was “living unto Him”, as the Lord said.  When God declares He is the God of someone, it means He is in relationship with that person, and will be true to all He has promised.  By saying that He was the God of Abraham, then, Jehovah is assuring Moses that all that He had promised to Abraham would come to pass, including the promise that Abraham would personally possess the land of Canaan, Genesis 17:8.
No wonder the Sadducees were put to silence, for a truth that had been in the Word of God all along, contained simply in the tense of a verb, had completely undermined their position; there was such a thing as resurrection after all!

Resurrection and Job
We come now to the patriarch Job, a man who had a close personal relationship with God.  He exclaimed out of his trial and distress, “For I know that my redeemer liveth, and that He shall stand at the latter day upon the earth:  and though after my skin worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I see God: whom I shall see for myself, and mine eyes shall behold, and not another; though my reins be consumed within me”, Job 19:25-27.
These are remarkable statements, and show that Job had taken to heart the things God had told him.  He was conscious that at the moment he uttered the words, his redeemer was living.  Moreover, He would stand at some late stage upon the earth, implying His incarnation and real manhood.  Since Job connects this with his own resurrection, it must be a reference to Christ’s second coming to the earth, when He shall redeem His people from the power of the grave, as Hosea 13:14 says.  Job is confident that even after the worms in his grave have not only eaten up his skin, but have totally destroyed his whole body, yet he would be raised again, and in his resurrection body see God.  Even though his reins had been consumed in the grave, yet he would personally recognise his redeemer, and be sure that it was not another, but He Himself.
Think of the things these words imply:
1.    Job had a Redeemer, who would ultimately deliver him from his troubles.
2.    He was living at the time Job spoke the words, probably 1520 BC.
3.    He would stand upon the earth, implying His real manhood.
4.    He would do so after a long period of time.
5.    Even though Job would die, and his body be consumed in the grave, he was confident of a resurrection which involved having a body.
6.    He was sure that His Redeemer was God and that he would see Him.
7.    He was also sure that even though his whole body had been consumed, his memories and insights would be carried over into resurrection conditions, so that he would know his Redeemer, not as a stranger seen for the first time, but as one well-known.

All this shall be realised when Christ comes to earth to reign, for we read in Revelation 11:15-18 as follows:

“And the seventh angel sounded; and there were great voices in heaven, saying, The kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of His Christ; and He shall reign for ever and ever.  And the four and twenty elders, which sat before God on their seats, fell upon their faces, and worshipped God, saying, We give Thee thanks, O Lord God Almighty, which art, and wast, and art to come; because Thou hast taken to Thee Thy great power, and hast reigned.  And the nations were angry, and Thy wrath is come, and the time of the dead, that they should be judged, and that thou shouldest give reward unto Thy servants the prophets, and to the saints, and them that fear Thy name, small and great; and shouldest destroy them which destroy the earth”.

So it that Job’s prayer will be answered, “O that Thou wouldest hide me in the grave, that Thou wouldest keep me secret, until Thy wrath be past, that Thou wouldest appoint me a set time, and remember me!  If a man die, shall he live again?  all the days of my appointed time will I wait, till my change come.  Thou shalt call, and I will answer Thee: Thou wilt have a desire to the work of Thine hands”, Job 14:13-15.

Resurrection and David
We come to the words of David, found in Psalm 16.  They read as follows:  “I have set the Lord always before Me:  Because He is at My right hand, I shall not be moved.  Therefore My heart is glad, and My glory rejoiceth:  My flesh also shall rest in hope, for Thou wilt not leave My soul in hell; neither wilt Thou suffer Thine holy one to see corruption.  Thou wilt show Me the path of life: in Thy presence is fulness of joy; at Thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore”, Psalm 16:8-11.

My might think at first that these words are about David, until we get to “Thou wilt not suffer Thine holy one to see corruption”.  This shows that David is not writing of himself, but the Messiah, for David’s body was not preserved from corruption, for it was “sown in corruption”, 1 Corinthians 15:42, like every other man except Christ.  And the apostle Peter emphasised this on the Day of Pentecost, for this was one of the passages he quoted in his address.  He pointed out that David’s sepulchre was still with them, with David’s dust within it; so he had gone to corruption.  The inspired apostle states categorically in Acts 2:25, that David was writing about Christ, not himself. 

But David had a promise from God that a descendant of his would sit on his throne, and “reign over the House of Jacob for ever”, Luke 1:33.  The only way to achieve this was for Christ, of the seed of David, to rise from the dead to die no more.  And this He has done.  God has seen to it that His body saw no corruption whilst He was in Joseph’s tomb.  The tomb was new, was hewn out of the rock, and had no-one else in it before, and He was wrapped in a new linen cloth, so there was nothing to pollute the body of Christ in death.  He had no sin-principle within, so He would not see corruption that way, nor did He see any corruption from without, for His tomb was sealed.  He has been shown the path of resurrection life, and is currently at the right hand of God, where all the things that spiritual minds find delightful are enjoyed.

Resurrection and Daniel
Daniel was confident of resurrection, and he looked forward to the time when he would stand in his lot at the end of the days, Daniel 12:13.  At the beginning of that chapter he was told “And at that time shall Michael stand up, the great prince which standeth for the children of thy people: and there shall be a time of trouble, such as never was since there was a nation even to that same time: and at that time thy people shall be delivered, every one that shall be found written in the book”, Daniel 12:1.  So the time in view is the great tribulation, (Matthew 24:21), and the promise is given that as many of Daniel’s people, the people of Israel, as are found written in the Book of Life, shall be delivered from it.  So much for the living, what of the dead?  The angel goes on, “And many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt”, Daniel 12:2.  Now it is important to understand this verse correctly.  On the surface it appears to say that all involved awake together, and some go into everlasting life, and the rest into shame and everlasting contempt.  The word translated “some” is never used in the Hebrew Bible, however, to divide up what has been mentioned before. 

The correct understanding of the words, (and the Rabbis were agreed about this), is as follows:
1.    Many of them that sleep in their graves shall be wakened.  The word “of” means “out of”, so bearing in mind the angel is only referring to Daniel’s people, the Israelites, the prophecy is telling us about the resurrection of Israelites from among the dead, with no reference to any others in the graves, whether Gentile believers or Gentile unbelievers.  In fact the Gentile believing dead will indeed be raised at this time, as we shall see, but the concern  in this passage is Daniel’s people.
2.    Since the promise to believers in Israel was that they would have a share in Messiah’s kingdom, (and this is what having everlasting life meant to an Old Testament Jew), those who awake to everlasting life go into Christ’s kingdom when He comes to earth to reign.
3.    Those who go into shame and everlasting contempt are clearly unbelievers, even though of Israel.  These shall awake at the resurrection of the unjust, and shall be judged at the Great White Throne judgement, Revelation 20:11-15.  There is nothing in the verse to say that all the people in view rise at the same time, just that they rise from among other dead persons, and go to their respective places.  So there are one thousand years between the two awakenings, just as there are one thousand years between the first resurrection and the resurrection of damnation.
4.    The foregoing is a warning to the men of Israel not to presume that since they were children of Abraham they were guaranteed a place in the kingdom.  Nicodemus thought this in his day, and the Lord Jesus had to warn him that unless he was born of water and of the Spirit he would not enter into the kingdom of God, John 3:5.  The Rabbis taught that all those who were descended from Abraham and had been circumcised were sure of a place in the kingdom, but they were wrong.

Resurrection and Hosea
Hosea the prophet also spoke of God’s promise to His people, “I will ransom them from the power of the grave;  I will redeem them from death: O death, I will be thy plagues; O grave, I will be thy destruction: repentance shall be hid from Mine eyes”, Hosea 13:14. 

In the Old Testament, redemption is most often in relation to national deliverance from calamity for Israel.  So Israel were redeemed from their slavery in Egypt, and the prophets speak of a future deliverance for the nation when Christ comes to earth in glory.  The verse just quoted, and also the words of Job we have already looked at, are exceptions.  God is pledging to redeem His people from the power of the grave, as it holds the bodies of His people, and from death, as it holds their souls.  Their spirits are with God, for the spirits of all who live upon earth go to God at death, to be re-united with the body in the resurrection day, whether for judgement or for blessing.  Hence there is no mention of redemption for the spirit.  God issues an ultimatum to death and the grave, that just as death had been the result of the plague of sin, (what Solomon called the plague of a man’s heart, 1 Kings 8:38), so God would plague death to such an extent that it shall be rendered completely powerless.  And just as the grave had swallowed up the bodies of His saints, and corruption had destroyed their bodies, so God will corrupt and destroy the power of the grave.  God is determined to do this, and assures us that any idea of repentance or change of mind is completely out of the question as far as He is concerned.  As we now turn to the New Testament, we see the way this announcement by God that He will deliver His people from death and the grave comes to pass.

Resurrection and Martha
The coming of the Son of God into this world changed everything.  One of the purposes of His coming was so as to “bring life and immortality (incorruptibility) to light through the gospel”, 2 Timothy 1:10.  We see this illustrated in what happened to Lazarus.  Lazarus was not only a disciple but a friend of the Lord Jesus, but he had died.  When the Saviour met Martha, Lazarus’ sister, four days later, He said to her, “Thy brother shall rise again”, John 11:23.  This was not only a word of encouragement and comfort for her, but also the introduction to a conversation in which He would reveal His glory to her.  Martha’s reply was, “I know that he shall rise again in the resurrection in the last day”.  She was in the good of what Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, Job, Daniel, and Hosea believed.  And she was confident that the “last day” was the last day before Messiah’s kingdom would be set up, so that Lazarus, raised from the dead, could enjoy that kingdom.  She was about to learn more, however, for a new age was about to dawn, about which the Old Testament saints knew nothing, as a reading of Ephesians chapter 3 will show.

So it is that at this point the Lord utters one of His “I am” statements.  Said He, “I am the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in Me, though he were dead, yet shall he live: and whosoever liveth and believeth in Me shall never die.  Believeth thou this?” 

Let us look at this statement phrase by phrase.  By saying “I am the resurrection”, the Lord is introducing the idea that because He is present, a fresh situation prevails.  Resurrection is vested in Him as the Son of God, so He holds in His person the right to raise men.   He Himself said, “For as the Father hath life in Himself; so hath He given to the Son to have life in Himself”, John 5:26.  If He who is the resurrection stands in a cemetery, things must change.

But He is not only the resurrection, but also the life; not natural life here, (although all forms and expressions of life come from Him at the beginning, “In His was life”, John 1:4), but eternal life.  He is “that eternal life which was with the Father, and was manifested unto us”, 1 John 1:2, and He is “the true God and eternal life”, 1 John 5:20.  So we are being presented with two aspects to life.  There is eternal life, the life of God, which Divine persons have essentially, and which believers have by the new birth.  And there is the expression of that life in resurrection conditions. 

The Saviour went on to say to Martha, “he that believeth in Me, though he were dead, yet shall he live”.  The expression “he were dead” is in the Aorist Subjunctive, “which refers to a simple defined action, without signifying the time of the action.  The Subjunctive Mood makes an assertion about which there is some doubt, uncertainty, or indefiniteness.  It is closely related to the future tense, which helps point up the fact that often the uncertainty only arises because the action has not yet occurred”, (Zodhiates).

Applying this to our phrase, we learn that the event referred to, death, is in the future.  Yet it is not certain that this believer will die; but should he do so, he will certainly live again in resurrection.  This is an important point, for the Lord is giving for the first time an indication that some believers will partake of resurrection without dying. 

Then we have the last expression, “And whosoever liveth and believeth in Me shall never die”.  Note the change in designation of the person in question.  In the first part, it is “he that…though he”.  Now it is, “whosoever…shall”.  Because the first part had to do with a possibility that might not involve everyone, it was “he”.  Now we are learning of something that all believers shall share, so it is “whosoever”, meaning everyone without exception.  So what is it that is to be true of all believers?  As those who are alive physically, and alive spiritually too, they shall never die physically or spiritually.  Such is the power of eternal life, that it renders the event of death as if it were of no consequence.  This has already been stated, for in John 8:51, the Lord said, “Verily, verily, I say unto you, If a man keep My saying, he shall never see death”.  It is also why the Lord said, when told of the death of Lazarus, that “This sickness is not unto death, but for the glory of God, that the Son of God might be glorified thereby”, John 11:4.  Unbelievers might say this was not the case, because Lazarus did die.  The point is, however, that the sickness was allowed by God, not so that Lazarus might die, but that he might be raised from the dead, and as a result both He, and His Son, might be glorified in his resurrection.

We should not apply this to the death of the Lord Jesus however, and say that because He is eternal life personified death was of no account to Him either.  For in His death He was being held responsible for the sins of others for whom death was a terrible consequence.  So for Him death was of the utmost significance.

Having taught these things to Martha, the Lord went on to illustrate the truth of them by raising Lazarus from the dead.  He was selected from among the dead that day, and came forth from his grave in response to the word of the Son of God.  This marks one of the differences between the raising of the dead by Elijah, Elisha, Peter and Paul, and the raising of the dead by Christ.  They did not act of their own will, but as subordinate to the will of God.  The Son, however, had authority to raise the dead of His own will.  But only in harmony with the will of His Father, with whom He is equal.  His own words were, “For as the Father raiseth the dead, and quickeneth them; even so the Son quickeneth whom He will”, John 5:21. 

Of course Lazarus was not raised to never die again, for the Lord Jesus must have the privilege of being the first to rise in that way.  Lazarus did not have a spiritual body as he came forth from his grave, or else he would not have needed to be loosed from his grave-clothes.  The resurrection body is spiritual, and does not suffer the restrictions our physical body does. 

Resurrection and the disciples
When the Lord Jesus referred to His resurrection in Mark 9:9, He used the preposition “ek”, meaning “out of”, which is the equivalent to the “of” in Daniel 12:2.  Yet the disciples were puzzled by this use of the word, “And they kept that saying with themselves, questioning one with another what the rising from the dead should mean”, Mark 9:10.  The idea of resurrection was not strange to them; nor was the idea of many persons rising from among the dead, for they would know the meaning of Daniel 12:2.  What was new to them was the idea of one man rising from among the dead, leaving all others, of whatever class, behind.  They did not as yet realise that the resurrection of Christ would inaugurate a new sort of resurrection, namely some believers rising and leaving other believers behind.  Those raised being church saints at the rapture, and those left being Old Testament saints. 

Now the Lord Jesus later told His disciples that He had many things to say to them, but they were not able to bear them at that point, for the Holy Spirit had not yet come to indwell them as He would on the Day of Pentecost.  After that, however, the Spirit in His capacity as the Spirit of Truth would lead them into all the truth, (and if it was all truth it must include about resurrection), John 16:12,13.

Resurrection and Christ
This brings us to a brief consideration of the resurrection of Christ.  When the Lord Jesus spoke of His death by lifting up in John 12:31, the people were puzzled, for they had “heard out of the law that Christ abideth for ever”.  What they had been taught was perfectly correct, for Isaiah had declared that the Son whose name is Wonderful, Counsellor, the Mighty God, the Everlasting Father, the Prince of peace, that “of the increase of His government and peace there shall be no end, upon the throne of David, and upon his kingdom, to order it, and to establish it with judgement and with justice from henceforth even for ever.  The zeal of the Lord of Hosts will perform this”, Isaiah 9:7.

If the Son of Man is to be crucified, and yet will reign for ever, then He must rise from the dead.  And this is what Peter asserted on the Day of Pentecost, quoting the words of Psalm 16 and alluding to the words of Psalm 132.  In the latter passage David wrote of God’s promise to him that his family would occupy the throne of David for evermore.  There were conditions, however; a condition which they (with one exception) did not fulfil.  Those conditions were that the children be just, fear the Lord, and keep God’s covenant.  David confessed that his house had not done this, for he has to admit “although my house be not so with God”, 2 Samuel 23:5.  How sad that in his last words, (see verse 1), David has to write this.  Does this mean that David’s throne shall be forever vacant?  Not at all, for as David goes on to say, “He hath made with me an everlasting covenant, ordered in all things and sure”.  If David’s throne is to be occupied only by one who has not broken God’s law, then there is only one person qualified, even Christ who is the Just One, was heard for His godly fear, and who magnified the law and made it honourable, and thus fulfilled the conditions for occupying that throne.  And being a prophet, David knew this, Acts 2:30,31, which is why he foretold that Christ’s soul would not be left in Hades, nor His body allowed to see corruption, but, on the contrary, would be quickly raised from the dead.  So how is it Christ shall be able to reign uninterruptedly for ever?  Because He has been raised to die no more.  “His kingdom is an everlasting kingdom”, Daniel 7:44, and “He shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever, and of His kingdom there shall be no end”, Luke 1:32. 
When we come to Isaiah 52 and 53 we hear the prophet asking, “And who shall declare His generation?  For He was cut off out of the land of the living”, Isaiah 53:8.  Then to safeguard the integrity of the One of whom he speaks, Isaiah makes it clear by the Spirit that “for the transgression of my people was He stricken”.  Matthew declares His ancestry, but who shall declare His posterity?  To die childless was to a Jew a disaster ever since Abraham lamented, “I go childless”, Genesis 15:2.  It is true that Messiah was cut off without natural seed, but the prophet assures us “He shall see His seed”; that even though cut off in the midst of His years “He will prolong His days”, and it will continue to be true that “the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in His hand”, verse 10.  There is, in other words, an expectation on the part of the prophet that the Messiah will rise from the dead.  And so it came to pass.  But if He rises, so must the seed associated with Him rise too.

Resurrection and Paul
Now it is the apostle Paul that especially deals with the consequences of the resurrection of Christ and applies those consequences to those who believe.  We shall look briefly at Romans 6 to see the spiritual and moral consequences, and 1 Corinthians 15 to see the consequences as to our bodies.  Turning, then, to Romans 6 we find the apostle confronting those who suggested that because the sin of man had been met by the grace of God in Christ, then the more we sin, the more opportunity there would be for God to be glorified by the exhibition of His grace, Romans 5:20-6:1.  The apostle answers this not by saying, “You ought not to sin”, but rather, “How shall we, that are dead to sin live any more therein”, Romans 6:2. 

