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Champions of Conditional Immortality in History | Change God? |
If you study these contributions on the topic of the mortality of the soul with a view to find a way to defeat it, you waste your time for it is a cardinal truth taught in the Bible. It is better to read the Bible with prayer and a view to learn of God and accept all things clear to you. Then, when you come to harder passages, pray about it, read all the Bible has to say about it with the help of a Concordance to find the scriptures using the words causing the problem, and most the time you will find your answer, provided you are willing to be determined to find the truth in God's Word. The line is long and impressive of those championing conditional immortality. In contrast, the opposers of conditional immortality included Pope Leo X who on Monday, December 19th, 1513 issued a Bull (Apostoloici regimis) declaring:
"Damnamus et reprobamus omnes assertentes animam intellectivam mortalem ess."
But the list of detractors of this papal decree is long and eloquent and includes man from all faiths and nationalities.[100] Pietro Pomponatius of Mantua [See map], a noted Italian professor and leader among the Averrorists, who denied the immortality of the soul, issued a book in opposition to the papal bull titled, Treatise on the Immortality of the Soul, 1516. This book was widely read, especially in Italian universities.[200] Dr. Martin Luther posted his Theses on October 31, 1517 in Wittenberg. In his 1520 published Defence of 41 of his propositions, Luther cited the pope's immortality declaration, as among "those monstrous opinions to be found in the Roman dunghill of decretals." [250] The 27th proposition read:
William Tyndale (1484-1536), British Bible translator, came to the defense of the revived teaching of conditional immortality.
Charge "XVI" stated:
Johann L. von Mosheim (1694-1755), chancellor of the University of Göttingen,
[900]
Richard or Robert Overton (1609-1679), scholar, soldier and pamphletier, published in 1643, Man's Mortality, in which the title page reads:
John Milton (1608-1674), was a well known or even the greatest of the sacred poets. Milton taught the totally unconscious sleep of man in death until the coming of Christ and resurrection, and wrote:
John Jackson (1686-1763), was the Rector of Rossington school and wrote several titles in which he confutes and condemns the doctrine of eternal torment.[1500] John Canne (1590-1667) was a pastor of the Broadmead Baptist Church in Bristol and printer of R. Overton's work and held essentially the same view as Overton.[1600]
Archbishop John Tillotson (1630-1694) of Canterbury states
Dr. William Coward (1657-1725) was a practicing physician in London. He states
Peter Pecard (ca. 1718-1797) was master of Magdalen College in Cambridge, England, and dean of Peterborough. He believed that
Bishop William Warburton (1698-1779) was bishop of Gloucester and a theological controversialist who
Bishop Timothy Kendrick states in a sermon from 1805:
Archbishop Richard Whately (1787-1863)
Charles F. Hudson (1821-1867) was a Congregationalist minister and Greek scholar who believed the same.[4900]
Dr. Robert W. Dale (1829-1895) was a Congregationalist pastor of Carr's Lane Church in Birmingham. He was editor of The Congregationalist magazine; chairman of the `Congregational Union of England and Wales'; and president of the `First International Council of Congregational Churches in 1891'. He announced his acceptance of conditionalism in a paper before the Congregational Union of 1874.
"The doctrine of natural, as distinguished from Christian, immortality had not been subjected to the severer tests of wide publicity and resolute controversy, but had crept into the Church, by a back door as it were; by a silent though effective process; and was in course of obtaining a title by tacit prescription." 6400]
"Another consideration of the highest importance is that the natural immortality of the soul is a doctrine wholly unknown to the Holy Scriptures, and standing on no higher plane than that of an inegeniously sustained, but gravely and formidably contested, philosophical opinion." [6500]
"The character of the Almighty is rendered liable to charges which cannot be repelled so long as the idea remains that there may by His ordinance be such a thing as never-ending punishment, but that it will have been sufficiently vindicated at the bar of human judgment, so soon as it has been established and allowed that punishment, whatever else it may be, cannot be never-ending." [6600]
Joseph Parker (1830-1902) was a Congregationalist pastor of the `City Temple' of London. He stated,
Discussing the ultimate banishment of sin from the universe, Parker adds:
"By destroying evil I do not mean locking it up by itself in a moral prison, which shall be enlarged through the ages and generations until it shall become the abode of countless millions of rebels, but its utter, final, everlasting extinction, so that at last the universe shall be `without spot or wrinkle, or any such thing' - the pure home of a pure creation." [6800]
Commenting on the "Destruction of Sodom," Parker denies that "in giving life God has put it absolutely out of his own power to reclaim or withdraw it." He comments on the implications:
"`Having once given you life you are as immortal as he himself is, and you can defy him to interfere with his own work!' The doctrine seems to me to involve a palpable absurdity, and hardly to escape the charge of blasphemy. Throughout the whole Bible, God has reserved to himself the right to take back whatever he has given, because all his gifts have been offered upon conditions about which there can be no mistake." [6900]
"In this case [of Sodom] we have an instance of utter and everlasting destruction. We see here what is meant by "everlasting punishment," for we are told in the New Testament that "Sodom suffered the vengeance of eternal fire," that is of fire, which made an utter end of its existence and perfectly accomplished the purpose of God. The "fire" was "eternal," yet Sodom is not literally burning still; the smoke of its torment, being the smoke of an eternal fire, ascended up for ever and ever, yet no smoke now rises from the plain, -
"The immortality of the soul is a phantom which eludes your eager grasp." [7200]
Sir George G. Stokes M.P., (1819-1903) was professor of mathematics at Cambridge and president of the Royal Society.
