Spirits of the Dead
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Now!
Alexander Bogomoletz, a Russian scientist, once said
that a man should live to be at least 150 years of age. He actually
prepared a serum that was designed to retard the aging process
of the connective tissues of the body. Unfortunately, the learned
doctor died at the age of 64, just 86 years short of the goal
he had set for himself and for all mankind. And we still do not
understand the mysteries of life and death
No one has yet discovered the fountain of youth,
and neither has anyone been through that veil of death to return
and tell us what it is like on the other side. The only authentic
information we have on this subject is found in the great book
of God, the Bible. Here are unfolded the answers to questions
which have troubled the hearts of men and women down through the
ages. Piercing through the froth of human emotion and superstition,
it will bring satisfying assurance for those who fear the future
and who wonder what happens to the soul five minutes after death
To introduce this subject, we must find the answer
to one great, basic question. If we can answer it correctly, all
the other questions about death and the soul will open up like
flowers in the sun. The really important issue is this: What kind
of inherent nature does man possess? How did God create him? Does
he have a mortal nature or an immortal nature? According to the
dictionary, the word "mortal" means "subject
to death," and the word "immortal" means "not
subject to death." Simply stated then, we are asking whether
God created man with a nature that could die or with the power
of an endless life
The answer to this significant question is found
in Job 4:17, "Shall mortal man be more just than God? Shall
a man be more pure than his maker?" There is the word we
are looking for! Man is mortal. He is subject to death. God did
not make him without the capacity to deteriorate and die. The
fact is, only God has that inherent power of eternal existence.
He is immortal. And the only time that word is used in the Bible,
it refers to God. "Now unto the King eternal, immortal,
invisible, the only wise God, be honour and glory for ever and
ever. Amen." 1 Timothy 1:17
The human family was not invested with a natural
immortality. The Word of God assures us that God alone has that
kind of nature. He is the author of life, the great source of
all existence. From Him every other life in the universe has been
derived. "King of kings, and Lord of lords; Who only hath
immortality, dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto;
whom no man hath seen, nor can see: to whom be honour and power
everlasting. Amen." 1 Timothy 6:15, 16
At this point someone may raise another question
about the subject of immortality. Is it possible that man has
a mortal body but an immortal soul living in the tabernacle of
flesh? Perhaps the "real" person is not the body
at all but the undying soul-entity dwelling within the mortal
body. We need not puzzle over this point, because it is concisely
settled by a number of Bible texts.
THE SOUL CAN DIE
God said, through the prophet, "Behold, all
souls are mine: as the soul of the father, so also the soul of
the son is mine: the soul that sinneth, it shall die." Ezekiel
18:4. This firmly establishes that the soul is definitely not
immortal by nature, or it could not experience death. Since the
word "immortal" means "not subject to death,"
there could be no question of death for a soul possessing an innate
immortality. At least ten other verses affirm exactly the same
thing: the soul is not naturally immortal
Jesus, the great Master Teacher, declared that the
soul could die, in Matthew 10:28. "And fear not them which
kill the body... but rather fear him which is able to destroy
both soul and body in hell." By this clear statement, Christ
places the matter beyond all question. The soul can die and will
die in the fires of hell. Therefore, it cannot be immortal by
nature
This is shocking to a lot of people. The traditional
position has been exactly the opposite of this. How upsetting
it is to learn that in all the 1700 biblical occurrences of the
words "soul" and "spirit" not once are
they referred to as being immortal or undying
Where, then, did the doctrine come from? Most of
us have heard about the "soul that never dies" from
our earliest years of childhood. One thing is certain: it did
not originate in the Scriptures. The truth is that it came directly
from pagan tradition and mythology. The ancient Chinese ancestor-worship
was rooted in the belief that the soul did not die. Egyptian pyramid
hieroglyphics reveal that the doctrine of a naturally immortal
soul was basic to their worship of the sun god. In India, where
I lived for years, the Hindus believe strongly in reincarnation
and transmigration of the soul. Darkest African voodoo ceremonies
are built around the concept of an undying soul
There is not one text that supports such a teaching
in the Christian Bible; nevertheless, the Word does tell us how
the doctrine got started and who preached the first sermon on
the subject. Read Genesis 3:1-4, "Now the serpent was more
subtil than any beast of the field which the Lord God had made.
