
WHEN
A MAN DIES
By
Carlyle B. Haynes
Forward
Death
is a profound mystery. To us who
live, death is the end of experience, therefore the end of knowledge.
The only positive aspect of it is that it comes to all men, and none
escape it. This book affirms that
only Christ, who broke the fetters of the tomb and has “the keys of hell and
of death,” is able to speak with authority in the matter of what comes after
death. Evidence is piled upon
evidence here that the Bible reveals both the state of man in death and his
subsequent future condition. The
sleep of the dead, followed by a glorious resurrection, is one of the most
comforting teachings of the Bible. How
to attain that happy reward of the new-earth state after sin and death have been
abolished is the object of the challenging instruction of this long popular
volume.
CONTENTS
The
Mystic Realm of Death
The Inerrant Source of Truth
Life and Death
Where Are the Dead?
Sin and Sinners Not Immortal
The Bible and Immortality
Bible Truth Versus Human Tradition
The Eternal Conquest of Death
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THE
MYSTIC REALM OF DEATH
WHEN
a man dies, what becomes of him? Here
is the question that has confronted the race of mankind from its beginning. It is the question which hovers in the background of every
man’s thinking during his entire life, and becomes more insistent and
important as he advances toward the end of life.
For life does end for all men.
That
is the most positive and certain and inevitable thing in the world.
We become increasingly aware of it as our years multiply.
And we come to be more conscious of our need of an answer the nearer we
come to the change from life to death.
We know something of life, what it is and means and holds.
But death — what does it hold?
A
great adventure? or endless silence and oblivion?
On no other question have men set forth and toyed with so many theories
or engaged in more speculation. And
for most of mankind it has remained in the realm of theory and speculation and
profound mystery.
THE
SHADOWS AHEAD
The
religions of the world have done their share of theorizing and speculating —
and have arrived at no certainties. They
leave the question still in the realm of mystery and fog, and provide no solid
ground upon which a man can place his feet with assurance and confidence. None of them really answers the question of the ages, “Man
dieth, and wasteth away: . . . and where is he?”
(Job 14:10).
What awaits us in those shadows ahead?
One replies, “Heaven.” Another, “Hell.”
Still another, “Purgatory.” And
yet another, “Just oblivion.” But
who knows? And which answer
is right? or is there
another answer altogether?
What we need here is an authority, one that knows — an authority
based, not on theory or speculation, not on theological claims or dogmatic
pronouncements, but on experience.
The whole reach of human knowledge is bounded by death.
We know what it is to be alive.
Shot
through with mystery as it still is, nevertheless we have experienced life.
About death we know only one thing, that it is a fact and comes to all
men. But what it is to die we do
not know, for we have not died. What
death holds for us or any other mortal we do not know, for we are not dead.
Life is a present experience.
Death
is a profound mystery. Our area of
knowledge does not project itself into the realm of death, does not extend
itself beyond the mere fact of death.
Up
to the end of life we know. But the
end of life is also the end of knowledge.
Beyond
that, with the beginning of death, all is unrelieved blackness.
No one living on earth has passed into that realm, gone through it,
explored its mysteries, and re-entered the realm of life to disclose what he
there learned.
SURE
AND RELIABLE KNOWLEDGE AVAILABLE
What
we need is the testimony, the trustworthy and reliable testimony, the positively
authoritative testimony, of one who lived on the earth and then died, who not
only experienced death but entered and passed through its dread realm, exploring
and learning all its secrets, and who returned to and re-entered the realm of
life, willing and ready to make known what death is, what it means, what it
holds, from the standpoint of actual experience and actual and unimpeachable
knowledge.
Do we have any such testimony?
Is
such sure and reliable knowledge available?
The answer is, We do, and it is.
We do not need to rely on the sham, deception, and fraud of spiritistic
seances or the lying testimony of pretended spirits of the dead; that way lies
confusion, worse confounded and unrelieved blackness.
We have no need to rest on the unsupported speculations of dogmatic
theology; that way lies continued conjecturing and unending contradiction.
There is no necessity even to listen to the guesses and hopes and
yearnings of the philosophies of men; that way lies endless uncertainty and lack
of knowledge.
No, there is One who knows, and who knows because He has died; who
is now alive, and has spoken; who has disclosed all that any man needs to know
about death, and whose revelation has met every test of reliability,
authenticity, trustworthiness, and authority.
All men die. Few have ever
returned to life. Only one of those
few learned anything or has disclosed anything of death.
But One has. It is to Him we
turn; it is to Him we look; it is to Him we go; it is He whom we are ready to
believe. When He speaks of life and
death, He knows.
He it is who accurately described His own qualifications to speak on this
subject by the impressive statement:
“I
am the first and the last: I am he that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am
alive for evermore, . . . and have the keys of hell [the grave] and of death.”
(Revelation 1:17, 18).
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THE
INERRANT SOURCE OF TRUTH
THE
Son of the living God not only lived on earth among men and as a man but also
entered the mysterious realm of death.
He
knows all its secrets. Not one is
hidden from Him.
