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250 on a basis that cannot be shaken. And surely such a faith is more strong, more spiritual, more comforting, yes, and more certain too, than a "knowledge" which you know in your own heart to be no knowledge! How long will mankind be content to be ignorant that the which constitutes truth is worth more than the  which is made up of truth and truth's integumentary illusion! How many there are to whom the saying of old Hesiod is still unmeaning:—

You cannot obtain, and must not expect to obtain, any demonstrative proof of the Resurrection of Christ, any more than you can obtain a demonstrative proof of the existence of a God: yet you can feel as strong and as sincere a conviction of the former fact as of the latter.

It is curious that St. Paul's parallel between the Resurrection of Christ and that of men should be so habitually overlooked. He assumes, as a matter of course, a similarity, almost an identity, between the Resurrection of men and the Resurrection of Christ: "If there is no resurrection of the dead neither hath Christ been raised," and again: "Now hath Christ been raised from the dead, the first fruits of them that are asleep." This reasoning holds excellently, if the Resurrection is to be the same for us as it was for our Saviour, a spiritual Resurrection, and if the Resurrection of Christ visibly revealed the universal law which shall apply to all who are animated by the Spirit of God. But if Christ's Resurrection was of a quite different kind, if it was a bodily stepping out of the tomb three days after burial, how can this be called the "first fruits" of the Resurrection of men whose bodies will all decay and for whom therefore no such stepping out from the tomb can ever be anticipated? The best, the truest,