Is Hell Eternal
or
Will God's Plan Fail?
by
REV. CHARLES H. PRIDGEON, M. A.
President and Founder of the Pittsburgh Bible
Institute
THIRD EDITION
THE EVANGELIZATION SOCIETY OF
THE PITTSBURGH BIBLE INSTITUTE
PITTSBURGH, PA.
1931
_________
COPYRIGHT, 1920 By
REV. CHARLES H. PRIDGEON, M. A.
[Printed in the United States of America]
Published in November, 1920
This book is not published for personal profit
Copyright under the Articles of the Copyright
Convention of the
Pan-American Republics and the United States, August
11, 1910
_________
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
I. BARRIERS
TO A CANDID CONSIDERATION
II. THE
DOCTRINE OF RESERVE AN ENEMY OF TRUTH
III. WHAT
SAlTH THE SCRIPTURES
IV. SOME
INSURMOUNTABLE DIFFICULTIES
V. ETERNITY
IS NOT TIME
VI. THE
AGES PRESENTED
VII. THE
MILLENNIAL AGE
VIII.
THE
GREAT NEGLECTED AGE
IX. THE
SIGNIFICANCE OF HADES
X. A
STUDY OF GEHENNA AND THE WORDS
“DESTROY”
AND “DESTRUCTION”
XI. THE
LAKE OF FIRE AND BRIMSTONE
XII. THE
PROBLEM OF EVIL
XIII. A
SANE AND SCRIPTURAL DOCTRINE OF PUNISHMENT
XIV. THE
JUDGMENTS OF GOD ILLUMINED
XV. UNPARDONABLE
SINS
XVII THE
HEADSHIP OF CHRIST versus
THE
HEADSHIP OF ADAM
XVII. THE
ETERNAL HUMANITY OF CHRIST
XVIII. SINCE
GOD IS LOVE
XIX. GOD'S
ACCOMMODATION TO A FALLEN WORLD
XX. THE
UNSELFISHNESS OF GOD
XXI. HAS
GOD A PURPOSE IN DEATH
XXII. THE
POWER OF HIS RESURRECTION
XXIII. FINAL
PERMANENCE OF CHARACTER
XXIV. THE
LIMITATIONS OF HUMAN FREEDOM
XXV. SPIRITISTIC
TESTIMONY IRRELEVANT
XXVI. CONCERNING
THE SALVATION OF ANGELS AND DEMONS
XXVII. THE
WITNESS OF THE EARLY CHURCH FATHERS
XXVIII. THE
WITNESS OF THE POETS
XXIX. CONSCIENCE
MUST BE SATISFIED
XXX. THE
TEST OF USEFULNESS AS A DIVINE ACCREDITING
PREFACE
This book is written for the thoughtful man or woman
who has had difficulty with the doctrine of endless punishment as usually
taught.
It aims to be constructive and is written from the
orthodox standpoint. In reference to the eternality of punishment it takes
issue.
It holds up the Christ and His Cross and its author
trusts that from its perusal there may result the salvation of souls and the
comfort of many who have lost loved ones who died whether in or out of Christ,
yet "loved long since and lost awhile."
It is animated by the spirit of love even though its
conviction is strong that its position is in accord with a true translation and
interpretation of the Word of God.
It does not make light of sin nor of its dire
consequences and it holds that "whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he
also reap," not only in this life but also in that which is to come.
It has no apology to offer for the truth which it
presents, it rejoices in it. Its author is, however, conscious of his
shortcomings and wishes that he could have done the work better, but as he
believes God bade, he can do nothing but obey.
The scientific world has been somewhat startled by the
theory of relativity which Dr. Einstein has recently promulgated. It is largely
acknowledged that by this theory alone can many of the new problems of light
and electro-dynamics find solution. Without making any pronouncement on this
subject, the author may be permitted to point out an analogy which may apply to
his own field. He is convinced that the consistent recognition of the
difference between time and eternity will accomplish for Biblical problems all
that the new theory promises to do for natural science.
The author once visited a silver mine where the shaft
had been sunk three hundred feet and where for years the miners had dug untold
riches. One day it was proposed that they go deeper, so down and down they dug
and blasted until a depth of a thousand feet was reached. There a wondrous find
was made, a new flow of the precious mineral in a large and wealthy vein.
The author believes that the upper veins of truth have
been fairly well worked in the past and their yield has been exceedingly rich,
but many questions still remain unanswered and he hails with delight the
workmen of God who have gone deeper. He takes no honor to himself--since others
have shown the way--if he digs a little and finds another flow of precious
truth.
In this book he tries to tell principally of the
things which he has discovered at the greater depth. There was a satisfaction
that he found nowhere else, a God of Love was vindicated, His plan
accomplished, and all waste material was saved for God. He does not think that he has gone as
far as others have gone and will go and yet he longs that all may share what he
has gained.
He realizes that there are still "blessings of
the deep that lieth under."
"A deep below the deep,
And a height beyond the height,
And our hearing is not hearing,
And our seeing, is not sight."
The author desires to express thanksgiving to God,
whose enabling alone made the writing of this book possible in the midst of
many other duties.
He would also express appreciation of the help and
fellowship of his wife, of the members of the faculty of the Pittsburgh Bible
Institute, and of other friends who have aided him in its preparation for the
press.
Any repetition in the different chapters is for
completeness of thought, as some of them may be published separately by the
Institute.
C.H.P.
PITTSBURGH, PA.,
August, 1920.
PREFACE
Third Printing
We take pleasure in sending forth the third edition of
this book. Messers Funk and Wagnalls published two editions, and wrote us
several years ago of their intention of sending forth another edition. We
negotiated with them and purchased the rights and plates, that we might be able
to put forth an edition that could be sold for less than cost. On account of the stress of other
duties we have been hindered from accomplishing our purpose till now.
The book has been printed on thinner and better paper
but the binding, is simpler. Four
of the faculty of The Pittsburgh Bible Institute are to be especially thanked
for preparing new and enlarged indexes. This will greatly increase the value
and usefulness of the book.
The self-denial, labor, and prayers of the workers of
all editions, though unseen, will add greatly to the hidden spiritual power of
this book.
We are grateful to God for what He has accomplished
through the former editions, for the favorable notices in so many publications,
for the fact of its having been placed in so many public libraries in this and
other countries, and for the many expressions of gratitude for help and
salvation through the setting forth of its special truth.
We praise God that looking at the results of the past
eleven years, since its first publication, there has been a larger increase in
our midst in the salvation of souls and in the sending forth of many more
missionaries to the home and foreign fields.
We pray as this edition goes forth that God's name may
be still further glorified.
C.H.P.
PITTSBURGH, PA.,
August, 1931.
PRESS COMMENTS
"Everybody should read this book."
"The book has awakened much discussion."
"This book is not Russellism."
The Pittsburgh Dispatch said,
"It is worth reading."
The Atlanta Constitution commented,
"There is no theme that awakens more
interest."
Funk and Wagnalls' critic wrote,
"The work seems to me a remarkable study and one
likely to arouse considerable discussion. You maintain your position with great
ability."
The Brooklyn Eagle said,
"The book is written in the hope, through its
perusal, of the salvation of many."
Funk and Wagnalls' editorial comment was,
"No theme awakens so profound an interest as that
of the future life and human destiny. Here is an arresting discussion of this
momentous question based upon an exhaustive study of a multitude of texts from
the Word of God. The author accepts the full inspiration and authority of
Scripture but does not ignore the claims of conscience, reason, and the best
thought of writers ancient and modern.
His interpretation of this great mass of evidence is original and
satisfying. He carefully
distinguishes between time and eternity and shows that this distinction, altho
acknowledged by scholars, has never been consistently applied to the solution
of the great problems of theology. A unique glory is given to the person and
work of the Lord Jesus Christ, and there is a strong presentation both of God's
character and of His plan of redemption that is adequate for the worst cases
and conditions. The writer holds that God will ultimately be 'all in all.' To
preachers, Bible students, evangelists, and Sunday-school teachers this volume
will prove a source of inspiration and enlightenment."
The review by J. Ranken Towse, in the New York
Evening Post, in part, follows,
"The question which provides the title for this
book has been discussed through the centuries and from almost every angle.
Today it would be answered very promptly in the negative, not only by the great
body of intellectual skeptics, but by a large proportion of professed
Christians strong in the faith of the future life, the scheme of redemption,
and the final judgment. The old notion of the medieval hell, with its grotesque
and endless torments, has been rejected very generally as something monstrously
and blasphemously incredible. But for all who believe in the divine origin of
man, his fall, resurrection, and subsequent immortality, there must remain the
hope of happiness or foreboding of punishment, and the very uncertainty
concerning the exact nature and duration of the latter makes the subject, for
them, one of imperishable interest.
This book is calculated to bring relief to many timid
souls. It is a remarkable work, although, of course, it has nothing absolutely
new to tell. What it does do is to array certain facts, not generally known
outside the world of scholars and theological students, in support of a Gospel
message which to not a few will have the force of a revelation. The compilation
is in itself a proof of great industry, deep and precise Biblical knowledge,
and profound spiritual conviction, while the argument deduced from it is
developed logically enough from the premises. . . . One of the fundamental
propositions of the author is that a God of Love who is also omnipotent, would
be defeated in His purpose, which is inconceivable, if He failed to redeem a
single one of His creatures. . . . His views are fortified everywhere with
quotations from original sources, and his statements derive an aspect of
plausibility from the manifest solidity of his workmanship."
CHAPTER I
BARRIERS TO A CANDID CONSIDERATION
The
spirit of prejudice stands in the way of all new views of truth. Prejudice has
been defined as “a judgment or opinion formed without due examination of
the facts or reasons that are essential to a just and impartial
determination.”
In
Bunyan's Holy War, Mr. Prejudice,
with sixty deaf men, keeps Ear-gate, one of the most important gates of entry
to the city of Mansoul. It is prejudice that blinds the eye, stops the ear,
misunderstands and misinterprets everything that comes its way. Its state of
mind is not founded on facts but on some feeling of dislike or something of
self-interest.
There are those who will not
accept any truth unless it is ministered in a certain conventional manner or
supported by certain great names. The question “Can there any good thing
come out of Nazareth” shows this same principle of partiality. One would
suppose that it was written in the Word that “Whoso believeth in eternal
punishment shall be saved.” Our point of fellowship and union is in the
Lord Jesus Christ; and even if many do not accept our teaching on the points
before us, we will not pronounce any anathema against them or say they are not
Christians, even though we could not take their standpoint without reflecting
on the very person and character of God.
One lad said to another whose
mother had been washing a bit of linen, ''I see that your mother is a
washer-woman.” The other replied, “If I saw your mother pulling
your little brother's wagon, ought I call her a horse?”
It is inconsistent with
justice to put in the same class all who may profess the same doctrine. A
further question needs to be first settled; viz., upon what grounds and for what reasons is this
particular truth held? We might speak of two men who were in favor of the World
War just waged. One of them favored it from reasons of patriotism and the
desire to aid his fellow man. He proved this by the sacrificing of himself in
the cause. The other favored it because he saw in it an opportunity to make a
large sum of money. These two men profest faith in the same thing, but the
reason and ground of their stand was so diverse that their names should not be
mentioned in the same breath. The one acted from a lofty motive, the other from
a selfish one.
One of the great religious
leaders of our day said:
“The
quality of men is shown not so much by the opinion they hold, as by the grounds
upon which they hold them, by the arguments upon which those opinions rest in
their minds. Men may hold the greatest of truths in a feeble way and upon the
most unsubstantial evidence. Men may believe, for instance, in the Being of God
because they have been told that it is true or because they want to believe
it. On the other hand, men may
believe the simplest and commonest of truths on the most solemn and majestic
grounds . . . So it seems that man's greatness is decided, not by the opinions
which they hold, but by the kinds of evidence on which and by the spirit in
which they hold them.”
We may not feel complimented
in being classed with those who do not believe in the doctrine of eternal
punishment because they dimly suppose that by denying the doctrine they may
make a way of escape; nor do we desire to be classed with those who make light
of sin; nor with those who found all their teaching on purely naturalistic
grounds, or manufacture them from their own imagining; nor with those who
belittle our Lord and His sacrifice on the cross; nor with those who do not
believe that what “a man soweth that shall he also reap”; nor with
those who do not think that any change is necessary in man in order to be
saved; nor with those who do not believe in any hell at all, or in an
inadequate one. To all these loose ideas we hope that we are a stranger.
Unless our faith is founded
on a fair interpretation of the Word of God, not in part, but in its entirety;
unless there is a vindication of God's wisdom, power, justice, and love; unless
it has the “Amen” of a chastened Christian consciousness; unless it
makes for righteousness and magnifies the cross of Christ; unless it solves
doubt, dries a tear, comforts broken hearts, wins souls, and sanctifies
believers; unless it also has practical spiritual fruit, we reject and refuse
it; but if it has all of these and more, then let us believe it, and even if we
have to suffer for it, let us suffer with joy, for it is worth it a thousand
times.
One of the words that Prejudice uses is, “That
is unorthodox.” Orthodoxy means “right thinking; to nearly every
one it has come to mean “to think as I do.”
There is no room in a crystallized orthodoxy to learn
anything more from the Word of God than it has learned. We are not affirming
that stability in doctrine is not desirable; neither are we discounting the
fact that we owe an immeasurable debt to our forefathers and to the Church
Fathers; but after acknowledging this, there is room for progress. Unless there
are deepenings and enlargement, vital and new openings of truth, orthodoxy
becomes dead.
It is not strange in our day to learn fresh truth in
the field of nature. It does not surprize us when scientific discoveries are
made through new applications of old principles and larger generalization of
truth. It ought not to be counted strange that new discoveries might be found
in God's Word and that modification of some things which we regarded as truth
had to be made. In this way alone
will truth remain living and have power. If this process is stopt, the Word of
God will become a dead letter.
If there were no truth in the religious systems which
some despise, they would die. The fact of their life and power can not be
attributed alone to the forces of darkness; there is another factor. Usually
there is some truth that has been neglected, some truth twisted or warped, else
there would not be any need met by the systems that are so largely false.
Christianity centers in the person and work of the
God-man, our Lord Jesus Christ. He is the touchstone and power of all truth.
Any seeming truth that does not glorify Him is counterfeit, or only partly
true. To us there seems to be a grave need for those who hold the great
fundamentals concerning the person and work of our Lord Jesus Christ--the full
Inspiration and Authority of Holy Scripture; the necessity of Regeneration; the
doctrine of Rewards and of Punishments--to assemble all the light from God's
Word that removes the difficulties from the doctrine of eternal torment as
usually held, and in this way make a glorious harmony.
We earnestly stand for the
right of private judgment and guidance of God in an illuminated conscience,
yet, at the same time, we desire to apprehend “with all saints what is
the breadth, and length, and depth, and height; and to know the love of Christ
which passeth knowledge” (Eph. 3:18,19).
Prejudice stands in the way
of even a conservative and constructive advance. May God's Holy Spirit alone be
our Teacher.
CHAPTER II
THE DOCTRINE OF RESERVE AN ENEMY OF TRUTH
If there is one cause more than any other that has
blocked and sometimes blighted the propagation and development of divine truth,
it is the doctrine of reserve.
This doctrine teaches that it is right to withhold, to
disguise and, if necessary, to deny faith in any truth, if there is sufficient
cause. This doctrine has prevailed all down the ages to a greater or less
degree, and some of the godliest saints and theologians have been its slaves.
They reason, "It is all right to hold these deeper things ourselves, even
if they differ from the popular conception. Such things will not hurt us, but
the people are not ready for them. It will work them great injury; these are
professional secrets."
The first reason that is given is the general
statement of the ignorance of the laity upon spiritual questions, except the
more primary ones. It is, therefore, wise, they say, not to confuse or confound
the common people. It is true that there are many who are not sufficiently
versed in the Word of God to be able to form an unbiased judgment, but in the
present day of almost universal education this consideration does not have the
same force as of old. A further fact needs to be given due weight, viz., that when it comes to the understanding of spiritual
things, the one who may have little of a worldly education may be "rich in
faith" and have large and just conceptions of spiritual things. Even if
wisdom is to be used in the method and amount of truth to be disclosed, there
is no necessity for deception nor misrepresentation.
When Abraham Lincoln determined to free the slaves, an
intimate friend of his sent him a telegram: "From Richard Yates to Abraham
Lincoln. Dear Abraham,--Pause! The people are not ready for it." The
President sent a reply that has been described as the finest message ever sent
over the wires. "From Abraham Lincoln to Richard Yates. Dear Dick,--Stand
still and see the of salvation of the Lord."
Often the reason that lies back of the concealment is
lack of courage, and fear of the consequences. In times of great persecution it
certainly would be easy to follow some devious path of Christian casuistry in
order to escape torture, imprisonment, suffering, or death. Even in our time,
altho much of the crude and outward persecution has passed, that which remains
may be none the less cruel and naturally provocative of fear. As one has aptly
said:
"There are other forms of dogmatic bondage
besides fear of death. The halter and the stake have indeed been banished . . .
But the more hidden and insidious forms of persecution--suspicion, prejudice,
calumny have by no means lost their power; and they are doing their enslaving
work (as truly and effectually today) within the limits of the Church as ever
in its history."
Many a preacher has to wear a muzzle on certain questions
or lose his church and his living. Even if he cares little for his own welfare,
that of his wife and children holds him strongly. It takes courage from God and
supernatural grace to step out trusting God alone, but He will honor every one
who honors Him. The rights of conscience and of private judgment are admitted
in theory by nearly all, but not in practise.
"A great error of the Church has always been its
assumption of authority over the souls of men in all matters of faith and
dogma; and the natural fruit of dogmatic authority has always been, and always
will be, insincerity, hypocrisy, cant, and all their evil brood. Until that
yoke is completely broken everywhere in Christendom, its results are bound to
appear.”*
*Professor Levi L. Paine in The Ethnic Trinities, page 315 (Houghton, Mifflin & Co.). We are not approving the theological conclusion this book, but the courageous honesty of its author is highly refreshing.
May God raise up more of those who will be willing to
stand for what they believe to be the truth of God no matter what it costs, and
deliver His children from all deceit and hypocrisy!
Away
with such bondage! Away with such deception! The old question arises again,
"Is a lie ever justifiable?" To this all courageous, honest men make
answer, "No." At the same time, we insist that tact and wisdom must
be exercised in the propagation of truth, but not to the extent of lying. No
matter if others yield to such deception and sin, let us be truthful. It is
true it often takes courage to tell the truth, but God's Word stands sure,
that, "Them that honor Me I will honor" (1Sam. 2:30). God honors with
more truth and more faith and more power, when one takes his freedom in God and
stands for all he believes. "If the Son therefore shall make you free, ye
shall be free indeed" (John 8:36). How many are blessed through such a
courageous stand! Even hardships that have to be endured, that promised to be
so hard, are found easy, "For My yoke is easy, and My burden is
light" (Matt. 11:30). Ecclesiastical bodies should allow such freedom to
their representatives, just so the essential truths of salvation are held
intact. Whosoever trusts the Lord Jesus Christ has salvation. This is our
foundation of faith and fellowship. "He that hath the Son hath life; and
he that hath not the Son of God hath not life" (1John 5:12).
CHAPTER III
WHAT SAITH THE SCRIPTURES
We are conservative enough to prefer to read the King
James version of the English Bible rather than other translations. This is
because its phraseology and structure have been wrought into our life and into
the texture of the English language. We also know that in very many instances
it is not an accurate representation of the original Greek and Hebrew and yet
for most practical purposes it is admirable.
We will point out that on a few lines its translation
is not clearly given. We are not arguing against its general correctness by
asking that such parts should have a more correct rendering.
There are those who think that any suggestions along
this path are irreverent and deny the inspiration of the Scriptures. We beg to
say, however, that it is the original in Greek and Hebrew that is our inspired
standard, and that the English or French or German, etc., are only
translations, and are inspired just so far as they express the actual thought
of these originals. When scholars see that another word will better translate
the thought or word of the original, and such correction is made, they are
establishing rather than questioning the plenary inspiration of God's Word.
This point needs to be fully appreciated and it will preclude any remark like
that of the woman who said that the English Bible was good enough for Paul and
it was good enough for her. She either did not know or did not think that Paul
did not have the Bible in English, but had it only in the original languages.
We sympathize in part with her reverence for God's Word.
Some of the discrepancies in our English Bible are
caused by the changes in the usages of words that normally take place in the
course of time; and others, by the bias of the translator.
The word "prevent" (1Thess. 4:15) in the
English Bible did not mean what it means now; but at the time of the King James
version it meant "to precede."
The word "damnation" (1Cor. 11:29) is too
strong for the Greek word; it should always be rendered
"condemnation." This verse then has a plain meaning. Also, if one
against his conscience eat meat offered to idols, he is "damned if he
eat" (Rom. 14:23). It should be, he is "condemned." In this case,
and in all others, the word should be translated "condemned."
As we take up different words we will more accurately
translate the few words that need alteration, which we have found through many
years of reading and teaching the Bible in the original languages as well as in
English.
F. W. Faber thus writes of the English Bible:
"The uncommon beauty and marvellous English of
the Protestant Bible! It lives on the ear like a music that can never be
forgotten, like the sound of church bells which convert hardly knows how he can
forego. Its felicities often seem to be almost things rather than mere words.
It is part of the national mind, and the author of national seriousness. The
memory of the dead passes into it. The potent traditions of childhood are stereotyped
in its phrases. The power of all the griefs and trials of man is hidden beneath
its words. It is the representative of his best moments; and all that there has
been about him of soft and gentle and pure and penitent and good, speaks to him
forever out of his English Bible. It is his sacred thing, which doubt has never
dimmed and controversy never soiled. It has been to him all along as the
silent, but, oh, how intelligible voice of his guardian angel; and in the
length and breadth of the land there is not a Protestant, with one spark of
religiousness about him, whose spiritual biography is not in his Saxon
Bible."
Besides a mere literal translation of the Bible there
are several important things which have to be taken into consideration in order
to the correct understanding and interpretation of the Scripture, some of which
are not always given due consideration.
First, the study of the idioms of both the Hebrew and
the Greek. A literal translation of a text from another language may give
exactly an opposite meaning to an English reader. For instance, in Greek two
negatives do not make an affirmative but a stronger negative. In English it is
quite the contrary: they make an affirmative.
Many Hebrew idioms of the Old Testament are carried
into the New Testament Greek. For example, the active voice of a verb is
frequently used in the sense of permission, and where this is not recognized as
an idiom, it makes havoc with a true conception of God, attributing all kinds
of evil to Him, and is contradictory to thousands of other statements. He is
thus incorrectly made the Author of evil. The proper translation of the idiom
corrects all this.
There are many expressions also that are used of God
speaking after the manner of men. It is not proper to understand them in the
letter. It is rather the condescension of the eternal God stooping down to our
apprehension. When thus understood, all difficulty disappears.
Again there are many passages of Scripture which speak
of things as they seem, rather than as they are. We often do this. We say,
"The sun rises and sets," when we know better; but we are simply
referring to the apparent and not to the real. In one passage of the Psalms,
God is called upon as if He were asleep (Ps. 44:23); while in another we are
told that He never slumbers nor sleeps. We know that the first is speaking
according to the way it seems and not according to the fact. In oriental
speech, this kind of thing is far more frequent than in English.
We quote from the eloquent and quaint John Donne, of
the seventeenth century, and modernize a few of his words (he is probably
making his own translation of the passages (quoted from the Bible):
"But some of those inordinate passions and
perturbations excesses and defects of man, are imputed to God, by the Holy
Ghost in the Scripture. For so laziness and drowsiness is imputed to God;
(Awake Lord, why sleepest Thou? Ps. 44:23). So corruptibleness, and
deterioration, and growing worse by ill company, is imputed to God; God is said
to grow froward with the froward, and He learns to go crookedly with them that
go crookedly (Ps. 18:26). And prodigality and wastefulness is imputed to God:
(Thou sellest Thy people for naught, and dost not increase Thy wealth by their
price. Ps. 44:12). So sudden and hasty choler; (Kiss the Son lest He be angry,
and ye perish in brief anger, tho His wrath be kindled but a little.) And then,
illimited and boundless anger, a vindicative irreconcilableness is imputed to
God; (I was but a little displeased (but it is otherwise now) I am very sore
displeased. Zech. 1:15).
“So there is devouring wrath; (Wrath that
consumes like stubble. Ex. 15:7). So there is wrath multiplied (Plagues renewed
and indignation increased. Job 10:17). So God Himself expresses it (I will
fight against you in anger and in fury. Jer. 21:5). And so for His
inexorableness, His irreconcilableness, (O Lord God of Hosts, how long wilt
Thou be angry against the prayer of Thy people? Ps. 80:4)--God's own people
praying to their own God, and yet their God irreconcilable to them. Scorn and
contempt is imputed to God; which is one of the most enormous, and
disproportioned weaknesses in man; that a worm that crawls in the dust, that a
grain of dust that is hurried with every blast of wind, should find anything so
much inferior to itself as to scorn it, to deride it, to condemn it: yet scorn
and derision and contempt is imputed to God (He that sitteth in the heavens
shall laugh: the Lord shall have them in derision. Ps. 2:4). And again (I will
laugh at your calamity: I will mock when your fear cometh. Prov. 1:26)
“Nay beloved. even inebriation, excess in that
kind, drunkenness which the Holy Ghost hath mingled in the expressing of God's
proceedings with man; for God does not threaten to make His enemies drunk (and
to make others drunk is a circumstance of drunkenness). So Jerusalem being in
His displeasure complains (He hath made me drunk with wormwood. Lam. 3:15). And
again, (They shall be drunk with their own blood, as with new wine. Isa.
49:26). Not only to express His plentiful mercy to His friends and servants,
does God take that metaphor (I will make the soul of the priest drunk; fill it,
satiate it). And again, (I will make the weary soul, and the sorrowful soul
drunk. Jer. 31:14,25). But not only this (tho in all this God has a hand) not
only toward others; but God in His own behalf complains of the scant and
penurious sacrificer (Thou hast not made me drunk with Thy sacrifices).
“And yet, tho for the better applying of God to
the understanding of man, the Holy Ghost imputes to God these excesses and
defects of man (laziness and drowsiness, deterioration, corruptibleness by ill
conversation, prodigality and wastefulness, sudden choler, long
irreconcilableness, scorn, inebriation and many others) in the Scripture."
All
this is only human and oriental figures of speech. Not one of them is true of
God, it only appears to be so.
A
translator of the Bible ought to be perfectly familiar with all the idioms of
the original languages and also of the idioms of the language into which he
translates, or he will make terrible confusion. Note the great number of idioms
that are pointed out by Dr. Robert Young in the introductory pages of his
admirable concordance to the Bible.
Another necessary study that has been too much neglected
in the interpretation of Scripture is the study of the figures of speech. We
know of a few books that have attempted to perform thoroughly this service for
the English language. There is only one book that we know of in English (The
Might and Mirth of Literature. A
Treatise on Figurative Language, by John Walker Vilant Macbeth; Harper &
Bros., New York, 1875), and of only one (Figures of Speech used in the Bible, by E. W. Bullinger, D.D.; Eyre & Spottiswoode,
London) that has in any adequate degree done the same for the Bible. Between
two and three hundred figures of speech are discust and illustrated. There is
certainly room for further work on this important line. The Bible is eminently
a figurative book, and its figures are principally oriental. Right
interpretation or translation demands the mastery of Bible figures.
Just one illustration: when in Daniel's time the King
was addrest, they said, "O King, live forever." No oriental would
mean literally "forever," but only a long time. The "forevers"
of Scripture all come in the same class, for we will show that they all refer
to time or portions of time, and time is to come to an end. (See Chapter on The
Ages Presented, and that on Eternity Is Not Time.)
Another fact that needs especial mention is that the
Bible is a graded book; not always graded so that the earlier books are less
profound than the later. This is in part true, but only in part. Scattered
through the Word are truths for the simple minds, which will be understood and
appropriated by the beginners. Then also scattered through its pages are truths
that are a little more advanced and will afford help to the man and woman of
average intelligence. And then all stages of truth are found till the greatest
intellects may be satisfied and yet inspired for further discoveries. The Word
of God is exactly parallel to nature; nature is still yielding her secrets to
the diligent student. Likewise the Word of God has still blessed discoveries
awaiting the faith and patience and skill of those who seek, with the help of
God's Holy Spirit, to find them.
Beside the graded stratifications of truth that lie
all through the Word of God, there is also a marked progress of doctrine. The
failure to discern this progress of doctrine in the Word has led to erroneous
or imperfect understanding of God's Word. On the subject of the future life,
when we come to Israel, we find that the promises held out to the faithful were
largely those that pertain to this life, with just enough of the other
spiritual promises of the future life to imply its real existence and to awaken
desire for further light. This light kept on increasing till life and
incorruptibility were brought out into clearness of light in the New Testament.
It
goes without saying that any book or passage of Scripture can be understood
only by discerning its own special standpoint. It makes much difference who the
speaker is. The Bible is fully inspired, but if the speaker is untrue the Bible
will record correctly what he says but does not ask you to believe his untruth.
The Bible records even what Satan says, but that does not mean that Satan is
telling the whole truth. We need an inspired and accurate record of sin and its
principles to understand it correctly. It is not proper to open the Bible and quote
a text to prove a point without observing who is speaking and what his
standpoint is. One might open the book of Job and quote from some of Job's
friends. We know that some of the things they said were true and some not. In
fact, many things were so erroneous that in the end, when Job was right with
God, he had to pray for these same friends.
