The Fountain of Life
The Fountain of Life opened up: or, a display
of Christ in his essential and mediatorial glory
by John Flavel
Wherein the Resurrection of Christ, with its influences upon
the Saints Resurrection, is clearly opened, and comfortably applied, being
the first Step of his Exaltation
"He is not here; for he is risen, as he said: come, see
the place where the Lord lay." Matthew 28:6
We have finished the doctrine of Christ's humiliation,
wherein the Sun of righteousness appeared to you, as a setting sun, gone out
of sight; but as the sun when it is gone down to us, begins a new day in
another part of the world, so Christ, having finished his course, and sock
in this world, rises again, and that, in order to the acting, another
glorious part of his work in the world above. In his death, he was upon the
matter totally eclipsed, but in his resurrection, he began to recover his
light and glory again. God never intended that the darling of his soul
should be lost in obscure sepulcher. An angel descends from heaven, to roll
away the stone, and, with it, the reproach of his death; and to be the
heavenly herald, to proclaim his resurrection to the two Mary's, whose love
to Christ had, at this time, drawn them to visit the sepulcher, where they
lately left him.
At this time (the Lord being newly risen) the keepers
were trembling, and become as dead men. So great was the terrible majesty
and awful solemnity attending Christ's resurrection; but, to encourage these
good souls, the angel prevents them with these good tidings; "He is not
here; for he is risen, as he said: come, see the place where the Lord lay:"
q. d. Be not troubled, though you have not the end you came for, one sight
more of your dear, though dead Jesus; yet you have not lost your labor; for,
to your eternal comfort, I tell you, "he is risen, as he said." And to put
it out of doubt, come hither and satisfy yourselves, "See the place where
the Lord lay."
In which words arts we have both a declaration and
confirmation of the resurrection of Christ from the dead.
First. A declaration of it by the angels, both negatively
and affirmatively. Negatively, He is not here. Here. indeed you laid him,
here you left him, and here you thought to find him as you left him; but you
are happily mistaken, He is not here. However, this giving them no
satisfaction, so he might continue dead still, thought removed to another
place, as indeed they suspected he was, John 20:13. therefore his
resurrection is declared positively and affirmatively; He is risen; "egerte",
the word imports, the active power or self-quickening principle, by which
Christ raised himself from the state of the dead. Which Luke takes notice of
also, Acts 1:3 where he says, He showed, or presented, himself alive after
his passion. It was the divine nature, or Godhead of Christ, which revived
and raised the manhood.
Secondly, Here is also a plain confirmation of Christ's
resurrection, and that, first, From Christ's own prediction, He is risen, as
he said. He foretold that which I declare to be now fulfilled. Let it not
therefore seem incredible to you. Secondly, by their own sight, "Come, see
the place where the Lord lay." The grave has lost its guest; it is now
empty; death has lost its prey. It received, but could not retain him,
"Come, see the place where the Lord lay." Thus the resurrection of Christ is
declared, and confirmed. Hence our observation is,
DOCTRINE. That our Lord Jesus Christ, by the almighty
power of his own Godhead, revived, and rose from the dead; to the terror and
consternation of his enemies, and the unspeakable consolation of believers.
That our Lord Jesus Christ, though laid, was not lost in
the grave; but the third day revived and rose again, is a truth confirmed to
us by many infallible proofs, as Luke witnesseth, Acts 1:3. We have
testimonies of it, both from heaven and earth, and both infallible. From
heaven, we have the testimony of angels, and to the testimony of an angel
all credit is due; for angels are holy creatures, and cannot deceive us. The
angel tells the two Mary's, in the text, "He is risen." We have testimonies
of it from men, holy men, who were eye-witnesses of this truth, to whom he
showed himself alive by the space of forty days after his resurrection, by
no less than nine solemn apparitions to them. Sometimes five hundred
brethren saw him at once, 1 Cor. 15:6. These were holy persons, who dared
not deceive, and who confirmed their testimony with their blood. So that no
point of religion is of more confessed truth, and infallible certainty than
this before us.
