Sunday, 5 April 2026

The Resurrection of Christ

by Augustus Montegue Toplady

“Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up”. JOHN ii. 19.

We have been considering the most awful and affecting transaction that ever came to pass; I mean the death and crucifixion of the Lord of Glory. But here we are presented with a brighter scene, and reminded us of that joyful and ever-memorable morning, when our Omnipotent Redeemer burst the inclosure of the tomb; when the sepulchre could no longer detain its illustrious prisoner; and when the Sun of Righteousness, who had so lately set in darkness, triumphantly emerged from His sad, though short eclipse, and rose to set no more.

According to our blessed Lord’s own prediction, related in the above Scripture, when pointing to Himself, He says, “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up;” meaning His own body; and intimated that the Jews should be permitted, in some sense, to destroy it, but that He would raise it up in three days.

The reason why the Son of God styled His body a temple was, because, as the temple of Jerusalem was built by direction of God Himself, so was the human nature of Christ. Hence He is represented in the Psalms, as saying to the Father, “a body hast Thou prepared Me;” and His manifestation in the flesh, was in consequence of His Father’s appointment, as well as of His own voluntary engagements.

As the temple was solemnly consecrated and set apart for the worship and service of God, so was the humanity of Christ. During the whole time of His continuance on earth, His life was one continued series of devotion and obedience. It is a peculiar part of His character, and what can be said of no one else that ever lived, that He did no sin, but on the contrary, perfectly fulfilled all righteousness, and always did the things that pleased the Father. As God, though present everywhere, was more immediately present in the temple, so the human nature of Christ was the immediate habitation of the Deity; for in Him, as the apostle says, dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily. But, though the Jewish temple was, in a peculiar manner, the seat of the divine residence, yet God was in no sense united to that temple; whereas, between the Deity and the human nature of Christ, there was an incomprehensible union; by virtue of which, He was God and man in one person. His indwelling divinity manifested itself in every word He spake, and in every miracle He wrought; and this it was, namely, His Godhead, which imparted infinite merit and efficacy to His obedience, sufferings, and intercession, as Mediator.

The temple of Jerusalem was supposed to be guarded, in a particular manner, by angels; neither is it unlikely, that hosts of those exalted spirits should hold their invisible stations in a place where God Himself vouchsafed to give such special manifestations of His presence. Christ, likewise, as man, through the whole course of His humiliation below, was attended by angels, who were the servants of His will, and the guardians of His person. Hence David prophesied concerning Him, “God shall give His angels charge concerning Thee, to keep Thee in all Thy ways; and in their hands shall they bear Thee up.” Accordingly we find, that after His temptation in the wilderness, angels came and ministered unto Him; and, during His agony in the garden, an angel appeared to strengthen Him. When He rose from the dead, an angel descended to roll away the stone from the door of the sepulchre: and when He was ascended into heaven, He was, no doubt, escorted to His throne by myriads of exulting angels.

The temple was a building of unequalled beauty and magnificence: and the Psalmist, speaking of Christ as to His human nature, says of Him, “Thou art fairer than the children of men”: and indeed it is reasonable to think, that the body of Christ, which was formed by the supernatural agency of the Holy Spirit, and which was taken into union with the Godhead, must have been transcendently fair and beautiful.

It is true that the prophet Isaiah, foretelling the sufferings of Christ, and the treatment He should meet with, says, “He hath no form nor comeliness; and when we see Him, there is no beauty that we should desire Him.” And elsewhere, “that His countenance was marred more than any man’s, and His form than the sons of men.” But this refers to His appearance under His sufferings, when He was emaciated with fasting, oppressed with grief, and disfigured with wounds; when, to use the words of Jeremiah, “His face was foul with weeping, and on His eyelids sat the shadow of death.”

The temple was a type of Christ, as it was a place where prayer was made, and sacrifices were offered; so, in His human nature, the blessed Redeemer offered Himself up in sacrifice for our sins, and now intercedes for us at the right hand of God. As the temple was the place to which all the Jews were to resort, and in which they were to present their addresses to the Majesty of Heaven, Christ, in like manner, is He to whom we draw near by faith; in whose name we are to pray; and on whose availing merits we are to depend for every blessing, both of grace and glory.

Our Lord’s prediction was, that the Jews should be permitted to destroy this temple; that is, to put Him to death. This they often attempted to do, during the course of His public ministry; and at last, they effected their design.

As I largely considered the circumstances of His crucifixion in my last discourse, and shewed what methods of unexampled cruelty they took to destroy Him; I shall not repeat here what has been said already; but pass on to the declaration of Christ, that, after the Jews had destroyed the temple of His body, He would raise it again in three days. It is observable that Christ speaks of Himself as the person by whose power He should be raised from the dead. “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up.” This is one of the many proofs which the Scriptures give us of His true and proper divinity. No power, inferior to that of God, can raise the dead; only that almighty energy which gave life at first, can restore it when lost. If therefore Christ was the author of His own resurrection, it unavoidably follows, that, in point of omnipotency, and consequently in point of Deity, He must be equal to the Father and the Blessed Spirit.

As in His life, which was spent in teaching mankind the way to safety and happiness, He acted as the prophet of His church; and, in His death, by which our sins are expiated, and our salvation secured, He acted as the priest of His church; so by His rising again, he manifested the truth of His kingly office. He proved Himself to be, what the apostle calls him, the Prince of Life; that the keys of the grave were in His own keeping, and demonstrated His ability to save to the uttermost, all that come unto God by Him.

The great event of His Resurrection, so fundamental to our faith and happiness, was foretold both by the prophets, who prophesied of His Incarnation; and by our Lord Himself, long before He suffered. The Psalmist, speaking in the person of the Mediator, said, “Thou wilt not leave My soul in hell”; that is, in the state of the dead; “neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption.” To the same effect is that passage in the 110th Psalm, relative to the Messiah; “He shall drink of the brook by the way, therefore shall He lift up His head.” By His “drinking of the brook,” is meant, that He should be overwhelmed with the most bitter and unprecedented sufferings; and by “lifting up His head,” is signified, that He should rise superior to all His afflictions; and particularly that He should evidence the divinity of His person, the infinite merit of His atonement, and the truth of His doctrines, by raising Himself from the bed of death, and triumphing over the king of terrors in his own dominions.

And as His resurrection was prophesied of, so was it also variously typified under the Old Testament dispensation. Isaac was, in this respect, a type of Him. When he was bound and laid upon the altar, and Abraham’s hand was lifted to slay him, he was suddenly reprieved by a voice from heaven; and therefore, Isaac is said, by the apostle, to have risen from the dead, in a figurative sense. And it is observable, that this, his deliverance from impending death, happened on the third day after his father had received a command to slay him.

