THY
KINGDOM COME
<PAGE 135>
STUDY
VI
THE
WORK OF HARVEST
Character of the Harvest Work--Gathering the Wheat--Bundling
and Binding and Burning the Tares--Their Origin and Prolific
Growth-- Consumed Like the Chaff of the Jewish Harvest--Time
Correspondencies Noted--The Casting off, Gradual Fall and Final
Destruction of Babylon--The Sealing of the Servants of God Before
the Plagues Come upon Babylon--Judgment or Trial, Both as Systems
and Individually --The Test of the Jewish System Typical--The
Testing and Sifting of the Wheat--The Wise, Separated from the
Foolish Virgins, Go in to the Feast--"And the Door was
Shut"--A Further Inspection, and the Casting Out of Some--Why?
and How?--The Close of the "High Calling"--The Time
is Short--"Let no Man Take Thy Crown"--Eleventh Hour
Servants and Overcomers.
"HARVEST"
is a term which gives a general idea as to what work should be
expected to transpire between the dates 1874 and 1914. It is a
time of reaping rather than of sowing, a time of testing, of reckoning,
of settlement and of rewarding. The harvest of the Jewish age
being a type of the harvest of this age, observation and comparison
of the various features of that harvest afford very clear ideas
concerning the work to be accomplished in the present harvest.
In that harvest, our Lord's special teachings were such as to
gather the wheat, who were such already, and to separate the chaff
of the Jewish nation from the wheat. And his doctrines became
also the seeds for the new dispensation, which opened (shortly
after the nation of Israel was cast off) at Pentecost.
Our
Lord's words to his disciples as he sent them forth, during his
ministry to that church-nation, should be carefully
<PAGE 136> remembered, as giving proof that
their special work then was reaping, and not sowing. He said to
them, "Lift up your eyes and look on the fields; for they
are white already to harvest: and he that reapeth receiveth
wages, and gathereth fruit unto life eternal." (`John
4:35,36`) As the chief reaper in that harvest (as he also
is in this one), the Lord said to the under-reapers, "I sent
you to reap that whereon ye bestowed no labor: other men [the
patriarchs and prophets and other holy men of old] labored, and
ye are entered into their labors"--to reap the fruits of
those centuries of effort, and to test that people by the message,
"The Kingdom of heaven is at hand," and the King is
present--"Behold, thy King cometh unto thee."
`Matt. 10:7`; `John 12:15`;
`Zech. 9:9`
In
the Jewish harvest, the Lord, rather than to make goats into sheep,
sought the blinded and scattered sheep of Israel, calling for
all who already were his sheep, that they might hear his
voice and follow him. These observations of the type furnish an
intimation of the character of the work due in the present harvest
or reaping time. Another and a larger sowing, under the more favorable
conditions of the Millennial age and Kingdom, will soon be commenced:
indeed, the seeds of truth concerning restitution, etc., which
will produce that coming crop, are even now being dropped here
and there into longing, truth-hungry hearts. But this is only
an incidental work now; for, like its Jewish type, the present
harvest is a time for reaping the professed church (so-called
Christendom), that the true saints gathered out of it may be exalted
and associated with their Lord, not only to preach the truth,
but also to put into operation the great work of restitution for
the world.
In
this harvest, wheat and tares are to be separated; yet both of
these classes, previous to the separation, compose the nominal
church. The wheat are the true children of the
<PAGE 137> Kingdom, the truly consecrated,
the heirs, while the tares are nominally, but not really, Christ's
Church or prospective bride. The tares are the class mentioned
by our Lord, who call him Lord, but who do not obey him. (`Luke
6:46`) In outward appearance, the two classes are often
so much alike as to require close scrutiny to distinguish between
them. "The field is the world," in the parable, and
the wheat and tares together (the tares more numerous) constitute
what is sometimes called "The Christian World," and
"Christendom." By attending religious services occasionally
or regularly, by calling themselves Christians, by following certain
rites and ceremonies, and by being identified more or less directly
with some religious system, the tares look like, and sometimes
pass for, God's heart-consecrated children. In so-called "Christian
lands," all except professed Infidels and Jews are thus counted
Christians; and their numbers (including the few fully consecrated
ones--the saints) are estimated at about one hundred and eighty
millions of Greek and Roman Catholics, and about one hundred and
twenty millions of Protestants.
During
the Gospel age, our Lord's instructions have been not to attempt
a separation of the true from the imitation children of the Kingdom;
because to accomplish a complete separation would occasion the
general turning of the world (the field) upside down--a general
unsettlement of the wheat, as well as of the tares. He therefore
said, "Let both grow together until the harvest." But
he added, "In the time of harvest I will say unto the reapers
[angels, messengers], Gather ye together first the tares and bind
them in bundles to burn them, but gather the wheat into my barn."
(`Matt. 13:30`) Hence, in the time
of harvest we must expect a general separating work, hitherto
prohibited. While those symbolized by the wheat are ever encouraged
to stand fast in the liberty wherewith Christ made them free,
and to
<PAGE 138> avoid entangling alliances with
open transgressors and with wolves in sheep's clothing, yet they
were not to attempt to draw the line between the fully consecrated
class (the wheat, the saints), and the tares who profess
Christ's name and doctrines, and who to some extent allow these
doctrines to influence their outward conduct, but whose heart
desires are far from the Lord and his service. This judging of
hearts, motives, etc., which is beyond our power, and which the
Lord commanded us to entirely avoid, is the very thing which the
various sects have all along endeavored to accomplish; attempting
to separate, to test the wheat, and to keep out as tares or heretics,
by rigorous creeds of human manufacture, all professors of Christianity
whose faith did not exactly fit their various false measurements.