And blessed be God it is so. For if it were not, then
were the "gospel in vain," 1 Cor. 15:14. seeing it hangs the whole weight of
our faith, hope, and salvation, upon Christ as risen from the dead. If this
were not so, then could the holy, and divinely inspired apostles be found
false witnesses, 1 Cor. 15:15. For they all, with one mouth, constantly, and
to the death affirmed it. If Christ be not risen, then are believers yet in
their sins," 1 Cor. 15:17. For our justification is truly ascribed to the
resurrection of Christ, Rom. 4:25. While Christ was dying, and continued in
the state of the dead, the price of our redemption was all that while but in
paying, the payment was completed, when he revived and rose again. Therefore
for Christ to have continued always in the state of the dead, had been never
to have completely satisfied; hence the whole force and weight of our
justifications depends upon his resurrection. Nay, had not Christ risen,
"the dead had perished," 1 Cor. 15:17. Even the dead who died in the faith
of Christ, and of whose salvation there now remains no ground to doubt.
Moreover,
Had he not revived and risen from the dead, how could all
the types that prefigured it have been satisfied? Surely they must have
stood as insignificant things in the scriptures; and so must all the
predictions of his resurrection, by which it was so plainly foretold. See
Matth. 12:40. Luke 24:46. Psalm. 16:10. 1 Cor. 15:4.
To conclude. Had he not risen from the dead, how could he
have been installed in that glory whereof he is now possessed in heaven, and
which was promised him before the world was, upon the account of his death
and sufferings? "For to this end Christ both died, and rose and revived,
that he might be Lord both of the dead and living," Rom. 14:9. And that, in
this state of dominion and glorious advancement, he might powerfully apply
the virtues and benefits of his blood to us, which else had been as a
precious cordial spilt upon the ground.
So then, there remains no doubt at all of the certainty
of Christ's resurrection; it was so, and upon all accounts it must needs be
so; for you see how great a weight the scriptures hang upon this nail. And
blessed be God it is a nail fastened in a sure place. I need spend no more
words to confirm it; but rather choose to explain and open the nature and
manner of his resurrection, which I shall do by showing you four or five
properties of it. And the first is this,
First, Christ rose from the dead with awful majesty. So
you find it in Mat. 28:2, 3, 4. "And behold there was a great earthquake;
for the angel of the Lord descended from heaven, and came and rolled back
the stone from the door, and sat upon it. His countenance was like
lightning, and his raiment white as snow. And for fear of him the keepers
did shake, and became as dead men." Human infirmity was not able to bear
such heavenly majesty as attended the business of that morning. Nature sank
under it. This earthquake was, as one calls it, triumpale signum: a sign of
triumph, or token of victory, given by Christ, not only to the keepers, and
the neighboring city, but to the whole world, that he had overcome death in
its own dominions, and, like a conqueror, lifted up his head above all his
enemies. So when the Lord fought from heaven for his people, and gave them a
glorious, though but temporal deliverance, see how the prophetess drives on
the triumph in that rhetorical song, Judg. 5:4, 5. Alluding to the most
awful appearance of God, at the giving of the law. "Lord, when you went out
of Seir, when you marchedst out of the field of Edom, the earth trembled,
and the heavens dropped, the clouds also dropped water. The mountains melted
from before the Lord, even that Sinai from before the Lord God of Israel."
Our Lord Jesus went out of the grave, in like manner, and marched out of
that bloody field with a pomp and majesty becoming so great a conqueror.
Secondly, And to increase the splendor of that day, and
drive on the triumph, his resurrection was attended with the resurrection of
many of the saints; who had slept in their graves until then, anrd then were
awakened and raised to attend the Lord at his rising. So you read, Mat.
