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STUDY XII
THE SUBJECT OF THE ATONEMENT--MAN
What is Man?--The "Orthodox" Answer--The Scientific Answer--
The Bible Answer--Man's Body--The Spirit of Man--The Human
Soul--Confusion Through Mistranslation--The Propagation of
Souls--What is "Sheol," "Hades," to which all Souls Go, in
the
Interim Between Death and Resurrection?--The Scriptural Statements
Severally Considered.
"What is man, that thou art mindful of him? And the son of man, that
thou visitest him? For thou madest him a little lower than the angels,
and hast crowned him with glory and honor. Thou madest him to have
dominion over the works of thy hands; thou hast put all things under his
feet: all sheep and oxen, yea, and the beasts of the field, the fowl of the
air and the fish of the sea." Psa. 8:4-8
WHAT great being is man that the Creator of the universe
has been so interested in his welfare as to make so bountiful
a provision for his reconciliation--even through the sacrifice
of his Son? We should know thoroughly, this highest of
God's earthly creatures, so far as possible: and yet, so limited
are our powers of judgment, and so circumscribed our
knowledge, that on this subject we are dependent almost
entirely upon what our loving Creator has made known to
us in his Word. Although the saying has become proverbial
that "The greatest study of mankind is man," yet, strange
to say, there are few subjects upon which mankind is more
confused than this one--What is man? There are two general
views on the subject, neither of which, we hold, is the
correct, the Scriptural one. Though both have certain elements
of truth connected with them, both are grievously
wrong and misleading; so that even those who are not
wholly deluded by them are nevertheless so influenced
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and confused by these errors that many truths are robbed of
their force and weight, and many fallacies are given an appearance
of truth. Our subject, therefore, is important to all
who would know the truth, and have the full benefit of the
same in its influence upon their hearts and lives. The subject
is of special importance in connection with the topic
under discussion, the Atonement. He who has not a clear
conception of what man is, will find it difficult if not impossible,
to clearly comprehend the Scriptural teachings
relative to the atonement for man's sin--its operation and
results.
We will here consider the general and so-called orthodox
view of the question, What is man? then the strictly scientific
view, and finally the Bible view, which, we hold, is
different from both, much more reasonable than either,
and the only ground of proper harmony between the two.
Orthodoxy's View of Man
The question, What is man? if answered from a so-called
"orthodox theological" standpoint (which we dispute)
would be about as follows: Man is a composite being of
three parts, body, spirit and soul; the body is born after the
usual manner of animal birth, except that at the time of
birth God interposes, and in some inscrutable manner implants
in the body a spirit and a soul, which are parts of
himself, and being parts of God are indestructible, and can
never die. These two parts, spirit and soul, "orthodoxy" is
unable to separate and distinguish, and hence uses the
terms interchangeably at convenience. Both terms (spirit
and soul) are understood to mean the real man, while the
flesh is considered to be merely the outward clothing of the
real man, in which he dwells for the years of his earthly life,
as in a house. At death, they say, the real man is let out of
this prison-house of flesh, and finds himself in a condition
much more congenial.
In other words, "orthodoxy" claims that the real man is
not an earthly being, but a spirit being wholly unadapted
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to the earth, except through its experiences in the fleshly
body. When set free from the body by death it is theorized
that a great blessing has been experienced, although the
man, while he lived, made every effort to continue to live in
the fleshly house, using medicines and travels and every
hygienic appliance and invention to prolong the life in the
flesh, which, theoretically, it is claimed is illy adapted to his
uses and enjoyments. The "liberation" called "death" is
esteemed
to be another step in the evolutionary process: and
in many minds such a future evolution from earthly to
heavenly conditions, from animal to spiritual conditions, is
regarded as a reasonable proposition and a logical outcome
of the scientific conclusion that man was not created a man,
but evolved, through long ages, from the protoplasm of
prehistoric times to the microbe, from the microbe, by various
long stages and journeys to the monkey, and from the
monkey finally to manhood. It is further claimed that manhood,
in its earliest stage, was very inferior to the manhood
of the present time, that evolution has been bringing mankind
forward, and that the next step for every human being
is a transformation or evolution into spirit conditions, as
angels and gods or as devils.
All this is very flattering to nineteenth century pride, for
though, on one hand, it acknowledges an ancestry of the
very lowest intelligence, it claims for itself today the very
highest attainments, as well as a future exaltation. Nor is
this view confined to the people of civilized lands: in a general
way all heathen people, even savages, have practically
the same thought respecting man, except that they do not
usually trace back his origin so far. This view finds support
in all the heathen philosophies, and to a considerable extent
it is supported by the scientific theorizers of the present
day, who, although they define the subject quite differently,
nevertheless love to indulge in hopes of a future life
along the lines of evolution, and experience a gratification
of their vanity along lines which do not at all accord with
their own scientific deductions respecting the spark of life in
man.
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Man as Seen by Science
The scientific answer to the question, What is man?
stated in simple language, would be: Man is an animal of
the highest type yet developed and known. He has a body
which differs from the bodies of other animals, in that it is
the highest and noblest development. His brain structure
corresponds to that of the lower animals, but is of a better
developed and more refined order, with added and larger
capacities, which constitute man by nature the lord, the
king of the lower creation. Man's breath or spirit of life is
like that of other animals. Man's organism and spark of life
are from his progenitors, in the same manner that the beasts
receive their life and bodies from their progenitors.
Science recognizes every man as a soul or sentient being;
but as to the future, the eternity of man's being, science has
no suggestion whatever to offer, finding nothing whereon to
base a conclusion, or even a reasonable hypothesis. Science,
however, while it does not speculate, hopes for a future
along the lines of evolution, which it believes it can trace in
the past. Science is proud of the said evolutionary steps already
accomplished by its god, natural law, and is hopeful
that the same operations of natural law will (without a personal
God) eventually bring mankind to still more godlike
and masterful conditions than at present.
Man from the Bible Standpoint
The Bible view, while agreeing with both of the foregoing
in some respects, controverts both most absolutely
along some of their most important lines. The Bible does
not speculate, but properly, as the voice or revelation of
God, it speaks with authority and emphasis, declaring the
beginning, the present and the future of man. The Bible
view is the only consistent one, and hence the only truly scientific
and orthodox view of this subject. But the Bible presentation
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does not pander to human pride; it does not make
of man his own evolutor, nor does it commit this to a god of
nature, which is no God. The Bible view respecting man
gives God the glory for his original creation (Adam), in the
divine likeness; and lays upon man the blame for failure to
maintain that likeness, and for a fall into sin, and all the
consequences of sin--mental and physical and moral impoverishment
unto death. The Bible view honors God
again, in revealing to us his mercy and magnanimity toward
man in his fallen estate, in the provision for man's redemption
and for his restitution to his original condition, at
the hands of his Redeemer, during the Millennium.
A fruitful source of confusion in the minds of Christian
people, when studying the nature of man, and particularly
when attempting to obtain the Scriptural views upon the
subject, is their failure to distinguish between mankind in
general and the Church, the little flock, which God is selecting
from amongst men during the present age, and fitting
and preparing for new and superhuman conditions--spiritual
conditions. Failing to "rightly divide the word of
truth," they apply to all men the statements and promises
of the Scriptures, especially of the New Testament, which
are addressed only to the Church class, and which have no
bearing whatever upon the restitution hopes held out for all
mankind. These "exceeding great and precious promises"
are proportionately as untrue of the world as they are true
of the Church. Thus, for instance, the Apostle's words,
"The body is dead because of sin, but the spirit is life because
of righteousness" (Rom. 8:10), which apply only to
the Church: thus the special and peculiar conditions of the
call of the Church during this Gospel age, is interpreted to
mean the same with respect to all humanity. Here the
words "dead" and "life" are used in a relative sense, of
those
who after being justified through faith, by the grace of God,
are at once reckoned as freed from death-condemnation, to
the intent that they may present their bodies living sacrifices,
reckoning their bodies and treating them as dead, so
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far as earthly rights and interests are concerned: and reckoning
themselves as no longer fleshly or human beings, but
as "new creatures," begotten to a new nature through the
promises of God. As such, justified and sanctified believers
(the Church) recognize themselves, from the divine standpoint,
as having obtained a new spirit of life through the
operation of faith in Christ and obedience to him. But such
uses of the words "dead" and "life" in respect to the world
would be wholly improper, for the world has no other nature
than the one human nature; it has not, in any sense of
the word, been begotten again.
Another text frequently misapplied to the world, which
belongs to the Lord's consecrated people, says, "We have
this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the
power may be of God, and not of us." (2 Cor. 4:7) Here the
Church alone is referred to--those who have received the
treasure of the new mind, the new nature. They have this
treasure, or new nature, in the natural body, which is reckoned
as dead, and here denominated an "earthen vessel."
The illustration is quite a correct one for the class to whom
it is applied, the Church; but it is wholly incorrect to apply
it to mankind in general, and to suppose that every human
being has a heavenly treasure or new nature, and that thus
every human body is an earthen vessel or receptacle for
such new nature. The world has but one nature--the human
nature: it has no new nature, either as a treasure or in
any other sense; nor is there any promise that it will ever
have. Quite to the contrary, the highest possible aspiration
ever to be opened to humanity, according to the divine
Word of promise, is "restitution"--to be restored to the full
perfection of the human nature, lost in Eden, redeemed at
Calvary. Acts 3:19-23
Similarly we might discuss scores of statements of the
New Testament, which are not applicable to mankind in
general, but merely to the consecrated Church, begotten
again by the holy Spirit to a new spirit nature. It will be
profitable for all to notice carefully the salutations by
which the apostles introduce their various epistles. They
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are not addressed, as is supposed by many, to mankind in
general, but to the Church, "the saints," the "household of
faith."
Be it remembered, therefore, that in discussing, What is
man? in this chapter, we are not discussing what is the
Church, the "new creature" in Christ Jesus, nor what is the
spirit nature to which the Church is already begotten of the
Spirit and if faithful shall be made partakers to the fullest
extent in the first resurrection. On the contrary, we are discussing
the first Adam and his children. We want to know
who and what we are by nature, as a race--What is man?
Thus we can best understand from what man fell, into what
man fell, from what man was redeemed, and to what man
shall be restored, and other cognate subjects.
Man--Body, Spirit, Soul
Accepting the standard definition of the word "animal"--
"a sentient living organism," we need have no hesitation
in classing man as one of and the chief and king over
earth's animals, and thus far the Scriptures are in full accord
with the deductions of science. Note the text which introduces
this chapter: in it the Prophet David particularly
points out that man, in his nature, is lower than the angels,
and a king and head over all earthly creatures, the representative
of God to all the lower orders of sentient beings.
The Scriptures nowhere declare, either directly or by implication,
that a piece, part or spark of the divine being is
communicated to every human creature. This is a baseless
assumption on the part of those who desire to construct a
theory, and are short of material for it. And this baseless
hypothesis, that there is a portion of God communicated to
every human creature at birth, has been made the basis of
many false doctrines, grossly derogatory to the divine character--
disrespectful to divine wisdom, justice, love and
power.
It is this assumption, that a spark of the divine being is
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communicated at birth to every human creature, which necessitated
the theory of a hell of eternal torment. The suggestion
is that if man had been created as other animals
were created, he might have died as other animals die,
without fear of an eternity of torture; but that God having
imparted to man a spark of his own life, man is therefore eternal,
because God is eternal: and that hence it is impossible
for God to destroy his creature even though such destruction
might become desirable. And if man cannot be destroyed
it is held that he must exist to all eternity
somewhere: and since the vast majority are admittedly evil,
and only a "little flock" saintly and pleasing to God, it is
held that the unsaintly must have a future of torment proportioned
to the future of bliss accorded to the saintly few.
Otherwise, it is admitted that it would be more to man's interest,
more to God's glory, and more to the peace and prosperity
of the universe, if the wicked could all be destroyed.
The claim is that God, having the power to create, has not
the power to destroy man, his own creation, because a spark
of divine life was in some unexplained manner connected
with him. We hope to show that this entire proposition is
fallacious: that it is not only without Scriptural support,
but that it is a fabrication of the Dark Ages, most positively
contradicted by the Scriptures.
The Scriptures recognize man as composed of two elements,
body and spirit. These two produce soul, sentient
being, intelligence, the man himself, the being, or soul. The
term "body" applies merely to the physical organism. It
neither relates to the life which animates it, nor to the sentient
being which is the result of animation. A body is not a
man, although there could be no man without a body. The
spirit of life is not the man; although there could be no
manhood without the spirit of life. The word "spirit" is, in
the Old Testament Scriptures, from the Hebrew word ruach.
Its signification primarily is breath; and hence we have the
expression "breath of life," or "spirit of
life," because the
spark of life once started is supported by breathing.
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The words "spirit of life," however, signify more than
merely breath; they relate to the spark of life itself, without
which breath would be an impossibility. This spark of life
we receive from our fathers, it being nourished and developed
through our mothers.* It is quite untrue that the
spark of human life is communicated in a miraculous way,
any more than is the spark of brute life. The lower animals,
the horse, the dog, cattle, etc., are begotten of the males and
born of the females of their respective genera, in precisely
the same manner as the human species is produced, nor
does anything in Scripture suggest the contrary. It is purely
human invention, designed to uphold a false theory, that
claims divine interposition in the birth of human offspring.
To suppose that God is the direct creator of every human
infant born into the world is to suppose what the Scriptures
contradict, for thus he would be the author of sin and of
confusion and of imperfection, whereas the Scriptures declare,
"His work is perfect." (Deut. 32:4) No, no! the
mentally
and physically and morally blemished and deformed
are not God's workmanship. They are far removed, far
fallen from the condition of their perfect progenitors,
Adam and Eve, for whose creation alone God takes the responsibility.
Those who claim that God directly creates every
human being make out that God is responsible for all
the idiocy and insanity and imbecility in the world: but
both science and Scripture declare that the children inherit
from their progenitors their vices and their virtues, their
weakness and their talents. The Apostle most explicitly
declares, "By one man's disobedience sin entered into the
world and death by [as a result of] sin: and thus death
passed upon all men; because all men had [by heredity] become
sinners." The Prophet refers to the same thing when
he declares, "The fathers ate a sour grape [sin] and the children's
teeth are set on edge"--they are all depraved. Rom. 5:12;
Jer. 31:29,30; Ezek. 18:2
*See page 98.
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But some one will inquire, Might it not be possible that
God had implanted a spark of his immortal divinity in our
first parents, and that thus that spark descends nolens volens
to posterity? Let us examine the Scriptural statement respecting
this subject, and in so doing let us remember that
there is no other revelation than the account of the Scriptures
open to any one else, hence we may know all there is to
be known on the subject by anybody. What do we find in
the Genesis account? We find indeed that man's creation is
particularly mentioned, while that of the brute creation is
not so particularly mentioned. We find, however, that the
statements made are in very simple language, and that they
contain no suggestion whatever of the impartation of some
superhuman spark of being. Man's superiority over the
beast, according to the account given in Genesis, consists
not in his having a different kind of breath or spirit, but in
his having a higher form, a superior body, a finer organism--
endowed with a brain organism which enables him to
reason upon planes far above and beyond the intelligence
of the lower animals, the brute creation. We find that it is in
these respects that man was created a fleshly likeness of his
Creator, who is a spirit being. John 4:24
The Spirit of Man
As already seen* the word "spirit" in our Common Version
Bibles translates the Hebrew word ruach and the Greek
word pneuma; and hence to rightly appreciate the word spirit
in God's Word we must keep always in memory the meaning
attached to the originals, which it translates. As we have
seen, "spirit" primarily means wind, and secondarily was
made to apply to any invisible power. In connection with
God we saw that it signifies that he is powerful but invisible;
and used in reference to God's influence and operation, it
implies that they are by an invisible power. It is applied to
mind because it is a power that is invisible, intangible; words
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are also invisible, yet powerful; life, although all-important
and all pervading, is an invisible power or quality, like electricity:
hence the word "spirit" is applied to all of these
various things. As a result, we have the Scriptures speaking
of the spirit of our minds, the invisible power of the mind;
the spirit of a man, a man's mental powers and will; the
spirit of life, the power of living, which actuates our bodies
and all creation; the Spirit of God, the power or influence
which God exerts, either upon animate or inanimate
things; the spirit of wisdom, a wise mind; the spirit of love,
a mind or disposition actuated by love; a spirit of evil and
of malice, a mind or disposition actuated by maliciousness;
the spirit of truth, the influence or power exerted by the
truth; the spirit of the world, the influence or power which
the world exerts. Likewise, heavenly beings are described as
spirit beings, that is, invisible beings, possessed of power, intelligence,
etc. This is applicable, not only to God, the Father,
of whom our Lord Jesus said, "God is a Spirit," but it
is applicable also to our Lord Jesus since his resurrection,
for of him it is declared, "Now the Lord is that Spirit." It is
applied also to angels and to the Church, which is assured
that in the first resurrection each overcomer shall have a
spirit body. It is applied in the Scriptures also to Satan and
his associates, spirit beings, invisible, yet powerful.
*See page 172.