Yet how unsuccessful all these sects have been! They have set
up false, unscriptural standards and doctrines, which have really
developed many tares and choked and separated the wheat; for instance,
the doctrine of the everlasting torment of all not members of
the Church. Though now becoming greatly modified, under the increasing
light of our day, what a multitude of tares this error has produced,
and how it has choked and blinded and hindered the wheat from
a proper recognition of God's character and plan. Today we see
what a mistake the various sects have made in not following the
Lord's counsel, to let wheat and tares, saints and professors,
grow together, without attempting a separation. Honest
men in every sect will admit that in their sects are many tares,
professors not saints, and that outside their sectarian bars are
many saints. Thus, no sect today either can or does claim to be
all wheat, and free from tares. Much less would
any earthly organization (except Christadelphians and Mormons)
be bold enough to claim that it contained all of the wheat.
Hence, they are without any excuse for their organizations, theological
fences, etc. They do not separate
<PAGE 139> wheat from tares, nor can anything
completely and thoroughly accomplish this separation of hearts
except the method which the Lord has ordained shall be put into
execution in the time of harvest. This shows the necessity for
knowing when the time is at hand and the harvest work of separating
is due to begin. And our Lord, true to his promise, has not left
us in darkness, but is giving the information now due, to all
whose hearts are ready for it. "Ye, brethren, are not in
darkness [nor sleep] that that day should overtake you as a thief."
`1 Thess. 5:4`
The
truth now due is the sickle in this harvest, just as a similar
sickle was used in the Jewish harvest. The reapers, the angels*
or messengers, now, are the Lord's followers, just as a similar
class were the reapers in the Jewish harvest. And though others,
throughout the age, were told not to attempt the separation of
the wheat from the tares, yet those now ready, worthy and obedient
will be shown the Lord's plan and arrangement so clearly that
they will recognize his voice in the time of harvest, saying,
"Thrust in the sickle" of present truth, and "gather
my saints together unto me, those that have made a covenant with
me by sacrifice." "They shall be mine, saith
the Lord of hosts, in that day when I make up my jewels."
`Psa. 50:5`;
`Mal. 3:17`
Not
only is this the time for the gathering of the saints by the truth
(into oneness with their Lord and each other, and out of fellowship
with mere professors, tares), but it is also a time for cleaning
up the field by consuming the tares, stubble, weeds, etc., preparatory
to the new sowing. In one sense the "wheat" is gathered
out from among the tares-- because of the greater abundance of
tares--as when the Lord says, "Come out of her, my people."
Yet, in another sense, the separation is properly represented
by the tares ---------- *The word "angel" signifies
messenger.
<PAGE 140> being gathered from the wheat.
Really, the wheat has the place by right; it is a wheat-field,
not a tare-field (the world of mankind being counted the ground
out of which the wheat and also the tares grow or develop); so
it is the tares that are out of place and need to be removed.
The Lord started the wheat-field, and the wheat represents the
children of the Kingdom. (`Matt. 13:38`)
And since the field or world is to be given to these, and already
belongs to them by promise, the parable shows that really it is
the tares that are gathered out and burned, leaving the field,
and all in it, to the wheat. The tares are returned to the ground
(world) whence they came, and the first-fruits of the wheat are
to be gathered into the garner, so that the earth may bring forth
another crop.
The
wheat was not to be bundled: the grains were originally planted
separate and independent, to associate only as one kind, under
similar conditions. But the parable declares that one of the effects
of the harvest will be to gather and bind the tares in bundles
before the "burning" or "time of trouble."
And this work is in progress all around us. Never was there a
time like it for Labor Unions, Capitalistic Trusts and protective
associations of every sort.
The
civilized world is the "field" of the parable. In it,
during the Reformation, the winds of doctrinal strife, from one
quarter and another, threw wheat and tares together into great
batches (denominations), inclining some in one direction (doctrinally),
and some in another. This huddled wheat and tares closely together,
and took away much of the individuality of all. The doctrinal
storms are long past, but the divisions continue from force
of habit, and only here and there has a head of wheat attempted
to lift itself to uprightness from the weight of the mass.
But
with the harvest time comes the release of the wheat from the
weight and hindrance of the tares. The sickle of
<PAGE 141> truth prepares this class for the
freedom wherewith Christ originally made all free, though the
same sickle has an opposite influence upon the tares. The spirit
of the tares is toward sectarian greatness and show, rather than
toward individual obedience and allegiance to God. Hence,
present truths, the tendency of which they at once discover to
be to condemn all sectarianism, and to test each individual, they
reject and strongly oppose. And, though disposed to unite with
each other, all the sects unite in opposing the disintegrating
tendencies of present truth, to such an extent as to draw the
cords slowly, cautiously, yet tightly upon all individual
thought and study on religious subjects, lest their organizations
should fall to pieces and, all the wheat escaping, leave nothing
but tares.
Each
of the tare class seems aware that, if examined individually,
he would have no claim to the Kingdom promised to the close followers
of the Lamb. The tares would prefer to have the various sects
judged as so many corporations, and in comparison one with another,
hoping thus to glide into the Kingdom glory on the merits of the
wheat with whom they are associated. But this they cannot do:
the test of worthiness for the Kingdom honors will be an individual
one--of individual fidelity to God and his truth--and not a trial
of sects, to see which of them is the true one. And each sect
seems to realize, in the greater light of today, which is scattering
the mists of bigotry and superstition, that other sects have as
good (and as little) right as itself to claim to be the one and
only true church. Forced to admit this, they seek to bind all
by the impression that it is essential to salvation to be joined
to some one of their sects--it matters little to which one. Thus
they combine the idea of individual responsibility with sectarian
bondage.
As
an illustration of a popular cord recently drawn tightly by sectarianism
upon its votaries, we cite the seemingly
<PAGE 142> harmless, and, to many, seemingly
advantageous, International Sunday School Lessons. These lend
the impression of unsectarian cooperation in Bible study, among
all Christians. They thus appear to be taking a grand step
away from, and in advance of, the old methods of studying with
sectarian catechisms. These uniform lessons have the appearance
of being an abandonment of sectarianism and a coming together
of all Christians to study the Bible in its own light--a thing
which all recognize to be the only proper course, but which all
sectarians refuse to do actually; for, be it noticed, these International
S. S. Lessons only appear to be unsectarian: they only
appear to grant liberty in Bible study. Really, each denomination
prepares its own comments on the scriptures contained in the lessons.
