Job XIX. 25, 26, 27 —For I know that my redeemer liveth
& that he shall stand at ye latter day on ye
Earth. And tho after my skin, worms
destroy this Body, yet in my flesh shall I
see God: whom I shall see for my self, &
mine Eyes shall behold & not another; tho
my reins be consumed within me.
"There is no part of a scripture which hath
afforded greater occasion for critical specu
-lations, or concerning which more elaborate
Dissertations have been written."
Some have been contended that there
never was in reality such a person as Job,
but that [illegible] Boothe's only apathetic & elegant
Fable, pregnant with ye
sublimest moral
Instructions. Others have mentioned that
it is a History of absolute facts — among
whom are some of our latest and best
critics, who have [with great] solidity in
judgment [blot]that there has
really such [blot]— and have
judiciously [blot] circumstances to
determined ye age in which he lived; w[hich]
was in all probability sometime better
that of Abraham.
To me it appears now that this
proposition will not be so much disputed
longer "That ye
History of Job is true"
"It is highly probable that Elihu was
the first penman of this History, as he
was ye
youngest person mention'd, & as
having a full acquaintance with Job & ye
several particulars of his life, who c[oul]d
therefore ye
best ascertain them. His
amiable character & remarkable modesty,
also fitted him for relating facts as they
happened. And lastly, his being little more
than a spectator, his mind was more [free] from
prej[udice] & passion than ye
other characters
interested, was therefore better qualified
than even Job himself, to examine and
recollect the several circumstances of
the affliction [blot]plaint ye diaglogue ye
accusat[io]n
defence & other [blot]which compose
this very [blot]able story. — I say
[tear] is hence probable that young Elihu
ye
original compiler of ye
History of
Job: However Tho indeed it is likely that
2
Moses gave it that sublimity of diction
& other dramatic & poetial ornaments
with which it every where abounds.
The design of this Ancient and
venerable Book seems to be first. —
to justify ye
conduct of an all wise being,
who always sees things as they are, & who in
all his Dispensations intends ye
chief good
of his creatures: — To show that men often
mistake characters; & in consequence fre-
-quently draw conclusions prejudicial to
themselves & others: — That afflictions
in ye
present state, simply considered, are
no proofs of ye
displeasure of ye
almighty,
but occasionally are quite ye
contrary:— And
lastly, as a general Lesson, by showing
that ye
behaviour of Job was considered as
a man, was upon ye
whole agreeable to
truth, reason [& not][blot] this seems
to be ye
[blot] and parti
-cularly in this [blot]Job in ye
most
moving [blot] complains of ye
cr[illegible]
of his pretended friends, who instead of compos
-ing his mind under his dreadful affliction,
[illegible]
-ing onerously ye
worst things ag[ains]t
him,
as if he had been ye
vilest & most detes-
-table Hypocrites upon Earth. How long
says ye
poor man, will ye
vex my soul;
& break me in pieces with words? [These] ten
times have ye
reproached me; & are ye
not
ashamed of your barbarity. — Is it not
enough that God the tremendous hand of
God is upon me? He hath set dismal
darkness in all my paths: — He hath
striped me of my glory, & taken my crown
from my head; he hath destroy'd me on every
side: — My Houses, lands, flockes, children,
health — all are gone! Yea he hath put mine
acquaintance brethren far from me, & my acquaintance
are verily estranged from me.— My kinsfolk,
have failed, & my familiar friends have for-
gotten me. — They that dwell in mine house,
& my maids cannot [blot] a stranger:— I called
my servant & [he gave me no answer]; I intreated
him with my mouth — alas! Job ye [blot]n hearts
[o]f they comforters — My [breath is] strange
[tear] my [wife], tho I intreated for ye
children & take
of my own body. —— Yea ye
young children
despised me; I arrose & they spake agt
me. All
3
my domestic friends abhorred me; & they whom
I loved are turned agt
me. — Nay more: my
bone cleaveth to my skin & my flesh! The
[terrours] of God set themselves in array agt
me! — And is now such an army of Evils suf-
ficient to break an Irron heart, with &
ye
additional weight of your in human & malignant reproaches.—
— Cease, o cease, my friends! — Nay, if
you are still friends — I beseech you by our
former friendship — I conjure you by every
thing that is sacred— have pity, have pity
upon [O ye my] friends! for ye
hand of god is
upon me. — No; in vain to expect it
from you: — — O! that my words were
written in Tables of lead, or engraved upon
ye
rock forever! A momento to rememberancer of my
Integrity, afflictions & resignation to Posteri-
-ty who w[oul]d
[indicate] my Cause! —— But
tho ye
world sh[oul]d [condemn me]
a hypocrite,
yet am I not [cast] [blot] while I have ye
root of ye matter
[blot] while I am in ye
house
of wise, just & merciful Being; — He knows
my heart — therefore, tho he slay my, y[et so]
I trust in him;
"For
I know that my redeemer liveth &c.