Spirit in Re the New Nature in the New Testament
In considering the use of the word spirit in connection
with man, we remark:
(1) The words "spirit" and "spiritual" in the New Testament
are often used to refer to (a) the will, especially to the
new mind of the "saints," begotten by the Word and Spirit of
God. The "new creatures in Christ" are called to a change
of nature, from human to spiritual, and are promised that if
faithful they shall in the resurrection have (b) spirit bodies
like unto Christ's resurrection body, and like unto the heavenly
Father's glorious person. In view of this, their future
prospect, the hope of the Church is designated as
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(c) spiritual and heavenly, in contrast with the hopes and
promises to which the world of mankind will become heirs
during the Millennium. Spirit is also used (d) in referring to
angels, who by nature are spirit beings--not flesh beings. But
the thought of invisibility always attaches to the words
"spirit" and "spiritual" whenever and wherever used.
A few illustrations of such uses of these words follow:
(a) "Paul purposed in the spirit [pneuma--mind, will]...
to go to Jerusalem." Acts 19:21
(a) "Paul's spirit [pneuma--mind, feelings] was stirred in
him when he saw the city wholly given to idolatry." Acts 17:16
(a) "Paul was pressed in spirit [pneuma--in mind, he was
mentally energized] and testified to the Jews that Jesus is
the Christ." Acts 18:5
(a) "[Apollos] was instructed in the way of the Lord; and
being fervent in spirit [pneuma--of ardent mind] he spake
and taught diligently." Acts 18:25
(a) "God is my witness whom I serve with my spirit
[pneuma--my new mind, my new heart, my renewed will] in
the gospel of his Son." Rom. 1:9
(a) "Glorify God in your body and in your spirit [pneuma--
mind] which are God's." 1 Cor. 6:20
(a) "I verily as absent in body but present in spirit
[pneuma--mentally] have judged already as though I were
present." 1 Cor. 5:3
(a) "A meek and quiet spirit [pneuma--mind,
disposition]."
1 Pet. 3:4
(b) "It is sown an animal body, it is raised a spiritual
[pneumatikos] body." 1 Cor. 15:44
(b) "There is an animal body and there is a spiritual
[pneumatikos] body." 1 Cor. 15:44
(b) "That was not first which is spiritual
[pneumatikos]."
1 Cor. 15:46
(b) "Afterward that which is spiritual [pneumatikos]."
1 Cor. 15:46
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(c) "To be spiritually minded [pneuma--to have a mind
controlled by God's holy Spirit or will] is life and peace."
Rom. 8:6
(c) "Ye which are spiritual [pneumatikos--spirit begotten
and possessed of the new mind] restore such an one in the
spirit [pneuma--disposition] of meekness." Gal. 6:1
(c) "The God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ hath
blessed us with all spiritual blessings [pneumatikos--blessings
of a spirit kind] in heavenly privileges in Christ." Eph. 1:3
(c) "Be filled with the spirit [pneuma--the holy Spirit of
God] speaking to yourselves in psalms and hymns and spiritual
songs [pneumatikos--songs in accord with your new
spirit]." Eph. 5:18,19
(c) "That ye might be filled with the knowledge of his
will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding [pneumatikos--
understanding of all matters connected with your new spiritual
relationship to God and his plan]." Col. 1:9
(c) "Ye are built up a spiritual household [pneumatikos--a
family or household of a spirit order or kind]." 1 Pet. 2:5
(d) "A damsel possessed of a spirit [pneuma--an invisible
power] of divination"--through fellowship with the fallen
spirit-beings. Acts 16:16
(d) "Paul...turned and said to the spirit [pneuma--the
evil spirit-being possessing the woman] I command thee...
to come out of her." Acts 16:18
(d) "The evil spirits [pneuma] went out of them."
Acts 19:12,13
(d) "And the evil spirit [pneuma] answered and said."
Acts 19:15
(d) "The Sadducees say that there is...neither angel nor
spirit [pneuma--spirit being]." Acts 23:8
(d) "If a spirit [pneuma] or an angel hath spoken to him let
us not fight against God." Acts 23:9
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Spirit in the Old Testament
(2) The word "spirit" is used of mankind in general, especially
in the Old Testament; but always either with reference
to (e) the spirit of life, the animating spark which God
first enkindled in Adam and which thence (impaired) descended
to all his posterity--which is an invisible power or
quality; or (f) the spirit of the mind, the will--an invisible
power which controls the life.
Ruach, Pneuma--an Animating Power
When speaking of man's creation it is the spirit of life that
is understood--the breath of life. The Scriptures clearly
show that this spirit of life is common to all God's creatures,
and is not possessed exclusively by man, as the following
Scripture quotations will clearly demonstrate.
(e) "All flesh wherein is the breath of life [ruach--the
spirit or
breath of life of all flesh]." Gen. 6:17; 7:15
(e) "All in whose nostrils was the breath of the spirit of life
[margin, ruach--the spirit or power of life]."
Gen. 7:22
(e) "The spirit of Jacob their father revived [ruach--the
vital
or life powers of Jacob revived]." Gen. 45:27
(e) "And when he [Samson] had drunk, his spirit [ruach]
came again and he revived [his strength, vigor, energy returned
to him]." Judges 15:19
(e) "In whose hand is...the breath [ruach] of all mankind.
[The spirit of life of all mankind is in the divine power]."
Job 12:10
(e) "O God, the God of the spirits [ruach--life-power, spirit
of life] of ALL FLESH, shall one man sin and wilt thou be
wroth with all the congregation?" Num. 16:22
The theory that the distinction between man and beast
consisted in a different spirit of life, a different kind of life,
and that at death the one went up and the other down
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seems to have been very old amongst the world's philosophers;
for we find Solomon, the wise man, querying:
(e) "Who knoweth [who can prove] that the spirit [ruach--
spirit of life] of man goeth upward and that the spirit
[ruach--spirit of life] of the beast goeth downward to the
earth?" (Eccl. 3:19-21) Solomon's own understanding he
gives just previously, saying:
(e) "That which befalleth the sons of men [death] befalleth
beasts; even one [the same] thing befalleth them: as the
one dieth so dieth the other; yea they have all one breath
[ruach--spirit of life, breath of life]; so that a man hath no
pre-eminence above a beast"--in this respect, in the matter
of having a different kind of life--his pre-eminence must be
sought and found elsewhere, as we shall see.
(e) "Into thine hand I commit my spirit [ruach--spirit of
life or vital energy]." Psa. 31:5
This was the prophetic declaration of our Lord Jesus'
dying words. He had received the spirit of life from the
Father as a gift: he had, in obedience to the Father's
plan, become a man to be man's Redeemer: and when yielding
up his spirit of life or vital energy, he declared his reliance
upon God's promise to give the spirit of life again, by a
resurrection.
Mankind received the spirit of life from God, the fountain
of life, through father Adam. Adam forfeited his right to
the power or spirit of life by disobedience, and gradually
relinquished his hold upon it--dying slowly for nine hundred
and thirty years. Then the body returned to the dust
as it was before creation, and the spirit of life, the privilege
of living, the power or permission of living, returned to God
who gave that privilege or power: just as any contingent
privilege or favor returns to the giver if its conditions are
not complied with. (Eccl. 12:7) Nothing in this text implies
that the spirit of life "wings its flight back to God," as some
would represent; for the spirit of life is not an intelligence,
nor a person, but merely a power or privilege which has been
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forfeited and hence reverts to the original giver of that
power or privilege. The thought is that man having sinned
has no further life-rights: the return of his forfeited life-rights
to God, and the return of his flesh to dust, reduces his
condition to exactly what it was before he was created.
But as our Lord Jesus had hope in the divine promise for
a return of his "spirit of life" or life powers and rights under
divine arrangement, so by reason of our Lord's redemptive
sacrifice certain hopes and promises are opened to all mankind
through "Jesus the mediator of the New Covenant."
(Heb. 12:24) Hence believers "sorrow not as others who
have no hope." Our Redeemer purchased the spirit of life-rights
which father Adam had forfeited for himself and all
his family. Now, therefore, believers can for themselves
(and, by a knowledge of God's plan, for others also) commit
their spirits (their powers of life) to God's hand also, as did
our Lord and as did Stephen--full of faith that God's promise
of a resurrection would be fulfilled. A resurrection will
mean to the world a reorganization of a human body, and
its vivifying or quickening with life-energy, the spirit of life
(Hebrew, ruach; Greek, pneuma). To the Gospel Church,
sharers in the "first [chief] resurrection," it will mean the
impartation of the spirit of life or life-energy (Hebrew,
ruach; Greek, pneuma) to a spirit body. 1 Cor. 15:42-45
In that graphic picture of earthly resurrection furnished
us in Ezekiel's prophecy (37:5-10,13,14) the relationship of
the body and the spirit of life, "the breath," is clearly
presented.
It matters not that the prophet uses this merely as a
symbol, it nevertheless shows (proves) that a human organism
has no life until it receives the ruach--the breath of life--
which, as elsewhere shown, is common to all animals, none
of whom can live without it. Let us notice Ezekiel's statements
very critically, as follows:
(e) "I will cause breath [ruach--spirit of life, life-energy]
to
enter into you, and ye shall live."
(e) "And I will...bring up flesh upon you, and cover
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you with skin, and put breath [ruach--spirit of life, life-energy]
in you, and ye shall live."
(e) "And when I beheld, lo, the sinews and the flesh came
upon them, and the skin covered them above: but there was
no breath [ruach--spirit of life, life-energy] in them."
(e) "And he said unto me, Prophesy unto the wind
[ruach--spirit of life, life-energy--margin, breath] and say
unto the wind [ruach--spirit of life, breath of life], Thus saith
the Lord God, Come from the four winds [ruach] O breath
[ruach--breath or spirit of life], and breathe upon these slain,
that they may live."
(e) "So I prophesied as he commanded me, and the breath
[ruach--spirit of life, breath of life, living energy] came into
them, and they lived."
(e) "And ye shall know that I am the Lord, when I have
opened your graves, O my people, and brought you up out
of your graves, and shall put my spirit [ruach--spirit of life,
breath of life] in you, and ye shall live."
This spirit of life or power of life given to Adam by his Creator
he was privileged to keep forever if obedient. He forfeited
this right by disobedience, and the right to life reverted
to the great Giver; not as a person, nor as a thing, but as a
right or privilege, the spirit of life returns or reverts to God,
who gave that right or privilege conditionally, and whose
conditions were violated. Eccl. 12:7
(e) "No man hath power over the spirit [ruach--spirit of
life, spark of life] to retain the spirit [ruach--spirit of life],
breath of life." Eccl. 8:8
By God's grace those forfeited life-rights or privileges
which each man surrenders to God in death have all been
purchased with the precious blood, and the purchaser is announced
as the new Life-giver, regenerator or father for the
race, who will give life, and that more abundantly, to all
who will ultimately receive him.
We will give but one instance from the New Testament:
(e) "The body without the spirit [pneuma--life-spark,
breath of lives] is dead." Jas. 2:26
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Ruach, Pneuma--the Mind, the Will
Since the mind or will is an invisible power or influence, it is
represented by the same words in the Hebrew and Greek
languages, as the following examples will show:
(f) "Hannah answered and said, No, my lord, I am a
woman of sorrowful spirit [ruach--mind, disposition]."
1 Sam. 1:15
(f) "A fool uttereth all his mind [ruach--plans, thoughts,
mind, purpose]." Prov. 29:11
(f) "My spirit [ruach--mind, courage] was overwhelmed."
Psa. 77:3
(f) "My spirit [ruach--mind] made diligent search."
Psa. 77:6
(f) "He that is of a faithful spirit [ruach--disposition,
mind]." Prov. 11:13
(f) "All the ways of a man are clean in his own eyes; but
the Lord weigheth the spirits [ruach--the mind, thoughts,
motives]." Prov. 16:2
(f) "Pride goeth before destruction, a haughty spirit
[ruach--disposition, will, mind] before a fall." Prov. 16:18
(f) "Better to be of an humble spirit [ruach--mind,
disposition]."
Prov. 16:19
(f) "Vanity and vexation of spirit [ruach--mind]."
Eccl. 6:9
(f) "Patient in spirit [ruach--mind, disposition]...proud
in spirit [ruach--mind, disposition]...hasty in thy spirit
[ruach--mind, disposition]." Eccl. 7:8,9
A few illustrations from the New Testament:
(f) "The child [John] grew and waxed strong in spirit
[pneuma--mind, character]." Luke 1:80
(f) "Not slothful in business, fervent in spirit [pneuma--
mind, disposition, character] serving the Lord."
Rom. 12:11
(f) "Now you have received not the spirit
[pneuma--disposition,
mind] of the world." 1 Cor. 2:12
(f) "I had no rest in my spirit [pneuma--mind]."
2 Cor. 2:13
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(f) "Be renewed in the spirit [pneuma--character,
disposition]
of your mind." Eph. 4:23
(f) "The ornament of a meek and quiet spirit [pneuma--
mind, disposition]." 1 Pet. 3:4
These Scriptural uses of these original words show that
our English word spirit is a good equivalent, for we not only
speak of the spirit of life, but also of a gentle spirit, a good
spirit, an angry spirit or mood, a bitter spirit and a fiery
spirit: and we also use these expressions in respect to the
lower animals as well as man. The fact we are proving is
abundantly demonstrated--namely, that the spirit is not the
real man, nor another man, but that this word, when used
in reference to man's creation, signifies simply the life-spark
or life-power, which is common to all animals.
Neshamah--the Breath of Lives
Although the word ruach is sometimes translated
"breath," the Hebrews had another word for breath, viz.,
neshamah. It occurs twenty-six times, and in nineteen of
these it is translated "breath"--"inspiration" once,
"spirit"
twice, "souls" once, "blast" three times. As samples of the
meaning of this word, and as proving that the word simply
signifies life power, and in no sense of the word conveys any
thought of everlasting life, or immortality, note the following
uses of the word:
"The Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground,
and breathed [naphach--inflated, blew] into his nostrils the
breath [neshamah] of lives [caiyah]."
Gen. 2:7
"All flesh died that moved upon the earth, both of fowl,
and of cattle, and of beasts, and of everything that creepeth
upon the earth, and every man: all in whose nostrils was the
breath [neshamah] of life [caiyah] of all that was
in the dry
land died." Gen. 7:21,22
These first two occurrences of the word neshamah in the
Bible are abundantly sufficient to prove our contention
that the word has no reference to immortality, nor to an immortal
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principle, but simply refers to vitality, life power.
This life power, we are told, was given to Adam, and the
same life power, by the second text quoted, is declared to
have been in all the dry land animals, fowl, cattle, beast
and creeping things, as well as in man, and when deprived
of this breath of life, the declaration is that all these souls or
beings died as a result--man as well as the lower creatures.
They died alike, except that there is a divine purpose respecting
man, which in due time provided a ransom, and
will in further due time provide the deliverance promised
from the power of death by a resurrection of the being, of
the soul.
A Human Soul
Many in reading the account of creation in Genesis have
noted the fact stated that when God had formed man of the
dust of the ground, and had communicated to him the
breath (spirit) of life, the record is, "Man became a living
soul." This statement to the average reader taken in connection
with his general misconception of the meaning of
the word "soul," as misrepresented to him by those who
should have instructed him properly, and should have understood
the subject themselves, is sufficient to bewilder
him and leads him to think that somehow there is some
basis for the prevalent error which he does not comprehend,
but which he supposes his chosen theological teachers have
investigated and proven beyond peradventure.
Not comprehending the meaning of the word soul, many
feel at liberty to use it in a reckless manner, and hence they
reverse the Scriptural statement and instead of speaking of
man as being a soul, they speak of man as having a soul,
which is a very different thought. It is necessary, therefore,
that each truth-seeker should, so far as possible, divest his
mind of prejudice on the subject, and especially with respect
to things and features which he admits he does not understand;
because it is the natural tendency to give attributes
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and powers to that which is mysterious and not comprehended.
Thus the general idea of a soul is that it is wonderfully
intelligent, possessed of wonderful powers, that it is indestructible,
intangible, and incomprehensible.
A Methodist bishop is credited with having given the following
definition of a soul, which certainly accords well
with so-called "orthodox" theories, even if it is absurd when
closely analyzed--"It is without interior or exterior, without
body, shape, or parts, and you could put a million of them
in a nutshell." These various things are predicated of a soul,
to help fill out a theory which is wholly erroneous. The theory
is that the soul is the real being, a spark of divinity, possessed
of divine quality and intelligent life, etc., separate
and apart from the body; and that it inhabits the human
body for a time, and uses it for a house, and when the body
is worn out or disabled abandons it. Inasmuch as no one
ever saw a soul enter a body, and inasmuch as a soul cannot
be found while it is in the body, by the most critical examination,
and with all the improved appliances of the microscope,
photograph and "X" rays, therefore it is supposed
that it is "without a body, without shape, and without
parts"; and since it is supposed to be so small that it cannot
be distinguished by a microscope, it might as well be said
that you could put fifty millions of them in a nutshell.
Really, the bishop gave an excellent definition of nothing;
and all will agree that a hundred millions of nothings could
be put into the smallest kind of a nutshell and have room to
spare.
