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| Prophetic Things and Actions, as Well as Words, Attest This Great Doctrine. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XXVIII.—Prophetic Things and Actions, as Well as Words, Attest
This Great Doctrine.
But we know that prophecy expressed itself by
things no less than by words. By words, and also by deeds, is the
resurrection foretold. When Moses puts his hand into his bosom, and
then draws it out again dead, and again puts his hand into his bosom,
and plucks it out living,7481 does not this apply
as a presage to all mankind?—inasmuch as those three
signs7482 denoted the threefold power of God: when it
shall, first, in the appointed order, subdue to man the old serpent,
the devil,7483 however formidable;
then, secondly, draw forth the flesh from the bosom of death;7484 and then, at last, shall pursue all blood
(shed) in judgment.7485 On this subject we
read in the writings of the same prophet, (how that) God says:
“For your blood of your lives will I require of all wild beasts;
and I will require it of the hand of man, and of his brother’s
hand.”7486 Now nothing is
required except that which is demanded back again, and nothing is thus
demanded except that which is to be given up; and that will of course
be given up, which shall be demanded and required on the ground of
vengeance. But indeed there cannot possibly be punishment of that which
never had any existence. Existence, however, it will have, when it is
restored in order to be punished. To the flesh, therefore, applies
everything which is declared respecting the blood, for without the
flesh there cannot be blood. The flesh will be raised up in order that
the blood may be punished. There are, again, some statements (of
Scripture) so plainly made as to be free from all obscurity of
allegory, and yet they strongly require7487
their very simplicity to be interpreted. There is, for instance,
that passage in Isaiah: “I will kill, and I will make
alive.”7488 Certainly His
making alive is to take place after He has killed. As, therefore, it is
by death that He kills, it is by the resurrection that He will make
alive. Now it is the flesh which is killed by death; the flesh,
therefore, will be revived by the resurrection. Surely if killing means
taking away life from the flesh, and its opposite, reviving, amounts to
restoring life to the flesh, it must needs be that the flesh rise
again, to which the life, which has been taken away by killing, has to
be restored by vivification.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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