I know that my redeemer will first arise
for if himself from ye
dead — Then tho my
skin be disfigured & torn — yea tho worms
feast upon & consum this mortal — yet in
my flesh — yea my redeemer shall revive this
flesh — in my own glorious spiritual Body
shall I see God; — I shall see God — & not [igno]
-rant partial, blind man — I shall see God
whom I shall see for myself — who knows
my heart, will plead my cause, & amply reward
my present afflictions. — Yea I say mine
own Eyes shall behold, & tho my reins, &
all ye
vital functions of my Body be con-
-sumed — yet in this very Body spiritually
shall I see god.
This I take to be ye
connexion & sense
of ye
words; — in which every pious xtn [Christian]
may Join — only in t[blot]of saying my
Redeemer liveth [blot] & arise — my Re[deeme]r
hath raised [blot] Tho, worms
prey upon my Body [blot]al fabric be
[faded] mingled with ye
co[blot] filth of
[ye
E]arth — yet Redeemer will [revive], [illegible]alt &
[illegible]talize this with my happy soul in [me]
1 Cor.15.20 "But now is xt [Christ]
"risen from the dead, & become the first
"fruits of them that sleep."
In this chapter from the important
fact of xt's [Christ's] resurrection, St
Paul is
arguing & proving the doctrine of a
general resurrection of the dead, par-
-ticularly of the pious dead. Because
it seems there were some among the
xns [Christians] at Corinth who said, there is no res[urrectio]n
of ye
dead. If we suppose those
persons to have sprung from the sa-
-duces or Epicureans, both which held
that the soul perished with the body, &
so denied a future state of existence
absolutly; the Apostle's way of reason[in]g
will be more intelligible [& strongly] conclusive
ag[ains]t
his [blot] for accord[in]g
to their [principle of][blot] is no resur[illegible]
there is no [future]state at all: & they
that are fa[alse] or a[sleep] in xt [Christ] are p[unishe]d
as the Apostle justly argues ag[ains]t
them.
The same view of the case will sug-
-gest a very good reason, why he en-
-larges so much upon the resurrection
of the pious dead in particular.
Because he was led in the course of
his argument to interest a moral
providence in the question, with respect
to the hard usage, & ill treatment,
which many persons in those days
met with, for honestly asserting &
maintaining the xn [Christian] cause. And
this is the ground of his remark in
the verse before the text: — If in this
life only we have hope in xt [Christ] we are
of all men the most miserable. But
(as a false assurance of the contrary) now is
xt [Christ] risen from ye
dead & become ye first &c
In which [case] we have a double vie[w]
of xt's [Christ's] resurrection [blot] as a true &
certain fact in itself & a matter of
great importance to us. X
Regions of eternal perfection.
X The subject leads to these two
important propositions.
I. That xt[Christ] hath is risen from ye
dead.
II. That mankind consequently, as
members of this glorious hoard, shall also
be raised.
Now that xt[Christ] is risen from the dead is such
an unquestionable fact, that it is established
upon ye
soundest evidences. It is a fact
attested by a sufficient number of witnesses.
He was soon, after his resurrection, first
of Cephas, then of ye
twelve Apostles; & after
that he was seen of above five 1000 Brethren
at once. A sufficient number, surely,
to authenticate any fact.
And those witnesses were such that
they c[oul]d
not be deceived themselves nor is
it in ye least probable that they w[oul]d
deceive
others in this [blot]— It is impossi
ble that they [should deceive] themselves
to ye reality of
[Resurrec]tion) because
most of them were personally acquainted
with our Lord before his Death; &
consequently c[oul]d
easily know him after
he arose, as he abode with them forty Days;
with whom they frequently They eat &
drank. He appeared with ye
same face
& voice, he felt no corruption, nor any change
as yet in his bodily substance & shape,
features & aspect, & with ye
marks of his
crucifixion, which they saw & felt.