In like manner, Joseph’s release from the dungeon, and advancement to the regency of Egypt; King Hezekiah, who went up well to the temple on the third day after death was threatened him; the miraculous deliverance of Daniel from the lion’s den; and the return of the children of Israel to Jerusalem after the Babylonish captivity; were all so many types of the resurrection of Christ. To which we may add the prophet Jonas, who was another. Our Lord Himself made particular mention of him; and observed, that as Jonas was three days and nights in the whale’s belly, just so long, and no longer, should the Son of Man be in the heart of the earth. And, as the death of Christ was typified, under the law, by several of the Jewish rites; so also was His resurrection. Thus, for instance, we read in the 14th chapter of Leviticus, that, in order to the legal purification of a leper, two live birds were to be brought to the priest; one of the birds was to be killed, and the other let go. By that which was killed, Christ was shadowed forth as a dying Redeemer; by that which was let go, He was typified as a rising conqueror, in both which capacities it was requisite He should be found, in order to our being cleansed from the leprosy of sin.

The resurrection of Christ, as it was, in itself, the most glorious event that ever came to pass, was also productive of the utmost advantage to us. It serves to confirm and strengthen our faith in Him, as the true Messiah and Saviour of sinners. He was buried in a cavern hewn within a rock, which had but one way for entrance, and that, blocked up with a stone of prodigious weight and size. The stone was likewise sealed for the greater security, and a watch, or company, consisting of sixty soldiers, was set to guard the sepulchre, night and day; notwithstanding all which obstructions, He raised again the temple of His body, which the Jews thought they had destroyed; and every precaution they took, in hope to prevent His rising, only added to the glory of His triumph, and, as the apostle’s words are, “declared Him to be the Son of God with power.”

His resurrection is matter of endless consolation to believers, as it was a proof that the sacrifice of Himself, which He offered to God, and the atonement He made for our offences, was accepted in the court of heaven.

Temporal death, no less than eternal, is the wages of sin; and, Christ being sinless, could not have died, if He had not graciously taken our sins upon Himself, and engaged to expiate them. And, as He died in a public capacity, as our substitute, so He rose again in a public capacity, as our representative. He was delivered for our offences, says St. Paul, and raised again for our justification; inasmuch as He thereby gave the finishing hand to our redemption, and proved that His sufferings answered the end for which He underwent them; and that by them, our transgressions were cancelled, and our iniquities done away. Whereas, supposing Christ had not risen, we could have had no solid reason to conclude that He had fully satisfied His Father’s justice for the sins of men. The merit of His death, and His reconciliation of His people unto God, could only be evidenced by the release of Christ, their Surety, from the prison of the tomb.

The resurrection of Christ is a motive to holiness. Hence the apostle says, “If ye be risen with Christ,” that is spiritually so, “seek those things that are above, where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God”; and elsewhere he thus argues. “We are buried with Him, by baptism, into death; that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life.” “Knowing,” says St. Paul, “that Christ, being raised from the dead, dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over Him; for in that He died, He died unto sin once; but in that He liveth, He liveth unto God. Likewise also reckon ye yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God, through Jesus Christ our Lord.”

The resurrection of Christ was an earnest of our resurrection in the day of judgment. So sure as Christ received His body again, so sure shall we receive ours, when the last trumpet summons the earth and sea to give up their dead. Now, says the apostle, is Christ risen from the dead, and become the first fruits of them that slept. For since by Adam came death; by man, that is, by the Man Christ Jesus, came also the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, as temporal death devolved on all through disobedience; even so in Christ shall all be made alive; all, wicked and righteous, shall be quickened and raised up by His power, from the dust of the earth.

As Christ, after He left His tomb, ascended into heaven, and took possession of His glory; so shall all who trust in Him, be glorified together with Him. Their souls are glorified immediately after death; their souls and bodies shall be glorified conjointly in the resurrection of the just; for, as it is in scripture, “If we believe that Jesus died and rose again; even so them also which sleep in Jesus, will God bring with Him;” which exactly harmonizes with that magnificent prophecy, Isa. xxvi. 19, where Christ is represented as saying to the church, “Thy dead men shall live; together with (or as it may be rendered, as sure as) My dead body, shall they arise. Awake and sing, ye that dwell in the dust; for thy dew is as the dew of herbs, and the earth shall cast forth her dead.”

Hence we are said to be joint-heirs with Christ; that is, to be heirs of the same glory which He is invested with, and of which all His people shall shortly be partakers; and, as the apostle says, “If the spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the dead, dwell in you, He that raised up Christ from the dead, shall also quicken your mortal bodies, by His spirit, which dwelleth in you.” So that, whether believers look back on their Saviour’s resurrection, or, by faith, look forward to their own, they will have the utmost reason to break out into the apostle’s triumphant song, “O death, where is thy sting; O grave, where is thy victory?” The ground of which rejoicing is contained in that promise of the Lord, who says, “Because I live, ye shall live also.”

As the human nature of Christ was, in the highest sense, a temple of God, so, in a subordinate sense, are the bodies of those that believe in Him. They are temples of His, not by nature, but by grace. Adam, in the state of innocence, was, by creation, a temple holy to the Lord, and continued such, till by transgression he fell. From that moment the living temple was desecrated and profaned; darkness took place of light: sanctity was exchanged for impurity; and the heart of man, from being an habitation of God, became like Rome, the mystic Babylon, “the hold of every foul spirit, and the cage of every unclean and hateful bird.” But, in regeneration, the tables are happily reversed: God’s converted people return to Him, their first husband; and are made to say, with the church in Isaiah, “Lord, Thou wilt ordain peace for us; for Thou also hast wrought all our works in us: O Lord our God, other Lords beside Thee have had dominion over us; by Thee will we make mention of Thy name only.” Thus, through the efficacious influence of God’s Holy Spirit, apostate man is brought back to his first love; and restored to his proper owner. The temple is consecrated anew, the idols are dethroned, and God resumes His seat. Impenitence, unbelief, and the love of sin, fall before the ark of divine grace, while repentance, faith, and sanctification, with all the other fruits of the Holy Ghost are implanted, take root, and spring up to everlasting life.

To those in whom this grand spiritual revolution has begun to be affected, are those declarations of the apostle addressed, 1 Cor. iii. 16. “Know ye not, that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you?” And again, Eph. ii. 22. “You also are builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit.”