And he said unto the woman, Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat
of every tree of the garden? And the woman said unto the serpent,
We may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden: But of the
fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, God hath
said, Ye shall not eat of it, neither shall ye touch it, lest
ye die. And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely
die."
Please notice that somebody disagreed with God. The
Creator had declared that sin would bring death, but Satan said
the opposite, "You will not really die." That was
the first great-granddaddy lie that was ever told, and the one
who told it has been trying to uphold it ever since. That original
sermon on natural immortality has been repeated many times through
the years, often by preachers and theologians who ought to know
better. A few years ago the Reader's Digest featured an
article entitled "There Is No Death," by one of America's
most popular Protestant ministers. The great preacher said exactly
the same thing that the great deceiver said to Eve, "You
don't really die at all. It may seem like death, but you
really keep on living and know more afterward than you did before."
Can that doctrine be dangerous? Indeed, it involves
much more than just promulgating a false statement. The implications
of this satanic teaching are far-reaching and eternal in consequence.
Millions will be lost because they do not understand the truth
about the nature of man. Deception on this point opens a door
which can flood the life with darkness and actual demon control.
The only protection we will ever have against this insidious danger
is to know the truth about death and the soul.
THE SPIRIT RETURNS TO GOD
The clearest and most concise inspired definition
of death was written by Solomon, "Then shall the dust return
to the earth as it was: and the spirit shall return unto God who
gave it." Ecclesiastes 12:7
Immediately we are struck by the word "return."
After death everything seems to go back from whence it came. The
dust returns to the earth from which it was taken, and the spirit
returns to God who gave it. Death is just the opposite of creation
It is easy for us to picture the process of bodily
decay and decomposition. We understand very well that the physical
components of the body are the very same as the earth itself.
When it is buried, the body reverts to the chemical elements of
the ground from which the Creator took it in the beginning
But what about the spirit which goes back to God?
That is not so easy to understand. There is not a man in the world
who can explain it with human wisdom. Nevertheless, many verses
in the Bible throw light on this crucial point. James wrote, "For
as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works
is dead also." James 2:26. The word "spirit"
has a marginal reference which reads, "or breath."
This is very important. The actual root word in the Greek is "pneuma,"
a word which means "breath" or "air."
We take our English word "pneumonia" from "pneuma"
because it is a disease of the lungs, or of breathing. We have
pneumatic tires, also derived from pneuma, because they have air
in them. But that same Greek word "pneuma" also has
another meaning. It means "spirit." For example,
the Greek term for "Holy Spirit" is "Hagios
pneumatos," "Holy Breath" or "Holy Spirit."
This brings us to a very interesting conclusion.
The words "breath" and "spirit" are
often used interchangeably in the Bible. Job said, "All
the while my breath is in me, and the spirit of God is in my nostrils."
Job 27:3. Now, it doesn't take a high degree of intelligence
to know that Job was describing the same thing by the words "breath"
and "spirit." Man has only breath in his nostrils.
In fact, that is what God breathed into man's nostrils
at the time of creation. "And the Lord God formed man of
the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath
of life; and man became a living soul." Genesis 2:7
Now the picture begins to clear up. When Solomon
described the spirit returning to God, he had to be referring
to the breath, because that was what God gave in the beginning,
and therefore, it was the only thing that could now "return"
to the One who gave it. The marginal note for Genesis 7:22 refers
to the breath of life as "the breath of the spirit of life."
The psalmist describes death in these words, "Thou
takest away their breath, they die, and return to their dust.