But what foundation is there for such wild speculation?
We answer, It is wholly unwarranted. It is the result of
man's taking his own theory of a future life, and rejecting
the divine theory and plan. Human theory says, There
must be something which never dies, else there can be no
future life. The divine theory says, The same God who created
in the beginning is able to resurrect the dead. This is
the conflict between the Word of God and all the human
theories of earth amongst the civilized as well as amongst
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the barbarians: all human theories teach that man does not
die, and hence has no need of a Life-giver and a resurrection.
The Bible theory is that man does die, and that without
the Life-giver, and without a resurrection, death would
indeed end all, and there would be no future life.
It is to support its theory that the world, and all its religious
books (including, we are sorry to say, the majority of
works on eschatology written by professed Christians),
teach the doctrine of the immortality of the soul--that there
is a soul in man, possessed of a separate life from his body,
and that it is immortal, indestructible, and therefore destined
to an eternity of pain or pleasure. We come then to
the inquiry:
What Is a Soul?
Examining this question from the Bible standpoint we
will find that man has a body and has a spirit, but is a
soul.
Science concurs with the Scriptures in this. Indeed, one of
the sciences, Phrenology, undertakes to treat the skulls of
men and the lower animals as indexes and to read therefrom
the natural traits and characteristics of the owners:
and do not all men find themselves possessed of some ability
in judging character physiologically? All can discern between
the intellectual and the idiotic, between the kindly
benevolent and the viciously brutal. Those who have not
learned that organism (bodily form) is indissolubly connected
with nature, character and disposition have made
poor use of life's lessons and are unprepared to pass judgment
on our topic or any other.
The word "soul," as found in the Scriptures, signifies sentient
being; that is, a being possessed of powers of sense, sense-perception.
With minds freed from prejudice, let us go with
this definition to the Genesis account of man's creation, and
note that (1) the organism or body was formed; (2) the spirit
of life, called "breath of life," was communicated; (3) living
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soul, or sentient being, resulted. This is very simple, and easily
understood. It shows that the body is not the soul, nor is
the spirit or breath of life the soul; but that when these two
were united by the Lord, the resultant quality or condition
was living man, living being--a living soul, possessed of perceptive
powers. There is nothing mysterious about this--no
intimation that a spark of divinity was infused into humanity,
any more than into the lower animals. Indeed, while the
creation of the lower animals is passed over and not particularly
described, we may know that with them, as well,
the process must have been somewhat similar. We know
that there could be no dog without a dog organism or body,
nor without spirit or breath of life in that body. The body of
the dog that had never been animated would not be a dog;
it requires first the infusion of the spark of life, the breath
of life, then doghood begins. The same would apply to all
animals.
In full accord with this, we now call attention to a fact
which will surprise many; viz., that according to the Scriptural
account every dog is a soul, every horse is a soul, every
cow is a soul, every bird and every fish are souls. That is to
say, these are all sentient creatures, possessed of powers of
sense-perception. True, some of them are on a higher and
some on a lower plane than others; but the word soul properly
and Scripturally applies to creatures on the lower
planes as well as to man, the highest and noblest--to fish,
reptiles, birds, beasts, man. They are all souls. Mark, we do
not say that they have souls, in the ordinary and mistaken
sense of that term, yet they all do have souls, in the sense of
having life, being, existence--they are living souls. Let us
prove
this:
In the first, second and ninth chapters of Genesisthe
words "living soul" are applied in the Hebrew language to
the lower animals nine times, but the translators (as though
careful to protect the false but common vagary respecting a
soul, derived from Platonic philosophy) sedulously
guarded their work, so that, so far as possible, the English
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reader is kept in ignorance of this fact--that the word soul is
common to the lower creatures, and as applicable to them
as to man in inspired Scripture usage. How else could it
happen that in all of these cases, and in many other instances
throughout the Scriptures, they have carefully covered
the thought, by using another English word to
translate the Hebrew word, which, in the case of man, is
rendered "soul"? So carefully have they guarded this point
that only in one place in the Bible is this word translated
"soul," in connection with the lower creatures, viz., in Num. 31:28,
and there, very evidently, they were compelled to
show the matter, by reason of the peculiar construction of
the sentence--no other translation being reasonably possible.
The passage reads:
"Levy a tribute unto the Lord of the men of war which
went out to battle: one soul of five hundred, both of the persons
and of the beeves and of the asses and of the sheep."
Here it will be noticed that the word "soul" is used respecting
the lower creatures as well as in reference to man; and so
it would appear elsewhere in the Scriptures, had the translators
been free from the warp and twist of their false theories
on this subject.
Let us now notice the nine texts in Genesis in which the
Hebrew original of the word soul (neh-phesh) occurs in connection
with the lower animals:
"God said, Let the waters bring forth abundantly the
moving [creeping] creature that hath life [Heb., neh-phesh--
soul]." (Gen. 1:20) Note that the marginal reading is
soul;
and that this was on the fifth creative day or period, long
before man's creation.
"God created great whales, and every living creature
[Heb., neh-phesh--living soul] that moveth, which the waters
brought forth abundantly." (Gen. 1:21) This also was in
the fifth "day," before man's creation. These were fish-souls.
"God said, Let the earth bring forth the living creature
[Heb., neh-phesh--living soul] after his kind--cattle and
creeping thing and beast." (Gen. 1:24) These were dry-land
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souls, higher than the fishes--but man, human soul or
being, had not yet been created.
"And God said...To every beast of the earth and to every
fowl of the air, and to everything that creepeth upon
the earth, wherein there is life [living soul--neh-phesh] I have
given every green herb for meat." (Gen. 1:30) Here the
lower animals are specified, and it is distinctly declared that
they are all living souls--in exactly the same terms that refer
to man.
"Out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of
the field, and every fowl of the air;...and whatever Adam
called every living creature [Heb., living soul--neh-phesh], that
was the name thereof." (Gen. 2:19) Comment here is
unnecessary:
there can be no question that soul is not exclusively
a human part or quality, but rightly understood is applicable
to all sentient creatures from the lowest to the highest--
all creatures possessed of sensibilities.
"Every moving thing that liveth shall be meat for you...
but flesh with the life thereof [Heb., flesh, soul--neh-phesh]
which is the blood thereof, shall ye not eat." (Gen. 9:3,4)
Here the animals which man may eat are not only declared
to possess soul or being, but their blood is said to represent
their existence, being or soul, and hence man is forbidden
to
use blood as food--forbidden to cultivate blood-thirstiness.
"Behold I establish my covenant with you [Noah] and
with your seed after you; and with every living creature
[Heb., living soul--neh-phesh] that is with you, of the fowl, of
the cattle, and of every beast of the earth." (Gen. 9:9,10)
A
very plain statement that all living creatures are souls as
well as man--though inferior to him in nature, organism,
etc.
"This is the token of the covenant which I make between
me and you and every living creature [Heb., living
soul--neh-phesh]."
(Gen. 9:12) What could be more explicit than this?
"I will remember my covenant which is between me and
you and every living creature [Heb., every living soul--neh-phesh]
of all flesh." Gen. 9:15
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The same expression exactly is repeated in verse 16. And
there is no room for cavil as to the meaning when the veil of
mistranslation is lifted and we catch the thought God
wished us to receive from his Word.
We might similarly proceed through other books of the
Bible, but we have quoted sufficient to establish our contention
before any reasonable mind--that soul in Scriptural
usage as properly applies to the lower animals as to man;
and hence that all claims or theories built upon the idea
that man's hopes of a future life and his present superiority
over lower animals result from his being a soul and they not,
is a false theory and needs radical reconstruction if
we would see matters from the true standpoint of divine
revelation.
But let no one misunderstand us to teach that because all
living, moving creatures, from a mite to an elephant and
from a tadpole to a whale are living souls, therefore all these
must have a future life, either by a transfer to spirit conditions
or by a resurrection future. Such a thought would be
arrant nonsense--insanity--without a shadow of reason.
Billions of living souls on these lowest planes of animal nature
are born every minute, while other billions die every
minute.
Our argument is that man is a soul or being of the highest
order--the king and lord over the lower orders of souls or
sentient beings, yet one of them--an earthly, human animal
soul; and yet so grandly constituted originally (Adam) that
he was properly described as in the likeness of God--the image
of him that created him.
Man as a soul is differentiated from the lower animals or
souls by reason of his higher organism: not merely is his superiority
indicated by his upright form; it is witnessed to by
his superior mental endowments, which are Godlike and
are reflected in his countenance. It is in his mental and
moral endowments rather than in physical form that man
was created in divine likeness. While many of the lower orders
of animal soul or being possess reasoning powers and
demonstrate them in thousands of ways, yet each has a level
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beyond which no progress can be made; but man's reasoning
powers are almost unlimited, because he was created an
"image of God," "the likeness of him that created
him." And
notwithstanding man's fall into sin and his thousands of
years of gross darkness and degradation we can still see
Godlikeness--especially in those who have accepted
Christ's ministry of reconciliation to God, and have again
become "sons of God," and who are seeking to be conformed
to the image of God's dear Son.
To illustrate: horses, dogs and birds may be taught the
meaning of many words so as to be able to understand
many things pertaining to life's affairs. They often demonstrate
their reasoning powers, and some are able to count--
as high as twenty: but who would attempt to teach a horse
or a dog or a bird algebra or geometry or astronomy? The
highest of the lower animals can be taught a certain degree
of moral honesty and obligation to their masters--not to kill
sheep, not to bite, kick, etc., but who would attempt to
teach his dumb brutes the Decalogue? They may be taught
a certain kind of love for their master and his friends, but
who would think of teaching them to love or worship God,
or more than mere endurance of enemies who had despitefully
used them.
The point to be noticed is that all these differences are
not by reason of the lower animals having a different kind
of breath or spirit of life, for as we have seen, "they have all
one breath" (Eccl. 3:19); nor because man is a soul
and the
brute beast is not, for as we have seen they are all souls. But
as we have found, and as all men are witnesses, each has a
different bodily organism which gives to each his different
characteristics, and which alone constitutes one higher and
the other lower in the scale of intelligence. Notice, too, that
not size and weight give excellence and superiority, else the
elephant and whale would be the lords of earth; the excellence
is in the "organic quality" represented chiefly in
brain-structure
and functions.
Man, therefore, is the highest type of earthly creature--
"of the earth, earthy"--and his excellence consists in the superiority
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of his mental endowment--not a development,
but a gift from his Creator.
"The Soul That Sinneth, It Shall Die"
It is quite in harmony with the foregoing, but quite out of
harmony with the usual thought on the subject, that we
find the Scriptures declaring repeatedly the death of the
soul, which human philosophy and hymn-book theology
most emphatically declare to be indestructible. We read,
for instance, that our Lord, when he became our ransom-price,
"poured out his soul [being] unto death." "He made
his soul an offering for sin." (Isa. 53:10,12) This
was necessary,
because it was Adam's soul that was sentenced to
death, and the promise to mankind is a redemption of soul
or being from the power of death. "God will redeem my soul
from the grave [sheol--the condition of death]." (Psa. 49:15)
And, as we have seen, it is because all souls are thus redeemed
in the one redemption that all our friends--all
mankind--are said to "sleep in Jesus." 1 Thess. 4:14
We remark here that the Apostle could not, in this expression,
refer merely to the saints, as when he speaks of
those who are "in Christ"; for those referred to as "new
creatures" are those only who are begotten of God through
the Spirit, to joint-heirship with Christ, as his Church, the
members of his body. But "those who sleep in Jesus" include
the entire race, for our Lord Jesus was a propitiation
for our sins, and not for ours only, but also for the sins of the
whole world, and he is by virtue of that sacrifice our Life-giver,
and not only ours, but also the Life-giver for the
whole world--the testimony and the opportunity for acceptance
being, with the majority, still future. 1 John 2:2;
1 Tim. 2:4-6
That the Apostle has this thought in mind is manifest
from this context: he is here exhorting believers to sorrow
not as others who have no hope; and gives as the reason of
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the hope this fact, that Jesus died for man's sin, and rose
again to be man's justifier, and hence that all "sleep in
Jesus," or are legally freed from the death sentence, and
amenable to Jesus, to be brought from the dead by the divine
power. Had the Apostle said or been understood to
mean that merely the saints would be thus blessed through
Jesus, we can readily see that believers then and since
would have very little consolation in his words, because the
vast majority of the friends of believers, then and since, cannot
be termed saints: and if the awakening from the sleep of
death is a blessing intended only for the saints, the thought,
instead of being a consolation, would be the reverse, an anguish,
a distress. But the Apostle refers to the whole world as
being thus asleep in Jesus, although none knows it from this
standpoint except the heavenly Father and his consecrated
people, whom he has instructed respecting his future
gracious plans, through the Word of truth, that they may
rejoice in the lengths and breadths and heights and depths
of divine goodness, and "sorrow not, even as others that
have no [such substantial] hope."
As the natural sleep, if sound, implies total unconsciousness,
so with death, the figurative sleep--it is a period
of absolute unconsciousness--more than that, it is a period
of absolute non-existence, except as preserved in the Father's
purpose and power. Hence the awakening from
death, to those restored, will mean a revival of consciousness
from the exact moment and standpoint where
consciousness was lost in death. There will be no appreciation
of time, as respects the interim. The moment of awakening
will be the next moment after the moment of death,
so far as conscious appreciation is concerned.
This same condition has been noted in connection with
persons who have sustained injuries which have caused
pressure upon the brain, and thus temporarily suspended
consciousness, without extinguishing life. In cases of this
kind, when the pressure upon the brain has been removed
by trepanning, the subject suddenly coming to consciousness
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has in numerous instances been known to complete
a sentence which had been interrupted by the
concussion which interrupted thought: for divine power
will thoroughly duplicate every convolution of every brain
and vivify them. Thus in the awakening-time the world of
mankind in general will revive with the same words and
thoughts with which they expired. But let it not be forgotten
that we here refer to the world in general, not to the
elect and special class selected out of the world, namely,
the Church, the body of Christ, which will have part in the
first resurrection, and in many respects know a different
experience.
But while, as the Adamic death has been turned, by reason
of the divine plan and the ransom, from being a destruction
to a suspension of existence, called sleep, nevertheless we
find that the Scriptures very distinctly assert that after the
revival or awakening from the death-sleep, it will depend
upon each individual whether he shall go on unto perfection
and life, under the guidance, government and tutelage
of the glorious Christ, or whether he will wilfully, deliberately
and stubbornly choose the way of sin. If he
choose the latter he will get the punishment originally designated
for father Adam, viz., death, but no longer Adamic
death, the penalty of Adam's sin: this is styled Second
Death. This Second Death is nowhere spoken of as a sleep,
nor is there the slightest intimation anywhere given that
there will be any awakening from it. On the contrary, it is
designated "everlasting destruction from the presence of
the Lord." 2 Thess. 1:9
Of this redeemed and awakened class, which in general
shall have its trial during the Millennial age, the Scriptures
declare, "The soul that sinneth it shall die." (Ezek. 18:20)
That this scripture is not generally applicable at the present
time is evident from three considerations:
(1) It would be meaningless, at the present time, when all
die--saints and sinners.
(2) It is expressed in the form of a second sentence, and
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based upon the individual action, and this could not be applicable
in the present time, because now we all die because
of "one man's disobedience," and the sentence of death
which came upon him, and indirectly affects all his race.
Rom. 5:12
(3) The context shows that this passage refers particularly
to those who have gotten free from Adamic sin which
prevails in general today. Its special applicability, therefore,
must belong to the next age, the Millennial age. Note
the connections, not forgetting that the law covenant of the
Jewish age was analogous to the covenant of the Millennial
age, except that the latter will have a better Mediator, able
and willing to succor and to help all who shall seek to walk
righteously, not imputing unintentional short-comings.
The context declares: This shall no more be a proverb in
Israel, The fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the children's
teeth are set on edge. But, on the contrary, each soul
shall be responsible to God for itself, and "the soul that sinneth
it shall die. The son shall not bear the iniquity of the
father, neither shall the father bear the iniquity of the son:
the righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him, and
the wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him." (Ezek. 18:2,4,20)
It is evident that this time has not yet come. The
children still have their "teeth set on edge," by reason of the
sour grapes of sin which their fathers have eaten; we are still
under the law of heredity; all still die for Adam's sin, and
not for individual sin. In proof of this note the indisputable
fact that nearly one-half of the human family die in infancy,
without having reached years of discretion or responsibility
on their own account. Who cannot see that the
agonizing and dying infant of a few days or a few months
old is not dying for its own sins, but that it is dying because it
is a member of the Adamic race, which is still under the
curse pronounced against our father Adam, "Dying thou
shalt die"? It has inherited a share of the curse, and will also
inherit a share of God's blessing through Christ in the coming
[E332]
awakening, secured through the merit of the great
Atonement finished at Calvary.
If we turn to Jeremiah 31:29-34, we find another reference
to exactly the same conditions mentioned by Ezekiel,
only that in Jeremiah we are furnished with more explicit
details, which show that this condition belongs not to the
present age, but to a future age. Jeremiah declares:
"In those days they shall say no more, The fathers have
eaten a sour grape, and the children's teeth are set on edge.
