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SERMON CLXIV.

THE IMMEDIATE CONSEQUENCES

OF DEATH.

THEN SHALL THE DUST RETURN TO THE EARTH AS IT WAS, AND

THE SPIRIT SHALL RETURN TO GOD WHO GAVE IT.

ECCLESIASTES XII. 7.

In my last Discourse I made several observations concerning Death, considered as the last dispensation of Providence to man in the present world. The immediate consequences of death furnish the next subject of our investigation.

In the text we are told, that when man goeth to his long home, the dust, (or body,) shall return to the earth,' of which it was formed, and that then also the spirit shall return to God who gave it.' In considering this subject, I shall follow the order of discourse here presented to us; and examine those things which immediately after death respect,

I. The body.

II. The soul.

Under the former of these heads, I observe, 1. That the body is changed into a corpse.

Death is the termination of all the animal functions of our nature. So long as these continue, life, the result of them, diffuses warmth, activity, and beauty throughout our frame. In this state, the body is a useful as well as pleasing habitation for the soul; and a necessary as well as convenient instrument for accomplishing the purposes to which it is destined

in the present world. But when these functions cease, life also ceases. The body then becomes cold, motionless, deformed, and useless. The form, which once gave pleasure to all around it, now creates only pain and sorrow. The limbs are stiffened, the face clouded with paleness, the eye closed in darkness, the ear deaf, the voice dumb, and the whole appearance ghastly and dreadful. In the mean time, the spirit deserts its ruined habitation, and wings its way into the unknown vast of being.

2. The body is conveyed to the grave.

Necessity compels the living to remove this decayed frame from their sight. Different nations have pursued different modes of accomplishing this purpose. By some nations the body has been consumed with fire. By others it has been embalmed. By some it has been lodged in tombs, properly so called. By some it has been consigned to vaults and caverns; and by most has been buried in the grave. All nations, in whatever manner they have disposed of the remains of their departed friends, have with one consent wished, like Abraham, to remove their dead out of their sight.'

In this situation the body becomes the prey of corruption, and the feast of worms. How humiliating an allotment is this to the pride of man! When the conqueror, returned from the slaughter of millions, enters his capital in triumph; when the trumpet of fame proclaims his approach, and the shouts of millions announce his victories; surrounded by the spoils of subjugated nations, and followed by trains of vanquished kings and heroes; how must his haughty spirit be lowered to the dust by the remembrance, that within a few days himself would become the food of a worm, reigning over him with a more absolute control than he ever exercised over his slaves. Yet this will be the real end of all his achievements. To this humble level must descend the tenant of the throne, as well as of the cottage. Here wisdom and folly, learning and ignorance, refinement and vulgarity, will lie down together. Hither moves with an unconscious, but regular step, the beauty that illumines" the gay assembly's gayest room;" that subdues the heart even of the conqueror himself; and says, I sit as queen, and shall see no sorrow.' All these may, and must, ultimately say to corruption, Thou art our father, and to the worm, Thou art our mother, and our sister.' But we are not

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yet at the end of the progress. The next stage in our humiliation is, to be changed into dust. This was our origin; this is our end. The very clods on which we tread were once, not improbably, parts, to a greater or less extent, of living beings like ourselves. Not a small part of the surface of this world has, in all probability, been animated and inhabited by human minds; and the remains of man are daily perhaps, as well as insensibly, turned up by the plough and the spade.

II. The events, which immediately after death concern the soul, are the following:

1. At death the soul quits the body, to return to it no

more.

At death the animal functions cease, or rather the cessation of them is death itself. Then the flexibility, the power of action, and the consequent usefulness to which they gave birth, are terminated also. The soul, of course, finds the body no longer fitted to be an instrument of its wishes, or its duties. The limbs can no longer convey it from place to place, the tongue communicate its thoughts, nor the hands execute its pleasure. Deprived of all its powers, the body becomes a useless and uncomfortable residence for a being to whose nature activity is essential, and the purposes of whose creation would be frustrated by a longer confinement to so unsuitable a mansion. We cannot wonder therefore that the Author of our being should, in his providence, remove the soul from a situation so contradictory in all respects to the design of its existence.