Thou sendest forth thy spirit, they are created." Psalm
104:29, 30. Here the order is reversed, and their breath returns
to God at death. Solomon said the spirit returns. Here God gives
the spirit to create, but Genesis says He gave the breath to create.
It only makes sense when we understand that the two words are
used interchangeably and mean the same thing
Please take note that this "spirit of life"
is not necessarily the same as the Holy Spirit, neither is the
"breath of life" the same as the regular air we breathe.
This breath or spirit is the special, life-giving power of God
which makes the body a functioning organism. Read Genesis 2:7
again, and try to visualize the act of creation. "And the
Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground." We have
no difficulty with this. We can see that dead body, perfectly
formed and containing the very elements necessary for life. But
there was no life. The heart wasn't beating. The blood
was there, but it wasn't flowing. The brain was there,
but it wasn't thinking
Then God added one more thing to the body He had
made. He "breathed into his nostrils the breath of life,
and man became a living soul." Genesis 2:7. Do not miss
the significance of these wordsy are often misconstrued.
God did not put a soul into the body. He added only one thingath
or spirit. Then, as a result of the body and breath uniting, man
BECAME a soul
Millions have accepted the false, traditional view
that God put a soul into the body to create man. This is based
entirely upon the common, erroneous doctrine of all non-Christian
religions. In the Bible, except in poetical or allegorical usage,
the soul does not go in and out of the body; neither does it have
an independent existence outside of the body. Because the Greek
word "psuche," meaning "life," has sometimes
been translated as "soul" in our King James version,
some have drawn wrong conclusions; but only because they apply
a false definition to the word "soul." Millions have
been taught that the soul possesses a natural immortality, and
every time they read or hear the word they assume something that
is totally false and unbiblical. Not even one time in the Bible
is the soul referred to as being immortal or undying
The fact is, the soul is the conscious life which
resulted when God added the breath or spirit to the body. A simple
illustration will help us see this truth more clearly. Let us
liken the body to a light bulb. The electric current flowing into
that bulb represents the breath of life which God put into the
body, and the light itself will represent the soul which man became
after the breath joined the body. As we look at the shining light
we see a perfect representation of the completed creation. Now
we press the button and turn the light off. What has happened?
The current has left the bulb, just as the breath leaves the body
at death. Now where is the light? Did it go up into the electric
socket? No, it simply ceased to exist when the current separated
from the bulb. Then let us ask, where is the soul when the breath
separates from the body? There simply is no soul until, in the
resurrection, God restores the breath of life to the body
That should not sound so strange to us, now that
we have discovered how everything "returns" at death
to the way it was before. Before creation, man did not exist in
some disembodied form. There was no personality, no conscious
emotions before God added the breath to the body. At that moment
man "became a living soul." If the soul came to be
as a result of that union, when does the soul cease to be? Surely
as a result of the breaking of that union
Suppose we have two things before us, boards and
nails. We take a hammer and drive the nails into the boards, making
a box. Now we have three things instead of two; we have boards,
nails, and a box. Later, we carefully pull out the nails and lay
them down beside the boards. Again, we have only two things before
us: boards and nails. What happened to the box? There is no box,
because it requires the two things together to cause it to be
In the same way God started with two things, the
body and the spirit. When He put them together, the soul "became"
came into being, it began to exist. At death, the wise man tells
us, the spirit returns to God and the body returns to dust. And
nowhere in the Bible are we told that any soul survives the body,
or continues to exist without a body. The soul, or the life, has
no existence without the power of God residing in the body. At
death that power is removed; it returns to God; and the state
of that man is exactly what it was before the breath joined the
body. That means no life, no consciousness, and no personality
Even animals are referred to as souls in the Bible,
because they have the same power from God to make them live (Revelation
16:3). The wise man wrote, "For that which befalleth the
sons of men befalleth beasts; even one thing befalleth them: as
the one dieth, so dieth the other, yea, they have all one breath;
...All go unto one place; all are of the dust, and all turn to
dust again." Ecclesiastes 3:19, 20. This does not mean,
of course, that man and animals have the same ultimate end. There
will be a resurrection and judgment for God's moral creatures,
but life comes only from God, whether it be human or animal. And
that life is often referred to in the Bible as the soul.