And the committee which selects these lessons, aiming for the
outward appearance of harmony and union, selects such passages
of scripture as there is little difference of opinion upon. The
passages and doctrines upon which they disagree, the very ones
which need most to be discussed, in order that the truths and
errors of each sect may be manifested, that a real union might
be arrived at upon the basis of "one Lord, one faith and
one baptism"--these are ignored in the lessons, but still
firmly held as before by each sect.
The
effect of these and other similar "union" methods is
to make Protestantism more imposing in appearance, and to say
to the people in fact, if not in words: You must join one
of these sects, or you are not a child of God at all. Really,
it is not a union as one church, but a combination of separate
and distinct organizations, each as anxious as ever to retain
its own organization as a sect or bundle, but each willing to
combine with others to make a larger and more imposing appearance
before the world. It is like the piling of sheaves together in
a shock. Each sheaf retains its own bondage or organization, and
becomes bound yet more
<PAGE 143> tightly by being wedged and fastened
in with other bundles, in a large and imposing stack.
The
International Lesson system, in connection with modern methods
of "running" Sunday Schools, greatly aids sectarianism,
and hinders real growth in the knowledge of the truth, in yet
another way. So general a lesson is presented in connection with
the "exercises" of the school, that there is scarcely
time to consider the guarded, printed questions, with prepared
answers; and no time is left for the truth-hungry Bible student,
or the occasional earnest teacher, to bring out other questions
of greater importance, containing food for thought and profitable
discussion. Formerly, Bible classes met to study such portions
of the Bible as they chose, and were hindered from obtaining truth
by the bondage of their own prejudice and superstition only, and
the earnest, truth-hungry ones were always able to make some progress.
But now, when increasing light is illuminating every subject and
dispelling the fogs of superstition and prejudice, it is hindered
from shining upon the Bible class student by the very International
Lessons which claim to aid him. His time for Bible study is skillfully
directed, so that he may get no new ideas, but be so continually
occupied in the use of the "milk of the word" (greatly
diluted with the traditions of men), as to take away all appetite
for the "strong meat" of more advanced truth. (`Heb.
5:14`) In such classes, all time and opportunity for tasting
and learning to appreciate "meat" is sacrificed, in
obedience to the words, "We must stick to our lesson; for
the hour will soon expire." Well has the prophet, as well
as the apostle, declared that, to appreciate the great doctrines
of God, so essential to our growth in grace and in the knowledge
and love of God, we must leave the first principles and go on
unto perfection--"weaned from the milk, and drawn from the
breasts." `Heb. 6:1`;
`Isa. 28:9`
<PAGE 144> While
Sunday School methods have recently been considerably improved,
they still leave much to be desired. They contain some of the
best of the Lord's people--who, anxious to serve the Master, are
more or less bewildered by the show of numbers and appearance
of "work for the Lord." Some good is accomplished,
we admit, but it has its offsets. The earnest are hindered from
personal duty and progress, in the doing of that which God committed
to the parents, the neglect of which is an injury to the parents
as well as to the children. The immature find the brief session
and "exercises" more agreeable than Bible study. They
are let to feel that they have performed a duty; and the
sacrifice of the few moments is repaid by the social gossip
and interchange which it affords. The little ones, too, like the
"exercises," the singing, story-books, picnics, treats
and general entertainment, best; and they and their mothers feel
well repaid for the labor of dressing, by the opportunity thus
afforded for showing their fine clothing. And the parental responsibility
of religious home-training is very largely resigned in favor of
the sham and machinery of the Sunday School. The Sunday School
has been well named the nursery of the church and the little ones
thus brought up in the nurture and admonition of the worldly spirit
are the young shoots of that abundant crop of tares with which
great Babylon is completely overrun.
Wherever,
here and there, an adult Bible class does exist, and the teacher
is candid and independent enough to leave the prescribed lesson,
and follow up more important topics, giving liberty for the truth
to be brought forward, whether favorable or unfavorable to the
creed of the sect, he is marked by the worldly-wise pastor or
superintendent as an unsafe teacher. Such teachers are indeed
dangerous to sectarianism, and are very soon without classes.
Such teachers, and the truths they would admit to candid investigation,
<PAGE 145> would soon cut the cords and scatter
the sectarian bundles, and hence are not long wanted. Others are
therefore preferred, who can hold the thoughts of their classes,
divert them from "strong meat," and keep them unweaned
babes, too weak to stand alone, and bound to the systems which
they learn to love, and believe they would die without. The true
teacher's place, and the true Bible student's place, is outside
of all human bondage, free to examine and feed upon all portions
of the good Word of God, and untrammeled to follow the Lamb whithersoever
he leads. `John 8:36`;
`Gal. 5:1`
While
individual liberty must outwardly be recognized as never
before, we see that really there never was a time when the bands
were so thoroughly drawn, to bind all wheat and tares into the
many bundles. There never was a time when arrangements were so
close, and so restraining of all personal liberties, as now. Every
spare hour of a zealous sectarian is filled by some of the many
meetings or projects, so that no time for untrammeled thought
and Bible study can be had. The principal design of these meetings,
entertainments, etc., is sectarian growth and strength; and the
effect is the bondage mentioned, so detrimental to the real development
of the consecrated children of God, the wheat. These bands are
being made stronger, as the prophet intimates. (`Isa.
28:22`) Some wheat and many tares constitute these bundles,
from which it daily becomes more difficult to get free.
From
what we have seen of the small quantity of truly consecrated wheat,
and the great mass of "baptized profession" (as a Methodist
bishop has forcibly described the tare class), it is evident that
the burning of the tares will be a momentous event. It is a mistake,
however, which many make, to suppose that the burning of the tares
in a furnace of fire, where there shall be wailing and gnashing
of teeth
<PAGE 146> (`Matt. 13:42`),
refers either to a literal fire, or to trouble beyond the present
life. The entire parable belongs to the present age. Not only
is this fire a symbol, as well as the wheat and the tares, but
it symbolizes the destruction of the tares, in the great
time of trouble with which this age is to close, and from which
the wheat class is promised an escape. (`Mal.