But every one [who dies] shall die for his own iniquity: every
man that eateth the sour grape his teeth shall be set on
edge."
The words "In those days" clearly refer to the future
times of restitution, under the reign of Christ, and not to the
present time of the reign of sin and death. Notice that the
Prophet proceeds to describe other features of the Millennial
age, telling about the New Covenant which is to be
confirmed to Israel and Judah, the everlasting covenant,
under which they shall obtain their long-looked-for portion
of the Abrahamic blessings and promises. Compare
Rom. 11:26-31
This same thought, that death will again be the penalty
for sin, to all redeemed from the Adamic death, if after they
come to a knowledge of the grace of God, they receive that
grace in vain, is shown by our Lord's own words, "Fear not
them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soul
[fear not them which take away the present life, which is
already under sentence of death, anyway; but remember
that you have been redeemed, and that a future life is a possibility
to you, and that no man can rob you of that which
God has provided for you through the redemption in Christ
Jesus], but fear him that can destroy both soul and body in
Gehenna." (Matt. 10:28) Here the power of God to destroy
the soul is positively asserted, and that by an unquestionable
authority. We are aware that a crooked theology has
sought to wrest the Scriptures, and therefore asserts that
this signifies that God is able to destroy the happiness of the
soul in Gehenna, but that he is unable to destroy the soul
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itself. We reply, that this is a wresting of the Scriptures, and
their perversion in a manner which cannot fail to bring evil
consequences upon those who "handle the word of God deceitfully."
We elsewhere show* that the word "Gehenna"
here used signifies "the Second Death"--utter destruction--
to all souls which will not hear God's great Prophet, when,
in due time, he shall speak plainly unto all the people, as he
now is speaking under parables and dark sayings, expounded
only to the Church. Acts 3:23; Matt. 13:11
*"What Say the Scriptures About Hell?" Address the publishers.
We claim, therefore, that the Scriptures unquestionably
declare that man is a soul or being; that his right to existence
under divine arrangement was forfeited by sin, and that he
is now under the curse or penalty of the divine sentence,
death; that man's privileges and rights were all purchased by
the man Christ Jesus, who gave himself a ransom for all;
that as a consequence death is not to be accounted as death,
utter destruction, but merely as a temporary "sleep," from
which the world of mankind will be awakened by their
Redeemer in the resurrection morning of the Millennial
age.
Confusion Through Mistranslations
It should not surprise us when we find that, holding
grossly erroneous views respecting what is the soul, what is
the spirit, what is the real man, the translators of our Common
Version English Bible have been sorely perplexed:
and in their endeavor to force the translation into harmony
with their preconceived ideas on this subject, they have
confused the ordinary English reader tenfold. They have so
covered and twisted the meaning of words as to make it extremely
difficult for the English reader to see through the
now double difficulty, (1) the false teaching on the subject,
and (2) the mistranslations which support that false
teaching.
[E334]
However, in divine providence, we are now living in a
day provided with helps of every kind, so that man or
woman of even ordinary education, with the helps before
him, can get a better view of the entire subject than the
translators themselves had. There are now three works
which give the English reader a tolerably clear insight into
the Common Version English Bible, and show exactly how
it has translated the Hebrew and Greek originals. (1) The
Englishman's Hebrew and Greek Concordance of the Holy Scriptures
[unsectarian]. (2) Professor Young's Analytical Concordance to
the Bible [Presbyterian]. (3) Dr. Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
[Methodist]. All three of these give each word of the
Scriptures, and show the original from which it is derived.
And although we have mentioned the denominations represented
in these different Concordances, it is but fair to say
that, so far as we have yet observed, denominational prejudices
have not been permitted to interfere with the accuracy
of any of them. Although gotten up on somewhat
different lines, their testimony is harmonious and accurate,
the differences between them being those of convenience
and utility.
Examining these standard works what do we find? This:
that the Hebrew word neh-phesh, which is generally rendered
"soul" (436 times) throughout the Old Testament,
and which has the signification of "sentient being," is translated
in thirty-six different ways, as follows: "any," 4 times;
"appetite," 2; "beast," 1; "body," 4;
"breath," 1; "creature,"
9 [see Gen. 1:21,24; 2:19; 9:10,12,15,16; Lev. 11:46,
twice]; "dead," 5; "deadly," 1; "desire," 3;
"discontented,"
1; "fish," 1 (Isa. 19:10); "ghost," 2;
"greedy," 1;
"hath," 1; "he," 1; (Psa. 105:18);
"heart," 15; "hearty," 1;
"herself," 1; "her," 1; "himself," 4;
"life," 100; "lust," 2;
"man," 2; "me," 3 (Num. 23:10; Judges 16:30; 1 Kings 20:32);
"mind," 15; "mortally," 1; "myself," 1 (Psa. 131:2);
"one," 1 (Lev. 4:27); "own," 1 (Prov. 14:10); "person," 24
(Gen. 14:21; 36:6; Num. 31:19; 35:11,15,30;
Deut. 10:22; 27:25;
Josh. 20:3,9); "pleasure," 3; "self," 21;
"slay," 1;
[E335]
"thing," 2 (Lev. 11:10; Ezek. 47:9);
"will," 3; "your," 3.
The Greek word, psuche [sentient being], of the New Testament
corresponding to neh-phesh, is translated "soul,"
fifty-six times; is also translated "mind," three times (Acts 14:2;
Phil. 1:27; Heb. 12:3); "heart," once
(Eph. 6:6);
"life," forty-one times.
Amongst these variations in translation none has served
to obscure the truth more than the last. It has tended to give
the impression that the life is one thing, and soul or being
another thing; and has fostered the idea that a man might
lose his life, without losing his soul, his being. The following
are the instances in which the word psuche is translated life,
but would better have prevented confusion if translated
being or soul:
"Which sought the young child's life [psuche--soul,
being]." Matt. 2:20
"Take no thought for your life [psuche--soul, being], what
ye shall eat." Matt. 6:25
"Is not the life [psuche--soul, being] more than meat?"
Matt. 6:25
"He that findeth his life [psuche--soul, being] shall lose
it,
and he that loseth his life [psuche--soul, being] for my sake
shall find it." Matt. 10:39
"Whosoever will save his life [psuche--soul, being] shall
lose it, and whosoever will lose his life [psuche--soul, being],
for my sake shall find it." Matt. 16:25
"The Son of man came...to give his life [psuche--soul,
being] a ransom for many." Matt. 20:28
"Is it lawful to save life [psuche--soul, being], or to
kill?"
Mark 3:4
"Whosoever will save his life [psuche--soul, being] shall
lose it, but whosoever shall lose his life [psuche--soul, being]
for my sake and the Gospel's, the same shall save it. For
what shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and
lose his own soul [psuche--life, being], or what shall a man
give in exchange for his soul [psuche--life, being]?" [How
few
English readers are aware that "life" and "soul," each used
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twice in this scripture, are from the same Greek word
psuche.] Mark 8:35-37
"The Son of Man came to give his life [psuche--soul,
being] a ransom for many." Mark 10:45
"Is it lawful to save life [psuche--soul, being] or to
destroy
it?" Luke 6:9
"Whosoever will save his life [psuche--soul, being] shall
lose it, but whosoever will lose his life [psuche--soul, being]
for my sake the same shall save it. For what is a man advantaged
if he gain the whole world and lose himself, or be cast
away?" Luke 9:24
"The Son of Man is not come to destroy men's lives
[psuche--souls, beings], but to save them." Luke 9:56
"Take no thought for your life [psuche--soul, being] what
ye shall eat, neither for the body, what ye shall put on. The
life is more than meat, and the body is more than raiment."
Luke 12:22,23
"If any man come to me, and hate not [love not less] his
father and mother and wife and children and brethren and
sisters, yea, and his own life [psuche--soul, being] also, he
cannot be my disciple." Luke 14:26
"Whosoever shall seek to save his life [psuche--soul, being]
shall lose it, and whosoever shall lose his life [psuche--soul,
being] shall preserve it." Luke 17:33
The thought in this last text, and in several preceding it,
is that the Lord's people are to remember that their present
existence or being is under sentence of death anyway; but
that divine grace has provided redemption--not a continuance
of being, but a resuscitation, a resurrection, a living
again. The call of this Gospel age is to lay down our lives in
the Lord's service, as living sacrifices, following the example
of our Redeemer--the promise being that all believers in
Christ who so do, faithfully, shall be granted a share with
him in the divine nature, through the operation of the first
resurrection. Thus they will get back again their soul,
being, existence--with "life [zoee] more abundantly."
John 10:10
"The good Shepherd giveth his life [psuche--soul, being]
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for the sheep [our Lord "poured out his soul unto death; he
made his soul an offering for sin." Isa. 53:10,12]."
John 10:11
"I lay down my life [psuche--soul, being] for the
sheep."
John 10:15
"I lay down my life [psuche--soul, being] that I might
receive
it again [according to the divine promise and power,
through the resurrection]." John 10:17
"He that loveth his life [psuche--soul, being] shall lose it;
and he that hateth his life [psuche--soul, being] in this world
shall preserve it unto life eternal." John 12:25
The thought here is, that faithfulness to God under present
evil conditions necessarily means dissatisfaction with
present conditions, and a willingness to sacrifice them all in
the service of God and righteousness and our fellow creatures--
and thus, according to the divine provision, to be accounted
worthy of existence [soul, being] under the more
favorable conditions of the dispensation to come. He who
loves the present conditions of things, and who values the
enjoyments and pleasures of the present time higher than
he values righteousness and obedience to God, will thus be
proving himself unworthy of the future existence God has
proffered us, unworthy to have his soul, his being, restored
in the first resurrection.
"Wilt thou lay down thy life [psuche--soul, being] for my
sake?" John 13:38
"Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay
down his life [psuche--soul, being] for his friends."
John 15:13
"Men that have hazarded their lives [psuche--souls,
beings]." Acts 15:26
"Trouble not yourselves, for his life [psuche--soul, being]
is
in him [he has not expired, or breathed out existence]."
Acts 20:10
"Neither count I my life [psuche--soul, being, existence]
dear unto myself, so that I might finish my course with joy."
Acts 20:24
The Apostle had learned to rightly view the present existence
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as of small value in comparison to the future one promised
in the resurrection. He did not count it "dear,"
precious, in the sense of valuing it more than the Lord and
the Lord's favor, and the opportunities for serving the
Lord's cause. He was willing to spend and be spent in the
Master's service, in hope of attaining to the first resurrection,
as he explicitly tells us in Phil. 3:8-11.
"Sirs, I perceive that this voyage will be with hurt and
much damage, not only of the lading and ship, but also of
our lives [psuche--souls, beings]." Acts 27:10
"There shall be no loss of any man's life [psuche--soul,
being]." Acts 27:22
"I am left alone, and they seek my life [psuche--soul,
being]." Rom. 11:3
"Who have for my life [psuche--soul, being] laid down
their own necks." Rom. 16:4
"Because for the work of Christ he was nigh unto death,
not regarding his life [psuche--soul, being], supplying your
lack of service toward me." Phil. 2:30
"Because he laid down his life [psuche--soul, being--"he
poured out his soul unto death; he made his soul an offering
for sin"] for us; and we ought to lay down our lives
[psuche--souls, beings] for the brethren." 1 John 3:16
"The third part of the creatures which were in the sea,
and had life [psuche--soul, being] died." Rev. 8:9
"They loved not their lives [psuche--souls, beings] unto
death." Rev. 12:11
Once we get our minds clear upon this subject of the soul
and obtain a clear understanding of just how the words neh-phesh
and psuche are used throughout the Scriptures, by the
inspired writers, it removes all the mystery that has heretofore
been shrouded under the obscure words, soul and
ghost, which, not only to the ignorant, but also to many of
the educated, have meant something indefinite, indescribable
and incomprehensible.
But let none get the thought that the body is the soul: this
[E339]
is an error, as our Lord's words clearly show--"God is able
to destroy both soul and body." But on the other hand there
can be no soul, no sentient being without a body--heavenly
or earthly, spiritual or animal.
Going to the Genesis record of man's creation we see that
the body was formed first, but it was not a man, soul or
being, until animated. It had eyes, but saw nothing; ears,
but heard nothing; a mouth, but spoke nothing; a tongue,
but no taste; nostrils, but no sense of smell; a heart, but it
pulsated not; blood, but it was cold, lifeless; lungs, but they
moved not. It was not a man, but a corpse, an inanimate
body.
The second step in the process of man's creation was to
give vitality to the properly "formed" and in every way prepared
body; and this is described by the words "blew into
his nostrils the breath of life." When a healthy person has
been drowned and animation is wholly suspended, resuscitation
has, it is said, been effected by working the arms and
thus the lungs as a bellows, and so gradually establishing
the breath in the nostrils. In Adam's case it of course required
no labored effort on the part of the Creator to cause
the perfect organism which he had made to breathe the life-giving
oxygen of the atmosphere.
As the vitalizing breath entered, the lungs expanded, the
blood corpuscles were oxygenized and passed to the heart,
which in turn propelled them to every part of the body,
awakening all the prepared but hitherto dormant nerves to
sensation and energy. In an instant the energy reached the
brain, and thought perception, reasoning, looking, touching,
smelling, feeling and tasting commenced. That which
was a lifeless human organism had become a man, a sentient
being: the "living soul" condition mentioned in the text had
been reached. In other words, the term "living soul" means
neither more nor less than the term "sentient being"; i.e., a
being capable of sensation, perception, thought.
Moreover, even though Adam was perfect in his organism,
it was necessary for him to sustain life, soul or sentient
[E340]
being, by partaking of the fruits of the trees of life. And
when he sinned, God drove him from the garden, "lest he
put forth his hand, and take also of the tree [plural trees or
grove] of life, and eat, and live forever [i.e., by eating
continuously]."
(Gen. 3:22) How the fogs and mysteries scatter
before the light of truth which shines from God's Word!
Although, because of his fall into sin and death, man's
condition is far from what it was in its original perfection
when pronounced "very good" by the highest Judge, so
that some, by the cultivation of the lower organs of thought
and a failure to use the higher intellectual faculties, have
dwarfed the organs of the brain representing these higher
faculties, yet the organs are still there, and are capable of
development,
which is not the case with the most nearly perfect
specimens of the brute creation. So then it is in that the
Creator has endowed man with a higher and finer organism,
that he has made him to differ from the brute. They have
similar flesh and bones, breathe the same air, drink the
same water, and eat similar food, and all are souls or creatures
possessing intelligence; but man, in his better body, possesses
capacity for higher intelligence and is treated by the
Creator as on an entirely different plane. It is in proportion
as sin degrades man from his original likeness of his Creator
that he is said to be "brutish"--more nearly resembling the
brutes, destitute of the higher and finer sensibilities.
Those whose eyes of understanding begin to open to this
subject, so that they see that the word "soul" signifies intelligence,
being, and the word "breath" or "spirit of life"
signifies the divine power to live, can readily see, from the
foregoing, that every creature which possesses life-consciousness
has, first of all, a body or organism; secondly, the
spirit of life animating it, and thirdly, existence, being, soul,
as a result. An illustration which helps some to grasp the
proposition is the similarity between heat and soul. If a
lump of coal is placed under favorable conditions, giving
access to the oxygen of the air, and then ignited, a new
thing will be produced--heat. The coal is not heat, though it
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possesses some of the qualities which, under favorable conditions,
would produce heat; neither is the oxygen heat, yet
it also, under favorable conditions, may be an element in
producing heat. So, to carry the analogy, the body is not
the soul, though the body possesses the qualifications necessary
to soul; neither is the breath or spirit of life the soul--it
is the power which came from God, and which is necessary
to the production of the sentient creature. The body, when
properly united with the breath or spirit of life, produces a
new thing--a being, a soul, a sentient creature.
And the process of dissolution, death, is in harmony with
these facts. If the breath or spirit of life be withdrawn, death
results. Now the question is, what dies? Does the breath or
spirit of life die? Surely not; it never had sentient being, it is
a principle or power, like electricity; it has no thought, no
feeling; it could not die. Does the body die? We answer, No.
The body may lose the life with which the Father animates
it, but the body of itself, apart from the breath or spirit of
life, had no consciousness, no feeling, no sense, and could
not, therefore, be said to die; it was inanimate before the
breath or spirit of life came into it; it was animate while the
breath or spirit of life was in it; it becomes inanimate again,
or dead, when the spirit of life is withdrawn.
What, then, dies? We answer that it is the soul that dies--
the sentient being ceases. Let us remember that the sentient
being was produced by the union of the breath or spirit of
life with an organism, and that the separation or dissolution
of these two causes the cessation of the being, the
soul--death. That this is true of the lower animals, none
would for a moment question; but is it not equally true of
man, the highest animal, created in the intellectual image
and moral likeness of God? It is no less true, and should be
equally evident to every reasoning mind. We are aware that
some few scriptures might be twisted and misunderstood to
contradict this proposition, but in due course they will have
consideration and will be found in most absolute accord
with these presentations.