He shows that when we believed we not only came into the good of Christ’s death, but, more than that, we were associated with Him in it.  Not, of course, that we made any contribution to the value of His death, but that God associates those who believe with what happened at Calvary, so what happened to Christ happened to them, in His sight.  He can do this because He foreknows who will believe.  So our old man, (ourselves considered as having links with Adam), was crucified with Christ, verse 6.  God considers that the pre-conversion person is cut off morally, as much as a crucified person was cut off physically. 

When the Roman authorities wished to declare very publicly that a certain criminal was not fit for their society, they crucified him.  After the same manner, God cannot have sinners in the society of heaven, so He publicly sets them aside by associating them with His Son when He was crucified.  So they are crucified by proxy.  Now if this was all there was to Christianity, it would be a very negative thing.  But it is positively positive!  For, having been crucified with Christ, the true believer is buried with Him, and then raised with Him to walk in newness of life. 

There are two things that show that a person has died, namely the death certificate and the burial service.  Our death certificate is the Scripture which says, “our old man is crucified”, verse 6.  Our burial is when we are baptized.  Those who are buried in the ordinary sense have died beforehand- they do not die at their own funeral.  So baptism is the burial of a person who has already died.  But unlike every normal burial, the buried person arrives at resurrection immediately, coming out of the watery grave to live a new sort of life.  So it is that to be baptized into His death means to be baptized into His state of death, associating with the one who for three days lay dead in the sepulchre.  But He is risen, so we are authorised to rise from our “grave” too. 

Now since we are dead and buried, and since we have emerged to live a new and different sort of life, the old way of life is not appropriate for us.  Yet we have a problem, for whilst our old man is crucified, the flesh is still with us.  As far as God and spiritual reality are concerned the pre-conversion person is dead; but as far as practical reality is concerned the ability to sin is still with us.  The reason being that we still have our old body, and that body is the seat of the sin-principle, so that the apostle calls it “the body of sin” in verse 6.  But he raises the possibility that that body of sin may be destroyed, or “made of no effect”.  This is the potential, and not the actual.  We know only too well that our bodies still have the tendency and ability to sin.  We are exhorted, however, to “let not sin reign in your mortal body”, verse 12. 

How do we do this?  The apostle tells us, for he writes, “Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord”, verse 11.  We are to reckon with the fact that as far as God is concerned, we are dead to sin.  If we act on that truth, by the power of the indwelling Spirit, we shall not sin.  We are also to act on the truth that we are alive to God, and if we do this, we shall live righteously, again by the power of the Spirit.
In this way we enter into the good of what the crucifixion, burial and resurrection of Christ has secured for us.  And as we reckon ourselves dead to sin and alive to God, we increasingly attain to the (out) resurrection of the dead, Philippians 3:11, which means moral conformity, even now, and by degrees, to the truth of Christ’s resurrection.

Resurrection and church saints
We come now to the classic chapter on resurrection, 1 Corinthians 15.  What body can possibly rise from the grave, when it has crumbled to dust centuries before?  The answer is found in the One who made man from the dust at the beginning, and who can bring a man out from the dust at the resurrection.  We should remember that our body is not only an object, but is also an idea- one million cells in our body die and are replaced each second, so we are constantly changing.  The body we had when we were saved, the body God bought with the price of His Son’s blood, 1 Corinthians 6:19,20, is composed of different cells now.  The resurrection body is “eternal in the heavens”, and “from heaven”, 2 Corinthians 1,2, in other words it exists in the mind of God in the first instance.

Before we take a look at what the apostle says about the resurrection body, we might ask why it is necessary for us to have one.  Are we not linked to Christ already on a spiritual level, for “he that is joined to the Lord is one spirit”, 1 Corinthians 6:17.  And are we not able already to commune with God by the gracious aid of the Holy Spirit, even in this present body?  Can we not be in heaven simply as spirits?  After all, the angels dwell in heaven, and they are spirits without a body. 

We might answer this question by considering four things:
1.    Having a body is part of being human, and is therefore part of our personality.  We express ourselves not only by soul and spirit, but also by our body.  We need to have our body to be recognised in heaven, as no doubt we shall be.
2.    The Lord Jesus has a body in heaven, for He is shortly coming out from heaven as the Last Adam; if Adam had a body and He does not, then that title has lost most if not all of its meaning.  He is coming as the Second Man, so He has a body, or else He could not be called a man.
3.    God has purchased our bodies by the redeeming blood of Christ, 1 Corinthians 6:19,20, and therefore they are valuable to Him, and He has an eternal purpose for them.
4.    We are to be conformed to the image of God’s Son, so as to represent Him.  But He has a body, therefore we cannot fully represent Him in heaven, or anywhere else for that matter, if we do not have a body.

When the apostle is giving instruction about the kind of body that believers will have in resurrection, he first of all gives some illustrations from the world of botany, biology and astronomy, to help us understand what the resurrection body will be like, in verses 36-41.  Then he makes a series of contrasts, in verses 42-44.

First the comparisons.  In verse 36 we learn that the resurrection body is a quickened body, a body pulsing in all its parts with Divine life, and freed from all the current hindrances imposed on it because it is a natural body having the sin-principle within it.  Death is a necessity, in this context, not a calamity, for seeds left unsown will not grow.  Later on the apostle will show that some believers will not die, yet shall share in the resurrection.
Our bodies in resurrection will be suited to their occupation, which will be to serve God, for “His servants shall serve Him”, Revelation 22:3. 

In verses 37 and 38 we learn it will be a clothed body, compared to which the present body is plain and unadorned.  Just as a grain of corn when it is sown is bare or unclothed, but when it is quickened into life a luxuriant plant is produced which seems to bear no resemblance to the plain seed sown, so will it be with our bodies in resurrection.  God “giveth”, (in the present), a body to a seed when it is sown, but He does so in accordance with what pleased Him at the beginning when He created all things.
Just as we know what was sown by seeing what has come up, so those in the resurrection body will be recognised as those we knew before, there will be a continued identity.

Verse 39 draws lessons from the world of biology.  Each kind of creature has a body suited to its environment, whether land, sea or air.  So the resurrection body will be suited to the environment of heaven.

Leading on from this idea, Paul moves into the world of astronomy.  The sun radiates Divinely-give energy, and so shall believers display the power of God, in bodies of glory.  The moon, on the other hand, reflects the glory of the sun.  So the believer will gladly acknowledge that any glory he is able to display is only a reflection of the glory of Christ; it is not intrinsic but acquired.  And just as each star has its own peculiar glory, so each believer will have his or her different and glorious characteristics, but all to glorify Christ.  The resurrection body will be able to display glory.

Having spoken of the resurrection body by the use of comparisons with creation, the apostle now makes a series of contrasts in 1 Corinthians 15:42-44, as follows:
Even though believers may have lived a spiritually incorrupt life, the body in which they lived was a corrupt one, because affected by the fall.  They shall be “raised incorruptible”, however, not only with no trace of corruption on them, but with no capacity to ever do corrupt things again.
Even though they may have been much honoured and respected by the saints, they are laid in the grave, sharing the dishonour that Adam brought on the race.  They shall be “raised in glory”, with a body ideally fitted to glorify God in the realms of glory, and to appreciate that glory to the full.
Even though they may have died when they were still physically strong, the weakness of the fall was still about them, and they were weak compared to what they shall be.  When raised, however, their bodies shall pulse with resurrection power, for they shall be “raised in power”, and they shall serve God with energy and enthusiasm for all eternity.

Even though they may have been very spiritual, their bodies were still natural, or soulish.  Like Adam they were living souls, not living spirits.  Their bodies were governed by the soul, and its relations with the earth.  They had eternal life from God, and thus they could grow in spirituality, but the fact remained that they had a body fitted for life on earth.  At the resurrection this will change, and there will be given a spiritual body”, one fitted for the heavenly sphere, and one, moreover, that will have the capacity to relate to God in the fullest way that is possible for a creature. 

We then learn from the apostle the role of the Lord Jesus in this change of the body.  He is now declared to be “the second man”, 1 Corinthians 15:47, the first man having shown himself to be a failure.  That first man was not only known personally as Adam, but that was also his title as head of natural men.  Christ is second man, not because He has some shortcoming- that cannot be- but because the first man must be seen to fail before God brings in the One who cannot fail.  But He is second, and not third, not only because there are only two heads of men as far as God is concerned, (there is no-one between first and second), but also because there is no-one to follow Christ as the third.  He brings in finality.  This is why the apostle calls Him the Last Adam, for He takes that name, not in a personal sense as Adam did, but in its official sense. 

Just as there are only two heads of men, so there are only two companies of men, those under the headship of Adam, and those who have believed, and therefore have transferred from the headship of Adam to that of Christ.  This is a moral and spiritual change, but not as yet a physical change, for that awaits the resurrection.  At that time the believers shall begin to bear the image of the heavenly.  That is, they shall be equipped to adequately represent their Head, even Christ, because they will have changed bodies.  Of course it is the responsibility of believers to represent Christ now, but they are somewhat hindered by being in the body they have from Adam.  In the resurrection every hindrance will be removed, and the last link with Adam will be gone.  The bondage of corruption which we share with the whole of the fallen creation shall be broken, and we shall be set free, Romans 8:19-23.  The apostle calls this the redemption of the body, when full sonship will be ours, with all its accompanying advantages and abilities. 

As a result of these changes, the resurrected saints will be enabled to “bear the image of the heavenly”, 1 Corinthians 15:49, or in other words, to represent Christ their head to the limits of their capacity.  Formerly representing Adam, and hampered by a body of clay, (see Job 4:19), they represented Adam; now all is changed, even as to the body.  Full sonship will have been reached, and the conformity to the image of God’s Son that God has purposed for all eternity will be attained, Romans 8:29.  When God made man at the beginning, He gave him rationality, personality, and spirituality.  Rationality, to enable him to think and reason, so that he might understand God’s truth.  Personality, so as to be able to express the character of God, (insofar as that is possible for a finite being).  Spirituality, so that he could relate to God, worship Him and commune with Him.  As far as Adam and his race are concerned, these faculties have been spoiled.  As far as believers are concerned, they are restored in Christ, but not fully, since they are still in a natural body.  When the resurrection comes, the believer will be able to fully exploit the rationality, personality and spirituality he has been given, to God’s glory.

Resurrection and living saints
There is a difficulty, however.  What of saints who are “alive and remain” when the Lord comes out of heaven for them?  How can they partake in resurrection if they have not died? 

We have really come across part of the answer to that question already, when we noticed that the Lord Jesus said, “he that liveth and believeth in Me shall never die”, John 11:26, and “if a man keep My saying, he shall never see death”, John 8:51.  In other words, it is not just those alive when the Lord comes who will not die.  All believers, since they have eternal life, (which cannot be touched by death), do not die as other men die.  For them death is defeated, and has no claim on them in the ultimate sense.  Their bodies are mortal and do indeed die, but their spirits are born of God and they share His life.
This situation prevails for three reasons.  The first is that believers have eternal life, and that life is not dissoluble by death, just as the Lord Jesus could not be held by death, and He is made priest in relation to the fact that by His resurrection He has shown His life to be indissoluble by death, Hebrews 7:16.
The second reason is that he who had the power of death in Old Testament times has been rendered of no effect in that regard, as Hebrews 2:14 informs us.  In Job’s day, the Lord had to say to Satan, “Touch not his life”, for he had power to do that; but now, through the death of Christ his power is gone.
The third reason is that the Spirit of God within the believer is the guarantee, according to Romans 8:11, that the believer’s mortal body will be quickened, or made alive, at His coming.  The Spirit is given a special title in that passage, namely “the Spirit of Him that raised up Christ from the dead”.  In other words, since the Spirit of the God of resurrection dwells within, the mortal body He indwells will certainly be quickened.

1 Corinthians 15:50-54 assures us that unchanged flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God.  The latter expression refers to the sphere of God’s spiritual rule, where-ever that rule is exercised.  “The kingdom of God is not meat and drink; but righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit”, Romans 14:17.  In other words, it has not to do with natural, material things, but spiritual things.  Those who inherit something do so because they have a claim upon it.  A body of flesh and blood, however, has no claim upon the heavenly sphere, for it is fitted for life on the earth, not heaven.  There must be a change to the body of living saints, so that they do have a claim upon heaven, and this is what will happen. 

So it is that the apostle assures us that even though not every saint shall sleep in death, nevertheless every saint shall be changed, for missing death will not rob living saints of their body fitted for heaven.  After all, this present body is corruptible, and tends to death every moment- it is therefore not so different to a body in the grave, where the corruption and mortality is most marked.  The only difference is that the living saint’s spirit is still within the body, whereas the dead saint’s spirit is with the Lord.  As to the body, (and the apostle is only thinking of the body here), in principle they are the same.  This is why he does not distinguish between the living and the dead in the next verses, for living saints have corruptible bodies, and dead saint’s bodies have corrupted wholly.  Living saints have a mortal body, and dead saints have seen the fact of mortality brought to its logical and terrible conclusion. 

We learn more about this process in Philippians 3:20,21.  Philippi was a colony of Rome, which meant that it was a miniature of Rome at a distance.  The customs, laws, dress and loyalties of the Philippians was centred on Rome, far away.  The believers in the assembly at Philippi were citizens of a far away place in another sense.  Their citizenship, and that of all believers, is in heaven.  The laws of heaven govern them.  Out from the city-state of heaven that is our true home, we await the Lord Jesus to come in His capacity as Saviour.  No doubt the Philippian citizens were used to the arrival of the Emperor from Rome, claiming as he did to be the “Saviour of the World”.  He was not able to do what our true Saviour will do.  He has already fitted us for heaven as to the soul and spirit; but soon He will come to complete the task, and fit our bodies for heaven also.  It is God’s purpose that we should be “conformed to the image of His Son”, Romans 8:29.  This involves representing and manifesting Him.  To do this effectively we shall need to have our bodies changed so that they are like His body.  And this will happen.  As we have seen from 1 Corinthians 15, we shall “bear the image of the heavenly”.  He has a body that is in all senses glorious, and we shall have one like that too.  A body fitted to do glorious things; fitted to appreciate glorious things; fitted to express glorious things.
So it is that in His Saviour-capacity He shall change our vile body.  The expression “vile body” means the body that we have in our current low estate, as compared to the high estate of living in heaven.  Mary spoke of her low estate, meaning her low status in society, Luke 1:48.  Citizenship of Philippi was a very coveted privilege, but it is nothing compared to being a citizen of heaven.  Our bodies will be changed so that we fulfil that role to the glory of God.
The word for change used here means to fashion anew, and has special reference to the outward appearance of things.  All the blemishes and defects that our bodies have will be completely removed, so that not only will the moral spots, wrinkles and similar things be gone, Ephesians 5:27, but the physical ones as well.  If Nebuchadnezzar insisted that his courtiers should be “children in whom is no blemish”, Daniel 1:4, how much more shall the Sovereign of heaven expect that no trace of the fall of man should be upon His servants.
The power He will put forth to do this, (for it does involve great power, such as was needed to raise Christ from the dead, Ephesians 1:19,21), is the same power He will use to subdue everything to Himself in a day to come.  It is spiritual energy supported by moral authority.  The same energy that shall see to it that “all rule and all authority and power” are put down in a day to come, 1 Corinthians 15:25.  Nothing shall prevent the Saviour from completing the task of fitting His people for heaven.
So this corruptible body, whether of the living saint or the dead one, shall put on incorruption.  Not that an incorrupt body will be put on like a garment over the corrupt one that was laid in the grave, but rather, the corrupt body will put on incorruption in the sense that it “acquires qualities”, (Souter, Lexicon to Greek New Testament).  It will be so changed morally as to be unrecognisable as to its former link with Adam, but not so changed that it is not recognisable as to appearance.
The whole of creation is in the bondage of corruption, functioning at less than its full potential, but when Christ comes to earth that will change.  But the sons of God will be manifest with Him, Romans 8:19, and they will be the clear sign that God will give to the world that He has been able to deliver from bondage.  Instead of being slaves in body, soul and spirit, they have been released, and have been brought, at the rapture, into full sonship, and as such are free.

The change spoken of will be accomplished according to three time-phrases, 1 Corinthians 15:52.  First, “in a moment”.  The Greeks believed that they had discovered the smallest particle, so small that it could not be divided further. They called it “a-tomos”, meaning “not divisible”, (they were mistaken, of course, for man has split the atom), and this is the word the apostle employs here.  If we could imagine  a period of time that could not be divided up, then we would have some idea of how quickly the change will take place.  It is not, therefore, a process, but occurs in indivisible time, preparing the body for the sphere where time has no relevance.  Second, “in the twinkling of an eye”, which is not as long as a blink, but the momentary change in the light of the eye.  This tells of change so sudden that the eye cannot capture it.  An imperceptible change, preparing us for the changeless state.  Third, “at the last trump”, telling of an irresistible call.  In 1 Corinthians 14:8 the apostle likened the commands of the Lord to His people by means of gifted men, as a trumpet preparing them to battle.  No doubt a allusion to the silver trumpets which directed the movements of Israel, whether to assemble, prepare for war, or prepare to march, Numbers 10:1-10.  It is the latter use of the trumpet that is relevant here, for the last call to movement for the people of God shall be, not to enter into an earthly Canaan, but to rise to meet Him in the air.  And it is with changed bodies that they shall do so.

When these changes have taken place, then the full extent of the victory obtained by Christ at the cross will be realised, and the triumph which He knew over death, Hades and the grave, will be shared with His people on the resurrection day.  The apostle employs as his victory hymn two quotations from the Old Testament, one from Isaiah 25:8, and the other from Hosea 13:14.  He prefaces them by the word “then”. 

It must be borne in mind that there are three distinct formulas for introducing the fulfilment of prophecy:
1. With the word “ina”, meaning “in order that it might be fulfilled”, indicating that the object of the prophecy has been completely realised.
2. With the word “opus”, meaning “so that it might be fulfilled”, where, not the full realisation of the thing prophesied, but an event within the scope and intention of the prophecy is in view, Matthew 8:17, for instance.
3. With the word “tole”, as here, meaning merely “a case in point”, when what happens is an illustration of what was said in the prophecy.