3:17`; `Luke 21:36`)
The great furnace of fire symbolizes the "great time of trouble"
coming, in the close of this harvest, upon the unworthy tare class
of "Christendom."
Nor
does the destruction of the tares imply the destruction, either
present or future, of all the individuals composing the
tare class. It signifies rather a destruction of the false pretentions
of this class. Their claim or profession is that they are Christians,
whereas they are still children of this world. When burned or
destroyed as tares, they will be recognized in their true character--as
members of the world, and will no longer imitate Christians, as
nominal members of Christ's Church.
Our
Lord explains that he sowed the good seed of the Kingdom, the
truth, from which springs all the true wheat class, begotten by
the spirit of truth. Afterward, during the night, the dark
ages, Satan sowed tares. Doubtless the tares were sown in the
same manner as the wheat. They are the offspring of errors. We
have seen how grievously the sanctuary and the host were defiled
by the great adversary and his blinded servants, and how the precious
vessels (doctrines) were profaned and misapplied by Papacy; and
this is but another showing of the same thing. False doctrines
begat false aims and ambitions in the Lord's wheat-field, and
led many to Satan's service, to sow errors of doctrine and practice
which have brought forth tares abundantly.
The
field looks beautiful and flourishing to many, as they count by
the hundreds of millions. But really the proportion of wheat is
very small, and it had been far better for the
<PAGE 147> wheat, which has been choked and
greatly hindered from development by the tares, if the worldly-spirited
tares had not been in the Church, but in their own place in the
world, leaving the consecrated "little flock," the only
representatives of Christ's spirit and doctrine, in the field.
Then the difference between the Church and the world would be
very marked, and her growth, though apparently less rapid,
would have been healthy. The great seeming success manifested
by numbers and wealth and social standing, in which many glory
so much, is really a great injury, and in no sense a blessing,
either to the Church or to the world.
As
we examine this subject, we find that many of these tares are
little to blame for their false position as imitation wheat. Nor
do many of them know that the tares are not the real Church; for
they regard the little flock of consecrated wheat as extremists
and fanatics. And, when compared with the tare multitude, the
Lord and the apostles and all the wheat certainly do appear to
be extremists and fanatics, if the majority, the tares, be in
the right.
The
tares have been so thoroughly and so often assured that they are
Christians--that all are Christians except Jews, infidels and
heathens--that they could scarcely be expected to know to the
contrary. False doctrines assure them that there are but two classes,
and that all who escape everlasting torment are to be joint-heirs
with Christ. Every funeral discourse, except in the case of the
miserably degraded and the openly wicked and immoral, assures
the friends of the peace and joy and heavenly glory of the deceased;
and, to prove it, passages of scripture are quoted, which, from
the context, should be seen to apply only to the fully consecrated,
the saints.
Naturally
inclined to reprove themselves, to conscientiously deny that they
are saints, and to disclaim the rich promises of the Scriptures
to such, they are persuaded
<PAGE 148> to claim them, by their no better
informed fellow-tares, both in pulpits and pews. They conscientiously
feel--indeed they are certain--that they have done nothing which
would justly merit everlasting torture; and their faith in the
false doctrines of "Christendom" leads them to hope,
and to claim, that they and all moral people are members of the
Church to which all the rich promises belong. Thus they are tares
by force of false doctrines, and not only occupy a false position
themselves, but misrepresent the truly high standard of saintship.
Under the delusion of the error, they feel a sense of security
and satisfaction; for, measuring themselves and their lives with
those of the majority in the nominal church, and with their deceased
friends to whose funeral eulogies they have listened, they find
themselves at least average--and even more consistent than many
of loud profession. Yet they are conscious that they have never
made any real consecration of heart and life, time and means,
talents and opportunities, to God and his service.
But
as the "chaff" class of the Jewish nation was
consumed in the close of that harvest (`Luke
3:17`), so this "tare" class will be consumed
in this harvest. As the chaff ceased from all pretention to divine
favor as the triumphing Kingdom of God, before that harvest closed
in the great fire of religious and political contention,
which consumed that system, so it shall be with the tare class
of so-called "Christendom." They will be consumed; they
will cease to be tares; they will cease to deceive either
themselves or others; they will cease to apply to themselves the
exceeding great and precious promises which belong only to the
overcoming saints; and, when their various so-called Christian
kingdoms, and their various religious organizations, rent by discords
induced by the increasing light of truth, will be consumed
in the fire already kindled, "the fire of God's zeal"
(the great time of trouble with which this age will end--
<PAGE 149> `Zeph. 3:8`),
they will cease to claim for their worldly systems the name "Christendom."
After
telling of the burning of the tares, the parable further declares,
"Then shall the righteous [the wheat] shine forth
as the sun in the Kingdom of their Father." [What better
testimony than this could we have, that the true Church is not
yet set up in power, as God's Kingdom, and that it will not be
thus exalted until this harvest is ended?] Then shall this sun
of righteousness (of which Christ Jesus will always be the central
glory) arise with healing in his beams, to bless, restore, purify
and disinfect from sin and error the whole world of mankind; the
incorrigible being destroyed in the second death.
Let
the fact be remembered that, in the typical Jewish harvest, Israelites
indeed, as well as imitation Israelites, constituted the Jewish
or Fleshly House of Israel; that only the true Israelites
were selected and gathered into the gospel garner, and honored
with the truths belonging to the Gospel age; and that all others
of that nation ("chaff") were not physically destroyed
(though of course many lives were lost in their trouble), but
were cut off from all Kingdom favors in which previously they
trusted and boasted. Then trace the parallel and counterpart of
this, in the treatment of the "tares" in the present
burning time.