[E342]
Take another illustration of the relationship between the
human or animal body, spirit and soul: an unlighted
candle would correspond to an inanimate human body or
corpse; the lighting of the candle would correspond to the
spark of life originally imparted by the Creator; the flame
or light corresponds to sentient being, or intelligence, or
soul quality; the oxygenized atmosphere which unites with
the carbon of the candle in supporting the flame corresponds
to the breath of life or spirit of life which unites with
the physical organism in producing soul or intelligent existence.
If an accident should occur which would destroy the
candle, the flame, of course, would cease; so if a human or
animal body be destroyed, as by disease or accident, the
soul, the being, intelligence, personality, ceases. Or if
the supply
of air were cut off from the candle flame, as by an extinguisher
or snuffer, or by submerging the candle in water,
the light would be extinguished even though the candle remained
unimpaired. So the soul, life, existence, of man or
animal would cease if the breath of life were cut off by
drowning or asphyxiation, while the body might be comparatively
sound.
As the lighted candle might be used under favorable conditions
to light other candles, but the flame once extinguished
the candle could neither relight itself nor other candles,
so the human or animal body while alive, as a living
soul or being can, under divine arrangement, start or propagate
other souls or beings--offspring: but so soon as the
spark of life is gone, soul or being has ceased, and all power
to think, feel and propagate has ceased. In harmony with
this we read in the Scriptures of Jacob's children: "All the
souls that came out of the loins of Jacob were seventy
souls."
(Exod. 1:5) Jacob received his spark of life as well as his
physical organism, and hence the united product of these,
his soul or intelligent being, from Isaac, and hence from
Adam, to whom alone God ever directly imparted life. And
Jacob passed on the life and organism and soul to his posterity,
and so with all humanity.
[E343]
A candle might be relighted by any one having the ability;
but by divine arrangement the human body bereft of
the spark of life, "wasteth away," returns to the dust from
which it was taken, and the spark of life cannot be re-enkindled
except by divine power, a miracle. The promise of
resurrection is therefore a promise of a relighting, a re-enkindling
of animal existence or soul; and since there can be
no being or soul without a body and restored life-power or
spirit, it follows that a promised resurrection or restoration
of soul or being implies new bodies, new organisms. Thus the
Scriptures assure us that human bodies, which return to
dust will not be restored, but that in the resurrection God will
give such new bodies as it may please him to give.
1 Cor. 15:37-40
The Apostle here declares that in the resurrection there
will be a special class accounted worthy of a new nature,
spiritual instead of human or fleshly: and, as we should expect,
he shows that this great change of nature will be effected
by giving these a different kind of body. The candle may
here again serve to illustrate: suppose the fleshly or human
nature to be illustrated by a tallow candle, the new body
might be illustrated by a wax candle of a brighter flame, or
indeed by an electric arc-light apparatus.
With any power and wisdom less than that of our Creator
guaranteeing the resurrection, we might justly fear some
break or slip by which the identity would be lost, especially
with those granted the great change of nature by a share in
the first (chief) resurrection to spirit being. But we can securely
trust this and all things to him with whom we have
to do in this matter. He who knows our very thoughts can
reproduce them in the new brains so that not one valuable
lesson or precious experience shall be lost. He is too wise to
err and too good to be unkind; and all that he has promised
he will fulfil in a manner exceedingly abundantly better
than we can ask or think.
Many suppose that the bodies buried are to be restored
atom for atom, but, on the contrary, the Apostle declares,
[E344]
"Thou sowest [in death] not that body which shall be." It is
the soul, the sentient being, that God proposes to restore by
resurrection power; and in the resurrection he will give to
each person (to each soul or sentient being) such a body as
his infinite wisdom has been pleased to provide; to the
Church, the "bride" selected in this age, spirit bodies; to the
restitution class, human bodies, but not the ones lost in
death. 1 Cor. 15:37,38
As in Adam's creation, the bringing together of an organism
and the breath of life produced a sentient being or soul,
so the
dissolution of these, from any cause, puts an end to sentient
being--stopping thoughts and feelings of every kind. The
soul (i.e., sentient being) ceases; the body returns to dust as
it was; while the spirit or breath of life returns to God, who
imparted it to Adam, and to his race through him. (Eccl. 12:7)
It returns to God in the sense that it is no longer amenable
to human control, as in procreation, and can never
be recovered except by divine power. Recognizing this fact,
the Lord's instructed ones commit their hope of future life
by resurrection to God and to Christ, his now exalted representative.
(Luke 23:46; Acts 7:59) So, then, had God made
no provision for man's future life by a ransom and a promised
resurrection, death would have been the end of all hope
for humanity. 1 Cor. 15:14-18
But God has thus made provision for our living again;
and ever since he made known his gracious plan, those who
speak and write intelligently upon the subject (for instance,
the inspired Scripture writers), as if by common consent,
speak of the unconscious interim between death and the
resurrection morning, in which sensibility (sentient being)
is suspended, as a "sleep." Indeed, the illustration is an
excellent
one; for the moment of awakening will seem to them
like the moment after the moment of their dissolution. For
instance, we read that speaking of Lazarus' death our Lord
said, "Our friend Lazarus sleepeth, I go that I may awake him
out of sleep." Afterward, because the disciples were slow to
comprehend, he said, "Lazarus is dead." (John 11:11-14)
[E345]
Were the theory of consciousness in death correct, is it not
remarkable that Lazarus gave no account of his experience
during those four days? None will claim that he was in a
"hell" of torment, for our Lord called him his "friend"; and
if he had been in heavenly bliss our Lord would not have
called him from it, for that would have been an unfriendly
act. But as our Lord expressed it, Lazarus slept, and he
awakened him to life, to consciousness, to his sentient being,
or soul returned or revived; and all this was evidently a favor
greatly appreciated by Lazarus and his friends.
The thought pervades the Scriptures that we are now in
the night of dying and sleeping as compared with the
morning of awakening and resurrection. "Weeping may
endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning"
(Psa. 30:5)--
the resurrection morning, when the sleepers shall
come forth from the tomb, as expressed by the Prophet:
"Awake and sing, ye that dwell in the dust [of the earth]."
Isa. 26:19
The apostles also frequently used this appropriate, hopeful
and peaceful figure of speech. For instance: Luke says of
Stephen, the first martyr, "he fell asleep"; and in recording
Paul's speech at Antioch he used the same expression, "David
fell on sleep." (Acts 7:60; 13:36) Peter uses the
same expression,
saying, "The fathers fell asleep." (2 Pet. 3:4)
And
Paul used it many times as the following quotations show:
"If her husband be dead [Greek, fall asleep]." 1 Cor. 7:39
"The greater part remain unto this present, but some are
fallen asleep." 1 Cor. 15:6
"If there be no resurrection,...then they also which are
fallen asleep in Christ are perished." 1 Cor. 15:13-18
"Christ is risen from the dead and become the firstfruits
of them that slept." 1 Cor. 15:20
"Behold, I show you a mystery, we shall not all sleep."
1 Cor. 15:51
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"I would not have you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning
them that are asleep." 1 Thess. 4:13
"Them that sleep in Jesus, will God bring [from the dead]
with [by] him." 1 Thess. 4:14
When the Kingdom, the resurrection time, comes, "we
who are alive and remain unto the presence of the Lord shall
not precede them that are asleep." 1 Thess. 4:15
The same thought is presented by the Prophet Daniel:
describing the resurrection he says--"Many that sleep in the
dust shall awake"--and the description shows that these
sleepers include both the good and bad. (Dan. 12:2) They
"fell asleep" in peace, to await the Lord's day--the day of
Christ, the Millennial Day--fully persuaded that he
(Christ) is able to keep that which they committed unto
him against that day. (2 Tim. 1:12) This same thought runs
through the Old Testament as well--from the time that
God first preached to Abraham the Gospel of a resurrection:
the expression, "He slept with his fathers," is very
common in the Old Testament. But Job puts the matter in
very forcible language, saying, "Oh that thou wouldest
hide me in the grave, that thou wouldest keep me secret until
thy wrath be [over] past!" The present dying time is the
time of God's wrath--the curse of death being upon all, because
of the original transgression. However, we are promised
that in due time the curse will be lifted and a blessing
will come through the Redeemer to all the families of the
earth; and so Job continues, "All the days of my appointed
time will I wait, until my change come; [then] thou shalt
call (John 5:25) and I will answer thee; thou shalt have a
desire to the work of thine hands." (Job 14:14,15) And we
of the New Testament times read our Lord's response, "All
that are in the graves shall hear the voice of the Son of God
[calling them to awake and come to a full knowledge of
God and to a full opportunity of everlasting life]."
John 5:25,28,29
This death-"sleep" is so absolutely a period of unconsciousness
[E347]
that the awakened ones will have no knowledge
of the lapse of time. Indeed, "sleep" is merely an accommodated
term, for really the dead are dead, utterly destroyed,
except as God's wisdom preserves their identity,
and has decreed through Christ their awakening--their
reorganization and resuscitation. And this, indeed, will be a
re-creation--a still greater manifestation of divine power
than was the original creation of Adam and Eve. It will be
the re-creation of fifty billions instead of two persons. It will
be the reproduction of infinite varieties instead of one. Only
our God possesses such omnipotent wisdom and power; he
is both able and willing to perform. It is to be one of the
benefits resulting from the permission of evil that its eradication
will manifest all the features of divine character as
they could not otherwise be manifested and known. Before
both angels and men divine justice will shine, so will divine
love, so will divine power, and finally the divine wisdom
in
preparing and permitting such an exhibition of God's character
will be seen and owned by all his creatures also.
The Scriptural testimony regarding the necessity for a
resurrection of the dead is most clear and explicit--and how
could there be a resurrection of the dead if none are dead, but,
as some maintain, "all who seem to die are more alive than
they ever were"; thus contradicting the five senses of every
intelligent being as well as the positive declaration of
Scripture that "To all the living there is hope: for a living
dog is better than a dead lion. For the living [even the least
intelligent] know that they shall die, but the dead know not
anything, neither have they any more a reward; for the memory
of them is [very generally] forgotten. Also their love,
and their hatred and their envy, is now perished; neither
have they any more a portion [interest] forever [Hebrew,
olam--for a long indefinite period] in anything that is done
under the sun...Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it
with thy might; for there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge,
nor wisdom, in the grave* whither thou [the soul, the
[E348]
sentient being] goest." Eccl. 9:4-10; Isa. 26:14
*Sheol--the state or condition of death as respects the soul, in
contrast
with grave, a tomb for a dead body which in the Hebrew is qeber.
See
Psa. 30:3; 49:15; 89:48; where sheol is rendered grave.
See
2 Chron. 34:28; Job 10:19; Psa. 88:5;
where qeber is grave. Our Lord's
soul went to sheol the condition of death (Psa. 16:10; Acts 2:27), but
"he made his grave [qeber, tomb] with the wicked and rich."
Isa. 53:9
"Thou destroyest the hope of man [in himself]. Thou
prevailest forever against him, and he passeth: thou
changest his countenance and sendest him away. His sons
come to honor and he knoweth it not; and they are brought
low, but he perceiveth it not of them." Job 14:19-21;
Isa. 63:16
Note the significance of the Apostle's words in his celebrated
treatise on the resurrection in 1 Cor. 15:12-54. He
says:
"If Christ be preached that he rose from the dead, how
say some among you that there is no resurrection of the
dead?"
If the dead are not dead, but more alive than ever, then
none are dead, and surely there could be no resurrection of
the dead. The Apostle held no such theory, but the very
contrary, that the dead are perished like brute beasts unless
God will resurrect them; and that our hopes for them are
vain hopes except they be resurrection hopes. Mark well every
word of this forceful argument by one of earth's greatest
logicians. He says:
"If there be no resurrection of the dead, then is Christ not
risen [but is still dead]: And if Christ be not risen [but still
dead], then is our preaching vain, and your faith is also
vain [because a dead Christ could know nothing and could
help nobody]. Yea, and we are found false witnesses of God
[we are wicked deceivers instead of divinely appointed ambassadors];
because we have testified of God that he raised
up Christ: whom he raised not up--if so be [if it be true]
that the dead rise not. For if the dead rise not then is Christ
not raised."
[E349]
It should be observed that the Apostle is not pressing his
argument as respecting a resurrection of the body, but as respects
a resurrection of being, or soul; "that his soul was not
left in sheol, hades." (Acts 2:31,32) Had Paul
the popular
theory of our day respecting resurrection, he would have
said something like this: Some of you speak of a resurrection
of the body as though it were a matter of importance;
but really the body is a "clog," a hindrance, a "prison
house" for the soul, which is far better off when "set free."
The resurrection of the body, whenever it comes, will be a
calamity and imply the "re-fettering" of the soul and a limitation
of its powers.
The Apostle said nothing of the kind because it would
have been the reverse of the truth. He taught a resurrection
of the soul or sentient being from unconsciousness, from
death; but denied the resurrection of the body which died,
saying, "Thou sowest not that body which shall be:...[in
the resurrection of the soul or being] God giveth it a [new]
body, as it hath pleased him, and to every [kind of] seed his
own [appropriate kind of] body." (1 Cor. 15:37,38) The
masses of mankind of human seed or kind will receive human
bodies; but not the same bodies which mouldered to
dust and whose fragments or atoms have passed into vegetable
and animal organisms infinitesimal. The Church will
receive spirit bodies like to that of their risen Lord and
wholly unlike their earthly bodies--so much so that the
Apostle declares, "It doth not yet appear what we shall be,
but we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him;
for we shall see him as he is"--not as he was. 1 John 3:2
But let us follow the Apostle's argument further. He
declares:
"If Christ be not raised, your faith is vain: ye are yet in
your sins. Then they also that are fallen asleep in Christ are
perished." Verses 17,18
Those who claim that the soul cannot die and therefore
does not die and who therefore deny the resurrection of the
[E350]
soul or sentient being, and who in consequence are forced
by their argument to claim that Scriptural references to resurrection
refer merely to the body, are in a quandary what
to do with these words of the inspired Apostle. If they claim
that our Lord was alive, "more alive than ever," during the
three days the Scriptures declare he was dead, and think of
his resurrection body as the one that lay in Joseph's tomb
wounded and scarred, how could they claim that faith in a
Christ who did not die (but who merely shed off his body for
three days) is a "vain" faith? How can they acknowledge
that such a faith does not release from condemnation? How
could they claim that the "more-alive-than-ever" Christ
"freed" from his body of flesh could not save sinners and
hence that all that have fallen asleep in Christ have
"perished?"
Their entire theory is in conflict with the Scriptural presentation
of the facts. They deny that any soul could perish
[Greek apolloomee--be destroyed] while the Apostle says it
could; and so says our Lord--"God is able to destroy both
soul and body." They deny also that any "are fallen asleep
in Christ" denying that death is a sleep, awaiting a resurrection
morn awakening, while the apostles, our Lord and all
the holy prophets unitedly declare it to be a "sleep" from
which God's power alone can awaken to consciousness,
soul, sentient being, on any plane of existence. For be it
noted that those who experience the "change" of the first
resurrection to the divine nature will be souls as truly as they
were in their earthly nature. God is declared to be a soul, the
same word psuche being used--"If any man draw back, my
soul [psuche--sentient being] shall have no pleasure in him."
Heb. 10:38
The Platonic philosophy (that man does not and cannot
die, but merely appears to do so) prevailed throughout
Greece at the time of the first advent, and constituted the
great obstacle to the progress of the gospel among the Gentiles.
For instance, we read that when Paul preached at
Athens he was listened to as a great teacher by the philosophers
[E351]
until he touched on the resurrection of the dead--that
was enough; they had no further interest; they considered
themselves far in advance of the Jewish idea that the dead
can have no future existence except by a resurrection. "And
when they heard of the resurrection of the dead [and thus
discerned that Paul disagreed with their theory that the
dead are more alive than ever] some mocked" and others
said, That's enough at present. Acts 17:32
The heathen idea, that death is not death, but a step into
broader conditions of life, had not to any extent permeated
Jewish thought up to the time of the first advent. The Pharisees
were the principal sect of the Jews, and our Lord declares
them the successors and representatives of the Mosaic
law, saying, "The scribes [writers] and Pharisees sit in
Moses' seat." (Matt. 23:2) The Sadducees, much less numerous
than the Pharisees, were next as a sect in point of
influence: they were really unbelievers, infidels. They denied
entirely a future life, holding that man dies exactly as
does the brute, and that there will be no resurrection of the
dead. They were disbelievers in all the Messianic promises,
deniers also of the superhuman intelligences, such as angels,
etc. True, Josephus does call attention to a sect called the
Essenes, which he declares held the Platonic theory prevalent
amongst the Gentiles, to the effect that man never
really dies, but merely takes a progressive step in life development,
at the crisis termed death. But we are to remember
that Josephus wrote his history of the Jews while at the Roman
court, and that he wrote it with a view of influencing
the minds of the emperor and his court in favor of the Jews.
The Romans had come to regard the Jews, as the Scriptures
declare them to have been, "a stiff-necked and rebellious
people," and naturally had concluded that the cause of this
rebellious disposition lay somehow or other in their religion.
