“The Lord grant unto him that
he may find mercy of the Lord in that
day.” 2 TIM.
.
We must now bring to a close the discussion
which has been occupying our attention: not that
everything has been said that can or ought to be said
about it; for the interest of the subject grows with
the handling of it, as the various features of it
open out to view.
So far we have been dealing with the
condition of the faithful dead as it affects themselves,
with the mode of their own conscious life in the Intermediate
State, and with the nature of their own progressive
advance towards perfection. But there is another
aspect of the question, about which nothing has hitherto
been said, I mean, their relation to us who are still
living on earth. A few words, and they must be
very few, must be said on this point. It is
asked, for example, whether the veil has completely
shut out all knowledge of what is passing on earth
from those who have gone to their rest. No doubt,
we can know very little about this. But, at
all events, we do not know enough to warrant us in
saying with any confidence that they are aware of
nothing that is going on here. It is true that,
as has been said, the door that opens between this
life and that life only “open inwards,”
and that none have come back to tell us what in that
after life they knew about us and about our doings
on earth. Yet this ignorance of ours is not
the same thing as knowledge of the contrary, any more
than silence is always equivalent to denial.
Because we cannot see with our eyes, nor hear with
our ears, and cannot, by our actual senses, put the
question to the test, we are not on this account justified
in denying. Do we not know almost nothing as
to the limits of the powers of the spirit world?
All we can say, so far as reason can be our guide,
is this, that it is possible that souls in the
Intermediate State, if they are conscious of themselves
and of their present condition, if they retain memory,
if they have means of holding intercourse with one
another, may have means of knowing what goes on here:
I say that reason will tell us that this is at least
possible, and that it is quite impossible to prove
the contrary.
But does the Bible throw any light
upon this mysterious subject? I think it does.
It will be remembered how, in the narrative of the
rich man and Lazarus, Abraham is made to say to the
rich man, “They have Moses and the Prophets,
let them hear them.” We may ask, how could
Abraham, who lived more than 400 years before the
birth of Moses, have known of the existence of Moses,
if there were no possible means of communication, by
which occurrences on earth could be made known in the
unseen world where Abraham was? What could he
know of the prophets who lived more than a thousand
years after his time, if no possible communication
could find its way to that other world? And
we may trust this inference because, in a narrative
of this kind, whether it be historical or not, it
is not to be supposed that our Lord would have introduced
a false detail.
Let us, however, turn to another passage.
In the scene on the Mount of the Transfiguration
there appeared, talking with Christ, Moses and Elijah.
In what condition were they present? They were
still in the Intermediate State. The general
Resurrection had not, and has not yet, come.
“In glory” they appeared. Yes! some
outward clothing, as of a bodily form, gloriously
radiant was thrown round them, so that they became
visible for the time to the eyes of the three disciples.
But in no resurrection bodies did they come; for
in those they could not yet present themselves, since
they had not yet received them. And what was
the theme of their conversation? They spoke,
we are told, with Christ concerning the exodus or
“death, which He should accomplish at Jerusalem.”
But how could they speak fitly of this great theme,
if they had no knowledge of the circumstances which
were leading to it, of the nature of Christ’s
Incarnate Life on earth, and something at least or
the real significance, known fully to the mind of
GOD only, of His approaching death? They must
have known not only of each other, who and what they
had been historically in their own generation, but
also what was now passing on earth, the course and
connection of prophecies and types, and the succession
of events in history which had led up to this climax
of the fulness of time.
Thus we see that the hearts of these
two visitants, visitants not from Heaven,
but from Paradise, were fastened with a
keen interest and strained attention upon the unfolding
of that wondrous Life of Christ. His works and
words were the theme of their adoring contemplation.
May we not learn then, that what these two great
Saints could do was, therefore, at least a possible
thing to do, and, according to the will of GOD, a
thing which others might also do? If so, the
barrier between Paradise and earth is so far transparent
on that further side, that what GOD permits souls
in the Intermediate Life to know, that they do actually
see and know of the occurrences that are passing here.
But I must hasten to the answer of
another question. Do they pray for us?
Surely that question is as good as answered by what
has just been said. If those who have gone from
our sight are still permitted to know what it may
be good for them to know of the trials and sorrows,
the hopes and fears, the temptations and the warfare
to which we, whom they loved so well and still love,
are exposed on earth, we are sure that they take thought
of us and pray for us. Shall not they whose eyes
are opened, now that they are with Christ, care for
and pray for those whom they have left behind, tossing
still upon the troubled seas, and buffeted by the
vexing winds and storms of this earthly life?
They are, moreover, “with Christ.”
What does this really imply, to be “with
Christ”? It must mean at least this, that,
where Christ is, there is the Church. And Christ,
though He has ascended to the Right Hand of GOD, is
still in a true sense in Paradise also. For “He
filleth all in all.” S. Stephen, before
his death, prayed, “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.”
