The
question shouldn’t be that difficult. Life and death, after all, is serious
business. At the very beginning of my Christian life I was abruptly confronted
with the “problem” of the resurrection. I had gone to a college age group at a
large downtown Baptist Church in Toronto, Canada. In the middle of the meeting
the Youth Minister came into the room and announced his amazing discovery:
Jesus wasn’t resurrected physically; he was only resurrected spiritually.
I had never thought about the resurrection before that
moment, but somehow his declaration didn’t measure up even with my subjective
experience of Jesus as my Saviour and Lord. Jesus was too real to me for that
to be true. That launched me into my first serious bible study and I immersed
myself in the biblical records of the resurrection of Jesus. It was immediately
clear that the apostles believed that Jesus was physically resurrected. They
saw him, touched him, handled him, and he stood in their midst and ate fish and
wild honey.
Some years later at seminary we were taught that Jesus
didn’t rise physically from the dead, but after his death his gathered
disciples had an experience of his presence and in their excitement read back
into the gospel accounts all the stories of the resurrection, and all of the
miracles. Our professor led a Lenten series in one of the local parishes. The
rector of the parish told me with great distress that the professor’s teaching
on the subject of the resurrection had destroyed the faith of a woman dying of
cancer. What we believe and what we teach can have serious repercussions.
After graduation I accepted a call as a curate in a
parish near Boston, Massachusetts. There was a story circling around in the
parish that was quite refreshing. The previous rector, a Father Lou, had a
custom of having talk back sessions in coffee hour after his sermons. In a
recent Easter sermon he held forth the brilliant but not exactly novel idea
that Christ wasn’t resurrected physically, but only spiritually. The parish
drunk, Homer, could hardly wait to ask a most pressing question: “Father Lou!
Father Lou! If Jesus wasn’t resurrected physically how did Thomas stick his
finger in the wounds?” The end result was that the Easter testimony to the
resurrection of Christ came from the parish drunk of blessed memory.
Once more around the barn; I was a young priest in my
first church, and as junior man in our Clericus I was stuck with organizing the
deanery meetings. In our deanery we had staff from the diocesan office in
Boston, and clergy from the churches in and around Cambridge. On the Monday
before Easter ten or twelve of us sat around a long table. We had decided to
study together, on a once a month basis, the lections for the upcoming Sunday.
The rector of a large Cambridge parish started the discussion by saying that he
tended to believe in the resurrection but couldn’t get excited enough to preach
about it. From there the discussion flowed swiftly down a slippery slope until
it reached the Canon to the Ordinary who sat directly across the table from me.
With great seriousness he confessed that the closer he got to death the less he
believed in the resurrection.
The discussion limped around the end of the table and
finally got to me. What I said in effect was that once I had been dead in
alcoholism and that I had been raised to sobriety and newness of life, and as a
result I had no doubt in God’s ability to raise Christ Jesus from the dead. Now
I know that arguing from experience to theology is not good theological method,
but sometimes where theology won’t do, testimony might. With that the Canon to
the Ordinary leaned across the table and said, “You’re young. You’ll learn!”
That was the first and last of our deanery clergy bible studies. After all
what’s the point? If Christ is not raised from the dead we are of all men most
pointless.
What is the problem posed by the physical resurrection
of Jesus the Christ? Humanism is the current theological plague. The
Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines humanism as, “a system of values and beliefs
that is based on the idea that people are basically good and that problems can
be solved using reason instead of religion.” Once you open the door to the
resurrection, you logically open the door to all miracles. Once you open the
door to the resurrection, man and his works can no longer be at the center of
religion. Instead God and his works are at the center where he should be. The
religion of “I can do it myself” is banished, and there are many who will be
offended if we suggest that Christianity is God centered, and Christ centered,
and not man centered. The poet Alexander Pope angrily exclaims, “Know then
thyself, presume not God to scan; The proper study of mankind is man.”
In contrast, as Christians, we actually believe what
has been believed always, everywhere, and by all. We Christians actually
believe that Christ rose physically from the dead. We believe that Christianity
is God centered and Christ centered, and that if you would understand
humankind, understand humankind as the creation of God. Believing this rests on
a serious theological understanding that is at the core of Christian faith.
John Donne, the great metaphysical poet and sometime
Dean of St. Paul’s Cathedral in London, preached a sermon on Easter Day 1623
that is quite helpful in getting at the core of the issue. What Donne stressed
was the proper understanding of the relationship between the soul and the body.
He said, “Never go about to separate the thoughts of the heart, from its
context, from the fellowship of the body.” “All that the soul does, it does in,
and with, and by the body.” “The body is washed in baptism, but it is that the
soul might be made clean.” “The body is anointed, that the soul might be
consecrated.” “The body is signed with the Cross, that the soul might be armed
against temptations.” “The body receives the body of Christ, that the soul
might partake of his merits.” “These two, Body, and Soul, cannot be separated
for ever,” because in earthly life they are united in all that they do.
Christ became incarnate, enfleshed in a human body.
Christ suffered in that body, died, and was buried, and in that body he rose
again physically from the dead. Christ is born in the flesh that our humanity
with him might be crucified, die, and rise again; that our humanity, our human
fleshly nature in all its physicality might be taken up into God. It is our
flesh as well as his that must after all die and be raised again.
To tear apart the soul and the body is the old heresy
of dualism. Christ’s body, as well as his soul, has eternal value. Once God the
Son is incarnate in the flesh, the flesh cannot be discarded as irrelevant to
the soul; nor does Christ discard his body in the resurrection. While it is
fashionable, and to some extent practical, to talk about body and soul as two
separate entities they are in fact a present and eternal unity. To separate
them is to make nonsense of the Incarnation as well as of the Resurrection. Let
me present you with the key question of St. Paul, “Now if Christ is proclaimed
as raised from the dead, how can some of you say that there is no resurrection
of the dead? . . . if Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain
and your faith is in vain” (1 Cor. 15:12, 14).
What is at stake is not only the physical resurrection
of Christ, but also your own physical resurrection in the age to come. Do you believe in eternal life? Do you
believe that in eternal life you float around as an ethereal disembodied
spirit? Or do you believe in the physical resurrection of Christ, and your own
eventual physical resurrection in the kingdom yet to come? The question
shouldn’t be that difficult. Life and death, after all, is serious business.
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