27:52, 53. "And the graves were opened, and many bodies of the saints, which
slept, arose, and came out of the graves, after his resurrection; and went
into the holy city and appeared unto many." This wonder was designed, both
to adorn the resurrection of Christ, and to give a specimen or pledge of our
resurrection; which also is to be in the virtue of his. This indeed was the
resurrection of saints and none but saints, the resurrection of many saints,
yet it was but a special resurrection, intended only to show what God will
one day do for all his saints. And for the present, to give testimony of
Christ's resurrection from the dead. They were seen, and known of many in
the city, who doubtless never thought to have seen them any more in this
world. To enquire curiously, as some do, who they were, what discourse they
had with those to whom they appeared, and what became of them afterwards, is
a vain thing. God has cast a veil of silence and secrecy upon these things,
that we might content ourselves with the written word, and he that "will not
believe Moses and the prophets, neither will he believe though one rise from
the dead", as these saints did.
Thirdly, As Christ rose from the dead with those
satellites or at pendants, who accompanied him at his resurrection; so it
was by the power of his own Godhead that he quickened and raised him self;
and by the virtue of his resurrection were they raised also, who accompanied
him. It was not the angel who rolled back the stone that revived him in the
sepulcher, but he resumed his own life; so he tells us, John 10:18. "I lay
down my life that I may take it again." Hence 1 Pet. 3:18. He is said to be
put to death in the flesh, but quickened by the Spirit, that is by the power
of his Godhead, or divine nature, which is opposed there to flesh, or his
human nature. By the eternal Spirit he offered himself up to God, when he
died, Heb. 9:14. that is by his own Godhead, not the third person in the
Trinity, for then it could not have been ascribed to him as his own act,
that he offered up himself. And by the same Spirit he was quickened again.
And, therefore, the apostle well observes, Rom. 1:4.
"That he was declared to be the Son of God with power, by his resurrection
from the dead." Now if he had been raised by the power of the Father, or
Spirit only, and not by his own, how could he be declared by his
resurrection to be the Son of God? What more had appeared in him than in
others? For others are raised by the power of God, if that were all. So that
in this respect also it was a marvelous resurrection. Never any did, or
shall rise as Christ rose by a self-quickening principle. For though many
dead saints rose at that time also, yet it was by the virtue of Christ's
resurrection that their graves were opened, and their bodies quickened. In
which respect he says, John 11:25. when he raised dead Lazarus, "I am the
resurrection and the life," that is the principle of life and quickening, by
which the dead saints are raised.
Fourthly, And therefore it may be truly affirmed, that
though some dead saints are raised to life before the resurrection of
Christ, yet that Christ is "the first-born from the dead," as he is called,
Col. 1:18. For though Lazarus and others were raised, yet not by themselves,
but by Christ. It was by his virtue and power, not their own. And though
they were raised to life, yet they died again. Death recovered them again,
but Christ dies no more. "Death has no dominion over him." He was the first
that opened the womb of the earth, the first-born from the dead, that in all
things he might have the pre-eminence.
Fifthly, But lastly, Christ rose as a public or common
person. "As the first fruits of them that slept," 1 Cor. 15:20. I desire
this may be well understood; for upon this account it is that our
resurrection is secured to us by the resurrection of Christ; and not a
resurrection only, but a blessed and happy one, for the first-fruits both
assured and sanctified the whole crop or harvest.
Now that Christ did rise, as a public person,
representing and comprehending all the elect, who were called the children
of the resurrection, is plain from Eph. 2:6. where we are said to be risen
with, or in him. So that, as we are said to die in Adam, (who also was a
common person) as the branches die in the death of the root; so we are said
to be raised from death in Christ, who is the head, root, and
representative, of all his elect seed. And why is he called the firstborn,
and first begotten frown the dead, but with respect to the whole number of
the elect, that are to be born from the dead in their time and order also
and as sure as the whole harvest follows the first fruits, so shall the
general resurrection of the saints to life eternal follow this birth of the
first-born from the dead.
It shall surely follow it I say, and that not only as a
consequent follows an antecedent, but as an effect follows its proper cause.
Now there is a three-fold casualty, or influence that Christ's resurrection
has upon the saints resurrection, of which it is at once the meritorious,
efficient, and exemplary cause.