The book of Ecclesiastes is often quoted in reference
to the future life. Its sphere of observation is entirely worldly and belongs
to this present life. Twenty-nine times it indicates this fact by using the
expression "under the sun." If we look at things from this standpoint
it would seem that there was no future life and therefore no difference between
the death of a man and a beast. From this standpoint, death means the body in
the grave and nothing more and we could say in its words that then "there
is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave, whither thou
goest." This is looking at life only from the standpoint of this present
world.
Also that little sentence, "In the place where
the tree falleth there it shall be." This is a figurative way of
illustrating the law of sowing and reaping. Note the context, where you sow you
reap and what you sow you reap. Farther than this principle this text is not
referring to human destiny. Even
if it did we could accept it. It would then be another way of saying that just
in the condition a man leaves this world, in that state he arrives in the next.
But neither the tree nor the man, tho they remain there long, will abide there
for eternity, for every state has its changes. We shall see that every state is
meant for progress and preparation for a final eternity.
We like to think of the book of Ecclesiastes as
written by Solomon after his backsliding and worldliness were ended. He tells
us that he looked at life and tried it from this worldly standpoint. He tells
of his riches and the great experiments he made because of his almost limitless
resources. He says that he ran the whole gamut of worldliness and pleasure,
endeavoring at the same time to keep his head balanced that he might see what
was in it all. He bears testimony that there is nothing in it, and that it is
all vanity. He desires his lesson to profit others for he asks, "What can
the man do that cometh after the king?" He then concludes his book by
telling us that from the worldly, outward standpoint, even if there was nothing
beyond this life, it is far better to reverence God and keep His commandments.
The book of Ecclesiastes is inspired, but has to be understood from its proper
standpoint. It is not proper to quote it in any other way.
The
principles here referred to are but some of those that are often either not
thought of or ignored, but which are absolutely necessary to a true
understanding of God's Word.
CHAPTER IV
SOME INSURMOUNTABLE DIFFICULTIES
There are insurmountable difficulties that stand in
the way of faith in the doctrine of endless punishment. It is a fact that,
altho its acceptance is accounted by many one of the tests of orthodoxy, it is
emphasized at the present day by only a very few. If it really is true, it
should be proclaimed by every one; in fact, there should never be any sermon
preached without making this doctrine a part of it. Its advocates will admit
that there are even whole books in the Bible that contain no mention of it.
When we remember that many of these books were issued separately, at first, and
that a community might have only one; or two of them, and in them there would
be no clear statement of the utter and forever hopelessness of any one dying
out of Christ,--this certainly seems surpassingly strange.
If this doctrine were really true, as it is profest,
every believer ought to give up all the ordinary pursuits of life, even the
necessary ones, and spend his whole time in warning the impenitent; that is
what would be done if a fire that threatened every one were to break out in our
city or country; but this alarm is rarely, if ever, shown by believers who are
in their right minds. The fact is that, altho it is profest by most Christians,
it is not believed by them with any conviction or they would act differently.
Edwards and Finney did not think that eternal punishment was rightly proclaimed
in a community unless some went insane. Indeed, if it were realized in all its
horrors and suffering it would make of our religion a hideous nightmare. Most
Christians would be victims of melancholia, and the whole world would become
either demented or atheistic.
We fear any doctrine that does not commend itself ''to
every man's conscience in the sight of God," for such a conscience
quickened and illumined by the Holy Spirit is the highest light that man has;
and if any so-called truth of God does not commend itself to this kind of
conscience, something is the matter with it. Most preachers and teachers who
proclaim the doctrine of eternal punishment say again and again, "We wish
this were not so," or, "We would change this, if we could." They
are by such remarks witnessing to the fact that they do not have the full backing
of their own conscience, and unconsciously they are criticizing God's
government and character. (See Chapter on Conscience Must Be Satisfied.)
Dr. Albert Barnes, the noted preacher and commentator,
thus expresses himself:
"That the immortal mind should be allowed to
jeopardize its infinite welfare; and that trifles should be allowed to draw it
away from God and virtue and heaven; that any should suffer forever, lingering
on in hopeless despair, and rolling amidst infinite torments without the possibility
of alleviation and without end; that since God can save men, and will save a part He has not purposed to save all; that on
the supposition that the atonement is ample, and that the blood of Christ can
cleanse from all and every sin, it is not in fact applied to all. That, in a
word, a God who claims to be worthy of the confidence of the universe, and to
be a Being of infinite benevolence, should make such a world as this, full of
sinners and sufferers; and that when an atonement had been made, He did not
save all the race, and put an end to sin and woe forever.
"These and kindred difficulties meet the mind
when we think on this great subject; and they meet us when we endeavor to urge
our fellow sinners to be reconciled to God, and to put confidence in Him. On
this ground they hesitate. These
are real, not imaginary
difficulties. They are probably felt by every mind that ever reflected on the
subject; and they are unexplained, unmitigated, unremoved. I confess, for one,
that I feel them, and feel them more sensibly and powerfully the more I look at
them and the longer I live. I do not understand these facts; and I make no
advance toward understanding them. I do not know that I have a ray of light on
this subject which I had not when the subject first flashed across my soul. I
have read, to some extent, what wise and good men have written. I have looked at their theories and
explanations. I have endeavored to weigh their arguments, for my whole soul
pants for light and relief on these questions. But I get neither; and in the
distress and anguish of my own spirit I confess that I see no light whatever. I
see not one ray to disclose to me the reason why sin came into the world, why
the earth is strewed with the dying and the dead, and why a man must suffer to
all eternity.
"I have never seen a particle of light thrown on
these subjects that has given a moment's ease to my tortured mind; nor have I
an explanation to offer, or a thought to suggest which would be of relief to
you. I trust other men--they profess to do--understand this better than I do;
and that they have not the anguish of spirit which I have but I confess when I
look on a world of sinners and of sufferers; upon death-beds and graveyards;
upon the world of woe, filled with hosts to suffer forever; when I see my
friends, my parents, my family, my people, my fellow citizens; when I look upon
a whole race, all involved in this sin and danger; and when I see the great
mass of them wholly unconcerned; and when I feel that God only can save them,
and yet He does not do it, I am struck dumb. It is all dark, dark, dark, to my
soul, and I can not disguise it." (Barnes' Practical Sermons, pp. 123-125).
We could multiply examples, but this will suffice to
witness to the recoil of even those who are spiritual from the so-called
orthodox doctrine of eternal punishment.
The doctrine of the eternal torments of the wicked
blots out a God of love from His world. One preached upon the theme: "The
End of the Wicked Contemplated by the Righteous; or The Torments of the Wicked
in Hell, no Occasion of Grief to the Saints in Heaven." Only a pitiless
logic that practically blotted out a God of love, and effaced the love of God from the hearts of believers, could establish such a
theme. In fact, we find this one of the points of that noted sermon by this
great preacher. We quote from this sermon:
"The sufferings of the damned will be no occasion
of grief to the heavenly inhabitants and they will have so love nor pity to the
damned as such. It will be no argument of want of a spirit of love in them,
that they do not love the damned; for the heavenly inhabitants will know that
it is not fit that they should love them, because they will know then that God
has no love to them, nor pity for them; but that they are the objects of God's
eternal hatred . . . However the saints in heaven may have loved the damned
while here, especially those of them who were near and dear to them in this
world, they will have no love to them hereafter."*
*The Works of President Edwards, Vol. iv, page 291 (Robert Carter & Bros., New York. 1881).
One
would not think that a godly man could be led by false premises to deny a God
of love and hearts of love to prove eternal torments. It is true that he was
misled by the popular erroneous translation of certain passages of Scripture
and the very word "damned." This word is properly translated
"condemned." The Scriptures say, "Love never faileth, . . . now
abideth faith, hope and love." God always and everywhere loves all of His
creatures, even the most prodigal of them. His love lasts not only for this
life. His love is eternal, in His very nature. The eternal punishment of the
wicked would be the eternal punishment of God, and the eternal punishment of
His saints.
We
will mention another insurmountable difficulty against the doctrine of endless
punishment, and that is this: that such teaching fosters an unloving and cruel
spirit and, in part at least, accounts for much of the persecution in the past;
instigated and inflicted by professing Christians. We can see what kind of
spirit would be inculcated by the following quotation, and one would not think
that the great Tertullian could possibly utter such sentiments on the torments
of Hell. He says in addressing the pagans:
"You are fond of your spectacles; but there are
other spectacles; that day disbelieved, derided by the nations, the last and
eternal day of judgment, when all ages shall be swallowed up in one
conflagration; what a variety of spectacles shall then appear! How shall I
admire, how laugh, how rejoice, how emit, when I behold so many kings, and
false gods in heaven, together with Jove himself, groaning in the lowest abyss
of darkness!--so many magistrates who persecuted the name of the Lord,
liquefying in fiercer flames than they ever kindled against Christians; so many
sage philosophers blushing in raging fire, with their scholars whom they
persuaded to despise God, and to disbelieve the resurrection; and so many poets
shuddering before the tribunal, not of Rhadamanthus, not of Minos, but of the
disbelieved Christ! Then shall we hear the tragedians more tuneful in the
expression of their own sufferings; then shall we see the dancers far more
sprightly amidst the flames; the charioteer all red-hot in his burning car; and
the wrestlers hurled, not upon the accustomed list, but upon a plain of
fire."*
*Tertullian's De Spectaculis, Chap. 30. Gibbon's translation. See also Ante Nicene Fathers, Vol.3, page 91 (Christian Lit. Co. N. Y.).
This fiery, unchristian eloquence was especially
addrest to the pagans, but how far removed it was from the spirit of Christ and
what cruelty and hatred would it inspire!
One of the cruel, persecuting queens of England
justified her cruelty by appealing to the supposed example of God: "As the
souls of heretics are hereafter to be eternally burning in hell, there can be
nothing more proper than for me to imitate the divine vengeance by burning them
on earth." In all the persecutions that professing Christians have
promoted in the past, they fanatically believed that they were doing their
cruel work for God's glory; therefore, the more zealous they were for God, the
harder they labored to persecute or slay those they called heretics.
Such persecutions bring the blush to the cheek of
Roman Catholic and Protestant alike, for both have been guilty before God, so
guilty that sometimes even children ten and twelve years of age joined with
their parents in killing the children of heretics for the glory of God! It
needs to be remarked here that such cruelty had not its origin in Christianity
any more than the doctrine of eternal torment had its origin in Christianity.
It came as an importation from paganism. The Jews received many of their
conceptions outside the Bible from Egyptian and Babylonian sources, and the
cruelty of Greek and Roman and other races was transported into Christianity
and read into certain passages of the Bible. In the receiving of whole tribes
and nations as profest followers of Christ without requiring a change of heart
in them, they paganized and unchristianized the Bible doctrine of rewards and
punishments. The pagans used all kinds of cruelties to subdue their ignorant
people, and they imagined and invented a diabolical hell to compel obedience.
That which seemed like a great day for Christ in declaring the Roman Empire
Christian, when Constantine (312-317 A. D.) became a convert, was but the
opening of the door for all kinds of worldliness to enter the Church. It prepared the way for the thousand
years of gross ignorance and superstition and the period usually called the
"dark ages."
The historical argument against eternal torments might
be further developed. It is certainly remarkable that no Church Council ever
pronounced against the doctrine of the ultimate salvation of all until between
five and six hundred years after Christ; and that, in some of the earliest of
the Church Councils, the leading spirits were honored men who were known by
every one to hold the doctrine of the ultimate salvation of all. It is also
worthy of note that the majority of the leaders in the first few centuries who
spoke Greek as their native tongue interpreted the Bible as teaching the
ultimate salvation of all. It is also true that many of the leaders who did not
speak Greek in these early centuries agreed and propagated the same truth. It
ought to be said further that even later than this early period the advocates
of eternal torment usually held other doctrines which so modified their views
of perdition that its awful punishments were greatly mitigated. These facts
from Scripture, from conscience, and from history form insurmountable
difficulties to the view of an eternal hell as ordinarily profest.
We
would add one word more for any one who may read only this Chapter: It is not
to be inferred from anything here exprest that the consequences are not
tremendous for one who rejects our God and His Christ now. "Whatsoever a
man soweth, that shall he also reap." The punishment and consequences of
sin are terribly real and can not be escaped, but they are sane and commend
themselves to every man's conscience. They are better adapted and entirely
adequate to deter us from sin; and, beside all this, we can learn that God has
attached a beneficent purpose to them that tends to bring one to himself that
he may be ready to accept Christ and His salvation. (See Chapter on A Sane and Scriptural Doctrine of
Punishment.)
CHAPTER V
ETERNITY IS NOT TIME
The Bible is emphatically a Book sent by God to help
man in his life in this world. It must of necessity be a Book of time and for
time, otherwise it would not comfort us in our sorrows, nor teach us the way of
forgiveness of sins and the way of victory over the things of time and sense.
The redemption of our Lord Jesus Christ, including His being made flesh; His
life on earth; His death on the cross; His session at God's right hand; His
coming again; His reigning till all enemies are subdued (1Cor. 15:28); and His
handing over His completed work to the Father have all to do with time.
This does not mean that eternity does not exist in God,
nor that eternity is not in Christ, nor that the seed of eternity is not
brought into every one who receives Him; but the seed does not enjoy its
fulness of development till our Lord hands over the finished product of His
life and work to the Father.
Every one has it as an inherent belief, to a greater
or less degree, that time will cease and eternity will begin; but, because we
are still in the limitations of time, our thinking is so bound by time and
sense that eternity, in its absolute sense, is not often considered, altho it
always exists.
There can not, in the nature of the case, be any word
in Scripture that means "endless time." "Time" is always
connected with its cognate thought
of "temporal" and
"temporary." "Time" is always a relative term; "eternity,"
in any accurate sense, is always absolute. The difficulty is increased by
popular speech. "Eternity" is used for time that does not end, but
this is incorrect. If we are to
have clearness of thought in this discussion and in the exposition of the Holy
Scriptures, it is necessary to distinguish the absolute from the relative. In many instances the translators of the Bible have
failed to do this, and most Bible teachers and theologians have also failed
here. Even those who know and remark the difference, when it comes to the
application of the same, largely neglect it. This is caused both by the bondage
of usage and the difficulty to think clearly beyond the fallen temporal
condition. In fact, if we desire to speak of eternity, so temporal is our condition
that we may have to use expressions of time. For instance, we might say that
there never will be "a time in eternity" when the creature will not
be in full fellowship with God. But the term "time in eternity'' is
incorrect, for there is no time in eternity, and yet if such a phrase was used,
most would understand what would be meant. The failure properly to distinguish
thoughts which are opposites has done immense damage to our right understanding
of God and His Word.
The Bible is preeminently a book for time. When
eternity, in its absolute sense, is reached we will not need the Bible, our
blessed Chart which guided our bark through the great oceans of time. Time has
a beginning and an end. Eternity is without bounds. Time has fallen out of eternity
after the same manner as man; and this world is in a different state from that
in which it was first created. The world has lost much of its spiritual
condition. It has become gross, dense, material. It was originally of spiritual
substance. Time is the state that is proper for such a fallen, divided and
mixed condition. Time, as we have said, has as part of its meaning,
"temporary." There is no such conception in the Bible (there may be
in some of our translations) as "everlasting," or
"eternal," in the sense of time. The very nature of the state called
"time" is temporary.
Whatever has a beginning must also have an end.
Again we repeat, there is no word in the whole Bible
that can be accurately and consistently translated "endless time." Time not only implies temporary, but also implies the
realm of the phenomenal. This does not mean that things of time have no real
existence, but only that we get to know them by their appearances, or that
which sense gives us. Their real substance is shrouded in mystery. Time, in its
very nature, implies that the final state or condition has not been reached.
All time will one day be converted into eternity. Time is allied to motion;
eternity to rest. Time is made up of successive moments. The quality of
eternity is its simultaneousness.
We may get the germ, the beginning and foretaste of
eternity, in time, as we do when we trust God; but this is only the seed of
eternity. No clocks will be needed in eternity. Sun dials have use only under
the sun. There are no shadows in eternity. Eternity is the opposite of time. It
signifies a new state of things, a different condition; it denotes
timelessness, that is, the absence of time.
Time is the revolving circumference of a circle.
Eternity is the fixt and unchanging center. Imagine a number of flies walking
around the rim of a wheel that has been placed in a horizontal position. Each
fly is present at a given point at a certain time. Each of them has its past
back of it and its future before it. There are also some of the flies ahead of
others and there are some following after. Each occupies a different relative
position. Each is moving. We read of a certain species of fly that has two
thousand five hundred eyes. We place one of these flies at the center of that
wheel; without turning, it sees in all directions. Every fly on the rim of the
wheel has its past, present and future. To the fly in the center, they are all
equally present. God dwells in the eternal center; and all the past, present
and future of time are equally present to Him.
Many think that the past is irrevocable. It is to us,
but not to our God. There is no such thing as time succession to Him. He can
deal with our past or our future as easily as our present, for it is all alike
present to Him. He means to teach us that since He calls Himself the "I
AM," He dwells in an eternal now,
although this may be difficult for us to apprehend. There is enough of the
ruins of our original state left in us to get some light from this astounding
fact of God's eternity. This is what He means to tell us when the Word says
that "with whom is no variableness, neither shadow which is caused by
turning" (James 1:17, literal rendering). There is no temporal movement in
God, no transitoriness, no shadows. He is a glorious, bright, unchanging
Reality.*
* See Dr.
Martensen's Christian Dogmatics (T.
& T. Clark Edinburgh, 1871, page 93. This distinguished author presents a
true and remarkable conception of the eternality of God. We do not accept all
his proof texts as relevant.
The verse in 2Peter 3:8 is meant to teach us the same
truth: "But, beloved, be not ignorant of this one thing, that one day is
with the Lord a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day." It takes
just such a temporal expression to convey the idea to us that time conditions
do not prevail in God's absolute domain.
Our Lord Jesus Christ proclaimed His own eternality
when He said, literally, "Before Abraham became, I am" (John 8:58).
The creature and creation of God, in the nature of the case, can have no inherent
eternality, but they have had and will have a derived and imparted eternality
through regeneration, recreation, glorification, and unification through our
Lord Jesus Christ.
The thought of a true and absolute eternity may be
perceived even by those who are not Christians nor have lived in a light that
has been made living by a Christian revelation. The reason that this may be so
is because the law of opposites and correlatives is inherent in all normal
minds. We need no proof when we say "down" that there must be an
"up"; nor when we say "near" that there must be a
"far"; dark implies light, etc. Notice that the correlative of
"down" is not ''more down,'' that is, ''further down''; but it is its
opposite, "up." In common speech, eternity is spoken of as
"endless time"; but this can not be, in the nature of things; for
when we say "time" we imply its opposite "eternity," which
signifies a state or condition in which time does not exist any more than
"up" exists in the word "down."
Over three hundred years before Christ, one of the
best of the Grecian thinkers wrote:
"But He (God) resolved to make a moving image of
eternity and, as He set in order the heaven, He made this eternal image having
a motion according to number, while eternity rested in unity; and this is what
we call time. For there were no days and nights and months and years before the
heaven was created; but when He created the heaven He created them also. All
these are parts of time, and the past and future are created species of time,
which we unconsciously but wrongly transfer to the eternal essence; for we say,
indeed, that He was, He is, He will be, but the truth is that 'He is' alone
truly expresses Him, and that 'was' and 'will be' are only to be spoken of
generation in time, for they are motions, but that which is immovably the same
can not become older or younger by time, nor ever did or has become, or
hereafter will be, older, nor is subject at all to any of those states of
generation which attach to the movements of things of sense. These are the
forms of time when imitating eternity and moving in a circle measured by
number.
“Moreover, when we say that what has become has
become, and what is becoming is becoming, and that what will become will
become, and that what is not is not--all these are inaccurate modes of
expression. But perhaps this is not the place in which we should discuss
minutely these matters. Time then was created with the heaven, in order that
being produced together they might be dissolved together, if ever there was to
be any dissolution of them; and was framed after the pattern of the eternal
nature, that it might, as far as possible, resemble it, for that pattern exists
throughout all ages, and the created heaven has been, and is and will be in all
time. Such was the mind and thought of God in the creation of time."*
*Plato's Timaeus, Jowett's translation, vol. 2, page 531.
Among the so-called Church Fathers and among the
clearest thinkers of the Church, the true conception of eternity was
recognized, tho it was not consistently applied to the interpretation of God's
Word. Augustine makes the distinction in more than one place. He says in
Tractate XXXVIII (John's Gospel) 10:
"Any thing whatever has not true being, if it
change. If that is not which was, a kind of death hath taken place. Something
is made away with there, that was, and now is not. Something is changed and is
that formerly was not. O Truth, Thou only art. For in all the movings of the
creature, I find two times, past and future, I seek the present, nothing
stayeth. What I have said now, is not. What I have done now, is not. What I am
going to do, as yet, is not. Past and future I find in all the motion of
things. In the truth which abideth I find not past and future, hut only
present, and this without fear or possibility of change. Take (as for example)
the mutation of things: Thou wilt find Hath been and Will be. Take God and thou wilt find I am, where Hath been and Will
be can not be. Then thou also mayest Be, mount beyond time. But who shall do this in his own
strength? Thither let Him lift us, who said to the Father, 'I will that where I
am, they also whom Thou hast given me
may be with me'. Blest be God,
this is His will."
Coming nearer our own times we will quote but one or
two--e.g., F. D. Maurice:
"The word 'eternal', if what I have said be true,
is a key word of the New Testament. To draw our minds from the temporal, to fix
them on the eternal, is the very aim of the Divine economy. How much ought we
then to dread any confusion between thoughts which our Lord has taken such
pains to keep distinct? How dangerous to introduce the notion of duration into
a word from which He has deliberately excluded it! And yet this is what we are
precisely in the habit of doing: and it is this which causes such infinite
perplexity in our minds. 'Try to conceive this', the teachers say, 'a thousand
years, multiply these by a thousand, by twenty thousand, by a hundred thousand,
by a million. Still you are as far
from eternity as ever'. Certainly I am, quite as far. Why then did you give me
the sum to work out? What could be the use of it except to bewilder me, except
to make me disbelieve in eternity altogether? Do you not see that this course
must be utterly wrong and mischievous? If eternity is the great reality of al,
and not a portentous fiction, how dare you impress such a notion of
fictitiousness on my mind as your process of illustration conveys? But is it
not the only process? Quite the only one if you will bring time into the
question--if you will have years and centuries to prevent you from taking in
the sublime truth."*
*Quoted
in The Spirits in Prison, by E. H.
Plumptree, D. D., page 361 (Thomas Whittaker, New York).
And the great textual critic and exegete of the Word,
Dr. B. F. Wescott, on page 215 of The
Epistles of John, writes:
"In considering these phases it is necessary to
premise that in spiritual things we must guard against all conclusions which
rest upon the notion of succession and duration. . . . It is not an endless
duration of time, but being of which time is not a measure. We have indeed no
power to grasp the idea except through forms and images of sense."
Frances Ridley Havergal's "A Waking Thought"
embodies some of the truth of the relation of time to eternity from the
standpoint of redemption:
"Then Time will seem but a pebble cast
Into the ocean of Eternity,
Breaking for one short moment that pure light,
Which dwells upon its calm expanse of joy,
As into shiv'ring radiance, and shade-like circles,
Soon melting back into primeval brightness,
(Like that which was, when all created essence
Took but the forms of blended light and music,
In the glory of an infinite variety),
Through the translucent crystal of that sea,
It swiftly sinks to rest, within the depths
Of that great heart, like an aye-glistening
And treasured memory of things gone by,
Bearing, deep graven on its pale, clear front,
One word--Redemption!"
From a totally different standpoint we quote from one
of our best weeklies (The Literary Digest) a part of its review of one of the most I recent scientific theories.
We are not of necessity
subscribing to this theory, but the reader will note a remarkable analogy to
the teaching of this Chapter, drawn not from religious but from the scientific
field:
"The term relativity refers to time and space;
according to Galileo and Newton, time and space were absolute entities and the
moving systems of the universe were dependent on this absolute time and space.
On this conception was built the science of mechanics. The resulting formulas
sufficed for all motions of a slow nature; it was found, however, that they
would not conform to the rapid notions apparent in electro-dynamics.”
This fact led two distinguished professors (we now
quote one of these professor's own words a
referred to in the same review, issue of Dec.27,
1919),
“This led the Dutch Professor Lorenz and myself
(Dr. Einstein) to develop the theory of special relativity. Briefly, it
discards absolute time and space and makes them in every instance relative to
moving systems. By this theory, all phenomena in electro-dynamics, as well as
mechanics, hitherto irreducible by the old formulas--and therefore
multitudinous--were satisfactorily explained.
“Till now it was believed that time and space
existed by themselves, even if there was nothing else--no sun, no earth, no
stars; while now we know that time and space are not the vessels of the
universe, but could not exist at all if there were not contents--namely, no
sun, earth, and other celestial bodies.”
Whether all the theories or findings of these
distinguished scientists be true or false, we have not the slightest doubt that
from the standpoint of both God's Word and nature, "time" is a
relative term. This fact will illumine and, to some extent, revolutionize many
of the accepted interpretations of Scripture; and, no doubt, it will do the
same for natural science.*
*See Knowledge and
Life, by Rudolf Eucken (G. P.
Putnam’s Sons); also an illuminating discussion by F. Hugh Capron on Time
and Eternity, in his Anatomy of Truth (Hodder and Stoughton).
We think that we have sufficiently established the
ineradicable difference between Eternity and Time. The fruit of the application
of this distinction will enrich our understanding of God Himself. The doctrine
of the Godhead, designated as the Trinity, will be divested of some of its
difficulties and will be wondrously enriched. The character of God will be
unveiled and vindicated. God's purpose and plan in creation, redemption, and
new creation will be more clearly apprehended. It will be necessary to examine
the Scripture more carefully as to the real meaning of its words and phrases,
carefully and prayerfully, for the consequences of such discrimination are
far-reaching and of vital and practical importance; and the Word of God is
always our final and infallible Court of Appeal.
CHAPTER VI
THE AGES PRESENTED
We
trust it has been made clear that eternity belongs to a different category from
time, that implies a different state and condition of existence and that, when
we become acquainted with God and receive the Lord Jesus Christ, we have in
this life only a germ or earnest of the eternity into which God will bring us
at the end of time. In fact, when a believer dies, it is popularly said that he
passes into eternity; but this is not an accurate statement, for, altho the
condition of the departed Christian is more spiritual than in this present
life, nevertheless he is still largely under time conditions (Phil. 1:6). Where
there is movement and progress analogous to that on the earth, it implies
change and transitoriness. Likewise even the resurrection state has its
degrees, and in consequence its progression. "One star differeth from
another star in glory. So also is the resurrection of the dead"; but we
know it is God's purpose to bring all to the full "measure of the stature
of the fulness of Christ" (Eph. 4:3), and while this is doing, it is still
time.
It may aid us in clearness of
thought to know that even God's manifestation in time is different from the
absolute and eternal God. He has to accommodate Himself to the creature. We
know our Lord Jesus Christ "was made flesh, and dwelt among us"; and,
tho there were glimpses of His glory, they were at the best but partial. The
Holy Spirit's person and work have had to be humbled that there might be
adaptability to us in a temporal universe. The title of a suggestive book on
the Holy Spirit is The Temporal Mission The Holy Ghost.* There is no doubt that the revelation of the Father
suffers a similar accommodation and that He shows the same spirit of love and
humility in bringing us an unveiling of Himself that we can apprehend. We can
enjoy the sunlight when it is properly dealt with by our atmosphere, but who
can gaze with impunity into the eye of the sun? What mortal could live in that
glorious sphere? Do not wonder if some divine truths do not look right to us.
We live in too dense an environment to see things as they truly are. The
straight rod partly thrust into the water looks bent. Much of our apprehension
of truth needs to be corrected because of the refraction caused by time
conditions.
*By Cardinal Manning (Appleton &
Co., New York, 1866).
We
are now ready to consider the word, in both the Old and New Testaments, which
is most frequently translated "eternal," but which should be
translated "age." This word in the Old Testament is used both as a
noun and an adjective. The New Testament there is the noun "age" or
"eon" and the adjective which signifies "pertaining to an age or
to the ages." We have no adjective to express this in English except some
such word as "eonian." This word is not in common use, but it is
probably the best that we have. Eons are used in geology and in some other
sciences for long periods of time.
If one has seen the absolute
difference between time and eternity, he will understand that making time
endless, we do not get eternity, for eternity means the absence of time, viz.,
timelessness. Eternity in its
absolute sense only obtains when time ceases. An old writer puts the matter
clearly:
"Whatever
suffers the condition of time, even tho it never began to be, and should never
cease to be, yet it can not be called eternal. For it does not comprehend and
the embrace whole at once; it has lost yesterday, and has not yet gained
tomorrow."
There is no word in the
Bible, nor in the nature of the case can there be, for a "forever" or
an "eternity" of time, because time ends when God becomes "all
in all" and then only is there the full eternity.
It
is not necessary for one to have a knowledge of the original languages, altho
that is a wonderful help, nor to be a student of philosophy, to see that the
words translated "ever" and "forever" and
"eternal" can not possibly mean either "forever" or
"eternal" or "eternity." All one needs is to take the
English Bible and compare Scripture with Scripture with the aid of a good
Concordance, such as Young's or Strong's.