"Man's whole being was forfeited by the Fall, and the future life is not his birthright, but depends on a supernatural dispensation of grace. To look to man's bodily frame for indications of immortality, to look even to his lofty mental powers - lofty, indeed, but sadly misused - is to seek the living among the dead. Man must look not into himself, but out of himself for assurance of immortality." [7400]
Dr. W.A. Brown (1865-1943) was of the Union Seminary in New York. he believed:
"It will of course be said, of this as of some other doctrines, that, if not explicitly taught in the Bible, it is implied and assumed there ... They who claim for their teaching the authority of God must prove that it comes from Him. Such proof in this case, I have never seen."
In his book in a note on 1.Corinthians 15:18 he says:
"By `perish' the Apostle here apparently means `pass out of existence'." [7800]
On Hebrews 9:28 we read:
"The use in the N.T. of such words as `death', `destruction', `fire', `perish', to describe Future Retribution, point to the likelihood of fearful anguish, followed by extinction of being, as the doom which awaits those who by persistent rejection of the Saviour prove themselves utterly, and therefore irremediably bad." [Ibid., 7800]
On Revelation 14:11:
"There is nothing in this verse that necessarily implies an eternity of suffering. In a similar way the word `punishment' or `correction' in Matthew 25:46 gives itself no indication of time."
On Revelation 20:10:
"The Lake of fire implying awful pain and complete, irremediable ruin and destruction." [Ibid., 7800]
Dr. Lyman Abbott (1835-1922) was a Congregationlist pastor and editor of Christian Union and The Outlook.
"The notion that the final punishment of sin is continuance in sin and suffering is also based in part on, what seems to me, a false philosophy of man. This philosophy is that man is by nature immortal. The conviction has grown on me, that according to the teaching of both of science and Scripture, man is by nature an animal, and like all other animals mortal; that immortality belongs only to the spiritual life; and that spiritual life is possible only in communion and contact with God; that, in short, immortality was not conferred upon the race in creation whether it would or not, but is conferred in redemption, upon all those of the race who choose life and immortality through Jesus Christ our Lord." [Ibid., 7900]
Dr. Edward Beecher (1803-1895) was a Congregationalist theologian and president of Illinois College. He stated:
"From the Biblical point of view the soul can be put to death."
"If, then, Man is immortal, it is because immortality has been bestowed on him. He is immortal, not because he was created so, but because he has become so, deriving his deathlessness from Him Who alone has immortality. And of this fact the `Tree of Life' in the midst of the Garden seems to have been the appointed symbol and pledge. That this is the meaning of the `Tree of Life' is evident from the closing words of the Archive of the Fall:
In the 19th century, in addition to a great revival of individual exponents of conditionalism, conferences were held, such as the large `London Conference on Conditional Immortality' on May 15, 1876, with its published report. Convened under the chairmanship of Lieutenent-General Goodwyn, the attendance included such prominent adherents as Henry Constable,with messages from Dr. Pétavel of Switzerland, Dr. Weymouth of Mill Hill School, etc. The gist of the conference report was:
Dr. White declared there:
Canon William H.M. Hay Aitken (1841-1927) was an Anglican mission organizer who stated:
Eric Lewis (1864-1948) of Cambridge University was a missionary to the Sudan and India who made the following points:
"Man is not immortal by nature or right; but he is capable of immortality and there is offered to him resurrection from the dead and life eternal if he will receive it from God and on God's terms." Ibid., p. 472.