So the resurrection of the saints of this age is not a fulfilment of the prophecies by Isaiah and Hosea that Paul quotes here, but rather, it is an illustration of what will happen regarding Israel in the future. 

“Death is swallowed up in victory” is a Hebrew way of saying that permanent victory over death has been achieved.  Believing Israel shall know it when the Lord Jesus comes to the earth, whilst church saints shall know it when the Lord comes for them.
In Hosea God looked on to a time when He would plague death, and be the destruction of Sheol, the equivalent of the Greek word Hades used by the apostle in the passage we are considering.  (The Authorised Version departs from the Textus Receptus at this point).  He did it first by raising Christ from the dead, thus robbing death of its prey, and plaguing death itself with the plague of death.  Did it too, by ensuring that Christ’s soul was not left in Hades.  If death cannot hold one who had all sins laid upon Him, its power is broken; if the Devil cannot defeat Christ when He is crucified through weakness, 2 Corinthians 13:4, he will never defeat Him. 

When the Lord comes, and their bodies are changed, the saints will realise that the victory of the resurrection is shared by them.  A statement of intention by God in Hosea will be transformed into a song of triumph for the saints, as they confidently challenge death to say where its sting has gone.  That sting was the sin-principle dwelling within the old body.  Now the body is changed, and the sin tendency has gone with it.  And since the wages of sin is death, then death is powerless.  Instead of sin stinging us so that we develop the plague of death, everything has been reversed, and freedom from sin shall be ours for ever.  No  longer shall we transgress God’s law, (for “sin is the transgression of the law, 1 John 3:4), we shall gladly do His will, for “His servants shall serve Him”, Revelation 22:3, and not, as is too often the case now, “serve sin”, Romans 6:6.
We do not have to wait until the resurrection to share in this victory, however, for the apostle gives thanks for the current position in which we are given victory through the Lord Jesus.  The victory which was achieved when God destroyed death, hell and the grave by raising Christ from the dead, is given by grace to us, because of Him.  Isaiah 53:12 speaks of Christ being divided spoil with the great, and Himself dividing the spoil with the strong, because He has poured out His soul unto death.  We may work out the triumph of the death and resurrection of Christ by not allowing sin to have dominion over us.
Another way we may share in His triumph now is by being steadfast in the implications of His resurrection, unmoved by error concerning it, (as, unhappily, some at Corinth were), and always abounding in the work of the Lord.  The only feast in Israel’s calendar that had not prohibition about working, was the feast of the waving of the firstfruits, see Leviticus 23:9-14, 1 Corinthians 15:20,23.  Service for the Lord is worthwhile, for He will bring over into resurrection everything we have done for Him in this life that has been to His glory.

John looks at things from a slightly different angle in 1 John 3.  He is concerned, as ever, about an inner change of mind and heart.  The world did not appreciate that the Lord Jesus was the Son of God, and that the life He lived out amongst them was the life of God; “the world knew Him not”, John 1:10.  By the same token the world does not understand believers, for as the children of God they possess the life of God in their souls.  This is because what we shall be as those conformed to Christ’s image has not yet been manifested.  It will be one day, however, when He is manifested to the earth, and we  shall come with Him then, Colossians 3:4.
The reason we shall be like Him is because at the rapture we shall see Him as He is.  We fail to appreciate Him fully at present, being hindered by our natural, soulish bodies.  But when we have a spiritual body, we shall fully know Him, even as He fully knows us now, 1 Corinthians 13:12.
It is not simply that we shall see Him with our eyes.  That will be wonderful indeed!  Seeing Him means seeing Him with spiritual insight.  John often uses in his writings that particular word for know which is derived from the word to see.  We do not fully understand Christ now, as we will.  We shall see Him then as He really is, and not as we failingly and falteringly think of Him at present.

Resurrection and Old Testament saints
We come now to a consideration of the resurrection of Old Testament saints, and also of those martyred during the future tribulation period.  We have already seen that Abraham had an expectation of resurrection, and this was expressed by others in Old Testament times.  For instance, Job surveys the life of man from his birth, life, and death, in Job 14:1-6.  Then he muses upon the fact that after a tree has been cut down, it may sprout and revive again, verses 7-9.  Yet man has no prospect of being revived to live upon the earth again, for “he layeth down, and riseth not”, verse 12.  So is that the end of the matter?  Oblivion is all there is for unbelieving man?  Not so, for Job goes on to say- “Till the heavens be no more, they shall not awake, nor be raised out of their sleep”.  That ominous word “till”!  John the apostle looked on to the time when the heaven and the earth shall flee away from before God on His great white throne of judgement, Revelation 20:11.  And Peter had told of a time when “the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burnt up”, 2 Peter 3:10.  Death and Hades shall certainly give up their dead; death holds the body and Hades the soul, and both shall yield up their contents.  The fact that John saw the dead standing shows that they had been reunited with their bodies by Divine power, to stand before God’s solemn judgement throne.
This is the same event spoken of by the Lord Jesus, when He asserted that all judgement had been committed to Him because He is Son of Man, John 5:27.  As such, men have had opportunity to respond to Him, not only whilst He was on earth in person, but also now that the account of His life has been set down in the gospel records.  As Son of Man He has relevance to all men, and that relevance extends to the raising of the dead, for the Father “hath given Him authority to execute judgement also, because He is the Son of Man.  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 5:27-29. 
As for Job, he appealed to God in these words, “O that Thou wouldest hide me in the grave, that Thou wouldest keep me secret, until Thy wrath be past”, Job 14:13.  So Job has his “until” as well, but his is until the wrath of God has been poured out upon the earth during the great tribulation, the final three and a half years of man’s rule upon the earth.  Revelation chapter 11 confirms this, for as the final stages of God’s wrath take their course, heaven anticipates the coming reign of Christ.  Then come the words “And the nations were angry, and Thy wrath is come, and the time of the dead, that they should be judged, and that Thou shouldest give reward unto Thy servants the prophets, and to the saints, and them that fear Thy name, small and great; and shouldest destroy them that destroy the earth”, Revelation 11:18.  It is clear that the dead who are judged are not saints of this present age, for they will have been taken to heaven at least seven years before when the Lord Jesus descended from heaven to take them to Himself, 1 Thessalonians 4:15-18.  The fact that God’s servants the prophets are included in the list of those judged, and that the other classes mentioned are believers also, serves to show that we have here the raising of Old Testament saints, and also those who were martyred during the great tribulation.  They now have their part in the first resurrection, as those who are blessed and holy, Revelation 20:4,6.  But as verse 5 says, “But the rest of the dead lived not again until the thousand years were finished”, Revelation 20:5.  Surely an echo of Job’s word “until”.
David shared this hope with Job.  Like Job 14, Psalm 49 has to do with death.  In fact, it is commonly used at Jewish funerals.  Yet for all its melancholy, David was confident that God would redeem his soul from the power of the grave, and receive him, Psalm 49:15.  These convictions were confirmed by the prophets, including David, in what they had to say about the Messiah’s resurrection.  He would not be left in the grave as to the body, nor would His soul be left in Hades, Psalm 16:10. 

Resurrection and unbelievers
The final stage of resurrection is intensely solemn, for the Lord Jesus called it the resurrection of damnation.  All that are in the graves shall hear His voice and shall come forth.  It is because they have done (practised) evil that they are damned, John 5:28,29.  For what a man habitually does is the sure indicator of what his nature is like.  This is why at the great white throne judgement the record books are opened, not only to apportion judgement according to the degree of guilt, but also to clearly demonstrate the justice of God’s judgement.  None shall have cause for complaint that they were treated unrighteously.
The fact that John saw the dead stand before God shows that they are in the body.  The very body in which they sinned against God will be restored to them.  But with this difference.  As the Lord Jesus made clear, the unsaved will be cast into Gehenna, (which is another name for the Lake of Fire), with the body they sinned with, Mark 9:43-50.  And if it be asked how the body can continue in fire for ever, then the solemn answer comes in that passage, “every one shall be salted with fire”.  In other words, just as salt preserves from change in the physical realm, so the very fire of the lake of fire shall preserve the bodies of the damned for all eternity.  As Job put it long ago, “But his flesh upon him shall have pain, and his soul within him shall mourn”, Job 14:22.  What a combination!  Eternal pain, coupled with remorse for opportunities of salvation ignored upon earth.
When this solemn judgement has taken place, the last of God’s enemies shall have been defeated, and no hostile force is left to disturb the eternal day of God, when He is all in all, 1 Corinthians 15:26,28.

Miracles

Many today claim to be able to work miracles of one sort or another, and many more claim to be endowed with the sign-gifts that believers had in apostolic days.  These claims often cause doubts and anxieties to arise in the minds of believers who do not possess such abilities.  In the light of this, we do well to turn to the Scriptures of truth, so that we may be given guidance on these important and pressing issues.

DEFINITION OF MIRACLES
Miracles have been defined as “works of a supernatural origin and character, such as could not be produced by natural agents and means”.  W.E.Vine, Expository Dictionary of New Testament words.  They are exceptions to normal events, which occur due to the intervention of a power beyond natural power.
We must beware of devaluing the word miracle by using it of happenings which are simply out of the ordinary, or merely coincidences, or take place at a particularly opportune moment.  We must also beware of labelling as miraculous, events which would have occurred anyway.  An example of this would be illnesses that are known to go into remission naturally.  An event does not become a miracle because it is an answer to prayer.

WONDERS
The apostle Peter coupled three words together in the phrase “miracles and wonders and signs”, Acts 2:22.  The second of these words expresses the effect the miracle had upon those involved.  At best, in the case of miracles wrought by Christ and the apostles, those around would be constrained to believe on the Lord Jesus.  As He said in John 14:11 “Believe Me that I am in the Father, and the Father in Me: or else believe Me for the very works’ sake”. (Note that belief in Himself is the goal in each case; it is not “believe Me or else believe the works”).  At worst, there were those who responded to Christ’s miracles by wanting to make Him king simply because He could multiply loaves.  He withdrew from such, John 6:15.

SIGNS
This word reminds us that the miracles had a lesson to teach, they had sign-ificance.  They were not simply acts of mercy and compassion, but doctrine made visible in vivid ways.  We see this especially in John 6, where the Lord’s long discourse on the Bread of Life is based on His miracle of feeding the five thousand.
Summarising, we may say that a miracle is an event beyond the normal, with an effect beyond the usual, giving expression to things beyond the natural.

SATAN’S COUNTERFEIT
We must always remember that Satan is able to imitate God’s work to a certain extent, as Moses and Aaron discovered in Exodus 7:11,12,22.  See also 2 Timothy 3:8,9.  This will come to a climax at the end times, when the Lawless One is revealed “whose coming is after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders….” 2 Thessalonians 2:8,9.  Note that in this case the wonders are lying wonders, for they do not further the truth of God, but rather, the Devil’s lie.

A WORD OF WARNING
The current obsession in charismatic circles with happenings which are out-of-the-ordinary is conditioning professing Christians to look for exhilarating experiences, instead of being built up by the exposition of the Word of God.  It is part of Satan’s New Age strategy to influence the minds of men so that they give themselves over to spirit forces, and so further his end.  His object is to draw believers away from the written revelation of the Word of God, and attract them to “spiritual” experiences.

THE MIRACLES OF CHRIST
Christ’s miracles were a witness to His own person.  Those performed by the apostles witnessed to His person, too.  They were certainly not performed to bear witness to themselves.  See Acts 3:12; 14:8-18.  They also were one of the ways in which God confirmed certain vitally important truths, as we shall see.

(I)    THE WITNESS TO HIS PERSON AS THE SON OF GOD
John chapter 5 contains Christ’s first public discourse as far as John’s record goes.  Significantly, it concerns His Deity, and is preceded by the healing of the impotent man on the Sabbath day.  The Lord Jesus establishes His authority for healing on the day of rest by saying “My Father worketh hitherto, and I work”, verse 17.  The Jews understood very well what He was claiming by this statement, even “That God was His (own) Father, making Himself equal with God”, verse 18.
Later, in John 5:31-39, the Lord Jesus spoke of four witnesses to His person, these being John the Baptist, verse 33; the works which the Father had given Him to finish, verse 36; the Father, who bore witness at His baptism, verse 37; and finally the witness of the Old Testament Scriptures, verse 39.
So the works which the Father had given to Christ to do were a testimony to the genuineness of His person, that He was indeed the Son of God.  Hence John appeals to them in John 20:31 as the reason why men should believe.
The apostle Peter also appealed to the miracles and wonders and signs performed by Christ, but his purpose was to show that He was approved of God, Acts 2:22.  So whether it is a question of His person or His character, the matter is settled when the testimony of the  miracles is received.

(2)    THE WITNESS TO HIS PERSON AS THE CHRIST, OR MESSIAH OF ISRAEL
Not only did John record the miracles of Christ that we might believe that He is the Son of God, but also that we might know He is the long-promised Christ, or Messiah, John 20:31.  The prophets had told of the Messiah as one who would come to bring in what the Jews called “the age to come”, when He would reign over them from Jerusalem.  Hebrews 6:5 describes the miracles of Christ as the “powers of the world (age) to come”.  Isaiah had written that in the time of the kingdom, “the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped.  Then shall the lame man leap as the hart, and the tongue of the dumb sing, Isaiah 35:5,6.  The fact that these things did indeed happen when Christ was here, is proof positive that He is the Messiah. 
So the miracles Christ did were not only expressions of compassion, but powerful and indisputable witness as to who He was.  So confident is the apostle John of this witness, that, guided by the Spirit of God, he bases on it his appeal to his readers to believe that Jesus is the Christ, that no less a gift than eternal life may be theirs.

THE MIRACLES OF THE APOSTLES AND OTHER SIGN-GIFTS

(I)    CONFIRMATION OF CHRIST’S PRESENCE IN HEAVEN
The resurrection and exaltation of Christ was confirmed by  things that could be seen and heard, Acts 2:32,33.  The seen things were the tongues of fire that sat upon each of the apostles.  The heard things were the spoken tongues or languages which the apostles were miraculously able to use when speaking to the foreign Jews who had gathered at Jerusalem for the Feast of Pentecost.
Note that Peter quotes from Joel 2 in his address on that occasion, not because all the events that passage mentions were coming to pass then, but because Joel spoke of the gift of the Holy Spirit, and also the opportunity to call upon the name of the Lord for salvation.  Those two things, the pouring out of the Holy Spirit, and the salvation of some in Israel, were what were relevant at that time.  Note also that Peter does not quote from the Old Testament passage which expressly speaks of tongues, namely Isaiah 28:11, because that was not so appropriate at that time.

(2)    CONFIRMATION OF THE PREACHING OF THE APOSTLES
The prophecy of the Lord Jesus in Mark 16:17,18, was that certain signs would follow them that believe.  What had been foretold indeed came to pass, for when Mark summarises the book of the Acts for us in verses 19 and 20, he writes in the past tense, and then ends with the words “confirming the word with (by means of) signs following”.  So the signs manifested in apostolic days were a confirmation from the Lord in heaven that what was preached was indeed God’s word.
With this agree the words of Hebrews 2:1-4, where the writer identifies three lines of testimony.  First, that of the Lord Himself when here, as He spoke of “so great salvation”.  Second, when those who heard Him confirmed to others what they had been taught, and third, when God bore witness to both these testimonies by enabling signs and wonders to be performed, giving added proof that what the apostles preached was of God.

(3)    CONFIRMATION THAT NON- JEWS HAVE RECEIVED THE HOLY SPIRIT
Apart from the initial pouring out of the Spirit on Jews only in Acts 2, there were certain groups that were dealt with separately by God, because they were special cases.
The Samaritans.  These were potentially a cause of friction amongst the believers, if they allowed the enmity between themselves and the Jews to spill over into their new life in Christ.  “The Jews have no dealings with the Samaritans”, John 4:9.  Hence in Acts 8:14-17, Peter and John are sent to Samaria to personally and directly lay hands on those who had believed from amongst the Samaritan nation, that they might receive the Holy Spirit after a delay.  That delay was not normal, since the moment a person believes and receives the gospel the Holy Spirit is given.  We know this from Galatians 3:2, where the apostle indicates that the Spirit is given when a person hears in faith.  (The indwelling of the Spirit of God is never presented to us in the New Testament. as something that can be earned, but rather the gracious gift of God the moment true faith is exercised).  But the Samaritan situation was not normal, given the bad relations between the two nations, so an unusual procedure was followed. And because the apostles themselves laid hands on the Samaritan believers that they might receive the Holy Spirit, they did not need confirmation of the fact, and therefore we do not read that the Samaritan believers responded by speaking in tongues.  They may have done so, but we are not expressly told.
The Gentiles.  Peter had needed a vision from the Lord to convince him that it was indeed the Lord’s purpose to call Gentiles to faith.  He had taken certain believers with him on his visit to Cornelius in order that they might be fellow-witnesses of what took place.  This was a wise precaution, for afterwards Peter was criticized for his actions.  These fellow-believers who companied with Peter were astonished that upon the Gentiles the Holy Spirit had been poured out, Acts 10:45.  But how did they know this?  Verse 46 begins with “for”, they knew they had received the Spirit “for they heard them speak with tongues, and magnify God”.  Hence, again, the speaking in tongues is audible proof of the gift of the Holy Spirit.
The disciples of John.  In Acts 19, the apostle Paul came across disciples of John the Baptist, who did not know that the Holy Spirit had been given at Pentecost.  Having heard of the Lord Jesus from Paul, they believed and were baptized.  Having received the Holy Spirit by the laying on of his hands, they spoke with tongues and prophesied.  No doubt this was a great encouragement to them, confirming that they had been right to cross over from allegiance to John to faith in Christ, a step John would have encouraged, see John 1:35-37; 3:25-30.

We see then that various special groups are dealt with by God in ways that are not regular.  Since they are special cases, they do not provide precedents for today.  Believers today receive the Holy Spirit the moment they believe, and do not need any to lay hands on them before this can happen.  Nor is the supposed speaking in tongues of some today, any evidence that they possess the Spirit of God.  After all, the devil-worshipping “Whirling Dervishes” of the Middle East utter sounds indistinguishable from modern tongues-speaking!