First, The resurrection of Christ is a meritorious cause
of the saints resurrection, as it completed his satisfaction, and finished
his payment, and so our justification is properly assigned to it, as before
was noted from Rom. 4:25. This his resurrection was the receiving of the
acquittance, the cancelling of the bond. And had not this been done, we had
still been in our sins, as he speaks, 1 Cor. 15:7. and so our guilt had been
still a bar to our happy resurrection. But now, the price being paid in his
death, which payment was finished when he revived; and the discharge then
received for us, now there is nothing lies in bar against our resurrect lion
to eternal life.
Secondly, As it is the meritorious cause of our
resurrection, so it s the efficient cause of it also. For when the time
shall come that the saints shall rise out of the dust, they shall be raised
by Christ, as their head, in whom the effective principle of their life is.
"Your life is hid with Christ in God," as it is Col. 3:3. As when a man
awakes out of his sleep, "the animal spirits seated in the brain, being set
at liberty by the digestion of those vapors that bound them up, do play
freely through every part and member of the body;" so Christ, the believers
mystical head, being quickened, the spirit of life, which is in him, shall
be diffused through all his members to quicken them also in the morning of
the resurrection. Hence the warm animating dew of Christ's resurrection is
said to be to our bodies, as the dew of the morning is to the withered,
languishing plants, which revive by it, Isa. 26:19. "Your dew is as the dew
of herbs;" and then it follows, "the earth shall cast forth her dead." So
that by the same faith we put Christ's resurrection into the promises, we
may put the believer's resurrection into the conclusion. And therefore, the
apostle makes them convertibles, reasoning forward, from Christ's to ours;
and back again from ours to his, 1 Cor. 15:12, 13. Which is also the sense
of that scripture, Rom. 8:10, 11. "And if Christ be in you, the body indeed
is dead because of sin; but the spirit is life because of righteousness."
that is Though you are really united to Christ by the Spirit, yet your
bodies must die as well as other men's; but your souls shall be presently,
upon your dissolution, swallowed up in life. And then it follows, verse 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 dwells in you," that is though your bodies must
die, yet they shall live again in the resurrection; and that by virtue of
the Spirit of Christ which dwells in you, and is the bond of your mystical
union with him your head. You shall not be raised as others are, by a mere
word of power, but by the Spirit of life dwelling in Christ your head, which
is a choice prerogative indeed.
Thirdly, Christ's resurrection is not only the
meritorious and efficient cause, but it is also the exemplary cause or
pattern of our resurrection. "He being the first and best, is therefore the
pattern and measure of all the rest." So you read, Phil. 3:21. "Who shall
change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body."
Now the conformity of our resurrection to Christ's stands in the following
particulars. Christ's body was raised substantially the same; so will ours.
His body was raised first; so will ours be raised before the rest of the
dead. His body was wonderfully improved by the resurrection; so will ours.
His body was raised to be glorified; and so will ours.
First, Christ's body was raised substantially the same
that it was before; and so will ours. Not another, but the same body. Upon
this very reason the apostle uses that identical expression, 1 Cor. 15:53.
"This corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal, immortality."
Pointing, as it were, to his own body when he spoke it; the same body, I
say, and that not only specifically the same, (for indeed no other species
of flesh is so privileged) but the same numerically, that very body, not a
new or another body in its stead. So that it shall be both the what it was,
and the who it was. And indeed to deny this is to deny the resurrection
itself. For should God prepare another body to be raised in stead of this,
it would not be a resurrection, but a creation; for non resurrectio dici
poterit, ubi non resurgit quod cecidit. That cannot be called a
resurrection, where one thing falls and another risers, as Gregory long
since pertinently observed.
Secondly, His body was raised, not by a word of power
from the Father, but by his own Spirit. So will ours. Indeed the power of
God shall go forth to unburrough sinners, and fetch them forcibly out of
their graves; but the resurrection of the saints is to be effected another
way; as I opened but now to you. Even by his Spirit which now dwells in
them. That very Spirit of Christ which effected their spiritual resurrection
from sin, shall effect their corporal resurrection also from the grave.
