Page:The Doctrines of the New Church Briefly Explained.djvu/206

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The Doctrines of the New Church.

the breeze it sails upon; but it never resumes the exuviæ that clothed it while a worm; for, useful as that covering was while it crawled upon the earth, it needs it no longer now that it is able to fly in the air.

And the doctrine is fully as unscriptural as it is unreasonable. Not one of the texts cited in proof of it, when carefully examined and rightly understood, lends this doctrine the least shadow of support. This has been repeatedly and conclusively shown in works where this subject has been treated at greater length than it accords with the design of the present work to treat it.[1]

The New Doctrine.

We turn now to the new doctrine of the resurrection.—According to the teachings of the New Church, man never dies. The material body dies, but this is not the man; this does not think, will, reason, or love. These and other human capabilities belong to the soul or spirit. And when the spirit is withdrawn from the body, all the bodily functions cease, and there supervenes what we call death. But the spirit which is the real man, still continues to live, but in the spiritual world


  1. The reader is referred to "The World Beyond," by John Doughty (No. 1, of this series), pp. 24 to 40: "Noble's Appeal" pp. 43 to 100: Barrett's "Lectures on the New Dispensation," pp. 246 to 272:—for a critical examination of the texts of Scripture commonly cited or referred to in support of the old doctrine.