Questionings Concerning the Resurrection Set At Rest
Mark 9:10
And they kept that saying with themselves, questioning one with another what the rising from the dead should mean.


I see the force of all this; I admit that the death and burial of a seed, while it suggests the bare possibility of man surviving that dissolution which we call death, by no means raises the presumption that it is so to the height of a proof. All we can say is that there are certain analogies for it from plant life, and other analogies against it from animal life; and who can tell which way it will ultimately turn? It is at this stage of the argument that the resurrection of Jesus Christ comes in to decide our wavering minds. Until Easter day we stand with the disciples, questioning what the resurrection of the dead should mean; but now we question no longer. In this respect we are as the contemporaries of Columbus were when he boldly set sail from Palos in August, 1492, and in less than three months set at rest the problem of ages. His return from the voyage to the Bahamas turned presumption into proof. It was no longer a question on which sides might be taken. In a sense it was now set at rest. It admitted no further argument. Those who continued obstinate, and held out for the old opinion, as some of Columbus' contemporaries did, in spite of evidence to the contrary, could only be left to their own obstinacy.

(J. B. Heard, M. A.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: And they kept that saying with themselves, questioning one with another what the rising from the dead should mean.

WEB: They kept this saying to themselves, questioning what the "rising from the dead" meant.




The Saying that was Kept
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