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| Section 29. The Third Day He Rose Again from the Dead PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
29. The Third Day He Rose Again from the Dead. The glory of
Christ’s resurrection threw a lustre upon everything which before
had the appearance of weakness and frailty. If a while since it seemed
to you impossible that an immortal Being could die, you see now that He
who has overcome death and is risen again cannot be mortal. But
understand herein the goodness of the Creator, that so far as you by
sinning have cast yourself down, so far has He descended in following
you. And do not impute lack of power to God, the Creator of all things,
by imagining his work to have ended in the fall into an abyss which He
in His redemptive purpose was unable to reach. We speak of infernal and
supernal, because we are bounded by the definite circumference of the
body, and are confined within the limits of the region prescribed to
us. But to God, Who is present everywhere and absent nowhere, what is
infernal and what supernal? Notwithstanding, through the assumption of
a body there is room for these also. The flesh which had been deposited
in the sepulchre, is raised, that that might be fulfilled which was
spoken by the Prophet, “Thou wilt not suffer Thy Holy One to see
corruption.”3357 He returned,
therefore, a victor from the dead, leading with Him the spoils of hell.
For He led forth those who were held in captivity by death, as He
Himself had foretold, when He said, “When I shall be lifted up
from the earth I shall draw all unto Me.”3358 To this the Gospel bears witness,
when it says, “The graves were opened, and many bodies of saints
which slept arose, and appeared unto many, and entered into the holy
City,”3359 that city, doubtless, of which
the Apostle says, “Jerusalem which is above is free, which is the
Mother of us all.”3360 As also he says
again to the Hebrews, “It became Him, for Whom are all things,
and by Whom are all things, Who had brought many sons into glory, to
make the Author of their salvation perfect through suffering.”3361 Sitting, therefore, on the right hand
of God in the highest heavens, He placed there that human flesh, made
perfect through sufferings, which had fallen to death by the lapse of
the first man, but was now restored by the virtue of the resurrection.
Whence also the Apostle says, “Who hath raised us up together and
made us sit together in the heavenly places.”3362 For He was the potter, Who, as the
Prophet Jeremiah teaches, “took up again with His hands, and
formed anew, as it seemed good to Him, the vessel which had fallen from
His hands and was broken in pieces.”3363 And it seemed good to Him that the
mortal and corruptible body which He had assumed, this body raised from
the rocky sepulchre and rendered immortal and incorruptible, He should
now place not on the earth but in heaven, and at His Father’s
right hand. The Scriptures of the Old Testament are full of these
mysteries. No Prophet, no Lawgiver, no Psalmist is silent, but almost
every one of the sacred pages speaks of them. It seems superfluous,
therefore, to linger in collecting testimonies; yet we will cite some
few, remitting those who desire to drink more largely to the
well-springs of the divine volumes themselves.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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