WHEN ARE THE RIGHTEOUS REWARDED?
With this background we are now prepared to see what
actually happens to the person who dies. In Peter's sermon
on the day of Pentecost, he made this strong statement about David,
who had been dead for over 1,000 years: "For David is not
ascended into the heavens." Acts 2:34. Now think of this
for a moment. David had long ago departed this life, and though
often wayward, had received the assurance of forgiveness and salvation.
Why, then, was he not enjoying the bliss of heaven ten long centuries
after his passing? The question is answered in verse 29 where
Peter explains, "Men and brethren, let me freely speak
unto you of the patriarch David, that he is both dead and buried,
and his sepulchre is with us unto this day."
The inspired Peter said David was right out there
in his grave, and had not yet ascended to heaven. How interesting!
If the man after God's own heart had not received his reward
1,000 years after death, what about all the other good people
who had lived and died up to that time? They, also, were resting
in their graves, awaiting the call of God in the resurrection
Jesus assured the people of His day, "Thou
shalt be recompensed at the resurrection of the just." Luke
14:14. Again, He said, "For the Son of man shall come in
the glory of his Father with his angels; and then he shall reward
every man according to his works." Matthew 16:27. There
is no equivocation here. In simple, direct language Jesus declared
that no one would be rewarded until the resurrection takes place
at His second coming. This means that none of the righteous dead
have gone to heaven so far. All are waiting in their graves for
the judgment and the end of the world. Almost the last words of
the Bible confirm this fact. "And, behold, I come quickly;
and my reward is with me, to give every man according as his works
shall be." Revelation 22:12. This last-day reward is further
described by Paul in 1 Corinthians 15:53. "And this mortal
must put on immortality." When does it happen? "In
a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump."
Verse 52
This settles the issue about the reward of the righteous
without any question, but what about the wicked? When will they
be punished for their sins? The amazing answer is found in 2 Peter
2:9, "The Lord knoweth how to deliver the godly out of
temptations, and to reserve the unjust unto the day of judgment
to be punished." There it is! The wicked are reserved somewhere
until the day of judgment arrives. Where are they reserved? Jesus
answers the question, "Marvel not at this: for the hour
is coming, in the which all that are in the graves shall hear
his voice, And shall come forth; they that have done good, unto
the resurrection of life; and they that have done evil, unto the
resurrection of damnation." John 5:28, 29
Our Lord made it exceedingly plain that everyone
would be reserved in their graves until called forth in the resurrection
to receive either life or damnation. Not only is this good theology,
it is also good sense. Obviously, no one can be punished until
after they are judged. Justice demands that this be done. Even
the most unjust earthly judge would be impeached for doing otherwise.
Suppose a man came before the judge charged with stealing, and
the judge said, "Put him away for ten years and then we
will hear his case." No! No! That could never be! And would
the judge of all the earth do so in dealing with the wicked? Never!
The judgment would be a farce in such a casewould have
no meaning
The wonderful message of the Bible is that both good
and bad are sleeping in their graves until the resurrection day.
At that time they are brought forth to face the judgment, after
which punishments and rewards are assigned. Job said, "So
man lieth down, and riseth not: till the heavens be no more, they
shall not awake, nor be raised out of their sleep. O that thou
wouldest hide me in the grave, that thou wouldest keep me secret,
until thy wrath be past, that thou wouldest appoint me a set time,
and remember me! If a man die, shall he live again? all the days
of my appointed time will I wait, till my change come. Thou shall
call, and I will answer thee: thou wilt have a desire to the work
of thine hands." Job 14:12-15.