He did not remain in that dread realm, however, as others have.
He could not be held there; He broke its bonds, delivered Himself from
its power, and returned to life. And
He is alive forevermore. “Christ
being raised from the dead dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over
him.” (Romans 6:9).
He had power to break the dominion of death;
He has knowledge of all the secrets, both of life and of death.
To supply that knowledge to men, and to impart that power, a revelation
is necessary, an authoritative revelation.
He has supplied that revelation and embodied it in a Book, the most
reliable Book in the world.
For the first disciples, those who knew Him and companioned with Him, and
saw Him meet death, and talked with Him after He came again to life, His very
presence was a complete revelation.
But we today do not have His visible presence, though He is alive.
We do have His words. These
are sufficient and adequate — and altogether reliable.
ALL
SCRIPTURE INSPIRED
The
revelation He has made of life and death and eternity is embodied in a Book. That Book is known as the Bible, the Holy Scriptures.
And “all Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable
for doctrine, . . . for instruction . . . : that the man of God may be perfect,
throughly furnished.” (2 Timothy 3:16, 17).
The authority and reliability of the Bible as a revelation of God and His
Son Jesus Christ may be demonstrated with convincing certainty by its genuiness,
its credibility, and its divine origin.
It is genuine, this revelation.
The
men who wrote it claim they wrote it.
There
is no fraud about it, no deception. For
this we have the testimony of the church through the centuries; the direct
testimony of its sixty-six books themselves; the confirmation of this testimony
by the allusions to Jewish, Roman, and Greek history contained in them,
allusions which could not have been made accurately by later writers; and the
testimony of the opponents of Christianity through the centuries who, while
opposing the teachings of the Book, have, by their very opposition, confirmed
the truth that such writings by such writers existed in their day and were
genuine.
The Book is credible. It is
worthy of acceptance and belief. Other
books may be genuine but not true. The
Bible is both. Its credulity is
evidenced by the untarnished character of its writers, its agreement with the
established facts of history, the unvarying beneficial and helpful effects of
its teaching, and the multiplying corroborations of archeological research.
Of all the manifold discoveries of archeology not one is in conflict with
the Bible. New discoveries consistently continue to confirm its truth
and accuracy.
A
DIVINE BOOK
The Bible is of divine origin.
No
other conclusion is possible when its infallible accuracy in prediction and
prophecy is considered; when its unique conception of the person of Christ, with
His superhuman balance and combination of qualities, and the sinless perfection
of His character, is examined; when its unvaryingly beneficial effects on human
life in all centuries, all races, all places, all conditions, are taken into
account.
This last is the great, the determining, the pragmatic test.
“By their fruits ye shall know them.”
If you would know the divine or human character of a religion, look at
what it does. If you would know the
character of Confucianism, look at China.
If
you would know the character of Mohammedanism, look at Turkey and Iran.
If you would know the character of Buddhism and Hinduism, look at India.
Then
look at Christianity, the religion of the Book, and the consistent,
never-failing effect it has on those who accept it and on the lands where it is
given free course.
It is different. It is
divine. In all others man is groping for and seeking God.
In Christianity, God is
seeking man. The others, all of them, are but human aspirations, poor,
feeble, inadequate. Christianity,
revealed in the Book, is a divine revelation supplying every human need.
GOD
HAS SPOKEN
So
God has spoken to man. He ha spoken
to man in His Son and in His Word. And
the revelation of His truth for us is in the Bible, as it is nowhere else.
That being so, the question of the ultimate authority regarding truth is
settled. The last and supreme word
concerning God, man, life, death, and eternity has been spoken.
That supreme authority is the Bible.
There are those who would have us believe that the source of final
authority is to be found in human reason.
They
are wrong. I would not deprecate reason.
It is valuable and altogether indispensable. To test the claims of any professed revelation, reason is
necessary. It is wholly necessary
in order to receive the revelation thus tested.
Nevertheless, it is not the source of authority.
The reasoning faculties of mankind have been affected by the fall of the
race. Sin has not left these
untouched but has unsettled their delicate balance and accurate functioning.
Absolute reliance cannot be placed on their operation.
Even if this were not so, there is such a thing as truth and reality
wholly apart from, and independent of, reason.
Truth is not what I believe.
Truth
is not even what I know.
Truth is fact. I may
not believe it. I may not know it. That does not change it.
It is there nevertheless, waiting to be discovered and believed.
Truth does not depend on the unsettled and changing opinions of men.
It was truth before it was believed.
It remains truth, whether it is believed or not.
Reason does not originate or create it.
It merely discovers it. Consequently,
reason is not a source. Truth goes
back beyond reason.
Others would have us believe that the church is the source of
authority, particularly in matters of theology.
They are wrong. The church
is the product of truth. It
does not originate it. It
came into being by accepting divine revelation.
It is not the source of that revelation.
Truth goes beyond the church, is antecedent to it.
THE
SOURCE OF AUTHORITY
It
is in the Bible that we have the source of authority.