The proof of the fact which I am considering, and of the existence of the soul in a state of separation from the body has, to a great extent, been necessarily given in a former Discourse, in which I attempted to show, that the soul is not material. To that Discourse I must, therefore, refer my audience for these proofs. It may, however, not be improper briefly to mention some of them on the present occasion.

The first which I shall mention is the text. Here we are informed, that the dust,' at death, shall return to the earth, as it was; and the spirit shall return to God who gave it,' That the soul and body are two distinct beings, and that at death one returns to the earth, and the other to God who gave it, are truths declared in this passage in a manner so

plain as probably never to have been misapprehended by any man, not embarked in some philosophical controversy.

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Secondly Of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, it is said, accordingly, that they gave up the ghost,' or rendered their spirits to God who gave them. In Exodus God saith, ' I am the God of thy father, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.'- God, our Saviour observes, is not the God of the dead, but of the living;' that is, of the spirits of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; living at the time when this declaration was made to Moses. Accordingly this passage is alleged by our Saviour to the Sadducees, as full proof of the ava☛ragis, or separate existence, of souls beyond the grave.

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Of these persons, also, it is said, that they were gathered unto their people.' This declaration is commonly, but very erroneously, understood to mean, that their bodies were gathered to the bodies of their kindred; and is supposed to be equivalent to the scriptural phrase, They slept with their fathers.' But in this sense it is, in many instances, obviously untrue. Neither Abraham nor Isaac was, in this sense, gathered unto his people. The people of Abraham were all buried either in Padan Aram, or in Ur, of the Chaldees; while he was buried in the cave of Macpelah in Canaan. Isaac was buried with none of his friends beside his parents; and these could not be styled his people.' The people to whom these persons were gathered were the assembly of the blessed.

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Thirdly: In conformity to this interpretation, Christ says, concerning Lazarus, that he died and was carried by angels to Abraham's bosom :' a complete proof, that Abraham was in existence among the blessed, at the time to which this parable refers.

Fourthly Christ said to the penitent thief on the cross, To day shalt thou be with me in Paradise.' This could not be true, unless the soul of the thief existed in a separate state.

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Fifthly: St. Paul declares, 2 Cor. v. 6, that, while we are at home in the body, we are absent from the Lord;' and subjoins, we are confident, I say, willing rather to be absent from the body, and present with the Lord.' Here this Apostle teaches us, that Christians can be absent from the body; and that this absence must take place to enable them

to be present with the Lord; and that, whenever it does take place, they will be present with the Lord. Christians therefore, that is, the spirits of Christians, exist in a state separated from the body.

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Sixthly: The same Apostle, Phil. i. 21-23, says, ' For me to live is Christ, and to die is gain.' And again, I have a desire to depart, and to be with Christ, which is far better.' When the apostle says, For me to live is Christ, he declares, that the present life is to him a course of high enjoyment. But if he did not exist in a separate state, his death would put an end to all his enjoyment; being an absolute termination of his consciousness. If, then, he had the least degree of enjoyment while living, his death, destroying this enjoyment, and supplying no other in its place, would with mathematical certainty be a loss to him. How much greater must this loss be, when, as he informs us, It was Christ to him to live. Can any sober man believe, that St. Paul meant to declare death, which, according to the opposite scheme, is merely a temporary annihilation, to be greater good than the happiness indicated by this expressive phraseology?

But the apostle himself has determined this point. He has told us, that the gain of his departure consisted in being with Christ, in a state of happiness totally superior to any thing found in the present world. Here, indeed, he enjoyed the presence of his Saviour, in an eminent, perhaps in a singular degree; yet in a manner far inferior to what, he was assured, he should find immediately after death.

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Seventhly: St. John, when caught up to heaven, beheld a great multitude, which no man could number, of all nations, and kindreds, and people, and tongues, standing before the throne, and before the Lamb, clothed in white robes, with palms in their hands,' uniting with the angels in their everlasting song of praise. The apostle asked who these persons were. The interpreting angel informed him, that they were 'those who came out of great tribulation, and had washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. Therefore, (he adds,) are they before the throne of God, and serve him, day and night, in his temple: and he, that sitteth on the throne, shall dwell among them. They shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more; neither shall the sun light on them, nor any heat; for the Lamb which is in the midst of

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