Wherefore, says Peter, of those men, who
have accompanied with us, all the time yt
the Lord Jesus went in & out among us,
beginning from ye
Baptism of John unto
ye
same day that he was taken up from
us must one be ordain'd to be a witness with
us of his resurrection. And as those
witnesses co[ul]d
not be deceived as to this
matter themselves; so neither c[oul]d
they
have any possible motive to impose upon
others. So far from it that they indulged
great doubt about ye [truth of]
[illegible] & with
most scrupulous [blot]w[oul]d
not
believe until he [showed on] his hands ye
[prin]t of ye
nails, & put his finger therein
[&] thrust his hands into [his side]— But
if they were disposed to believe to propogate
w[ha]t
they thot to be a lie — w[ha]t
motive c[oul]d
they have to it? — Had they any prospect
of some honour or worldly advantage from
testifying their truth of xt's[Christ's] resurrection?
So far from it, that by proacting this
Doctrine they suffered shame — ye
loss of
all their worldly interests — exposed themselves
to every danger — & at last laid down their lives
in attestation of it's truth. — w[oul]d
men be
cheats & Imposters for nothing? never:
If they were not sure their testimony
was true they must incur both ye
dis-
-pleasure of God & men, & be of all men ye
most stupid & most miserable. — No set
of men ever gave greater proofs of their
sincerity than ye
Apostles did in bearing
witness to ye
Resurrection of xt[Christ] — They
were in every view very sufficient & credible
witnesses, & the [blot] Resurrection is
an in[contestable fact]
[ more[blot] of ye
Apostles &c
confirmed by ye
[blot] of ye
holy
spirit. [blot][End] our Lord promised
ye
apostles — ye
shall [illegible] receive power af[ter]
that ye
holy ghost is come upon you:
& ye
shall be witnesses unto [me] both in
Jerusalem & in Judea, & Samaria, & unto ye
uttermost parts of ye
Earth. To this
Effusion of ye
spirit they therefore justly
appealed, as a divine confirmation of their
Testimony concerning ye
Resurrection
of xt [Christ]: — This Jesus hath God raised
up whereof we are all witnesses. Therefore
being by ye
right hand of God exalted, and
having received of ye
Father ye
promise of ye
holy ghost, he hath shed forth this, which
ye
now see & hear, in ye
gift of Tongues.
again to the same purpose — and we are
witnesses of these things; & so is ye
holy ghost
whom God hath thus given to them that
obey him for a confirmation of ye
Resur-
-rection of his son: — But surely ye
God
truth w[oul]d
never have set his seal to a lie; there-
-fore ye
Testimony of ye
Apostles is true,
& xt [Christ] is verily risen from ye
dead.] X
Lastly: The [blot]Testimony
of apostles, [saints] [blot] be
[rel]ied upon [as][blot]universal
[state Nations] of [blot]
[illegible] Jerusalem [blot] been
[torn]greatest folly to a[blot] propagate
a falsehood in a place & country where,
7
if it had been so, might easily have
been immediately detected refuted & ex-
-posed. — But ye
Jews instead of dispro[vin]g
ye
fact, only bribed ye
soldiers to deny it &
when ye
Apostles ascerted ye
Resurrection
among them, they never called them to
an acc[oun]t
for teaching a falsehood, but only
peremptorily commanded their silence
upon ye
subject.
Thus, my fellow xns [Christians], ye
Resurrection
xt [Christ] is established upon ye
[illegible]ible
foundation, which the brutality of Atheism ye
powers of hell cant
over turn. And upon ye
truth of im-
-portant fact we chiefly ground our
explanation of ye
Resurrection of his
followers. — For thus ye
great Apostle
Paul states ye
case: —— Now is xt [Christ] risen
from ye
dead & become ye
first fruits of them
them that st[oop]. — This is ye
Because xt [Christ] is risen
II View [blot] subject
Christ[blot] first fruits of
them that [blot] ye
plans
of di[blot][from] restoration of
Mankind[blot] is ye
sure pledge [tear]
secure f[illegible] ye
general resurrection
of all his faithful followers to life and
immortality. And this compleats his
character as ye
Saviour of ye
human Race.