If not only Christ’s natural body, but likewise every member of His mystic body is thus a temple sacred to God, and inhabited by Him; what an effectual motive is this, to deny all ungodliness and worldly lusts, and to live soberly, righteously, and godly in the present world; talk we of the dignity of human nature? Alas! It is little more than an empty name, till we are restored to the image of God. There our baseness ends; and there true dignity begins; for, what excellence can equal the resemblance of God? And can we experience real dignity till our hearts are the residence of Deity? — Again, talk we of man’s “natural obligations to virtue?” I grant, that we have, by nature, so much light left us as to distinguish, in many instances, between moral good and moral evil: I grant, likewise, that we are by the law of nature, bound to avoid the one and pursue the other; and, if all did so, it would be better for society, and conduce to the happiness of man’s life below. But still, to be “temples of God,” is something higher, and something more: it is the soul’s conformity to the great source of good and mental subjection to the Spirit of grace. When He takes possession of the heart, and we experience the guidance and government of Him that created us; then we are temples of His building — are the seats of His spiritual empire, and our cry is, with Paul, “Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?” or, with Augustine. “Lord, work in me that which Thou commandest, and then command what thou wilt.”

Prudential motives may induce us to the performance of actions which have the appearance of virtue; but virtue is then only virtue indeed; righteousness is then only truly such, when it flows from a principle of love to God, wrought in the soul by His renewing grace. And where love to Him is thus wrought there, obedience will surely follow: for, to be temples of God implies a peculiar relation to God; even such a relation to Him as cannot possibly consist with a life of wilful iniquity. This the apostle more than intimates, 1 Cor. vi. 19, 20, “What! Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost, which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own? for ye are bought with a price; therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God’s”. And elsewhere, 2 Cor. vi. 16, 17, “What agreement hath the temple of God with idols? for ye are the temple of the living God: as God hath said, I will dwell in them, and walk in them; and I will be their God, and they shall be My people; wherefore, come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord; and touch not the unclean thing.” Thus the saints are temples, and this is the consequence of their being such. But, as our Saviour foretells, that the temple of His body would be destroyed, or put to death; so will the temple of the believer’s body be shortly taken down, and return to dust.

When the Christian has run the race set before him, and finished the work appointed for him to do, the earthly house of his present tabernacle will be dissolved, and thrown aside: the veil of the temple being rent in twain, and the temple itself reduced to a mass of inanimate clay, the soul that lodged in it flies to the holy of holies, and travelling out from the body, gets home to the Lord.

But, as one said once upon his deathbed, “To die is not to be lost.” Short is the victory of the grave. Every departing saint may, with a little variation, adopt the triumphant words of our blessed Master, and say to sickness, say to pain, say to death itself, “Destroy this temple; but, at the appointed season, God, to whom it belongs, will raise it up.” This was the language of Job, and Job’s support; “I know that my Redeemer liveth, and that He shall stand at the latter day upon the earth; and though after my skin worms destroy this body,” that is, though my frame will be destroyed, and moulder away, one part after another, “yet in my flesh shall I see God; whom I shall see for myself, and mine eyes shall behold”; these very eyes which I now have, shall see Him, “and not another’s; though my reins be consumed within me.” He who built the bodies of His people, knows and observes every particle of their dust; and will rebuild them more glorious than at first: for, if that which was done away, was, in many respects glorious; when it is put together again, to remain forever, will exceed in glory.

When the bodies of God’s elect have slept the time allotted, the Lord will suddenly come to His temples, He himself will 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. Of this the ancient Jewish church had as positive assurances given them, as we have under the gospel. Thus Isa. xliii. 5, 6. “Fear not, for I am with thee: I will bring thy seed from the east, and gather thee from the west. I will say to the south, Give up; and to the north, Keep not back; bring My sons from far, and My daughters from the ends of the earth.” “As for me,” says David, “I shall behold thy presence in righteousness, and when I wake up after thy likeness, I shall be satisfied with it.”

When God calls home His people to glory, they may, without presumption, sing as the Psalmist did on another occasion, “I will lay me down to sleep in peace, and to take my rest; for thou, O Lord, makest me to dwell in safety.”

Death is a long sleep; but, to them, it is a sweet sleep, and a safe one: though their flesh sees corruption, it rests in hope, and their dust is precious, for it was ransomed by the blood of Christ, sanctified by the Spirit of God, and is part of the Saviour’s mystic body: for which reasons it shall not be lost, but will rise from the bed of death incorruptible, when the morning of the resurrection dawns, and the trumpet sounds.

Author

Augustus Montague Toplady (1740-1778), was educated at Westminster School and Trinity College, Dublin, he was converted through a Methodist lay preacher, took Anglican orders in 1762, and later became vicar of Broadhembury, Devon. In 1775 he assumed the pastorate of the French Calvinist chapel in London. He was a powerful preacher and a vigourous Calvinist, bitterly opposed to John Wesley. He wrote the Historic Proof of the Doctrinal Calvinism of the Church of England (2 vols., 1774) and The Church of England Vindicated from the Charge of Arminianism (1769). His fame rests, however, on his hymns, e.g., “A debtor to mercy alone”; “A sovereign Protector I have”; “From whence this fear and unbelief?”; and especially “Rock of Ages” (appended to an article calculating the “National Debt” in terms of sin). This article is taken from Toplady’s own manuscripts.

The Resurrection

by Guy Prentiss Waters

The resurrection of the dead is anathema to the modern mind. Rudolf Bultmann, one of the most famous New Testament scholars of the twentieth century and a theological liberal, declared, “An historical fact which involves a resurrection from the dead is utterly inconceivable.” To the Apostle Paul, however, Christianity without the resurrection of Jesus from the dead was inconceivable (see 1 Cor. 15:1–11). In company with the other Apostles, Paul proclaimed the resurrection as the great fact upon which Christianity stands or falls.

How do we tell jaded and skeptical people about the resurrection? Luke’s account of Paul’s ministry in Athens (Acts 17:16–34) gives us much-needed direction. When Paul arrived in Athens, he preached at the synagogue, but he also went to the “marketplace,” where philosophers and teachers congregated to exchange ideas (v. 17). Paul persevered through initial misunderstanding and mockery, and he accepted an invitation to address the Areopagus, an august body of retired public officials.

In that address, Paul first gently but firmly exposes one of the fundamental and fatal weaknesses of polytheism. The altar “to the unknown god” was the Athenians’ standing acknowledgment that their religion was insufficient and inadequate. Paul then presents to the Athenians the solution that they need but never found on their own—the worship of the one true God.

Paul tells the Athenians about the sovereign and all-sufficient God who made and upholds the world and all that is in it (vv. 24–25). He also tells them about themselves (vv. 26–29). God has made all human beings from “one man,” and He has furthermore “determined allotted periods and the boundaries of their dwelling place” (17:26). The entirety of our lives is lived inescapably before the omnipresent God (17:28). We are, furthermore, His image-bearers (“offspring”; vv. 28–29).

For these reasons, we should “seek God” in the hopes of “find[ing] him” (v. 27). We should not try to think of God or worship Him with images (v. 29). As sinners, however, the best we manage is to “feel [our] way,” that is, to grope in the dark (v. 27). God is always present to His creation, but His sinful creatures willfully refuse to come to Him. Even so, because God has created and sustains us, we will one day have to give an account before Him (see v. 31).