(4)    CONFIRMATION OF JUDGEMENT UPON UNBELIEF
God had warned Israel of the penalty of unbelief, namely that a foreign power would carry them away, and they would hear strange languages spoken by their captors, Deuteronomy 28:45-51.  He warned the people of the same danger in Isaiah 28:11.  The judgement fell when the Assyrians took the ten tribes into captivity.  Paul, in 1 Corinthians 14:21,22, used these Scriptures to show that tongues-speaking was a sign from God to those who believe not, just as the “tongues-speaking” of the Assyrians had been to unbelieving, idol-worshipping Israel in Isaiah’s day.

SUMMARY
Clearly the things that are confirmed by the gift of tongues were new at the time.  The gospel of a crucified and risen Christ; His ascension to heaven; the pouring out of the Spirit on the Gentiles; the particularly grave sin of rejecting a Saviour who had been received back into heaven, these were all fresh and different matters, and God graciously confirmed their reality by the exhibition of miracles. Once this confirmation has been done, it does not need to be repeated, or else doubt is cast upon the original confirmation, and upon the Scriptures which record it.
It is an historical fact that sign-gifts did cease.  Chrysostom, the well-known “church father”, was unable to find them practised in his day.  The onus is upon those who claim to perform miracles and speak in tongues today, to prove from Scripture that their return at the end of the age is to be expected. They should also offer evidence that what they do is identical in character to the signs of the apostolic age, and is accompanied by a strict adherence to apostolic doctrine and practice. 

THE NATURE OF THE SIGN GIFTS                                                Miracles and other signs did have an important role to play in the days when the record of the New Testament was not complete.  They are listed for us in three passages.  In Mark 16:17,18, we read of the casting out of demons, speaking with new tongues, taking up of serpents, drinking of deadly things without harm, and the laying of hands on the sick, so that they recovered.  Further on, in 1 Corinthians 12:8-10, we find mention of the word of wisdom, the word of knowledge, faith, gifts of healing, working of miracles, prophecy, discerning of spirits, divers kinds of tongues, and the interpretation of tongues.  A further two, namely helps and governments, are found in 1 Corinthians 12:28.

God never wastes time or energy on mere entertainment.  Each of these gifts had great usefulness.  A brief notice of each will make this clear.  The gifts of Mark 16:17,18 are mentioned in connection with the command of the Lord Jesus to go into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature.  It is no surprise, then, to find that they are especially of use in pioneer evangelism.

(I)    GIFTS OF USE IN EVANGELISM
When God embarks upon a new phase in His dealings with men, Satan is always ready with his opposition, which often takes the form of demon activity.  This, however, was no problem to an evangelist penetrating a new area with the gospel, for he could cast out demons, being gifted to do so. He had no language problem, either, for he could speak with new tongues.  By ” new” is meant “unaccustomed”; that is, the one speaking was not used to the language, it was not his native dialect.  It does not mean new in the sense of newly-invented.
Hacking his way through the jungle, he inadvertently disturbs a sleeping cobra.  But this is no problem, either, for he can handle serpents!  Thirsty and hungry from his exertions, he drinks contaminated water, and eats the fruit of a poisonous tree, yet comes to no harm.  He finds himself in a clearing, where malaria-ridden natives huddle in their mud huts.  Imagine the effect upon these poor souls as he touches the untouchable, and they instantly recover.  What an introduction for the evangelist as he brings to them the gospel!
Notice that this man does not need to learn a language, or take a course in a school of tropical medicine, or learn botany, to prepare him for his mission, for he had been gifted by God.  But where is the missionary today who is so fitted?  He does not exist, for the simple reason that these gifts have been withdrawn in the wisdom of God.

(2)    GIFTS OF USE IN THE ASSEMBLY
The gifts mentioned in 1 Corinthians 12:8-10 are useful too, but most of them in connection with the gatherings of God’s people, as again we might expect given the context in which they are found.

THE GIFTS OF WISDOM AND KNOWLEDGE
How valuable a word of wisdom would have been in those early days when so many new things were happening, and before the scriptures of the New Testament were written.  Of course there was the written wisdom of the Old Testament, but it was not always relevant to the new conditions prevailing at that time.  So, too, the word of knowledge, insight directly from God on a particular, and perhaps strictly local problem.

THE GIFT OF FAITH
The tremendous challenges of those days would need to be met by men with the gift of faith, who could “move mountains” so that the work of God could go forward.  Needless to say, this faith is not saving faith, which is the common possession of all the people of God.

THE GIFTS OF HEALING AND MIRACLES
There were those with the gift of healing, (but with no mention of the laying on of hands), who like Paul in Acts 19:11,12, could heal from a distance.  This gift is distinguished from that of working of miracles, for whereas healing was a beneficial thing, sometimes miracles of judgement were necessary to preserve the testimony, as in Acts 5:5-11 and Acts 13:8-12.  The raising of the dead would also be classed as a miracle, rather than an act of healing.

THE GIFT OF PROPHECY
The gift of prophecy, or the forth-telling of the mind of God, was vitally necessary if the saints were to be built up in Christian doctrine.  The believers could not open their Bibles and find, say, Ephesians 3, for it had not yet been written.  Nor could the apostles be everywhere at once to personally teach the saints.  Hence the man gifted with insight into the mind of God filled a very real need.

THE GIFT OF DISCERNING OF SPIRITS
In those days there was no lack of imposters, and in order that the companies of the Lord’s people be not infiltrated by these, this gift was very necessary, so that the fraudulent might be kept out.

THE GIFTS OF TONGUES AND INTERPRETATION OF TONGUES
In the pioneer situation envisaged above in connection with Mark 16, the interpretation of tongues was not needed, for those addressed would all be of the same tongue.  The same would be the case on the Day of Pentecost, for each nationality could gather round the particular apostle that was miraculously speaking their language.
In the assembly gatherings at Corinth, however, there might be several languages represented in the one company, especially as Corinth was a cosmopolitan city, and near to the sea-port of Cenchrea.  If a brother began to speak the truth of God in the language of one of these groups, the fact that that group could testify to hearing their own language spoken accurately, (even though the speaker did not know the language), was in itself part of the object of that gift; it was a sign that God was at work.  But all things, according to 1 Corinthians 14:26, must be unto edifying, and so far only the minority that knows the tongue has been edified. There needs to be, then, the interpretation of that particular tongue, for the benefit of the rest.

THE GIFT OF HELPS AND GOVERNMENTS
As time went by, there would arise administrative needs such as distribution to the poor, so it was very necessary for some to be gifted with practical and organisational skills to enable this to be done without the work of preaching being held up.

THE EXERCISE OF THE GIFTS
A reading of 1 Corinthians 14 will show clearly that the gifts, particularly of prophecy and tongues, were to be exercised with dignity and restraint.  For instance, the maximum number allowed to speak in tongues during a meeting was three, verse 27, and that by course, or one after the other.  The spectacle of large numbers of people all speaking with tongues at the same time, would raise questions as to their sanity, verse 23.
The situation was similar with regard to the gift of prophecy.  Verses 32 and 33 make it clear that those who were gifted in this way did not abandon self-control, (which after all is a fruit of the Spirit, Galatians 5:23), but in an orderly and becoming way they edified the gathered saints.  If a revelation was given to a prophet sitting alongside the current speaker, then the latter was well able to hold his peace and defer to the other.
 “Let all things be done decently and in order”, is the final word of the apostle in chapter 14, for “God is not the author of confusion, but of peace, as in all churches of the saints”, verse 33.  It is sadly true that many gatherings of those who claim to possess these gifts today, have not been notable for orderliness or dignity.  This raises serious doubts as to the validity of what they claim.

“THE TORONTO BLESSING”
The current obsession with this phenomenon is a very grave matter.  Far from being a repeat of apostolic practice, there is every indication that earnest, unsuspecting souls are being subjected to hypnosis in the name of Christ.  If this is what is happening, then it is outrageous, because the unbelieving public looks on, and finds that what they think of as Christianity, is represented by those who seem intent on making fools of themselves, instead of preaching Christ.

It is said that 90% of the population can be hypnotised without much difficulty.  Any run-of-the-mill secular hypnotist can induce feelings of being washed clean, of peace, of tingling sensations, of feelings of energy passing through the body, of seeing bright lights and so on.  He can make people lay down, go stiff, laugh uncontrollably, and also heal minor ailments like migraine and back pain. And all this without the power of the Holy Spirit at all!  Just unbelievers hypnotising unbelievers!

The methods by which these things are done in the world are in principle the same as are used in charismatic meetings.  The persuasive voice of the leader; the mind-numbing use of repetitive music; the exhortations to relax and give way; the encouragement to look for an experience which the leader assures everyone is about to come; the testimonies of those who have had the experience before; all these things combine together to produce a situation where almost everything can happen under the control, and touch, of the plausible master of ceremonies.  And all in the Name of the Lord!

THOU SHALT LOVE THE LORD THY GOD WITH ALL THY….MIND
It is highly dangerous for believers to abandon reason in favour of feelings.  The service of God is to be “reasonable service”, Romans 12:1, intelligent action as a result of a careful understanding of what God requires, as detailed in His Word.
We are NEVER called upon to abandon rational thought-processes, and give ourselves over to the influences abroad in the world.  Satan is determined to control the minds of men, so that they willingly do his bidding.  His strategy is to alter the state of a person’s consciousness, so that he may introduce a new set of perceptions, and cause the old values to be rejected, paving the way for the ultimate deception, the lie that the Antichrist is Christ.
Any supposedly Christian activity, therefore, which displays so many of the classic features of hypnotism, and which encourages the abandonment of reason, is highly suspect.

THE ALTERNATIVE
What alternative is there then, to the practices of the signs and wonders movement?  The answer is simple- the Scriptural alternative.  The apostle Paul makes clear in 1 Corinthians 13 that whereas prophecies, tongues and knowledge come to an end, faith, hope and love do not.  This is true whatever the phrase “that which is perfect” means.  The cultivation by the believer of these three cardinal Christian virtues will result in steady growth in Christ-likeness, which surely must be the main aim.

The apostle also makes clear in Ephesians 4 that the ascended Christ has given gifts to His people, which will ensure that they all “come…unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ”, Ephesians 4:13.  The gifts Christ has given are apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors and teachers.  Through their ministry the end-result God is looking for, even likeness to His Son, is certain to be achieved.

May the Lord revive His people, so that they once again have a love for His Word, and an earnest desire to put it into practice, to His glory alone.

DOCTRINES OF SCRIPTURE: Resurrection of Christ

INTRODUCTION:

 The resurrection of the Lord Jesus from the dead is a fundamental part of the Christian gospel, as Paul makes clear in 1 Corinthians 15:1-8. That He really died is seen in that He was buried, that He really rose is seen in the fact that He appeared (not simply was seen, but deliberately confronted people). His resurrection had been prophesied in the Old Testament, hence the apostle says He was raised according to the (O.T.) Scriptures. See Psalm 16; Psalm 21:2-6; Psalm 22:21-31; Psalm 40:1-3; Psalm 118:22; Isaiah 52:13, 53:10,11. It was also prophesied by the Lord Jesus Himself, although His disciple did not grasp the fact. Only Mary, who sat at His feet and heard His word, saw that He was going to die, and so anointed Him for His burial whilst He could appreciate it. She must also have seen that He would rise, for she did not go to the sepulchre to seek to preserve His dead body, as the other women did. So the Old Testament views Christ’s resurrection prophetically, the Gospels view it historically, whereas the epistles view it doctrinally.

1.    Romans 1:4: ‘”And declared to be the Son of God with power, according to the Spirit of Holiness, by the resurrection from (of) the dead”. Note the change of verb from verse 3, where Christ is made of the seed of David by incarnation. Here it is not something He was made in time, but what He is eternally is declared by resurrection.  He is ever the Son of God, for “to be the son of” means “to share the nature of”. Since the Father’s nature is eternal, so must the Son’s be, therefore He is the eternal Son of God. This is declared by resurrection. Note that it is not the resurrection from the dead, but rather the resurrection of dead persons, for the word dead is plural. Every time the Lord Jesus raised a person from the dead; every time a sinner is raised from death in trespasses and sins; when saint’s bodies are raised at His coming; when sinner’s bodies are raised  just before the Great White Throne judgement, then on each occasion there is a declaration of His Deity. This is in line with His words in John 5:19-29, where the right of the Lord Jesus to grant life and to raise from the dead, is vested in His equality with the Father.

And then of course there was the declaration of His Sonship when He Himself was raised from the dead. He had said “when (after) ye have lifted up the Son of Man, then ye shall know that I am He”, John 8:28. They should have known He was Son of God by the supernatural events at His crucifixion, for the centurion came to this conclusion, Matthew 27:54. They should have known by His rising again, for Saul of Tarsus was convinced, Acts 9:20.

2.    Romans 4:15: “Who was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our justification”.  The apostle has been deriving principles from the experience of Abraham and Sarah, who as far as having children were concerned, were dead. Yet they believed God, and as a result He intervened and brought Isaac out of the sphere of death. Whereas Abraham believed God was able to do this in the immediate future, we look back to the distant past and believe that the true “Isaac” has been brought out of the sphere of death to guarantee the promises of God. Paul in effedct asks two questions: “Why was Christ found in death anyway?” and “Why was He raised from the dead?” The answer to the first is our offences, whilst the answer to the second is because of our justification, which means that He was raised again because God was satisfied that His work upon the cross was enough to justify believing sinners.

3.    Romans 5:10: ‘”For if, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of His Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved by His life”. Verse one speaks of peace with God, so that those once enemies of God because of sin, are now reconciled to Him. Now if the work which forms the basis of that reconciliation was done for us whilst we were still God’s enemies, what blessings will He not bestow now that we are friends? And more than this, if Christ’s work of reconciling enemies took place when were in sin, surely we shall be saved from every sort of penalty at the judgement day, for the one who saved us from sin is still our saviour, preserving us eternally from the judgement of God. Because Christ lives eternally in resurrection, the believer is eternally secure. If the suffering and agony of the cross did not put Him off from taking up our case, surely the glory He has now will not prevent Him living to preserve those who believe in Him.

4.    Romans 6:4: “Therefore we are buried with Him by baptism into death: that like as Christ was raised up by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life”. Paul is showing why it is not in order for believers to continue in sin, i.e. continue to respond to the sin-principle within. The reason here given is that we are buried, and therefore cannot continue in sin. The burial took place when we were baptized, and we were identified with Christ in His (state of) death. But our baptism has a positive purpose, it is not just a negative putting out of sight, but association also with Christ in His resurrection. Christ was raised from the dead because the glory of the Father demanded that such a person should be raised, and not left in the grave. It was not so with us personally, however, so our emergence from the watery grave of baptism is solely because of association with Christ. Having been raised, we have a responsibility to walk in a different sort of way, which is compatible with the new place we have with Christ risen.

5.    Romans 7:1-6: “Wherefore, my brethren, ye also are become dead to the law by the body of Christ, that ye should be married to another, even to Him who is raised from the dead, that we should bring forth fruit unto God”. The apostle is showing that the believer is not under the Law of Moses, nor will trying to keep that Law result in a victorious Christian life. He uses two illustrations to prove his point. First, that when a person is dead, the dominion of the law, any law, is gone from him. Second, that when a woman’s husband dies, she is free from the law of the husband. He then applies these two principles, namely one’s own death delivering from law, and another’s death delivering from law. Christ has died, and we have died in association with Him, so on both counts we are dead to the Law of Moses. The body of Christ was hung upon a cross, and there He bore the curse of a broken law for us. But His body was also placed in a tomb, and subsequently rose from the dead. By association with Him in these things we are delivered from the law by association with what happened to Christ in His body.

6.    Romans 8:11:”But if the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, He that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by His Spirit that dwelleth in you”. The Spirit of God is here described as the Spirit of the God of resurrection. Not only does the Spirit of God empower us so that we are able to live proper Christian lives now, but He is the guarantee that we shall share in the resurrection of the body hereafter. The epistle to the Romans emphasises truth which enables us to live upon the earth, hence we are looked at in this verse as being alive on the earth when Christ comes. When dead saints are raised, then those alive on the earth will share in the same sort of change, even though they have not died. The certainty of this is found in the presence within of the Spirit of God.

7.    Romans 8:34: “Who is He that condemneth? It is Christ that died, yea rather, that is risen again, who is even at the right hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us”. The only one who could possibly condemn God’s people is Christ, for all judgement has been committed to Him. But far from condemning, He is the very one who defends and supports them. He does this in a four-fold way, because of the four events mentioned here. He died to deal with our sins that would have meant our condemnation. He was raised again  to demonstrate to all who would accuse us that the work of the cross dealt effectively with sins. He is ascended to the right hand of God, the most influential place in the whole of the universe where He wields all power. And He intercedes for us to defend us from the charges the adversary, Satan, would level against us, Revelation 12:10.

HEBREWS 2:11-18

THE WORDS OF THE BIBLE, THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES, AS FOUND IN THE EPISTLE TO THE HEBREWS CHAPTER 2, VERSES 11-15

2:11  For both He that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of one: for which cause He is not ashamed to call them brethren,

 2:12  Saying, I will declare Thy name unto my brethren, in the midst of the church will I sing praise unto Thee.

 2:13  And again, I will put my trust in Him. And again, Behold I and the children which God hath given me.

 2:14  Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, He also Himself likewise took part of the same; that through death He might destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the devil;

 2:15  And deliver them who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage.