I. It will be found that our translators in numerous places had
to translate this word for "age" in several different ways. If it
meant either "forever" or "eternal" in an absolute sense,
this would not have been necessary. At the best, this word they so translate
must be only a relative term.
II. It does not take any knowledge of the
original languages to see that if the word "age" means
''forever" or "eternal" in the singular, a plural would be an
impossibility. But the word "ages" in the plural occurs quite
frequently. In a number of instances it is translated ''ages," as Eph.
2:7; "That in the ages to come He might show the exceeding riches of His
grace in His kindness toward us through Christ Jesus." Age can not mean
"forever" in this passage. In Col. 1:26 "ages" is used in
the plural. The translation would
make nonsense if it was translated by "forever." The mystery would be
"hid forever," and hence could never be made known.
III. If this word "age" signified
eternity, it could have no beginning as well as no end. In the latter part of 1
Cor. 2:7 we read in our English Bible, "which God ordained before the
world unto our glory." The word translated "world" is this same
word "ages." Here the apostle is speaking of something "before
the ages." This certainly indicates that the word "age" does not
mean eternity, and also makes plain the fact that the ages have a beginning,
which eternity does not have.
In Titus 1:2 we read,
"God, that cannot lie, promised before the world began." This word
translated "world" is the same word "age" in a plural,
adjective form joined to the word "times" in the plural. The clause
should be translated "God, that cannot lie, promised before age
times." This text also signifies that the ages are temporal in their
meaning.
In 2Tim. 1:9 we have a
similar expression, which should also be translated "before age (or
eonian) times." The ages or time clearly had a beginning and hence are not
meant to signify eternity.
IV. It is clearly taught in the Scriptures that the ages have
not only a beginning but also an end. We have already shown even if the ages or
time continued forever that that would not be eternity. The use of the plural
"ages" shows that some end before another or others begin.
1. In Matt. 13:39 it is written, "The harvest is the end
of the world." Here again the word that is translated "world" is
the word "age.” The text should read, "The harvest is the end
of the age." The same word is found in Matt. 13:40; 24:3; 28:20.
2. In 1Cor. 10:11, in the last part of this verse, we read,
"Upon whom the ends of the world are come." This should read,
"Upon whom the ends of the ages are come." Therefore the ages have an
end and are not eternal.
3. In Heb. 9:26 we find;
"For then must He often have suffered since the foundation of the world:
but now once in the end of the world hath He appeared to put away sin by the
sacrifice of Himself."
In reference to the first
word translated world," it is the regular word for "world" or
"universe," whereas the second word for “world" is the
word "ages" and reference is again made to the fact that the ages
have an end.
Further, this text speaks not
of the ends but of the end of the
ages. It is therefore evident that the ages have an end and do not last
forever, nor are they eternal. This also negatives the idea that there is an
infinite series of ages, for it speaks of the end of the ages, ages being in the plural; and, besides, as we have
already shown, the fundamental idea of eternity is not continuous time. The
very structure of our mind and thought, as well as the Word of God, demands
an eternity without time
succession.
"Age" or "Ages to Come"
The phrase "age" or
"ages to come" needs to be definitely examined.
In Matt. 12:32 we find "Neither in this world, neither in
the world to come." The word "world” is "age" in this
verse. The clause should read, "Neither in this age nor in that which is
to come. Here we have a reference
to another age which to is to come after the age when Jesus was preaching the
Gospel on this earth.
In Luke 18:30 we have the
words, "in the world to come life everlasting." Here the word
"world" should read "age" again. The words
"everlasting life" will be considered later.
In Eph. 1:21, when correctly
translated, the word "age" should be substituted for
"world” to translate the original word. The usual thought that comes
to most minds in speaking of "the age to come," or the next age, is
that of heaven; but to those to whom the Word of God was first given, the next age always meant
the Millennial age, that is, the time of their being restored to their own land
and of the personal presence of their Messiah and of untold temporal, physical
and spirit blessing.
We again refer to Eph. 2:7
where the Word speaks of "the ages to come." Evidently there is more
than one age to come": there must at least two, or the plural, "ages
to come," would not be appropriate.
In Isaiah 65:17 we read of
God creating "new heavens and a new earth"; and in Rev. 21:1, we have
opened to us a marvellous time when God will be making all things new,
including the heavens and earth.
We see in Revelation that this period follows the Millennium. If the Millennium
be an age of surpassing blessing, what must this new age be!
"The Age of the Ages"
This line of thought throws
light on the expression in Eph. 3:21, "throughout all ages, world without
end." If one looks at the Greek of this passage, the above phrase can
hardly be called a translation. Some one has designated it as "a
flourish." The Revised Version in the margin is nearly accurate. The whole
verse reads: "To Him be glory in the Church in Christ Jesus for all the
generations of the age of the ages. Amen" (R.V. margin). The "age of
the ages" is, therefore, the most glorious Age of all the Ages that are
included in God's marvellous plan. The phrase "the Age of the Ages"
can be understood if we think of some similar expressions. If there is any day
that is the best day of our life we may say it is “the day of days."
The book of Canticles is called the "Song of Songs"; that is the best or the greatest song.
The "Holy of Holies" means the Holiest-of-all.
This idiomatic method of
expressing the superlative leads us to examine with a new interest the phase so
frequently translated "forever and forever," but which is literally
not "forever" at all, but "for the ages of the ages." We
know by the phrase "the age of the ages" that there is one age that
is the supreme age. We also know from. Heb. 1:8, in the original, of the close
connection of "the age of the ages" and the Millennium. It reads in
the literal Greek, ''But to the Son (He says) Thy throne O God, (is) for the
Age of the Age." In this
verse it implies that the grandest age of all springs forth from the millennial
age, which is often spoken of as
the age for Israel as a nation. Hence we think of these two ages and only two
as the supreme ages in God's economy. As far as God's revelation of the ages is
concerned these two ages are The Ages par excellence that lie in the future. Eternity in its absolute
sense does not emerge till after these two ages are ended. This idiomatic use
of two ages being called supreme, by styling them "the ages of the
ages,” is paralleled in more than one place in Scripture.
In Ezek. 44:13 is found in
the Hebrew unto the Holies of the Holies." If the Holy of Holies is
an idiomatic way, in the Hebrew,
of saying the Holiest of All, then the Holies of the Holies is an idiomatic expression
referring to the two specially holy places, viz., the Holy Place and the Holiest of All. Thus the two Holiest places would designate
the two and only the two of the
temple proper, thereby omitting the outer court, etc.
A similar construction is
found in Lev. 21:22. With this key the two future ages are found to be the most
glorious ages of all. The theory of "ages tumbling on ages" or an
infinite series of ages is purely imaginary. These are the two definite, final
ages and always have the definite article before them. Time comes to an end
when the ages end and eternity, with God "all in all," becomes an
accomplished reality.
When we read in Rev. 11:15
that "He shall reign for ever and ever," we know that it literally
reads "for the ages of the ages"; viz., during the Millennium and also during "the Age
of the Ages."
We also learn from Rev. 22:5
where the Word speaks of the reign of the saints, ''they shall reign forever
and ever," or, as it is in the Greek, "they shall reign for the ages
of the ages, "that is, during the same two great ages that our Lord, as
the Redeemer, reigns.
Rev. 19:3, where the smoke of
Babylon is represented as going up "forever and ever," that is, for
the ages of the ages; but it certainly ceases when all things are made new. It
lasts only for these two ages.
Again we need to notice Rev.
14:11. "And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up forever and
ever." This verse refers to the length of time that the suffering lasts of
those who worship the antichrist in the great days of tribulation before the
Second Coming of Christ. This phrase here, "forever and ever," is the
same one that literally says, "for the ages of the ages and these ages
come to an end. Even if we have not followed the entire argument, we may know
not only from the Scripture referred to in Rev. 11:15, that Christ's reign, as
Son of man, is to end. Compare 1Cor. 15:24-28: "Then cometh the end, when
He shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father; . . . And when
all things shall be subdued unto him, then shall the Son also Himself be subject unto Him that put
all things under Him, that God may be all in all." The reign of Christ, as
Son of Man and Redeemer, comes to an end when His work of redemption is
completed at the end of the ages. Then all things are subject to Him and He
hands over all to the Father and He Himself has no more redeeming work to do as
Son of Man, but in that capacity becomes subject to the Father. This shows that
the end in 1Cor. 15: 24, the great goal and end of all time.
The punishment of the wicked
is for the ages of the ages. Death itself ends before our Lord hands over His
completed work (1Cor. 15:26). Our Lord's redemptive work was potentially finished when He died on
the cross, but the application of it to His creation will not be completed till
the great end of the Ages. It might be well to notice that altho the Son of Man
becomes subject to the Father, the Scripture does not say that the Father
becomes "all in all," but "God (becomes) may be all in all," that is, the whole
Godhead becomes "all in all."
Before concluding this
Chapter it might be remarked that the two great ages to come are to be found
separately treated in the next two Chapters.
The question may also be
asked if we can distinguish the ages since the beginning of time. We think that, as far as is
necessary for our understanding of the ages and God's purpose and plan in them;
this can be done.
We believe that in Gen. 1:1
at least two great ages are connoted, because the word "beginning" is
in the plural in the Hebrew. The verse should be read, "By beginnings, God
created the heavens and the earth"; and, lest any one should question
this, in the New Testament, in Heb. 1:10, it has the word "beginning"
in the Greek in the plural. Also it should read: "And, Thou, Lord, according
to beginnings didst lay the foundation of the earth and the heavens are the
works (plural) of Thy hands." Evidently that which is called the creation
from Genesis, Chapter one, verse two, is, at least, the third creation. This
third creation may be said to come to an end at the Flood. From the Flood to
the Second Coming may be called "the world that now is," or the
"present evil age." A Millennial world will follow and that will pass
into the wondrous "Age of the Ages," or "The New Heaven and the
New Earth," with its many generations. The Greek literally reads, "I
am making all things new" (Rev. 21:5). Corresponding to these different
worlds are the six different Ages. The first two ages referred to in Gen. 1:1
may be said to be prehistoric. How much of the conflict between science and religion would have
been prevented by merely noting that" the term "beginning" was
in the plural! There is room for millions of years, if necessary, in this;
first verse of the Bible. We know that there was a cataclysm between Gen. 1:1 and 1:2. These early creations
ended in "waste and ruin" (Gen. 1:2, Hebrew). There may be a
long period between verses 1 and 2
of Genesis one. From Gen. 1:2 to
Gen. 8:14, we have the Antediluvian Age. From Gen. 8:15 to Rev. 19, we have the Age of Promise, sometimes called
the "present evil age" (Gal. 1:4). Then the Millennial Age will
follow, and finally the Age of the Ages. There are thus, six ages. The number
six seems to us appropriate as it is the number of creaturely self-will and
also of the work of God in bringing the creature into His image.
It is also to be noted that
when we use the word "age," we do not mean dispensation, as there may
be a number of dispensations in an age.
In eternity, heaven and earth
were not separated, but formed a glorious oneness and they will again reunite
as one at the end of the ages. All separation comes originally from sin.
The first two ages, which are
noticed in the plural of the word "beginning" in Gen. 1:1 and Heb.
1:10, may be distinguished spiritually even tho it does not appear to be God's
purpose to speak particularly of them in the Bible. The fall of Satan and his angelic associates
evidently was in two stages. The first was a fall into selfhood as intimated in
Isa. 14:12-15; Ezek. 28:12-15. The result of this was the "casting
down" (katabole, Greek) from
the eternal state into a temporal one and the separation of the spiritual glory
that originally existed into a heaven and an earth. God's creative work
operated even in the "casting down" and this temporal world and
universe was founded. This explains the reason that two different words are
used in the original Greek for the word "foundation": they are katabole and themelion. The first one signifies a "casting down"; the second is the
regular word for "foundation." In the "casting down" of the
creation because of sin, God introduced His creative work and made it the
foundation of His temporal universe. God's creative work is always animated by
love and has so crystalized and bound His falling creation that it is kept from
descending to such an extent that evil would have unlimited scope and
development.
There are some careful
students of the Word that make the word katabole refer to Gen. 1:2, which literally reads, "And
the earth became a waste and a ruin." There is no doubt that judgment and ruin are spoken of in
Gen. 1:2, but the time referred to is the sad condition at the end of the
second great age. Their explanation fails to take into full account the eternal
creation (Col. 1:16) and to note that the "casting down" is used
synonymous with "foundation." Heb. 1:10 uses the same root that
always means "foundation." Compare with it Eph. 1:4 and John 17:24,
which have the word katabole, or
"casting down," referring apparently to the same event from the
standpoint of the first fall.
In the first age there was a
heaven and an earth and, altho the first sin of the angels had taken place, the
sin was confined and the creation was largely spiritual.
In the second age there seems
to have been a further fall which caused the spiritual creation to become
earthly and grossly material, something after the manner as we know it. This
implied in Gen. 1:2, which represents that age in ruins.
The arrangement of the ages
as presented in this Chapter is further attested by their remarkable
correspondence and contrast.

The
above diagram of the six great ages with eternity at each end is perhaps more
easily apprehended as thus presented. The ages and eternity would be more truly
represented by bending the diagram upward from each end so that the two
eternities become one and the base line forms a circle. See diagram on the next
page.

The
descending arrow represents the foundation of the earth called in a number of
passages in the original "the casting down." It also represents the
beginning of time. The arrows indicate the course of time in the ages and the
ascending arrow in the sixth age shows the end of the ages and the return of
all things into God’s eternity again. This illustrates the great law of
circularity referred to in the Chapter, God’s Accommodation to a Fallen
World.
The first age and the sixth
age need to be thus associated and compared. Both have a spiritual heaven and
earth with evil little in evidence.
The second age and the fifth
age help to explain each other. The second age shows the earth becoming a waste
and ruin; while the fifth or Millennial age represents the earth as especially
blessed and as the age ends, the earth and heavens are purged by fire.
The third age reaches from Adam
to Noah; and we are told of the fourth age, "as it was in the days of Noe,
so shall it be also in the days of the Son of man" (Luke 17:26). Also the
third age begins with the first Adam and the fourth age is especially the age
of the Second Adam, containing His First Coming and concluding with His Second
Coming.
These six ages, thus so
wondrously related, are arranged according to God's own plan and have enacted
in them a redemption that provides not only for sins committed, but also for
the very root, sin and selfishness (2Cor. 5:21; Rom. 6:6) and, further than
this, delivers us from the rudiments and beggarly elements of this world, for,
through the cross, "the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the
world" (Gal. 6:14). This plan of God, or, as it literally reads,
"according to the plan of the ages" (Eph. 3:11), will work out as God
has purposed; it will not fail, God shall be "all in all" (1Cor.
15:28). The saving work of Christ
is to last throughout the ages, Jesus Christ the same yesterday, today and for
the ages (Heb. 13:8, literal).
CHAPTER VII
THE MILLENNIAL AGE
The
Millennium is the next age after the present age. According to the Scriptures
it is introduced by the Second Coming of our Lord. It is called the Millennium,
which means a period of a thou- sand years, is spoken of as the time of
Christ's reign and of that of his saints. There are, how- ever, other great
events which may follow the thousand years which may properly be included in
the same age. It is therefore probable that the Millennium may be considerably
longer than the thousand years.
The
Millennium is a time of far more supernatural manifestation than the present
time. The nation of Israel will be signally blessed and will become the most
important nation in the world. The religion of the world will center in
Jerusalem. There will be the mysterious and glorious city which will come down
out of heaven and will be accessible from the earth. Resurrected and glorified
saints and celestial angels, as well as those in the flesh, will enjoy wondrous
communion; Satan, and probably his coadjutors, will be imprisoned. The earth
will be greatly transformed both as to its topography and characteristics. All
this and more is foretold in the Scriptures of the prophets. To many Bible students
the Millennium is regarded as the Golden Age, in which all the hopes of mankind
as exprest in the Word of God and the best of Plato's Republic and More's Utopia, will have fulfilment. But there are other
considerations that indicate that the Millennial age falls far short of
perfection and, even tho Satan is bound, the natural heart of man is by no
means changed:
I.
There will be sin in the Millennium (Ps. 101).
II. Judgment on sin will be immediate as in the
ease of Ananias and Sapphira. (Acts 5:5,10; Isa. 65:20; Ps. 101). Whole nations
may have to suffer judgment (Isa. 60:12; Zech. 14:17-19; Ps. 2).
There
will be death in the Millennium. This will make a great impression because
human life will be greatly prolonged as in the antediluvian age. One may be
considered but a child at a hundred years of age and if a man die and be only
one hundred years of age, death will come as a curse upon him (Isa. 65:20).
III. When Satan is loosed at
the end of the thousand years, he succeeds in deceiving the nations and leading
them in a great revolt. The period denoted by the words "loosed a little
season" (Rev. 20:3), may extend for many years, for God's little seasons
often seem very long to us; as, in Heb. 10:37, "a little while" has
been nineteen hundred years. This revolt is supernaturally and divinely subdued
and Satan is cast into the lake of fire.
IV. Some time after this
there looms the judgment of the "great white throne." This evidently
covers a. period of time, possibly a long period. The wicked dead are judged
and evidently the rest of the righteous, who need divine disposing, are judged
(Rev. 20:15). God could render His judgments in a moment of time; but when He
deals with His creatures, His days of judgment have to be long days, that they
may really understand and learn His lessons. This judgment day is to end with
the earth and the heavens having a baptism of fire; they are not annihilated,
but dissolved and made anew into a "new heavens and a new earth, wherein
dwelleth righteousness" (2Pet. 3:12,13).
The whole Millennial period
is characterized as "the day of the Lord" (2Pet. 3:10). This
certainly implies a time of continuous judgment. The very name
"Jehovah," which signifies the "I am that I am," or "I
will be that I will be," shows God as acting consistently with His
character and thereby requiring righteousness and demanding that justice be
done. As Jehovah, He is the Lord of Sinai, the God of Law. His awfulness in
righteousness and holiness terrifies. Even to the present day this name is not
pronounced by the Jews. There is more than one word for "Lord" in the
Scripture. This name in the Old Testament is written in capital and ''small
capital'' letters as "Lord," when it translates the Hebrew yhwh. It can not always be distinguished in the New Testament.
It may aid us in
understanding the Millennium and the New Heavens and the New Earth to notice a
few passages in the Word. Gen. 1:2 might be translated, "And the earth
became a ruin and an emptiness." God did not make it so. Isa. 45:18 tells
us that God created it "not a ruin" (literal), using the very word of
Gen. 1:2. When anything is a waste or a ruin there is also the natural
implication that it was not always so. When we look at a ruined building we
know it was not originally so. Something must have happened in God's universe
that caused the waste and ruin. Evidently it was the fall of the angels or of
some of His creatures. Adam’s mission was intended to compass the
restoration of the earth. He was told to "replenish the earth and subdue
it." Adam failed through sin. The second Adam had to complete what the
first Adam failed to accomplish.
Notice the words in Gen. 9:1.
A somewhat similar commission was given to Noah, "replenish the
earth." He and his sons also signally failed.
God's purpose remained. He
desired to bring back the heavens and the earth to what they were originally
and probably even do more, but man failed again and again.
It is manifest that when God
redeemed His people out of Egypt, He intended to establish His glorious kingdom
and speedily bring in the New Heavens and the New Earth. The New Jerusalem,
that is the place of the throne of God, was in touch with them just before
their great trespass with the golden calf. In Ex. 24:9,10, we read, "Then
went up Moses, and Aaron, Nadab and Abihu, and seventy of the elders of Israel;
And they saw the God of Israel: and there was under His feet as it were a paved
work of a sapphire stone, and as it were the body of heaven in his
clearness." God almost introduced the Millennium then. In the Millennium
the New Jerusalem in its jewelled glory may be reached from Mount Sinai or from
Mount Zion, which is to be greatly exalted.
Ezekiel among the captives in
Babylonia saw the New Jerusalem just ready to come down if his nation would
only repent and turn fully to God. God was ready even then to set up the
millennial kingdom. Mark the words, "And above the firmament that was over
their heads was the likeness of a throne, as the appearance of a sapphire
stone: and upon the likeness of the throne was the likeness as the appearance
of a man above upon it. And I saw as the color of amber, as the appearance of
fire round about within it, from the appearance of His loins even upward and
from the appearance of His loins even downward, I saw as it were the appearance
of fire, and it had brightness round about. As the appearance of the bow that
is in the cloud in the day of rain, so was the appearance of the brightness
round about. This was the appearance of the likeness of the glory of the Lord.
And when I saw it, I fell upon my face and I heard a voice of one that
spake" (Ezek. 1:26-28). Israel was not ready to return to the Lord and to
execute His commission to the world. When God opened the way for their return
to their own land to fulfil their destiny in His promises, only a few availed
themselves of the great opportunity.
When John the Baptist
proclaimed the kingdom was at hand, he was declaring the same truth of the
Millennial kingdom that God had desired established at the first. Our Lord
Jesus' first preaching was in the same line, but how few became His true
followers. Notwithstanding the national rejection of their Messiah in
crucifixion and death, God still persisted. The Shepherd still sought the
sheep. The Apostle Peter after Pentecost called to his nation and said;
"Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out,
when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord; And He
shall send Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto you: Whom the heaven
must receive until the times of restitution of all things, which God hath
spoken by the month of all His holy prophets since the world began" (Acts
3:19-21). Had Israel obeyed Peter's exhortation, Jesus would have returned and
the millennial kingdom would have been set up that time was always "to the
Jew first," but Israel has been stubborn of heart. Their national
rejection was practically complete in Acts 28:25-28; this was followed by the
destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans, a few years later. The nation has been
scattered and in many instances persecuted till the present day.
The national rejection of Israel was not forever.
God's purposes are without repentance; the day is fast approaching for the
setting up of their millennial kingdom. The Apostle Paul speaks of it in many
places. Rom. 11:25,26 is very clear, "For I would not, brethren, that ye
should be ignorant of this mystery, lest ye should be wise in your own
conceits; that blindness in part is happened to Israel, until the fulness of
the Gentiles be come in. And so all Israel shall be saved: as it is written,
There shall come out of Sion the Deliverer and shall turn away ungodliness from
Jacob."
The Apostle John, years later, foresaw the LORD'S Day and the
millennial kingdom reaching to the time of the New Heavens and the New Earth.
He was transported in the Spirit into the LORD'S Day (Rev. 1:10). All the
prophecies of the LORD'S Day in the past are gathered together in the book of
Revelation. How like Ezekiel's vision is Rev. 1 and grander than Ex. 24 is Rev.
21:10-27! Grander far than the deliverance out of the land of Egypt will be
God's final deliverance of Israel. "Therefore, behold, the days come,
saith the Lord, that it shall no more be said, The Lord liveth, that brought up
the children of Israel out of the land of Egypt; But, the Lord liveth, that
brought up the children of Israel from the land of the north and from all the
lands whither He had driven them: and I will bring them again into their land
that I gave unto their fathers" (Jer. 16:14,15). This word awaits
fulfilment. The book of Revelation tells of such time.
There are those who say that the Scripture which speaks of a Millennium
can not have a literal fulfilment, because in reference to that period it was
said, "Verily I say unto you, This generation shall not pass, till all
these things be fulfilled" (Matt. 24:34). They say there was no literal
fulfilment then and so there can not be now.
This verse (Matt. 24:34) is not the only verse of the New Testament
that seemed to promise fulfilment in that day. We would call attention to the
fact that the translation of that verse and parallel verses is not accurate in
our English version. It should read; "Verily I say unto you, this
generation may indeed not pass away, till all these things may be
accomplished." It is a conditional sentence and there is a necessary
condition which has to be first fulfilled before it will be accomplished; and
that condition was not fulfilled then, but will be fulfilled in the future.
That condition is the same one that the Apostle Peter referred to in Acts
3:19-21; viz., the repentance of
Israel, or at least the repentance of a representative number of that nation.
That promise will be fulfilled in the future and the mighty movements in and
for Israel as a nation in our day presage a speedy fulfilment of all these
things.
God's purpose will have no miscarriage: the millennial
kingdom will be established on and over this earth. For Israel it will be a
"golden age" and also for those who accept Israel's dominion and
Israel's God. Of the other nations, many will give only an outward or feigned
obedience. Note especially the marginal readings in Ps. 18:44; 66:3 and 81:15.
We have seen that the
Millennium with all its glory is filled with judgment and with an iron rule
(Ps. 2); and that notwithstanding its unspeakable blessings and Israel's
preeminence, it is far from a perfect state. It can not be the final age. The
final age must come with the New Heavens and the New Earth "wherein
dwelleth righteousness."
CHAPTER VIII
THE GREAT NEGLECTED AGE
The
phrase, "the Age of the Ages," is found in Eph. 3:21. The literal
reading of this verse is:
To
Him be glory in the church in Christ Jesus, for all the generations of the Age
of the Ages." The reader may look up the marginal reading of the Revised
Version and find it practically the same.
We
learned in the Chapter on the Ages that the phrase, "Ages of the
Ages," referred to the two last great Ages; viz., the Millennium and the Age of the Ages. We saw that
the Age of the Ages denoted the greatest age of all, just as the expression the
"Holy of the Holies" signifies the holiest of all.
We gathered from the Chapter
on the millennial age that that age was far from ideal, even tho it surpassed
former ages in natural and spiritual grandeur. We find that many Scriptures
tell of the age when all things will become new; when all things will be
subdued to God; when "in the Name of Jesus every knee shall bow, of things
in heaven and things in earth and things under the earth; and that every tongue
should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father"
(Phil. 2:10,11, literal). The title "Age of the
Ages" is a fitting title for such a glorious time, for it is still time.
We have already seen that all ages refer to the temporal.
In 2Peter 3:10 we noticed in a former Chapter the Day
of the Lord in which the heavens shall pass away; and in verse 12 of the same
chapter, we are exhorted to look for the "Day of God," when there
will be a "new heavens and a new earth, wherein dwelleth
righteousness."
We are living in "Man's Day" now (1Cor. 4:3,
margin). The supremacy of man and his practical deification belong to our time.
In the antichrist this deification of man will head up (2Thess. 2). This is the
fruitage of Satan's lie in Eden, "Ye shall be as God" (Gen. 3:5,
literal).
The Lord's Day will follow Man's Day and will extend
from the close of this present age to the end of the Millennium. The Millennium
will be followed by God's Day, or the "Day of God," according to 2Peter
3:12. This is the final age of which we have any account in the Bible. No other
age is needed to fulfill the Scriptures and the work of redemption. It is
closely connected with the Millennium and springs from it. "Thy throne, O
God, is for the age of the age" (Heb. 1:8), which means that the last age
springs from the Millennium. In the Hebrew Scriptures Ps. 45:6,7, from which
Heb. 1:8 is quoted, literally reads, "Thy throne, O God, is for the Age
and beyond." The Millennial Age is often called "the Age"; The
Age of the Ages is the "beyond" age. This final Age might be called
The Neglected Age, for so many Bible students have no place for it and this is
one reason why the complete redemption and reconciliation is not apprehended.
Before this final age and during this age, there is
ample space for every promise and every threat to be fulfilled. There is enough
time for the punishment of the wicked, also for the reconciliation and for God
to make "all things new." So this age of the ages might be called the
Age of the New Creation, according to Rev. 21:5, "Behold, I make all
things new," Or perhaps more in accord with the fact and in accord with
the Greek, "Behold, I am making all things new." The new creation is
not sudden in its completion, even if it is in its beginning. In 2Cor. 5:17 we
read: "Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature (or
creation); old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new."
We know that the new creation of man begins as soon as his conversion takes place,
but his new creation in its fulness takes a long time (the Greek word for
"creation" indicates by its ending, a process). So in the new
creation of the universe, its initial work will probably be sudden, but its
completion will take long periods of time, for the expression is used "for
(or) throughout all the generations of the Age of the Ages" (Eph. 3:21
literal; see also margin, R. V.).
It is fitting that this last age should be so extended, not only that
there may be time for making all things new and getting everything right; but
that our Lord may have right of way for a far longer time than Satan and man
have had in spoiling the old creation. Some have supposed that such passages as
the following give us more than a hint of the length of time of God's covenant
with Israel and that by subtracting the years of Israel that are past from the
estimated length of a thousand generations, we may find how many thousands of
years there will be left for the Millennium and for the age of the ages. Deut.
7:9," Know therefore that the Lord thy God, He is God, the faithful God,
which keepeth covenant and mercy with them that love Him and keep His
commandments to a thousand generations." Also 1Chron. 16:15: "Be ye
mindful always of His covenant; the Word which He commanded to a thousand
generations." Whether this
calculation will be correct or not, the implication of these passages is that
the promises to Israel are to extend in the future for an exceedingly long time.
We find in Eph. 1:10,
"That in the dispensation of the fulness of times He might gather together
in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven and which are on
earth." We believe that this dispensation of the fulness of times"
will form a part of this greatest age of all. The above phrase, "He might
gather together in one," literally means that "He might head up all
things in Christ."
According to Col. 1:16, all
things were originally created in Christ. Through sin, separation, confusion
and all the consequences of sin have entered. The object of this final Age of
the Ages is to get all things back under the original headship again. To this
1Cor. 15:25 and 27 agree, "For He (Christ) must reign, till He (God) hath
put all enemies . . . and all things under His (Christ's) feet." This age
will include even more than "the times of restitution of all things, which
God hath spoken by the mouth of all His holy prophets since the world
began." For the restoration of a wrecked universe is not enough. God's
creatures must be so established that another fall will be a moral
impossibility. Bare restoration will only take His children where they were
before. It is further His purpose to bring them all to the same place as that
He promised the Church in Paul's day. "Till we all come in the unity of
the faith and of the full knowledge of the Son of God, unto a full grown man,
unto the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ" (Eph. 4:13,
literal). God is no respecter of persons, His promise to one is His promise to
all.