This was a true supposition; it is undoubtedly a fact
that the truths of divine revelation tend to produce a spirit
of liberty wherever they are applied--breaking down the
wide distinctions as between priests and people, kings and
[E352]
subjects, teaching that all are amenable to one great Judge
and King. But Josephus wished to counteract this correct
estimate of the Jewish people, and the Jewish religion; and
hence he stretched the truth in his endeavor to make out a
case, and to show the Roman court that the Jews' religion
was practically the same as the various heathen religions,
(1) in respect to consciousness of the dead, and (2) a belief
in eternal torment.* To make out his case, he cites the sect
of the Essenes, as though they were the chief religious sect
amongst the Jews. On the contrary, they were so insignificant
that they are not so much as mentioned in the
New Testament, and evidently never came in conflict with
either the Lord or the apostles, whereas the Pharisees and
the Sadducees are continually and frequently referred to.
*Eternal torment never was the Jewish belief except of the very few; but
the Roman Emperors favored this theory, for it increased the imperial
influence over the common people. Later the Emperors adopted the title,
"Pontifex Maximus," chief religious ruler--later still adopted by
Papacy
for the popes.
"All Live unto Him"--Luke 20:37,38
It was after our Lord had answered the doctors of the law
and the scribes and Pharisees, and had discomfited them,
that the Sadducees put in an appearance, thinking that
they could show the superiority of their infidel position, by
refuting our Lord's doctrines. To these Sadducees, who
claimed that the dead were forever dead, our Lord said,
"And now that the dead are [to be] raised, even Moses
showed at the bush, when he calleth the Lord the God of
Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob. For
he is not a God of the dead, but of the living: for all live
unto him." Luke 20:37,38
Our Lord suggests that this of itself is a proof "that the
dead are [to be] raised," because God would surely not refer
thus to beings totally and forever blotted out of existence.
He then shows that God's plan for a resurrection is fixed,
[E353]
and that those whom men call "dead" "all live unto
Him"--from God's standpoint they only "sleep." God's
Word, therefore, speaks of these as "asleep" and not as destroyed.
Though the original sentence was to destruction it
is now offset by the ransom. So Moses says: "Thou turnest
man to destruction, and sayest [in resurrection], Return, ye
children of men." (Psa. 90:3; 103:4) In saying, "I am
the
God of Abraham," God speaks not only of things past as
still present, but also of things to come as if already come to
pass. Rom. 4:17
The Body, Spirit and Soul of the Church
--1 Thess. 5:23--
The terms body, soul and spirit are figuratively used of
the Church collectively. For instance, the Apostle says: "I
pray God [that] your whole spirit, soul and body be preserved
blameless, unto the coming of our Lord Jesus
Christ." This prayer must be understood to apply to the
Church as a whole--the elect Church whose names are written
in heaven. The true spirit has been preserved in the little
flock. Its body is discernible today, also, notwithstanding
the multitude of tares that would hide as well as choke it.
And its soul, its activity, its intelligence, its sentient being, is
in evidence everywhere, lifting up the standard for the
people--the cross, the ransom.
In no other way could we apply the Apostle's words; for,
however much people may differ respecting the preservation
of the individual spirits and souls of the people addressed,
all will agree that their bodies have not been preserved,
but have returned to dust, like those of others. Besides, the
words body, soul and spirit are in the singular, not in the
plural.
What Is Signified by "Sheol" or "Hades"
to Which All Souls Go?
It is held that since souls are said to go to sheol, hades,
[E354]
therefore the soul of man must be something tangible and
conscious after dissolution--after the separation of the spirit
of life from the organism or body. It is therefore proper
that we examine the Word of the Lord on this line, and
see--What is sheol, hades?
The Hebrew word sheol occurs sixty-five times in the Old
Testament Scriptures. It is three times translated pit, thirty-one
times translated grave, and thirty-one times translated
hell. These are all faulty translations, if measured by the
present general use of the words, hell, grave and pit.
The meaning of the Hebrew word sheol (hades is its Greek
equivalent) can scarcely be expressed by any one English
word: it signifies hidden or extinguished, or obscure--the
condition
or state of death: it is not a place but a condition, and
perhaps the word oblivion would more nearly than any other
in our language correspond with the word sheol of the
Hebrew and hades of the Greek. Nothing in the word sheol
signifies joy or misery, or any feeling; the connections must
guide us in this. Let us therefore examine uses of the words
sheol and hades and ascertain from the connection all we can
respecting "hell." We will find it clearly stated in the Scriptures
that sheol, hades, oblivion, receives all mankind, good
and bad alike; that it has no light, no knowledge, no wisdom,
no device; that no tongue there praises the Lord, neither
blasphemes his name; that it is a condition of absolute
silence, and in every way an undesirable condition, except
that it has attached to it a hope of resurrection.
It will be noticed also that it is "souls," both good and
bad, that go to this condition--sheol, oblivion--to await the
summons of the Life-giver in the morning of the Millennial
age. It cannot be denied that the translators of our Common
Version English Bible have been at times inconsistent,
but we urge that this be not charged wholly to dishonesty,
even though in many instances it may appear to be little
short of this: rather let us believe that it was the result of a
confusion of mind on this subject, superinduced by long
centuries of false teaching, handed down from the "dark
[E355]
ages." Another thing that can be said in extenuation of the
work of the translators is, that in the "old English" the word
hell had no such meaning as it has in modern English language.
It, in no sense of the word, signified or implied a
place of flames or torture or trouble or pain, but more the
thought of grave--hidden condition, oblivion. The translators
in using the word hell probably partially justified
themselves, on the ground of its ancient significance,
its primary meaning, as given in unabridged English
dictionaries.
In examining the following occurrences of the word sheol,
the reader is urged to note what would be the sense of the
passage, if the word sheol were translated in each case "hell
fire," or "place of torment," and then also to note how, in
every instance, the translation would be thoroughly smooth
and consistent with the context if it were translated oblivion.
These prove conclusively that "souls" go to sheol,
oblivion,
and that they are not in torment there, nor have they any
knowledge or wisdom or work or joy or pain or feeling of
any kind, but simply wait in oblivion for "the voice of the
archangel and the trump of God."
"I will go down into the grave [into sheol, into
oblivion] unto
my son, mourning." Gen. 37:35
Thus did Jacob mourn for his son Joseph, whom he supposed
had died a violent death.
"If mischief shall befall him [Benjamin] by the way in
which ye go, then shall ye bring down my gray hairs with
sorrow to the grave [to sheol, to oblivion]."
Gen. 42:38
These were the words of Jacob, when parting with Benjamin,
and fearful lest he should be killed, as he supposed
Joseph had been.
The same words identically are repeated under similar
circumstances, in chapter 44:29, when the brethren of Joseph
are relating to him the parting injunction of their father
respecting Benjamin. And in the 31st versethe
[E356]
brethren again state the matter as for themselves, saying,
"Thy servants shall bring down the gray hairs of thy servant
our father to the grave [to sheol, to oblivion]."
Here are four instances in which the word sheol has been
translated "grave," and we invite all to consider how inappropriate
it would have been to have used the word hell,
attaching to it the usual, ordinary thought of fire, torment
and anguish. The translators were evidently quite positive
that the word hell, as ordinarily understood, would give
very false ideas of the expectation of Jacob for himself, and
of his sons respecting him: hence they here translated the
word "grave." Nevertheless, they did not believe, nor do the
majority of people believe, that Jacob went into the grave,
or had any thought of going into the grave. Nor was the patriarch
thinking of the burial of his body in a tomb, for then
doubtless he would have used the same Hebrew word for
grave which he used in speaking of Rachel's grave, viz.,
qeburah (Gen. 35:20), or else he would have used the same
word which his son Joseph used (qeber), when speaking of
Jacob's grave, which Jacob himself had already caused to
be prepared before he died. (Gen. 50:5) On the contrary, we
see that Jacob was speaking about himself, as a soul or
being--that the disappointment of the loss of Benjamin
would bring him down to oblivion, to the state of death, in his
now old age and feeble health.
"If the Lord make a new thing, and the earth open her
mouth, and swallow them up...and they go down quick
into the pit [into sheol, into oblivion]." Num. 16:30
"They...went down alive into the pit [sheol, oblivion], and
the earth closed upon them and they perished from among
the congregation." Num. 16:33
These two texts referring to Korah, Dathan and Abiram,
showing how they were destroyed, could not have been consistently
translated "into hell," for fear of proving that the
claimed place of torture is under the surface of this earth.
But how simple the statement when rightly understood: the
[E357]
earth opened her mouth and swallowed them up and they
went down from the midst of life's activities into oblivion,
unconsciousness.
"A fire is kindled in mine anger, and shall burn unto the
lowest hell [sheol, oblivion], and shall consume the earth with
her increase, and set on fire the foundations of the mountains."
Deut. 32:22
Here certainly is a mention of fire, but not of literal fire.
The entire context shows that it is the fire of God's jealousy,
and the statement follows, "They shall be burnt with hunger,
and devoured with burning heat and bitter destruction
...the sword without and terror within shall destroy." We
are not left to conjecture respecting how this prophecy was
fulfilled; for the Apostle Paul, speaking under the inspiration
of the holy Spirit, refers to this passage, and applies
it to fleshly Israel, and to the trouble which came upon
them as a nation, when they rejected the Lord Jesus, and in
turn were themselves rejected of the Lord. The Apostle declares
that wrath came upon them to the uttermost (1 Thess. 2:16):
divine anger burned against them and did
continue to burn against them until, as a people, they had
suffered for their national sins. After divine wrath has
burned out their national transgression, even searching
them out to the very lowest oblivion (sheol) he will then
speak peaceably toward them, saying to the Church,
"Comfort ye, comfort ye my people; speak ye comfortably
to Jerusalem, and cry unto her that her warfare is accomplished,
that her iniquity is pardoned; for she hath received
of the Lord's hands double for all her sins." (Isa. 40:1,2)
Then also shall come the deliverance of Jacob predicted by
the Apostle Paul, on the strength of the divine statement,
"For this is my covenant unto them, when I shall take away
their sins." (Rom. 11:26,27) The same thought that this
burning of divine wrath against Israel, to the very lowest
oblivion, will be followed by divine blessing, is shown in the
context. See Deut. 32:26-43.
"The Lord killeth and maketh alive: he bringeth down to
[E358]
the grave [to sheol, to oblivion], and bringeth up [by a
resurrection
out of oblivion, out of sheol]." 1 Sam. 2:6
"The sorrows of hell [sheol, oblivion] compassed me
about."
2 Sam. 22:6
The prophet David here expressed the fact that his life
was in jeopardy, but that God delivered him from the hand
of Saul. The context, however, shows quite clearly that the
Psalmist speaks prophetically of the Christ, and the time of
the full deliverance of the body of Christ, which is the
Church, from the present evil world, into the glories of the
world to come, showing (verses 8-18) that the deliverance of
the body of Christ would be just before a great time of
trouble, and manifestation of divine power and indignation
against wickedness.
"Let not his hoar head go down to the grave [sheol, oblivion]
in peace...but his hoar head bring thou down to the grave
[sheol, oblivion] with blood." 1 Kings 2:6,9
David was the speaker, pointing out to Solomon his son
that Joab was a dangerous man, a man of blood, justly deserving
of some retribution before he died. The translators
evidently thought that, although Joab was a bad man, it
would not do here to translate the word sheol by the word
hell, because the context speaks of gray hairs, while their
theory asserts that the hairs and all the remainder of the
physical body are buried, and that the naked soul or spirit
goes to hell. Hence they preferred here to render sheol by the
English word grave. But with the proper thought in mind,
there is no difficulty about having Joab's gray hairs and
also Jacob's gray hairs go down into sheol, oblivion, the
state of death, together. The words "gray hairs" and "hoar
head" are simply figures of speech signifying aged.
"As a cloud is consumed and vanisheth away, so he that
goeth down to the grave [sheol, oblivion] shall come up no
more." Job 7:9
Job here points out the utter destruction of man's soul, or
[E359]
being, in death. Nevertheless in verse 21he concludes the
argument with the declaration, "I shall sleep and thou shalt
seek me in the morning, but I shall not be." Here the interim
of death is referred to as a sleep, as the Millennial age
is referred to as the morning, and the present age as the
night of weeping and trouble, dying and crying. The Lord
will seek Job in the morning, in resurrection power, and
though he shall not be, though death shall have worked
utter destruction, nevertheless the case is not beyond divine
power, and hence, when the Lord's time shall come
"he shall have a desire unto the work of his hands," when
the day of the Lord's vengeance shall have passed, and the
times of refreshing shall have come--then he shall call, and
Job and all others will answer him. See Chap. 14:14,15.
"It is as high as heaven; what canst thou do? Deeper than
hell [sheol, oblivion]; what canst thou know?" Job 11:8
These words are by Zophar, one of Job's mistaken comforters,
whom the Lord reproved. By this statement he is attempting
to show Job that the divine principles of
government are inscrutable to humanity: as an illustration
of man's utter lack of knowledge of God he refers to sheol,
and compares the two; as there is no knowledge in sheol,
equally, he claims, there can be no knowledge of the divine
wisdom and plan.
"O that thou wouldst hide me in the grave [sheol, oblivion],
that thou wouldst keep me in secret until thy wrath be past,
that thou wouldst appoint me a set time and remember
me." Job 14:13
Here is the most simple and most explicit statement of
Job's hope. He was not anxious for a perpetuation of the
present conditions of sin and sorrow and trouble and pain;
he was quite willing to be hidden in oblivion until the time
when the curse, "wrath," shall be lifted from the earth, and
the times of refreshing instead shall come. But he does not
wish to be blotted out forever. Oh no! having confidence in
the divine provision for a future life, through a resurrection,
[E360]
he prays that God in due time, after the curse of sin has
been rolled away, will remember him, and call him out of
oblivion into being again, by the restitution powers then to
be exercised through the Christ. See Acts 3:19-21.
"If I wait, the grave [sheol, oblivion] is my house: I shall
make my bed in the darkness. I have cried to corruption,
Thou art my father; to the worm, Thou art my mother and
my sister." Job 17:13,14
How expressive this language! Oblivion is the house or is
the bed, and it is full of darkness--Job's soul, his being,
sleeps, is inanimate, waiting for the morning of the resurrection,
while his body turns to corruption.
"Where is now my hope? As for my hope, who shall see
it? They shall go down to the bars of the pit [to sheol,
oblivion,
separately]. Truly in the dust alone there is rest for all."
Job 17:15,16
The servant of God expresses his own hope or confidence,
but questions how many can have such a confidence. He
has already expressed the hope that his death will be merely
a sleep, from which he shall awake in the morning. But although
each separately goes down to sheol, to oblivion,
whether they have this hope or not, all find rest in the dust.
"They spend their days in wealth and in a moment go
down into the grave [sheol, oblivion]." Job 21:13
Job is here describing the prosperous course of some who
are not the Lord's people--contrasting the same with the
tribulations experienced by some who are the Lord's
people, and come under the rod of divine correction, to fit
and prepare them for better things hereafter.
"Drought and heat consume the snow waters: so doth
the grave [sheol, oblivion] those which have sinned."
Job 24:19
All mankind has sinned, and hence all mankind is subject
to death, and goes down to oblivion. The only hope is
in him who redeemed us from death, and who, "in the
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morning," will bring us out of oblivion, according to his
own gracious promise. Job, however, in this instance is specially
referring to evildoers, who hasten their death by an
evil course.
"Hell [sheol, oblivion] is naked before him, and destruction
hath no covering." Job 26:6
Here Job points out the all-wisdom of the Creator, who
not only knows the end from the beginning, but every secret
thing of oblivion is open to his inscrutable gaze.
"For in death there is no remembrance of thee; in the
grave [sheol, oblivion] who shall give thee thanks?"
Psa. 6:5
What a clear, positive statement we have here, proving
the unconsciousness of man in death! It should be noticed
also that the statement is not with reference to the wicked,
but with reference to God's servants who desire to thank
and to praise him for his mercies. Note also that the reference
is not to the dead flesh which is buried in qeber, but to
the soul which goes to sheol, oblivion.
"The wicked shall be [re-] turned into hell [sheol, oblivion]
and all nations that forget God." Psa. 9:17
The Hebrew word shub in this text is properly translated
"returned." This gives the thought of one recovered from
sheol, oblivion, and that some thus recovered will be returned
to oblivion on account of wickedness and forgetfulness
of God. The deliverance of mankind in general from
sheol will occur during the Millennial age, as a result of the
ransom price finished at Calvary. However, those once
awakened and brought to a knowledge of the truth, who
then are wilfully perverse, will be returned again to oblivion--
"the Second Death," from which there is to be no ransom
and no restitution. That this passage is not applicable
to the masses of mankind (the heathen) who have never
known God, is very evident--from its own statement it
refers to those who forget God after they have been
brought to clear knowledge of him, and to corresponding
responsibility.
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"Thou wilt not leave my soul in hell [sheol, oblivion];
neither
wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption."
Psa. 16:10
The Apostle Peter, speaking on the day of Pentecost, under
the plenary influence of the holy Spirit, expounds to us
the true significance of this statement, pointing out that it
could not possibly be true of David himself; because David's
soul was left in sheol, and his flesh did see corruption.
