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    ESSAY ON THE SCRIPTURAL DOCTRINE OF IMMORTALITY
    BY JAMES CHALLIS



    AN ESSAY

    ON THE

    SCRIPTURAL DOCTRINE

    OF

    IMMORTALITY



    BY THE REV.

    JAMES CHALLIS, M.A., F.R.S., F.R.A.S.




    PLUMIAN PROFESSOR OF ASTRONOMY AND EXPERIMENTAL PHILOSOPHY IN THE
    UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE, AND FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE.




    _Anagke gar moi epikeitai ouai gar moi estin, ean me euaggelzûmai
    --1 Cor. ix. 16




    RIVINGTONS

    London, Oxford, and Cambridge

    MDCCCLXXX




    RIVINGTONS


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    {1}

    AN ESSAY

    ON THE

    SCRIPTURAL DOCTRINE OF IMMORTALITY.


    Considering that under the existing conditions of humanity, disease,
    and decay, and death abound on every side, it is surprising that the
    word "immortality" obtained a place in systems of philosophy, the
    authors of which must be supposed to have been unacquainted with divine
    revelation. It is not surprising that in the absence of such aid the
    belief of immortality should not have been firmly held, or that by some
    philosophers it should have been expressly disavowed. Even in the
    Canonical Scriptures, the words "immortal" and "immortality" occur only
    in the Epistles of the Apostle Paul, and consequently not till "life
    and immortality had been brought to light through the Gospel." It is a
    remarkable circumstance that these words are met with more frequently
    in the Apocryphal Books, 2 Esdras, Wisdom of Solomon, and
    Ecclesiasticus, than in the Canonical Scriptures. The {2} explanation
    of the apparent silence of the Scriptures, especially those of the Old
    Testament, on so essential a doctrine, will, I think, be found to be
    given by the course of argument adopted in this essay.

    It may, further, be noticed that, according to philosophical dogma not
    derived from the teaching of Scripture, immortality is regarded as a
    principle, or innate quality, in virtue of which the human soul is
    exempt from the experience of death or annihilation. On this account
    Greek and Roman philosophers speak of "the immortality of _the soul_,"
    and even in the present day the same terms are used, the soul being
    regarded as _per se_ immortal. But neither in the Scriptures, nor in
    the Apocrypha, is "immortality" qualified by the adjunct "of the soul;"
    the reason for which may be that since death, as far as our senses
    inform us, is an _objective_ reality, the writers judged that mortality
    and freedom from mortality could only be predicated of _body_. It
    must, however, be taken into account that according to the doctrine of
    Scripture there is "a spiritual body" as well as "a natural body," so
    that while the natural body is, as we know, subject to the law of
    death, it may be true that the spiritual body is capable of
    immortality. This point will be farther discussed in the course of the
    essay.

    To account for the absence of any direct announcement of man's
    immortality in the Old Testament, and for its being sparingly mentioned
    in the New {3} Testament, the following argument seems legitimate and
    sufficient. These Scriptures, as already intimated, give no
    countenance to the idea that the soul of man possesses any innate
    principle of immortality; on the contrary, they reveal immortality by
    revealing _the means_ by which the spirit of man is _made_ immortal.
    As, according to natural science, the external world, both the animate
    part and the inanimate, has become such as we now perceive it to be by
    processes of generation and development, so there is reason from
    Scripture to say that a spiritual world is being created in an
    analogous manner, and that to this creation all other creations are
    subordinate and contributory. Moreover, we, the subjects of this
    creation, are so constituted that we are conscious of, and can
    ourselves take cognizance of, the means by which it is effected. These
    considerations may be applied to account for the mode in which
    immortality is treated of in the Bible. It concerns us, above all
    things, to discern and feel the operations whereby our spirits are
    formed both intellectually and morally for an immortal existence; and,
    accordingly, Scripture

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