"Are there not, however, many passages which speak of the endless torment of the lost? No; as far as my knowledge goes, there is none at all." Ibid., p. 464.
"After all, annihilation is an everlasting punishment though it is not unending torment." Ibid."
"One thing we can say with confidence: everlasting torment is to be ruled out. If men had not imported the Greek and unbiblical notion of the natural indestruction of the individual soul, and then read the New Testament with that already in their minds, they would have drawn from it a belief, not in everlasting torment, but in annihilation. It is the fire that is called aeonian, not the life cast into it." [9000]
"How can there be the Paradise for any while there is Hell, conceived as unending torment, for some? Each supposedly damned soul was born into the world as a mother's child, and Paradise cannot be Paradise for her if her child is in such a Hell." Ibid., p. 454.
Dr. Gerardus van der Leeuw (1890-1950) was a professor at the University of Groningen, Netherlands. He comments after quoting Ecclesiastes 3:19-21:
"The church has - no matter how much Helenized it may be in doctrine and practice - always maintained the resurrection of the body ... The body dies, death is not being denied at all. Even the Spirit, the soul that I am, will not exist. The soul will also die. But the whole life of man will be renewed by God. God will raise me up "in the latter days." Ibid., p. 32.
"Many preachers of recent times are rather hesitant to preach about immortality. But in former days, when preaching about eternal life, it was without effort that they dwelt upon imaginations of a corruptible body and an immortal soul. The older devotional books and church hymnals are full of it. Even now people in the house of bereavement and on the graveyards are being comforted from the same source - yet these representations are not in any respect Christian, but purely Grecian and contrary to the essence of Christian faith. Ibid., p. 20.
Dr. Aubrey R. Vine (1900-1973) was the editor of `The Congregational Quarterly' and professor at Yorkshire United Independent College who stated:
"Against the idea of the natural immortality of the spirit we must set the fact that God is the only self-existent and that nothing exists or continues to exist except by His grace and will, within this schema or within any other. God only is exoschematic. When we use the word `immortal', therefore, of anything but God, we must always realize that none but God is immortal by his own nature and without qualification." Ibid., p. 315.
"`Immortal' should not be applied to a human spirit if we clearly recognize that it is only immortal at God's grace and pleasure. Only God is immortal by His own nature and without qualification." Ibid., p. 311 footnote.
Dr. Martin J. Heinecken (1902-1998) was professor of systematic theology at the Lutheran Theological Seminary in Philadelphia. Speaking of man as a unit, he stated:
"We are dealing with a unified being, a person, and not with something that is called a soul and which dwells in a house called the body, as though the body were just a tool for the soul to employ, but not really a part of the person." Ibid., p. 38.
Coming then to the issue of immortality of the soul Professor Heinecken then says:
"The Christian view is by no means to be identified with the above belief in the immortality of the soul. The Christian belief is in the immortality of the God-relationship, and in the resurrection. The Christian dualism is not that of a soul and body, eternal mind and passing things, but the dualism of Creator and creature. Man is a person, a unified being, a center of responsibility, standing over against his Creator and Judge. He has no life or immortality within himself. He came into being through God's creative power. He spends as many years on this earth as in God's providence are allotted to him. He faces death as the wages of sin." Ibid., p. 133,134.
"Men have speculated like this:
"to die then means to pass to the resurrection and the judgment at the end of time. even if someone should say that all men sleep until the final trumpet sounds, what is the passage of time for those who are asleep? The transition from the moment of death to the resurrection would still be instantaneous for them. It would be no different from going to bed at night and being waked in the morning." Ibid., p. 136.
David R. Davies (1889-??) was the rector at St. Mary Magdalen in Britain. He stated:
"The Hebrew view of man was entirely different. In the Bible man is regarded as a unity of `life' or spirit, which manifests itself as both soul and body. Since man has made himself mortal, his soul, in consequence, also partakes of mortality. Man is not a compound of two different entities, matter and spirit, but a unity of spirit functioning as matter and soul. It is this unity that is mortal." Ibid., p. 84,85.
Dr. Basil F.C. Atkinson (1895-??) was the under-librarian of Cambridge University Library and commented on Genesis 2:7 saying:
Then he added:
"The philosophical belief in immortality is like an echo, both reproducing and falsifying the primal Word of this divine Creator. It is false because it does not take into account the real loss of this original destiny through sin." Ibid., p. 107.