Not
only has the Lord shown us what to expect in this "harvest,"
and our share in it, both in being separated ourselves and, as
"reapers," in using the sickle of truth to assist others
to liberty in Christ and separation from false human systems and
bondages, but in order to render us doubly sure that we are right,
and that the separating time of the harvest has arrived, he provided
us proofs of the very year the harvest work began, its length,
and when it will close. These, already examined, show that the
close of 1874 marked the beginning, as the close of 1914 will
mark the
<PAGE 150> end, of this 40 years of harvest;
while all the minutiae of the order and work of this harvest were
portrayed in that of the Jewish age, its type. Some of the marked
time-features of that typical harvest we will now examine, and
note the lessons which they teach, which are applicable now, and
which our Lord evidently designed for this purpose, so that we
might not be in either doubt or uncertainty, but might know of
his plan, and be able to act accordingly, with strength, as cooperators
with him in carrying out his revealed will.
All
the time-features connected with the Jewish harvest (though they
sometimes indirectly related to the faithful), had their direct
bearing upon the great nominal mass, and marked periods of its
trial, rejection, overthrow and destruction as a system or church-nation.
Thus the Lord, as the Bridegroom and reaper, came (A.D. 29) not
to the true Israelites only, but to the entire mass. (`John
1:11`) The progress of the harvest work there disclosed
the fact that the grains of ripe wheat fit for the garner (the
Gospel dispensation) were few, and that the great mass was wheat
merely in appearance--in reality only "chaff," devoid
of the real wheat principle within. When, three and a half years
later (A.D. 33), our Lord assumed the office of King, and permitted
(what before he had refused--`John 6:15`) that the people should
mount him upon an ass and hail him King, it marked a point in
this antitypical, Gospel harvest more important far than that
of the type. The parallel to this, as we have seen, points to
1874 as the time of our Lord's second presence as Bridegroom and
Reaper, and to April 1878 as the time when he began to exercise
his office of King of kings and Lord of lords in very deed--this
time a spiritual King, present with all power, though invisible
to men.
The
doings of our Lord, while there for a few hours typically
<PAGE 151> acting as King of Israel, are deeply
significant to us, as unquestionably indicating, and shadowing
forth, what must be expected here. What men saw him do
at that time, such as riding on an ass into Jerusalem as king,
and scourging the money-changers out of the temple, we recognize
as typical--as done here on a larger scale, though the
King, and the scourge of cords, and the proclamation of kingly
authority, are now manifested in a very different way, and to
the eye of faith only. But the Jewish type serves to call attention
to this fulfilment, which otherwise we would not be able to appreciate.
The first work of the typical King was to reject the entire church-nation
of Israel as unworthy to be his Kingdom, or longer to be treated
as his special heritage. This was expressed thus: "O Jerusalem,
Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them which
are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy children
together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings,
and ye would not. Behold, your house is left unto you desolate!"
`Matt. 23:37-39`
This,
when applied to the present harvest, teaches that as in A.D. 33
typical Israel, after being recognized as God's people for 1845
years by favors, chastisements, etc., was cast off, rejected by
the King, because found unworthy, after a trial and inspection
of three and a half years, so in the present harvest, after a
similar three and a half years of inspection, and at the close
of a similar period of 1845 years of favor and chastisement, nominal
Christendom would be rejected by the King as unworthy longer to
receive any favors from him, or to be recognized in any manner
by him.
But,
as the rejection of nominal Fleshly Israel did not imply the rejection,
individually, of any "Israelite indeed," in whom was
no guile, but rather a still greater favor to such (who were set
free from the "blind guides," and taught more directly
and perfectly through new spiritual channels --the apostles),
so here we must expect the same. The
<PAGE 152> spiritual favors, formerly bestowed
upon the nominal mass, belong henceforth only to the faithful
and obedient. Henceforth the light, as it becomes due, and "the
meat in due season for the household of faith," must be expected,
not through former channels, in any degree, but through faithful
individuals outside of the fallen, rejected systems.
During
his ministry, and up to the time when, as King, he cast off the
Jewish system, our Lord recognized the scribes and Pharisees as
the legitimate instructors of the people, even though he often
upbraided them as hypocrites who deceived the people. This is
evident from the Lord's words (`Matt. 23:2`)--"The
scribes and the Pharisees sit in Moses' seat; whatsoever therefore
they bid you do, that observe and do." So, likewise, for
a time the great religious rulers of nominal Christendom in Synods,
Conferences, Councils, etc., measurably sat in Christ's seat as
instructors of the people, as the Jewish Sanhedrin once occupied
Moses' seat. But as, after A.D. 33, the scribes and Pharisees
were no longer recognized by the Lord in any sense, and the true
Israelites were no longer instructed by these, but by God himself,
through other, humbler, untitled and more worthy instruments,
who were raised up among the people and specially taught of God,
so we must expect and do find it here, in this parallel harvest.
The
taking of the kingly office by our Lord in A.D. 33, and his first
official act in rejecting the national church of fleshly Israel,
taken in connection with all the striking parallels of the two
ages, indicate very clearly that at the parallel point of time
in the present harvest, i.e., 1878, mystic Babylon, otherwise
called Christendom, the antitype of Judaism, was cut off; and
there went forth the message, "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`
<PAGE 153> The
fall, plagues, destruction, etc., foretold to come upon mystic
Babylon, were foreshadowed in the great trouble and national destruction
which came upon fleshly Israel, and which ended with the complete
overthrow of that nation in A.D. 70. And the period of falling
also corresponds; for from the time our Lord said, "Your
house is left unto you desolate," A.D. 33, to A.D. 70 was
36 1/2 years; and so from A.D. 1878 to the end of A.D. 1914 is
36 1/2 years. And, with the end of A.D. 1914, what God calls Babylon,
and what men call Christendom, will have passed away, as already
shown from prophecy.
Judaism
was a divinely appointed type of the Millennial Kingdom of Christ
which will control and regulate all matters; hence Judaism was
properly a union of church and state--of religious and civil government.
