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J.C. Philpot

Ecclesiastes 12:7

Ecclesiastes 12:7
J.C. Philpot December, 9 2016 3 min read
660 Articles 41 Sermons 54 Books
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December, 9 2016
J.C. Philpot
J.C. Philpot 3 min read
660 articles 41 sermons 54 books
What does the Bible say about the death of believers?

The Bible teaches that upon death, the spirit of believers returns to God who gave it, as stated in Ecclesiastes 12:7.

Ecclesiastes 12:7 affirms that at death, 'the dust returns to the earth as it was, and the spirit returns unto God who gave it.' This verse underlines the biblical view that our physical bodies are temporary and will return to dust, while our spirits transcend this life, returning to God. For those who have faith in Christ, this transition is not a fearful event but a step into eternal communion with Him. The death of Jesus serves as a critical comfort, demonstrating that He too entrusted His spirit into the Father's hands as He faced death, setting a profound example for believers.

Ecclesiastes 12:7, John 11:42

How do we know that our spirits return to God after death?

Biblical scripture assures us that the spirit of believers returns to God, as seen in Ecclesiastes 12:7.

The certainty that our spirits return to God upon death is grounded in scripture, particularly Ecclesiastes 12:7. This verse clearly states that when we die, our physical bodies return to dust, but our spirits return to the Creator. In the New Testament, this assurance is further backed by the example of Jesus, who, at the moment of His death, commended His spirit into the hands of the Father (Luke 23:46). For the believer, this transition is not merely a theological concept but also a deeply personal assurance of God's promise to welcome them into His presence.

Ecclesiastes 12:7, Luke 23:46

Why is understanding death important for Christians?

Understanding death is crucial for Christians as it informs their hope in eternal life and the assurance of being in God's presence after death.

For Christians, a solid understanding of death profoundly impacts their perspective on life and eternity. The belief that our spirits return to God after we die provides comfort and hope, especially during times of grief. Ecclesiastes 12:7 helps solidify this understanding by reminding believers that death is not an end but a transition. This perspective is further exemplified in Christ's assurance of eternal life, encouraging believers to trust that their own spirits, like Christ's, will find rest in the presence of God. Reflecting on the death of Jesus not only offers an example of faith but also strengthens the believer's resolve in the face of mortality.

Ecclesiastes 12:7, John 11:25-26

"Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was--and the spirit shall return unto God who gave it."

— Ecclesiastes 12:7

Nature shrinks from death, even apart from that which following after death, makes it to so many a king of terrors. Even where grace has set up its throne, and mercy rejoices over judgment, many unbelieving, infidel thoughts at times will cross the mind and perplex the judgment about the separation of body and soul, and the launching of the spirit into an unseen, unknown world. Faith, it is true, can subdue these perplexing thoughts, better hinted at than described, but faith needs some solid ground on which to build and rest. If, then, the soul is blessed with any assured hope or sweet persuasion of saving interest in the blood and obedience of the Lord Jesus Christ, so as to remove guilty fears, how strengthening to faith is a view of his death, not merely as the only sacrifice for sin, but as the exemplar, so to speak, of our own.

We shall all have to die, and therefore to look by faith at the death of Jesus may be a profitable subject of meditation as a relief against the perplexing thoughts to which we have before alluded. Into his Father's hands the dying Lord commended his spirit. The Father received it, for him the Father hears always (John 11:42); and thus his spirit returned unto him who gave it. Thus, by the act of dying, the soul and body of the blessed Redeemer were, for a time, fully and actually separated--as fully and actually as ours will also be at death. But follow by faith that soul of Jesus when he breathed it forth, and view it at once and immediately entering paradise, into the blissful presence of God. What food for faith is here! How strengthening, how encouraging to a believing heart which has often been perplexed by such thoughts as we have named, to view the soul of Jesus thus passing at once into paradise.

And may we not, by faith, view the soul also of the believing malefactor, when the time of release was come, winging its flight into the same paradise where the soul of Jesus had preceded it? If we know anything painfully and experimentally of the assaults of unbelief, the arrows of infidelity, and the fiery darts of the wicked one, and how they are all quenched by the shield of faith, we have found that faith, in order to stand firm, must have the word of truth, a "Thus says the Lord," upon which to rest. Let us now, then, see how this stands as connected with the death of the blessed Lord. Fortified by his holy example, if blessed with faith in his Person, blood, and righteousness, the dying believer may commend his spirit into the hands of Christ as did martyred Stephen, in the same confidence that the Lord Jesus commended his spirit into the hands of his heavenly Father.

From Through Baca's Vale by J.C. Philpot.
J.C. Philpot
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