Dr. Reinhold Niebuhr (1892-1971) was a professor at Union Theological Seminary.
"Origen's Platonism completely destroys the Biblical sense of the unity of man." Ibid., p.153, footnote.
"Gregory's [of Nyssa] thoroughly Platonic conception of the relation of the soul to the body is vividly expressed in his metaphor of the gold and the alloy." Ibid., p.172.
"The idea of the resurrection of the body is a Biblical symbol in which modern minds take the greatest offense and which has long since been displaced in most modern versions of the Christian faith by the idea of the immortality of the soul. The latter idea is regarded as a more plausible expression of the hope of everlasting life." Ibid., vol. 2, p. 294.
"The resurrection is not a human possibility in the sense that the immortality of the soul is thought to be so. All the plausible and implausible proofs for the immortality of the soul are efforts on the part of the human mind to master and to control the consummation of life. They all try to prove in one way or another that an eternal element in the nature of man is worthy and capable of survival beyond death." Ibid., p. 295.
"The Christian hope of the consummation of life and history is less absurd than alternate doctrines which seek to comprehend and to effect the completion of life by some power or capacity inherent in man and his history."Ibid., p. 298.
"It has been characteristic of Western thought ever since Plato to distinguish sharply between the soul and the body. The body is supposed to be composed of matter, and the soul of spirit. The body is a prison from which the soul is liberated at death to carry on its own proper nonphysical existence. Because of its immaterial spiritual nature the soul has been considered indestructible. Hence the question of life after death has been the question of demonstrating the immortality, the death-defying capacity, of the soul. The body is of little consequence.
This way of thinking is entirely foreign to the Bible. True to Scripture and definitely rejecting the Greek view, the Christian creed says, not "I believe in the immortality of the soul," but "I believe in the resurrection of the body." "The soul is not a separate part of man, constituting a substance of its own." Ibid., p. 29. "The Christian faith knows nothing about an immortality of the person. That would mean a denial of death, not recognizing it as judgment of God. It knows only an awakening from real death through the power of God. There is existence after death only by way of awakening, resurrection."[9920] There is no immortality of the soul but a resurrection of the whole person, body and soul, from death. The only immortality which the Bible recognizes is the immortality of a personal relationship with God in Christ."— Ibid., p. 33.
"The Bible does not distinguish between man and the beasts on the ground that man has an immortal soul while the beasts do not. Men, beasts, even plants, are alike in death. We do not need to concern ourselves about spiritualism or hypotheses of any kind concerning future existence. The whole matter of death and life after death is simplified when our only concern is faith in God who can destroy and who can resurrect. Life makes no sense and holds no hope except in terms of Christ's victory over death and the assurance that we share in that victory.
There is considerable support in Scripture for the view that the soul as well as the body is destructible. This evidence has been obscured because the Greek conception of the inherent immortality of the soul has supplanted the teaching of Scripture." "There are two indisputable realities in the scriptural doctrine, the fact of death and the fact of resurrection from the dead at Christ's second coming. But between the death of an individual and the return of Christ is an interval, which from the human point of view, in the case of most men, is a long period of time." Ibid., p. 36. "Against such speculation [Roman Catholic purgatory, Limbo, etc.] Protestant orthodoxy has, on the whole, denied all conceptions of a neutral state of waiting and held that souls pass immediately into a state of misery or of blessedness." Ibid., p. 37. "If death means entrance into heaven, then resurrection and judgment lose their significance." Ibid., p. 38. "The soul has no existence apart from the body. The whole man, body and soul dies, and the whole man, body and soul, is resurrected on the last day. At death man proceeds directly to the final resurrection and judgment. There is no period of waiting, for waiting implies time, and beyond death time no longer has any significance. From our own temporal point of view we may speak of the dead as being asleep and then say with Luther that for one in deep slumber the passage of centuries is as an instant. We may even say that departed believers are at home with the Lord in the sense that their striving and waiting are over and they have reached their final goal." Ibid., pp. 96, 97.