It is in the Bible that we have embodied and preserved the revelation God
has made. That revelation is in
this Book in its clearest, purest, its fullest form.
The Bible is true, and it contains the truth.
In it we possess the best available form of God’s revelation to man.
It is not a Book of one age, one race, or one language.
From its earliest years it has passed readily, by spontaneous reception,
from race to race and from people to people.
As the centuries have passed, it has migrated without violence into new
regions, and found a home among widely different tribes, separated though they
have been by every conceivable difference of climate, government, custom,
culture, and religion. As it
conquered the conquering Goths and other barbarians of the early centuries, so
today its sway is felt throughout the whole world, heathen and civilized alike.
That its power is not derived from race or clime is demonstrated when it
is taken to savage, cannibal islands and transforms barbarians into peaceful,
law-abiding citizens; when it changes a wild, native warrior into the editor of
a paper, and a Negro slave into the president of an African republic.
It changes human lives for the better wherever its teachings are followed
and its truths accepted.
It has stimulated the intellects and energies and attracted the love and
veneration of men. The literary
geniuses of the world, in struggling to give utterance to their thoughts, have
drawn largely from this Book. The
greatest masters of prose — Bacon, Milton, Ruskin, Macaulay — have, perhaps
unconsciously but no less really, laid hold of Scripture phrase and metaphor. The influence of the Bible on Shakespeare’s genius and
writings is so striking as to have stimulated many writers to analyze and trace
it.
The extraordinary influence and authority of this Book, as compared with
that of any and all others, is seen, too, in other aspects of life, in
sculpture, in painting, in music. It
has stimulated genius in these fields as has no other agency.
Its majestic scenes have become the outstanding themes of painting and
music. The greatest masters of
these arts never weary of embodying the ideas it suggests.
Its altogether unique word pictures, its vivid narratives, its poetry and
pathos, have served as an inexhaustible source of inspiration to painters.
Every event of outstanding importance recorded in its pages has been made
the subject of some great oratorio, on which the gifts of their genius have been
lavished by such masters as Handel, Mozart, Hayden, Beethoven, and Mendelsohn. The greatest paintings of Raphael, and Michelangelo can be
traced to it. The greatest modern
epic, Paradise Lost, and the greatest musical creation, The Messiah,
are
built on the mighty themes of the Bible.
The position the Bible has occupied, and increasingly occupies, amid such
various circumstances, through such distant ages, among such different races,
amid such fluctuations of taste, and in spite of all the opposition of its
enemies makes it an altogether singular phenomenon.
For twice a thousand years the Sacred Scriptures have gone hand in
hand with advancing civilization, with science, law, letters, learning, the arts
— in brief, with the moral and intellectual cultivation of the human race,
always stimulating and leading the way.
A
UNIVERSAL BOOK
So the Bible is one of the greatest facts in the history of mankind.
It is universal in its appeal.
Though
it is Oriental in its origin and background, nevertheless its teachings carry a
profound appeal to, and wield a powerful influence among, every people and race
on earth. It influences every type
of mind, every degree of intellect, every gradation of life.
Prince and peasant, artisan and mechanic, ruler and subject, employer and
laborer, learned and unlearned — all alike read its fascinating pages, study
its profound truths, and are benefited thereby.
Its words are spirit and life.
It
is different, wholly different, from every human product. Milton’s Paradise
Lost is poetry. Shakespeare’s
writings are tragedy and comedy. Cicero’s
writings are eloquence. But
Christ’s word is life. “The
words that I speak unto you, they are spirit and they are life.”
The words of the Bible are filled with living energy, pointed with
penetrating power. “The word of God is quick [living], and powerful, and
sharper than any twoedged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul
and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and
intents of the heart.” (Hebrews
4:12).
Here, in this Book, is truth, authoritative and final truth, the words of
Him who Himself is very truth, who was dead, and is alive, and who holds
the keys of death and the grave.
Therefore, in searching for the truth of this question of death, of what
becomes of a man when he dies, we go to this source with complete confidence.
The authority of the Bible we take as supreme and final.
It is above reason. Not that
reason and the Bible must of necessity be in conflict.
The Bible is the light of reason, of human thought; it comes from God. Reason may be, should be, employed upon it.
Reason examines its claims, weighs the evidence, tests, sifts, inquires,
studies, analyzes, but the moment it becomes convinced, accepts the truth, and
then takes a subordinate place and makes the Bible, the revelation of God,
supreme.
The authority of the Bible is supreme because it is divine.
It is above the church. The
church is a witness to the Bible; it is not its author.
It is a keeper of the Bible; it is not its maker.
The Bible is above creeds. Creeds
are often very able, but they are the productions of men, and therefore fallible
and liable to error. The Bible was
produced under the control and guidance and direction of the Spirit of God, and
is therefore inerrant in its teachings.
The
creeds are not binding upon the conscience; the Bible is.
they contain only human echoes of the heavenly message; the Bible is
that message.
It is, therefore, to this divine Source that we turn in our search for
light and truth on this supremely important question of the condition of man in
death.
CONTINUE
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