For
X So ye
Apostle argues: For
[1] as in Adam all die, so in xt [Christ] shall be
made alive; but every man in his own order:
xt [Christ] ye
first fruits, and after, they that are
xt's [Christ's] — since by man came death, so also
by man came ye
Resurrection of ye
dead.
By ye
sin of Adam [Death] to possession
of ye
human Race, so in consequence of
their relation to xt [Christ] ye
2d
Adam they are
entitled a Resurrection from ye
dead.
"2 This is a power xt [Christ] is invested with,
in ye
accomplishment of his high office
as our Redeemer, until he finishes his
mediatorial kingdom. Then cometh ye
End when he shall have delivered up ye
kingdom
unto God, even[blot]when he shall have
put down all [blot][death] for he must
[design] 'til he hath [blot] under
his feet; the [blot] destroy'd
[tear] [flesh — Elsewhere] [blot]Apostle — who
[illegible] change our vile [blot] might be
fashion'd like unto his own glorious body,
8
according to ye
working — observe — whereby
he is able to subdue all things unto himself
— or according to ye
power which he is
invested with to receive & spiritualize ye Bodies
of good Men like unto his own glorious &
immortal body.
This my friends is the great priviledge
of ye [servants] of God — most worthy of ye
power, wisdom & grace of God, most
advantageous & honourable to Man! [Tho
the ignorance, presumption & vanity of
many have tempted them to cavil & object
to it as a thing Romantic, unreasonable,
impossible. — And this was ye
case seen
in ye
time of ye
Apostles, yea & soon in a
xtn [Christian] [illegible] at Corinth: — How are ye
dead raised? — Or it may be read thus:
How are the dead to be raised up! "is it
possible [to] [blot] thing? — "Yes
St
. Paul might [tear,blot] Resurrection
shows [blot, tear] ye
Apostles
known [blot] objected [illegible]
ye
cause was [blot, tear]hol believe in ye [tear]
of one who laid [blot] grave only three d[ays]
& therefore had not dis[erv]ed, or seen
corruption, & these Bodies which putrify
& mingle with ye
common dust of ye
Earth, &
the particles of it dispersed into a thousand
quarters. — No; he takes a shorter way with
ye
objection — & co[illegible] him by the testimony of his senses — thou fool! That which thou
sawest, is not quickened except it first
die, or Rot in ye
ground. — Look arround
thee! — view ye
productions of ye
Earth: — behold
a resurrection every year: — is ye
restoration
of a putrified Body more impossible to
that Being than who sendeth forth his
spirit continually in creative [miracles],
than ye
revival of ye
face of ye
Earth.?
"Expose thy weakness no more with such
with palpable absurdities."
—But if ye
dead are raised again he
objects — with w[ha]t
body do they come?
—why ye
same body in some respects,
tho not altogether [blot] shall be so
[for] the [blot, tear]ted to that
[they now possess] [tear, blot] & from
[tear]— Their [blot, tear]perations
[tear] com[illegible]rs of [tear, blot] a
[tear] of corn: - it is [blot] which thou
9
that grows up again, but bare grain, whe-
-ther it be wheat, or any other grain; as
God giveth it a body as it pleaseth him; that
is to every seed its own body. — "To every
seed its own Body" — mark that! — Thus every
seed, by ye
wisdom & power of God, is made to produce it's
own proper Body, which is extracted from its
seminal substance, in ye
natural course of
vegetation. In like manner or, by ye
same
divine chemistry, can be reduced from ye
substance
of ye
human Body tho putrified in ye
grave, another
proper Body, which may therefore be called
it's own Body.
Such are ye
futile objections ag[ains]t
ye
Resurrection
which surely cant
shake our faith in this
interesting truth. — No: — we have ye
highest
reason to believe that xt [Christ] is risen, & that can &
will change our vile Bodies into ye
similitude
of his own glorious Body. — And so may every
good man [blot][everlasting] language of
Job; [nay][blot, tear]nce th[ose]
him [blot, tear] my Redeemer liveth
—"hath risen [blot, tear] he will stand [on]
ye
Earth [blot, tear]
X the [after] [blot]
reins be [blot, tear]
to my im[blot, tear]
These are ye
glad tidings of ye
word of God, par-
ticularly ye
gospel — This is ye
confidence
of all good men, & eminently xtns[Christians]: — then
1. How thankful sh[oul]d
we be to almighty
God for this amazing display of his grace
& love to fallen Man — in whom he hath raised
ye
hope eternal glory by ye
Resurrection of
Jesus xt[Christ]! Man had no right to being
at first, nor after he was created had he any
claim to immortality: — Much less after he had
forfeited it by sin. — By ye
first Transgression
Death received an empire over ye
human race; for
sting of death is sin — The guilty cause of Death.