[9930] "An alternative solution is that the fate of the wicked is neither eventual redemption nor endless torment but simply annihilation. Eternal death would conform to the New Testament connotation of death in general, apoleia, destruction. Proponents of this view claim that the idea of eternal punishment rests on the Platonic conception of the inherent indestructibility of the soul and that the reasoning used to disprove it applies here also. On this ground the nature of God also appears to be vindicated." Ibid., p. 107. "Dr. Kantonen has since modified his view, according with Walter Künneth (Theologie der Auferstehung) that the dead are not non-existent. (See p. 39.) "When Christ, then, in the end destroys "every rule and every authority and power," he will wipe out every vestige of opposition to God, both human and superhuman. This view, unlike universal restoration, preserves the twofold judgment taught in Scripture. And to be completely cut off from God, the source of life, would seem logically to imply nonexistence. Such a lapse into nothingness of all of life's hopes and values makes perdition a terrible reality even without the added feature of prolonged torture." Ibid., p. 108. "The hope of the individual Christian at death does not lie in man's power to defy death but in God's power to raise man from the dead. Death is real, and man has no inherent capacity to leap over the grave into another existence." Ibid., p. 111. "The ultimate significance of Christ's triumph over death will become manifest in the resurrection of the dead. Ibid., p. 112. DR. D. R. G. Owen, professor of religious knowledge at Trinity College was also a lecturer and a teacher on philosophy and religion at Wycliffe College in Toronto, Canada. He said:
"If we turn to the Bible, however, as we shall later, we find that a quite different view of man is assumed throughout. Here there is no dualism and scarcely any idea of the immortality of a detached and independent soul." Ibid., p. 29. "Plato remains to the end an antiphysical dualist. It is he, and his followers, who most of all are responsible for imposing the "religious" anthropology on Western thought." Ibid., p. 41. This latter belief especially - the idea that the soul can exist apart from the body - obviously implies some form of body - soul dualism. . . . This body-soul dualism was a necessary implicate of the Greek doctrine of the immortality of the soul. Ibid., p. 59. "Now there are a few isolated Scriptural passages that may suggest the idea of the immortality of the soul in the Greek sense, but the normal Biblical point of view is quite different: in the New Testament it is the resurrection of the body that is stressed, and this doctrine is almost a direct contradiction of the "Orphic" eschatology. Why, then, did the Fathers lean toward this largely un-Biblical notion?" Ibid. "The fact is that the Fathers' adoption of the "religious" idea of the immortality of the detachable soul forced them into the doctrine of body-soul dualism." Ibid., p. 61. "The idea of the intermediate state eventually developed into the doctrine of purgatory." Ibid. "The Fathers were no doubt impressed by the force of the arguments advanced by Greek philosophy to prove the immortality of the soul. And, finally, of course, the idea of an intermediate state gave the human being another chance to be purged of his sins before the last judgment. It was the development of this notion that led to the doctrine of purgatory, with all the superstitions and objectionable practices that eventually made up the purgatorial system and, in the end, furnished part of the immediate cause of the Reformation." Ibid., p. 62. "Their [Church Fathers] resulting anthropology was a mixture of Biblical and Greek ideas. They added to the New Testament doctrine of the resurrection of the body the idea of an intermediate state in which the soul exists apart from the body, awaiting its recovery at the end." Ibid., p. 77. "The "religious" anthropology, as far as Western thought is concerned, is Greek and not Biblical in origin. It is also typical of Eastern religions in general, such as Hinduism and Buddhism. It seems to be characteristically "religious," and for this and other reasons has tended to creep into and corrupt the Christian view of man. This happened, as we saw, in the patristic and medieval periods, and modern Catholicism and Protestantism have tended to perpetuate this early mistake." Ibid., p. 163. "The Biblical view of man is entirely different from the `religious'." Ibid., p. 164. "The Hebrews had no idea of the immortality of the soul in the Greek sense. . . . It was impossible for them even to conceive of disembodied human existence." Ibid., p. 177. "The idea of the immortality of the soul in the Greek sense may be suggested in some passages in the wisdom literature and is definitely found in places in the Apocrypha. This line of thought was later developed in the Hellenistic Judaism of the Alexandrine School, in the inter-Testamental period, of which the religious philosopher Philo is the outstanding example." Ibid., p. 178. Such are some of the host of advocates of conditional immortality, or life only in Christ, and/or of the ultimate destruction of unrepentant sinners. What was the diagnosis of Jesus of Lazarus? He said, "This sickness is not unto death." Suggested Action: Teach your members how to study the Bible for themselves. Do not send your young people to established schools of higher learning but train them at home or newly established schools which teach the truth. Notes & References [0050] To really understand the Bible's assertions about what happens to us when