Only a few, called the "first fruits,"
"the elect," have usually been thought of as attaining this full
stature of Christ, but God says for them as a first fruits and hence for all,
"till we all come." (See
Chapter on headship of Christ.) It would seem unthinkable to suppose that we
all were to attain the full measure of the true humanity of our Lord, but God
has promised it. Note, not the
measure of His Deity, but of the Christ who was made flesh. This is to be part
of the astounding work that is to be completed in this final and grandest age.
Our Lord’s work would not be fully done if He did not hand over to the
Father a finished product. This takes the conceit out of the great ones of
mankind and puts a divine, unselfish inspiration and aspiration in all. Men are
all different now, no two absolutely equal. The inequality has come through
sin, through diligence and also through so-called natural talent. In the
original creation, we were all equal. The standing of every man in the work of
Christ on the cross (for He tasted death for every man and purchased a complete
redemption for every man, Heb. 2:9) is absolutely equal. God will bring this
result about no matter how long He has to continue the age of the ages. Here is
an ultimate equality that staggers us with its ideal and accomplishment.
Some
one says, What advantage is it then to those who yield to the Lord and serve
Him now? The advantage for such a course will be rewarded through the myriads
of years in the ages. "If we suffer, we shall also reign with Him."
But what discipline; what suffering; what anguish; what fires; "what a
forge and what a heat," must the last-born ones go through to overtake the
firstborn ones! Eternity can not dawn till everything that can be learned in
time is thoroughly apprehended and burned in.
The Age of the Ages is the final age but not the final
state. God can not bring in Eternity and be- come "all in all" until
the Son has fully finished His redemptive work. When Christ was made flesh and
went through the whole process that all have to undergo, He went through as the
seed of the whole creation. The vital germ of every one and everything was in
Him. "The Head of every man is Christ" (1Cor. 11:3). Adam was only a
typical head (Rom. 5:14). Christ was the Head of all ranks of angels and of men
and of the whole creation (Col. 1:16). The potential universe, animate and
inanimate, was in Him on the cross and is now in Him in glory. The seed will
certainly bring forth everything that is within it. Through the death on the
cross, the universe was potentially reconciled (Col. 1:20) and before the end
of time, will be so actually.
Some one asks, Does He save without their having a
change of heart? By no means; it would not be salvation without a change of
heart. We do not have to know the method if He states the fact. We may,
however, know much of this also. He does state the fact when He says, as the
Greek and the Revised Version put it, "that in the name of Jesus every
knee should bow, of things in heaven and things in earth and things under the
earth; And every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is lord, to the glory
of God the Father" (Phil. 2:10,11). Join to this text Isa. 45:23, "I
have sworn by Myself, the word is gone out of My mouth in righteousness and
shall not return, That unto Me every knee shall bow, every tongue shall
swear."
In looking at Phil. 2:10, "That in the name of
Jesus every knee should bow," it may be objected that they
"should," but they will not. But the original here means that they
not only "should," but that they also will; the same construction is
in John 3:16 where the Word reads "that whosoever believeth in Him should
not perish," etc. There is no doubt exprest in the word
"should," a believer will certainly not perish. Besides, the passage
in Isa. 45:23 states by the divine oath that "every knee shall bow."
"In
the Name of Jesus" (Greek and R. V.) means more than simply using the name
of Jesus. It signifies, according to the Hebrew idiom, in the very nature of
Jesus. This implies not only a change of heart, but that He has bestowed His
own nature and spirit. Besides, the confession is that "Jesus Christ is
Lord." No hypocritical
confession will satisfy God. "No man can say that Jesus is the Lord, but
by the Holy Ghost" (1Cor. 12:3). Further, Phil. 2:11 says that the
confession is "to the glory of God the Father." No confession
compulsion and force would glorify God the Father." The whole text implies
a real change of heart to make this confession truly "in the Name of
Jesus" and "to the glory of God the Father."
Note,
further, that those who "bow" and "confess" are in
heaven," "in earth," and "under
earth."
This includes the whole creation of God.
1Cor.
15:22-28 needs to be specially noted: "As in Adam all die, even so in
Christ shall all be made alive." These two clauses are not an equation but
a comparison. There were far less in Adam than in Christ. The seed of the
Adamites was in Adam, the seed of the universe and all in it was in Christ.
Adam's death brought death to all in him, Christ's death and resurrection bring
life to all in Him. The result is not instantaneous. "But every man in his
own order." Some are first-born ones, that is, a kind of first fruits
(Jas. 1:18); but "first-fruits" implies that the fulness of the
harvest has not yet come. The Millennium and the Age of the Ages is the full
harvest time; it comes in "the fulness of times" (Eph. 1:10).
"Then cometh the end" (1Cor. 15:24). The
word "end" here means the "goal," the "final
consummation." It signifies that the purpose of God is accomplished. In
Jas. 5:11, in speaking of the Lord's accomplishing His purpose with Job, the
Word says, "Ye . . . have seen the end of the Lord; that the Lord is very
pitiful and of tender mercy." "The Lord blessed the latter end of Job
more than his beginning" (Job 42:12).
Our Lord delivers up the
kingdom to the Father when He finishes His work. All enemies are subjected.
Death is conquered. There is no death in God's universe--no first death, nor
second death, nor any kind of death. There is no place for hell when everything
is made new. The Father is the only One who is not made subject to the Son. In
verses 27 and 28 of 1Cor. 15, the same word is used, in different forms, six
times. It might be translated
"subjected." It is rendered in verse 27 three times by the words
"put under"; in verse 28, it is translated "subdued,"
"be subject" and "put under." It is the same word that is
used of our Lord as a boy, when the Scripture says that Jesus was subject to
His parents (Luke 2:51). It expresses loving and loyal obedience. Here no other
meaning is possible, for it is the fruitage of Christ's death and resurrection;
and the same word is used of Christ, the Son, becoming subject to the Father.
If the other subjection was not loving and voluntary, some modifying word would
be necessary in this connection. Notice, the Scripture does not say that the
Father "may be all in all," but that "God may be all in
all." Christ as Redeemer and Son of man becomes subject; but as Son of God
He is part of the Godhead that becomes all and in all.
One of the able writers on the Ages says:
"This principle of rule by delegated authority,
which dates before the fall of the angels (Jude 6, for 'estate' read
'principality'), was conferred on Adam, till he too fell (Ps. 8:6-8), then on
Israel (1Kings 4:21) till she apostatized, then on the Gentiles (Dan. 2:36-43),
whose 'times' continue until now and are to close in the blasphemous ambition
of one who shall set up his throne in the temple of God and claim Divine
worship (2Thes. 2). This principle is seen in full force in the
Millennium. For (1) Christ Himself
shall reign (by His deputy, the prince), as God's king in Zion (Ps. 2), the
saints of the first resurrection (Rev. 20:4) being His associates on the
throne; (2) then the twelve disciples (the apostle of the Gentiles is not of
them) shall sit on thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel (Matt. 19:28);
and (3) of the sons of Israel Christ will make 'princes in all the earth' (Ps.
45:16), that is sovereign delegates in each Gentile nation of the world. In other
words, a complete system of deputed rule, authority, and power will be set up
on the earth, the whole of it being in the hands of Israel."*
*After
the Thousand Years by George T. Trench,
B.A.. (London: Morgan & Scott), page 70.
But in the final Age deputed rule will gradually
cease, till Christ will reign alone with the whole universe joined to Him as a
living body to its head. It is this sort of a redeemed and glorified
cosmos" that is handed over to the Father.
We will mention a few texts of Scripture that may need
a word of comment:
"And he shall reign over the House of Jacob for
the ages and of His kingdom there shall be no end" (Luke 1:33, literal).
This text harmonizes with all others and tells us that
Christ shall reign for the ages of the ages. We know that His reign comes to an
end when He delivers the kingdom to the Father.
The second clause means that there shall be "no
end" of His kingdom while the ages (which are time) last. This makes no
reference to eternity. In Isa. 9:7 the same is said, "Of the increase of
His government and peace there shall be no end." We know that Christ's
personal reign lasts as long as time and He delivers up the kingdom to the
Father at the end of time (1 Cor. l5:24). Any difficulty with these passages
arises only from trying to take "end" in an absolute sense when it is
relative, for the Bible is a book for time and time relationships. When the
Word says, "neither is there any end of their treasures; neither is there
any end of their chariots"; we all understand that the usage of the word
"end" is relative.
There are those believing in ultimate salvation who
say that the kingdom does not end even if Christ's rule ends. Let those who
desire, accept that interpretation.
We think that there is no reference in this text to eternity in its
absolute sense but it is relative and refers to time.
It might be wise to consider another text which is
thought, by some, difficult to explain. "For the things which are seen are
temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal" (2 Cor. 4:18).
The verse is not correctly translated, it should read "the things which
are seen are for a while (Matt. 13:21 has the same word), the things which are
not seen are for the ages."
The transient things around us pass away, the invisible things last for
the ages. We know that many of the in- visible things pass away, such as hate,
sin and sorrow, even the good invisible things pass from their temporal
manifestation into an eternal state at the end of the ages. The Apostle is
speaking in the preceding verse of "the light affliction which is but for
a moment works for us an exceeding weight of glory for the ages"
(literal). These little
afflictions which are for the brief span of our life, work an age-abiding
glory. He is not speaking of eternity where all God's creatures have reached
equality of glory in Christ, the inequality is only for the ages. The standing of every one in our Lord's
redemption is equal and eternity will not arrive till God has brought all into
this fulness and equality as wrought for them by Christ.
We have often thought of how great the change must be
for a Christian "to depart and to be with Christ; which is far better: we
have often marveled at the thrill of life and joy that the redeemed will enjoy
at the resurrection. We believe that the greatest experience that will ever
come to any living being will be to have all things of time and sense disappear
and God and His creatures and creation in ineffable and eternal union.
CHAPTER IX
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF HADES
The
word "Hades" means "unseen" and it is the term used in the
New Testament for the invisible world of departed spirits. It is a gross error
to use the word always in a bad sense and translate it by the word
"hell," for Hades has a good part as well as a bad part. The good
portion is regarded as above the bad portion. The good part is called Paradise
(Luke 23:43); and we may infer that the bad portion is called
"Tartarus" (2Pet. 2:4): "For if God spared not the angels that
sinned, but cast them down to Tartarus," etc. (literal). Jesus said to the dying malefactor,
"Today shalt thou be with Me in Paradise." The expression
"Abraham's Bosom" is a Jewish term synonymous with at least a part of
Paradise (Luke 16:22). The usage of the word "Sheol" is that it is
the Old Testament synonym for Hades.
The
word "Hades" occurs in the following passages of the Scripture:
Matt.
11:23," And thou, Capernaum, which art exalted unto heaven, shalt be
brought down to hell (Hades): for if the mighty works, which have been done in
thee, had been done in Sodom, it would have remained until this day."
Matt.
16:18, "The gates of hell (Hades) shall not prevail."
Luke
10:15, "And thou, Capernaum, which art exalted to heaven, shall be thrust
down to hell (Hades)."
Luke
16:23, "In hell (Hades) he lifted up his eyes."
Acts
2:27, "Wilt not leave my soul in hell (Hades)."
Acts
2:31, "His soul was not left in hell (Hades)."
1Cor.
15:55, "O grave (Hades), where is thy victory?"
Rev.
1:18, "Have the keys of hell (Hades) and of death."
Rev.
6:8, "And his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell (Hades) followed
with him."
Rev.
20:13 "Death and hell (Hades) delivered up the dead which were in
them."
Rev.
20:14, "And death and hell (Hades) were cast into the lake of fire."
The Hadean state is the state
into which the departed pass immediately upon death and there remain till the
resurrection. It is, therefore, frequently spoken of as the Intermediate State.
There are those who hold that
it was true that the saved entered Paradise in the Old Testament times and in
the early Gospel times; but since Jesus ascended on high, they assert that the
righteous immediately enter the highest heaven. We do not think that this
position can be established by Scripture. The principal text that is quoted to
prove this view is Eph. 4:8, "Wherefore He saith, When He ascended up on
high, He led captivity captive, and gave gifts unto men." The leading
"captivity captive "is made to refer to our Lord leading the
righteous out of Paradise into heaven itself; whereas, the phrase "He led
captivity captive" refers to the conquering of enemies and leading them in
triumph. We have almost the same phrase in Judges 5:12. There it is seen as a
Hebrew idiomatic expression referring to the conquering of enemies and leading
them captive. So in our Lord's death on the cross and His ascending on high, He
spoiled principality and power and made a show of them openly through the power
of His death and resurrected life. Satan could not keep Him down and He
ascended high above all enemies. Satan and all his hosts are already,
potentially, conquered foes. Their captivity was sealed by His resurrection and
ascension. Col. 2:15 says that on the cross Jesus spoiled principalities and
powers. He conquered death and the grave and Satan and his hosts. He ascended
as victor, having broken the power and authority of the enemy, Satan;
therefore, He could give power to His own (Eph. 4:11). The Christian blessing
that Christ gives us has been snatched from the enemy. He gives us peace and
joy and every good thing which the enemy has stolen from mankind. Christ
divides the spoil (Luke 11:22) and the Word tells us that all the powers of
darkness are in captivity to His power (Eph. 4:8). He will manifest this
dominion at the proper time. To those who trust Him Satan is already a
conquered foe. This view also makes Paradise a prison holding the redeemed as
captives, whereas, it is a heaven for this stage of things, even tho God has
something higher for them at the Second Coming of the Lord. The blessed
condition of Lazarus in Paradise is certainly set forth in Scripture (Luke
16:25).
In addition to this we have one or two very clear
texts. Peter preaching on the day of Pentecost which was after the ascension of
Christ, says, in Acts 2:34: "For David is not ascended into the
heavens." It certainly would seem strange that David should be left in
Paradise if Jesus took all the saints up with Him. Again, John 3:13 reads;
"And no man hath ascended up to heaven, but he that came down from heaven,
even the Son of man which is in heaven." We believe that the failure to
realize the full force of this text arises from the fact that it is not usually
observed that this verse thirteen was spoken by John, the writer of the Fourth
Gospel and not by our Lord. For at the time Jesus was talking to Nicodemus,
Christ had neither died nor ascended; and, besides, the verse asserts that the
Son of man was then in heaven. This was not true till after He ascended: as God
He might be everywhere, but as Son of Man He was not in heaven till He ascended
there. John is writing these words long after the ascension of Christ, and he
says that Christ is the only one who "hath ascended up to heaven"
This becomes plainer when we remember that Jesus Himself did not ascend into
the heavens immediately upon His death but only after the resurrection. Neither
shall we: and for the believer the resurrection is always in connection with
the Second Coming of the Lord; and for the unbeliever at least a thousand years
thereafter.
The Church needs to emphasize the fact that the full
measure of rewards is not given till we get our glorified bodies; and also that
the Lake of Fire and Brimstone, except in reference to the anti-Christ and
false prophet, is not brought to our notice till the closing portion of the
Millennium and that most are not cast into it for at least a thousand years
after Christ's Second Coming.
Many theologians seem to teach that we immediately
receive all God has for us when we die. The full harvest of both joy and
suffering comes only after the Second Coming of the Lord. This does not
derogate from the fact that Paradise is a blessed state, or that Tartarus is a
place of suffering. We believe more than this; viz., that rewards and punishments begin in this life, that
heaven and hell begin here. He alone can go to Paradise or heaven who has
heaven begun in him and he alone can go to hell, Tartarus, or the Lake of Fire,
who has hell begun here. The Intermediate, or Hadean state, will have more of
both joy and suffering than we have in this life, but the fuller state,
heavenly or hellish, will not come until after the resurrection.
Our Lord manifests Himself in these three conditions.
We know that He manifests Himself to His children here in this life. We know
that He manifests Himself in the next state, for "to depart, and be with
Christ is far better." He will manifest Himself in the resurrected state,
for "When Christ . . . shall appear, then shall ye also appear with Him in
glory" (Col. 3:4).
It is a source of great comfort to know that we never
lose our identity in the Intermediate, or in any state.
Our Lord went and preached to the spirits in prison
that were aforetime disobedient in the days Noah (1Pet. 3:18-29). He went after
He was killed and was quickened in spirit. He greeted the repentant thief in
Paradise, but it was especially in the Tartarus portion that He is said to have
preached to the very same antediluvians who would not heed Noah's preaching.
Dives and Lazarus are represented as having preserved
their identity and as knowing each other.
Moses and Elijah on the Mount of Transfiguration were
manifested from the Hadean state--their identity was preserved.
David, in speaking of the death of his little son,
says, "Can I bring him back again? I shall go to him." There would
have been no comfort in this if he and the child were not the same in identity
and also that recognition and association were facts.
The phrase, "Gathered to his fathers," so
frequently used of death, means more than having their bodies in the grave,
even tho some saw only as far as that. In speaking of the Lord as the "God
of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob," the Scripture
adds, "For He is not a God of the dead, but of the living: for all live
unto Him" (Luke 20:37,38).
It helps us to understand the fact of identity and
real recognition after death to recall that identity in the particles of our
body is not necessary for the preservation of identity. The atoms of our bodies
are changing every moment and entirely change every few years, and yet we know
each other and count each other's personality as permanent.
Progression and advance do not alter identity.
Besides, altho this natural body is laid aside, there is a spiritual body that
awaits us at the resurrection; and even in this life we get an earnest of that
spiritual body forming within us (2Cor. 5:5). "Though our outward man
perish, yet the inward man is renewed day by day" (2Cor. 4:16). If this is
true here, how much more in the Intermediate state!
Even the unsaved pass into the next life with the
forces of their spirit which formed and made their body in this life. This
spiritual body goes with them into the Hadean state, no matter how warped and
dwarfed it may become. Each one that passes out of this life reaches the next
life in exactly the same spiritual condition in which he was when he died.
Death did nothing for him except to separate him from his earthly body. The
intermediate state is for discipline, punishment, a process of judging, and for
improvement, progress, and growth. There are those who without others will
"not be made perfect" (Heb. 11:40); and there are others whose
"spirits are made perfect" (Heb.12:23).
Our Lord, after His death, was quickened in spirit and
went and preached to those who were disobedient in the days of Noah (1Pet.
3:18-20); this is proof of conscious activity in the Hadean state.
If there ever was a wicked company it was that of
Noah's day. The word "to preach" is to herald, but it is the same
word as that which refers to John the Baptist's preaching, and to Paul when he
preached "Christ and Him crucified." In the next Chapter (1Pet. 4:6),
we read that "for this cause was the Gospel preached also to them that are
dead that they might be judged according to men in the flesh, but live according
to God in the spirit." This word for "preach" is the word
"to declare glad tidings," and the result was to bring judgment upon
them and also for conversion; viz., to
"live according to God in the spirit." Our Lord did this kind of
preaching once and He is "no respecter of persons." If He preached to
this company that was as degraded as any company in the world, He will do so
again, and He will not neglect less guilty companies.
Let
it be remembered that the First Epistle of Peter was written to a persecuted
company of believers. It was written during the reign of cruel Nero. Christians
were being imprisoned and martyred, the attempt was made to stamp out
Christianity. The people were tempted to discouragement and it took grit and
grace to witness for Christ. The Apostle encourages them in their "fiery
trial." He tells them "if ye suffer for righteousness' sake (our Lord
suffered in that manner) happy are ye: and be not afraid of their terror."
Then he tells them to "sanctify the Lord in your hearts as God"
(literal); and go on with your preaching and witnessing, for if they kill you
(so the argument runs), they will not stop you: they killed Christ but death
only opened for Him a larger field; so, believers, fear not, if they kill you,
you will only have a wider field of usefulness opened, your opportunities for
saving souls will increase.
How
many teach that death ends God's power over lost souls! As if Satan, who has them, were
stronger than God, and that God was no longer loving, whereas it is Christ who
holds the keys (Rev. 1:18)!
Martin
Luther wrote:
"God forbid that I should limit the time of
acquiring faith to the present life. In the depth of the Divine mercy there may
be opportunity to win it in the future."*
*Luther's letter to
Hansen von Rechenberg in 1522. Quoted, page 168, in The After Life by Henry Buckle (George W. Jacobs & Co. Phila.,
Pa.).
Bengel
also quotes* Luther's exposition of Hosea as accepting the idea that Christ
appeared to the souls of some who in the time of Noah had been unbelieving,
that they might recognize that their sins were forgiven through His sacrifice.
*(Bengel's Gnomon, translated by Charlton T. Lewis, M.A., page 748,
under 1Peter 3:20; Perkinpine
& Higgins, Phila., Pa).
To
us the Scripture is plain enough, unless there is prejudice to warp the
judgment. John 5:25 is large enough for this thought and more: "Verily,
verily, I say unto you, The hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall
hear the voice of the Son of God: and they that hear shall live."
How many
a mother weeping for her children refuses to be comforted because they are not!
The mother's prayer and work seems to have been for nought. They are dead in
the land of the enemy. Hear the Word of God: "A voice was heard in Ramah,
lamentation, and bitter weeping; Rahel weeping for her children refused to be
comforted for her children, because they were not. Thus saith the LORD: Refrain
thy voice from weeping, and thine eyes from tears: for thy work shall be
rewarded, saith the LORD; and they shall come again from the land of the
enemy" (Jer. 31:15,16). These words were in part fulfilled in our Lord's
childhood at the slaughter of the innocents; but their complete fulfilment will
not take place till the proud, self-willed, unbroken and dead children of Ephraim,
and all other such children, repent and God's Word is fulfilled, "I will
surely have mercy upon" them, "they shall come again from the land of
the enemy" (Jer. 31:16-20).
The
suffering of the rich man in Tartarus had certainly done wonders for him. He probably had never been concerned
about his "brothers" before. Now he is more than solicitous. It was
more than earthly water that he thirsted for. He had no physical tongue. His
thirst was spiritual, and only the spiritual water of life could satisfy him.
He is not saved yet, but he is moving already in that direction.
But,
says some one, "There was a great gulf fixed between the righteous and the
wicked." The next clause, as it reads in the Greek, does not say that
they" can not" pass over but that they "may not" be able to
pass over, for Christ had not yet died and made the way. That gulf is fixt,
even in this life, between the righteous and the wicked. "He that
believeth not is condemned already," "the wrath of God abideth on
him." "He that believeth is not condemned" (John 3:18,36). Man
has no power to cross the gulf but Christ has. By His death He bridged it, He
is the Bridge. He has the "keys of Hades and of death" (Rev. 1:18).
He bridged it when He died and went and preached to the spirits in prison and
He will do it again. He so unites Himself to His Church of every dispensation
that "the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it." There is no
power in Hades that can block the work of Christ and of the Church in Hades to
keep a repentant soul from Christ. Some one may say, "They can not
repent." That may be true n part, but only in part for the only true
repentance that counts anywhere is His gift (Acts 5:31). His command is always
an enabling.
A
helpful writer thus expresses himself:*
"There is one thing which astonishes me beyond measure, and that
is, that any attempt to show from Scripture that the salvation of Christ is
more embrasive than has been commonly imagined, calls forth a display of
bitterest hostility, and the most cruel misrepresentation. It is one of the
puzzles of human nature. Unless experience has taught us otherwise, we should
be inclined to think that a Christianity whose chief characteristic is
described by St. Paul as being 'charity' which 'hopeth all things,' would hail
with intense delight the thought of salvation beyond the grave for poor
unfortunates who have lived and died without, in some cases, one of the
religious advantages which we enjoy. That the attitude of a man or woman,
bearing the name of a pitiful Christ, toward any suggestion of such a hope
would be, 'Thank God! Tell me, are
there any statements in the Bible upon which I can rest such a magnificent
belief? How devoutly I wish you may be right in what you say: How far more
glorious and attractive will it make the Gospel for me!'"
*Our Life After
Death, by Rev. Arthur Chambers (Geo. W.
Jacobs & Co., Phila., Pa.), page 135.
Of those who are righteous the Hadean state will be
for them a time of further training, discipline and development. "He which
hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus
Christ" (Phil. 1:6). In place of the work of grace being finished God will
carry it on till the Day of Christ and that day reaches not only to His coming
but to the end of the ages. May we not pray as well as preach in the
Intermediate state? Yes, and beyond, for our Lord still does both, and He is in
the resurrected state. Our work will extend through all time. He "hath blessed us with all spiritual
blessings in the heavenlies in Christ; . . . That in the dispensation of the
fulness of time He might gather together in one all things in Christ, both
which are in heaven, and which are on earth" (Eph. 1:3,10). God has called
us to a magnificent service which will bring to us an ample discipline and a
fuller glory.
When man fell it was a
twofold fall. He fell into spiritual selfhood and he fell into an earthly
nature. To get man back he has to die two deaths: he has to die to the natural
and earthly and he has to die to self. If in this life man does not have these
deaths wrought in him, then he enters the Hadean life with its judgments,
discipline, training, and service. If man is still stubborn, there awaits him,
and all such, the Lake of Fire and Brimstone, which is "the second
death." The first death slew the natural and animal and took him into the
Hadean state, and at its end, it and death, that is, all in Hades that have not
repented are cast into the Lake of Fire where the process of the second death
awaits, which is the death of all selfishness.
CHAPTER X
A STUDY OF GEHENNA AND THE WORDS
DESTROY AND DESTRUCTION
The
word "Gehenna" is used in twelve passages of Holy Scripture. We can
best study them by viewing all of them. In each instance the word 'hell"
is the translation; only a student of the Bible in the original Greek could
tell that the word here is "Gehenna." The word occurs nowhere else in
the Bible.
Matt. 5:22, "shall be in danger of hell
fire."
Matt. 5:29, "whole body shall be cast into
hell."
Matt. 5:30, "whole body should be cast into
hell."
Matt. 10:28, "to destroy both soul and body in
hell."
Matt. 18:9, "rather than having two eyes to be
cast into hell fire."
Matt. 23:15, "more the child of hell than
yourselves."
Matt. 23:33, "can ye escape the damnation of
hell?”
Mark 9:43 “having two hands to go into
hell.”
Mark 9:45, "having two feet to be cast into
hell."
Matt. 9:47, "having two eyes to be cast into hell
fire."
Luke 12:5, "hath power to cast into hell."
Jas. 3:6, "and it is set on fire of hell."
The only way that any passage of Scripture can be properly expounded is
to discover the time and place to which it refers. A passage of Scripture that
belongs to one dispensation ought to be explained in reference to that
particular dispensation. It is through failure to follow this principle that
confusion is brought to many passages of Scripture.
The first three Gospels and the Gospel according to
Matthew in particular, are anticipatory to our Lord's setting up a theocratic
kingdom on the earth. In this way alone can the Sermon on the Mount be fully
understood. This is not affirming that in these first Gospels there is no
revelation that is appropriate for other dispensations, but it is saying that
its truth especially belongs to that period. If Israel had repented (Acts 3:19,
etc.), the Millennium would have begun and all the conditions and laws that
have special reference to that time would have gone into effect. We have seen
in the Chapter on "The Millennium" that certain sins will be
immediately punished, even lying and slandering will be punished with death.
The early portion of the Acts of the Apostles has some of the same
characteristics: note the case of Ananias and Sapphira (see also Ps.
101:4,7,8). This certainly will be a new order of things.
Outside of Jerusalem, in the valley of Hinnom, there
will be a place for the disposing and cremating of the bodies of certain wicked
ones, and that is the meaning of "Gehenna." In fact, it seems that
very many will be thus punished, having been smitten by some destroying angel,
and their bodies will be burned. The last verses in the last Chapter of Isaiah
refer to this same thing:
"And it shall come to pass, that from one new
moon to another, and from one sabbath to another, shall all flesh come to
worship before Me, saith the Lord" (Isa. 66:23).
This refers to the Millennial time. Zech. 14:16-18
refers to the same period. All nations will have Jerusalem as their center of
worship and will send their representatives there every year (Isa. 66:23).
The
next verse adds: "And they shall go forth, and look upon the carcasses of
the men that have transgressed against Me: for their worm shall not die,
neither shall their fire be quenched; and they shall be an abhorring unto all
flesh." Notice that this whole scene is spoken of men in their bodies of
flesh, who are alive on the earth. The criminals judicially die and their
bodies are burned. The inhabitants of and visitors to Jerusalem may walk
outside the city and see the great crematory. There evidently will be so many
bodies that some will begin to decay and will breed worms before they can be
burned. In other passages of Scripture when it says that the fire shall not be
quenched, we will explain in another chapter that it indicates that the worm
will not die and the fire will not be quenched till the work is done (see Jer.
17:4 and 17:27). The fire spoken of in these passages was to burn up Jerusalem
completely at the time of Nebuchadnezzar, which it did: it was not quenched
till it fully accomplished the judgment that was prophesied.
All
these references to Gehenna do not mean "hell" at all, for they refer
to natural fire and to natural bodies burned in the Valley of Hinnom outside of
Jerusalem. There is a hell, but these passages are not referring to it. They
should always be translated "Gehenna." The fire of Gehenna was
natural fire; and the bodies were bodies of flesh; and the inhabitants that
will see them will be alive on the earth. This passage has no reference to the
Lake of Fire. We will study about the Lake of Fire later. It will take another
kind of fire than natural fire to torment Satan and his associates. It will be
a real fire but not an earthly one. Notice that the text in Mark 9:43,48 has
the same words as Isa. 66:24, and refers to the same time and place.