Thus far, Paul has reasoned with the Athenians based upon what they know of God and of themselves from the creation. He then turns to a particular fact of history—God raised a man from the dead (v. 31). That God has lifted the sentence of death from Jesus and publicly vindicated Him means that Jesus was a righteous man. That is to say, He is unlike any other person who walked the face of the earth. This righteous Jesus had claimed on earth that He would judge all people (see John 5:19–29). The resurrection vindicated this claim. In raising Jesus from the dead, God publicly affirmed Jesus’ claim to judge the world at the end of the age.

Because this judgment is certain and imminent, Paul pleads with his hearers to “repent” (Acts 17:30), to turn from the service of idols to the worship of the triune God. The resurrection and the worldwide preaching of the gospel has brought to an end the “times of ignorance,” during which God was pleased to withhold final judgment (v. 30). The days of comparative but culpable Gentile blindness have come to an end. Only the gospel can dispel the ongoing ignorance and blindness in which unrenewed humanity finds itself.

Paul’s mention of the resurrection yields two very different results. Some mock and sneer—the very idea that one’s body would have immortal existence was laughable to the Greek mind (v. 32a). Others, however, want to hear more and, trusting in Christ, follow Paul (vv. 32b–34).

Proclaiming the resurrection of Jesus did not, on this occasion, win Paul the accolades of the Athenian intelligentsia. Neither did it yield a visibly impressive host of converts in Athens. But Paul did not preach the resurrection because it was popular. He preached it because it was true. The resurrection of Jesus confirmed the coming judgment but also secured blessing for the undeserving. However God is pleased to use this truth in the lives of unbelievers, the church’s task remains the same—to tell others that Jesus Christ was raised from the dead.

Dr. Guy Prentiss Waters is James M. Baird Jr. Professor of New Testament at Reformed Theological Seminary in Jackson, Miss., and a teaching elder in the Presbyterian Church in America. He is featured teacher for the Ligonier teaching series Facing the Last Enemy, and author of several books, including Facing the Last Enemy: Death and the Christian, How Jesus Runs the Church and The Life and Theology of Paul.

How Does Christ's Resurrection Shape Our Hope?

By Dr. Joel R. Beeke 

  • Scripture Reading: 1 Corinthians 15:1–28, 42-44, 50-58 
  • Psalter 267: all 
  • Psalter 364: all 
  • Psalter 28:3-5 
  • Psalter 31:1, 4, 6, 7 

We all live by hope. If you are an unbeliever, you put all your hope in this life. You get some satisfaction out of life, due to God's common grace, but ultimately your hope is vain, for it will perish. If you are a believer, you build your hope on a different foundation: you build your hope on the sure, unchanging foundation that Christ has been raised from the dead. For you, life is like a long trip or a spiritual pilgrimage to reach Christ and to be with Him in glory. Everything about your hope depends on Christ being alive and almighty. 

Let us look more closely at how our hope is affected by Christ's resurrection. In the process, we will examine our hope, our life, and our attitude to the resurrection. We will pursue this theme via various portions of 1 Corinthians 15, which is Scripture's most profound, doctrinal defense of the church's confession, “I believe in the resurrection of the dead." Let us specifically focus on verses 19-20: "If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable. But now is Christ risen from the dead and become the first fruits of them that slept." 

With God's help, we wish to address the question, How does Christ's resurrection shape our hope? We will consider three points: a momentary yet miserable hope, a magnificent yet moderate hope, and an unmovable yet moving hope. 

1. A Momentary Yet Miserable Hope 

The Corinthian Christians did not deny the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, for as Paul says in the opening part of 1 Corinthians 15, hundreds of living witnesses testified (v. 8) of the resurrection. Indeed, the resurrection was already part of the apostolic tradition. 

Some Christians at Corinth, however, had difficulty believing in a general, physical resurrection of the dead. They could not believe that all believers would be raised like Christ and that their bodies would be reunited with their souls and become like the glorious body of the Lord Jesus. 

These Christians were influenced largely by Greek philosophers who believed that, when we die, our souls enter another world but our bodies perish forever. Unlike many philosophers today, they believed that though the body perished, the soul was immortal. Plato, for one, taught that the body is imprisoned by the soul. When someone dies, Plato said, his soul escapes the body like a bird escapes from its cage. For Greek philosophers, the soul was everything; the body, nothing. It was even less than nothing; it was the soul's prison. 

Influenced by this Greek philosophy, some Christians at Corinth did not view the bodily resurrection as a privilege. For them, resurrection was purely spiritual. 

Today, many modern theologians embrace a parallel error. They say Christ's resurrection refers only to the resurrection of the spirit or the teaching of Christ. They claim that the body of Jesus still sleeps in the tomb, but His soul goes marching on. Only Christ's teaching, doctrine, and spirit are still alive, they say. They believe only the doctrine of Christ is immortal. That doctrine, not the Person of the resurrected Christ, will one day overcome evil and Satan. 

This theology is altogether mistaken in denying the bodily resurrection. It defies the express teaching of the Bible. When Paul instructs the Christians at Corinth about the resurrection, he first strongly asserts that Christ died, was buried, and rose again, all according to the Scriptures (vv. 3-4). 

Under the Spirit's enlightening wisdom, Paul then tells the Corinthians the consequences of disbelieving in the bodily resurrection of Christ. In verse 13, he says, “But if there be no resurrection of the dead, then is Christ not risen." The apostle basically says: If you do not believe in a physical resurrection and deny that the saints will once receive a body like Christ's, then Christ has not been raised, for He is the head of the body, and believers are members of His body. You cannot separate Him from His church. If the church will not be raised, then Christ is not raised, either. If we believe only in a spiritual resurrection after we die, then we can only believe in a spiritual resurrection of Christ. 

The consequence of this denial, Paul says, is the absence of hope and salvation: "And if Christ be not risen, then is our preaching vain, and your faith is also vain. Yea, and we are found false witnesses of God; because we have testified of God that he raised up Christ" (vv. 14–15). If Christ was not raised from the dead, there is no gospel to preach to the lost. There is no gospel of salvation, of deliverance from death, and of eternal life. If Christ was not raised, we have no message of forgiveness, no message of victory over death and hell, no message of eternal life. If Christ was not raised, we have only a momentary hope, which will not carry into eternity.

Christ's resurrection from the dead proves that His sacrifice has been accepted. It proves that His sacrifice has met every requirement of the justice and holiness of God, that God was satisfied by the work of Jesus. If Christ was not raised, the sin question is not settled, the devil is not defeated, atonement is not made, and there is no salvation for lost sinners. F. F. Bruce says, "If Christ had not been raised from the dead there would be no New Testament, no Christian faith, no Christian church, and the story of Jesus of Nazareth, crucified under Pontius Pilate would never have been told. The disciples, in their mourning after Christ's crucifixion, in their perplexity and unbelief, would have wandered off and found some other pursuit." 