we die, we first have to understand the Jewish worldview in contrast to that of Egypt, which underlies this topic, and which is presented in the Word of God. After we understand their worldview, not ours, we may understand the clipped, unspoken references in many Bible passages which make it appear that man's soul goes to heaven at death, like passages we discuss here. [0100] H.J. Schroeder, Disciplinary Decrees of the General Councils, 1937, pp. 483, 487. [0200] Pietro Pomponatius, Treatise on the Immortality of the Soul, 1516. See here offline. [0250] Martin Luther, Assertio Omnium Articulorum M. Lutheri per Bullam Leonis X. Novissimam Damnatorum (Assertion of all the articles of M. Luther condemned by the latest Bull of Leo X.), article 27, Weimar edition of Luther's Works, Vol. 7, pp. 131,132. [0300] Martin Luther, Assertio Omnium Articulorum M. Lutheri per Bullam Leonis X. Novissimam Damnatorum (Assertion of all the articles of M. Luther condemned by the latest Bull of Leo X.), article 27, Weimar edition of Luther's Works, Vol. 7, pp. 131,132 (a point by point exposition of his position, written Dec. 1, 1520, in response to requests for a fuller treatment than that given in his Adversus execrabilum Antichristi Bullam, and Wider die Bulle des Endchrists. [0400] Francis Blackbourne, Short Historical View of the Controversy Concerning an Intermediate State, 1765, p. 14. [0500] William Tyndale, An Answer to Sir Thomas More's dialogue, Parker's 1850 reprint, Bk. 4, ch. 4, pp. 180,181. [0700] John Frith, An Answer to John Fisher, Bishop of Rochester. [0800] Blackburne, Historical View, p. 21.
[0840] Hillerbrand, Hans, The Reformation, N.Y., 1964, p. 208.; Cited from the
Last Will and Testament of John Calvin which he signed on Tuesday April 25, 1564. A month later, at sunset on Wednesday May 27, 1564 John Calvin passed away because of, as he wrote, being oppressed with various diseases. Theodore Beza, Life of Calvin, pp. cxxi-cxxv (CR 49, 162-3).
[0860] Ibid., p. 207, 208. The Last Will of John Calvin: "In the name of the Lord, Amen, I, John Calvin, minister of the Word of God in this church of Geneva, being afflicted and oppressed with various diseases, which easily induce me to believe that the Lord God has determined shortly to call me away out of this world, have resolved to make my testament, and commit my last will to writing in the manner following: First of all, I give thanks to God, that taking mercy on me, whom he had created and placed in this world, he not only delivered me out of the deep darkness of idolatry in which I was plunged, that he might bring me into the light of his Gospel, and make me a partaker in the doctrine of salvation, of which I was most unworthy; and not only, with the same mercy and benignity, kindly and graciously bore with my faults and my sins, for which, however, I deserved to be rejected by him and exterminated, but also vouchsafed me such clemency and kindness that he has deigned to use my assistance in preaching and promulgating the truth of his Gospel. And I testify and declare that it is my intention to spend what yet remains of my life in the same faith and religion which he has delivered to me by his Gospel; and that I have no other defence or refuge for salvation than his gratuitous adoption, on which alone my salvation depends. With my whole soul I embrace the mercy which he has exercised towards me through Jesus Christ, atoning for my sins with the merits of his death and passion, that in this way he might satisfy for all my crimes and faults, and blot them from his remembrance. I testify also and declare, that I suppliantly beg of him that he may be pleased so to wash and purify me in the blood which my Sovereign Redeemer has shed for the sins of the human race, that under his shadow I may be able to stand at the judgment-seat. I likewise declare that, according to the measure of grace and goodness which the Lord hath employed towards me, I have endeavoured, both in my sermons and also in my writings and commentaries, to preach his Word purely and chastely, and faithfully to interpret his sacred Scriptures. I also testify and declare that, in all the contentions and disputations in which I have been engaged with the enemies of the Gospel, I have used no impostures, no wicked and sophistical devices, but have acted candidly and sincerely in defending the truth. But, woe is me! my ardour and zeal (if indeed worthy of the name) have been so careless and languid that I confess I have failed innumerable times to execute my office properly, and had he not, of his boundless goodness, assisted me, all that zeal had been fleeting and vain. Nay, I even acknowledge, that if the same goodness had not assisted me, those mental endowments which the Lord bestowed upon me would, at his judgment-seat, prove me more and more guilty of sin and sloth. For all these reasons, I testify and declare that I trust no other security for my salvation than this, and this only, viz. that as God is the Father of mercy, he will show himself such a Father to me, who acknowledge myself to be a miserable sinner. As to what remains, I wish that, after my departure out of this life, my body be committed to the earth (after the form and manner which is used in this Church and city), till the day of happy resurrection arrive."