DEATH IS A SLEEP
In harmony with all the rest of the Bible, Job describes
a period of unconscious sleep in the grave before awaking to receive
his reward. It agrees with Daniel, who spoke of the coming of
Christ in these words, "And at that time thy people shall
be delivered... And many of them that sleep in the dust of the
earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame
and everlasting contempt." Daniel 12:1, 2
There is a reason that so many inspired writers speak
of death as a sleep. It is a perfect description of the state
of the dead. When a tired man lies down at night he is immediately
wrapped in sleep. As far as he is concerned, the very next moment
he is awakened by the rising sun. He is totally unconscious of
anything that transpired while he slept. So it is with the sleep
of death
Lazarus had died. Jesus said to His disciples, "Our
friend Lazarus sleepeth; but I go, that I may awake him out of
sleep. Then said his disciples, Lord, if he sleep, he shall do
well. Howbeit Jesus spake of his death: but they thought that
he had spoken of taking of rest in sleep. Then said Jesus unto
them plainly, Lazarus is dead." John 11:11-14
Here is a classic example of the true Bible teaching
about death. Christ called death a sleep. Later, He stood by the
rock-hewn sepulchre of His friend and cried out, "Lazarus,
come forth!" He did not say, "Lazarus, come down."
Lazarus was not up in heaven, nor was he anywhere else, except
inside the walls of his tomb. In response to the call of Jesus,
he awoke from his sleep of death and walked out into the sunlight
Many exaggerated tales have circulated about people
who came back from the dead, but this is the most authentic story
on record. There is absolutely no doubt that Lazarus had been
dead for four days. His sisters protested when Jesus ordered the
stone to be rolled away from the door. Martha said, "Lord,
by this time he stinketh." John 11:39
Most modern accounts of patients who resuscitate
from heart failure include dramatic recitals of glorious views
of heaven. What did this righteous man have to say about his four
days of death? Did he report celestial visions of heavenly reward?
Not a word. He had been asleep, just as Jesus had indicated. It
had been like a moment of oblivion
By the way, what kind of unspeakable punishment would
it have been to bring Lazarus back into this dark world after
being in the presence of God? Surely he would have begged to return,
had he truly been enjoying the rewards of the righteous. A resumption
of earthly life would have been worse than the horror of hell
in comparison to ninety-six hours in Paradise. Certainly our Lord
would never have been guilty of playing such a trick on His friend
Lazarus
Why do we find it difficult to believe the simple
terminology that Jesus used in describing death? Certainly we
have no problem in understanding the nature of sleep. Suppose
a man lies fast asleep on a park bench. So soundly does he sleep
that he is totally unaware of the stealthy approach of an attacker.
In another moment he lies dead in a pool of blood. Now, according
to the popular view of death, this man who knew nothing while
he was sleeping, suddenly knows everything as his soul leaves
his body. But how could that be true? Jesus said death is a sleep.
If the man knew nothing while sleeping, how could he know any
more after death? Christ's words would have no meaning
if we twist them to mean whatever we want to believe
We are not left to wonder about the nature of this
death-sleep. Many Bible writers give detailed explanations of
what it is like. "Put not your trust in princes, nor in
a son of man, in whom there is no help. His breath goeth forth,
he returneth to his earth; in that very day his thoughts perish."
Psalm 146:3,4
Out of all the puzzling aspects of death which could
be discussed, the inspired writers most often talked about the
unconscious nature of it. Never once do we find any of the exciting
descriptions of life after death which mark the modern version
of the doctrine. Theology has adopted its teaching directly from
the pleasing forms of pagan worship. David said, "He returneth
to his earth; in that very day his thoughts perish."
Solomon wrote, "For the living know that they
shall die: but the dead know not anything, neither have they any
more a reward; for the memory of them is forgotten. Also their
love, and their hatred, and their envy, is now perished; neither
have they any more a portion for ever 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 goest." Ecclesiastes
9:5, 6, 10
If one deliberately tried to produce stronger words
and expressions to support a totally dreamless sleep in death,
he would be hard put to match these words of the wise man. Just
suppose for a moment that the same forceful statements were made
to assert consciousness after death. In other words, suppose Solomon
had said, "Their love, and their hatred, and their envy
will continue... for there is work and knowledge and wisdom in
the grave whither thou goest." Such an unambiguous statement
would rightly be the end of all debate on the subject. Who could
argue with it?
