Scots' Confession (Chapter 17)

Proofs | Search | Previous | Contents | Next


Chapter 17
The Immortality of the Souls

The elect departed are in peace and rest from their labours:a not that they sleep and come to a certain oblivion (as some fantastics do affirm), but that they are delivered from all fear, all torment, and all temptation, to which we and all God's elect are subject in this life,b and therefore do bear the name of the kirk militant: as contrariwise, the reprobate and unfaithful departed, have anguish, torment, and pain, that cannot be expressed.c So that neither are the one nor the other in such sleep that they feel not joy or torment, as the parable of Christ Jesus in the sixteenth [chapter] of Luke,d his words to the thief,e and these words of the souls crying under the altar,f O Lord, thou that art righteous and just, how long shalt thou not revenge our blood upon them that dwell upon the earth! doth plainly testify.

(a) Rev 14:13
(b) Isa 25:8; Rev 7:14-17; Rev 21:4
(c) Rev 16:10-11; Isa 66:24; Mark 9:44,46,48
(d) Luke 16:23-26
(e) Luke 23:43
(f) Rev 6:9-10

Proofs | Search | Previous | Contents | Next