If Christ was not raised, our preaching is nothing but a lie, and your faith is in vain. All your trust and reliance upon Christ is an empty hoax. You trust nothing more than a bruised reed. You will be deceived in the end. 

We recently witnessed the space shuttle docking with the space station. After they docked, everything in the space station could come into the shuttle, and all the supplies from the shuttle could come into the space station. A remarkable union brought the two together in the darkness. This was Paul's idea of faith: it docked the sinner with Christ. In the midst of the darkness and hopelessness of sin, we look to Christ and dock with Him by faith. As a result, all that is in us is transferred to Him, and all His righteousness and good works come through the channel of faith and are credited to us. 

The space shuttle brought new batteries and sources of energy to the space station, which had lost much of its power. Likewise, when Christ and the sinner come together, the power of Christ gives the sinner power over sin. It enables us to fight against sin and brings power into the heart. What a blessed docking this is between a hell-worthy sinner and the living Christ! As soon as that connection is made, life purges the sinner's bad record and gives power to the sin-fatigued heart. 

Paul says here, in effect, that if Christ was not raised, we have no one to dock into. We have no hope of union. We become like any pagan in the street, trying our best to get to heaven by our own efforts. Then we are still sinners in the darkness, wandering further and further into outer darkness, with no hope of union with someone who can save us. What a terrible consequence! 

Your only hope, Christian, of having your abhorrent records blotted out and all that Christ did written in its place and credited to you is burned into ashes if Christ was not raised! Your hope of gaining power over your habits that are so self-destructive and of getting power from above is gone! It is dashed into pieces! You are still mired in your sins. 

Paul goes on to say in verse 18 that those who have fallen asleep in Christ have also perished, if Christ was not raised. In other words, those who died hoping in Christ were deceived in their hope. They have not entered into the place of eternal bliss. 

Paul concludes in our text: "If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable" (v. 19). If Christ was not raised from the dead, He can only help us believers while we are alive. He cannot be our Savior in death and our Redeemer after death. We can expect nothing from Him after this life if He cannot lead us through the dark valley of the shadow of death into the kingdom of His Father. If that is so, we are of all people most miserable. We believers are the most pitiable and unhappy people in the world, for we have placed all our hope upon the Savior's redemptive work—in vain. We have given up the world with all its pleasures and follies and friendships—in vain. We have exposed ourselves to the hatred, the reproach, and the persecution of the world—in vain. We have been chastised by God—in vain. We have been harassed and tempted by the devil—in vain; we have fought against the world, sin, and Satan—in vain. We have prayed—in vain. If Christ was not raised from the dead, all our hope, our religion, and our Christianity is a colossal mistake. It is nothing but a dream. Of all people, we are to be most pitied, for we are going to lose both this world and the world to come. 

If Christ was not raised from the dead, we have no hope or expectation for a better world. We have no future. Abraham and all other believers have sought in vain for a city which has foundations. Moses and the children of Israel have chosen in vain to suffer affliction with the people of God rather than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season. In vain we have counted all things loss except for the excellence of Christ. In vain we have denied ourselves and crucified our flesh. In vain we have been oppressed; in vain we have hoped and believed. 

But did you notice Paul's emphasis on the little word if? Paul says, "If Christ be not risen, then our preaching is vain...our faith is vain. If He is not risen, then those who have fallen asleep in Jesus have perished. If Christ is not risen, then of all men we are most miserable!" The apostle iş saying in effect, “But God be thanked and blessed; it is not so!" Verse 20 says, "But now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the first fruits of them that slept." 

2. A Magnificent Yet Moderate Hope 

The truth of Christ's resurrection changes everything. Instead of having only a miserable, mistaken hope, we may now say that we are the most blessed people on earth, for we have a magnificent hope. Now we of all people are most happy and hopeful, for God has accepted the sacrifice of His Son, and there is no condemnation to those who are in Him. Our faith is not in vain but is the power of God unto salvation. Now preaching is full of power and comfort. Now those who have fallen asleep in Jesus, expecting salvation from Him, have entered into eternal bliss! Now all their sins are forgiven and buried in Jesus' empty grave. 

This resurrection hope is like a beautiful, glistening diamond in our hands, which we can view from several different angles to appreciate some of its breathtaking beauty. Let's look at some angles of resurrection hope: 

• Consider the resurrection's magnificent Christ-centered hope. Our resurrection hope is built on Christ's resurrection in three important ways: 

First, the resurrection of Christ is God's validation of Christianity itself Without Christ's resurrection, Christianity would have been just another sect, quick to die out. But because Christ's tomb was empty on Resurrection Sunday, believers can triumphantly declare: "Death has lost its sting, sin is subdued, the world is overcome, and Satan is trodden underfoot. Christ, who was delivered for our offenses, was raised again for our justification” (Rom. 4:25)! 

On a tour of Israel, we approached the supposed sepulcher of Jesus and read on the door: "He is not here, for he is risen" Matt. 28:5). Our guide said, "This is the best news you'll hear in all of Israel or the world." He was right! It is no wonder, then, that the New Testament believers greeted each other with "The LORD is risen indeed!" Christ's resurrection was the crowning event of His church — the V-Day. It guarantees our salvation as believers. Luther says, "Christ's death and resurrection are the two hinges on which the door of salvation swings open." 

Have you ever cried out in awe: "Jesus is alive! Every stone is rolled away. Redemption is accomplished. Eternal life is secured. Justice is satisfied. The curse of the law is buried. Debt is cancelled. God's amen on His Son's work has resounded throughout the universe, for Jesus is alive. Christianity is objectively, certifiably real and true!" 

Second, the resurrection of Christ is God's guarantee of our resurrection and our ultimate conformity to Christ. Paul says in 1 Corinthians 15:20-22, "But now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the firstfruits of them that slept. For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive." He elaborates further in verses 45-49: "And so it is written, The first man Adam was made a living soul; the last Adam was made a quickening spirit. Howbeit that was not first which is spiritual, but that which is natural; and afterward that which is spiritual. The first man is of the earth, earthy: the second man is the Lord from heaven. As is the earthy, such are they also that are earthy: and as is the heavenly, such are they also that are heavenly. And as we have borne the image of the earthy, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly." 

Paul clearly states that our resurrected bodies as believers will resemble Christ's resurrected body. He underscores that in 1 Corinthians 13:12: "For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then I know even as also I am known." The apostle John is even more explicit in 1 John 3:2: "Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and 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." 