But here is the incredible truth! Not only does the
Bible contain no such statement, but it repeatedly declares the
opposite! Yet people continue to believe only what they want to
believe. Passing over the explicit verses given by numerous inspired
authors, which tell the truth about death, multitudes blindly
follow empty traditions learned from parents or pastor
Again we read, "For the grave cannot praise
thee, death cannot celebrate thee: they that go down into the
pit cannot hope for thy truth. The living, the living, he shall
praise thee, as I do this day." Isaiah 38:18, 19. Would
not the righteous dead praise God if they were ushered into heaven
at their death? David repeats the same timeless truth, "The
dead praise not the Lord, neither any that go down into silence."
Psalm 115:17. "For in death there is no remembrance of
thee: in the grave who shall give thee thanks?" Psalm 6:5.
DO THE DEAD EVER RETURN?
Why do so many resist the obvious import of these
biblical statements? Strong traditional biases may be part of
the answer, but there is much more involved. Many sincerely believe
that they have physical, eye-witness proof that the dead do return.
They have the witness of their own senses that they have actually
conversed with departed loved ones. What can be said about these
manifestations? They can give the place, date, and hour when they
were confronted by dead relatives or friends in exactly the same
form as when they lived
Shall we discount all such psychic appearances as
mental aberrations of emotional, unstable individuals? Hardly.
The fact is that forms do appear, and they have been verified
countless times. But on the basis of the infallible Word of God
we can categorically reject them as being the spirits of the dead.
The dead cannot return; neither do they have any post mortem existence
in any conscious, living form whatsoever
Then who is appearing in these bodily forms and making
lying claims in the name of the innocent dead? Who else but the
father of lies who built his first deception around the issue
of death? He boldly contradicted God when he said to Eve, "Ye
shall NOT surely die." When death did follow, Satan tried
to make the survivors believe it was only an illusion. By impersonating
those who died, Satan has persuaded millions that he was right
and God was wrong. Accepting the testimony of their eyes and ears
above the testimony of the Bible, many have become expert in calling
up the spirits in seances
Often Satan exploits the grief of those who have
lost relatives and tries to draw them into his spiritualistic
snare by pretending to be their own special loved one. What an
overwhelming delusion! Only those who have fortified their minds
with the truths of the Bible will be able to stand against this
type of attack
Let me share with you an incredible example of Satan's
mode of operation. A dear friend of mine served for many years
as a missionary in Africa. While he and his wife were living in
an isolated mission station, their three-year-old daughter was
struck down by a fatal tropical fever. They buried the little
girl on a hillside across from their home. A few days after the
funeral the mother was sitting in her kitchen when the door burst
open, and her little daughter ran across the room to fling herself
into her mother's arms. Can you picture yourself under
that kind of traumatic horror? And to top it all, the little girl
cried out, "Mommy, I'm not dead! I'm not
dead!"
Fortunately, that mother knew the Bible truth about
death, and God gave her the power to pray instantly for deliverance
from that Satanic masquerade. When she called on the name of Jesus,
the form disappeared
Is this an exceptional case? Unfortunately, no. Experiences
like this have been repeated over and over again. Doubtless there
are some charlatans who create their own illusions, but we have
to recognize that very often the prince of all evil is manipulating
the minds of people by his supernatural expertise in deceit
Think of the implications of this for a moment! Millions
have literally submitted their lives to the control of demons
believing that they were being advised by loving relatives. Can't
you see the monstrous irony of the situation? And can't
you see how easily Satan can even start controlling the lives
of Christians who have not understood the true Bible teaching
about death? The only safety for anyone is the Word of God. Yet
the stage is set for the majority of Catholics and Protestants
to be swept away by the final manifestation of Satanic power
because they have been taught a lie about the state of the dead.