But, as we have already shown, the Gospel Church was in no sense
to be associated in, or to have anything to do with, the government
of the world, until her Lord, the King of kings, comes, assumes
control, and exalts her as his bride to share in that reign of
righteousness. Neglecting the Lord's words, and following human
wisdom, theories and plans, the great system called Christendom,
embracing all governments and creeds professing to be Christ's
(but a miserable counterfeit of the true Kingdom of Christ), was
organized before the time, without the Lord, and of wholly unfit
elements. The fall of Babylon as an unfit church-state system,
and the gathering out of the worthy wheat, therefore, can be and
is well illustrated by the fall of Judaism.
The
name Babylon originally signified God's gateway; but afterward,
in derision, it came to mean mixture or confusion.
<PAGE 154> In the book of Revelation this
name is applied specifically to the church nominal, which, from
being the gate-way to glory, became a gate-way to error and confusion,
a miserable mixture composed chiefly of tares, hypocrites--a confused
mass of worldly profession in which the Lord's jewels are buried,
and their true beauty and luster hidden. In symbolic prophecy,
the term Babylon is applied at times only to the Church of Rome,
called "Babylon the Great, the Mother of Harlots." The
name could apply only to her for centuries, so long as she was
the only mixed system and would tolerate no others; but other
ecclesiastical systems, not so great as the "mother,"
nor yet so wicked, nor so radically wrong, sprang up out of her,
through various attempted though imperfect reforms. Errors, tares
and worldliness in these also largely predominating, the name
Babylon is used as a general or family name for all the nominal
Christian systems, and now includes not only the Church of Rome,
but all Protestant sects as well; for, since Papacy is designated
the mother system, we must regard the various Protestant systems
which descended from her as the daughters--a fact very generally
admitted by Protestants, and sometimes with pride.
Previous
to the harvest time, many of God's people in Great Babylon discovered
her real predominant character to be grossly antichristian (notably
the Waldenses, the Huguenots and the reformers of the sixteenth
century); and, calling attention to the fact, they separated from
the mother system and led others with them, many of whom were
tares, as the prophet had predicted, saying, "Many shall
cleave to them with flatteries." (`Dan.
11:34`) Here were the separatings of the politico-doctrinal
storms before the harvest time. Among these the tares, still predominating,
formed other, though less objectionable, Babylonish systems.
Thus
the wheat, though from time to time endeavoring
<PAGE 155> to free themselves from the incubus
of the tares (and especially from the grosser errors which fostered
and produced the tares), and though blessed by these efforts,
were still under their influence, still mixed with large predominance
of the tare element. But for the wheat's sake God's favor extended
even to these mixed bunches or Babylonish systems; and not until
God's time for effecting a complete and final separation--in the
time of harvest, 1878--were those systems completely and forever
cast off from all favor, and sentenced to swift destruction, and
all of God's people explicitly and imperatively called out of
them. In the very beginning of the age, God's people were warned
against the deceptions of Antichrist, and taught to keep separate
from it; and yet, for their trial and testing, they were permitted
to be in a measure deceived by it and more or less mixed up with
it. Every awakening to a realization of unchristian principles,
doctrines and doings, which led to reform measures, tested and
proved the wheat class, and helped to purify them more and more
from the pollutions of Antichrist. But this last testing and positive
call, coupled with the utter rejection of those systems, no longer
to receive divine favor (as they had formerly received it, for
the sake of the wheat in them), is to effect the final separation
of the wheat class from all antichristian systems and principles.
What truths those systems formerly held are now fast being swept
away from them, being displaced by theories of men, subversive
of every element of divine truth; and vital godliness and piety
are being rapidly displaced by the love of pleasure and the spirit
of the world.
With
the declaration that Babylon is fallen comes also the command
to all of God's people still in her, to come out--"And I
heard another voice from heaven, saying, Come out of her, my
people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye
receive not of her plagues." (`Rev.
18:4`) The expression, "Babylon is fallen: Come out
of her, my
<PAGE 156> people," clearly marks two
thoughts which should be distinctly remembered. It indicates that
at one time Babylon was not fallen from divine favor; that for
a time she retained a measure of favor, notwithstanding her mixed
character; that, however large the proportion of error which she
held, and however little of the spirit of Christ which she manifested,
she was not entirely cast off from God's favor until the harvest
time of separation. It indicates that at some time a sudden and
utter rejection is to come upon Babylon, when all favor will forever
cease, and when judgments will follow--just such a rejection as
we have shown was due in 1878. It indicates, also, that at the
time of Babylon's rejection many of God's people would be in and
associated with Babylon; for it is after Babylon's rejection,
or fall from favor, that these are called to--"Come out of
her, my people."
The
contrast between the many gradual reform movements of the past
four hundred years and this final complete separation should be
clearly discerned: they were permitted attempts to reform
Babylon, while this recognizes her as beyond all hope of reform--"Babylon
hath been a golden cup in the Lord's hand, that made all the earth
drunken; the nations have drunken of her wine; therefore the nations
are mad [intoxicated with her errors]. Babylon is suddenly fallen
and broken: wail for her; take balm for her wound, if so be she
may be healed. We would have healed Babylon, but
she is not healed: forsake her, and let us go every one unto his
own country [to the true Church, or to the world, as the case
may be, according as each is thus proved to be of the wheat or
the tares]: for her punishment reacheth unto heaven."
`Jer. 51:7-9`. Compare `Rev. 17:4;
14:8;` `18:2,3,5,19`.
Unhealed
Babylon is now sentenced to destruction: the whole system--a system
of systems--is rejected, and all of God's people not in sympathy
with her false doctrines and
<PAGE 157> practices are now called to separate
themselves from her. The prophet gives the reason for this sentence
of rejection, and the failure of some to comprehend it, saying:
"The
stork in the heavens knoweth her appointed times; and the turtle
and the crane and the swallow observe the time of their coming
home; but my people know not the arrangement of the Lord. [They
do not recognize that a harvest time of full and complete separation
of wheat, from chaff and tares, must come. In this they show less
discernment than the migratory fowls.] How can ye say, We are
wise, and the Law of the Lord is with us [when you cannot discern
the harvest time and the change of dispensations then due]? Truly,
behold in vain wrought the pen, in vain the writers [because the
word of the Lord by his prophets and apostles is made void, and
set aside without attention, and creeds formed in the past "dark
ages" are the lightless lanterns of them that walk in darkness].