THE PATH OF SEPARATION FROM ADAM’S WORLD
2:11    For both He that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified- To sanctify means to set apart.  It is too early in the epistle to think in terms of being sanctified by the sacrifice of Christ, 10:10.  In the context, the captain of our salvation has separated us from the world of Adam of which we formed part.  In His prayer in John 17, the Lord Jesus spoke of sanctifying Himself, that His people might be sanctified by the truth.  Sanctification, or holiness, has not to do in the first instance with separation from sin, (we must not confuse sanctification with purification), but rather involves separation from the ordinary, to be occupied with the sacred.  Christ ever sanctified Himself during His life down here, and this qualifies Him to sanctify His people now.  He had contrasted those who have eternal life with those who only have the life of flesh, John 17:2, and has described His own as given to Him by the Father out of the world, verse 6.  This does not involve being physically removed, but morally distinct.  Given that believers are in the world, He requested that they might be sanctified by the truth.  The truth in question being that regarding the nature of the eternal life believers possess, the very life of God.  It is as we have fellowship with God and His Son in the things of eternal life, (which things were expressed fully by the Son when He was here), that we shall be set apart from the world of Adam.  The closer we get to God, the further we shall be from the world.  Adam associated his race with things that caused them to perish, whereas Christ associates with salvation the race of which He is head.  By passing through this world, and suffering in it, the Lord Jesus has equipped Himself with the experience to lead His people through the same world, with all its sufferings. 
Are all of one- the sanctifier, (Christ), and those sanctified, (His people), all emerge out of one common experience of suffering on the way to glory.  He has already come out of the tomb never to suffer again.  But association with Christ in His burial and resurrection begins a life of suffering for the believer.  From which suffering he will emerge just a certainly as Christ has emerged.  If we suffer with Him, we shall be glorified together, Romans 8:17.  Christ is out of the experience of suffering already, whereas we await that emergence, but because it is certain it can be spoken of as if already accomplished.  It is noticeable that the apostles did not begin to suffer for Christ until He was risen from the dead.
For which cause He is not ashamed to call them brethren- “A brother is born for adversity”, Proverbs 17:17, and the common experience of suffering bonds us with our captain.  If He passed through suffering, and the people did not, then there might be room for embarrassment if He called us brethren.  Note the way Romans 8 moves from a consideration of sufferings because of a groaning creation, verses 16-27, to the thought that God’s people shall be brethren with His Son, in glory, verses 28-30.  No amount of privation can destroy that, as Romans 8:38,39 declares:  “For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord”.

THE PATH OF (RESURRECTION) LIFE WITH CHRIST
2:12    Saying, “I will declare Thy name unto My brethren- These are words found in Psalm 22:22 at the point where the scene changes from one of death and great suffering, to resurrection and great glory.  They represent the point where Christ finishes His experience of suffering in this world, and begins to enter His glory, “God raised Him from the dead and gave Him glory”, 1 Peter 1:21. 
The Lord described His disciples as those that had continued with Him in His temptations, and despite the way they had forsaken Him in Gethsemane, He still said to the women, “Go tell My brethren that I go before you into Galilee”, Matthew 28:10.  He also spoke of ascending to His Father and theirs, thus showing He was not ashamed to associate with them, even if they had been ashamed, temporarily, to associate with Him.  In this way He began to carry out what He promised in His prayer to His Father in John 17:26, and continued the declaration of the Father’s name or character. 
In the midst of the church will I sing praise unto Thee”- If the first phrase involved teaching the Name, this one involves praising the Name.  Praise is the expression of the works of God, and here the Lord Jesus can be thought of as praising God for His great work of delivering Him from death, in answer to His prayer, Hebrews 5:7.  It is noticeable that after the Passover meal a psalm was sung before they left, in accordance with the custom of Israel, whereas we do not read of this in the upper room in the post-resurrection appearances to the disciples there.  Perhaps a psalm, (1 Corinthians 14:26; Ephesians 5:19), now has the more spiritual idea of a personal expression of praise, rather than the repetition of the exercises of others.  By singing praise in the church is meant the recounting by the Lord Jesus of His appreciation of the intervention of His Father on His behalf; He does this as His people speak of Him to the Father.  Psalm 22 does not actually use the word sing in the expression that is quoted here, perhaps confirming that singing is not necessarily in view.
There is a possibility that the declaring of the Name is done while His people are still on earth, whereas the singing of praise in the midst of the church will take place in heaven when all the redeemed are safe home.  So one refers to the local assembly, the other to “the church of the firstborn (ones) which are written (enrolled) in heaven”, 12:23.

THE PATH OF FAITH IN GOD
2:13    And again, “I will put my trust in Him”- This is a quotation from Psalm 18, which is mainly an account of David’s deliverance from the hand of his enemies, including Saul.  Now Saul had persecuted David some 40 or more years before, and he seems to have used this psalm as an expression of his dependence on God at every stage of his life.  The first three verses, from which this quote comes, give to us the attitude of David to adversity, and one feature is his trust in God.  Then he records the way in which God vindicated his trust in him by delivering him from his foes.  So we learn that during the time when His enemies had the upper hand, the Lord Jesus was marked by trust in God.  Indeed, this was ever His attitude, for Psalm 22:9,10 says “I was cast upon Thee from the womb; Thou art My God from My mother’s belly; Thou didst make me hope when I was upon My mother’s breast”.  As a result, He knew deliverance from Herod.  Children, even unborn children, are remarkably sensitive to the circumstances in which their mother finds herself.  See, for instance, Luke 1:41.  By implication, His brethren will be marked by this trust too, as they follow the path the captain of their salvation has marked out for them. 
And again, “Behold, I and the children which God hath given Me”- This is a quotation from Isaiah 8:18.  Isaiah had the task of warning the wicked king Ahaz of impending captivity at the hands of the Assyrians.  As a sign to Israel, Isaiah was instructed by God to name his two sons in a particular way.  One was to be Shear-jashub, a name which means “A remnant shall return”, and the other, Maher-shalal-hash-baz, which means “In making haste to the spoil he hasteneth the prey”.  So when Isaiah said to the nation, “Behold, I and the children which God hath given me”, they were a “sign and a wonder” to Israel.  Maher-shalal-hash-baz was testimony that the Assyrian would indeed hasten to invade the land, and take them as a prey.  The other son, however, was God’s promise that even though that happened, a remnant would return from captivity.  So during the present age, believers from the nation of Israel are likewise a testimony to coming judgement on the nation in the form of the Great Tribulation, (and to a lesser extent the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70), and also to the fact that God will be favourable to His people and ensure that a remnant of them will know His salvation.  It is interesting that the Lord Jesus called His brethren “children”, in John 21:5, using the same word which is found here and in the next verse.  So physical descendants are not necessarily in view in the application of the quotation, but a spiritual relationship.  Just as Isaiah’s trust was in God despite the impending judgements, so the trust of the Hebrew believers should be in God despite what would happen to them as a nation in AD 70.

THE PATH OF DELIVERANCE FROM OUR ENEMIES
2:14    Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood- The children in question being those addressed in the previous verse, the children of God, who are the same as Christ’s brethren, true believers.  The present condition of the children is in view because they were not children before they became partakers.  The verb “are partakers” is in the perfect tense, meaning continuation from the past to the present.  Those who share flesh and blood are in a condition of relative weakness, which leaves them vulnerable to attack by evil as they make their way to glory, therefore their Captain steps in to help. 
He also Himself- It is necessary for Him to have the same nature as those He leads, so that He may pass through the same experiences, sin apart, of course. 
Likewise took part of the same- Not only does He share flesh and blood with the children, but shares it likewise, or in the same manner- “Similarly, in like manner, in the same way… is equivalent to ‘in all things’ of verse 17, and hence is used of a similarity which amounts to equality”, Grimme.  The manhood  of Christ is real, even though He is without sin, for a sinful nature is not an integral part of humanity.  Adam was a real man before he sinned- he did not have to possess a sinful nature before he was rightly called a man.  1 Corinthians 15:50 distinguishes between flesh and blood, and corruption, showing that our corrupt nature can be considered apart from our flesh and blood condition.  The Lord Jesus took part of flesh and blood in like manner to the children, by birth of a mother, and He subsequently took part in this condition as He lived amongst men.  Perhaps there is an allusion to the other son mentioned by Isaiah, even Immanuel, the child born of the virgin, Isaiah 9:14, see Matthew 1:23. 
The word used of believers is partakers, meaning they have a common, equal share in humanity, whereas Christ took part, which involves coming in from outside the condition, a testimony to His pre-existence before birth. 
That through death He might destroy Him that had the power of death- Psalm 18, which is quoted in verse 13, and which is found in 2 Samuel 22 also, was written when the Lord had delivered David from his enemies, including Goliath and his sons.  In fact 2 Samuel 21:22 links the defeat of Goliath when David was a youth, with the defeat of his four sons by David’s mighty men, when David was an old man.  Goliath had put the fear of death into the hearts of the armies of Israel, but David had delivered them from that fear, and had beheaded Goliath with his own sword.  So Christ has defeated the greatest enemy of all, the Devil, by using the very weapon that he used. 
By coming into flesh and blood conditions, and by allowing Himself to be condemned to death, the Lord Jesus placed Himself in a position of weakness.  Yet in this weakness He defeated the mightiest force for evil there ever could be.  See 2 Corinthians 13:4.  Since He is now raised from the dead by the power of God, there is no possibility of the Devil being effective against God’s sons.  To destroy means to make of no effect, not annihilate.  In the wisdom of God, the Devil is still allowed some measure of activity, but when his final doom is effected it will only take an “ordinary” angel to bind him and cast him into the lake of fire, Revelation 20:1-3. 

2:15    And deliver them who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage- those under the law were under the ministration of condemnation and death, 2 Corinthians 3:7,9.  This brought bondage, for they were not free from fear of death.  Imagine a believer in Israel who is returning from sacrificing a sin offering.  As he returns to his tent he sins again; yet it is too late to return to the altar.  He goes to sleep that night fearing that he may die, and die, moreover, with sin upon him.  Through Christ’s death, however, this fear is removed, and death may be faced calmly.  This relates especially to believers who formerly were Jews, and therefore under the law.

THE WORDS OF THE BIBLE, THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES, AS FOUND IN THE EPISTLE TO THE HEBREWS CHAPTER 2, VERSES 16-18

2:16  For verily He took not on him the nature of angels; but He took on him the seed of Abraham.

 2:17  Wherefore in all things it behoved Him to be made like unto His brethren, that He might be a merciful and faithful high priest in things pertaining to God, to make reconciliation for the sins of the people.

 2:18  For in that He Himself hath suffered being tempted, He is able to succour them that are tempted. 

THE PATH OF VICTORY OVER TEMPTATION
2:16    For verily He took not on Him the nature of angels- “the nature of” has been added by the translators, since they felt it necessary.  But the word “took” is the key here.  It means to “take up a person to help him, to rescue from peril, and also to succour”.  There is nothing about taking a nature.  The Textus Receptus says “For not indeed of angels takes He hold”.  The point is that He did not come into flesh and blood conditions to help angels, but the seed of Abraham.  Angels have no fear of death, nor does Christ succour them. 
But He took on Him the seed of Abraham- that is, His coming is relevant to the first readers of the epistle, the Hebrews, descended from “Abram the Hebrew”, Genesis 14:13.  They should not think that because the link with Adam has been emphasised in the earlier verses, that they have no special place with God.  “Salvation is of the Jews”, John 4:22.  “Of whom, as concerning the flesh, Christ came”, Romans 9:5.  The special emphasis, however, is on those descended from Abraham naturally who were believers, and therefore were his seed spiritually, see John 8:33-45; Romans 4:16; Galatians 3:29.   The word “took” is the same as is used in 8:9 of God taking hold of Israel to lead them out of Egypt.  Here our captain takes hold to lead out of the world.  Clearly, the statement in 8:9 does not involve taking a nature.  “For verily” is only found here in the New Testament.  “It is used when something is affirmed in an ironical way”- Grimm.  Vine says it means, “Of course,” or “It goes without saying.”

2:17    Wherefore- this means “for which reason”. 
In all things it behoved Him to be made like unto His brethren- For the purpose of taking hold of the seed of Abraham, He needed to be made like them in all things- note He is made like His brethren, meaning believers.  He is not made like unbelievers in all things, for they have a sinful nature, whereas believers are looked at ideally as being righteous, even whilst in a mortal body.  This confirms that the seed of Abraham in verse 16 means believers.  “Behoved” means “a necessity in view of the subject under discussion”.  Having taken flesh and blood, and come to take hold of believers to help them, it is necessary that He become like them in all relevant things, so that He may minister unto them effectively.  The previous verses have shown believers to be delivered by His various ministries; but they are passing through temptations that may cause them to fall- how can He help them in this? 
That He might be- in order that He might take His place as, or be granted the position of. 
A merciful and faithful high priest- the word for mercy here indicates the outward manifestation of pity, with need on the part of the one shown mercy, and resources on the part of the one showing it.  It is not simply an attitude, but an act, as demonstrated by the Good Samaritan, who was not content to look from a distance, (as the priest was), but acted in compassion. 
Faithfulness marks Him, not only in His relationship with God, 3:2, but also towards believers, the idea behind faithfulness being reliability and stability.  The failures we manifest do not cause our helper to desert us.  Cf. “only Luke is with me”, 2 Timothy 4:11, for the writer of the priestly gospel has learnt the constancy of the One he wrote of, and sought to imitate it. 
In things pertaining to God- in matters that relate to the honour of God.  Aaron was made priest to minister unto God, Exodus 28:1.  The priesthood of Aaron had to do with constant sacrifices and yearly atonement.  Christ dealt with these two aspects before He entered into his ministry, as hebrews 7:28 makes clear.  His sacrifice renders altar sacrifices obsolete, chapter 10, and His work of propitiation is once for all, chapter 9.  His priesthood has to do with helping us move through the world safely, and leading the way into the presence of God. 
To make reconciliation for the sins of the people- reconciliation, the bringing into harmony of persons formerly at variance, is one result of the work of propitiation.  “To” means “for to”, a similar expression to the “That He might be” of the beginning of the verse.  The change of word indicates that, as the scholars say, “this is a separate telic clause”, (a clause which tells us what the goal is).  So there are two goals in view in the verse, the one issuing from the other- He is made like His brethren with the general object of being a faithful high priest for them, and also to make propitiation.  Whilst this is put second, the work was done before He became high priest, but the writer perhaps wishes to link His present work of succouring the tempted with the work that is the support for that ministry.  Compare 1 John 2:1,2, with the advocacy of Christ on the basis of His propitiatory work.  He is the propitiation for our sins in the sense that the one in heaven interceding is the one who once was on the cross propitiating.  The alternative reason for propitiation being mentioned second will be given later.
The Lord Jesus spoke to Mary Magdalene about His brethren, and indicated that He was about to “ascend to My Father, and your Father, to My God, and your God”, John 20:17.  Thus He would still be the link between His people and God, maintaining them in His dual role of Advocate with the Father, and High Priest in things pertaining to God. 
The basis of His advocacy is two-fold.  His person, for He is Jesus Christ the righteous, and His work, for He is the propitiation for our sins, 1 John 2:1,2.  The apostle John was concerned about believers sinning.  The sins of believers are just as obnoxious to God, and just as deserving of wrath, as those of unbelievers.  But we are “saved from wrath through Him”, Romans 5:9, as He pleads the merits of His work.  He is, says John, the propitiatory offering for our sins.  Not was, but is.  In other words, the one who acts for us in heaven as our advocate, is the very same one who hung upon the cross as a sacrifice for our sins. 
He is also our High priest.  Hebrews 2:17,18 form a bridge between chapter two, with its emphasis on the reasons why the Lord Jesus took manhood, and the way in which Israel were tempted in the wilderness as noted in chapter three. 
Note in particular the word “for” which begins verse 18. Too little attention has been paid to this word, and hence the connection between verses 17 and 18 is often lost.  The reason why we have a high priest who is merciful and faithful is that He has been here in manhood and suffered being tempted.  When His people pass through temptation, then He undertakes to deal with their cause.  Because He has been here, and has been tempted in all points like as we are, He is able to help us when we cry to Him for help.  The word for succour is used by the woman of Canaan in Matthew 15:25 when she cried out, “Lord, help me”.  He is able to point us to the ways in which He overcame in the wilderness temptation, and thus we are strengthened to resist temptation.
But what if we fall, and sin?  In that case He comes to our aid in another way.  We see it typified negatively in Leviticus 10:16-20.  The priests were commanded to eat the sin-offerings, if the blood thereof had not been brought into the sanctuary.  This was in order to “bear the iniquity of the congregation, to make atonement for them before the Lord”, Leviticus 10:17, where the word for bear is the same as is used for the scapegoat bearing iniquity.  But at the end of the consecration of the priesthood, Moses was angry on God’s behalf, for the priests had failed in this.  One of the functions of priesthood, then, was to personally identify with the sin-offering by eating it, and by so doing bear the iniquity of the congregation, taking responsibility for their failure, but doing so safeguarded by the fact that a sin-offering had been accepted by God.  As they did this the scripture explicitly says they made atonement for the people, Leviticus 10:17.  We see then what the writer to the Hebrews means when he talks of Christ making reconciliation or propitiation for the sins of the people.  He is indicating that Christ personally identifies Himself with His sin-offering work at Calvary, and thus takes responsibility for the failures of His people under temptation.  This is acceptable to God, and His people are preserved, despite their failure.

2:18         For in that He hath suffered, being tempted- only those who resist temptation suffer.  The fact that it is said without qualification that He suffered when He was tempted, shows that He always resisted resolutely.  He therefore knows what His people pass through when they resist temptation. 
He is able to succour them that are tempted- knowing the pressure they are under, He is able to suit the help they need to their situation.  When His people do not resist temptation, then His work at Calvary safeguards their position, hence the mention of propitiation in the previous verse.  To succour means to run to the aid of a person in danger when they cry for help.  See Matthew 15:25, “Lord, help me”; and Hebrews 4:16 “Grace to help in time of need”, where the same word as succour is used.  Because He has experienced the pressure of temptation, and has overcome, when we go to Him for help He is able to point us to the way in which He overcame, as detailed in the temptation accounts in the gospels.

 

 

1 CORINTHIANS 15:35-58

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This brings us to the second major section of the chapter, in which the apostle deals with the resurrection of the saints. Those who have died in Christ have not perished, verses 18, for Christ is risen. Those who are still alive are not of all men most miserable, verses 19, for the same reason.

In verse 1-34 the emphasis has been on the resurrection of Christ Himself. In the remainder of the chapter the focus is on the consequence of that resurrection, even the resurrection of the saints of this present church age.

 

THE WORDS OF THE BIBLE, THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES, AS FOUND IN THE FIRST EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS CHAPTER 15, VERSES 35-49:

15:35  But some man will say, How are the dead raised up? and with what body do they come?

