Where is the promise of his coming? The question indicates the comparatively late date of the Epistle. St James had spoken (probably a. d. 50) of the Judge as standing at the door; St Paul had written twice as if he expected to be living on the earth when the Judge should come (1Th 4:15; 1 Corinthians 15:51; 2 Corinthians 5:4), and yet He came not. Men began to think that the Coming was a delusion.

for since the fathers fell asleep Ordinarily, the "fathers," as in Romans 9:5, would carry our thoughts back to the great progenitors of Israel as a people. Here, however, the stress laid by the mockers on the death of the fathers as the starting-point of the frustrated expectation, seems to give the word another application, and we may see in the "fathers" the first generation of the disciples of Christ, those who had "fallen asleep" without seeing the Advent they had looked for (1 Thessalonians 4:15); those who had reached the "end of their conversation" (Hebrews 13:7). The scoffers appealed to the continuity of the natural order of things. Seed-time and harvest, summer and winter, followed as they had done from the beginning of the creation. In the last phrase we may trace an echo of Mark 10:6; Mark 13:19. "You have told us," they seem to have said, "of an affliction such as there has not been from the beginning of the creation, and lo! we find the world still goes on as of old, with no great catastrophe." The answer to the sneer St Peter gives himself, but it may be noted that the question of the scoffers at least implies the early date of the writings in which the expectation of the Coming is prominent.

In the use of the verb to "fall asleep" for dying, we are reminded of our Lord's words "Our friend Lazarus sleepeth" (John 11:11); of St Paul's "many sleep" (1 Corinthians 11:30). So in Greek sculpture Death and Sleep appear as twin genii, and in Greek and Roman epitaphs nothing is more common than the record that the deceased "sleeps" below. Too often there is the addition, as of those who were without hope, "sleeps an eternal sleep." In Christian language the idea of sleep is perpetuated in the term "cemetery" (κοιμητήριον = sleeping-place) as applied to the burial-place of the dead, but it is blended with that of an "awaking out of sleep" at the last day, and even with the thought, at first seemingly incompatible with it, that the soul is quickened into higher energies of life on its entrance into the unseen world.

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