The resurrected body of Jesus teaches us much about our resurrection bodies. The risen Jesus appeared in the same body that had been crucified. His wounds were apparent; His new body was very much like what He had prior to death. He was recognizable. Although on some occasions, such as with the disciples on the road to Emmaus, people did not immediately recognize Him, some familiar mannerism or expression eventually showed them that He was indeed the Lord. Also, His body could be touched by Thomas or other disciples. He was no disembodied spirit or ghost. He ate food with His disciples after the resurrection on more than one occasion, as recorded in Luke 24 and John 21. 

Our ultimate end is to be like Christ; therefore, the Holy Spirit is increasingly conforming us to the image of God's dear Son. Paul says in Romans 8:11, "But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you." The Spirit of Christ is a marvelous guarantee of our ultimate destiny in His work in our lives. But even more marvelous is the truth that our existence will be ultimately like that of the risen Christ. That is what we, who are believers, can look forward to. Third, Christ's resurrection guarantees that we will forever focus on Christ in glory. Revelation 7:15 says Christ will sit on the throne of glory forever in the midst of His people. Forever they will bask in His smile, worship at His feet, feast in His presence, bathe in His glory, and delight in His communion. Though they will enjoy the fellowship of saints and angels, Christ will be their all in all (Col. 3:11). 

• Consider the resurrection's magnificent conscience hope. The resurrection of Christ is not just the objective cornerstone of our salvation; it is also the subjective hope of our conscience. The Holy Spirit usually leads sinners to that hope by first convicting them of their sin and making room within them for Christ in His resurrection power. He then shows them their miserable hope in themselves. He makes us feel how poor, miserable, wretched, and naked we are in ourselves. We learn what it means to be without God. We learn what it means to be created for eternity, yet be separated from God and from His favor. We feel what it means to be deprived of God's presence and His love. 

At such a time, we say to ourselves, "Is there anyone as miserable as I am-without hope, without God, without Christ in the world?" We are convicted by our sin. We feel the curse of the law, the judgment of God, the solemnity of our unreadiness to meet Him. We see that we will be miserable as long as we are without Christ, for to be without Christ is to be without holiness, without righteousness, without a Savior, without an advocate, without a Mediator between God and us. To be without Jesus is to be under the curse of the law and under the wrath of God.

Every God-taught soul feels the need of Christ. They feel an unbearable burden on their shoulders which no one but Chrişt can take away. Normally, the Holy Spirit leads them to see themselves under the wrath of God and to realize that no one but Christ can save them from the wrath to come. They feel the sentence of death in their soul. They are brought to a crossroads: either Christ must justify them or they must burn in hell forever! They must either have Christ to bring them to God, or they must be shut out of God's presence forever. Like a martyr's last words at the stake, they cry out, "None but Christ!" So, if Christ has not risen from the dead, if the justice of God has not been satisfied, if no Savior lives to save sinners, if no blood cleanses from all sin, we would be of all people the most miserable. 

But Christ has risen from the dead! That means that our Savior lives and can save us — even to the uttermost. That means the justice of God has been satisfied and salvation is offered freely to lost and wretched sinners. 

Some believe that Paul's words, "Christ has been delivered up for our offenses, and has been raised for our justification," refer to a custom in the Middle East. If you want an article displayed in the market place, you can bargain with the merchant before deciding what to pay for the article. You then write out your price and lay that on the article. The merchant can either pick up the price or ignore it. If the merchant picks up the price, the offer is accepted.  

Well, dear friends, Jesus Christ was delivered up for our offenses on Good Friday! He paid the full price for our sin and iniquity. And on resurrection morning, the Father accepted the price; therefore, the resurrection is the cornerstone of our salvation. Without it, we would not know that God was satisfied; we would not know that our sins were blotted out. God the Father accepted the price of His Son! So now, Paul says, "Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's elect? It is God that justifieth. Who is he that condemneth? It is Christ that died, yea rather, that is risen again, who is even at the right hand of God, who also maketh interceşsion for us” (Rom 8:33-34). 

When we understand these things by faith and the Holy Spirit applies them to our heart, we miserable sinners are set free in our consciences and we overflow with magnificent and joyous hope in Christ Jesus, which more than compensates for all our losses in this life! 

• Consider the resurrection's magnificent corporate hope. Many of us have heard from childhood the question: "What is the chief end of man?" We readily answer: "Man's chief end is to glorify God and to enjoy Him forever." You and I strive to glorify and enjoy God in this life. No doubt we also look forward to how we might glorify and enjoy Him after death. But I fear we tend to stop at that point. We identify with Paul in Romans 7 when he says, "O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death?" But we do not go on to consider that we will one day fully glorify and enjoy God in our resurrection body. So what a glorious day it will be when the bodies of the dead are raised in Christ! Paul alludes to this in his great benediction in Ephesians 3:20-21: "Now unto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that worketh in us, unto him be glory in the church by Christ Jesus throughout all ages, world without end." We gain a sense of that glory and enjoyment in this life as we experience the Lord's work within us. But what will the consummation be like in the resurrection? 

In Ephesians 1:18-21, Paul says to believers that they have been enlightened "that ye may know what is the hope of his calling, and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the saints, and what is the exceeding greatness of his power to us-ward who believe, according to the working of his mighty power, which he wrought in Christ, when he raised him from the dead, and set him at his own right hand in the heavenly places, far above all principality, and power, and might, and dominion, and every name that is named, not only in this world, but also in that which is to come." 

In a holy and mysterious way, even our Lord's glory awaits the time when He gathers all His people with Him in glory and presents them to His Father, saying, "Here am I, Father, and all those that Thou hast given to me." Christ longs for the time when He will have His church, His bride, joined to Him in the resurrection. 

Dr. David C. Jones, writing in the Fall 1985 issue of Presbyterion on Jonathan Edwards' dissertation concerning the end for which God created the world, says: "The corporate implications of glorification are not to be missed." Quoting Edwards, he says, "Thus the church of Christ, toward whom and in whom are the emanations of His glory and the communication of His fullness, is called the fullness of Christ, as though He were not in His complete state without her, like Adam without Eve." Jones then says, 

Man's chief end is to glorify God in a body, in a corporate entity, organically united to its head, and not simply as individuals having no connection with one another. This is so much the case that eschatological glorification, which entails the resurrection of the body, is consistently represented in Scripture as taking place at the same time. The supreme good is the glorification and enjoyment that comes in the union of the risen Christ with His bride, the risen church. And the delight of that union will be like the physical and spiritual delight of the union of husband and wife. It is that towards which all of God's creation is leading. That fulfillment of man's chief end, the full glorifying and enjoying of God, will come when we, as His bride, the church, in our resurrection bodies, will be united with Christ in His resurrection body, and we shall be like Him, and so will we ever be with the Lord. 