15:36  Thou fool, that which thou sowest is not quickened, except it die:

15:37  And that which thou sowest, thou sowest not that body that shall be, but bare grain, it may chance of wheat, or of some other grain:

15:38  But God giveth it a body as it hath pleased Him, and to every seed his own body.

15:39  All flesh is not the same flesh: but there is one kind of flesh of men, another flesh of beasts, another of fishes, and another of birds.

15:40  There are also celestial bodies, and bodies terrestrial: but the glory of the celestial is one, and the glory of the terrestrial is another.

15:41  There is one glory of the sun, and another glory of the moon, and another glory of the stars: for one star differeth from another star in glory.

15:42  So also is the resurrection of the dead. It is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption:

15:43  It is sown in dishonour; it is raised in glory: it is sown in weakness; it is raised in power:

15:44  It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body. There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body.

15:45  And so it is written, The first man Adam was made a living soul; the last Adam was made a quickening spirit.

15:46  Howbeit that was not first which is spiritual, but that which is natural; and afterward that which is spiritual.

15:47  The first man is of the earth, earthy; the second man is the Lord from heaven.

15:48  As is the earthy, such are they also that are earthy: and as is the heavenly, such are they also that are heavenly.

15:49  And as we have borne the image of the earthy, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly.

 

15:35-49    GRAPHICAL: DESCRIPTION OF THE RESURRECTION BODY

Structure of the section

(a) Verses 34-41 The character of the resurrection body.
(b) Verses 42-44 The change of the resurrection body.
(c) Verses 44(b)-49  The correspondence of the resurrection body to Christ’s.

(a)    Verses 35-41     THE CHARACTER OF THE RESURRECTION BODY.

(a) Verse 36 A quickened body.
(b) Verse 36 A clothed body.
(c)  Verse 38  A sovereignly-given body.
(d) Verse 38 An identifiable body.
(e) Verse 39 A body suited to the nature.
(f) Verse 40 A body suited to the environment to be lived in.
(g) Verse 41 A body capable of radiating glory.

Summary of the section
By the use of illustrations from various fields of study in the natural realm, whether biology, zoology or astronomy, the apostle illustrates truths regarding the resurrection body and its suitability for the glorious environment in which it will function.

15:35 But some man will say, How are the dead raised up? and with what body do they come?

But some man will say- having dealt effectively with the question raised in verse 12 as to whether the resurrection of the dead is a possibility, the apostle now anticipates another query. The way the apostle answers suggests that the question is a cynical one on the part of an unbeliever, virtually suggesting that it cannot happen.
How are the dead raised up?- the word “how” means either, “by what means”, or “in what condition?”. That the latter is the meaning is clear from subsequent verses, for the apostle makes no attempt here to explain by what means God will raise the dead. The Sadducees denied resurrection, and the Lord Jesus rebuked them with the words, “Ye do err, not knowing the Scriptures, nor the power of God”, Matthew 22:29. The resurrection of Christ was through the working of God’s mighty power, Ephesians 1:19,20, and so shall the resurrection of the saints be.
And with what body do they come? What body can possibly rise from the grave, when it has crumbled to dust centuries before? The answer is found in the One who made man from the dust at the beginning, and who can bring a man out from the dust at the resurrection. The one who gave Adam a spirit at the beginning, can reunite the believer’s spirit, (which, at death, had gone back to God who gave it, Ecclesiastes 12:7).
We should remember that our body is not only an object, but is also an idea, for cells in our body die and are replaced all the time, so we are constantly changing. The body we had when we were saved, the body God bought with the price of His Son’s blood, 1 Corinthians 6:19,20, is composed of different cells now. The resurrection body is “eternal in the heavens”, and “from heaven”, 2 Corinthians 1,2, in other words it exists in the mind of God in the first instance.

(a) Verse 36 A quickened body

15:36 Thou fool, that which thou sowest is not quickened, except it die:

Thou fool, that which thou sowest is not quickened, except it die- even a knowledge of natural matters should rid the fool of his doubts as to the possibility of resurrection. “Thou” is emphatic, for even the seeds fools sow are quickened after they have “died”, that is, after the outer part has given way to the development of the inner germ of life. So death is a necessity, in this context, not a calamity, for seeds left unsown will not grow. Death for the believer is not the end, but a means to the end.
Later on the apostle will show that some believers will not die, yet shall share in the resurrection. How that will happen is part of the mystery he will set out to explain in verses 51-54. In a later epistle he states that “the body is dead because of sin”, Romans 8:10, so because the believer’s body is judicially dead already, he can share in resurrection. Meanwhile, the “Spirit is life because of righteousness”, so we can live for God now.

(b) Verse 37 A clothed body

15:37 And that which thou sowest, thou sowest not that body that shall be, but bare grain, it may chance of wheat, or of some other grain:

And that which thou sowest- now a further thought, based on the act of sowing a seed.

Thou sowest not that body that shall be, but bare grain, it may chance of wheat, or of some other grain- the small insignificant seed is placed in the earth, but when it is quickened into life, a luxuriant plant is produced, which seems to bear no resemblance to the plain seed sown. The Lord Jesus spoke of Solomon and his glorious array, yet the lilies of the field had more glory than he. Solomon needed to put on his apparel from without, but the beauty of the flowers is intrinsic, for they are arrayed by God. Yet for all that, they are sown as insignificant seeds, yet come out of the earth in glorious splendour. So the believer is sown in the earth as bare seed, (for as Job said, “Naked came I out of my mother’s womb, and naked shall I return thither”, Job 1:21), but shall emerge in resurrection glory.

(c) Verse 38 A sovereignly-given body

15:38 But God giveth it a body as it hath pleased Him, and to every seed his own body.

But God giveth it a body as it hath pleased Him- note the change of tense, with the “giveth” (present), when the seed grows, but the “pleased Him” (past), referring to God’s original creation. He gives the seed a body in accordance with His original design in Genesis 1:11,12 as the Creator of all things. To wheat He gives a wheat body, to another grain a different and corresponding body. Perhaps there is a suggestion here that the believer will rise with the body that suits his personality.

(d) Verse 38 A body with continued identity

And to every seed his own body whether wheat, or some other grain, the body or foliage is given suited to the kind of seed that has been sown. So there is a continuity maintained from sowing to growing, so we know what was sown by looking at what has come up.

(e) Verse 39 A body suited to the nature

15:39 All flesh is not the same flesh: but there is one kind of flesh of men, another flesh of beasts, another of fishes, and another of birds.

All flesh is not the same flesh- having established certain principles from the plant kingdom, the apostle now turns to the living creatures. This statement introduces the idea of differences of nature, whereas wheat and other sorts of grain were a question of variety of the same species, with the common idea that the plant produced corresponded to the seed sown. Now the further idea that God has given bodies to the creatures of earth that suit their environment. So with the resurrection body- it will be suited to life in heaven.
But there is one kind of flesh of men, another of beasts, another of fishes, and another of birds- this shows that men and apes are different flesh. Each class has a body which is suited to the nature, which the word flesh suggests. Eve was flesh of Adam’s flesh, but she was not made of the soft part of his body. She did, however, share his nature, as the animals did not. So Adam says “This is now…flesh of my flesh” whereas before, when he named the animals, it was not, Genesis 2:19, 23.
Each creature mentioned here has a body suited to its habitat and nature, with man being upright, able to work; animals walking on all fours, able to hunt; fishes with fins, able to swim in the water, and birds with feathers and wings, able to fly in the air. So with the resurrection body, it will be suited for life in heaven, its proper environment, as far as church saints are concerned.

(f) Verse 40 A body suited to the environment

15:40 There are also celestial bodies, and bodies terrestrial: but the glory of the celestial is one, and the glory of the terrestrial is another.

There are also celestial bodies, and bodies terrestrial- our bodies are currently terrestrial, suited to earth, but after the resurrection they will be celestial, suitable for heaven. Just as the stars are suited for heaven, so shall we be. The celestial bodies he has in mind are the sun, moon, and stars of the next verse. Our body has a certain glory even now, for it may be presented to God as a living sacrifice, Romans 12:1, but the glory of the resurrection body will far exceed it. In 2 Corinthians 5:1,2 our resurrection body is described as “a building of God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens…our house which is from heaven”.

(g) Verse 41 A body capable of radiating glory

15:41 There is one glory of the sun, and another glory of the moon, and another glory of the stars: for one star differeth from another star in glory.

There is one glory of the sun, and another glory of the moon- even celestial bodies vary according to God’s ordination. The sun displays the glory of energy, the moon the glory of beauty. So we may think that the believer’s resurrection body will possess tremendous energy, and will display incredible beauty, for it will be like Christ’s glorious body, Philippians 3:21.
And another glory of the stars: for one star differeth from another star in glory- it is obvious that the sun and moon vary but it is not so evident that stars are different to one another, hence the affirmation that it is so. Just as each star has its own peculiar glory, the glory of its individuality, (suggested by the fact that all the stars are named by God, Psalm 147:4), so each believer will have his or her different and glorious characteristics, but all to glorify Christ.

(ii) Verses 42-44(a) The change of the resurrection body

Structure of the section

(a) Verse 42 From corruption to incorruption
(b) Verse 43(a) From dishonour to glory
(c) Verse 43(b) From weakness to power
(d) Verse 44(a) From being natural to being spiritual

(a) Verse 42   From corruption to incorruption

15:42 So also is the resurrection of the dead. It is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption:

So also is the resurrection of the dead- the apostle now enlarges on the subject of the character of the resurrection body as to its moral features. He refers only to the resurrection of believers in the remainder of the chapter.
It is sown in corruption- the dead body is buried in the earth as a corruptible and corrupt thing, being part of the creation which is in the bondage of corruption. The apostle wrote of this as follows, “For the creature was made subject to vanity, not willingly, but by reason of Him who hath subjected the same in hope, because the creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God. For we know that the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together until now. And not only they, but ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body”, Romans 8:20-23. No matter how holy a believer is, the body is corrupt.
It is raised in incorruption- able to display holiness perfectly. This is the redemption of the body, Romans 8:23, Ephesians 4:30 which introduces us to the full measure of sonship, (adoption) of which the Spirit of adoption is the earnest or pledge, Romans 8:15, Ephesians 1:13,14.
Note that the same body is raised, even though the body that shall be is not the body sown in the earth, verse 37. The latter statement has to do with the condition of the body, the bare grain contrasted to the luxuriant plant, not its identity. The plant is not buried, but the seed is, so in that sense the future body is not sown. On the other hand, the seed that is sown is the seed that comes up. The human body changes every second, so it is an idea as well as an object. The identity and personality of the believer are not lost by death.

(b) Verse 43(a) From dishonour to glory

15:43 It is sown in dishonour; it is raised in glory: it is sown in weakness; it is raised in power:

It is sown in dishonour; it is raised in glory- there is nothing personal about the dishonour, for it is the common lot of humanity, including the believer. No matter how honourable that believer, his body lacks the honour it should have, because of the Fall. It is a body of humiliation, Philippians 3:21, and yet shall be fashioned like unto His body of glory. It will be fitted to radiate the glories of Christ, not simply outwardly, but morally too. We shall see Him as He is, 1 John 3:2.
At the moment, we but feebly appreciate His glories, but in the resurrection it will be different, and the sight of His glories will transform us into His glorious image. This is what the apostle referred to when he spoke of believers being conformed to the image of God’s Son, Romans 8:29.

(c) Verse 43(b) From weakness to power

It is sown in weakness; it is raised in power- no matter how physically strong the believer was before he died, his body was weakened by sin. At the resurrection weakness will give way to unfettered energy, enabling us to serve God as we should.

(d) Verse 44(a) From being natural to being spiritual

15:44(a) It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body.

It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body- no matter how spiritual the believer was before he died, his body was natural, or soulish, fitted for life on earth, and to sense things naturally. Note that the resurrection body is a spiritual body, not a spirit-body. This body will be perfectly fitted to express spiritual things, and to appreciate them too.

(iii) Verses 44(b)-49 The correspondence of the resurrection body to Christ’s

Structure:

(a) Verses 44-45 Spiritual body.
(b) Verse 46 Superior body.
(c) Verses 47-48 Suitable body.
(d) Verse 49 Serviceable body.

(a) Verses 44(b),45   A spiritual body

15:44(b) There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body.

There is a natural body- the one possessed by Adam and all in his image. The word natural means soulish, dominated by soul-considerations, appreciating things through the senses. Hence for instance the garden in Eden was full of trees pleasant to the sight, and good for food, and Adam with his soulish body was able to appreciate them. The apostle repeats the fact that there is both a natural body and a spiritual one, for the latter truth was being denied. It is also the truth he is about to develop. There are three repetitions in the passage, in verses 44, 46, and 54, and they are Paul’s way of drawing our attention to a matter he is about to emphasise and enlarge upon.
And there is a spiritual body- only possessed by one man as yet, Jesus Christ. Note that just as Adam had a soulish body, but this did not mean he was immaterial soul only, so Christ has a spiritual body, but this does not mean He is immaterial spirit only. In the next verse each of these two men will be designated by the part that is dominant, either the soul or the spirit, but for all that, they each have a body.

15:45 And so it is written, The first man “Adam was made a living soul”; the last Adam was made a quickening spirit.

And so it is written, the first man “Adam was made a living soul”- note the order in Genesis 2:5,7, where first it is said there was not a man to till the ground, then the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and “man became a living soul”. So the man described here is the first man, for before him there was no-one to till the ground. The notion that there were men who lived and died before Adam, existing in a supposed era between the first two verses of Genesis 1, has no support in Scripture. Death came in through Adam, Romans 5:12, so there was no death before his sin. The fossil record is perfectly explained by the events at the Flood.
The man is specifically and personally named, so that we may be in no doubt that it is of Adam that the apostle is speaking. The Hebrew word “adamah”, from which Adam derives his name, is the word for red earth, for God formed man as a potter forms a clay vessel. Then man became a living soul by the in-breathing by God of the breath of life (plural), so that he might have the ability to live in every sense of the word, whether physically, morally, spiritually, intellectually or sensually.
So man has a soul, but is also said to be a living soul, that is, a living person. The Scripture Paul quotes relates to man in innocence, so having a natural body does not imply being a sinner. Note that the name Adam is also used to describe the whole of the human race. See for instance the use of word man (adamah) in each of first seven verses of Genesis 6. So by bearing the race-name as his personal name, Adam was marked out as the head of the race of men.
It is worth remembering that there is only one race; there is not a variety, such as the yellow race, the brown race, the black race, the white race. God has “made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth”, Acts 17:26. So wherever we go on the earth, the people there are of the same blood as ourselves, even though not of the same nation.
The last Adam was made a quickening spirit- Christ is not called the last man Adam, for that would make Adam His personal name. He only takes the name of Adam as the head of the new creation. He takes the name Last Adam because He is the last one who will be head of a race of men. The rabbis spoke of the former Adam and the latter Adam, the Messiah.
He has become, in resurrection, a quickening spirit. Adam lay on the ground lifeless, and then by the in-breathing of God received life and stood upon his feet. Christ lay lifeless in the tomb, and then took His life again at the commandment of His Father, and stood in resurrection.
The fact that He is a quickening spirit does not mean that He is only spirit, any more than Adam being a living soul meant he was only soul. What it does mean is that His resurrection body, the pattern of the saints’ resurrection body, is governed by the highest part of man, the spirit.
But whereas Adam was simply the receiver of life, for he became a living soul at his formation, Christ is become, by virtue of His resurrection, the giver of spiritual life even as to the body. Adam received life, but Christ gives it. This means that He will give His people bodies that fit them to dwell in the realm of spirits, heaven itself. When He was on earth, Christ raised the dead, and gave them their natural body back, (as is seen in the fact that Lazarus had to be released from his grave-clothes). Now that He is risen, He will give His people a spiritual body at the resurrection.
This ability to quicken implies His Deity, for only God can quicken with resurrection life. See John 5:17-25. He also gives this life as one who is “spirit”, that is, has Himself the sort of body that is dominated by the spirit, and can be suitably described by that part of Him.
There is another reason why He is called a spirit, and that is because the resurrection of believers is guaranteed by the fact that they have the Spirit of the God of resurrection indwelling them. Paul writes, “But if the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, He that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by His Spirit that dwelleth in you”, Romans 8:11. So there is the united action of the Persons of the Godhead in the raising of the saints, with the God who raised Jesus, the Spirit of God, and Christ Himself, all acting together. So by calling Him a spirit Paul is emphasising also that, like the other persons of the Godhead, He is spirit too, and can work in harmony with the Father and the Spirit to raise the dead.

We may set out the contrasts between Adam and Christ as follows:

ADAM  CHRIST
First man.                              Second man, (none in between).
Adam (as head of race, with none before).  Last Adam, (none to follow).
Became (by creation) a living soul. Became (by resurrection) a life-giving spirit.
Given life for earth. Gives life for heaven.
Natural (soulish) body Spiritual body
From the earth beneath him. From heaven.
Lower than angels. Lord of all.

(b) Verse 46   A superior body

15:46 Howbeit that was not first which is spiritual, but that which is natural; and afterward that which is spiritual.

Howbeit that was not first which is spiritual, but that which is natural; and afterward that which is spiritual- the word “howbeit” introduces further thoughts on this matter, as the apostle now tells us three more features of the resurrection body. The idea of the second being better is a principle which runs throughout scripture. So it is Cain who is the first, Abel the second; Ishmael the first, Isaac the second; Esau the first, Jacob the second; Reuben the first, Judah and Joseph combined, the second. Saul the first, David the second. The law-sacrifices the first, the sacrifice of Christ the second. The first must show itself a failure, and be set aside, so that the way is clear for the introduction of the second. When God introduces a second thing, it implies the failure of the first. It is not that He needs to experiment until He reaches perfection. But He does need to allow the first to show us that it is a failure. Even though Christ existed before Adam, He did not have a spiritual body then. The natural body comes first, so that the spiritual body may be seen to be superior.

(c) Verse 47    A suitable body

15:47 The first man is of the earth, earthy; the second man is the Lord from heaven.