Thirdly, His body was raised first, he had in this, as
well as in other things, the pre-eminence; so shall the saints, in respect
of the wicked, have the pre-eminence in the resurrection, 1 Thess. 4:16 "The
dead in Christ shall rise first." They are to attend the Lord at his coming,
and will be brought forth sooner than the rest of the world, to attend on
that service. As the sheriff; with his men, goes forth to meet the judge,
before the gaoler brings forth his prisoners.
Fourthly, Christ's body was marvelously improved by the
resurrection, and so will ours. It fell in weakness, but was raised in
power; no more capable of sorrows, pains and dishonors. In like manner our
bodies are "sown in weakness, but raised in strength, sown in dishonor,
raised in glory. Sown natural bodies, raised spiritual bodies," as the
apostle speaks, 1 Cor. 15:43, 44. Spiritual bodies, not properly, but
analogically. No distemper hang about glorified bodies, nor are they
henceforth subject to any of those natural necessities, to which they are
now tied. There are no flaw, defects, or deformities, in the children of the
resurrection. What members are now defective or deformed, will then be
restored to their perfect being and beauty; "for, if the universal death of
all parts be rescinded by the resurrection, how much more the partial death
of any single member?" or as Tertullian speaks, and from thenceforth they
are free from the law of mortality, "They can die no more," Luke 20:35, 36.
Thus shall they be improved by their resurrection.
Fifthly, To conclude, Christ's body was raised from the
dead to be glorified and crowned with honor. Oh it was a joyful day to him;
and so will the resurrection of the saints be to them, the day of the
gladness of their hearts. It will be said to them in that morning, "Awake,
and sing, you that dwell in the dust," as Isa. 26:19. O how comfortable will
be the meeting between the glorified soul, and its new raised body. Much
more comfortable than that of Jacob's and Joseph's, after twenty years
absence, Gen. 46:29. Or that of David's with Jonathan, when he came out of
the cave to him, 1 Sam. 20:41. Or that of the father of the prodigal with
his son, who "was dead, and is alive, was lost, and is found." As he speaks,
Luke 15: And there are three things will make it so.
First, The gratifications of the soul, by the
satisfaction of its natural appetite of union with its own body. For even
glorified souls in heaven have such an appetition and desire of reunion. In
deed, the angels, who are pure spirits, as they never had union with, so
they have no inclination to matter; but souls are otherwise tempered and
disposed. We are all sensible of its affection to the body now, in its
compounded state, we feel the tender care it has for the body, the sympathy
with it, and lothness to be separated from it. It is said, 2 Cor. 5:6. "to
be at home in the body." And had not God implanted such an inclination to
this its tabernacle in it, it would not have paid that due respect it owes
the body while it inhabited in it, nor have regarded what became of it when
it left it. This inclination remains still with it in heaven, it reckons not
itself completely happy until its old dear companion and partner be with it,
and in that sense some understand those words, Job 14:14. "All the days of
my appointed time," that is of the time appointed for my body to remain in
the grave, will I wait until my change (namely, that which will be made by
the resurrection) come; for it is manifest enough he speaks there of the
resurrection. Now, when this its inclination to its own body, its longings
and hankerings after it, are gratified with a sight and enjoyment of it
again, oh what a comfortable meeting will this make it! especially if we
consider,
Secondly, The excellent temper and state in which they
shall meet each other. For, as the body shall be raised with all the
improvements and endowments imaginable, which may render it amiable, and
every way desirable, so the soul comes down immediately from God out of
heaven, shining in its holiness and glory. It comes perfumed out of those
ivory palaces, with a strong scent of heaven upon it. And thus it re-enters
its body, and animates it again. But,
Thirdly, And principally, that wherein the chief joy of
this meeting consists, is the end for which the glorified soul comes down to
quicken and repossess it, namely, to meet the Lord, and ever to be with the
Lord. To receive a full reward for all the labors and services it performed
to God in this world. This must needs make that day, a day of triumph and
exaltation. It comes out of the grave, as Joseph out of his prison, to be
advanced to the highest honor. O do but imagine what an ecstasy of joy, and
ravishing pleasure it will be, for a soul thus to resume its own body, and
say as it were, unto it, come away, my dear, my ancient friend, who servedst
and sufferedst with me in the world; come along with me to meet the Lord, in
whose presence I have been ever since I parted with you. Now your bountiful
Lord has remembered you also, and the day of your glorification is come.