As far as the soul is concerned, in his last will, John Calvin says, "With my whole soul I embrace the mercy which he has exercised towards me through Jesus Christ, atoning for my sins with the merits of his death and passion, that in this way he might satisfy for all my crimes and faults, and blot them from his remembrance." He uses the phrase "my whole soul". It seems that would mean all his life, his energy, his knowledge, his thinking brain, all his physical being. At least in his last will I find no reference to the soul being immortal though he may have written about that earlier in his life. If so, he was vacillating or confused about the soul being a life human being or some ghostlike existence. As we demonstrate, the notion of a ghostlike soul derives from Egypt and went from there to Greece as Herodotus affirms.
[0900] Murdock, tr., Institutes of Ecclesiastical History, Bk. IV, cent. XVI, Sec. III, Pt. 2, Ch. III, par. 23.
[1000] J. Priestley, Works, chapter on Corruptions of Christianity, 1818, Vol. 5, p. 229.
[1100] R. Overton, Man's Mortality, 1643, Title page.
[1200] S. Richardson wrote in 1658: `A Discourse on the Torments of Hell: The foundations and pillars thereof discovered, searched, shaken, and removed. With Infallible Proofs that there is not to be a punishment after this life, for any to endure that shall never end.
[1300] John Milton, Treatise of Christian Doctrine, Vol. 1, ch. 13.
[1400] Produced an English translation of Nemesius, early Bishop of Emesa, 1636.
[1500] John Jackson, A Dissertation on Matter and Spirit, 1735.; The Belief of a Future State, 1745.; A Clear Distinction Between True and False Religion, 1750.
[1600] John Canne, Reference Bible, 1682.
[1700] John Tillotson, Works, 1683.
[1800] Isaac Barrow, `Duration of Future Punishment' in Works.
[1900] Wm. Coward, A Survey of the Search After Souls, ca. 1702.
[2000] Henry Layton, Arguments and Replies, in dispute concerning the nature of the soul, 1703.; A Search After Souls, 1706.
[3000] Joseph N. Scott, Sermons Preached in Defence of All Religion, 1743.
[3100] Joseph Priestley, `Disquisitions Relating to Matter and Spirit' in Works, Vol. 3.; also `The History of Opinion Concerning the State of the Dead'.
[3200] Edmund Law, Considerations on ... the Theory of Religion, 1749.' The State of the Dead, 1765, See Appendix.
[3300] Peter Pecard, Observations on the Doctrine of an Intermediate State, Between Death and Resurrection, 1756.
[3400] Francis Blackbourne, A Short Historical View of the Controversy Concerning the Intermediate State, 1765.
[3500] William Warburton, Divine Legation of Moses, 1738-41.
[3600] Samuel Bourne, Christian Doctrine of Future Punishment, 1759.
[3700] William Whiston, The Eternity of Hell-Torments Considered, 1740.
[3800] John Tottie, Sermons Preached Before University of Oxford, 1775.
[3900] Henry Dodwell, Letter Concerning the Immortality of Human Souls, 1708.; An Epistle Discourse, 1706.
[4000] Timothy Kendrick, Sermons, 1805.
[4050] Leroy E. Froom, The Conditionalist Faith of Our Fathers, 1965.
[4100] William Thomson, The Thought of Death, Bampton Lecture, 1862.
[4150] Edward White, Life in Christ, 1846.; That Unknown Country, Symposium.; Immortality, a Clerical Symposium.
[4200] Introduction to J. H. Pettingell's The Unspeakable Gift, 1884, p. 22.
[4300] J.H. Pettingell, Homiletic Monthly (England), March, 1885.; Mt. 10:28.
[4400] John Thomas, in one of his articles.
[4500] H.H. Dobney, Notes on Lectures on Future Punishment, 1844.
[4600] Richard Whitley, A View of the Scriptural Revelations Concerning a Future State.
[4700] Dean H. Alford, Author of a Greek New Testament.
[4800] James P. Ham, Life and Death or The Theology of the Bible in Relation to Human Mortality, 1849.
[4900] Charles F. Hudson, Debt and Grace as Related to the Doctrine of a Future Life, 1857.; Christ Our Life. The Scriptural Argument for Immortality Through Christ Alone, 1860.