The first man is of the earth, earthy- we now have a reference to the actual material of Adam’s body, whereas in verse 45 it was a question of the character of it. He was made of the dust from beneath his feet, which is appropriate, since he would walk on the earth.
The second man is the Lord from heaven- whilst it is true that when He came down from heaven at the incarnation He was the Lord from heaven, nonetheless the apostle is referring to a risen and exalted Christ coming to effect resurrection for His people at the rapture of the saints, for the apostle writes in 1 Thessalonians 4:16, “the Lord Himself shall descend from heaven”. He is the Lord both of the dead and the living, Romans 14:9, and this in virtue of the fact that He has died, rose and revived.
The things spoken of here with regard to believers receiving a spiritual body await His coming from heaven at the rapture. He did not come from heaven as a man at His first coming, but came into manhood. Adam came from the dust beneath our feet, but Christ shall come from the sky above our head. He has a body which is suitable for Him to live in heaven with, and He is coming to ensure that believers have a body suitable for that heavenly sphere as well. The apostle is not describing the Lord’s resurrection body, (as if it is “from heaven”), but is emphasising where He is coming from, heaven, in contrast to where Adam came from, earth.

15:48 As is the earthy, such are they also that are earthy: and as is the heavenly, such are they also that are heavenly.

As is the earthy, such are they also that are earthy- Adam’s race shares his earthy body. This is not a stigma, for Adam had an earthy body in innocence. It is true that he was earthly in character, but the point here is that his body was made from the earth. Man dwells in a house of clay, Job 4:19, for God at the beginning formed Adam as a potter forms a vessel, such is the word used in Genesis 2:7. There is no element in our bodies that is not found in the soil.
And as is the heavenly, such are they also that are heavenly- they who are linked with the Lord who is coming from heaven are looked on here as if the resurrection has taken place, and they can be said to be heavenly, sharing the same resurrection body as the Lord when He comes from heaven to make it a reality. As He is, with a glorified body in resurrection, so are the heavenly, (as far as the purpose of God is concerned), those destined for heaven by God’s grace, Ephesians 2:6. Our resurrection body is a house from heaven, 2 Corinthians 5:1,2, meaning it is God’s heavenly purpose for His people that they should have a changed body.

M (d) Verse 49   A serviceable body

15:49 And as we have borne the image of the earthy, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly.

And as we have borne the image of the earthy- the “and” suggests a further thought; not only possessing a natural body like Adam, but representing and manifesting him through it.
We shall also bear the image of the heavenly- we shall have a body then which will enable us to truly and perfectly represent Christ, not only bodily but morally also, for we shall be like Him, 1 John 3:2. We all represent Adam now, (that is, as far as having a body is concerned. We should represent Christ as to our nature), but we are all different in looks, and have our own personality; so also when we represent and manifest Christ fully in resurrection conditions. We should always remember, however, that we should be growing daily in likeness to Christ. Paul’s desire for the Galatians was that Christ might be formed in them, Galatians 4:19, and Christ as the ascended Head of the church has given us gifted men, so that we might “grow up into Him in all things”, Ephesians 4:15.

THE WORDS OF THE BIBLE, THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES, AS FOUND IN THE FIRST EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS CHAPTER 15,VERSES 50-53:

15:50  Now this I say, brethren, that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; neither doth corruption inherit incorruption.

15:51  Behold, I shew you a mystery; We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed,

15:52  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.

15:53  For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality.

Section 5 15:51-53 Revelational

The mystery of the change of the bodies of the living saints

Structure of the section:

(a) Verses 50,51 Telling of the mystery.
(b) Verse 52 Timing of the change.
(c) Verse 53 Transformation of the believer’s body.

Summary
Up to this point the apostle has dealt mainly with the bodies of dead saints, but now he deals with the change effected to living saints at Christ’s coming. This is hitherto undisclosed truth, which is why it is called a mystery. After it has been disclosed, it will no longer be a mystery.

(a) Verse 50 The announcement of a mystery

15:50 Now this I say, brethren, that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; neither doth corruption inherit incorruption.

Now this I say, brethren- the apostle asserts his personal authority as the steward of Divine mysteries. He also encourages the Corinthians to take note, by calling them brethren.
That flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God- in other words, the bodies of believers, (brethren), cannot enter into full inheritance in heaven as they are. Flesh and blood conditions are suited to the earth, but not heaven. Note it is a question of inheriting. The children of God are heirs, Romans 8:17, (another reason why he calls them brethren here, for they are members of the family of God), and they are about to receive the fulness of their inheritance.
Neither doth corruption inherit incorruption to be flesh and blood does not imply sin, but corruption does, for it reminds us that there has been a fall, with its consequent bondage of corruption for all of creation, including our bodies, Romans 8:18-23. “Flesh and blood cannot” indicates a physical impossibility, whilst “corruption doth not” indicates a moral impossibility. It is said of the holy city that “there shall in no wise enter into it any thing that defileth”, Revelation 21:27.

15:51 Behold, I shew you a mystery; We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed,

Behold, I shew you a mystery- the word show as used here means to tell, or explain. A mystery in ancient times was a secret known only to the initiated, (called “the perfected”, see 1 Corinthians 2:6), and revealed by one specially authorised, see Ephesians 3:1-4. Paul acts in this capacity here as he unfolds the truth regarding the bodies of saints who are still alive when the Lord comes. How are they going to share in the resurrection if they have not died before Christ’s coming?
We shall not all sleep- that is, not all believers will pass into death, where the body sleeps, see John 11:11. The mystery is not about the fact that not all shall sleep, but about the fact that all shall be changed. We know that not all shall sleep because 1 Thessalonians 4:15, (written five years before 1 Corinthians), speaks of those who shall be alive at the coming of the Lord. In that passage Paul simply said that the living saints would be caught up with the saints who had died, but had now been raised from the dead. He did not mention the change of living saints in that passage.
But we shall all be changed- whether dead or alive at Christ’s coming. The word change means to make other than it is. Paul does not use the word that speaks of the manifestation of inner reality which he employs in Philippians 3:21, Romans 8:29, no doubt because he is thinking of bodily changes only at this particular point in his argument. The ground of this change is that the believer’s body is indwelt by the Spirit of God, so Romans 8:11 reads, “But if the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus dwell in you, He that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken (make alive) your mortal (tending to death) bodies by His Spirit that dwelleth in you”.
In the previous verse to the one just quoted, Paul writes, “And if Christ be in you, the body is dead because of sin, but the Spirit is life because of righteousness”. The indwelling of the Spirit shows up the fact that the believer’s body, because it has the sin-principle within it still, is judicially dead; that is, dead as far as God’s thought is concerned. However, the Spirit within means the believer is also judicially alive, because God has justified him with “justification of life”, 5:18. In this way spiritual life can manifest itself now. But it will manifest itself fully when the mortal body of the believer is quickened from its judicially dead state, and in this way partakes of the quickening that saints who have died will know.
Taking this passage and 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18 together, we see that dead saints shall rise first with their resurrection body, the living will be changed, so that both classes stand momentarily upon the earth in bodies fit for heaven, and then they are caught up together in the clouds, and then rise higher to meet the Lord in the air or atmosphere above the clouds. Perhaps they will be caught up together in the clouds so that the first person they see clearly is the Lord Himself, and not one another. The word translated “caught up” is based on a root word meaning “to take to oneself”, and would remind us of the Lord’s words, “I will come again, and receive you unto Myself”, John 14:3. Is this my reader’s hope? If it is not, then please re-read 1 Corinthians 15:1-11, looking to God to reveal His truth to you.

(b) Verse 52 The accompaniments of Christ’s coming

15:52 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.

In a moment- the Greeks believed that they had discovered the smallest particle, so small that it could not be further divided; they called it “a-tomos”, meaning “not divisible”, and this is the word the apostle employs here. If we could imagine a period of time that could not be divided up, then we would have an idea of the rapidity with which the change will take place. It is not, therefore, a process, but speaks of indivisible time, preparing us for eternity. This has solemn moral implications for us, for there will be no time to make amends with others, nor to repent of sins before God. As the apostle John wrote, “He that hath this hope on Him, purifieth himself”, 1 John 3:3.
In the twinkling of an eye- not a blink, but the momentary change of the light in the eye. This tells of change that is so sudden that the eye cannot capture it, an imperceptible change therefore. This is preparation for the changeless state.
At the last trump- now we learn of an irresistible call. In 1 Corinthians 14:8 the apostle likens the ministry of Christ to His people as a trumpet sound preparing them for battle. He no doubt has in mind the uses to which the silver trumpets were put in Israel, in accordance with Numbers 10. They were for calling the assembly; for a signal to journey; to call the princes, and to sound an alarm for war. Clearly, at the coming of Christ it is a question of preparing to journey. Many have been the soundings of the trumpet down through the centuries, as Christ has led His people on, but now there has come the last trump, for the last journey, this time from earth to heaven, is to be made.
For the trumpet shall sound- in Revelation 4:1 the apostle John heard a voice like a trumpet saying “Come up hither”, and he went through the opened door of heaven. Such shall be the experience of the saints. The apostle John described the voice of the Lord as like a trumpet, Revelation 1:10,11, so no doubt Paul is alluding to the voice of the Son of God that shall wake the dead saints, for “the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, and they that hear shall live”, John 5:25.
And the dead shall be raised incorruptible- not only shall the bodies of believers not be corrupt, but shall be unable to be affected by corruption, assuring us the saints will never fall into sin.
And we shall be changed- the apostle links himself with those alive at the Lord’s coming, such was the expectancy with which he anticipated it. Yet he was also realistic, and spoke of his time of departure, 2 Timothy 4:6.

(c) Verse 53 The alterations to the believer’s body

15:53 For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality.

For this corruptible must put on incorruption- the believer’s body is corruptible because it is the seat of the sin-principle, which means it is in the bondage of corruption. It is morally imperative that this body be altered, for nothing that defiles shall ever enter heaven, Revelation 21:27. Incorruption here has the thought of incorruptibility, which means the resurrection body is not only incorrupt, but cannot be corrupted.
And this mortal must put on immortality- likewise it is vital that the body that tends to death should be changed to one that is totally and eternally deathless. So sin which brings corruption, and death which brings mortality, shall both be dealt with.

THE WORDS OF THE BIBLE, THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES, AS FOUND IN THE FIRST EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS CHAPTER 15,VERSES 54-57:

15:54  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.

 15:55  O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?

 15:56  The sting of death is sin; and the strength of sin is the law.

 15:57  But thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.

Section 6 15:54-57 Triumphal

Death is swallowed up in victory

 

Structure:

(a) Verse 54 The victory of life over death.
(b) Verses 55-56 The victory of Christ over death and hades.
(c) Verse 57 The victory of the believer through Christ.

Summary of the section

When the changes detailed in verses 51-53 have taken place, then the full extent of the victory obtained by Christ at the cross will be realised, and the triumph which He knew over death, Hades and the grave, will be shared with His people on the resurrection day.

(a) Verse 54 The victory of life over death

15:54 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”.

So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption- “this corruptible” means this body which is capable of deteriorating because of the bondage into which the Fall of man brought it. “Put on” is the same figure used in 2 Corinthians 5:2, “clothed upon with our house which is from heaven”. The resurrection body is not able to decay.
And this mortal shall have put on immortality- now the body is viewed as being subject to and tending towards death. The resurrection body is not capable of dying, for it comes from the one who is life-giving, verse 45.
Then- there are three distinct ways used by the inspired writers to introduce the fulfillment of prophecy, and they are as follows:

1. With the word “ina”, meaning “in order that it might be fulfilled”, in cases where the object of the prophecy is completely realised.

2. With the word “opus”, meaning “so that it might be fulfilled”, in cases where not the full realisation of the thing prophesied, but an event within the scope and intention of the prophecy, is meant, in Matthew 8:17 for instance.

3. With the word “tole”, as here, meaning merely a case in point, when what happened was an illustration of what was said in the prophecy.

So the resurrection of the saints of this age is not a fulfilment of the prophecy of Isaiah that Paul quotes here, nor of the prophecy from Hosea which he alludes to in the next verse. Rather, what will happen in relation to Israel in the future provides an illustration of what will happen at the resurrection of church saints. The principle is the same but the time and the people are different.

Shall be brought to pass the saying which is written- the saying of Isaiah 25:8 still stands written, hundreds of years later, for God’s word is inspired, not just was inspired- it retains its original character.
Death is swallowed up in victory”- this is the Hebrew way of saying that permanent victory over death has been achieved. What God pledged to do He will have then done.

(b) Verses 55,56 The victory of Christ over death and the grave

15:55 O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?

“O death, where is thy sting?- this will be the exclamation of the saints when the resurrection has taken place. The original wording was “O death, I will be thy plagues”, Hosea 13:14, and is a declaration that God will accomplish this in the future.
O grave where is thy victory?” The original wording in Hosea indicates God’s intention to destroy death, “O death, I will be thy destruction”, and this He did when Christ rose from the dead, no more to die. If death cannot hold one who had all sins laid upon Him, its power is broken; if the Devil cannot defeat Christ when He is crucified through weakness, 2 Corinthians 13:4, he will never defeat Him.
So it is that saints that have died will find that the grave has not had the ultimate victory over them, and saints who are still alive when the Lord comes will rejoice as they realize they have escaped it altogether.
The Hebrew word “sheol” is translated in the Old Testament as “the grave” 31 times, and as “hell” 31 times. It is never translated “a grave”, but “the grave”. It is also translated “pit” three times, twice in connection with Korah. (In the passage from Hosea that Paul is alluding to here, the definite article is replaced by the vocative “O”, as God addresses the grave as if it is a person). So the same word is used of the place where the body is put, and the place where the soul resides until the resurrection. Jacob said, “For I will go down into the grave unto my son mourning”, Genesis 37:35. But Jacob believed that his son had been devoured by a wild beast, and therefore had no grave. So in this first mention of the word sheol the grave is looked on as the entrance to the world of the dead, so that Jacob would indeed go down to the grave where his son was, meaning sheol.
The Authorised Version translators very wisely translated the word hades, (which is the equivalent of the Hebrew word sheol), as grave, and not Hades, because they knew full well that church saints do not go there anyway. They had the precedent of the Old Testament, where there was a choice between translating as either hell or the grave, according to the context. Christ has the keys of death and of Hades. He unlocks the door of death to His saints so that they die. But He locks Hades so that they do not go there, but pass immediately into His presence.

15:56 The sting of death is sin; and the strength of sin is the law.

The sting of death is sin- this is no doubt a reference to the word plague in Hosea 13:14. The bite of the serpent in Eden has resulted in the poison of sin being in us, which brings about death, for “the wages of sin is death”, Romans 6:23. On the resurrection morning all the saints shall be completely free from the sin-principle that currently dwells in their body. It will not be transferred to the resurrection body, for that body will be like Christ’s, and He has no sin.
And the strength of sin is the law- that which gave the sin-poison its potency, was the fact that it was the transgression of God’s law, for sin is the transgression of the law, 1 John 3:4. “The law worketh wrath”, Romans 4:15, and is the “ministration of death”, and “the ministration of condemnation”, 2 Corinthians 3:7,9. The apostle wrote, “Was then that which is good made death unto me? God forbid. But sin, that it might appear sin, working death in me by that which is good; that sin by the commandment might become exceeding sinful”, Romans 7:13. So the law combines with the sin-principle in man to make that sin principle all the more deadly. In this way the law becomes the strength of sin, (the word is dunamis, from which we get the word dynamite), giving it even more power than it has on its own. There will be nothing of this in resurrection, however, for sin will be gone, and there will be nothing for the law to work upon in this way. The believer will only be governed by the “law of the Spirit” in heaven. Currently it is possible to give way to sin, but not then.

(c) 15:57 The victory of the believer through Christ

15:57 But thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.

But thanks be to God- the word thanks is “charis”, meaning grace, so is in direct contrast to the law which enhanced the power of sin in us. The grace of God gives us the victory over the powerful forces of sin and death. The law could not do this, Romans 8:3.
Which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ- the victory which was achieved when God destroyed death, hell and the grave by raising Christ from the dead, is given by grace to us, because of Him. Isaiah 53:12 speaks of God dividing a portion to Christ among the great, and Himself dividing the spoil with the strong, the reason being that He has poured out His soul unto death. His surrender to death has gained the surrender of death.

Section 7 15:58 Practical

Labour is not in vain in the Lord

15:58 Therefore, my beloved brethren, be ye stedfast, unmoveable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as ye know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord.

Therefore- as a result of the whole chapter, but especially the last sections.
My beloved brethren- as those whose spiritual welfare is on the apostle’s heart.
Be ye steadfast- be firmly established in the truths set out in this chapter.
Unmoveable- unaffected by the error that some would try to teach.
Always abounding in the work of the Lord- the only feast in Israel’s calendar where there was no prohibition about working, was the feast of the waving of the firstfruits, see Leviticus 23:9-14, 1 Corinthians 15:20,23. The waving of the sheaf of firstfruits was done on the morrow after the Sabbath of week when the Passover lamb was slain. In other words, the very day the Lord Jesus rose from the dead. The wave-sheaf was waved horizontally, so that it could be seen from every angle; so the Lord Jesus was seen from every angle by those who believed, as verses 5-8 have reminded us.
Forasmuch as ye know- because you believe the truth of this chapter.
Your labour is not in vain in the Lord- because the Lord is risen, all work done for Him is worthwhile. The resurrection of Christ is a great incentive to work for Him, for everything done in His name will be carried over into resurrection to be for His praise to all eternity. The resurrection of Christ is also a great challenge, for it means that all that we have done will be assessed at the Judgement Seat of Christ, and we shall not be able to escape the consequences of our actions, even if we should desire to do so.

“And when I saw Him,
I fell at His feet as dead.
And He laid His right hand upon me, saying unto me,
Fear not;
I am the first and the last:
I am He that liveth, and was dead;
and, behold, I am alive for evermore, Amen;
and have the keys of hell and of death”.

Revelation 1:17,18.

 

ROMANS 1:1-17

THE GOSPEL DEFINED

Concise Notes on the Epistle to the Romans 

 

The Epistle to the Romans is a masterly exposition of the doctrines relative to the gospel of God. Under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit the apostle Paul was guided to unfold those truths which it is necessary to know and believe in order to be reckoned right in the sight of God, and also to live a life which is righteous before God and before men. 