The wise (?) [learned] men are ashamed; they are disheartened
[by the failure of their cherished human schemes] and caught:
lo, the word of the Lord have they rejected, and what wisdom have
they [now]? [Compare `Isaiah 29:10`.]
Therefore will I give their wives [churches] unto others, and
their fields [of labor] to the conquerors; for, from the least
even to the greatest, every one [of them] is seeking his own personal
advantage--from the prophet [orator] even unto the priest [minister],
every one practiceth falsehood. [Compare `Isa. 56:10-12; 28:14-20`.]
And they heal the sore of the daughter of my people [nominal Zion--Babylon]
very lightly, saying, Peace, peace: when there is no peace [when
her whole system is diseased, and needs thorough cleansing with
the medicine of God's Word--the truth]. They should have been
ashamed of their abominable work; but they neither felt the least
shame, nor did they know how to blush: therefore shall they
[the teachers] fall among them that fall; in the time of their
visitation [or inspection--in the "harvest"]
<PAGE 158> they shall stumble, saith the Lord.
I will surely make an end of them, saith the Lord; there shall
be left no grapes on the vine, and no figs on the fig tree, and
the leaf shall wither; and the things that I have given them [all
divine favors and privileges] shall pass away from them."
`Jer. 8:7-13`
The
succeeding verse shows that many of the rejected will realize
the troubles coming, yet will still be blind to their real cause.
They will say, Let us unite ourselves and entrench ourselves in
the strong cities [governments], and keep silence. They
somehow realize that neither reason nor Scripture supports their
false doctrines, and that the wisest method is to keep silent,
in the shadow of old superstitions and under the protection of
so-called Christian governments. They are here represented as
saying very truly: "The Lord hath put us to silence, and
given us bitter poison-water to drink." The only refreshment
they may have is the cup which they have mixed (the poison of
bitter error, the "doctrine of devils," mingled with
the pure water of life, the truth of God's Word). Shall not such
as are of and who love Babylon, and who are therefore unready
to obey the command, "Come out of her," be forced to
drink the cup of their own mixing? Shall not such be forced to
admit the falsity of their doctrines? They surely shall; and they
will all be thoroughly nauseated by it. The next verse tells of
the disappointment of their expectations, which were that their
bitter (poison-water) doctrines would have converted the world
and brought about the Millennium. They say, "We looked for
peace, but no good came; and for a time of health, and behold
trouble!"--The disease of nominal Zion will grow rapidly
worse from the time of her visitation and rejection, when the
"Israelites indeed," obeying the divine call, begin
to come out of the nominal systems.
Some
wonder why the Lord does not institute a still greater reform
than any of the past, which have proved so futile and short-lived.
They ask, Why does he not pour
<PAGE 159> out a blessing upon all the great
sects and amalgamate them all into one, or else upon some one
and purify it of dross, and draw all others into it? But, we ask,
Why not also amalgamate all the kingdoms of earth into one, and
purify it?
It
should be sufficient for all of God's children to know that such
is not what he reveals as his plan. And a little further reflection,
from the standpoint of God's Word, shows us the unreasonableness
of such a suggestion. Consider the number of the professed church
(four hundred millions) and ask yourself, How many of these would
themselves claim to be fully consecrated, mind and body,
to the Lord and the service of his plan? Your own observation
must lead you to the conclusion that to separate the "wheat"
from the "tares," by removing the "tares,"
would in almost every instance leave but a small handful even
in the largest church buildings or cathedrals.
The
reason for not attempting to purify the nominal systems is that
no amount of cleansing would make the unconsecrated mass of "Christendom"
and their organizations, civil and ecclesiastical, suitable to
the Lord's work, now to be commenced in the earth. During the
past eighteen centuries he has been selecting the truly consecrated,
the worthy ones, and now all that remains to be done is to select
from among the living those of the same class--and they are but
few--as only a few are lacking to complete the foreordained number
of members in the body of Christ.
The
reason for discarding all human organizations, and not reforming
the least objectionable one and calling out of all others into
it, now, is shown by our Lord's treatment of the various Jewish
sects in the harvest or close of their dispensation; for then,
as now, all were rejected, and the "Israelites indeed"
were called out of all, into freedom, and taught the will and
plan of God by various chosen vessels of God's own selection.
<PAGE 160> Illustrating
this subject to the Jews, the Lord in two parables explained the
wisdom of his course: first, that a patch of new cloth upon a
very old garment would only make the weakness of the garment more
noticeable, and from the inequality of strength the rent would
be made greater; second, that new wine put into old wine-skins,
out of which all the stretch and elasticity had gone, would be
sure to damage, rather than benefit, for the result would be not
only to speedily burst and destroy the old wine-skins, but also
to lose the valuable new wine.
Our
Lord's new doctrines were the new wine, while the Jewish sects
were the old wine-skins. Suppose that our Lord had joined one
of those sects and had begun a reform in it: what would have been
the result? There can be no doubt that the new truths, if received,
would have broken up that sect completely. The power of its organization,
built largely upon sectarian pride, and cemented by errors, superstitions
and human traditions, would forthwith have been destroyed, and
the new doctrines would have been left stranded --hampered, too,
by all the old errors and traditions of that sect, and held responsible
for its past record by the world in general.
For
the same reasons, the Lord here, in the present harvest, in introducing
the fuller light of truth, at the dawn of the Millennial age,
does not put it as a patch upon any of the old systems, nor as
new wine into old skins. First, because none of them are in a
fit condition to be patched, or to receive the new doctrines.
Second, because the new truths, if received, would soon begin
to work, and would develop a power which would burst any sect,
no matter how thoroughly organized and bound. If tried, one after
another, the result would be the same, and, in the end, the new
wine (doctrines) would have none to contain and preserve it.