What a day it will be when our whole being, body and soul, praises the Triune God forever with no more sin in our soul, no more sin in our body, and no more temptation to sin! We will forever be what we have always wanted to be from the moment of our new birth — sin-free! We will be so sin-free that our holy, spotless Bridegroom will look at us and say, “I see no spot in my Jacob, and no transgression in my Israel." 

Amazing grace! I will finally be a worthy, perfect bride in the presence of my worthy, perfect Bridegroom, and enjoy an eternally perfect marriage! 

• Consider the resurrection's corporeal or physical hope. Our resurrection bodies will have continuity and identity with our present bodies and yet be substantially different. To explain this, Paul uses the image of a seed that is planted and gives birth to a plant. The seed doesn't actually die, but exists no longer as a seed but as a life-giving nutrient to the plant. Paul's point is that the seed's identity continues in a different form. 

We are already familiar with this transition in life. We look at baby pictures of a friend and see some features in the adult that were already evident in the baby. And though we are told that our entire physical molecular composition changes every seven years, we still look much the same. Still, we wonder what our resurrection bodies will be like. If a baby dies, will she be resurrected as an infant? We do not know the answer, but we do know we will be recognizable. When Moses and Elijah appeared with Jesus on the Mount of Transfiguration, Peter, James, and John immediately knew who they were. Likewise, when we sit down to eat with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in heaven, we will not need name tags for identification. 

First Corinthians 15 offers the fullest explanation of the differences between our present body and our glorified body. In verse 35, Paul asks, "How are the dead raised up? and with what body do they come?" He answers, "And that which thou sowest, thou sowest not that body that shall be.... But God giveth it a body as it hath pleased him.... So also is the resurrection of the dead" (vv. 35, 37, 42a). Paul goes on to mention five differences between our present body and our glorified body in heaven. 

First, he says, in verse 42b: "It is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption.” I am dying as I write this. Your bodies are dying as you read this. Our teeth get cavities, our eyes grow dim, our hearing fails us. There is an inevitable process of deterioration at work in every cell in our bodies, which is remorselessly going on until we die. Paul tells us that in heaven there will be no such deterioration. Our bodies will be imperishable and incorruptible. We will be rejuvenated beyond the reach of sickness and injury and death. Imagine what it will be like to have a body that never knows pain, disease, or weakness! 

Second, Paul says in verse 43a, “It is sown in dishonour; it is raised in glory." A casket contains the poor, weak, wasted shell of someone who has been ravaged by disease. If you look at that poor, dead flesh, which will decay to dust, do you not agree that it is sown in dishonor? But Paul says, "It is raised in glory." I do not know everything that means, but the verse does assure us that in heaven our bodies will be healthy and radiant. Jesus said, "Then shall the righteous shine forth as the sun in the kingdom of their Father.” Our culture puts a high premium on appearance, but no matter what you look like today, you will be even more beautiful in your resurrection body. You will be strong and glorious and magnificent! 

Third, Paul says in verse 43, “It is sown in weakness; it is raised in power." How weak we are! We so often have to put up with our lack of strength, our fatigue, our weariness. We get tired and fall asleep, we are stressed and feel we cannot cope, and our energy drains away because of problems and people. 

Do you have some disability that you have coped with all your life? Like the lame and blind people who were healed by Jesus, you will one day experience deliverance from that limitation, not only in the functions that you regard as normal in this life, but also in powers you can scarcely imagine. Think of people with mental impairments who will one day operate faster and more accurately than any computer. Think of a world beyond this world of color that will be so multidimensional and so glorious that we will realize what we see today is but a shadow. "Raised in power" means that our bodies will pulsate with energy and dynamism and power. We will not know weariness. No disability will hinder us. We will carry out all the impulses of our holy wills and our holy desires, engaging in continually blessed, worshipful activity forever and ever! 

Fourth, verse 44 says, “It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body.” The word natural here means our bodies are subject to the limitations of this age, implying they are weakened and damaged by sin. The natural body is what we have inherited from Adam. It was created good, as only God could make it. But what awaits us in the resurrection is even better — we will have bodies like the resurrected body of Christ. 

Cornel Venema says, "The word spiritual here harks back to Genesis 1 when Adam was breathed into by God's Spirit and he became a living soul. It was an in-souled body. The language used for the spiritual body is that of a body that is animated and energized by the Spirit." 

Gerhardus Vos says spiritual here should have a capital "S.” What Paul means is that we will have physical, material bodies of flesh and blood that are energized and ruled by the Spirit. A spiritual person not only thinks about spiritual things; he is indwelt by the Spirit. A spiritual body is not a non-material body; it is a body irradiated by the Holy Spirit and perfectly suited to the environment of heaven. Our bodies will be the servants of our spirits in heaven. Our body and spirit together will enable us to serve and worship God. 

So spiritual here means our bodies will be totally submissive to the Spirit of God. Jesus was totally submissive to the Spirit while He was incarnated, yet He was subject to temptation in His natural body. But in our resurrection bodies, we will enter into the ultimate freedom that Augustine says is not the ability to sin that Adam had, or the ability not to sin that the redeemed now have as compared with the inability not to sin that characterized our unredeemed state, but rather, in our spiritual bodies we will have the greatest freedom of all — the inability to sin." Our resurrection bodies will no longer experience the temptations to which we are now subject. 

Finally, in verses 53-57, Paul says the "mortal must put on immortality." All the wonderful traits of the resurrection body already described will not end in death. Our bodies will be the same in essence, but they will have new qualities designed for immortality. 

When Christ raised Lazarus from the dead, Lazarus still had to die again. I have often wondered how he felt about that. He must have been torn; happy to be raised for the glory of Christ, yet longing to be with Christ forever in glory. Paul says those raised by Christ at His Second Coming will not have such mixed feelings. Christ is "the firstfruits" (vv. 20, 23) and "the firstborn from the dead" (Col. 1:18). Those who follow Him will be raised with bodies that are immortal like His, no longer subject to death. You can see why Paul, in Philippians 3:10–11, says he longs to be with Christ in eternity: "That I may know him, and the power of his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made conformable unto his death; if by any means I might attain unto the resurrection of the dead.” In the end, the resurrection makes us like Christ. 

• Consider the resurrection's comparative hope. What kept the Apostle Paul going in all of his sufferings was knowing that the good he would have in glory would be so magnificent that it would make the troubles of this world seem miniscule. Those joys and comforts are negative, but they are also positive. 

The negative is that all the troubles that we experience with Satan, the tempting world, our old nature, tears and sorrow, ill health, and ill treatment from others will pass away when we get to heaven. We will never again fear temptation, death, falling, bringing shame on our Savior's name, or departing from the faith. 