Examine for a moment Matt.
5:22, "But I say unto you, That whosoever is angry with his brother"
("without a cause" is not in the best manuscripts. See the Revised Version.) "shall
be in danger of the judgment and whosoever shall say to his brother, Raca!
(thou foolish fellow) shall be in danger of the council: but whosoever shall
say, Thou fool! (or reprobate) shall be in danger of the fire of Gehenna."
Any one who reads this verse can see that it does not refer to the present but
to the judgments that are to be poured out just before and in the Millennium,
when there will be the judgments of the destroying angels and the bodies will
be burned in the fire in the valley of Hinnom. Every one of the passages quoted
at the beginning of this Chapter has an easy and simple explanation when it is
applied to the proper dispensation.
The passage in James 3:6
containing the word Gehenna. is thought by some to be used largely in a
figurative sense; but, because the book of James refers to the same Millennial
period as is referred to in the Gospels, it has a literal reference also. Many
sins of the tongue are at that time to be punished by death and by the burning
of the body in Gehenna (Ps. 101).
The passage in Matt. 10:28 has often been thought of
as presenting the greatest difficulty because of their being told to "fear
not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul: but rather
fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell" (Gehenna.).
From Isa. 10:18, we learn that the phrase "soul and body" (or flesh),
is a figurative expression and signifies "completely," the same as if
it had read, "root and branch." So Isa. 10:18, in plain English would
read: "And shall consume the glory of his forest, and of his fruitful
field, completely, or utterly." For in this passage Isaiah is speaking of
a forest and not of persons. So in Matt. 10:28, interpreting the words
according to the time that immediately precedes the Millennium, i.e., the Great
Tribulation, our Lord tells them not to fear the antichrist or the false prophet,
who will slay all those who refuse to worship the antichrist, but rather fear
to do wrong and to commit sin for a sorer punishment will follow, viz., the destroying angel will destroy the sinner in
Gehenna. The wicked will be killed and their bodies burned in the valley of
Hinnom, and their souls lost, for the Millennium.
The judgments that are to be
poured out are to be similar to those poured out in the days of Moses on the
Egyptians when, among other things, the first-born of man and beast was slain.
So there will be terrible judgments executed upon the nations gathered against
Jerusalem in that time. God or Moses did not directly inflict the Egyptian
punishments, they were brought about entirely by their own sin. By their sin
the Egyptians separated themselves from God and He could not help them as He
could the Israelites. See Ps. 78:43,49: "How He had wrought His signs in
Egypt, and His wonders in the field of Zoan. . . . He cast upon them the
fierceness of His anger, wrath, and indignation, and trouble, by sending evil
angels among them." It was evil angels who wrought the judgments. Such
judgments can be attributed to God only in a governmental or permissive sense.
(See Chapter on What Saith the Scripture.)
Notice
Ex. 12:23: "For the Lord will pass through to smite the Egyptians; and
when He seeth the blood upon the lintel, and on the two side posts, the Lord
will pass over the door, and will not suffer the destroyer to come in unto your
houses to smite you." Here the Lord is clearly seen as not being the
destroyer, for He is represented as entering through the blood-sprinkled
doorways of the Israelites and preventing the destroying angel from doing his
work. Compare Matt. 13:49,50, and see the work of the destroying angels:
"So shall it be at the end of the age (literal): the angels shall come
forth, and sever the wicked from among the just, and shall cast them into the
furnace of fire: there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth." Judicially
and permissively the punishment of the Egyptians is attributed to the Lord; but
really it is the consequence of their own rebellion; for had they done God's
will, He could have protected them as well. Sin causes men to step beyond the
place where God can for their good protect them. He can reach them only through
judgments and punishment, which He makes work ultimate good.
This
may be a. fitting place to study the word "destroy," which is used in
connection with Gehenna in this same passage, Matt. 10:28. The root of the
principal word "to destroy," in the New Testament, is ollumi joined to a preposition which strengthens its meaning.
It means "destroy" and "perish," but not in the sense of
"annihilation"; for it is the same word that is translated
"lost" in Matt. 10:6, where the disciples were told to "go rather
to the lost sheep of the house of
Israel." It is the same word translated "lose" in Matt. 16:25,
"whosoever will lose his life shall find it." It is translated
"marred" in Mark 2:22, "The bottles will be marred." It is
the same word translated "perish" in the great text, John 3:16; and in Luke 19:10 it is again
translated "lost," "For the Son of Man is come to seek and to
save that which was lost." The same root is in the word "destruction"
as in 2Thes. 1:9, where also the word "everlasting" should be rendered
"age-abiding."
These examples show us that the fundamental idea to be exprest in the
words "destroy" and "destruction," is to reduce to ruins. A
lost soul is one whose spiritual life is in ruins. It is that class of lost
ones that our Lord came to save (Luke 19:10). This further explains Matt. 10:28
in which the believers are warned not to yield to the antichrist even if they
were killed for their faith; otherwise they would suffer from the destroying
angel and be completely reduced to ruins, physically, morally, and spiritually.
If they lost their lives through fidelity to the Lord, that would be
praiseworthy, but if they yielded to the temptation to sin in the Tribulation
or the Millennium, then the judgment of God would be upon them, and for their
sin they would be brought to ruins in Gehenna.
Gehenna is therefore seen to be principally the place of the burning of
the corpses of certain transgressors. It seems also that some may be cast alive
into Gehenna and burned as a special penalty; to such it would be a gateway to
the Hadean state.
CHAPTER XI
THE LAKE OF FIRE AND BRIMSTONE
There
are only three chapters in the Bible that distinctly mention “the Lake of
Fire and Brimstone.” They are Rev. 19, 20, and 21. In order to have them
clearly before us we will quote each passage:
Rev.
19:20, “And the beast was taken, and with him the false prophet that
wrought miracles before him, with which he deceived them that had received the
mark of the beast, and them that worshipped his image. These both were cast
alive into a lake of fire burning with brimstone.”
Rev.
20:10, “And the devil that deceived them was cast into the lake of fire
and brimstone, where the beast and the false prophet are, and shall be
tormented day and night for the ages of the ages” (literal).
Rev. 20:13-15, “And the sea gave up the dead
which were in it; and death and hades delivered up the dead which were in them:
and they were judged every man according to their works. And death and hades
were cast into the lake of fire. This is the second death. And whosoever was
not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake of fire.”
Rev. 21:8, "But the fearful, and unbelieving, and
the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters,
and all liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and
brimstone: which is the second death."
The Lake of Fire and Brimstone signifies a fire
burning with brimstone; the word “brimstone” or sulfur defines the
character of the fire.
The word theion translated “brimstone” is exactly the same word theion which means “divine.” Sulfur was sacred
to the deity among the ancient Greeks; and was used to fumigate, to purify, and
to cleanse and to consecrate to the deity; for this purpose they burned it in
their incense. In Homer's Iliad
(16:228) one is spoken of as purifying a goblet with fire and brimstone. The
verb derived from theion is theioo,
which means to hallow, to make
divine, or to dedicate to a god.
(See Liddell and Scott Greek-English Lexicon, 1897 Edition.)
To
any Greek, or to any trained in the Greek language, a “lake of fire and
brimstone” would mean a “lake of divine purification.” The
idea of judgment need not be excluded (see Chapter on The Judgments of God).
Divine purification and divine consecration are the plain meaning in ancient
Greek. In the ordinary explanation, this fundamental meaning of the word is
entirely left out, and nothing but eternal torment is associated with it.
“The
Lake of Fire” does not appear in Scripture until the introduction to the
Millennium, altho many theologians send the wicked there now. Satan is not there yet. There is not a
single Scripture that teaches that Satan is confined either in Hades or in the
Lake of Fire now. He is not utterly cast out of the heavenlies yet, and many of
his angels and demons still have access there (Eph. 6:12). He and they are to
be cast down at the time of the Great Tribulation (Rev. 12:9,10). The demons
that possest the Gardarene 's swine prayed that they might not be cast into the
abyss (Luke 8:31, literal). They evidently were not yet confined there.
Toward
the end of the age called the Millennium, Satan and his helpers are to be cast
into the Lake of Fire and Brimstone and tormented there “day and
night” for the rest of the millennial Age. (This Age, as we have shown,
probably lasts far longer than the thousand years. The saints reign one
thousand years.) Satan also will be tormented in the next age which is the
great final age. We have seen in the Chapter on The Ages, that these two ages
comprise “the ages of the ages.”
The word “torment” needs study. In the New Testament the
same word is used of one “sick of the palsy, grievously tormented (Matt. 8:6). It is used of the disciples' ship in
Galilee, and is translated “tossed with waves” (Matt. 14:24). It is translated by the word
“toiling” in Mark 6:48. It is translated by the word
“vexed'” in speaking of Lot (2Pet. 2:8). It is translated by a word
that means “birth-pains” (Rev. 12:2). In the other Scriptures it is
translated by the word “torment” or “tormented.” The
original idea of the verb is “to put to the test by rubbing on a
touchstone.” Then it means “to question by applying some test or
torture to discover whether true or not.” The original idea was to test
some metal that looked like gold to find whether it was real or not. It also
signifies “to torture in order to extort a confession.” The meaning
and usage of this word harmonizes with the idea of divine purification and the
torment which is the test to find whether there has been any change or not in
the sufferer. Through the hidden, loving purpose of God, every pang of torment
will be a birth pang; and the grace of God will not be absent--and as He says,
“Behold, I am making all things new” (literal). He will leave no
spot in the whole universe unrenewed. “Every knee shall bow and every
tongue . . . confess” (Phil. 2:10,11, literal). The ages of the ages come
to an end. “Then cometh the end” (1Cor. 15:24-28). Time ceases and
eternity begins. There will be no ''day and night'' in eternity. The suffering
lasts only while there is “day and night” (Rev. 20:10).
There
is another phrase that may throw further light upon this great theme and that
is “the second death,” “in the lake which burneth with fire
and brimstone, which is the second death.”
The
Second Death implies that there must be a first death. The first death is what
is usually called a physical death. The second death that a Christian has to
endure is the death of the self-life (Gal. 2:20; Rom. 6:6). To be a real
overcomer we must trust the Lord that our self-life was “crucified with
Christ.” Only those who have had this second death wrought in them will
“not be hurt of the second death” (Rev. 2:11). Practically all
those who are condemned to the Lake of Fire have endured the first death; but
the self-life has been untouched or so hardened as to have kept them, up to
that time, from yielding to the grace of Christ.
In the cross of Christ there
was provision for the first death (Col. 2:20), “Dead with Christ from the
rudiments (or elements) of the world.” Also Gal. 6:14, “The cross
of our Lord Jesus Christ, whereby the world is crucified unto me, and I unto
the world.” Besides this elemental death, there is a spiritual death of
self that has to be wrought. This is all provided for in the cross of Christ.
Man fell at least into two conditions or stages, and in his redemption he has
to retrace these two stages, to return to the plane upon which he was
originally created. The cross of
Christ will deliver from both the first and the second death.
Sin develops till it slays
the Son of man. In slaying Him, it reaches its fulness of iniquity, the crime
of the universe. Sin always aims to kill the Christ, the Life and Light, and in
the death of Christ it attained its object; but by so doing, it potentially
slew itself, for by death Christ conquered him who had the power of death, even
the devil (Heb. 2:14). So then the death of Christ slew death. “For this
purpose the Son of God was manifested, that He might destroy the works of the
devil” (1John 3:8). “The last enemy that shall be destroyed is
death” (1Cor. 15:26). Then there will be a universe without death; then
there will be no first death nor second death; then all things will have been
made new; then the Son will hand over a finished work to the Father.
This world is especially
concerned with the forces of good and the forces of evil, and is the seed plot
of the universe. It was the place where our Lord was born and died, where He is
to come again and reap the fruits of His victory on the Cross. This world has
been the theater for the heading up of evil and its final overthrow, so, not
only is this world the seed plot, but also the greatest battlefield in the
universe.
We do
not know the location of the Lake of Fire but it might be on this earth; if it
is to be here, Babylon and its region would be the most likely quarter. The
smoke of Babylon ascends for the ages of the ages and also the smoke of the
Lake of Fire. Rev. 19:3, “And her (Babylon) smoke rose up for the ages of
the ages” (literal). Rev. 14:11,” The smoke of their torment
ascendeth for the ages of the ages” (literal).
Isa. 34:9,10 indicates that
the land of the Lord's enemies will become lands burning with fire and
brimstone. The whole description harmonizes with the judgments on Babylon, for
this same Babylon has been the center of defection from God from the earliest
times. In Rev. 9:14, the voice from the golden altar bids the angel
“Loose the four angels which are bound in (or at) the great river
Euphrates.” Rev. 16:12-14 tells of a vial of wrath poured upon the great
river Euphrates, and evil spirits were released. This place of the special
detention of evil angels and evil spirits might be a location of sufficient
spiritual manifestation to punish and purify spiritual beings. “And he
cried mightily with a strong voice, saying, Babylon the great is fallen, is
fallen, and is become the habitation of devils, and the hold of every foul
spirit, and a cage of every unclean and hateful bird” (Rev. 18:2). It
will also have enough of natural location and characteristics for the beast and
the false prophet to be cast into it “alive” (Rev. 19:20). Wherever it is, even this place will yield to the renewing work of Him who makes
“all things new” (Rev. 21:5; Acts 3:21; Rom. 8:19-21). The divine
purification will be complete. Those confined in the Lake of Fire are not saved
by their suffering, but plowed and harrowed by it, or punished and judged till
willing for all of Christ and none of self.
Christ becomes “all and
in all,” that God “may be all in all.”
CHAPTER XII
THE PROBLEM OF EVIL
We
know that God is good and we know that everything that God does is good; but
the fact is, in this universe created by God, we find evil. We read in the Word
of God that "A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, neither can a
corrupt tree bring forth good fruit." How then could evil ever enter if
God is good and if God made everything? It does not fully answer the question
by saying, "An enemy hath done this," for then the natural question arises,
"Who made the enemy?"
There are those who hold that
there was a necessity of evil's entering for the developing and perfecting of
free moral agents, that unless there is such a contest there would be no
developing of strength. If evil is absolutely necessary, then evil must have
had an eternal beginning; and evil would be necessary in God, so that He could
be His best and His unfallen creatures become their very best. In consequence
of this line of reasoning, some of the old divines held the necessity of both
good and evil ever existing and contending. Augustine, before he was thoroughly
converted, held such a conception and some of it seemed to cling to him
afterward. Some of the pagan religions go further and have two gods, a good god
and a bad god as their explanation of the problem of good and evil.
There are Christians who reason from the blessings that accrue from the
overcoming of evil that evil is a necessity.
We thoroughly recognize the
fact that there has to be the exercise of the power of choice for the
development of moral agents, and to exercise such power of choice there must be
two objects that may be chosen. All moral progress is produced by such
exercise. God could have made man as a mere machine, but he would not have been
created in the image and after the likeness of God. He never would nor could
have morally and spiritually developed. God can create moral and spiritual
agents, but such agents can be perfected only by the exercise of the power of
choice in fellowship with God's will and choice. We emphatically declare that,
altho all this is true, it was not and is not God's plan and highest will that
any of His free agents should ever go into sin to develop. In other words, sin
is not a necessity for the highest development of God's creatures. If it were
necessary, then the highest type of free moral agents would have had to sin and
then conquer it. If it had been necessary to sin in order to reach the highest
moral and spiritual development, then the Lord Jesus Christ would of necessity
have had to sin. The highest development of humanity is found in the Lord Jesus
Christ when He was made man. Likewise, if sin were necessary for the highest
development, all the angels who have never fallen, ought to fall in order to
perfection. In these two cases we certainly see that sin was not a necessity
for the perfection of the creature, nor was it God's highest plan.
Speaking of the Lord Jesus Christ, one objects and says, "But He
was tempted and how could a person who was truly righteous and holy be
tempted?"' It is true that He was tempted, but He never yielded to
temptation. We need to have it written in our hearts, and realized in our
experience, that temptation is not sin. The harboring and yielding to it are
sins. Often the enemy says when we are tempted, "Now you have thought
about a certain sin, you may as well do it." Say, "Get thee behind
me, Satan, I will not yield one inch." It may not be possible at times to
prevent thoughts of sin from being hurled into our mind, but we can refuse
them, and we will become a stronger man or a stronger woman immediately.
Temptation is not sin.
This raises another question:
How could we be tempted if there was no evil in the world? Sup- pose there were
just God and you in the universe and you were good and, we know, God is good;
how could there be two things to choose? There certainly could be, and both of
them seem pretty good too. You could choose God and that certainly would be
good; and, on the other hand, you could choose yourself, and that usually seems
good and might not seem so very bad before there was a sinful fall. When God
created the angels and all the glorious beings that He originally created,
everything was good; but they could not develop as moral beings unless they had
the power of choice. There was no evil in the universe of God, but they could
choose God or themselves first. The instant they chose themselves that was
selfishness and self-will, because the highest good was promoted by the choice
of God and sin entered by the choice of self. Selfishness is the root of all
sin, it is in every sin that there is. You can not name one that does not have
selfishness as a root, and yet it looks so innocent to choose one's self. There
can be a selfish and hence a sinful ambition to attain even great spirituality.
Evil is always mixed with some element of good, and that is why it is so
deceitful.
There
is not the slightest doubt that the first temptation that was accepted had, in
a most subtle way, a large proportion of good mingled with disguised
selfishness. There was no Satan, originally; but God's plan was in effect:
"I will give them the power of choice, I will give them spiritual
discernment, but they will have to choose. They are pure, but not perfected
yet." One can be born with the finest heritage, he can inherit from the
most noble ancestors, he can have the germ of great ability as a statesman, or
an architect, or a poet, or a mathematician--he can inherit the germ of that
ability, and yet he needs to develop it. Our moral nature amounts to nothing
without development through the exercise of choice. There is no necessity of
committing sin for our development. There is no necessity of evil in the
universe for development, else there would have to be evil in eternity. That is
absolutely unthinkable, that is blasphemous, if we were thinking it with
seriousness. We reason from the terms of a fallen world. We do not say that God
does not give strength and blessing from the overcoming of evil after we have
gone into it. Praise God, He can do that! God is so great that, notwithstanding
his highest plan has not yet been accomplished, when there has been a
perversion of His plan (that is what sin is, that is what wrong is, something
getting twisted, something being perverted), notwithstanding that, God can work
and overrule all evil for good to those who trust Him. He can take all the
drunkards and outcasts and every sinner that has not been won, and God is so
great He can bring good out of their sin; but that is not God's highest method.
God
desires to teach us through communion and the power of choice along every line
every time. Another objects and says, "Then there would be many things
about sin that you would not
know." There might be some things about sin that
you would not know. For this you can be thankful. Such things have to be
forgotten, blotted out, displaced by good; but whatever about sin would make
for your moral development, that would be known. We have some conviction of sin
when we are young Christians; but it is not until we receive the fulness of the
Holy Spirit, greater light, that we get our deepest conviction of sin, that we
really see sin as it is. We may have committed sins before and asked God to
forgive; but we did not know what sin
was. After we yielded fully to God and let Him come in and fill us with His
Spirit, then the heinousness of sin and the consequences of sin became so real
to us that we were broken down before God. We knew then through the teaching of
the Holy Spirit more about sin than through any experience that any of us ever
had.
God teaches us of sin not only in reference to
ourselves but also in reference to others. Many a parent or loved one learns
much about sin through endeavoring to hold and help another who is bent on
following that devious path. Such a one often realizes the terribleness of sin
more than the one who indulges in sin.
It is not necessary for a physician to have every
disease he treats. Pity the physician if he had to suffer every disease he
treats! He never would have any time to practise his profession, he would
always be in the hospital. We are sure that he would die before he finished the
category of diseases. However, a man who is a wise physician knows more about
the disease than the patient does. He has learned it another way.
People who go into sin have become mesmerized by
Satan's wiles and have committed the worst sins without a full realization of
their guilt. The deepest conviction of sin is that which comes through the
teaching of God's Holy Spirit, revealing the pure white light of the Lord Jesus
Christ. We know what black is when we see the white. God's method is by
communion. He says, "I will guide thee with mine eye". "Be ye
not as the horse, or as the mule, which have no understanding, whose mouth must
be held in with bit and bridle, lest they come near unto thee" (Ps.
32:8,9). "Why do you always want to have a terribly hard time to learn the
lessons? I want to teach you, I will teach you the lessons without having to
put on the bit and bridle, if you will trust Me, but if you will not, you will
have to learn by a sadder method."
Let
us consider the angels, all created equal. What would develop them morally and
spiritually? Exercising the power of choice was one of the methods. What would
they have to choose? Choose God and realize to some extent what it would be if
they refused God and chose themselves. As they continued in this path their
lessons would become more complex. All would progress, some more than others
(errors of judgment are not sins), and those who made the greatest progress
became the greatest angels, and those who made the least progress were the
smaller angels. God is no respecter of persons, and He made them all equal at
first. Those that appropriated more of God became stronger and stronger. In
this way some of the angelic beings became greater than others and had
positions nearer to God. They continued by communion and the power of choice,
just as the Lord Jesus Christ was developed when He came down here--and how
wonderful He became! One of the greatest was a good angel, he was not called
"Satan" then, for Satan means "adversary." When Satan
advanced he began feeling how great he was, he chose himself before God; and
all those he influenced fell with him. God foresaw that--the disruption of His
plan and the entrance of evil; and His marvelous power and wisdom were
sufficient, and so He had the
redemption prepared in the Lord Jesus Christ. We have seen something of Sin and
its Cause and we know something of its Consequences, and the Cure is the Lord
Jesus Christ.
Evil
in its nature was not eternal in the past, therefore it can not possibly be
eternal in the future.
CHAPTER XIII
A SANE AND SCRIPTURAL DOCTRINE OF PUNISHMENT
The
text, "Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap" (Gal. 6:7),
contains many of the principles that obtain in a true doctrine of punishment.
We will note some of these principles.
The
Certainty of Punishment. One of the
elements that makes punishment effective is its certainty. If a man thinks that
there is a chance for him to escape the punishment for wrong doing, he may take
that chance. Every one needs to learn that this law of certainty has no
exceptions. There is no chance about it; what you sow, you reap. Every sin has
its certain consequences. This is true even of the wrongdoer who thinks that he
has escaped the working of this law. He is mistaken. The evil has already
wrought damage to his character and one day its direful consequence will be
manifest, unless divinely dealt with. Every offer of salvation; every presentation
of more or new light; and every opportunity proffered, brings added
responsibility. Every rejection
increases guilt and multiplies the consequences as a punishment. From this law
there is no escape. When this principle of punishment is understood, it
furnishes one of the strongest deterrents to evil doing and also to the
rejection of light.
The
Measure of Punishment. The normal
harvest exceeds by many fold the sowing. This is a wise provision in reference
to punishment. The enjoyment or gain that comes through sin is very small in
proportion to the evil consequences that naturally come to the one who so
yields. This is one of the natural laws of the harvest. God means this law to
cause men to halt and to cease from sin. Sin costs the sinner too dear, it cost
God His Only Begotten Son.
The
Limitations of Punishment. The
harvest is limited by the quantity and character of the seed. Punishment is
graded in proportion to light and opportunity. The law of justice will obtain.
Some will be "beaten with few stripes" and some with
"many." "And that servant, which knew his lord's will, and
prepared not himself, neither did according to his will, shall be beaten with
many stripes. But he that knew not, and did commit things worthy of stripes,
shall be beaten with few stripes. For unto whomsoever much is given, of him
shall be much required; and to whom men have committed much, of him they will
ask the more" (Luke 12:47,48). Punishment, as well as reward, is to be
graded. A finite sin will have a finite punishment: nothing else would be
justice. God Himself has set bounds to the consequences of evil, whereas to
good there are practically no limitations. In the Commandments, given to Israel
(Ex. 20:5,6), we find written, "visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon
the children unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate Me; And
shewing mercy unto thousands of them that love Me, and keep My
commandments." The reason for the advantages of the blessings of
righteousness over wickedness, lies in the fact that the consequences of sin
are under the laws of fallen nature, and that in righteousness God has
introduced His eternal and unbounded nature that never fell.
How low may erring souls descend?
I ask my troubled heart.
Only as deep as depth of sea,
Or to earth's lowest part.
How high may trusting souls aspire?
I asked my spirit free.
The boundless steeps of heaven high
Are surely meant for thee.
O love of God, how great! how good!
That holds the wrong in bounds
And offers right the heights of bliss,
Where God with glory crowns.
The
Kinds of Punishment. "Whatsoever
a man soweth, that shall he also reap," implies that the punishment will
be of the same kind as the sins. Sins of the flesh bring forth consequences in
the flesh. Sins of the mind beget mental suffering. Sins of the heart bring
forth blasted affections and emotions. Sins of the spirit blight our highest
nature on its Godward side. This law is certainly one of the harvest laws and
is also in accord with the principles of justice. Jacob cheated his brother
Esau, and he himself was deceived ten times (Gen. 31:41). Israel failed to keep
God's law of the sabbaths and they reaped seventy years of captivity as a
consequence (Jer. 17:27; 25:11; 2Chron. 36:20,21). When we think that every
thought, word and deed will bring forth a harvest after its kind, we certainly
need to take warning, to "flee from the wrath to come," and to bring
forth "fruits of righteousness."
An old treatise on Law concerning crimes and
punishments sounds very modern and confirms the principles that we have thus
far discovered:
"Crimes", it says, "are more
effectually prevented by the certainty than the severity of the punishment.
Hence, in a magistrate, the necessity of vigilance, and in a judge, of
implacability, which, that it may become a useful virtue, should be joined to a
mild legislation. The certainty of a small punishment will make a stronger
impression than the fear of one more severe, if attended with the hopes of
escaping; for it is the nature of mankind to be terrified at the approach of
the smallest inevitable evil, whilst hope, the best gift of heaven, hath the
power of dispelling the apprehension of a greater; especially if supported by
the examples of impunity, which weakness or avarice too frequently afford.
"If punishments be very severe, men are naturally
led to the perpetration of other crimes, to avoid the punishment due to the
first. The countries and times most notorious for severity of punishments are
also those in which the most bloody and inhuman actions and the most atrocious
crimes are committed; for the hand of the legislator and assassin were directed
by the same spirit of ferocity; which, on the throne, dictated laws of iron to
slaves and savages, and, in private, instigated the subject to sacrifice one tyrant
to make room for another.
"In proportion as punishments become more cruel,
the minds of men, as a fluid rises to the same height as that which surrounds
it, grow hardened and insensible; and, the force of the passions still
continuing, in the space of a hundred years, the wheel terrifies no more than
formerly the prison. That a punishment may produce the effect required, it is
sufficient that the evil it occasions should exceed the good expected from the
crime; including in the calculation the certainty of the punishment, and the
privation of the expected advantage. All severity beyond that is superfluous,
and therefore tyrannical."*
*Beccaria on Crimes and Punishments, quoted in Thomas C. Upham,
A Philosophic and Practical Treatise on the Will, page 184. (Published by William Hyde, Portland, 1834). For translation of this treatise of Beccaria see J. A. Farrar's Crimes and Punishments.
That is simply studying the subject of punishment from
the standpoint of the ordinary law, and those punishments and the principles
there enunciated are the principles that commend themselves "to every
man's conscience," and are the very principles we find in God's book.
The Author of Punishment. God is not the author of punishment, even tho He is
over all and makes everything that happens serve His purposes in the government
of His universe. It is the creature who is the author of sin and is thus
responsible for its consequences. Sin has its origin in the creature's acting
independently of God. God is not the author of anything that is evil. He never
made any of the consequences of sin any more than He made the sin. God's
creature is the only one to blame. God did not make a fallen nature. It
resulted from the fall of angel and man. God never made a punishment for sin. Every
punishment for sin is manufactured by the one committing the sin,
"Whatsoever a man soweth."
Our punishment springs from our own sowing. This consideration dispels all
detraction in reference to God's character and Word. The place of punishment
referred to in Matt. 25:41 as "prepared for the devil and his
angels," may be better translated, "prepared by the devil and his angels." Wicked men share this
punishment because their sins were similar to those of the evil angels, and
they cooperated with the evil angels and followed their suggestions.
The Purpose of Punishment.
We gather from the preceding consideration some of God's purposes in
punishment. God's original law was framed to increase the fruitage of goodness
by the creature's sowing goodness. When nature and man fall, God's law still
works, but on the lower plane of punishment. Even on this plane all punishment
in God's economy is:
According
to justice. There is no vindictive
wrath in God Himself, but the working of fallen nature sometimes has that
appearance! it is only in appearance. God always and only purposeth
good to every creature of His. Accordingly, He has
twined about the very consequence of sin high, holy, and beneficial purposes.
1. He uses the punishment of sin as a preventive. This
is for the breaker of His law, that he may be prevented from other infractions
of it. God also has in mind the deterring of others who may learn or witness
the terrible consequences of sin.
2. Punishment is also disciplinary. The root-meaning
of one of the chief words for punishment is that of pruning. The Lord of the
harvest never prunes to kill, but to help. The persistence of the consequences
of sin long after the sin is forgiven by God is doubtless intended so to deepen
and burn in the lesson that the
cause of punishment may be cured. God purposes to establish in righteousness,
that the creature, even if he could, would not yield to sin.