Surely it will be a joyful awaking. For, do but imagine, what a joy it is
for dear friends to meet after long separation, how do they use to give
demonstrations of their love and delight in each other, by embraces, kisses,
tears, etc. Or frame but to yourselves a notion of perfect health, when a
sprightly vivacity runs through every part, and the spirits do, as it were,
dance before us, when we go about any business as especially to such a
business as the business of that day will be, to receive a crown, and a
kingdom. Do but imagine then what a sun shine morning this will be, and how
the gains and agonies, cold sweats, and bitter groans at parting will be
recompensed by the joy of such a meeting?
And thus I have showed you the certainty of Christ's
resurrection, the nature and properties of it, the threefold influence it
has on the saints resurrection, and the conformity of ours unto his in these
five respects. His body rose substantially the same, so shall ours; his body
was raised by the Spirit, so shall ours. Not by the Godhead of Christ as his
was, but by the Spirit, who is the bond of our union with Christ. He was
raised as the first begotten from the dead, so the dead in Christ shall rise
first. His body was improved by the resurrection, so shall ours. From the
consideration of all which,
INFERENCE 1. We infer, that if Christ was thus raised
from the dead, then death is fairly overcome, and swallowed up in victory:
were it not so, it had never let Christ escape out of the grave. The prey of
the terrible had never been thus rescued out of its paws. Death is a
dreadful enemy, it defies all the sons and daughters of Adam. None dared
cope with this king of terrors but Christ, and he, by dying, went into the
very den of this dragon, fought with it, and foiled it in the grave, its own
territories and dominions, and came off a conqueror. For, as the apostle
speaks, Acts 2:24. "It was impossible it should hold or detain him." Never
did death meet with its over match before it met with Christ, and he
conquering it for us, and in our names, rising as our representative, now
every single saint triumphs over it as a vanquished enemy, 1 Cor. 15:55. "O
death, where is your sting? O grave, where is your victory? Thanks be to
God, who has given us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ." Thus, like
Joshua, they set the foot of faith upon the neck of that king, and, with an
holy scorn, deride its power. "O death, where is your sting?" If it be
objected that it is said, 1 Cor. 15:26. "The last enemy that is to be
destroyed is death." And if so, then it should seem the victory is not yet
achieved, and so we do but boast before the victory; it is at hand to reply
that the victory over death, obtained by Christ's resurrection, is twofold,
either personal and incomplete, or general and complete. He actually
overcame it at his resurrection, in his own person, perfectly and virtually
for us, as our head; but at the general resurrection of the saints (which
his resurrection, as the first-fruits, assures them of) then it will be
utterly vanquished and destroyed. Until then, it will exercise some little
power over the bodies of the saints, in which respect it is called the last
enemy. For sin, the chief enemy that let it in, that was conquered utterly
and eradicated when they died; but death holds their bodies in the grave
until the coming of Christ, and then it is utterly to be vanquished. For
after that they can die no more, 1 Cor. 15:54. "And then shall be brought to
pass that saying that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory." Then,
and not until shell, will that conquest be fully completed in our persons,
though it be already so in Christ's; now incompletely in ours, and then
completely and fully forever. For the same word which signifies victory does
also signify perpetuity, and in this place a final or perpetual conquest.
And, indeed, now it smites only with its dart, not with its sting, and that
but the believer's body only, and the body but for a time remains under it
neither. So that there is no reason why a believer should stand in a slavish
fear of it.