PUNISHMENT AND REWARDS IN THE RESURRECTION
Consider how confusing it would be if rewards and
punishments are now being applied. What purpose would be served
by a resurrection? Why even have a resurrection? Obviously each
soul would already have a determined fate, and the farce of some
make-believe final judgment would be totally meaningless. All
the pious assurances heard at funerals about loved ones in heaven
are simply repetitions of Satan's first lie to the human
family. The portrayal of imaginary, immaterial souls flying away
from the body at death is not a source of comfort to grieving
relatives. Paul described the time when the righteous dead will
be with the Lord in 1 Thessalonians 4;16-18, and concluded with
these words, "Wherefore comfort one another with these
words."
Here is a perfect, inspired picture of true comfort,
and we need to understand clearly what word Paul was referring
to that would bring such comfort. The two previous verses give
us the words, "For the Lord himself shall descend from
heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with
the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first. Then
we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with
them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall
we ever be with the Lord."
Paul here describes without any limitation the way
and means by which we go to be with the Lord. Don't overlook
the word "so" in his statement. It means "in
this way." By that little word Paul precluded every other
way of being with the Lord. When he described the coming of Jesus
and the resurrection of the saints as being the manner and means
of being with the Lord, he automatically excluded all other means
of doing it. Then he admonishes us to "comfort one another
with these words."
I repeat that there can be no comfort in the pseudo-Christian
concept that some invisible, intangible entity leaves the body
at death to be punished or rewarded. Is it reassuring to believe
that unsaved relatives are suffering the torment of unquenchable
fire? Is there solace in the picture of loved ones looking down
from heaven upon the heart-breaking circumstances of those left
behind? No wonder Paul was so specific in describing the second
advent of Jesus and resurrection as the only way anyone can be
with the Lord after death and, incidentally, as the only way to
be comforted at their departure
Paul's magnificent declaration points up the
glorious fact that death and the grave are not the end. There
will be an awakening from the sleep of death. The righteous will
receive the gift of immortality, but it will all happen "In
a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the
trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible,
and we shall be changed. For this corruptible must put on incorruption,
and this mortal must put on immortality." 1 Corinthians
15:52, 53. Jesus said, "Marvel not at this, for the hour
is coming in the which all that are in the graves shall hear his
voice, And shall come forth; they that have done good, unto the
resurrection of life; and they that have done evil, unto the resurrection
of damnation." John 5:28, 29
All the dead will rise to face the great decrees
of the judgment. Whether they went to sleep 1,000 years ago, or
five minutes before Jesus appears, it will seem as only a fraction
of a second
Some have questioned the way in which Christ can
restore the broken, decayed bodies of all the deceased of past
ages. Some were blown to bits in explosions, others were burned
up in fires, and many went down into the depths of the sea. Will
it be any problem for the mighty Creator of life to bring back
every soul and restore each personality? None whatsoever. He who
numbers the hairs of our head and counts the sparrows in the sky
will have no difficulty in restoring the identity of each individual
We may not be able to understand the process, but
we can believe in it anyway. There are many things, such as television
and computers, which are mysteries to the average person who benefits
from them, but that doesn't keep us from believing in them.
If most of us are baffled by the complexity of common electronics,
we should not expect to grasp the secrets of resurrection power.
Nevertheless, we can have complete faith that God can and will
restore life to all the dead.
THE THIEF ON THE CROSS
Now let us look at one of the chief objections which
has been raised against the Bible doctrine of death and the soul.
There are a few ambiguous texts which can be understood only as
they are viewed in the light of all the other verses on the subject.