Heaven will be full of positives. The greatest positive is saying like Robert Haldane, who witnessed revival in Geneva when he preached to students: "Oh to be forever with the Lord!" In heaven, Christ will never be out of your sight, dear believer. He will be in your eyesight, before your face, and within earshot for you to talk to, to worship, to question, to understand the Word of Life, to adore, and to thank Him for what He has done for you. 

Heaven will be a place of perfect worship of God, perfect service to God, perfect reigning with Christ, perfect fellowship with saints, perfect education about God and His truth, and perfect rest. It will be a place of gracious reward for faithfulness on earth and abundant compensation for suffering on earth. Heaven will be a place of perfect holiness—an eternal Holy of Holies and a sin-free land. As Rowland Hill says, “If an unholy man were to get to heaven, he would feel like a hog in a flower garden." Heaven will be pure and clean. There will be no infirmity there and not one speck of dust. All evil will be walled out; all good walled in. 

Finally, heaven will be a world of love. Spurgeon puts it this way: "A fish can more easily drink the oceans dry than we can ever exhaust the love of God in heaven." He adds: "Drink away little fish, you'll never drink it all dry!" Oh, magnificent hope, magnificent love! Edwards says God's love in heaven is an ocean without a floor and without a shore! 

Our magnificent hope of heaven ought to teach us not to live just for this life and this world. In living more for the world to come, the Christian should moderate his hopes for this world. Throughout his writings, Paul says that the true Christian has the best of this world, though his heart is not here. His hope in this world falls far short of his hope for the life to come. It is a moderated and tempered hope that comes out of the "now-not-yet" tension of this present age. Now we are in Christ and live by hope, but we are not yet what we will be in glory. 

You might say, "What should my attitude be toward this life if I am focused on the life to come? How can I live out this moderate hope with regard to this world?" 

Following the teachings of Paul, Calvin teaches us that though we live in hope in the world today, afflictions and cross-bearing are necessary for us to learn contempt for the present life when compared to the blessings of heaven. This life is nothing compared to what is to come. It is like smoke or a shadow. Calvin asks, “If heaven is our homeland, what else is the earth but our place of exile? If departure from the world is entry into life, what else is the world but a sepulcher?” He adds, "No one has made progress in the school of Christ who does not joyfully await the day of death and final resurrection.” 

Calvin uses an argument of opposites to find a middle way between them when explaining the Christian's relation to this world. On the one hand, cross-bearing crucifies us to the world and the world to us. On the other hand, the Christian enjoys this present life, but with due restraint and moderation as he learns to use things in this world for the purposes that God intended them. Like Paul, Calvin enjoyed good literature, good food, and the beauties of nature. But, also like Paul, he rejected all forms of earthly excess. The believer is thus called to Christ-like moderation, which includes modesty, prudence, avoidance of display, and contentment with our lot, for the hope of the life to come gives purpose to the enjoyment of our present life. Like Paul, Calvin says, "We have here no continuing city, but seek one to come." This life is always straining after a better, heavenly life.  

How is it possible for a Christian to maintain a proper balance so he enjoys the gifts that God gives in this world while avoiding the snare of over-indulgence? Calvin offers three principles gleaned from Paul: 

  1. Remember that God is the giver of every good and perfect gift. This should restrain our lusts because our gratitude to God for His gifts cannot be expressed by a greedy reception of them. 
  2. Remember that we are stewards of the world in which God has placed us. Soon we will have to give an account to Him of our stewardship. 
  3. Remember that God has called us to Himself and to His service. Because of that calling, we strive to fulfill our tasks in His service, for His glory,and under His watchful, benevolent eye, always aiming for the maturation of the saints and the salvation of the lost. 

In summary, what Paul and Calvin teach is that a Christian should not expect to find all joy in this present life. This truth is obvious but worth stressing because we believers tend to feel sorry for ourselves about having to live in self-denial. Deep down, we don't truly believe that denying ourselves for Christ will give us joy in Christ. We struggle against the unfairness of seeing unbelievers living at ease and in prosperity in this world while we carry our crosses to the bitter end. It is hard to accept that throughout life we must put base desires behind us while all around us people are freely acting out their ambitions. They don't have many restraints, while we are called to be temperate and self-controlled, refusing to hanker for things that the world enjoys but which would compromise our holiness and obedience to God. 

Having said that, we go on to say that the Christian has many blessings, comforts, and joys in this life, and God who is rich in mercy has given us these things to enjoy. He keeps back no good from those that love Him, even now. Even so, the Christian must deny himself many things in this life and must expect that he will not get full joy in this life because of certain things that belong to the essence of Christian faith and life. 

The art of being a Christian is not expecting too much of this life. We do not expect God to give us everything; rather, He gives us only a modest share of joys and comforts. In this world, God feeds us with a spoon. In the world to come, God will feed us with a ladle.  

3. An Unmovable Yet Moving Hope 

In 1 Corinthians 15:58 Paul says: "Therefore, my beloved brethren, be ye steadfast, unmoveable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as ye know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord.” You may wonder why Paul adds this verse after an entire chapter devoted to the resurrection. Actually, Paul applies the entire doctrine of resurrection by teaching us that we are not simply to say, "The Lord is risen indeed! Now let us sit back and wait for God to apply the resurrection power of His Son." 

Rather, Paul says that because believers are recipients of this magnificent resurrection hope, they must be steadfast and unmovable. What difference does it make whether our Lord comes today or tomorrow, and in a moment or a twinkling of an eye? If He is coming today, I want to be ready. I want to live in anticipation of what will be mine when Christ comes. Paul says that, in rising from the dead, Christ is the firstfruits of those who sleep. So for those in Christ, who now reigns, rules, and brings all things into subjection to Himself, the final enemy to be subjected is death. Believers live in anticipation that this corruptible will put on incorruption and they no longer are in their sins but are justified and being sanctified. So "Thy kingdom come, Lord, Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven," is a prayer born of this resurrection hope. If you believe in the resurrection of Christ from the dead, the resurrection hope, then you must stand firm — immovable and steadfast — for Christ and His gospel. 

Second, Paul says we are to be moving and active. We must be motivated by our steadfast resurrection hope to become active in the work of God. We must be willing to die every day for the sake of the gospel, says Paul, who fought with wild beasts in Ephesus. Why would Paul do that if Christ had not risen from the dead? But He has, and that puts wind in Paul's sails! It gives us strength and hope-filled expectation! It makes us want to be about the business of the King. We want to aim for our Father's glory, for the edification of the saints, and for the salvation of the lost. 

Many people around us today have no sense of direction and no future. Their lives are vacuous; they live as though they were just killing time. We have a message for them: Christ was crucified for sinners and raised for their justification. He will come again at the end of the age, and every believer will share in His resurrection victory in the world that will come when He appears. Believe in Him so that you may live in hope today and in the world to come. Amen. 

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