3. Punishment is also meant by God to be
self-corrective. This is exprest in Jer. 2:19, "Thine own wickedness shall
correct thee, and thy backsliding shall reprove thee." This still is
disciplinary, but it implies that in the punishment itself is a self-corrective
element. The fermentation of liquids tends to their own purification. The
principle of the modern disposal plant is that one germ of impurity devours
another till all their malignity is destroyed. God tells us what the harvest of
sin is; "The wages of sin is death" (Rom. 6:23). This denotes all
kinds of death, answering to the different kinds of sin. Sin always attempts to
kill God. Its culmination was reached when it slew the Christ, but His death
overcame "him (Satan) that had the power of death" (Heb. 2:14). And
through our Lord's death all death has been potentially destroyed, and will be
actually and historically destroyed before the end of the ages, when the Son
hands over the kingdom to the Father: "The last enemy that shall be
destroyed is death." God has thus limited the extent of the consequences
of evil. It, in one sense, wears itself out. Let no one say however that
Christ, the Savior, is not needed. We have already indicated that slaying Him
only promoted His plan of redemption. It cut away all our nature of flesh and
blood that He had taken, and in Him we and the whole creation were potentially
set free from all corruption and all harvests that are the consequence of sin
and sins. "The law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free
from the law of sin and death" (Rom. 8:2).
What more does any one want than a punishment for sin
that is fully adequate; that accords with absolute justice; that has the
strongest sanctions that can be imagined, because not only of their greatness,
but also because of their continuance even after forgiveness; a punishment that
is not unnatural and unreasonable but that grows out of the creature's selfish
actions; a punishment that so closely and continuously disciplines its author
that the release can come only by an utter and forever putting away of the
cause; a punishment that is not manufactured by an angry God, but whose cause
and development depend entirely upon the creature and a fallen nature; a
punishment that vindicates God's character for goodness, for He makes sin, even
against its will, work for righteousness and also destroy its own harvest of
all kinds of death, through the death that it wrought in His only and first
begotten Son! This is a Sane and Scriptural Doctrine of Punishment. "For
God hath shut them all up for unbelief, that He might have mercy upon all. O
the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How
unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways past finding out! For who hath
known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been His counsellor? Or who hath first
given to Him, and it shall be recompensed unto Him again. For out of Him, and
through Him, and unto Him, are all things: to whom be glory for the ages.
Amen" (Rom. 11:32-36, literal).
CHAPTER XIV
THE JUDGMENTS OF GOD ILLUMINED
"Ye
. . . pass over judgment and the love of God" (Luke 11:42). These words,
that were spoken of the Pharisees in reference to their lives, may be applied
to most of us in reference to our conception of the judgments of God. In fact,
the love of God is rarely associated with the judgments of God. Even when
judgment is discerned as having a loving purpose in reference to believers, it
is always thought of as having a purpose of another kind toward unbelievers, as
if God could change His nature, or as if God could have two purposes, one of
love and another of hate. The philosophy of God's judgments is too little
understood.
We
have said in the Chapter on Punishment, that God does not manufacture any
punishment that it is the sinner who makes his own punishment, "for
whatsoever a man soweth, that
shall he also reap." This is true of God's judgments. God does not
manufacture, or arbitrarily get up certain judgments for certain cases. Every
judgment of God is the fruit and the natural consequence of self-will,
rebellion, and sin; and has had its source in the creature separated from God.
Our God of Love would not have permitted such self-will with its direful
consequences unless He could make it work ultimate good.
There is an erroneous idea
that, when one accepts forgiveness of his sins, he thereby escapes all the
consequences of his sins. This is by no means the case, as every one may know
by experience. The consequences last until there is no longer need of their
warning and judging lesson. Some of them continue to the end of this life, and
even extend much further.
The power of the cross of
Christ is too little apprehended. It is true that salvation is spoken of as the
initial step of the Christian life; viz., accepting Him as one's personal Savior and then, by complete
surrender, believing for and receiving the fulness of His Spirit; but this is
but the bare beginning. Salvation in its fulness is a continuous process. We
are perfect when our hearts are entirely set Godward, that is, perfect in love
and purpose; but by no means are we perfected. The Apostle Paul many years
after His conversion and sanctification wrote in Phil. 3:10: "That I may
know Him, and the power of His resurrection, and the fellowship of His
sufferings, being made conformable unto His death." It is one thing to be
converted, and another to be fully consecrated; but the work that takes time is
this of conformity to His death. More and more, even in his old age, the
Apostle Paul longed for this conformity, and welcomed everything that would
make him appropriate it. This is what is meant by the power of the cross in a
life; for the cross means judgment. Judgment in all that is carnal and selfish,
all that is worldly, and all that is demoniacal or Satanic. But "God
forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, whereby
the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world" (Gal. 6:14,
margin). (See also Rom. 6:6; Gal.
2:20 and Col. 2:14.) In other words, in Christ the work is wrought out for us; but that does not mean that it does not have to
be wrought out in us; and to be
wrought out in us may involve pain, suffering, loss, heart-breaks, and anguish.
There is no merit in any kind of suffering, and it is not the suffering that
saves us; but through it there is preparation to receive more of Christ. Every
advance step demands deeper judgment, and every advance step is nothing less
nor more than a larger appropriation of Himself. If I desire more grace, I may
never take it unless I have the spur of some great need. Christ "learned
obedience by the things which He suffered" (Heb. 5:8). "The disciple is
not above his Master; but . . . shall be perfected as his Master" (Luke
6:40, margin).
When we understand that we
have to be made perfect even "as our Master," we can clearly see that
there is no escape from the process. If we play truant and endeavor to escape
any lesson, we will not only be made to learn the lesson from which we thought
we could flee, but also we will have the other lesson added, which is, that we
can not permanently flee anything that God has for us to be or to do. We know
the goal and standard that He has set for mankind. "Till we all come into
the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a perfect
man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ" (Eph. 4:13,
margin). This is not only His goal for the elect, who are the first fruits; but
also for the whole harvest of mankind, when God becomes "all in all"
(1Cor. 15:28). Be not deceived, no one can escape any of the process of the
cross of Christ. We may take a longer time to it, but we can not escape it. The
seeds that will spring forth into God's judgments are in one’s own
nature, and in one's own words and deeds. There is no such thing as
"chance" in the universe of God. It is the same law for the sinner as
for the saint. "God is no respecter of persons." There is no other
way than the way of Christ. It is this path that brings all the blessings for
which our hearts yearn. Our spiritual imaginings fall so far short! Our prayers are offered in too great blindness, He
will "do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think" (Eph.
3:20).
It is necessary to note that if we are to be made perfect in the same
manner as Christ, we need to find the source of our suffering and judgments not
alone in ourselves, but in others. There is much vicarious suffering in the world
today, fathers and mothers suffer for children; children suffer for parents;
wives suffer for husbands and husbands for wives; friends suffer for friends,
etc. The Christian worker suffers for his converts; the missionary suffers for
the heathen; the pastor for his people; and the people for the pastor. A
Christian's judgments and sufferings, to be like Christ's, need to be more for
others than for himself. What a field is provided in this life, and what fields
in the ages to come! God alone knoweth; and has made all things ready for our
perfecting. It is but the working out of the principle of the cross in us and
through us for all time.
This principle explains why the Apostle glories in the
cross of Christ. This makes clear the statement in Rom. 5:3, "We glory in
tribulations also: knowing that tribulation worketh patience." Tribulation
is not pleasant; it involves suffering. It is a judgment; it is a portion of
the cross. Why glory in it? Because when taken aright, it leads us to take more
of the very patience of Christ. We do not have any for the new trial, and He
gives us His patience. It was through recognizing the necessity and beneficence
of judgments that the Apostle again said "Most gladly therefore will I
rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me.
Therefore I take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in necessities, in
persecutions, in distresses for Christ's sake: for when I am weak, than am I
strong" (2Cor. 12:9,10). There is no virtue in judgment for judgment's
sake, nor in manufacturing some new cross for ourselves. There will be His
cross that meets us and brings its judgments. He will make al of His judgments
be in order to grace. Let that suffice.
When we understand that this
law is inexorable, that it will keep on following us till we learn its lesson,
and all blessing and the beatific vision with the unveiled face is ours, we
will gladly welcome the next judgment. This explains the seeming paradox of the
Psalmist when he said, "I have hoped in Thy judgments" (Ps.
119:43,120). We will never separate love from God's judgments (Luke 11:42). We
will love the cross and welcome it. "My soul breaketh for the longing that
it hath unto Thy judgments at all times" (Ps. 119:20).
While we are writing this, we
have brought to our attention the recent decision of a certain criminal who was
condemned to death. He was told that he could choose the time of his execution,
either on Wednesday or Thursday of the same week. He said, "I will choose
Wednesday; since it has to be, I want it to be over with." Just as soon as
sinner and saint get to realize the absolute certainty of having to endure
judgments in order to the full conformity to Christ, there will be the sooner
yielding, and the learning what God wants us to learn, and the becoming what He
wants us to be.
Notice in Jude, verses 14, 15, we have revealed to us
the purpose and the outcome of the Lord's coming and His judgments; viz., "to execute judgment upon all, and to convince
all." The return of judgment is always unto righteousness (Ps. 94:15). The
Father suffers judgment to come upon us only to bless us. If we learn our
lessons speedily, and judge ourselves, we will escape many judgments (1Cor.
11:31). The redemption of Zion is with judgment (Isa. 1:27). And when God's
judgments are in the earth, the inhabitants learn righteousness (Isa. 26:9).
Our Lord will keep on "till He have set judgment in the earth" (Isa.
42:4). Christians will not escape, for "judgment must begin at the house
of God" (1Pet. 4:17).
If this principle of divine
love in judgment were seen, the words "judge" and
"judgment" would never have been translated "damn" and
damnation." The usage of language also precludes such a translation. The word "to judge" (krinein) signifies "to judge," and is so translated
over eighty times. In one place, 2Thes. 2:12, it is incorrectly translated
"damned." "That they all might be damned who believed not the
truth." It would make great confusion to use the word "damn" in
most of these eighty cases; for instance, in Acts 16:15, in place of "if
ye have judged me to be faithful," it would read, "if ye have damned
me to be faithful." This would make gross nonsense. Only a preconceived
theory would cause any one to translate "to judge" by the word
"damn." It is contrary to the normal meaning of the word.
The
word "to condemn" (katakrinein) occurs nineteen times in the New Testament; in every instance but two
it is translated "condemn." In these two, Mark 16:16, it reads,
"but he that believeth not shall be damned"; and in Rom. 14:23,
"he that doubteth is damned if he eat." It should have the same
translation, "condemned," in every case.
The word "judging"
(krisis) denotes the process of
judging. In over forty passages this word is rendered "judgment," in
three, it is rendered "damnation." These places are Matt. 23:33; Mark 3:29; and John 5:29. If
we would try to apply this word "damnation" to all the passages where
this word occurs, it would be foolish; for instance, it is the same word
translated "judgment" in John 5:30. It reads, "As I hear, I
judge, and My judging (krisis) is
just." To be consistent, this verse should read, "As I hear, I damn,
and My damning is just." Any one would know that this is not what is
meant. All these words are stretched to bolster the false theory of an eternal
hell. We have learned in the Chapter on "Time and Eternity" that the
word translated "eternity" and "everlasting" can mean no
longer than time lasts; they never mean "eternal" or even "everlasting."
The word "judgment" (krima) denotes the sentence pronounced, or the result of
judging. This word is used thirty times in the New Testament. Fourteen times it
is translated "judgment"; Matt.7:2; John 9:39; Acts 24:25; Rom. 2:2;
2:3; 5:16; 11:33, etc., and seven times the word "damnation" is used, Matt. 23:14; Mark 12:40;
Luke 20:47; Rom.3:8; 13:2; 1Cor.11:29; and 1Tim. 5:12. The reason the word "damnation" is employed
seems to be to so construe the words referring to judgment that they could
signify only eternal punishment. This is contrary to the very nature of God and
to the correct meaning of the words.
The judgment on Hymenaeus and Alexander was their
delivery over to Satan. This meant sickness and death, even instant death. The
purpose was loving; viz.,
"That they may learn not to blaspheme" (1Tim. 1:20).
The case of the wicked man in
the church at Corinth (1Cor. 5:5), was "to deliver such an one unto Satan
for the destruction of the flesh." Here, through this judgment, Paul
desired to have the
man's spirit "saved in
the day of the Lord Jesus." Here is salvation, at least reclamation, after
death; and judgment is part of the means used. Again, in the passage in 1Pet.
3:18, etc., our Lord, after His death, "went and preached unto the spirits
in prison"; who "were disobedient . . . in the days of Noah."
Here is preaching to those who had refused the light and preaching of Noah.
Especially notice the reference to judgment in the next Chapter; viz.,1Pet. 4:6. He is speaking of the same preaching, for
this Chapter should not be divided from the former one where it is divided. The
Apostle Peter continues and says, "For this cause was the Gospel preached
also to them that are dead, that they might be judged according to men in the
flesh, but live according to God in the spirit." Here was the gospel
preached to the dead. Here also is judgment on the dead. Here is the Gospel,
with judgment, bringing salvation; for they were changed to "live
according to God in the spirit."
We
have known many in this life who never yielded to God till they met with some
great bereavement, sorrow or loss. God used the sorrow and judgment to make
them willing to accept the Lord Jesus Christ. "Start not at the plow that
makes deep furrows in thy soul, God purposeth a crop."
In the cases given above, we learn that God will use the judgments, punishments and sorrows of the life to come as one of the means to bring souls to Him. The judgments are not the Savior, but they are sanctified to prepare the way for Him. Salvation in this age, or any age, is only through the Christ.
CHAPTER XV
UNPARDONABLE SINS
"For
ye know how that afterward, when he would have inherited the blessing, he was
rejected:
for
he found no place of repentance, tho he sought it carefully with tears"
(Heb. 12:17)
This
text has reference to Esau (verse 16) selling the right to his birthright; and
afterward, altho he wept sore, he could not get it restored. This is one of the
texts that have been used by the enemy to torment oversensitive Christians, and
to lead them to believe that they have committed the unpardonable sin, and for
them there is nothing left but an unending hell. Every pastor of experience has
met a number of such cases. This text, or some other text, has become the
ground of their despair. Melancholia, or even a permanent insanity, has often
resulted. The book of Hebrews affords several of these texts, and the enemy has
made sad use of them.
We
will speak at first only of this text, and may discover a principle which will
be helpful in understanding a number of others.
This Scripture seems to
contradict the words of our Lord when, in answer to Peter's question in The
Gospel according to Saint Matthew, Chapter 18:21,22," Lord, how oft shall
my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? till seven times? Jesus saith
unto him, I say not unto thee, Until seven times; but, Until seventy times
seven." This, evidently, means that we should put no limit to our spirit
of forgiveness. If our Lord teaches us to have such a spirit of forgiveness, He
must desire us to understand that there be no limit to his forgiveness. In our
day it is certainly taught that any one who turns to the Lord will find
forgiveness.
It may yield some light if we ask what it was that Esau sought to
obtain when "he found no place of repentance, tho he sought it carefully
with tears." Was it his salvation that he was seeking? Certainly not. Was
it forgiveness? No, he could have that. When he lost his birthright, he was
still a son; and, as a son, received the blessing from God through his father.
In Heb. 11:20 we read that "By faith Isaac blessed Jacob and Esau
concerning things to come." Esau received a blessing also; but; he had
forfeited the honor and reward that was offered him first. It is well to note
that in Israel, altho the one born first naturally was offered the birthright
first, other requirements were necessary. This may be seen in Jacob's own sons.
The first-born and the second-born did not get this honor; but it was given as
a reward to Judah and to Joseph.
1Cor.
3:11-15 teaches us that there are some who are not only to be saved, but also
rewarded; while others lose their reward and are saved as through fire.
The
interpretation of the whole book of Hebrews turns on this thought of winning
the honor and reward of a first-born one. This honor was held open for the
whole Hebrew nation, but some would forfeit this privilege as Esau did. It is
not a question of salvation; but a question of having position with the Lord in
His kingdom.
This is entirely parallel to the children of Israel who were redeemed
out of Egypt. The attaining of the Land of Promise was a reward. It is
impossible to believe that all who perished in the wilderness were lost
forever; all perished except Caleb and Joshua, the children and many of the
priests. All who died missed the reward of entering the Land. We know that even Moses forfeited this
privilege, but no one believes that he was lost. Fifteen hundred years after,
we find him in the Land of Promise talking to our Lord. Through sin one may lose
an arm or an eye; if he repents God will forgive him, but he does not get back
his eye or his arm. We know, however, through God’s help and grace, that
he may do much more with the arm and eye left him than he would ever have done
with two arms and two eyes. Repentance may not bring back forfeited
birthrights, but God has other blessings waiting faith and fidelity.
Altho the Bible says clearly that "all Israel shall be saved"
ultimately (Rom. 11:25,26), it appears that many of them may miss the
millennial kingdom and not be resurrected till its close. We do not wonder that
they may weep as Esau wept; but, for the period, in place of a glorious
kingdom, they are shut out in the "outer darkness." In the spirit of
Esau they may say, "If I only had been more faithful and self-sacrificing!"
In the parable of the virgins it is not a question of
salvation; but it is one of honor and privilege. The foolish and wise virgins
had light. The light of the foolish was diminishing (Matt. 25:8, margin). They
miss the reward. It is not a question of salvation, but of reward. Even when
the foolish virgins went and bought more oil and became, typically,
Spirit-filled, they were too late for the kingdom honors. It is one thing to be
saved, and another to be saved "with eonian glory" (2Tim. 2:10
literal). It is usually taught that those who are saved will have no regret.
The Word of God teaches differently in reference to Israel. He picture even
"weeping and gnashing of teeth. "The same principle certainly obtains
for us, and the Apostle Paul speaking in our dispensation said: "I count
all things but loss for the excellency of Christ Jesus my Lord." What was
he striving for? To win the birthright on a higher plane than that of Israel.
The Apostle knew that he was saved, that is, accepted of God; but he was fearful
of missing the honor and glory that God held out for him. If he missed he might
weep, like Esau, but he would never
get it again.
If we examine Heb. 2:3, "How shall we escape, if we neglect so
great salvation, "we shall learn that this text has application to the
unconverted, but it is especially addrest to those who have the beginning of
salvation, that they may not miss the reward of a first-born one and the glory
of the salvation that is to be revealed when Jesus comes (1Pet. 1:5).
This is evidently the principle that is involved in a proper
understanding of Heb. 6:4,6, that "it is impossible . . . to renew them
again unto repentance." The particular point in question is lost
irrevocably; viz., the birthright of a first-born one. Heb.
10:26 is likewise addrest to Hebrew Christians; and these are told that they
may lose the birthright utterly if they despise their birthright. In Heb.
10:35,36, the Apostle exhorts them to "cast not away therefore your
confidence, which hath great recompense of reward. For ye have need of
patience, that, after ye have done the will of God, ye might receive the
promise." Also Heb. 10:39, "But we are not of them who draw back unto
perdition; but of them that believe to the saving of the soul." Only the
faithful Hebrews will be resurrected at the first resurrection. The rest of
them will not be raised till the first-born ones reign for a thousand years.
The overcomers are the first-born and receive their birthright.
Compare this with 1Cor. 11:30, "For this cause
many are weak and sickly among you, and many sleep." Here were believers
in the church at Corinth that were suffering certain sicknesses, and others,
death as judgment because of their failing to judge themselves. This does not
mean that all such are lost, but they lose something and have to suffer the
judgment of God.
The Church has eliminated all discipline for the righteous in the life
to come, and, as a consequence, has no place for these texts. We do not teach
that the righteous suffer punishment in the life to come; but if there is to be
progress, there must be training and discipline. Suffering is not punishment
when there is no guilt. When all sins have been forgiven, there is no guilt. If
any criminal, because of guilt, was condemned to go through the toils and suffering
that Admiral Peary had to endure in his attempts to explore the Polar regions
and to reach the North Pole, he would have no other word for it than that it
was a unendurable hell. To Admiral Peary, it was suffering; but, because it was
in line with his ambition; because it would bring him honor and also blessing
and knowledge to his fellow men, he gladly and voluntarily endured it. The
Master was made "perfect through sufferings" and "the disciple
is not above his Master (Luke 6:40, margin). To the Christian who thus suffers
in his life, it may be aid, "who for the joy set before him endured the
cross," etc.
It will help greatly in the understanding of the New Testament to see
that, except in the texts that speak of the ultimate redemption, the subject is
in reference to winning the birthright and becoming a first-born one. These are
sometimes called "the elect," that is, the first-fruits or earnest of
the final glorious harvest. The elect are the first to come. It is a fearful
loss not to be among the elect or first-born ones. They will enjoy the glory
all through the ages while those who miss it will not enter in till the last
age. "God is no respecter of persons," every one who misses the mark,
even for the ages, will have no one but himself to blame.
Another text that is especially connected with the unpardonable sin is
found in Matt. 12:32; “and whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of
Man, it shall be forgiven him; but whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost,
it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this world, neither in the world to
come." This text looks formidable at the first glance, but it is not
difficult if we rightly divide the Word of Truth. We need to notice that the
word "world" in this verse is the word for "age," and it
should be read, "it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this age,
neither in the age to come."
We know from the diagram of the Ages (See Chapter on the Ages
Presented) that this age is this present age, and the age to come is the
millennial age. This text may reasonably imply that some sins committed in this
age may be forgiven in the Millennium, but not this particular one against the
Holy Ghost.
We have learned that the great age of universal reconciliation and
acceptance of the benefits of the sacrifice of Christ is not the age nor the
millennial age but the great age which follows it, viz., the age of the ages. Some sins are so grievous that
the sinner is given up or given over to them, so that it may not be of use to
plead further with him; but in the final age he will accept the proffered
mercy. The most obstinate class will endure punishment and discipline till this
last age. This is the time of "the dispensation of the fulness of
times" when He gathers "together in one all things in Christ"
(Eph 1:10). (See Chapter on The Great Neglected Age.)
Another text that needs examination is 1John 5:16, "If any man see
his brother sin a sin which is not unto death, he shall ask, and he shall give
him life for them that sin not unto death. There is a sin unto death: I do not
say that he shall pray for it." The question here discust is a totally
different matter from what is usually thought in connection with unpardonable
sins.
First, it is well to note that the one who commits this sin is
converted, for he is called a "brother." The question of being
finally lost is out of the question for those who hold that the Father will
lose none that are committed to His hand
(John 10:27-29). This text is akin to the one already referred to in
1Cor. 11:30 where many in the church of Corinth were weak and sickly and many
had fallen asleep. These last words imply that they had committed a sin unto
death. If was of no use to pray for their recovery when they became ill; they
must die as truly as the unbelieving Israel died on the way to the Land of the
Promise. The physical chastisement of death had to be meted out to them. Their
spiritual destiny after death is quite another question. In 1Cor. 5:5, the
Apostle Paul, under divine direction, tells the church at Corinth "to
deliver such an one unto Satan for the destruction of the flesh, that the
spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus." This deliverance to
Satan certainly brought sickness and death, but it was in order to salvation at
the coming of the Lord."
In Jer. 14:11 the Lord said,
"Pray not for this people for their good." And in Jer. 15:1, He says:
Tho Moses and Samuel stood before Me, yet My mind could not be toward this
people." The same principle as the "sin unto death" (1John
5:16,17) obtains here. The Kingdom of Judah in Jeremiah’s time had
despised all warning and gone deeper and deeper into sin. They had all sinned,
some unto captivity and some unto death. Prayer could not avail. No one could
pray in the Spirit and in faith for their deliverance. It would have wrought
more harm than good to have such a prayer answered. Their highest good demanded
exile and captivity. But this is not final: God still has purposes for Israel.
In our day a great stride has been made toward their return to their own land,
their repentance and salvation. The same book of Jeremiah contains, in Chapter
16:14,15, these words "Therefore, behold, the days come, saith the Lord,
that it shall no more be said, The Lord liveth, that brought up the children of
Israel out of the land of Egypt; But, the Lord liveth, that brought up the
children of Israel from the land of the north, and from all the lands whither
He had driven them: and I will bring them again into their land that I gave
unto their fathers." A few
Israelites in past times have
returned, but this great promise has not yet been fulfilled. The
rejection of Israel was for a time, even a long time. In the days of the
Apostles Paul wrote to the Romans (11:26), "And so all Israel shall be
saved."
It is the failure to notice the distinction between the time when God's plan was to a first-fruit, and the time when He will have every knee bow (Phil. 2:10); and also to distinguish what is for time and yet not for eternity, that brings confusion to the understanding of the Scriptures and dishonor to the character of God.
CHAPTER XVI
HEADSHIP OF CHRIST VERSUS THE HEADSHIP OF ADAM
There
has been much said in theology of the federal or representative headship of
Christ, and by its application many questions have been solved, at least in
part. We would not detract from any truth thus ascertained, clarified or
established; but a mere federal headship is true only through an existing
deeper and more fundamental fact in reference to the headship of our Lord; viz., a real and vital headship.
In 1Cor. 11:3 we read, "But I would have you
know, that the head of every man is Christ." In Acts 17:24-28, "God
that made the world and all things therein, seeing that He is Lord of heaven
and earth, dwelleth not in temples made with hands, Neither is worshipped with
men's hands, as tho He needed any thing, seeing He giveth to all life, and
breath, and all things; And hath made of one blood all nations of men for to
dwell on all the face of the earth, . . . For we are also His offspring."
This text is usually taken to mean that all races have sprung from Adam. The
word "blood" is not in several of the best manuscripts, but whether
it is or not, that fact does not militate against the truth that we have in
mind.
There is not the slightest doubt that both the Bible
and present-day studies of the races of mankind prove that there were and are
races on the earth who have not descended from Adam.* Hence comes the answer to
the questions: "Where did Cain get his wife?" "Of whom was Cain
afraid when he departed from his own people?" "Where did he get help
to build a city?"
*Theodore
Roosevelt in The National Geographic Magazine, Feb. 1916; and H. F. Osborn, Men of the Old Stone Age (Charles Scribner's Sons, N.Y.).
In Gen. 4:14 (literal) Cain said, "Behold, Thou
hast driven me out this day from the face of the Adamic domain (not earth); and
from Thy face shall I be hid; and I shall be a fugitive and a vagabond in the
earth; and it shall come to pass, that every one that findeth me shall slay
me." This implies inhabitants beside the Adamites.
In Gen. 4:16, "And Cain went out from the
presence of the Lord, and dwelt in the land of Nod," literally, the land
of the Nomads. Evidently there were wandering tribes at that time.
In Gen. 4:17, "And Cain knew his wife; and she
conceived, and bare Enoch: and he builded a city, and called the name of the
city, after the name of his son, Enoch." It certainly implies a large
number of people besides Cain and his wife and son to help him build the city
and to occupy it.
We have in the Bible the word Adam used for Adam and also for his descendants, and also
the word ish which means
"man" in general. The word Adam has no feminine form and no plural. The word ish has a feminine form, ishshah, and the words ish and ishshah
may signify husband and wife, or man and woman. In several passages of the
Scriptures the descendants of Adam and men of other races seem to be
contrasted.
Ps. 49:1,2, "Here this, all ye people; give ear,
all ye inhabitants of the world. Both low and high, rich and poor, together."
The words "low and high" if literally rendered, would read "sons
of Adam and sons of man (ish)."
Ps. 62:9, "Surely men of low degree are vanity,
and men of high degree are a lie." Here also the literal translation is
"sons of Adam" and "sons of man."
Isa. 2:9 should read, "The Adamite boweth down,
and the man (ish) humbleth
himself."
Isa. 5:15 should also read, "And the Adamite
shall bow down, and the man (ish)
shall humble himself."
One has summed up the usage of these words in
Scripture thus:
It is plain that the rules of literal translation
require us to regard ish as a
general appellation including Adam,
and Adam denoting the first man so-called and any and all of his descendants,
tho it may generally be rendered 'man' or 'men' because the Old Testament
seldom speaks of any other human beings than descendants of Adam, unless it be
so incidentally and distinctively."*
*Adam
and the Adamite, by Dominick McCausland,
Q.C. LL.D. (Richard Bentley & Sons, Fifth Edition, London.) Consult also Preadamites by Alexander Winchell, LL. D. (S. C. Griggs &
Sons, Chicago.)
There is no doubt from the Biblical chronology that
Adam lived about 6,000 years ago. He was the head of a race. The Bible is a
book of redemption. It is principally a history of Adam's race, especially a
history of the Hebrew branch of that race through which Christ came. There is
no doubt that man, of some kind; has been on this earth a very long time, fifty
or a hundred thousand years or more; It is also certain that there are races on
the earth today whose genealogy can not be traced to Adam and whose history
antedates the time of Adam. The discovery of such facts has led some to reject
the Bible as the Word of God, whereas, if the Bible is thoroughly studied and
Scripture compared with Scripture, the truthfulness of the Bible narrative is
most certainly established.
In fact, the Bible itself only makes Adam the typical
head of the race, and not the real head. Rom 5:14, "Adam, who is a type of
Him about to come" (literal). The fact is, men and angels and all things
were originally created in Christ (Col. 1:16). He is not only the head of
mankind (1Cor. 11:3), but also of angels (Col. 2:10). Christ is, therefore, the
one out of whom all sprang and even if the word "blood" is retained
in Acts 17:26, we do not object to this; for the blood stands for the life, and
in creating men and angels God used the life of His Son, the God-Man. The blood
of Christ, even to us, must mean more than the natural blood that was outpoured
on the cross. The blood that was then outpoured was more than mere human blood,
it was the life of the Son of Man and Son of God. His blood that is said to
have purified the heavens is essentially spiritual blood, and the blood that
cleanses our heart is the spiritual blood.