Our Lord, therefore, must have been there in Paradise
to receive it. S. Paul, long after our Lord’s
Ascension, knew that to die was better than to live,
because it was to be absent from the body and present
with the Lord. But if Christ is there, He must
be the object of the worship of those who are also
there. So then if Christ be there, and the Church
is there, and worship is offered there, then it follows
that the whole energy of Church life is there.
The souls in Paradise are not so many isolated and
individual units. The Church unites them.
They are organised in the exercise of worship, sustained,
as it surely is, in unfailing and perpetual intensity.
As the incense of our worship rises here, it blends
with the incense that ascends to Christ there.
The Church is militant on earth, it is expectant in
Paradise, it will be hereafter triumphant in Heaven.
Yet these are not three Churches, but one Church.
And this helps us to see more clearly what is meant
by the Communion of Saints. The Church on earth
and the Church in Paradise are one, and one thrill
of spiritual communion vibrates through its members
there and here.
But is prayer to be one sided?
Communion is not one sided. And communion implies
that what they do for us, we should also do for them.
This brings us to one more question. May we,
then, pray for those who have passed on before us?
Let us plainly say that there is every reason for
and none against the practice. We have in favour
of it the sanction of Bible witness, of primitive
Church custom, of Christian and human instinct.
In the Jewish synagogues in our Lord’s
time, prayers for the dead formed part of the service.
Our Lord therefore, Who regularly frequented
the synagogue worship, must have been present at times
when prayers for the dead were used. If He had
disapproved of such prayers, He must have condemned
the use of them. But did He? He did not.
We have then His tacit sanction of them. S.
Paul again, a Hebrew of the Hebrews, must have warned
the Gentiles against the practice, unless he approved
of it. But so far from that, there is every reason
to suppose that he himself prayed for Onesiphorus.
According to the best commentators, Onesiphorus was
dead when S. Paul wrote the words quoted in the text,
“The Lord grant unto him that he may find mercy
of the Lord in that day,” viz., in the
Day of Judgment. He does not pray for temporal
blessings, for health, or even for grace. If
it was too late to pray for these things, this omission
is quite intelligible.
The earliest Church Liturgies
contained in them prayers for the dead. And
the earliest Christian writers, as well as the inscriptions
on tombs bear such witness to the existence of this
primitive practice, that it cannot be disputed.
It is true that our English Prayer Book neither expressly
sanctions nor yet expressly forbids these intercessions.
But in the Liturgy, in the Litany, and in the Burial
Service, prayers occur which appear to have been purposely
so worded, as to lend themselves to a reference in
the minds of worshippers to the faithful dead, if
any should desire so to apply them. Bishop Cosin,
one of the chief compilers of our present Prayer Book,
writes that the words, “that we and Thy whole
Church may obtain remission of our sins, and all other
benefits of His Passion,” occurring in our Liturgy,
are to be understood to refer as well to “those
who have been here before,” that is to say,
who have died in the Lord, as to those “that
are now members of it,” that is, who still are
living.
And is not the custom reasonable?
Are we to pray for those whom we dearly love up to
the very last moment of their life, and then for ever
to refrain? We could understand this on the supposition
that death was the end of all things, or that at death
there followed an immediate heaven or an instant hell;
but not if the process of purification and of real
Church life are continuing after death. And Christian
instinct urges it. GOD is a Father. As
children we ought to tell Him all that is in our heart.
Whatever we may rightly desire we may rightly pray
for. It is only that which we ought not to desire
that we ought not to pray for. It is not right
to pray that they may, as by a miracle, be restored
to us; that is not the will of GOD. Nor is it
right that we should seek by occult and forbidden
ways to hold converse with them. But we may surely
ask for them what S. Paul asked for his friend, that
they may find mercy in that day, that they may have
rest and peace and light and refreshment, the joy
of Christ’s Presence, and the gladness of a blessed
Resurrection.
And now these words must be brought
to a close. The arguments which have been urged
rest upon the very language of Holy Scripture, or upon
legitimate inferences from it. What then?
If they are worthy of trust, to accept them is to
rob death of half its fears and alarms. It is
the unknown that inspires terror. To know but
a little more than we before knew of the land in which
those who have gone before now sojourn, is to gather
fresh courage to face it with less misgiving for them
and for ourselves. They have passed on, but
they await us there. They are only hidden from
us for a little while. Their voices are silent.
But their life is as real a life as ours. No
dull oblivion weighs them down. They live and
think and see and know, know, it may be,
more of us than we think, know as much of us as it
is for their happiness to know. A little while
and we also shall know as they know, and see as they
see, in the home and resting place of vision and of
peace.