"From the hand of
Hades I will save them, and from death I will ransom their souls. O Death,
where is thy victory? O Death, where is thy sting? The sting of death is sin,
and the strength of sin is the law."
Such was the
dispensation that brought Him even unto death, of which one that wishes to seek
for the cause, can find not one reason but many. For firstly, the Word teaches by
His death that He is Lord both of dead and living; and secondly, that He will
wash away our sins, being slain, and becoming a curse for us; thirdly, that a
victim of God and a great sacrifice for the whole world might be offered to
Almighty God; fourthly, that thus He might work out the destruction of the
deceitful powers of the daemons by unspeakable words; and fifthly also, that
shewing the hope of life with God after death to His friends and disciples not
by words only by deeds as well, and affording ocular proof of His message, He
might make them of good courage and more eager to preach both to Greeks and
Barbarians the holy polity which He had established. And so at once He filled
with His own divine power those very friends and followers, whom He had
selected for Himself on account of their surpassing all, and had chosen as His
apostles and disciples, that they might teach all races of men His message of
the knowledge of God, and lay down one way of religion for all the Greeks and
Barbarians; a way which announced the defeat and rout of the daemons, and the
check of polytheistic error, and the true knowledge of the one Almighty God,
and which promised forgiveness of sins before committed, if men no longer
continued therein, and one hope of salvation to all by the all-wise and
all-good polity that He had instituted.