An Essay on the Scriptural Doctrine of Immortality
Produced by Al Haines
_Anagke gar moi epikeitai ouai gar moi estin, ean me euaggelzûmai —1 Cor. ix. 16
London, Oxford, and Cambridge
London . . . . . . Waterloo Place
Oxford . . . . . . Magdalen Street
Cambridge . . . . Trinity Street
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Considering that under the existing conditions of humanity, disease, and decay, and death abound on every side, it is surprising that the word immortality obtained a place in systems of philosophy, the authors of which must be supposed to have been unacquainted with divine revelation. It is not surprising that in the absence of such aid the belief of immortality should not have been firmly held, or that by some philosophers it should have been expressly disavowed. Even in the Canonical Scriptures, the words immortal and immortality occur only in the Epistles of the Apostle Paul, and consequently not till life and immortality had been brought to light through the Gospel. It is a remarkable circumstance that these words are met with more frequently in the Apocryphal Books, 2 Esdras, Wisdom of Solomon, and Ecclesiasticus, than in the Canonical Scriptures. The {2} explanation of the apparent silence of the Scriptures, especially those of the Old Testament, on so essential a doctrine, will, I think, be found to be given by the course of argument adopted in this essay.
It may, further, be noticed that, according to philosophical dogma not derived from the teaching of Scripture, immortality is regarded as a principle, or innate quality, in virtue of which the human soul is exempt from the experience of death or annihilation. On this account Greek and Roman philosophers speak of the immortality of the soul , and even in the present day the same terms are used, the soul being regarded as per se immortal. But neither in the Scriptures, nor in the Apocrypha, is immortality qualified by the adjunct of the soul; the reason for which may be that since death, as far as our senses inform us, is an objective reality, the writers judged that mortality and freedom from mortality could only be predicated of body . It must, however, be taken into account that according to the doctrine of Scripture there is a spiritual body as well as a natural body, so that while the natural body is, as we know, subject to the law of death, it may be true that the spiritual body is capable of immortality. This point will be farther discussed in the course of the essay.