INFERENCE. 2. Has Christ, and has his resurrection such a
potent and comfortable influence into the resurrection of the saints? Then
it is the duty, and will be the wisdom of the people of God, so to govern,
dispose, and employ their bodies, as become men and women, that understand
what glory is prepared form them at the resurrection of the just.
Particularly,
First, Be not fondly tender of them, but employ and use
them for God here. How many good duties are lost and spoiled by sinful
indulgence to our bodies? Alas! we are generally more solicitous to live
long, than to live usefully. How many saints have active, vigorous bodies,
yet God has little service from them. If your bodies were animated by some
other souls that love God more than van do, and burn with holy zeal to his
service, more work would be done for God by your bodies in a day, than is
now done in a month. To have an able, healthy body, and not use it for God,
for fear of hurting it, is as if one should give you a strong and stately
horse, upon condition you must not work or ride him. Wherein is the mercy of
having a body, except it be employed for God? Will not its reward at the
resurrection be sufficient for all the pains you nor put it to in his
service?
Secondly, See that you preserve the due honor of your
bodies. "Possess them in sanctification and honor," 1 Thess. 4:4. O, let not
these eyes be now defiled with sin, by which you shall see God. Those ears
be inlets to vanity, which shall hear the Hallelujahs of the blessed. God
has designed honor for your bodies, O, make them not either the instruments
or objects of sin. There are sins against the body, 1 Cor. 6:18. Preserve
your bodies from those defilements, for they are the temple of God; "If any
man defile the temple of God, him shall God destroy," 1 Cor. 3:17.
Thirdly, Let not the contentment and accommodation of
your bodies draw your soul into snares, and bring them under the power of
temptations to sin. This is a very common case. O how many thousands of
precious souls perish eternally for the satisfaction of a vile body for a
moment? Their souls must, because their bodies cannot suffer. It is recorded
to the immortal honor of these worthies, in Heb. 11:35. "That they accepted
not deliverance, that they might obtain a better resurrection." They might
have had a temporal resurrection from death to life, from reproach to honor,
from poverty to riches, from pains to pleasure; but upon such terms they
judged it not worth acceptance. They would not expose their souls to secure
their bodies. They had the same natural affections that other men have. They
were made of as tender flesh as we are, but such was the care they had of
their souls, and the hope of a better resurrection, that they listened not
to the complaints and whinings of their bodies. O, that we were all in the
same resolutions with them.
Fourthly, With-hold not, upon the pretense of the wants
your own bodies may be in, that which God and conscience bid you to
communicate for the refreshment of the saints, whose present necessities
require your assistance. O, be not too indulgent to your own flesh, and
cruel to others. Certainly, the consideration of that reward which shall be
given you at the resurrection, for every act of Christian charity, is the
greatest spur and incentive in the world to it. And to that end it is urged
as a motive to charity, Luke 14:13, 14. "When you makes a feast, call the
poor, the maimed, the lame, the blind, and you shall be blessed; for they
cannot recompense you: for you shall be recompensed at the resurrection of
the justly". It was the opinion of an eminent moderns divines, that no man
living, fully understands and believes that scripture, Mat. 25:40. "In as
much as you have done it to one of the least of these my brethren, you have
done it unto me." How few saints would be exposed to daily wants and
necessities, if that scripture were but fully understood and believed!
INFERENCE. 3. Is Christ risen from the dead, and that as
a public person and representative of believers? How are we all concerned
then to secure to ourselves an interest in Christ, and consequently in this
blessed resurrection? What consolation would be left in this world, if the
hope of the resurrection were taken away? It is this blessed hope that must
support you under all the troubles of life, and in the agonies of death. The
securing of a blessed resurrection to yourselves, is therefore the most deep
concernment you have in this world. And it may be secured to yourselves, if,
upon serious heart-examination, you can discover the following evidences.
Evidence 1. First, If you are regenerated creatures,
brought forth in a new nature to God, for we are "begotten again to a lively
hope, by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead." Christ's
resurrection is the ground work of our hope. And the new birth is our title
or evidence of our interest in it. So that until our souls are partakers of
the spiritual resurrection from the death of sin, we can have no assurance
our bodies shall be partakers of that blessed resurrection to life.