But thanks be to God who hath given us ye
victory thro our Lord Jesus xt[Christ]! — who hath
abolished Death, & brot Life & immortality
to Light thro ye
gospel: — for ye
wages of sin
is Death, but gift of God is eternal Life thro
our Lord Jesus xt[Christ]. — Blessed be god!
Then
2. Religion [blot]ing —There-
fore my brother [blot] with ye
apostles — be [blot]able always
[illegible]ding [blot] much as
[blot]Resur-
[blot] shall [illegible]in [illegible]
[blot] you to
10
stedfast in your principles — & immovable
in your profession, always abounding in ye
practice of Religion — w[ha]t
greater encourag[emen]ts
hereto can you have than such glorious
prospects? — prospects which you now can
but dimly see — as thro a glass darkly!—for no
eye hath seen, no ear heard, nor is possible for
ye
heart of man to conceive ye
happiness w[hic]ch
hath prepared for those that are his!
[Love God—serve God—Love & follow xt[Christ], &
your labour shall not be in vain.
3 From w[ha]t hath been said good men
have abundant cause to moderate their
fears of Death themselves, & their sorrows
for ye
Death of their pious friends.
Death, my friends is unstung! — This
king of sorrows is disarm'd by ye
hopes of
immortality, now brot to light, by the sun
of Righteousness shining in his gospel
with brig[ht] [blot]ture
[Such [tear][blot] makes
us res[tear]we ha[ve]
any [tear]ye [tear]
of s[tear]
have [tear]
that hath set their feet at large from
ye
necessities, incumberances of this mortal
life & thrown open to them ye
gates of
Heaven! ——— Shall we
exceed the bounds of truth if we believe
that this is ye
happy change — our departed
friend hath made? I trust not — May
we not hope that He who was so dear
to some of you — He whom you now
mourn —[Nature fools ye
wound blood
of [rest]]— may we not hope that he whose
Death it concerns us all to improve — I
say may we not hope that He hath been
released from all comforts troubles & gone
to that blessed abode, where ye
weary are at
rest? — May we not hope that in leaving
you, he is admited to ye
society of purer
happier beings — Saints & Angels — nay to
Jesus himself [blot]iator of ye
new
covenant wh[tear]ife his
[illegible]tal B[tear]er to his
[tear]al to his
[tear]at
[tear]s —
[tear]May
we not hope that you if you love [tear]
Jesus — that [illegible]ds you parents [tear]
wife — Brothers, Sisters — or whatever
other [tend] or Relation you bore to h[tear]
— May we not hope that you yet
shall see him, be forever happy in his
comunion to be separated no more? yet
if you are followers of that which is
good. —— Then cease your
sorrows — alas it is impossible!
Nature must have it's way! — But
surely those transporting hopes sho[ul]d
surely abate, & moderate your sorrows,
tho not at once be able to altogether
to stifle them.]
X Let this be your consolation and
rejoicing — that Death is disarmed!
— O Death where is thy sting? I [have]
broke [tear] thy victory
It is [tear]ng [tear]
man[tear]ter [tear]
"I [tear]
[tear]
that hope by ye
Resurrection of Jesus xt [Christ]
[illegible] ye
dead, to the list of an inheritance m[illegible]
[illegible]le undefiled & that fadeth not away:
[illegible] a sure Earnest whereof xt [Christ] is now
[ris]en from ye
Dead, & become ye
first fruits
[o]f them that sleep.
Wherefore, my beloved Brethren,
encourage your selves — comfort one
another with those faithfull sayings.—
—May ye
peace of God be with you!—
—May ye
spirit of God suport & guide
you, & at last conduct you unto his
heavenly kingdom; where are Rivers
of pleasure, & Joy forevermore!
The funl
for Richard B Christopher
[Brownton 1773] [blot]
&[blot]