Christ was the Head, and mediated between the absolute God and all
creation because He was the God-Man. All the light and life of the whole
creation was His Life and Light. There was no spiritual life or light apart
from Him. When angels and men fell, the Light and Life of Christ in them was
extinguished. The ground of the whole redeeming and atoning work rests in
Christ; and it can be easily seen why He was the only One in the whole universe
who could restore the fallen, for that which they needed besides forgiveness
was His Life and Light renewed or born again in them. This is the reason that
God sent His Son,--no one else would or could do what was needed to be done.
God's purpose in sending Adam to the earth seems to
have been to bring the knowledge of God to the races dwelling upon it who had
forgotten God. The command, "Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the
earth, and subdue it," in the light of the consideration above instanced,
means far more than to cultivate and conquer the material earth. God evidently
intended through Adam to unfold His salvation to the fallen races. Adam failed:
and in his fall God gave the promise of a coming Redeemer, the Seed of the
woman, the Christ, who was not only the head of Adam and his descendants, but
was the Head and therefore could be the Redeemer of every man.
Not withstanding the failure of Adam, God's purpose is
being carried out in some degree by the Adamites; viz., the Caucasian race. We quote:*
"In the Caucasian alone, of all the inhabitants
of the globe, we find a race who have always been in a state of active and
progressive improvement of themselves and others. They are the parents and
nurses of civilization and have ever been active in advancing the great
interest of humanity . . . The depositories and missionaries of the religion
that binds the true God whose instruments they have been for the expansion and
extension of all that is great and good . . . This is rendered the more
conspicuous by association with so many of his (Adam's) own lineage who devote
their energies to deface the little that remains of God's image and degrade
themselves and their fellow creatures to the moral level of the lowest
specimens of humanity."
*Dominick
McCausland, in work cited before.
The flood was especially brought about on account of the sins of the
Adamites, and it was their whole world, and not necessarily the whole world of
other races, that was destroyed by the flood. Gen. 6:7, when literally
rendered, refers entirely to the Adamites. This interpretation makes the flood
of Noah extend over the world of the Adamites, destroying man and beast except
those saved alive in the ark. This would make the flood to be tremendously
great, for by the time of Noah the descendants of Adam had probably widely
extended. The world of the other
nations not Adamites is not included in God's purpose in the judgment of the
flood. Gen. 6:7 (literally), "I will destroy the Adamites whom I have
created from the face of the earth; both man, and beast, and the creeping
thing, and the fowls of the air."
Gen. 6: 7 needs a further remark. The context
determines whether the word Adam should
be translated Adam or the Adamites. The date of the flood by received
chronology is 1656. The death of Adam was 930 (Gen. 5:5). The flood came 726
years after the death of Adam, therefore the word for "Adam," in Gen.
6:7, can only refer to his descendants, for Adam was dead.
The word for "earth" in Gen. 6:7 is not the
ordinary word for "earth" but is the word Adamah which refers to only a portion of the earth. It can
not be translated "earth" in Gen. 4:14, "Behold, thou hast
driven me out this day from the face of the Adamah (Adam's domain) . . . and I shall be a fugitive and a
vagabond in the earth (eretz). The
text does not mean that God drove Cain out of the earth but out of the domain
of Adam and he became a fugitive and vagabond in another part of the earth.
This word Adamah, or "domain of the Adamites," in Gen. 6:7, therefore
indicates that the flood destroyed only the portion of the earth inhabited by
the descendants of Adam. This evidently was a very large portion, it was their
world.
This understanding of the Scripture relieves the
difficulty in reference to the size of the ark. It was a refuge for the men and
animals of the world of the Adamites.
We are treating the headship of Christ and it matters
not how many nations there are in this world, or any world, Christ is their
Head. All have sprung from Him. The text, "As in Adam all die, even so in
Christ shall all be made alive," becomes larger and grander than is
usually imagined. The two clauses are more than an equation, for there are far
more in Christ than in Adam. These words are a simile and a comparison. Adam
carried death to all who were in him, whereas, Christ carries life to all who were
in Him. As Adam and all his descendants were in Christ, life is brought to all
of them; and no matter how many other races were in Christ, salvation has been
wrought out for them. The redemption, instead of being decreased, is increased
to include every creature and the whole creation of God.
Let us remember that not Adam, but Christ, is "the Head of every
man" (1Cor. 11:3); and the Head of every angel (Col. 2:10); the Head of
the Church (Col. 1:18); the Head of the whole creation (Eph. 1:22; Col. 1:16).
In this way alone will we appreciate Him in His greatness and as the vital
center of Christianity and its complete redemption.
CHAPTER XVII
THE ETERNAL HUMANITY OF CHRIST
The
contents of this Chapter do not have to be accepted for the general argument of
the book to stand, but if the considerations here presented are understood,
they carry with them a tremendous additional confirmation to the truthfulness
of the conclusions reached.
Professor
Laidlaw of Edinburgh wrote in The Bible Doctrine of Man:
"Earnest thinkers in theology have often sighed
for some pathway that would lead direct from an original relation of the
eternal Logos with the human race to the actual incarnation of the Redeemer.
Some have even said that the theory of expiation can not retain its place in
the thoughts of the Church unless it can be shown that the death of Christ as a
propitiation and a sacrifice for the sins of men is the highest expression of
an eternal relation between Christ and the human race.
"Doubtless there is something more in the great
texts (Col. 1:15-17; Eph. 1:10-22; Rom. 8:15-23, etc.) which combine the
relation of the Son to the universe with that of the glorified Redeemer to the
'restitution of all things' than the Church has ever formulated. In that direction
there is theological territory to be possest."
R.
W. Dale to the same point wrote in his work on The Atonement:
"The relation of Christ to mankind is, however,
only part of a larger question--the relation of Christ to the created universe.
The Church has been content to acknowledge that Christ created all things, and
that in some sense He upholds all things. It has never felt any keen and
practical interest in the nature of His permanent relation to the universe. In
the dread of Pantheism, and in its eagerness to maintain the freedom and
personality of the living God, it has rather shrunk from conceiving any other
kind of relation between the Creator and the creation than that which exists
between the builder of a house and the house he has built. But there are many
passages in the New Testament which are inconsistent with such a conception as
this."
We
desire to study for a little the person of our Lord Jesus Christ, for "in
Him are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge," and we doubt not
that in Him will be found the solution of every difficulty and every mystery.
In
respect to the great mystery of the God-man we have always felt it to be a
difficulty to accept the usual doctrinal statement that He was not man until He
"was made flesh, and dwelt among us" and that ever after He had the
indissoluble personality as the God-Man. It seemed to us as if the Godhead, in
the Person of the Only Begotten Son, added something that it did not have
before, and, as a consequence, was not absolutely complete in the past.
The
text (John 6:62), "What and if ye shall see the Son of man ascend up where
He was before?" rather startles us.
We take the title "Son of man" as especially emphasizing His
humanity. We have had no difficulty in accepting the pre-existence of His
deity, but this Scripture seems to assert the same of His humanity, viz., that as "Son of man" as well as "Son
of God" he had a preexistence.
John 3:13 deserves notice. It
asserts that "no man hath ascended up to heaven, but He that came down
from heaven, even the Son of man which is in heaven." This is ordinarily
taken as spoken by our Lord to Nicodemus; but we believe that a careful study
and exegesis of the context, as well as the text, will clearly indicate that
this verse marks a new paragraph which was spoken by the evangelist. The fact
of its beginning with the word "And," signifies nothing from a Hebrew
standpoint and John wrote from that standpoint. Look at almost any chapter in
Genesis and see the use of "And," it will be found that
"And" frequently begins new paragraphs. Without stating all our
reasons, we understand the latter phrase, "even the Son of man which is in
heaven," to mean that John says that the Son of man is in heaven when he
is writing. To us this verse has the same fundamental truth as in John 6:62,
that the Son of man first came down and then returned to heaven.
Eph. 4:9,10, contains the
same remarkable teaching: "Now that He ascended, what is it but that He
also descended first into the lower parts of the earth? He that descended is
the same also that ascended up far above all heavens, that He might fill all
things." The identity of the Christ, that is, the divine-human
personality, is the same in coming down from heaven and in ascending into
heaven. Not only His divine nature but His divine-human nature must have
pre-existed.
These
considerations are strengthened by the fact of the persistence and continuance
of His human nature, as well as His divine, after His return to heaven and
after His glorification. At His Second Coming, which has not yet taken place,
He will be identical in personality, the divine-human Jesus, for Acts 1:11
declares, "This same Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall
so come in like manner as ye have seen Him go into heaven." The Lord Jesus
always will be the God-man. He must have pre-existed, in fact, must have always
existed, not in our fallen flesh, but in a truly spiritual and potential
humanity, inseparably and vitally joined to His deity. These facts do not
imply, as many of the Church Fathers and others assert, that His deity became
human and His humanity became deity; for His deity was absolute; His humanity
was relative. The relative can never become the absolute. His deity was
uncreated, His humanity of necessity was created, even tho its creation was
before time. The created can never become the uncreated. Creation can never
become the Creator in the absolute sense. Our Lord's humanity was always and
everywhere perfectly dependent upon the Father. All other of humanity and creation
have access to and union with God only in and through Christ, because of His
divine-human, eternal existence.
We will note a few more important verses. "And
the glory which Thou gavest Me I have given them" (John 17:22). Christ, as
God, that is, as part of the absolute God, had and has all glory, none could be
given Him that He did not have; but as Son of man, He won a glory and was given
a glory, and, by faith, in this wonderful prayer our Lord anticipates the work
as done and the glory won. Verses 11, 12, etc., speak of "those whom Thou
hast given Me," and verse 24 also tells us of a "glory which Thou
hast given Me: for Thou lovedst Me before the foundation of the world."
We
believe that the difficulties of Phil. 2:6 can be explained only by taking into
account the eternal existence of our Lord not only as God but also the eternal
existence of Him as Son of man. The verse reads, "Who, being in the form
of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God" (Phil. 2:6). The
latter part of this verse should be translated, "He thought it not a thing
to be grasped as a robber's prize to be equal with God." The temptation to
be equal with God did not belong to His deity, for that was God and there was
nothing to be grasped; but in His humanity, which altho eternal, was created,
and therefore, was dependent, there might have been the temptation to make His
humanity equal with God. He never even entertained the temptation. It seems
that Satan, who was only a creature when he attained to greatness under the blessing
of God, sinned in this kind of temptation, in striving to make himself like
God. "For thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will
exalt my throne above the stars (angels) of God . . . I will be like the most
High" (Isa. 14:13,14).
The word "being" in
the expression "being in the form of God" needs attention. It is a
stronger word than "being," and the phrase should be translated "subsisting
from the beginning in the form of
God."
There is also evidence from
Hebrews 1:2,3, that the Son who came on this earth in a true humanity was in
the form of God; for those verses tell us that He was "the brightness of
His glory, and the express image of His substance" (literal).
Altho we hold the true and
essential deity of our Lord, yet we believe the text Phil. 2:6, is witnessing
to victory in His eternal humanity; and only on this ground yields its true
meaning. Christ was and is, and will be as He was eternally, the God-Man.
Phil.
2:4-11 speaks of the humiliation, suffering, death and exaltation which He has
as Son of man endured and through which He won the highest honors. "For
the joy that was set before Him He endured the cross," etc. (Heb. 12:2).
We can not conceive of all these words having applicability to anything but to
His humanity. We, therefore, believe that He was always the God-Man, and will
always remain the God-Man.
We
do not think, in the "emptying" of Himself, i.e., "made Himself of no reputation," that the
Lord Jesus Christ ceased to be the Son of God, but that in His humiliation He
did not take His deity nor the glory and eternality of His humanity, into
account. Peter the Great, Tsar of all the Russias in the seventeenth century,
in disguise hired himself as a laborer in their shipyards and worked at hard
work three months or more. He was still Tsar of all the Russias, but for that
time he did not take his Tsardom into account,--so the Lord Jesus Christ. His
humanity was a real humanity, an eternally created humanity, He condescended to
our fallen condition, He "was made flesh, and dwelt among us." He was
born of a woman; He grew; increased in wisdom and stature"; learned as any
boy who trusted God would learn. In His deity, He knew everything; in His
humanity He became like us. He wrought His miracles by faith; He prayed and had
answers to prayer; he was dependent on the Father for words and works; He
trusted the Father; He wrought by the power of the Holy Ghost. Asman, He was
tempted, "God can not be tempted"; He withstood temptation through
faith in the Word of God; He became like us in all things, and yet, in addition
to all this, He was more than humanity, for humanity is creaturely, and He
received worship. He would never have done this if He had not been truly a part
of the absolute Deity as well as a part of humanity. As Deity He was the
"only begotten Son," as man He is the "first begotten."
(See Chapter, Since God Is Love.)
There
are certain things which can be explained only by recognizing the fact of the
eternality of the union of our Lord's humanity and His Deity. Think it not
strange that even a creaturely humanity can have eternality; but anything that
is creaturely can have only a received, or a derived eternality. Only Deity can
have an essential and an absolute eternality.
It
may be necessary to state that we do not mean that our Lord looked like us in
our fallen nature on earth, when He was in eternity. A great change was noticed
in Him as man after His resurrection, and especially after His glorification.
Stephen, Paul, and John saw Him, and He was more like a most glorious angel,
that is, in His humanity. His Deity can not be apprehended, but by faith. What
His humanity will be when He finishes the work and presents the kingdom to the
Father no word has told us, but it will be transcendently great and glorious.
This
truth of our Lord's eternal humanity explains the origin and dignity of man. If
the humanity of our Lord came down from above, then all humanity has thus
descended, not, however, for the same reason and in the same manner. The angels
and men that fell came down because of their sin. They lost the light and life
of Christ; they died to His presence and awakened to the lower world of sense
and sin.
In this time when the hypothesis of evolution is
dominating most of our thinking, we need to learn that altho it uses many
facts, in itself it contains but little truth. If it were all true as
developed, it would contain no more than a half truth; for there never is any
evolution unless there is first an equal involution. Besides this, the whole
truth of man's origin as revealed in God's Word is entirely neglected. Man in
his original was created in Christ's humanity, on a higher and more glorious
plane than the angels. There has been a terrible degeneration, and there is
need of a recreating regeneration. Nature itself, as we know it, has fallen
from what it was originally; and all its groans and travail are a working
toward what it was. Of itself it will not reach the goal; the life and light of
Christ must be born in it again.
Phillips Brooks, in a remarkable sermon on "The
Eternal Humanity," writes:
"Christ says, 'I am eternal.' Now that must mean
not merely that He has existed and shall exist for ever, but also that in the
forevers of the past and the future He is eternally Christ; that the special nature
in which He relates Himself to us as Savior never had a beginning and shall
never have an end. Now what is that special nature? Christ! The word includes
to our thought such a Divinity as involves the human element. Christ is the
divinely human and the humanly divine . . . There are two words: God and
man. One describes pure deity, the
other pure humanity. Christ is a word not identical with either, but including
both . . .
"Stop here one minute and see how this exalts the human nature
that we wear. In the midst of the eternity of God there bursts forth into being
the new life of man. What shall we say of it? Is it just a creature of the
moment which witnesses its birth? Is it just another of the world's ephemera,
with a little longer space of life than some of its time brethren? Is it a new
type of being made to be born and die? What if this other truth be true? What
if the type of this life I live were part and parcel of the everlasting
Godhead? What if it be the peculiar glory of one of the persons of that Godhead
that He has worn forever, bound with His perfect deity, the perfect archetype
and pattern of this humanity of mine?
"If this truth be so, then we can not but feel that there is much
in it to enable us to feel rightly with regard to every one of the new theories
which look to a confusion and a loss of the distinctive type of manhood. We
have all had our interest excited by the apparent tendencies of modern science
toward a depreciation of what has always been considered the unshared honor of
humanity. Wise men come forward and tell us of a course of structural
development, wherein man becomes not a new creation, for whom a new word was
spoken from the creative lips, a new gesture made by the creative hand, but
merely the present completion of the natural progress of lower natures working
up thus far by some process of selection whose law is resident within itself.
The gorilla in his generation is seen climbing through the gradations of a more
and more perfect apehood, to attain the summit of his life in men. 'Man is in
structure one with the brutes'.
All are but coordinated terms of nature's great progression from the
formless to the formed; from the inorganic to the organic; from blind force to conscious
intellect and will'.
". . . What am I only a higher attainment of
those poor dumb brutes, digging the earth a little deeper for the roots I am to
eat, piling a little more delicately the den I am to live in, crying a little
more articulately the pain or pleasure that I feel? . . . Let science show me
my affinities with the lower life: a mightier hand points me to my connection
with the higher. I go back beyond the first rudiments that curious hands have
found, buried in the slime of formless worlds; I go hack beyond the forming of
the world in which man was to live, back to the beginningless Alpha of all
being, and lo, in Him I find the eternal pattern after which my nature was to
be fashioned, the eternal perfection which my nature was to seek."
The creation of our Lord's humanity in eternity
implies that the whole creation was originally eternal, for it was all created
in Him (Col. 1:16). If it were otherwise, Christ would not be complete, the
eternal creation would not be complete and God's glory in eternity would not be
complete.
This is further confirmed by the facts that the ruins
of our fallen nature witness to a former glory that belongs to a state of
things that is not temporal, and besides, the conditions of time never fully
satisfy the heart of man.
In the Scriptures, John 6:62, "What and if ye
shall see the Son of man ascend up
where He was before?" we are given truth which is for all men, for the
title "Son of man" is
Christ's title as man and as man's vital Head and Representative. If He was
there originally we were also there, and if He ascends there again, so will we
when Christ finishes His redemptive work.
We also know that when He ascended He took up with Him
a glorified body, that is, a body made up of the gross elements of this world,
glorified. All this shows that nature and creation were once spiritual and
glorious, and through Christ are to be restored; for the material was a vital
part of Him. Vitally united to Christ again, man and all creation will be
eternally in God.
In the
death, resurrection, and glorification of our Lord Jesus Christ, all creation
has potentially passed through that process; and in the ages to come it will
have all wrought in it which was wrought in Him. "He that descended is the
same also that ascended up far above all heavens, that He might fill all
things." And when He does so fill, every longing of His whole creation
will be satisfied.
CHAPTER XVIII
SINCE GOD IS LOVE
The
theme of this Chapter is not "If God is Love," for in that case it
might be thought that there was some doubt that love is His very nature; but
the theme is "Since God is Love," and we purpose to consider a few of
the consequences that follow from this momentous fact.
When Edgerton Young, a successful missionary in
Northwestern British America, taught some of the Indians to read by the simple
syllabic characters, he wrote on the rock for them to read the words, "God
is Love." One old Indian chief looked and pronounced the characters, and
as soon as he uttered them he caught their import. He arose to his great height
and said, rubbing his eyes, "Has there been sand in my eyes all these
years? I have seen the Great Spirit in the lightning, I have heard Him in the
thunder, but I never knew till now that 'God is Love.'" How many have
really learned this truth?
We realize our insufficiency in approaching this great
theme and appropriate the words to ourselves, "Sir, thou hast nothing to
draw with, and the well is deep." We know that it is only as He draws for
us, and gives us of the living water that we can have it within us. May we
trust for the water that He causes to flow from His Word and the upspringing
water of life which He said "shall be in him" (John 4:14).
When we speak of God's attributes we may say, and many
do, that "God is a Spirit, infinite, eternal and unchangeable in His
being, wisdom, power, holiness, justice, goodness and truth." This is a
very blessed definition; but it largely defines only God's attributes, whereas,
the text, "God is Love," tells us what He is in Himself. This text
reveals His very nature. For instance, in speaking of justice, we know that God
has justice as one of His attributes, but He is not justice; God is Love. This fact gives us a revelation of God's very
nature.
Since God is Love, there must be personality in the
Godhead; for a mere thing, energy or force can not love. Further as one of the
old Church Fathers said, "Love implies the Trinity; for if God is Love,
there must be a Lover and a Beloved and the Spirit of love." The Son must
have equality with the Father, or He is not an adequate object for the Father's
love; and the Father must be equal to the Son, or the Son does not have an
adequate object to love; and the Holy Spirit must be equal to Father and Son,
or He could not be the Bearer of the love of the One to the Other, and Himself
be the very essence of their love-life.
The
word, "person" is inadequate when referring to the Godhead; Father,
Son and Holy Spirit. Augustine, Calvin,* and others express their regrets at
having to use so imperfect and misleading a word; but it was the best-known
word they had or we have. The words "subsistence" or
"hypostasis" are more accurate, but are too little understood. There
are three such subsistences or hypostases in the Godhead and the Three make
One. There are not three Gods, but only One God. As has been well said, "Neither is God without the
others, and each with the others is God, and each has a peculiarity
incommunicable to the others." Here is a tree (all illustrations fall
short), it has a hidden root and the manifested tree-trunk and branches, and
also the sap as the spirit of life that flows from one to the other. There is
but one tree, not three. God the Father is the root, the Hidden God; God the
Son is the part of the tree above ground, He is the Manifest God; and the Holy
Spirit is the Life that flows from one into the other and then outward. Again,
God the Father may be compared to a great Love-Fire, which eternally begets the
Son, who is the Light; and the Holy Spirit is the heat and chemical rays that
proceed from both.
*Institutes, I, 13:3-6.
In human relations when we say "father," we
mean that he was born before the son; in eternal divine relationship, the
Father would not have been Father if He existed before the Son for one is not a
father without a child. The same principle applies also to the Holy Spirit who
eternally proceeds from the Father and the Son. His relationship is also
eternal.
The generating power in the Godhead is this great
love-desire.* In man desire generates images and thoughts. In God such
generations are eternal realities. On the plane of the Divine, the Only
Begotten Son is the Joyous Light, which is eternally begotten of the
love-desire, and in which God sees Himself. Divine love is greater than loving
on the line of equality. Divine love has condescension in it and as this
generating love-desire in eternity loved and loves the Son on the creaturely
plane, then the true humanity, in a spiritual form and material, is created. In
His deity the Son of God is uncreated; in His humanity He was created. Christ
always was and always will be the God-man. He may have different
manifestations, one at one time and another at another; but He is always
essentially the same.
*See
William Law, The Spirit of Love. Vol. III of The Works of Rev.
William Law, M.A.. (G. Moreton,
Canterbury).
This fact explains such texts as, the "Son of Man
(note, not "Son of God") ascends up where He was before" (John
6:62). As the Son of Man, He is in
the resurrection "the first-born among many brethren," but as Son of
God in deity there is no other; on the plane of Deity He is the Only Begotten
Son. God, through the strong
love-desire, created His humanity with all angels and men in Him, as the
descendants of Adam were originally in Him; and, further, the whole spiritual
creation was likewise in Him. This creation was not out of nothing, that is
unthinkable. The Scripture gives light on this point in Rom. 11:36, "For
out of Him, and through Him, and into Him, are all things" (literal). And
again, the things which He created "were not made of things which do
appear"; that is, they were created out of the invisible energies and
powers which streamed forth from God. These energies and powers are called His
glory; they form an eternal spiritual nature. God as a God of Love would not
have had perfect satisfaction unless everything of creation was created by Him
in eternity. Not one whit is ever to be added to God's glory, as God: He has it
all eternally.
The
doctrine of the conservation of energy, which is generally accepted at the
present day, proves that nothing is truly destroyed even if consumed in fire.
All of its elements remain somewhere. Things may appear in new form, but their
essence was created before time began. All the light and peace and joy that was
in the eternal creation was caused by the birth into it of the life and light
of the Son through the working of God's love-desire. When the creation fell,
what it lost was the birth and manifestation of the Son within. This fact alone
explains the necessity of the Son being the only one who could redeem. The
love-light has been lost and Christ must be born into this fallen world to
bring in again that love-light in all where it was lost.
This love of God in eternity, was not only a love on
the plane of Deity; but also the divine love condescending and manifested on a
creaturely plane: it was and is a sacrificial love. In the original creation it
was God in Christ, giving His life to and for others. His foreknowledge, and
His eternally knowing of the fall of angels and men; and also the fall of the
nature in which they were created so that they fell and nature fell--all this
drew no new thing from Him. The cross of self-sacrifice has always been in the
heart of God. He has been, and is continually, giving His life to and for
others, else there would have been no creation and no redemption. God in His
own heart of love, in eternity, has met everything that is ever to happen in
the universe; not only that, but further, on account of His infinitude of love,
He has met everything that by any possibility could happen, and has infinite
love and peace because of His victory in Himself.
In God's eternal nature there is nothing that can
disturb. All the disturbances come in the nature that is separated from God.
The expressions of God's wrath and hatred are of a piece with such statements
that seem to regard Him as asleep, as when the Psalmist calls upon Him to
"awake" (Ps. 35:23); all such expressions are speaking after the
manner of men. It is true, that in our fallen nature, God seems to have wrath;
but the wrath is only when there is separation from Him. In the developing of a
photograph the only kind of light they use in the dark room is that which
enters through a red glass window. The white sunlight shines on the room, but
the red glass lets no rays enter but the red rays. So our sins and self
separate us from God; and, altho He is ever the same, we receive only judgment,
for we do not let the full white light enter. But even here God has not
forsaken man. He will make grace ''much more abound'' where sin abounded, and
more of the divine love will be manifested than ever. Adequate judgments will
punish, but they will all have God's love-purpose in them. Guilt is real,
punishment is real, but real only while time lasts. Love is more real for it is
eternal.
God has a wayward sinner for a son, that wayward boy
sprang originally from the heart of God after a creaturely manner. He was
created out of the glory of God and was a radiant creature, more radiant than
an angel; and that boy, dead in scarlet sins, is still God's son, but he is a
prodigal son. Some fathers may disown their sons, but the father of the
prodigal son never said that that wayward boy of his was not his son. The Bible
says that such become children of the devil; but, nevertheless, God still has a
double claim upon them: they are His by creation; and they are His by right of
redemption. They are dead in trespasses and sins. They need to be saved, to be
converted, regenerated. They need to repent and come home; but when they do, the
sorrowing father is made glad and says, "For this my son was dead, and is
alive again; he was lost, and is found." God is a bereaved God. It brings
sorrow to our heart to think that Almighty God is bereaved of His children.
Do we believe in hell? Certainly we do; but God never
made it. Man so yields to the temptations of the evil one that he, by his own
doing, goes to the place prepared by the devil and his angels and prepared by
man's own sinful deeds.
Is God's love greater than sin; greater than death;
greater than hell; greater than Satan? The sacrificial death of His Son is not
for the sins of those only who believe now; but "for the sins of the whole
world" (1John 2:2). How long will the Good Shepherd seek the lost? "Until
He find" (Luke 15:4).
Can God do anything after we die, or is He helpless?
Christ preached the Gospel to the dead, even to those who were most wicked
(1Pet. 3:18-20; 1Pet. 4:6). He says that He has the keys of Hades and of death
(Rev. 1:18).
The word "punished" means not only suffering
for the guilt of sin, but also signifies discipline and training for
improvement. (See Chapter on A
Sane and Scriptural Doctrine of Punishment.)
Will believers have any opportunity of helping the
lost after death? The reason of the reference to Christ's preaching was to
encourage believers to be faithful, even if they suffered and died for their
testimony (1Pet. 3:17-20). For when His enemies thought that they would stop
Christ's work by killing Him, they only opened another sphere for His activities,
larger than any in the world. The argument is, so will "He" do for you. They needed this teaching, for 1Peter was
written in Nero's day of persecution and martyrdoms. Gladly would the
Christians go to death, when they knew that in the life to come they were
entering greater service and usefulness.
We believe that this opening of Divine Love will melt
more hearts for God than any other kind of preaching. A mother may forget her
child; but God says, "Yet will I not forget thee." He also says,
"As one whom his mother comforteth, so will I comfort you" (Isa.
66:13). When John B. Gough, the great temperance orator, was entertained by
some friends in an eastern city, the mother of the household called him aside
and asked him to go to her son Edward and have a talk with him. She said that
Edward had been a wayward son; in fact, had gone so far in disgracing them that
the father forbade him to enter the house. She said that she had pleaded with
the father and had prevailed, and that the father had consented to permit
Edward to have a room where he would never have to see him. She said, "Mr.
Gough, Edward came home intoxicated a couple of days ago and is still in his
room. I have been caring for him. Will you not go and have a little talk with
him"' Mr. Gough said,
"My dear mother, if you with all your love ad patience can not do anything
with him, I scarcely think that I can." With a mother's persistency she
finally persuaded Mr. Gough to talk with her son. He knocked at the door and
entering found Edward. Mr. Gough said, "Edward, aren't you tired of the
kind of life that you are leading ?" Edward said, "Yes, Mr. Gough, I
am sick and tired of it." "Then why do you not quit it?"
"Quit it? I can't, Mr. Gough; I am bound hard and foot with an evil
habit." "Then why do you not pray, Edward?' "Pray! I don't
believe in prayer; I don't believe in God; I don't believe in anything."
"Oh, yes, you do, Edward," replied Mr. Gough. "You believe in
something. You believe that your mother loves you." Edward replied,
"I do not believe anything about it, I know she loves me."