[5000] Recorded in Freer's `Edward White', His Life and Work, 1902, pp. 354-355.
[6000] Frederick Farrar, Eternal Hope, 1877.; Faith and Mercy,; Mercy and Judgment, 1881.
[6100] Herman Olshausen, Biblical Commentary on the New Testament, Vol. 4, 1860, p. 381.
[6200] Henry Constable, hades: or the Intermediate State of Man; Restitution of All Things; The Duration and the Nature of Future Punishment.
[6300] William E. Gladstone, Studies Subsidiary to the Works of Bishop Butler, (1896 ed.), p. 184. [7100] John J. S. Perowne, Hulsean Lectures on Immortality, 1868 , p. 31. [7300] George Stokes, That Unknown Country (A Symposium), 1889.; Immortality, a Clerical Symposium. [7500] W. A. Brown, The Christian Hope, 1912. For an explanation why all these champions here cited, refer to the Greeks as the source of the belief in immortality and CIAS refers the Egyptians as the source, please be reminded that Egyptian history and their believe in the afterlife became not widely known until after the French Revolution. The Egyptian believes on this subject appear to be more ancient. [7600] J. Ager Beet, Last Things - Preface to The Immortality of the Soul: A Protest, 5th ed., 1902. [7700] Cited by Edward White in Life in Christ, (1878), p. 365. [7800] Notes by Earnest Hampden-Cook, editor and reviser of third edition of The New Testament in Modern Speech, by Richard Francis Weymouth. [7900] Lyman Abbott, That Unknown Country, 1889. [8000] Edward Beecher, Doctrine of Scriptural Retribution, p. 58. [8100] Emmanuel Pétavel-Ollieff, The Struggle for Eternal Life (La Fin du Mal); The Extinction of Evil, 1889.; The Problem of Immortality. [8150] Franz Delitzsch, A New Commentary on Genesis. [8200] Charles J. Ellicott, The Ceylon Evangelist, October, 1893. [8300] George Dana Boardman, Studies in the Creative Week, 1880, p. 215, 216. [8500] H. Pettingell, The Theological Trilemma (Endless Misery); Universal Salvation, or Conditional Immortality, 1878.; Platonism versus Christianity, 1881.; The Life Everlasting: What Is It? Whence Is It? Whose Is It?, 1882.; The Unspeakable Gift, 1884. Pettingell's, The Life Everlasting, pp. 66, 67. [8600] White, Report, London Conference on Conditional Immortality, pp. 28, 29. [8700] William H. M. Hay Atken, Foreword, Eric Lewis' - Life and Immortality, 1949, p. f. [8800] Eric Lewis, Life and Immortality, 1949 Christ, the First Fruits, 1949.; Christ the First Fruits, p. 79. [8900] William Temple, Christian Faith and Life, 1931; 16th impression, 1954.; Drew Lecture on Immortality, 1931.; Nature, Man and God, 1953, p. 460. [9000] William Temple, Christian Faith and Life, p. 81. [9100] Gerardus van Der Leeuw, Onsterfelijkheid of Opstanding (Immortality or Resurrection), 1947, p. 30. [9200] Aubrey R. Vine, An Approach to Christology, 1948, p. 314. [9300] Martin J. Heinecken, Basic Christian Teachings, 1949, pp. 36, 37. [9400] Martin J. Heinecken, Basic Christian Teachings, 1949, p. 133. [9500] David R Davies, The Art of Dodging Repentance, 1952, p. 84. [9600] Basil F. C. Atkinson, The Pocket Commentary of the Bible, Part One: Book of Genesis, 1954, p. 32. [9700] Emil Brunner, Eternal Hope (English translation by Harold Knight), 1954, p. 100. [9850] Reinhold Niebuhr, `The Nature and Destiny of Man', Scribners, 1955, (Gifford Lectures at Edinburgh, 1939), Vol. 1, p. 5, 13. [9900] T. A. Kantonen, The Christian Hope, 1954, p. 20. [9920] From Paul Althaus, Die letzen Dinge, (Gütersloh: Bertelsmann, 1933), p. 126. [9930] Dr. Kantonen has since modified his view, according with Walter Künneth (Theologie der Auferstehung) that the dead are not non-existent. (See p. 39.)
[9940] D. R. G. Owen (??-1961), Body and Soul: A Study on the Christian View of Man. (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1956), p.177. Used by permission.)
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