One example of this is found in the experience of the thief on
the cross. At first glance it seems that Jesus was telling the
dying criminal that he would go to heaven on the very same day
he died
In the context, the thief asked Jesus, in the last
moments of his life, "Lord, remember me when thou comest
into thy kingdom. And Jesus said unto him, Verily I say unto thee,
To day shalt thou be with me in paradise." Luke 23:42, 43
Does this contradict all the other verses we have
read on this subject? It certainly sounds as though Jesus and
the thief would go that very day into God's presence. Let's
allow other texts to clear up the mystery. Three days after he
spoke to the repentant thief, Jesus met Mary near the open tomb.
As she fell to worship at His feet Jesus said, "Touch me
not; for I am not yet ascended to my Father: but go to my brethren,
and say unto them, I ascend unto my Father, and your Father; and
to my God, and your God." John 20:17
This statement of Jesus brings us to a puzzling enigma.
If He had not yet gone to heaven, how could He have assured the
thief three days earlier that they would go there together that
same day? And please take note that Paradise and the Father's
throne are in the very same place. John said the tree of life
was located "in the midst of the paradise of God."
Revelation 2:7. Then in Revelation 22:2 he explained that the
tree overarched the river of life, which in turn, flowed out from
the throne of God. This definitely places God's presence
in Paradise. Obviously, if Jesus had not gone to His Father by
the time He was resurrected He could not have ascended on the
day He died three days earlier
Another seeming contradiction appears when we remember
that Jesus and the thief did not even die the same day. The apostle
John tells us that because it was illegal for anyone to hang on
the cross over the Sabbath, soldiers were sent to remove the bodies
before the Sabbath began. "Then came the soldiers, and
brake the legs of the first, and the other which was crucified
with him. But when they came to Jesus, and saw that he was dead
already, they brake not his legs." John 19:32, 33
Jesus died on Friday, the preparation day, but the
thieves were very much alive when they were removed from their
crosses just before the Sabbath started. Their legs had to be
broken, probably to prevent their escape and to hasten their deaths.
It seems quite certain that they did not die before the Sabbath
began at sundown. This means they did not die the same day Jesus
died. How, then, could Jesus promise to be with either of them
in Paradise on that day?
These two mysteries are cleared up quickly when we
consider the context of Luke 23:43. We have to be aware that the
original manuscripts of the Bible were written in one continuous
line of script. There was no separation of words, sentences, verses,
or chapters. In 1611 when the King James Version was translated,
scholars separated the words, inserted punctuation marks, and
divided the script into verses and chapters. These men were not
inspired, although they generally did a tremendous work in their
assigned task. By necessity they had to put in commas often to
give meaning to the translated words. In Luke 23:43 they added
a comma before the word "today," which makes Jesus
say, "Verily I say unto thee, today shalt thou be with
me in paradise."
In this instance the comma should have been placed
after the word "today" instead of before it. Then
the sentence would read, "Verily I say unto thee today,
Thou shalt be with me in paradise." This would bring the
record into perfect harmony with all the rest of the Bible
In other words, Jesus was saying to the thief, "I
give you the assurance todayn it seems that I can save
no one, when my own disciples have forsaken me and I am dying
as a condemned felonive you the assurance today that
you will be with me in Paradise."
Is this tampering with the sacred record? No. The
translators were no more divinely inspired than we are. Only the
original authors were inspired. Placing the comma after the word
"today" is just as true to the original text as placing
it before the word. The only difference is that one way brings
total harmony in the scriptures and the other brings hopeless
contradiction. It takes no supernatural insight to decide which
place is correct for the comma
Keep in mind that the thief was only asking to be
remembered when Jesus came into His kingdom. He did not request
any reward on that day of his approaching death. In the same vein,
we find the great apostle to the Gentiles anticipating his departing
this life, "For I am now ready to be offered, and the time
of my departure is at hand. I have fought a good fight, I have
finished my course, I have kept the faith. HENCEFORTH there is
LAID UP for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous
judge, shall give me AT THAT DAY: and not to me only, but unto
all them also that love HIS APPEARING." 2 Timothy 4:6-8
Just as the receptive thief and the anointed Paul
both focused their hope of eternal reward upon the coming of Christ's
kingdom, so may we also be remembered in that day
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