After death,
what?
Death is the greatest fact in human
experience. Its occurrence is universal and inevitable: its gloomy
shadow, sooner or later, darkens every house. We may try to put
the question posed by our title out of our minds and fill our lives
with material things, but ultimately it is a question all human
beings must face. Where can we look to find a true
answer?
The source of truth
Scientists and philosophers can
only offer their own personal opinions - and all say different things.
On the other hand the religious leaders fail to face up to the question
and think only of saying something, however fanciful, to comfort
the bereaved - and they too vary in their opinions. Spiritualists
make bold claims but their theories and activities carry no conviction
to the critical investigator.
There is however, one place we can
go to find a consistent and credible answer which satisfies the
mind of the critical and discerning. The Bible, because it comes
as a message from God can and does, give the true and completely
satisfying answer to this vital question. Because God made man,
he knows what man IS and because he controls the future, he knows
what man may become.
The creation of man
The Bible account of creation tells
how man was made - "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).
This principal statement teaches
unmistakably that the real man is the body which was made by God
out of the dust; that man was a lifeless thing until his lungs were
inflated by God and air was introduced
to make this dust-formed organism "a living soul". This
term "living soul" is, in the Hebrew scriptures, applied
equally to fish, fowl, animals and man (see Genesis 1:21,24) and
means simply "living creature". There is not the faintest
suggestion in the original inspired record that man has an immortal
soul in a fleshy frame. Such a view is (as most church scholars
admit when pressed) a notion derived from pagan philosophy and not
from the Bible. When God made Adam and Eve He pronounced them "very
good". However, they disobeyed a clear commandment God had
given them, and inevitably received the penalty God had prescribed,
"In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die"
(Genesis 2:17). No longer "very good", there began immediately
in their bodies a process which made them corruptible beings, heading
relentlessly to death and the grave. As God said to Adam after his
sin (for sin is simply disobedience to God's commands) "Dust
thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return" (Genesis 3:19).
Man's ultimate fate
What then happens to man at death?
Simply, the creation process is reversed; "Then shall the dust
return to the earth as it was: and the spirit (Hebrew for "spirit"
means "breath") shall return to God who gave it"
(Ecclesiastes 12:7). Reason tells us that since inanimate dust cannot
think or know, therefore man in death must be unconscious- and this
is exactly what the Bible says:- "His breath (the same Hebrew
word as Ecclesiastes 12) goeth forth, he returneth to his earth;
in that very day his thoughts perish" (Psalm 146:4. See also
Ecclesiastes 9:5).
You may be saying "Ah! but
that's the Old Testament". Well the New Testament is fully
in harmony. It also refers to death, not
as the departure of an "immortal soul" to increased activity
and knowledge, but as "sleep" - which is unconsciousness.
Life, the apostle James says is a "vapour which vanisheth away"
(chapter 4:14). Take your Bible and look up John 11:11-13 and 1
Thessalonians 4:13.
What are the prospects?
If the matter were in the hands
of man there would be no hope. No scientist can bring a man to life
again. However God has revealed that for certain people death will
not be the end of all hope. God has said that those without understanding
and ignorant of his will, will be held in the grave for all time
- they are "like the beasts that perish" (Psalm 49:19,20).
This agrees with that well known passage in the gospel of John;
"God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten son,
that whosoever believeth in him should not perish,
but have everlasting life" (John 3:16).
God calls all men everywhere to
his Word, the Bible, to learn what it means to "believe in
Christ". Many things are involved and many commandments must
be obeyed. We can only find out by reading God's word - all of it
- from the beginning. We will discover that Jesus is to return to
the earth and that he will raise from the dead those who are responsible
to him, because they know God's plan revealed in the Bible. Thus
we read:- "The Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge the quick
(living) and the dead at his appearing and his kingdom" (2
Timothy 4:1).
The hope of the faithful
The resurrected ones who are judged
faithful will be given a change of nature and made like Jesus is
now. "...the Lord Jesus Christ: Who shall change our vile body,
that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body..." (Philippians
3:20,21).
This is the hope of life after death
which the Bible reveals. Only the Bible is true and authoritative
- only the Bible is the message of the Creator to His creatures.
This can be proved by reference to its historical prophecies and
in many other ways, if one knows this wonderful book intimately.
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