He declares of David, "He is both dead and buried, and his
sepulcher is with us unto this day." "David is not ascended
into the heavens." Acts 2:27-34
The Apostle's words are emphatic and thoroughly convincing
on two points, (1) that the soul of David went to
sheol, oblivion, and still remained there and up to the time
of Peter's discourse had not gone to heaven; (2) that the
soul of Christ Jesus went to sheol, oblivion, also, but did not
remain because resurrected the third day--and subsequently
ascended to heaven.
These plain statements from an inspired source should
clarify this subject to all genuine truth seekers. They set before
us the following facts: (1) The soul (being) of our Lord
Jesus went to oblivion, to sheol, at death. (2) He was dead
parts of three days. (3) He arose, was quickened, brought
out of oblivion, to the divine nature, on the third day, by
the power of the holy Spirit of God, and became "the first
fruits of them that slept." Our Lord's being or soul was
non-existent
during the period of death: "He poured out his soul
unto death; he made his soul an offering for sin." But his
soul [being] was revived in resurrection, being granted a
new spiritual body.*
*Vol. II, p. 109.
"The bonds of hell [sheol, oblivion] encircled me: the snares
of death seized on me." Psa. 18:5(Leeser,
18:6)
A figurative expression of deep anguish and fear of
death.
"O Lord, thou hast brought up my soul from the grave
[E363]
[sheol, oblivion]; thou hast kept me alive." Psa. 30:3
This is a thanksgiving for recovery from severe illness,
which threatened death.
"Let the wicked be ashamed, let them be silent in the grave
[sheol, oblivion]; let the lying lips be put to silence."
Psa. 31:17,18
Here, as elsewhere, the Psalmist longs for the cleansing of
the earth from those who love and practice wickedness.
This has no reference whatever to a future life, nor does it
imply a hope of resurrection. When the Kingdom is the
Lord's and he is the governor amongst the nations, and the
laws of righteousness and truth are established, and when
mercy and love shall bring to every creature fullest opportunity
of knowledge and recovery from sin, it may be
that some who are now wicked will seek righteousness, seek
justice, and be hidden under the mercy of Christ's righteousness,
and eventually attain to eternal life through him.
Neither the prophet David nor any one else could offer objections
to such a reformation, nor to the giving of eternal
life to those thoroughly reformed and brought back to harmony
with God.
"Like sheep they are laid in the grave [sheol, oblivion];
death
shall feed upon them, and the upright shall have dominion
over them in the morning; and their strength shall consume,
the grave [sheol, oblivion] being an habitation to every
one of them. But God will redeem my soul from the power
of the grave [sheol, oblivion]." Psa. 49:14,15
That sheol does not signify grave in the ordinary sense,
but as we translate it, oblivion, is clearly manifested from
this text; for sheep are not buried in graves, though all
sheep go into oblivion, are forgotten, are as though they
had not been. The Prophet is here pointing out his own
confidence in the resurrection, that God would redeem his
soul from sheol, oblivion. This is in full harmony with the
Apostle Peter's statement that "David is not ascended into
the heavens." David's soul went to sheol, to oblivion, and
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David's only hope is in the redemption of his soul from
sheol, from oblivion, to life, by the Redeemer in the resurrection.
Moreover, even those who go into oblivion like the
sheep are to come out of oblivion again, for this passage distinctly
declares that "in the morning" of the resurrection,
the Millennial morning, the righteous shall "have dominion"
over these, shall rule them, shall control them, shall
judge them in righteousness. So also saith the Apostle, "The
saints shall judge the world." 1 Cor. 6:2
"Let death seize them, and let them go down quick into
hell [sheol, oblivion]: for wickedness is in their
dwellings."
Psa. 55:15
This scripture, as ordinarily misunderstood, has been a
great stumbling block to many of God's people. They have
said, how could it be that a good man like David should
pray for his enemies to go down into hell--into everlasting
torture. A good man would not so pray, nor was this the
tenor of David's prayer. As we have seen, and are seeing, the
word sheol contains no thought whatever of fire or blaze or
torment or anything of the kind, but simply signifies oblivion,
the extinguishment of life. It follows, then that David's
prayer or desire for his enemies, the opponents of righteousness,
was a perfectly proper desire, in fullest harmony
with the laws of the most civilized peoples in this day of
greatest enlightenment. Today the laws of civilized nations
declare that all murderers shall be executed, and they generally
stipulate the supposedly easiest and least painful
methods of execution. The law is thus saying, as did David,
Let these culprits go to sheol, oblivion--let them die. Nevertheless,
God in his mercy, has redeemed, by the precious
blood of Christ, the vilest sinner as well as the least vile, for
"Jesus Christ, by the grace of God, tasted death for every
man." "He gave himself a ransom for all, to be testified in
due time." If some of our fellow-creatures are more perverse
than ourselves, it may, for aught we know to the contrary,
be because of the specially blinding influences of the Adversary
upon them (2 Cor. 4:4); or because of a more evil heredity.
[E365]
In any case, God's provision is that each individual
of the race shall have a full, fair, impartial opportunity of
deciding his choice for righteousness and life, or for unrighteousness
and the Second Death--to be returned to sheol. All
this is fully guaranteed to us in the New Covenant secured
and sealed to us through the merit of the precious blood of
Christ.
"Great is thy mercy toward me: thou hast delivered my
soul from the lowest hell [sheol, oblivion]." Psa. 86:13
The words "lowest hell" here would signify depth of
oblivion. We may not improperly consider that the Prophet
is here personating the Lord Jesus, as he does in many of his
Psalms. If so, the words "depth of oblivion" would have a
peculiar applicability. In the case of the world of mankind
death is but a sleep, and its oblivion but a temporary one,
from which there shall come an awakening in the resurrection,
as a result of the redemption. But in the case of our
Lord Jesus it was different: inasmuch as he took the place of
the sinner (Adam), death to him must have meant the extreme
penalty of sin, viz., a perpetual oblivion, except as, by
the Father's grace and power, he should be raised from the
dead, and become the Deliverer of those whom he
redeemed.
"My soul is full of troubles, and my life draweth nigh
unto the grave [sheol, oblivion]." Psa. 88:3
Here, again, sorrow nigh unto death is briefly and poetically
described.
"What man is he that liveth and shall not see death?
Shall he deliver his soul from the hand [power] of the grave
[sheol, oblivion]?" Psa. 89:48
How consistent this inquiry and its implied answer, with
all the facts of the case as we have thus far seen them, and
how inharmonious are these words with the common
thought upon the subject discussed! The common thought
is that no man, no soul, experiences death; that the moment
of dying is the moment of an increase of life; hence that the
soul is quite superior to the powers of sheol, oblivion--that
[E366]
the soul cannot die: so far from it being a question whether
it could deliver itself from the power of sheol, it passes unquestioned
that sheol has no power whatever to touch the
soul. How consistent the Scriptures and the truth! How inconsistent
the commonly accepted Platonic philosophy!
"The sorrows of death compassed me, and the pains of
hell [sheol, oblivion] gat hold upon me; I found trouble and
sorrow." Psa. 116:3
Here, again, fear of death is graphically portrayed.
"Whither shall I go from thy spirit [power--to escape or
be hidden from divine power], or whither shall I flee from
thy presence? If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there: if I
make my bed in hell [sheol, oblivion] behold, thou art
there."
Psa. 139:7,8
According to the prevalent idea, this would mean that
God is a permanent resident of the awful torture chamber
which sheol is represented to be. On the contrary, the
Prophet is taking a large view of the divine power, and telling
us the result of his researches, that there is no place in
all the universe that is not accessible to divine power. Even
the oblivion of death is subject to our Lord who declares,
"I have the keys of death and of hades [oblivion]." It is our
confidence in God--in his omnipotence--that constitutes
the basis of our faith in a resurrection of the dead.
"Our bones are scattered at the grave's [sheol, oblivion]
mouth, as when one cutteth and cleaveth upon the earth."
Psa. 141:7
The significance of this passage is very obscure, but in
any event, it has nothing in it favorable to the common idea
of a hell of torment. Young's translation renders this verse--
"As one tilling and ripping up the land, have our bones
been scattered at the command of Saul."
"Let us swallow them up alive, as the grave [sheol,
oblivion]."
Prov. 1:12
This purports to be the language of murderers, who
would destroy their victims quickly, and have them lost
from sight and from memory--in oblivion.
[E367]
"Her feet go down to death; her steps take hold on hell
[sheol, oblivion]." Prov. 5:5
Here the temptations of an evil woman, and their baneful
results, are poetically set forth: her ways lead to destruction,
to death, to oblivion.
"Her house is the way to hell [sheol, oblivion], going down
to the chambers of death." Prov. 7:27
A similar expression to the one preceding, but giving
evidence that the hell referred to is not ablaze; not a
place of torment, but the dark chambers of death, nonentity,
oblivion.
"Her guests are in the depths of hell [sheol,
oblivion]."
Prov. 9:18
Here, in hyperbolic language, the harlot's guests are represented
as dead, as having lost self-respect, and all the dignity
of manhood--undoubtedly they are in the way of
death, for the way of licentiousness hastens disease and
death. They are in the way of oblivion, not only in the physical
sense, but also in the sense of losing their respect and
influence amongst men.
"Hell [sheol, oblivion] and destruction are before the Lord:
how much more, then, the hearts of the children of men?"
Prov. 15:11
It should be noted that there is no intimation here of torture,
but quite the reverse, sheol, oblivion, is associated with
destruction.
"The way of life is above to the wise, that he may depart
from hell [sheol, oblivion] beneath." Prov. 15:24
Our translators have very nearly made this text favor
their theory that the righteous go up to heaven, and the unrighteous
go down to hell. Notice the Revised Version's rendering--
"To the wise the way of life goeth upward that he
may depart from sheol [margin, the grave] beneath." The
correct thought might properly be rendered thus--The
path of life for the wise is an upward one toward righteousness,
that they may be delivered by resurrection power
from oblivion.
"Thou shalt beat him with the rod, and shalt deliver his
soul from hell [sheol, oblivion]." Prov. 23:14
[E368]
It is, perhaps, unnecessary to explain that this passage
does not teach that after death the corpse should be beaten,
in order that the soul might be gotten out of a hell of torment.
The meaning is clearly indicated by the context. The
injunction is that the child shall not be spared the rod, if it
needs it, for in so doing years of usefulness may be added to
its life--its soul (being) shall be kept back from a premature
oblivion, and possibly be saved from the Second Death--
from being returned to oblivion.
"Hell [sheol, oblivion] and destruction are never full; so
the
eyes of man are never satisfied." Prov. 27:20
So far from this signifying a burning hell, of so immense
proportions that it never can be filled, it merely signifies
that there is no limit to the capacity of death--oblivion and
destruction cannot be overcrowded.
"There are three things that are never satisfied; yea, four
things say not, It is enough: the grave [sheol, oblivion]; the
barren
womb; the earth that is not filled with water, and the
fire that saith not, It is enough." Prov. 30:15,16
In this text, as in the one preceding it, death, oblivion, is
said to have no end of capacity, and cannot be over-filled.
"Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy
might; for there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor
wisdom in the grave [sheol, oblivion] whither thou goest."
Eccl. 9:10
Here is a most positive statement respecting hell, sheol,
oblivion. It is applicable not merely to the wicked, but also
to the righteous--to all who enter death. There is neither
good work nor bad work, neither praising God nor cursing
God, neither thinking good nor thinking ill, neither holy
knowledge nor unholy knowledge, neither heavenly wisdom
nor other wisdom, in sheol, in the oblivion of death.
How could the matter be more clearly or more emphatically
stated?
"Jealousy is cruel as the grave [sheol, oblivion]."
Sol. Song, 8:6
[E369]
Here the death state, oblivion, is represented as the very
personification of relentlessness. It swallows up the entire
human family, making no exceptions, either of character or
condition.
"Therefore hell [sheol, oblivion] hath enlarged herself and
opened her mouth without measure." Isa. 5:14
The Prophet here uses the word sheol, oblivion, to describe
the loss of prestige, the ignominy, the dishonor upon
Israel. They had become as though dead, they had passed
into oblivion in large numbers. The passage has no reference
to a literal grave, nor to a lake of fire.
"Hell [sheol, oblivion] from beneath is moved for thee to
meet thee at thy coming." Isa. 14:9
This is highly symbolic language. It is applied to Babylon.
Its fulfilment, we believe, is still future, and is now close
at hand. Great Babylon is to be swallowed up; as a stone
cast into the sea, it shall be utterly lost sight of and forgotten--
it will go to oblivion, sheol. (Rev. 18:21) This is shown
by the context, which declares, "How hath the oppressor
ceased, the golden city ceased!" See verses 4-8.
"Thy pomp is brought down to the grave [sheol,
oblivion]."
Isa. 14:11
This is a continuation of the same symbolical picture of
the destruction of mystic Babylon, whose greatness will soon
be a thing of the past--buried in oblivion, not in a burning
hell.
"Ye have said, We have made a covenant with death,
and with hell [sheol, oblivion] are we at agreement."
Isa. 28:15
Here the Lord predicts direful trouble, stumbling, and
falling amongst those who, through false doctrines, have
come to disregard the Scriptural teaching that death is the
wages of sin. This time of retribution upon those who have
handled the Word of God deceitfully, and who, instead of
being sanctified by the truth, are preferring the error, is
near at hand. Our great adversary, Satan, is taking advantage
of the prevalent misbelief on this subject to ensnare the
[E370]
world with various false doctrines presented upon this false
premise. Already he has misled the Papists and the entire
heathen world into prayers and masses for the dead, who
are believed to be not dead, but very much alive in the torments
of purgatory. And now, through Spiritualism, Theosophy
and Christian Science, the same Adversary is making
special attacks upon Protestants, who because of their
belief that the dead are not dead, are very susceptible to
these deceiving influences.
Christians of various denominations have "made a
league with death," and declare that it is a friend, whereas
the Scriptures declare that it is man's greatest enemy, and
the wages of his sin. With the grave nominal Christians are
in agreement; they consider it to be nothing but a storehouse
for the earthly body, which they declare themselves
well rid of. Failing to see that death (oblivion) is the wages
of sin, they are ready to believe Satan's falsehood, that eternal
torment is the wages of sin. Failing to believe that death
is the wages of sin, they are ready to deny that the death of
Christ was the remedy, the corresponding price, for man's
release, and thus all the gracious features of the divine plan
of the ransom and restitution are more or less obscured from
their view, and made difficult of apprehension.
"Your covenant with death shall be disannulled, and
your agreement with hell [sheol, oblivion] shall not stand."
Isa. 28:18
Thus the Lord declares that he will ultimately convince
the world of the truth of the Scripture statements respecting
death and the oblivion condition; but it shall be through a
great time of trouble and confusion to those who are under
this deception, and who refuse to hearken to the voice of the
Word of the Lord on this subject.
"I said, in the cutting off of my days, I shall go to the
gates of the grave [sheol, oblivion]. I am deprived of the
residue
of my years." Isa. 38:10
These are the words of Hezekiah, the good king of Judah,
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on whose behalf a miracle was wrought, prolonging his
days. In these words he is telling what were his thoughts at
the time of his sickness. He certainly did not mean that he
expected to have gone down to a hell of eternal torment,
and the translators were wise enough to see that if in this
instance they had translated sheol with the word hell, it
would have aroused questionings and investigations on the
part of the readers, which would the sooner have brought
the truth on this subject to general attention. The king simply
declares that he felt himself near to death, to oblivion,
and that he was about to be deprived of the residue of his
days, that he might reasonably have expected to enjoy.
"The grave [sheol, oblivion] cannot praise thee: death cannot
celebrate thee." Isa. 38:18
These are the words of Hezekiah, a part of the same description
of his sickness, his fear of death, his record of the
Lord's goodness and mercy in prolonging his life, and his
thanksgiving to the Lord. He declares, "Thou hast in love
of my soul [being] delivered it from the pit of corruption."
The translators did not render this, "Hell cannot praise
thee," else those of inquiring mind would have been asking
what kind of a hell would be referred to. Hezekiah associates
the thought of death, with oblivion, sheol, and uses
them synonymously, and then he declares, "The living, the
living, he shall praise thee, as I do this day." In other words,
a living man can praise the Lord, but if a man be dead, if
his soul be gone to sheol, to oblivion, he cannot praise the
Lord, nor in any sense recount his mercies--until, in the
morning of the resurrection, as Job declares, the Lord will
call, and all will answer him.
"Thou wentest to the king with ointment...and didst
debase thyself even unto hell [sheol, oblivion]." Isa. 57:9
This is a figurative expression. It does not refer to a hell of
torment, nor to a literal grave. It represents Israel as a
woman, negligent of her husband, the Lord, seeking alliance
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with the kings of the earth, to oblivion--to the extent
of becoming figuratively dead, oblivious to the Lord and to
the principles of his truth and the righteousness which is of
faith.
