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Death and
Resurrection
【Believers’ Resurrection】Chrysostom, early
church father and orator, deplored the ostentatious public lamentations that
were made at Christian funerals in his day: “When I behold the wailings in
public places, the groanings over those who have departed this life, the
howlings and all the other unseemly behavior, I am ashamed before the heathen
and the Jews and heretics who see it, and indeed before all who for this reason
laugh us to scorn.”
He
complained that such conduct had the effect of nullifying his teaching on the
resurrection and encouraged the heathen to continue in unbelief. He asked what
could be more unseemly than for a person who professes to be crucified to the
world to tear his hair and shriek hysterically in the presence of death.
“Those
who are really worthy of being lamented,” Chrysostom admonished, “are the ones
who are still in fear and trembling at the prospect of death and have no faith
at all in the resurrection.” Then he drove home his point with these arresting
words: “May God grant that you all depart this life unwailed!”
【Believers’ Resurrection】John G. Paton, a
nineteenth-century missionary to the South Seas, met opposition to leaving his
home in
Without
hesitation, Paton replied, “I confess to you that if I can live and die serving
my Lord Jesus Christ, it makes no difference to me whether I am eaten by
cannibals or by worms; for in that Great Day of Resurrection, my body will rise
as fair as yours in the likeness of our risen Redeemer!”