"Then, Edward," continued Mr. Gough, "you believe that there is
such a good thing in this world as love, and I am going to leave you here and I
want you to promise me that after I go out, you will get down on your knees and
pray to love." "Pray to
what?" said Edward, "Pray to love, for that is the only thing that
you say you believe in. After much persuasion Edward promised. He afterward
said that he felt very foolish when he knelt down to pray to love, but he had promised, and he tried to fulfil his
promise. He kneeled and cried, "Oh love, love help me"; and straight-
way, as if through the cleft heaven, this text sounded as a voice in his heart,
"God is Love"; and, still looking up, he said, "Oh God!"
and there came to him the verse that he had learned years before, "For God
so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever
believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life." And he
cried, "Oh, Christ! "--and it was done. He rushed out of his room to
find his mother, and, when he did, he threw his arms around her neck and said;
"Mother, I have found the Christ."
Our poor, lisping, faltering
tongues can not proclaim the Gospel as we would like; but we have God's Word
that is true for the present time, and for all the times of the ages. It was
and is true eternally, "God is Love"; and the great practical
consequence is for you and me to respond to that God and to that Love.
CHAPTER XIX
GOD'S ACCOMMODATION TO A FALLEN WORLD
The creation was originally in Christ and in God,
"For in Him were all things created, that are in heaven, and that are in
earth, visible and invisible, . . . all things were created through Him, and
for Him" (Col. 1:16, literal). The original creation in eternity was made
out of the things that proceed from God, the invisible things. The outraying
glory made up the eternal nature, and the original creation was generated out
of this eternal nature. We can not imagine the glories that existed then!
But sin entered, and there was a fall. We do not know
how many of the original angels fell. We gather from Rev. 12:4, that at the
time of the end of the age Satan will draw one third of the stars, or angels,
of heaven with him. Possibly a third, or less, of the original created beings
fell; and with each fell his kingdom or principality. Before this, everything
was spiritual. There was no gross matter, nor anything but spiritual beings and
spiritual substance in God's creation. With the fall, time began; and what we
call nature, instead of remaining eternal, also fell and became fallen and
temporal. The remarkable thing about the ordinary word for the
"foundation" of the world in time is that it is a word signifying
"casting down"; so that the temporal foundation of the world is
synonymous with the "casting down" of the world (Heb. 1:10; Eph.
1:4).
God did not forsake the world even when it was cast
down because of sin; but recreated it for its new temporal and fallen
conditions. His creative work stopt the fallen creation from going so far that
there would be nothing in it, upon which God could work. Fallen nature still
has some remnant which witnesses to its former goodness and greatness. It is
like the tree of knowledge of good and evil, even that tree was not all evil. God's
great love caused him to manifest Himself on this fallen plane. The absolute
God without such condescension and adaptiveness would have been entirely
unknown and unknowable.
God's great law of circularity* then came into special
operation. All worlds and suns have circles for their pathway, and truth of
every kind has also its circular orbit. Science is beginning to tell us that in
the highest development of physics and mathematics the old theory of straight
lines of infinite length has to be changed and modified to satisfy all the data
of electro-dynamics, light, and of some of the new electrical phenomena. There
is probably no such thing in the universe as an absolutely straight line of
infinite length. There are straight lines for all practical purposes; except
for these new mysterious yet natural forces that transcend our former
knowledge. All straight lines will, no doubt, be found to be portions of
immense circles. This law of circularity runs through all nature. It was
Harvey's discovery of the fact that the flow of blood in our bodies went, as it
were, in a circle that lies at the foundation of most of the science of modern
medicine. He was laughed at and mocked. He suffered all kinds of detraction at
first, but he lived long enough to have all this changed and to be heaped with
honors.
*See
Popular Science Monthly for March, 1920,
page 77.
Theology needs to be arranged according to the vast
sweep of this law of circularity. Then there will be the proper place for every
one of its great truths; and no generalization will be in error because too few
facts have been taken into account. In place of shreds of truth and piece-meal
principles, the wholeness and roundness of God's own plan will appear; truths
will be held in proper perspective and proportion, and harmony will reign. In
the falling from an eternal condition into a fallen, temporal condition, God
permitted it to fall according to the law of circularity so that all would
return to Him after self-will had been conquered by judgments and grace. We
have already exprest that law in Rom. 11:26, "For out of Him, and through
Him, and (back) into Him are all things" (literal). Thus the complete circle is
accomplished, and the end returns to the beginning.
We know that God is not only the God of eternal
creation, but also the absolutely Eternal God; but what does He do when so much
of His creation falls out of eternity? We have seen that He does not forsake
His fallen creatures and works. He is called in 1Tim. 1:17, "The King
eternal"; but the literal Greek is, "The King of the Ages." He
is not only the King of eternity but this verse tells us that He is the King of
time. He has a plan for the ages; and He will accomplish His purpose for time
as well as for eternity. When in several passages of Scripture it speaks of God
"who liveth forever and ever" (Rev. 15:7, etc.), we know that the
correct translation is, "who liveth for the ages of the ages," which
means that during the ages that intervene between the "casting down"
from the eternal creation to the return back into God in the eternity to come,
God is King and God lives. The word "lives," still further shows what
love did when the fall came. God began then to live His life, and manifest it
in the fallen universe. This life He lived, or rather manifested, was not the
absolute life of eternity, but a life accommodated to His creatures. It was the
kind of spiritual life that was best suited for the time of the ages. When we
live in a warm climate we can live in a house with scores of windows and doors,
with great openness to light and air. If we moved to the frigid zone, we might
have to live in a house of rock or snow, with but one aperture to serve both
for windows and doors, and that opened the least possible number of times. The
verb that defines the kind of life that God lives is connected with the word
for creature and animal; the verb is zao, and the noun is zoe. We
are familiar with this word; we find the same root in the word,
"zoological." This word means that, because of love, God so humbles Himself
that He manifests His spiritual life on the creaturely plane to help His fallen
creatures.
It also seems that the good angels, who did not fall,
took upon them such spiritual bodies that they could manifest themselves in
time to a fallen world. The highest angels that control the judgments recounted
in the book of Revelation are called zoa. There were four of them joined to God's throne. They have a nature in
which they can manifest themselves in this Arctic world. What love must God
have so to humble Himself and create, anew for time, His unfallen ones! We
believe they voluntarily yielded themselves, so that they all might become
"ministering spirits to minister for them who shall be heirs of
salvation."
We can understand, then, why it is that God calls zoe,
"life," the kind of
spiritual life that we get when we trust Him, because this is the kind of
spiritual life best adapted for time. This explains why in some way the word
"age" is practically associated with this life; and it is called in
John 3:16, and many other places, not "everlasting" or ''eternal''
life, but ''eonian'' or ''age'' life.
When eternity begins the ages end, and eternal life in
its absolute sense begins. The age-life has the germ and first-fruits of
eternal life. How glorious must real, full-orbed eternal life be, if the little
sample in time is so grand!
To express the idea of the eternality of God and
Christ, the verb ''am'' is employed. God as the absolute God, is the "I
am." Another word that carries us back to eternity is the verb huparcho,
which means subsisting from the
beginning. It is translated "being" in Phil. 2:6.
With this understanding of the difference between the
spiritual life in time and the spiritual life in eternity, one can easily
answer the objection that seems so formidable that if sin and punishment come
to an end, then the Scriptures would seem to make God and eternal life come to
an end. This difficulty arises from a wrong translation in our English Bibles
already pointed out.
When God is called "the King eternal" (1Tim.
1:17), the correct translation is the King of the
ages. It is easily seen that when the ages end (1Cor.
15:24) God is no longer the King of the ages.
We also know that the words "everlasting"
and "eternal" life, when rightly translated, mean life for the ages,
and when the ages end the age-life is left behind and real eternal life begins.
The very word for ''life,'' zoe, shows
that the spiritual life that we receive now is for time. There will be a
grander kind of life when time ends and eternity begins.
Some one asks, "But does not absolute eternity
exist in God always?" Yes, in God Himself; but the manifestation of God's
life, on account of His love, is tempered and adjusted to be apprehended by us
in time and in a fallen world. Otherwise we would never have a point of contact
to attain to the fulness of eternal life.
Another says, "Sin must have started in eternity,
if it was sin that caused 'the casting down of the world.'" This is a
little difficult to explain, but easy when once apprehended. If evil existed in
the eternity of the past, it would be difficult to prove that it would not
exist in the eternity that awaits us; but it did not exist in the eternity
past. It required a separation from God and from the eternal nature to commit
one sin. Let us suppose that silence stands for eternity, and sound, for time.
As soon as we speak we are not in silence, but in sound; and, hence, by this
comparison, out of eternity into time. So, when sin began it was no longer
eternity.
All the purpose of God was made in eternity before
time began. "Who hath saved us, and called us with an holy calling, not
according to our works, but according to His own purpose and grace, which was
given us in Christ Jesus before the times of the ages" (2Tim. 1:9,
literal). The purpose of God antedates the times of the ages (Titus 1:2).
"In hope of eternal life, which God, that can not lie, promised before the
world began." Let us make a literal translation of Titus 1:1,2:
"Paul, a slave of God, and an apostle of Jesus Christ, according to the
faith of the chosen ones of God, and a full knowledge of the truth which is
according to a right worship, founded upon the hope of age-life, which God, who
can not lie, promised before the times of the ages." Here we have the
promise of God made before time. "Even as He chose us in Him before the
casting down of the world" (Eph. 1:4, literal). Here we have His choice
before the casting down of the world, that is, before time began.
Divine Love was not surprized, but had His whole plan
made for the ages, "according to a plan of the ages which He made in
Christ Jesus our Lord" (Eph. 3:11, literal). God's plan will never
miscarry. Where sin abounded, grace will much more abound (Rom. 5:20); and the
creation that was cast down, will be lifted up and made anew. Time conditions
will be overruled for good (Rom. 8:28). God will again be "all in
all" and there will never again be any sin or suffering in all His domain.
God so accommodates and adjusts His truth that it is
given at the most fitting season. "Who gave Himself a ransom for all to be
testified in its own fitting seasons" (1Tim. 2:6, literal).
CHAPTER XX
THE UNSELFISHNESS OF GOD
An
erroneous idea of the Christian's God is abroad and has been abroad from time
immemorial.
It
rarely enters into the head or heart of man that we have a humble, unselfish
God. Humility and unselfishness are so little associated with strength that it
is hard to believe that they are among the prime attributes of the true God.
Not
only the enemies of Christianity but Christians themselves, have been the
propagators of many false conceptions of our God.
When
we teach that God wants us always to put Him first and do everything to His
glory, the natural conception would be that of an inconsiderate, lofty, earthly
monarch, one who desired the best for himself and cared not how his subjects
fared.
What
is the true statement of the case? What is God's glory? God's glory is the
outraying of Himself and His gifts, which is the giving of Himself. He bids us
depend upon and trust Him, in order that He may be able to support and help us.
He bids us put Him first, in order that He may give us more, and be more to us
than ever. He is not satisfied with anything but our love, our very selves;
because in that way alone can He give us Himself. His ideal for us is,
"Son, thou art ever with Me, and all that I have is thine"; but we
fail to enjoy His wealth, and are often like the elder brother in the parable
of Luke 15. He stoops to us, He serves us. The earthly life of humble service
and sacrifice of our Lord Jesus Christ, is a true picture of our Great God. For
Christ was "the effulgence of His glory, and the express image of His
substance" (Heb. 1:3, literal).
We
believe in the true substitutional sacrifice and atonement of our blessed Lord;
but when it is presented as if Christ had to pay the price of His own life, to
win God over and to get Him propitiated, it is a wrong conception of our God
and of the work on the cross. For "God was in Christ, reconciling the world
unto Himself" (2Cor. 5:19). It was God who "so loved the world, that
He gave His only begotten Son." Let no one present Christ as loving and
the Father as cruel. The Son was but expressing in all His suffering and
sacrifice the unselfish love of our God. When we realize that and desire to
understand God, we look unto Jesus. "Philip saith unto Him, Lord, shew us
the Father, and it sufficeth us. Jesus saith unto him, Have I been so long time
with you, and yet hast thou not known Me, Philip? he that hath seen Me hath
seen the Father" (John 14:8,9). Again, in John 1:18, the same truth is
clearly set forth: "No man hath seen God at any time; the only begotten
Son, which is in the bosom of the Father, He hath declared Him (made Him
known)." God, in the person of His Son, not only sacrificed Himself for us
on the cross, but He is always giving and sacrificing Himself for us. We have a
God who is on the giving hand.
If
God had been selfish, He never would have created intelligent beings in His own
image. He did this in order that He might give Himself and His vast resources
to them.
In
providence, God is following us to help us. He always does the best for us
under the circumstances. We, by our self-will and unyieldedness, block His
unstinted generosity toward us.
In
salvation, His same grace is manifested. Grace always says, "Not according
to your deserts." Law says, "Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he
also reap." God's love always works counter to the enemy. In the parable
of the tares, the enemy sowed tares among the good wheat. God 's unselfishness
always sows some good in the midst of our sin; and when we inquire, "How
has this come to pass?" we will hear, "A friend hath done this,"
our unselfish God.
In the hymn of praise to love in 1Cor. 13, we have a
description of our God in His nature and character. He does not ask us to be
anything, or to do anything that He is not and does not do Himself.
"Charity suffers long and is kind;
Charity envieth not;
Charity vaunteth not itself,
Is not puffed up,
Doth not behave itself unseemly,
Seeketh not her own,
Is not provoked,
Thinketh no evil;
Rejoiceth not in iniquity, but
Rejoiceth in the truth;
Beareth all things,
Believeth all things,
Hopeth all things,
Endureth all things.
Charity never faileth" (1Cor. 13:4-8).
If there is anything in the Scriptures that seems to
convey a different message, or a different spirit from this unselfish love, its
cause lies not in God but in the creature.
Had man and the creation remained in the state and
nature in which God originally created them, there would be nothing in this
world but harmony, peace, and love; but God's creatures fell out of the estate
of glory in which they were created, and their fall brought about another
nature--gross, bestial, with just enough of the ruins of good in it to keep it
from total corruption and
destruction. Nature has become the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of
good and evil, not only evil. God always deals with man or angel according to
the laws that govern the nature in which that man or angel has his being. In
the unfallen state, God dealt according to the laws of an unfallen and eternal
nature. In a fallen state, He deals according to the law of a fallen and
temporal nature. Morally, God can not deal in any other way, because every creature
is circumscribed and determined by the laws of its own nature. In the fallen
nature there is the clash of discord and the suffering of separation from God.
The very approach of the light gives us pain. Every day that Divine Love tries
to bless us there is judgment and conviction. There is a sense in which all
this may be attributed to God, in that He is the exciting cause; but its real
cause is in our own sin and waywardness from God and His nature.
All
the punishment, suffering, and discipline that comes to us in this life arises
from the nature we have that is sinful and corrupt; but it might have some sort
of peace, if God's warmth and sunshine did not make it ferment. Thus God will
turn corruption into incorruption, and bring life out of death. In nothing more
than in this is His unselfishness manifested.
One might say, "Why not leave corruptible things
alone?" The answer is plain, God causes the fermentation of corrupt nature
to produce purity. He does not contradict, nor remove the laws of nature.
Metaphorically, He turns her own guns on herself. Her own laws by God's own
hand, work for the destruction of her evil and toward a new creation. He
nullifies death with death. All they did in the crucifixion of Christ was to
slay the body that belongs to this fallen environment; and God had His
opportunity to raise up an unfallen, new creation in the Person of His risen,
glorified Christ. The whole creation potentially died with Him, and a new
creation rose with Him and was glorified in Him. He is the first fruits of a
new creation. Its completion is absolutely certain; God's purpose waits for the
faith of the creature, which He foresaw from eternity.
The unselfish love of God
toils and suffers to bring us back to a glory more glorious than that which was
spoiled. Through the gross medium of our fallen nature, the Person and work of
our God may look distorted and cruel; but to the anointed eye there is nothing
but love and unselfishness. His voice of approbation and blessing sounds to the
diseased ear as the thunder of judgment. When God so spake there were some who
said it thundered (John 12:29).
Hannah Whitall Smith, the
author of The Christian's Secret of a Happy Life, introduces her autobiography thus:
"On the fly-leaf of my Bible, I find the following
words taken from I know not where: 'This generation has rediscovered the
unselfishness of God'.
"If I were called upon to state in one sentence
the sum and substance of my religious experience, it is this sentence I would
choose. And no words could express my thankfulness for having been born into a
generation when this discovery has been comparatively easy.
"If I am not mistaken, the generation before mine
knew very little of the unselfishness of God; and, even of my own generation,
there are I fear many good and earnest Christians who do not know it yet.
Without putting it into such words as to shock themselves or others, many
Christians . . . look upon God as one of the most selfish, self-absorbed Beings
in the universe, far more selfish than they could think it right to be
themselves--intent only upon His own honor and glory, looking out continually
that His own rights are never trampled on; and so absorbed in thoughts of
Himself and of His own righteousness, as to have no love or pity to spare for
the poor sinners who have offended Him.*
"I grew up believing that God was like this. I
have discovered that He is exactly the opposite."
*Mrs. Hannah Whitall
Smith's, A Spiritual Autobiography, named
in the earlier editions, The Unselfishness of God (Fleming H. Revell Co., New York).
The author of The Anatomy of Truth adds his testimony (See notice of this author and book in note in Chapter, Eternity Is Not Time.):*
"'God is Love'. We say and re-say these words until we have lost almost all
sense of their proportion and their meaning. We have grown so accustomed to the
sound of the formula that it has ceased to impress upon us one thousandth part
of what it contains. And in spite of the protest which the words import, we
still secretly, in our heart of hearts, regard God as a kind of all-powerful
Autocrat, Who governs the world and the universe, no doubt not without the
welfare of His creatures, yet still with a purpose which is primarily directed
to His own gratification, and on principles which arc mainly self-centered if
not actually selfish.
"But what a travesty of the formula does such a
conception involve! What an immeasurable distance are we straying from its
meaning when we suffer ourselves to think thus of God! Think for a moment what
the words import. Consider what
love really is. Love, the spendthrift; love, the prodigal; love, that gives
all, asking nothing in return--and yet, by some mysterious law of its being,
sows the seeds of gain in loss itself, reaping harvests of waste from its own lavish
waste, and garnering stores of profit out of its very profusion. Of its
boundless extravagance love takes no reckoning, With a perverse economy love
'seeketh not its own.' Love keeps no profit and loss account. Love strikes no
balance between mine and thine. For to love, all things are loss. And to love
all loss is gain.
"But if this be so, then it is obvious that we
must totally reconstruct the very basis of our conception of God. We must look
upon Him now as the Supreme Altruist, Who has never known a selfish thought,
and Whose whole existence is one vast expenditure--an outpouring of Himself in
passionate self-sacrifice, for the welfare and happiness of His children. More
than a father's affection, more than a mother's self-forgetting devotion, more
than a lover's love--more a thousandfold than all these is the love of God,
'which passeth knowledge,' and which sets no bounds to its bounty save only
those which our limitations supply. It was no empty figure of speech which
declared 'all things are yours'."
*See notice
of this author and book in note in Chapter, Eternity Is Not Time.
We add a suggestive prayer of Dr. Matheson:
"Lord let not the sun go down upon my wrath! Life
is too short for quarrels. Yet it is not because life is short that I would
have peace. It is because eternity is long. How strange my old quarrels look in
the light of vanished years! Me thinks they will look stranger still in the
light of Thine eternity. I am ambitious now, and I shall be ambitious then; but
the things for which I am ambitious now are not the things for which I shall be
ambitious then. Now I strive to get; then I shall strive to give. Now I seek
possession; then I shall try to be dispossest. Now I covet the uppermost seat;
then I shall descend the stair. Now I select the best robe; then I shall choose
the servant's form. I see Paul and Barnabas standing before Thy presence and
there is still a strife between them. But the cause of strife is changed--Paul
wishes Barnabas to be first, and Barnabas is eager to remain second; they
wonder at their old quarrel in the light of Thy throne. Reveal that light to
me, O Lord! In my hour of quarrel, in he hour when I strive to he first, give
me a glimpse of the soul's last judgment on itself--its reversed judgment! Let
me see Cain rejoicing over the acceptance of Abel's sacrifice! Let me see Lot
repudiating the richer share! Let me see Sarah making a home for Ishmael! Let
me see Jacob refusing his brother's birthright! Let me see Joseph exalting his
brethren in his dreams! Let me see David take Uriah's place in the battle! Let
me see Jonah intent on sparing Nineveh! Let me see Herod exulting in the
sustenance of the babes of Bethlehem! Then shall the light of eternity arrest
the strife of time."*
*Representative Men of the New
Testament, by George Matheson, D.D., page
259 (A. C. Armstrong & Son, New York).
CHAPTER XXI
HAS GOD A PURPOSE IN DEATH
The
only way any of us ever enters life is by a birth. Creation is also nothing
more nor less than a generation. "These are the generations of the heavens
and of the earth when they were created" (Gen. 2:4).
The
only way we ever leave life is by a death. These two processes always go hand
in hand. We die to one form of life and live to another. "Except a corn of
wheat . . . die, it abideth alone, but if it die, it bringeth forth much
fruit" (John 12:24).
In
the Old Testament, especially in God's dealing with Israel, the sanctions or
punishments referred to belonged, largely, to this life. This world was to be
for them the place of reward, and the death threatened was in reference to this
earthly life; but there were just enough other references and inferences of
another life to prepare the way for the clearer and higher unfoldings of the
New Testament. It is with the New Testament truth therefore that we will have
most to do.
Death
is always transition. Take physical death or the death of the body,
"Absent from the body, . . . present with the Lord." Take spiritual death: it is leaving the
realm of light and entering the realm of darkness; leaving the realm of love
and unselfishness and entering the realm of alienation, self-will and
selfishness; leaving the realm of harmony with the divine will and entering the
realm of discord with the divine will; leaving the spiritual and entering the
realm of the worldly and grossly material.
Death never means
annihilation; there is no such thing anywhere as absolute annihilation. We
sympathize with our Annihilationist friends in their effort to get rid of the
blot on God's name, but the Scripture has a better way than theirs.
Death does not mean life in
endless torment. For death is always a transition; and there is no such thing
as endless time. The phrase is self-contradictory; for time always carries with
it the idea of temporary and besides there can not be an endless temporary
anything. (See Chapter on Eternity Not Time.)
We read; "She that
liveth in pleasure is dead while she liveth" (1Tim. 5:6). That is, a death
has taken place in reference to the spiritual and serious realm of life, and she
is alive on a worldly and natural plane. The reckoning of one's self "dead indeed to sin" is in
order to be "alive unto God" (Rom. 6:11).
There was a real death that
took place in our first parents on the day they sinned, viz., a spiritual death. They died to the spiritual, and
they became alive on a new and lower plane. This spiritual death affected their
whole being. Before they sinned
they were glorious like the angels; but they died to that glorious state, lost
their body of glory, and knew that they were naked. The death of the gross
physical body they had acquired did not follow till years afterward. There are
two distinct stages in their death; the spiritual and the physical. The
spiritual death brought them to a natural plane; and the physical death to the
natural brought them to a more spiritual plane, if not the ultimate spiritual,
at least one that was on the way back to the spiritual. It is only as the plant
is dying that it brings forth the seed of another life.
Death
came in as an enemy. God makes death overcome itself and bring forth life. It
is by death that death is rendered powerless, and there arises an upspringing,
conquering life. It is by Christ's death that all death is thus overcome. God
limits the influence of every enemy; and when the round is complete, He makes
everything work good.
Because man died to the state
in which he was originally created by a sort of a twofold death, the only way
back is by a twofold death; and both of these deaths have been potentially
wrought for us by Christ's death on the cross. The first is a death to the
outward, the material and natural of this earthly, worldly plane, "the
cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, whereby the world is crucified unto me, and I
unto the world" (Gal. 6:14). The second death is also potentially provided
for in Christ's death on the cross, "Knowing this, that our old man is
crucified with Him" (Rom. 6:6). Our old selfish self in its essence died
with Him on the cross.
What has been wrought for us
in Christ has to be accepted by faith as a fact; but the working of it within
us is a process, and a tremendous one.
When we take our stand of
faith for the forgiveness of sins, for the crucifixion of our self-life, for
the fulness of the Holy spirit--then alone is salvation truly begun in us. Many
are tempted to think that they then have all that God has for them; but this
principle of death is in order to life, and the life is in order to death on
that plane that they may live on a higher and a higher plane, in which progress
they will keep on not only in this life but also in the ages. It has taken the
rubies and the diamonds ages to grow, is God's plan for a soul any less complex
and glorious? The higher the type of being, usually the longer it takes for
development. The Apostle Paul, many years after his conversion and
sanctification cries out; "That I may know Him, and the power of His
resurrection, and the fellowship of His sufferings, being made conformable unto
His death" (Phil. 3:10). The Apostle Paul is still breathing that prayer,
for the special resurrection that he longed for has not yet been fulfilled; and
when it is come, then it will be the power for further progress. As long as
time lasts, this wondrous process will continue. The vistas of the ages before
us hold for us more love and grace and heights and depths and progress than we
have ever imagined. "That in the ages to come He might show the exceeding
riches of His grace in His kindness toward us through Christ Jesus" (Eph.
2:7). As long as the ages, that is, time lasts, there will be this temporal
progress.
What
will happen when eternity comes at the end of the ages and God is "all in
all?" The creature has no essential eternity in himself, for the
creature's eternity is always derived and imparted from God in Christ. The word
"progress" is not proper for eternity; but God will have something
else then which will transcend progress. We will never lose our identity and
personality; and we make up the body of Christ and the body of God. We will
then surpass angelic beings. All spiritual beings will have transcendent
natures in God; and as they are God's body, so all nature now redeemed and
spiritual will be their body. "Which is His body, the fulness of Him that
filleth all in all" (Eph. 1:23). "That God may be all in all"
(1Cor. 15:28). There will be no more death, no more sin, no more judgment, no
more punishment in all God's domain; and all domains will be God's and
Christ's, and we will be Christ's in God, and God will be everything in every
one.
Death
and sin and judgment and punishment were terrible evils. They wrought woful
havoc; they shattered God's universe and broke His great heart; but omnipotent
love is quenchless and has prevailed; the freedom that was given to the
creature has been respected; and every evil has been made to bring forth good
(Rom. 8:28); every sin has found a deeper love in God; every pain has been a
birth-pang; every judgment has been "unto victory"; the ages of
training and endurance have put a set to character. True permanence of character
comes only after all the tests of all the ages, but it comes then to abide.
Then there will be no more fall, no more sin, no more death! God made these
things work His purpose. The whole span of all the Ages will be but as a
moment, as we look back at it. Eternity is here. It was only a discordant note
in an eternal symphony; now it is corrected, mellowed, and entrenched and held
by God in His perfected harmony.
Welcome the cross and its death and hold fast to its
whole process. There is no other way than the way of Christ. There is no other
process than this to bring man, not only to where he was originally, but also
to the place God intended him to be. There is no escape for any one. There is
no such thing as "chance." Every refusal makes the way longer and
harder. There is no escape, no lesson can be skipt. Man has sinned and slipt thousands and millions of times; he
will have to retrace every false step. The path of progress is just the reverse
of the path of the fall. It is death in order to life, and life in order to
deeper deaths, ever to higher planes. The path does not stop when the
starting-place has been reached, but moves on and on into "all the fulness
of God."
God willeth not the death of a sinner. If one sinner
die eternally, God is defeated. God can not be defeated. "God willeth all
men to be saved, and to come to the full knowledge of the truth" (1Tim.
2:4, literal). But it is not in the feeble, germinal, and initial sense in
which we understand the word "saved" to mean that God willeth all men
to be saved; but God wills all to come also to the full knowledge of the truth, and that implies the whole process of
Christ for every man. In speaking of the elect, who are the first ones to ripen
in this harvest, "a kind of first-fruits," God in the Word says,
"Till we all come to the unity of the faith, and of the full knowledge of
the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the
fulness of Christ" (Eph. 4:l3). At the end of the ages all men will have
reached that goal, for He wills for them the same full knowledge. It is only as
the truth becomes a part of yourselves that you really know; and when you have
the fulness of the truth of Christ, then you have reached the stature of the
fulness of Christ. This is a result unthinkable apart from God's own Word (Eph.
4:13). "But faithful is He that calleth you, who also will do it"
(1Thes. 5:24). For God is the only One who can take us through.
"O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is
thy victory?" "Thanks be unto God, which always leadeth us in triumph
in Christ." Eternity has come, the goal is won, God is "all in
all."
In view of this wondrous law of life out of death and
God's tremendous plan for us, let us not say that this life is all and when it
is gone, that all is gone. Neither let us say that death ends all. Read this
parable which we found, said to be written by one James Buckham. It is called
A ROBIN'S EGG
"Only think of it--love and song,
The passionate joy of the summer long
Matins and vespers, Ah! bow sweet,
A nest to be in the village street,
A redbreast flashing in happy flight,
Life's full ecstasy and delight
Thrilling God's minstrel through and through,
All of them packed in this egg of blue!
"Would you believe it, holding dumb
Lime and pigment twixt finger and thumb ?
Would you think there was love within
Walls so brittle and cold and thin?
Such a song as you heard last night,
Thrilling the grove in the sunset light?
Out of the casket in which we dwell
What may issue? Can you foretell?
"Can
you say when you find outspread
Bits of
eggshell, we are dead?
Can you
think if this shell be crusht
All that
is in it is cold and hushed?