"In the day when he went down to the grave, [sheol, oblivion]
I caused a mourning...I made the nations to shake at the
sound of his fall, when I cast him down to hell [sheol, oblivion]
...they also went down into hell [sheol, oblivion] unto them
that were slain with the sword." Ezek. 31:15-17
Here the Lord, through the Prophet, is in figurative language
describing the fall of Babylon. As heretofore seen, the
fall of Babylon, and the extravagant descriptions of it, were
in part applicable to literal Babylon, and in greater part are
yet to be applied in the complete fall and collapse of mystic
Babylon. The old-time nation of Babylon was overthrown
by the Medes and Persians, and went down into oblivion,
into the death state as a nation: modern mystic Babylon is
similarly to fall into oblivion, to rise no more.
"The strong among the mighty shall speak to him, and
them that help him, out of the midst of hell, [sheol,
oblivion]."
Ezek. 32:21
Here the passing of the nation of Egypt into oblivion,
and the other strong nations which went down into oblivion
prior to the fall of Egypt, are represented as speaking to
Egypt in respect to its fall. Thus we say that history tells us
certain things--that history repeats her lessons.
"They shall not lie with the mighty that are fallen of the
uncircumcised which are gone down to hell [sheol, oblivion]
with their weapons of war." Ezek. 32:27
The Prophet is here foretelling the destruction of Meshech
and Tubal, how they also will go down to oblivion
with their weapons of war. The weapons of war can, indeed,
go down into oblivion, and we thank the Lord that no provision
has been made for their restoration, in the glorious
age that is to come, when Emmanuel shall have established
[E373]
his Kingdom, for the positive promise is, "He shall make
wars to cease unto the ends of the earth." Psa. 46:9
"I will ransom them from the power of the grave [sheol,
oblivion]; I will redeem them from death: O death, I will be
thy plagues, O grave [sheol, oblivion] I will be thy destruction:
repentance shall be hid from my eyes." Hos. 13:14
Whoever has not already been convinced that sheol does
not signify a place of torture can at least take comfort from
this text, in which the Lord declares unqualifiedly that sheol
shall be destroyed. If, therefore, anyone still believes and contends
that it is a place of torture, let him also at least admit
that it will not endure to all eternity, because the Lord himself
has decreed its destruction.
But how beautifully clear and harmonious is this entire
statement from the true standpoint! The ransom price has
already been paid by our dear Redeemer, and the work of
delivering mankind from sheol, from the oblivion of death,
merely waits until the Church, the Body of Christ, has been
selected from amongst mankind, and glorified with her
Lord and Head, Christ Jesus. As soon as the resurrection of
the Church is complete (the chief or first resurrection) then,
declares the Apostle, "shall be brought to pass the saying
that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory. O death,
where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?"
1 Cor. 15:54,55
The swallowing up of death in victory will be the work of
the Millennial age, and a gradual one, just as the swallowing
up of mankind by death has been a gradual one. Eventually
the death sentence which now rests upon mankind,
and sheol, the oblivion which it enforces upon mankind,
shall completely pass away, because all have been redeemed
from its power. Under the new conditions, under
the New Covenant, with its abundant provision, no one
shall enter death (oblivion) again, except such as will be intentional
sinners on their own behalf. This will be the Second
Death, from which there will be no hope of recovery.
[E374]
"Though they dig into hell [sheol, oblivion] thence shall my
hand [power] take them." Amos 9:2
In this strongly figurative language the Lord declares the
completeness of his power and control over mankind, referring
in particular to Israel. As a nation, no more than as
individuals, could they escape from the divine judgments,
and though they should go down into death, individually
and nationally, still all of God's promises, and threats as
well, shall be fulfilled. Nevertheless, after declaring their utter
overthrow and scattering amongst all nations of earth,
as we see it fulfilled today, the Lord's promise is (verses 11-15),
"In that day [in the dawning of the Millennial day] I
will raise up the tabernacle of David that is fallen...and I
will bring again the captivity of my people, Israel...and
they shall no more be pulled out of the land which I have
given them, saith the Lord thy God." None would think of
digging his way into a place of eternal torment; but Israel
as a nation did dig its way toward national oblivion. Yet
God shall prevent this.
"Out of the belly of hell [sheol, oblivion] cried I, and thou
heardest my voice." Jonah 2:2
The belly of hell, in which Jonah was, and from which he
cried to the Lord, and from which he was delivered, was the
belly of the great fish which had swallowed him. It was the
belly of oblivion, destruction, death, to him, had he not
been delivered from it.
"Yea also, because he transgresseth by wine, he is a proud
man, neither keepeth at home, who enlargeth his desire as
hell [sheol, oblivion], and is as death, and cannot be satisfied,
but gathereth unto him all nations, and heapeth unto him
all people." Hab. 2:5
Here, apparently, an ambitious nation is referred to, an
aggressive nation. It might be very fitly applied to the nations
of the present time, which are scouring the world to
bring smaller and less civilized nations under their control
[E375]
and patronage. Or it might refer to the Man of Sin, and his
world-wide influence, through which he draws his revenues
from all nations under the sun. In any case, the thought is
that covetousness is like death (oblivion), in that it never
has enough; its capacity cannot be satisfied.
"Hades" in the New Testament
In the New Testament the Greek word hades is the exact
equivalent of the Hebrew word sheol. We have the most absolute
proof of this from the fact that the apostles, in quotations
from the Old Testament, render sheol by the word
hades. The following are all the instances in the New Testament
in which the word hades occurs:
"Thou, Capernaum, which art exalted unto heaven,
shalt be brought down to hell [hades, oblivion]." Matt. 11:23
It certainly was not true that the city of Capernaum went
into eternal torment, neither was it true that it went into a
grave, in the ordinary sense of that word, but it was most
absolutely true that Capernaum did go into oblivion, into
destruction.
"I say unto thee, Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will
build my Church, and the gates of hell [hades, oblivion] shall
not prevail against it." Matt. 16:18
Peter had just made confession of the Lord Jesus as being
the Anointed, the Son of the living God, the Messiah. This
truth is the mighty rock upon which the entire Church of
Christ, as living stones, must be built, for there is no other
name given whereby we must be saved. Our Lord declares
Peter to be one of these living stones, and Peter declares (1 Pet. 2:5),
that all consecrated believers are similarly living
stones, built upon this great foundation rock, Christ, the
Anointed. These living stones are being built up for a habitation
of God, through the spirit, to be a glorious temple for
his indwelling, and through which he will bless all the families
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of the earth. Notwithstanding this fact, that God has accepted
believers in Christ and is counting them as members
of this future temple, he is permitting death to prevail
against his people now: they go down into death (oblivion),
apparently as do others: they therefore have need of the
Lord's encouraging assurance that death shall not prevail
against them, that the doors of oblivion shall not forever remain
closed; that as he symbolically burst the bars of death,
and came forth in resurrection through the Father's power,
so also his Church shall be delivered from the power of
death--from oblivion, and shall have share in his resurrection,
"the first resurrection." Surely this is in harmony with
all Scriptural testimony, and surely no other interpretation
of our Lord's words would make the least sense.
"Thou, Capernaum, which art exalted to heaven, shalt
be thrust down to hell [hades, oblivion]." Luke 10:15
Capernaum was highly exalted, highly privileged, in
that it had our Lord as a resident for some time, enjoyed the
privileges of his teaching, and witnessed many of his
mighty works; and this hyperbolically is termed exaltation to
heaven. But in consequence of a failure to rightly use these
high privileges and opportunities, our Lord declares that
the city would suffer corresponding depression, overthrow,
death, as a city--be cast down to oblivion. And this has
been fulfilled.
"In hell [hades, oblivion] he lifted up his eyes being in
torments." Luke 16:23
This is the only passage of the Scriptures in which there is
the slightest intimation of the possibility of thought, feeling,
torture or happiness in hades or sheol. At first it seems to
be opposed to the declaration that there is no work, nor
knowledge, nor device in sheol, and it can only be understood
from the one standpoint, viz., that it is a parable.
Elsewhere we discuss it in its details,* and show that the
rich man who went into oblivion, and yet was tortured
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while in oblivion, is the Jewish nation. Israel certainly has
gone into oblivion; as a nation it is dead, yet as a people
scattered amongst all the nations, Israel lives and has suffered
torments since the rejection of Messiah, and will so
continue to do until having filled her measure of tribulation
she shall be restored to divine favor, according to the
conditions of the divine covenant. Rom. 11:26-29
*See "What Say the Scriptures About Hell?" Address the
publishers.
"Thou wilt not leave my soul in hell [hades, oblivion]."
Acts 2:27
This is the quotation from the Psalms with which we
started our present examination--to ascertain whether it is
the soul, or merely the body, that goes to hades, to sheol, to
oblivion. This text most emphatically teaches that our
Lord's soul went to hades, oblivion, and that it was delivered
therefrom by a resurrection. The context proves that David's
soul also went to sheol, but that it has not yet been delivered
from sheol--nor can it be delivered, according to the
divine arrangement, until after all the Church, which is the
body of Christ, has first been delivered, and until the first
resurrection is complete. See vss. 29,34; Heb. 11:32,39,40.
"David, seeing this before, spake of the resurrection of
Christ, that his soul was not left in hell [hades,
oblivion]."
Acts 2:31
This positive statement is a further confirmation of what
we have just seen.
"O death, where is thy sting? O grave [hades, oblivion]
where is thy victory?" 1 Cor. 15:55
The Apostle gives this as a quotation from the Old Testament,
in corroboration of his argument that the only hope
for the dead is a resurrection--not in a resurrection of the
body, for he distinctly states that the body buried will not
be the one resurrected--(see verses 37,38): the resurrection
hope is for the soul, the being, regardless of what kind of body
God may be pleased to give it. It is not, "If your body rise not
...your faith is vain," but "If the dead rise not...your faith
is vain...then they also which are fallen asleep in Christ
are perished." (Verses 16-18) It is that which falls asleep,
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not that which turns to corruption, that is to be awakened,
resurrected.
"I am he that liveth and was dead; and behold I am alive
forevermore, amen; and have the keys of hell [hades, oblivion]
and of death." Rev. 1:18
This passage is given as an encouragement to God's
people, hence surely hell, hades, here cannot mean a place of
torment: otherwise, what would be the force of this expression?
These words imply that the Lord's people go to hades
(oblivion), whoever else may go there, and that the hope of
the Lord's people, when going down to hades, to oblivion, is
that in due time our great Redeemer shall unlock this figurative
prison-house of death, and bring forth the captives
from the tomb, from sheol, hades, oblivion. This is the
significance
of the statement that he has the keys, that is, the
power, the authority--he can open and he can shut; all
power is given into his hand.
In preaching at his first advent, he quoted the prophecy
of Isaiah respecting himself, which declares that he will
open the prison-house, and set at liberty the captives, and
declared this to be the Gospel. (Isa. 61:1; Luke 4:18) It is the
Gospel of the resurrection, the message, the good tidings of
deliverance of all the captives from the oblivion of death,
from the power of the Adversary, "him that hath the power
of death, that is, the devil." How full of meaning are these
scriptures, when viewed from the proper standpoint; how
confusing and absurd when viewed from any other standpoint,
except when the ignorance is so dense as to cover and
hide the inconsistencies!
"And his name that sat on him was death, and hell [hades,
oblivion] followed with him: and power was given unto them
over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with the sword, and
with hunger, and with death, and with the beasts of the
earth." Rev. 6:8
It would require a very strong imagination to harmonize
this statement with the commonly accepted view that hades
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is a place of torment of such immense size as to be capable
of receiving and torturing the fifty thousand millions of the
earth's population. Nor could any one see the slightest consistency
in using a symbol representing such a place of torment
riding on horseback. But the reasonableness of the
symbols, death and the state of death, destruction, oblivion,
unconsciousness, stalking through the earth and sweeping off
large proportions of the human family, is entirely consistent.
We content ourselves here with merely showing this
reasonableness, without offering any explanation of the
symbols.
"Death and hell [hades, oblivion] delivered up the dead
which were in them: and they were judged, every man according
to their works." Rev. 20:13
As a result of the first trial in Eden, the death sentence
passed upon all men. Probably fifty thousand millions have
already gone into sheol, hades, oblivion; and hundreds of
millions
whom we still call alive are not, in the true sense of the
word, alive, but are nine-tenths dead, under the operation
of the death sentence. As a result of the ransom price paid at
Calvary, an opportunity for a new trial is to be granted to
each member of the human family; and only a favored minority
get such opportunity and trial during this age appointed
for the selection of the Church. This means the
rolling back of the original sentence of death, and the
bringing of all mankind into a condition of judgment or
trial for eternal life, on the basis of his own works of obedience
or disobedience. This scripture shows us that at the
proper time not only will the dead (those under sentence of
death, who have not yet gone into the tomb) be granted a
full trial or judgment, to determine their worthiness or unworthiness
of life everlasting, but also all of those who have
gone into sheol, hades, oblivion, shall also come forth
from
unconsciousness, from the sleep of death, to be judged. This
scene of judgment is located in the Millennial age, which is
the "day of judgment" for the world, as the Gospel age is
the day of judgment for the Church.
[E380]
"And death and hell [hades, oblivion] were cast into the lake
of fire--this is the Second Death." Rev. 20:14
Great confusion must necessarily come to all who would
attempt to interpret hades as meaning a place of eternal torment,
when considering this passage of Scripture, but how
reasonable and harmonious it is from the correct standpoint!
The lake of fire (gehenna) represents utter destruction,
the Second Death, which shall utterly destroy all evil
things. The "death and hades" here pictured as destroyed in
the Second Death are the same as we have just described in
connection with the preceding 13th verse. The present state
of condemnation, the result of Adam's transgression, is
styled "death and hades"--the dying condition of those now
called the living and the oblivious sleep of the fully dead.
As the 13th versedeclares that all men shall be brought
out of these conditions in due time for trial, so this verse declares
that Adamic death, and the sleep in oblivion, consequent
to it, shall be no more, after the Millennial age; and
it explains why, viz., because they shall be merged into or
swallowed up by the Second Death condition. In the future
no one will die for Adam's sin: it will be out of consideration
as a factor in the trial of the future. The only death
thereafter will be the Second Death, which will affect only
the sinner who commits the sin, not the parents, not the
children. In that day he that dies shall die for his own sin.
"The soul that sinneth it shall die." Although such will
have weakness of the Adamic nature from which they will
never recover, because of refusal to use the means and opportunities
placed within their reach during the Millennium
by the Mediator of the New Covenant, yet under that
New Covenant those inherited weaknesses will not be reckoned
against them, being fully offset by their Redeemer's
sacrifice. Hence from and after the time when this full opportunity
of the Millennial age is offered to each individual,
although Adamic weaknesses and imperfections will
still be upon them, their death will not be counted as being
a part of Adamic death, but as being a part of the Second
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Death--because their failure to make progress will be the
result of their own wilfulness, and not the result of Adam's
transgression, nor of their own heredity to its weaknesses.
We have now examined every text of Scripture containing
the words sheol and hades, and have ascertained that it is
the souls of men that at death pass into this condition, and
that it is a state or condition, and not a place, although
sometimes figuratively spoken of as a place, a prison-house,
from which all prisoners shall come forth in the resurrection
morning. We have found that it is figuratively described as
dark, silent, and the statement freely made that there is no
knowledge, nor device, nor wisdom, nor work, nor cursing,
nor praise to God on the part of any who enter this state or
condition of oblivion. Their only hope is in the Lord--that
having redeemed their souls (beings) from destruction by
the sacrifice of his own soul, he shall in due time deliver
them, call them forth from oblivion, in such bodies as may
please him, and to more favorable conditions than the present,
when his wrath, the curse, is passed away and the Millennial
era of blessing has been ushered in.
It is not surprising that the translators of our Common
Version English Bible, and most commentators, being influenced
by erroneous views respecting the nature of man,
and the time and place of his reward and punishment, and
misapprehending his condition in the interim of death,
have rendered and glossed certain passages of the Scriptures,
in harmony with their misconceptions, which are to
some extent stumbling blocks to those seeking the truth. It
is proper, therefore, that we consider some of these stumbling
blocks, and remove them from our path; but as we
must not interrupt our subject proper, these will be left for
examination, with other popular misconceptions of Scripture,
in our next volume of the SCRIPTURE STUDIES series.
[E382]
A LITTLE LIGHT
'Twas but a little light she bore,
While standing at the open door;
A little light, a feeble spark,
And yet it shone out through the dark
With cheerful ray, and gleamed afar
As brightly as the polar star.
A little light, a gentle hint,
That falls upon the page of print,
May clear the vision, and reveal
The precious treasures doubts conceal.
And guide men to an open door,
Where they new regions may explore.
A little light dispels the gloom
That gathers in the shadowed room,
Where want and sickness find their prey,
And night seems longer than the day,
And hearts with many troubles cope
And feebler glows the spark of hope.
O, sore the need that some must know
While journeying through this vale of woe!
Dismayed, disheartened, gone astray,
Caught in the thickets by the way,
For lack of just a little light
To guide their wandering steps aright.
It may be little we can do
To help another, it is true;
But better is a little spark
Of kindness, when the way is dark,
Than one should walk in paths forbidden,
For lack of light we might have given.
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