Central to this gospel is the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, by whom the work of redemption which is the foundation of the gospel was effected at Calvary. It was there that He died for the ungodly, and subsequently rose from the dead and ascended to heaven to intercede for those who believe on Him. 

No preacher should venture to present the gospel to sinners without first gaining a working knowledge of at least the first eight chapters of this epistle. No believer should seek to testify in a personal way without such a knowledge, either. And certainly no unsaved person should dare to enter eternity without first becoming acquainted with the saving truths this epistle contains. Since the moment of departure from this world is unknown to us, it is important to gain this acquaintance as a matter of great urgency.

“Because there is wrath, beware lest He take thee away with His stroke, then a great ransom cannot deliver thee,”  Job 36:18. 

 

Like the rest of the Holy Scriptures, the epistle to the Romans is structured and orderly. We would do well to consider the general scheme of the epistle by way of introduction, for it will help in understanding the truth contained therein.

The epistle as a whole may be divided into three parts, each beginning on a personal note from the apostle, and each ending with a note of praise:-

Chapters 1-8.

 

GOD’S RIGHTEOUSNESS IMPUTED. 

Personal note: “I am ready to preach the gospel”, 1:15

Key phrase: “Him that justifieth the ungodly”, 4:5.

Concluding praise: “For I am persuaded”, 8:38.

 

[Chapters 1-8 may be further divided into two major sections as follows:-

1:1 to 5:11 THE SINS OF THE PERSON

The remedy- the blood of Christ;

The result- redemption and righteousness. 

5:12 to 8:39 THE PERSON WHO SINS

The remedy- death, burial and resurrection of Christ;

The result- identification and assurance.]

 

 Chapters 9-11. GOD’S WAYS DEFENDED. 

Personal note: “I have great heaviness”, 9:2.

Key phrase: “His ways past finding out”, 11:33.

Concluding praise: “For of Him, and through Him, and to Him, are all things: to whom be glory for ever. Amen”, 11:36.

 

Chapters 12-16. GOD’S SERVANTS INSTRUCTED. 

Personal note: “I beseech you, therefore, brethren”, 12:1.

Key phrase: “Him that is of power to stablish”, 16:25.

Concluding praise: “To God only wise, be glory through Jesus Christ for ever. Amen.” 16:27. 

 

ROMANS CHAPTERS ONE TO EIGHT MAY BE DIVIDED INTO FOURTEEN SECTIONS AS FOLLOWS:

SECTION 1 ROMANS 1:1-17

The Person of Christ is central to the gospel

SECTION 2 ROMANS 1:18-32

God’s wrath against men as their Creator 

SECTION 3 ROMANS 2:1-16

God’s wrath against men as their Moral Governor

SECTION 4 ROMANS 2:17-3:20

God’s wrath against men as their legislator

SECTION 5 ROMANS 3:21-26

The work of Christ is central to the gospel

SECTION 6 ROMANS 3:27-4:25

God’s grace towards men as their justifier

SECTION 7 ROMANS 5:1-11

The glory of God is central to the gospel

SECTION 8 ROMANS 5:12-21

Christ and Adam compared and contrasted

SECTION 9 ROMANS 6:1-23

The believer’s past and present position

SECTION 10 ROMANS 7:1-6

Deliverance from the law

SECTION 11 ROMANS 7:7-25

Defence of the law and despair under the law

SECTION 12 ROMANS 8:1-17

Life in the flesh and life in the Spirit

SECTION 13 ROMANS 8:18-27

Present suffering and future glory

SECTION 14 ROMANS 8:28-39

Overwhelmed or overcoming

 

There is a great need in these days to recognise that the gospel is God-centred, and Christ-centred, and not sinner-centred. The apostles “ceased not to teach and preach Jesus Christ”, Acts 5:42. Having taught who He was, they were then in a position to preach that He should be believed in and relied upon. It would be a useful exercise to note the number of verses about sinners and the number of verses about Christ in the gospel addresses recorded in the book of Acts.

THE WORDS OF THE BIBLE, THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES, AS FOUND IN THE EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS CHAPTER 1, VERSES 1 TO 17

1:1 Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ, called to be an apostle, separated unto the gospel of God,

1:2  (which He had promised afore by His prophets in the holy scriptures,)

 1:3 Concerning his Son Jesus Christ our Lord, which was made of the seed of David according to the flesh;

1:4 And declared to be the Son of God with power, according to the spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead:

1:5 By whom we have received grace and apostleship, for obedience to the faith among all nations, for his name:

1:6 Among whom are ye also the called of Jesus Christ:

1:7 To all that be in Rome, beloved of God, called to be saints: Grace to you and peace from God our Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ.

1:8 First, I thank my God through Jesus Christ for you all, that your faith is spoken of throughout the whole world.

1:9 For God is my witness, whom I serve with my spirit in the gospel of his Son, that without ceasing I make mention of you always in my prayers;

1:10 Making request, if by any means now at length I might have a prosperous journey by the will of God to come unto you.

1:11 For I long to see you, that I may impart unto you some spiritual gift, to the end ye may be established;

1:12 That is, that I may be comforted together with you by the mutual faith both of you and me.

1:13 Now I would not have you ignorant, brethren, that oftentimes I purposed to come unto you, (but was let hitherto,) that I might have some fruit among you also, even as among other Gentiles.

1:14 I am debtor both to the Greeks, and to the Barbarians; both to the wise, and to the unwise.

1:15 So, as much as in me is, I am ready to preach the gospel to you that are at Rome also.

1:16 For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek.

1:17 For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith: as it is written, The just shall live by faith.

 

SECTION 1: ROMANS 1:1-17

THE PERSON OF CHRIST IS CENTRAL TO THE GOSPEL

STRUCTURE OF SECTION 1

The person of Christ in relation to:

1 (a) 1:1                   Paul.

1 (b) 1:2                  The prophets.

1 (c) 1:3                  The people of Israel.

1 (d) 1:4                  God.

1 (e) 1:5                  People of all nations.

1 (f) 1:6,7               The people of God.

1 (g) 1:8-12            Paul’s ministry.

1 (h) 1:13-15         Paul’s motives.

1 (i) 1:16-17           Paul’s message.

 
SUBJECT OF SECTION 1

Having introduced himself as the writer of the epistle, Paul goes straight into his theme, which is the gospel of God. He shows that this gospel was promised in Old Testament times as the prophets foretold the coming of Christ. He has now come, and is preached as being relevant to all men. Having assured the believers at Rome to whom he writes that he has a great desire for their blessing, Paul then asserts his strong belief in the ability of the gospel of Christ to save those who believe it.

1:1 Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ- as a servant-slave, Paul was captive to Christ’s will, ready to be told “what thou must do,” Acts 9:6. Called to be an apostle- appointed by Christ’s call, Galatians 1:1; an apostle is a “sent one,” sent out from the presence of his superior to do what he commands. Separated unto the gospel of God- commissioned for Christ’s service, and committed to it, Acts 22:21. Singled out, and single-minded.

1 (b) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO THE PROPHETS

 1:2 Which He had promised afore- since Christ is the subject of gospel, to promise Him, (as God did through the Old Testament prophets), is to promise the gospel. By His prophets- because they were His, they spoke for God with authority. “But those things, which God before had shewed by the mouth of all His prophets, that Christ should suffer, He hath so fulfilled,” Acts 3:18. “And beginning at Moses and all the prophets, He expounded unto them in all the scriptures the things concerning Himself,” Luke 24:27. See also Luke 1:69,70. In the holy scriptures- the writings of Old Testament are holy, for they express God’s holy will, and are completely separate in character from all other writings, being utterly reliable and trustworthy; “the holy scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. All scripture is given by inspiration of God…” 2 Timothy 3:15,16.

1 (c) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO THE PEOPLE OF ISRAEL

1:3 Concerning His Son, Jesus Christ our Lord- as God’s Son, the Lord Jesus shares the nature of God the Father, see on verse 4. Jesus is the name He was given when He came into manhood to save His people from their sins, Matthew 1:21. As Christ, He is the Anointed One, the Messiah of Old Testament predictions, see 1 Samuel 2:10; Psalm 2:2; Daniel 9:25. As our Lord, He is the One whose will is sovereign, and to whom believers readily submit themselves, Romans 14:7-9. Which was made of the seed of David according to the flesh- was made means “having come”, the same word as Galatians 4:4, “made of a woman.” As One who is of the seed of David, the Lord Jesus is qualified to bring in a future righteous kingdom on earth, see Luke 1:30-33. But the three main principles of that kingdom will be “righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit”, Romans 14:17, and these also sum up the blessings that come to those who believe the gospel. The apostle is careful not to alienate the Jewish element amongst his readers, so reminds them that the line of David clearly reaches to Christ, as Matthew chapter one shows. In fact, “according to the flesh” may include the idea that even a unbelieving man might consult the temple records and see this to be true. But he is also careful to point out that since Christ has become flesh, He is relevant to all men, not just Israel. He became real man, and as such is God’s Ideal Man.

1 (d) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO GOD

1:4 And declared to be the Son of God- note the change of verb; not made, but declared, for He is ever the Son of God, sharing the Father’s eternal, unchanging nature. The Lord Jesus indicated in John 10:30,36 that to be Son of God was to be one in essence and nature with the Father. If He had meant anything less than this, the Jews would not have tried to stone Him for blasphemy. With power, according to the Spirit of holiness- the declaration of Christ’s Deity is a powerful one, and is made in relation to the Spirit of holiness. Views differ as to whether this is a reference to the Holy Spirit, or to the spirit of the Lord Jesus. If the former, then the Holy Spirit empowers the declaration, but if the latter, then Christ’s own spirit, marked as it is by holiness, and by which He communed with His Father, is set in contrast to His being of the seed of David according to the flesh, by which means He associated with men on earth. Note the contrast with the unholiness of the men described in the second half of the chapter. By the resurrection of the dead- not resurrection from among the dead, but the resurrection of dead persons, Himself included. See for instance, John 11:4. Every time a dead person was raised by Christ, when He Himself was raised, and when the dead are raised at the resurrection, there is a powerful testimony to His Deity. See John 5:17-31.

1 (e) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO THE PEOPLE OF ALL NATIONS

 1:5 By whom we have received grace- grace is unmerited favour, and believing sinners are shown this when they are saved from their sins; but there is a constant need for the believer to receive Divine favour, in order that the Christian life may be lived effectively. “without Me ye can do nothing,” John 15:5. And apostleship- grace is the common portion of all the people of God, whereas apostleship was granted to only a few, who must have seen the Lord Jesus personally, 1 Corinthians 9:1. Divine favour was needed by apostles also for the discharge of their responsibilities. Note the incidental testimony to the Deity of Christ in that the grace which elsewhere is said to be the grace of God, 1 Corinthians 15:10, is here said to be from Christ Himself. For obedience to the faith- one object of the preaching of the gospel is to bring men to an obedient faith in Christ. The person of the Lord Jesus is presented to men that they may believe on Him and submit obediently to His Lordship. Among all nations- the epistle emphasises the universal need of man to hear and believe the gospel. See also verse 13. For His name means for the good of His name. The object of the apostle’s preaching was not just that sinners might be saved, but that the name of God’s Son, Jesus Christ our Lord might be honoured.

1 (f) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO THE PEOPLE OF GOD

 1:6 Among whom are ye also the called of Jesus Christ- the preaching of the gospel is the means by which Jesus Christ calls men and women to Himself, that they might enter into the blessings which He obtained at infinite cost when He died upon the cross at Calvary. The call is not only to Himself, but also away from self and the world.

1:7 To all that be in Rome- as is clear from the next statement, this means all the believers in Rome. Beloved of God- they were the object of Divine affections. Beloved is a title of the Lord Jesus, telling of the active love of the Father for Him; here it is used of believers. “Thou…hast loved them, as Thou hast loved Me,” John 17:23. Called to be saints- this means that they were constituted saints or separated ones by the call of Christ, not that they were called to develop into saints, although it is true that believers are to perfect holiness in the fear of God, 2 Corinthians 7:1. All true believers are saints, or holy ones, as far as their standing before God is concerned, but their current state of holiness varies with the individual. Grace to you and peace- grace has been described as “the fount of all mercies,” and peace “the crown of all blessings.” Grace (“Charis”) was a Gentile greeting, whereas peace (“Shalom”) was a Jewish salutation. Here they are combined in the apostle’s greeting to all believers in Rome, whether Jew or Gentile. In Christ there is neither Jew nor Greek, Galatians 3:28. From God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ- a further testimony to the Deity of Christ in that Divine blessings come equally from the Father and the Lord Jesus.

 1 (g) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO PAUL’S MINISTRY

 1:8 Verses 8-10 emphasise Paul’s attitude Godward, verses 11-15 his attitude towards believers. First I thank my God through Jesus Christ for you all- giving thanks through Jesus Christ for their energetic faith and testimony. Note that even a leading apostle needed the Lord Jesus as mediator between himself and His God. That your faith is spoken of throughout the whole world- living as they did in the capital city of the Roman Empire, they were in a good position to spread the gospel, and this they had done diligently.

1:9 For God is my witness, whom I serve with my spirit in the gospel of His Son- the preaching of the gospel is a spiritual activity, and nothing of man or self must be allowed to intrude into it. It is also a priestly activity, as the word for serve indicates, so the preaching must be with dignity and holiness, with God’s glory as the end in view. That without ceasing I make mention of you always in my prayers- it is just as important to pray for converts after they are saved as it is to preach to sinners so that they may be saved. Note the apostle prayed for these believers even though he did not know many of them personally. See 1 Samuel 12:23.

1:10 Making request, if by any means now at length I might have a prosperous journey by the will of God to come unto you- in the ordering of God he was prevented for many years from visiting them, see 15:23, with the result that we have the benefit of his epistle to them, in which he sets out what he would have said if he had come. Note he subjected his movements to the over-riding will of God.

1:11 For I long to see you, that I may impart unto you some spiritual gift- the gifts he had were for the edifying of the believers, not the advancing of self, Ephesians 4:11,12. To the end ye may be established- sound doctrine is vitally necessary if believers are to be firmly grounded in the faith, Ephesians 4:13-16.

1:12 That is, that I may be comforted together with you by the mutual faith both of you and me- the apostle is at pains not to elevate himself above them. He would be comforted by evidences of their genuine faith, and so would they be comforted by evidences of his faith.

1 (h) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO PAUL’S MOTIVES

 1:13 Now I would not have you ignorant, brethren, that oftentimes I purposed to come unto you, (but was let hitherto)- he had been let, or hindered, from coming to them by his desire to fully preach Christ elsewhere. He was concerned to preach Christ where others had not, Romans 15:20-24. Those at Rome had heard from others, see Acts 2:10. That I might have some fruit among you also- fruit means results for God’s glory from the making known of His truth. A tree does not produce fruit for itself, but for its owner, so Paul sought glory only for God in his service. He could only be fruitful through Christ- “He that abideth in Me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit: for without Me ye can do nothing.” John 15:5. Even as among other Gentiles- Paul was commissioned to concentrate on preaching to Gentiles, Galatians 2:9, Acts 22:21.

1:14 I am debtor both to the Greeks, and to the barbarians- it did not matter whether men were cultured or otherwise, Paul was concerned to discharge his debt of obligation to preach the gospel to them, for Christ had died for them all. Both to the wise, and to the unwise- those who sought God through philosophy, or those who were unthinking, all had a claim on his time and attention. “for necessity is laid upon me; yea, woe is unto me if I preach not the gospel!” 1 Corinthians 9:16. Note that the gospel is for all sorts of men, of whatever nationality, culture, or natural ability. 

1:15   So, as much as in me is, I am ready to preach the gospel to you that are at Rome also- as far as it depended on Paul, he stood ready to preach in Rome, for the message of the gospel is urgent, and is also of universal relevance.

1 (i) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO PAUL’S MESSAGE

1:16 For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ- the preaching of the gospel is foolishness to men, 1 Corinthians 1:18, but those who have been saved know it is nothing to be embarrassed about. “and whosoever believeth on Him shall not be ashamed,” Romans 9:33. For it is the power of God unto salvation- the men of the world are perishing all the time they refuse the gospel, whereas believers not only know initial salvation from sin and judgement when they receive the gospel by faith, but are constantly saved from the pitfalls along the way by that same gospel. To everyone that believeth- this is the principle on which God acts in His dealings with men. To believe and to have faith mean the same, namely a firm persuasion based on hearing the word of God. See later passages in this epistle, such as 4:1-8; 10:8-13. To the Jew first- in the rich grace of God, the very nation which cast out the Son of God and crucified Him, is given the first opportunity to believe in Him. “And that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in His name among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem,” Luke 24:47. And also to the Greek- by Greek the apostle here means non-Jew. Since the common language throughout the Roman Empire was Greek, the Gentiles were known as Greeks.

1:17 For therein is the righteousness of God revealed- the expression “the righteousness of God” is used in two senses in this epistle. Here, the phrase means that Divine righteousness which is reckoned, or imputed, to those who believe, see 3:21,22; 4:3-5. Elsewhere, it means God’s attribute, that which He possesses intrinsically and eternally, see 3:25,26. Instead of God demanding that man become righteous by his own efforts, (a thing the apostle will show later in the epistle he cannot do), God is prepared, in grace, to reckon to be righteous those who receive the gospel. From faith to faith- literally “out from faith (on the principle of faith), to faith (with faith as the expected response).” God is prepared to reckon righteousness to a person, provided they come to Him on His terms. The sinner must abandon any idea that he can earn God’s favour, and rely totally on the person and work of the Lord Jesus, who died at Calvary so that his sins might be forgiven, and he might be made right in the sight of God. As it is written, “The just shall live by faith”- the truly just or righteous man is he who has spiritual life within on the principle of his faith in God, as is shown by the fact that he lives out that life by the same principle. The apostle had claimed at the beginning of this section that the gospel was promised through the prophets, and now he proves his point as he brings the section to a close by quoting Habakkuk 2:4. He thus disposes of any idea that he is teaching a new doctrine of his own devising.