"Blessed and holy (says the Spirit), is he that has part
in the first resurrection, on such the second death has no power," Rev.
20:6. Never let unregenerate souls expect a comfortable meeting with their
bodies again. Rise they shall by God's terrible citation, at the sound of
the last trumpet, but not to the same end that the saints arise, nor by the
same principle. They to whom the spirit is now a principle of
sanctification, to them he will be the principle of a joyful resurrection.
See then that you get gracious souls now, or never expect glorious bodies
then.
Evidence. "If you be dead with Christ, you shall live
again by the life of Christ. If we have been planted together in the
likeness of his death, we shall be also in the likeness of his
resurrection," Rom. 6:5. "sumfutoi", planted together. Some refer it to
believers themselves; Jews and Gentiles are planted together in Christ. So
Erasmus, "Believers grow together like branches upon the same root," which
should powerfully enforce the great gospel duty of unity among themselves.
But I would rather understand it, with reference to Christ and believers,
with whom believers are in other scriptures said to suffer together, and be
glorified together; to die together, and live together; to be crucified
together, and buried together; all noting the communion they have with
Christ, both in his death, and in his life. Now, if the power of Christ's
death, that is the mortifying influence of it, have been upon our hearts,
killing their lusts, deadening their affections, and flattening their
appetites to the creature, then the power of his life, or resurrection,
shall come (like the animating dew) upon our dead withered bodies, to revive
and raise them up to live with him in glory.
Evidence 3. If your hearts and affections be now with
Christ in heaven, your bodies in due time shall be there also, and conformed
to his glorious body. So you find it, Phil. 3:20, 21. "For our conversation
is in heaven, from whence we look for the Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, who
shall change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto his own
glorious body." "The body is here called vile, or the body of our vileness."
Not as God made it, but as sin has marred it. Not absolutely, and in itself,
but relatively, and in comparison of what it will be in its second edition,
at the resurrection. Then those scattered bones and dispersed dust, like
pieces of old broken battered silver, will be new cast, and wrought in the
best and newest fashion, even like to Christ's glorious body. Whereof we
have this evidence, that our conversation is already heavenly. The temper,
frame, and disposition of our souls is already so; therefore the frame and
temper of our bodies in due time shall be so.
Evidence 4. If you strive now by any means to attain the
resurrection of the dead, no doubt but you shall then attain what you now
strive for. This was Paul's great ambition, "that by any means he might
attain the resurrection of the dead," Phil. 3:11. He means not simply a
resurrection from the dead, for that all men shall attain, whether they
strive for it or no. But by a metonymy of the subject for the adjunct, he
intends that complete holiness and perfection, which shall attend the state
of the resurrection, so it is expounded, ver. 12. So then, if God have
raised in your hearts a vehement desire, and assiduous endeavor after a
perfect freedom from sin, and full conformity to God, in the beauties of
holiness; that very love of holiness, your present partings, and tendencies
after perfection, speak you to be the persons designed for it.
Evidence 5. If you are such as do good in your
generation. If you be fruitful and useful men and women in the world, you
shall have part in this blessed resurrection, John 5:28, 29. "All that are
in the graves shall hear his voice and shall come forth; they that have done
good unto the resurrection of life." Now it is not every act materially
good, that entitles a man to this privilege; but the same requisites that
the schoolmen assign to make a good prayer, are also necessary to every good
work. The person, matter, manner, and end, must be good. Nor is it any
single good act, but a series and course of holy actions, that is here
meant. What a spur should this be to us ail, as (indeed the apostle makes
it, closing up the doctrine of the resurrection, with this solemn
exhortation, 1 Cor. 15:58. with which I also close mine) "Therefore, my
beloved brethren, be you steadfast, unmoveable, always abounding in the work
of the Lord, for as much as you know that your labor is not in vain in the
Lord." Thanks be to God for his unspeakable gift!