<PAGE 161> The
proper and best course was the one followed by our Lord at the
first advent. He made an entirely new garment out of the new stuff,
and put the new wine into new wine-skins; i.e., he called out
the Israelites indeed (non-sectarian), and committed to them the
truths then due. And so now: he is calling out the truth-hungry
from nominal spiritual Israel; and it becomes them to accept the
truth in the Lord's own way, and to cooperate with him heartily
in his plan, no matter which, or how many, of the old wine-skins
are passed by and rejected as unfit to contain it. Rejoice, rather,
that you are counted worthy to have this new wine of present truth
testified to you, and, as fast as proved, receive it and act upon
it gladly.
Those
who at the first advent waited to learn the opinion and follow
the lead of prominent sectarians, and who inquired, "Have
any of the scribes or Pharisees believed on him?" did not
receive the truth, because they were followers of men rather than
of God; for prominent sectarians then did not accept of Christ's
teaching, and the same class always have been, and still are,
the blindest leaders of the blind. Instead of accepting the truth
and being blessed, they "fall" in the time of trial.
The old garment and the old wine-skins are so out of condition
as to be totally unfit for further use.
Since
it is the Lord who calls his people out of Babylon, we cannot
doubt that, whatever may be his agencies for giving the call,
all truly his people will hear it; and not only will their obedience
be tested by the call, but also their love of Babylon and affinity
for her errors will be tested. If they approve her doctrines,
methods, etc., so as to be loathe to leave her, they will prove
themselves unworthy of present truth, and deserving of her coming
plagues. But the words of the call indicate that God's true people
in Babylon are
<PAGE 162> not to be considered as implicated
in her sins of worldliness and ignoring of divine truth, up
to the time they shall learn that Babylon is fallen--cast
off. Then, if they continue in her, they are esteemed
as being of her, in the sense of approving her wrong deeds
and doctrines, past and present, and shall be counted as partakers
of her sins, and therefore meriting a share of their punishment,
the plagues coming upon her. See
`Rev. 18:4`.
How
strong the expression, "She is become the habitation of demons,
and the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of every unclean
and hateful bird." How true it is, that the most execrable
of society seek and wear the garb of Christian profession and
ceremonialism, in some of the various quarters (sects) of Babylon.
Every impure principle and doctrine, somehow and somewhere, finds
representation in her. And she is a "cage" which holds
securely not only the Lord's meek and gentle doves, but also many
unclean and hateful birds. Of all the defaulters, and deceivers
of men and of women, how many are professedly members of Christ's
Church! and how many even use their profession as a cloak under
which to forward evil schemes! It is well known that a majority
of even the most brutal criminals executed die in the Roman Catholic
communion.
Babylon
has contained both the best and the worst, both the cream and
the dregs, of the population of the civilized world. The cream
is the small class of truly consecrated ones, sadly mixed up with
the great mass of mere professors and the filthy, criminal dregs;
but under favorable conditions the cream class will be separated
in the present harvest, preparatory to being glorified.
As
an illustration of the proportion of the unclean and hateful birds,
in and out of Babylon, note the following official report of the
condition of society in a quarter of the wheatfield where "Orthodoxy"
has for centuries boasted of
<PAGE 163> the fine quality and purity of
its wheat and the fewness of its tares, and where "The
Church," so-called, has been associated with the government
in making the laws and in ruling the people:
The Status of Society in England and Wales
Parliamentary Report Made in 1873
Population by Religious Professions Roman Catholics.................................1,500,000
Church of England...............................6,933,935 Dissenters
[Protestants other than Episcopalians]
.........................7,234,158 Infidels........................................7,000,000
Jews............................................ 57,000
Total Number of Criminals in Jails Roman Catholics.................................
37,300 Church of England............................... 96,600
Dissenters...................................... 10,800 Infidels........................................
350 Jews............................................ 0
--------
145,050
Criminals to Every 100,000 Population Roman Catholics.................................
2,500 Church of England............................... 1,400 Dissenters......................................
150 Infidels........................................ 5 Jews............................................
0
Proportion of Criminals Roman Catholics.................................
1 in 40 Church of England............................... 1 in
72 Dissenters...................................... 1 in 666 Infidels.....................................
1 in 20,000
<PAGE 164> The
cause of this mixed condition is stated: "Babylon made all
the peoples drunk with the wine [spirit, influence] of her fornication"--worldly
affiliation. (`Rev. 18:3`) False
teachings concerning the character and mission of the Church,
and the claim that the time for her exaltation and reign had come
(and particularly after the great boom of success which her worldly
ambition received in the time of Constantine, when she claimed
to be the Kingdom of God set up to reign in power and great
glory), led many into Babylon, who would never have united with
her had she continued in the narrow way of sacrifice. Pride and
ambition led to the grasping of worldly power by the early Church.
To obtain the power, numbers and worldly influence were necessary.
And to obtain the numbers, which, under present conditions, the
truth never would have drawn, false doctrines were broached, and
finally obtained the ascendancy over all others; and even truths
which were still retained were disfigured and distorted. The numbers
came, even to hundreds of millions, and the true Church, the wheat,
still but a "little flock," was hidden among the millions
of tares. Here, as sheep in the midst of devouring wolves, the
true embryo Kingdom of God suffered violence, and the violent
took it by force; and, like their Lord, in whose footprints they
followed, they were despised and rejected of men, men of sorrows
and acquainted with grief.
But
now, as the Millennial morning dawns, and the doctrinal errors
of the dark night past are discovered, and the real gems of truth
are lighted up, the effect must be, as designed, to separate completely
the wheat from the tares. And, as false doctrines produced the
improper development, so the unfolding of truth in the light of
harvest will produce the separation. All of the tares and some
of the wheat are fearful, however. To them it seems that the dissolution
of Babylon would be the overthrow of God's work,
<PAGE 165> and the failure of his cause. But
not so: the tares never were wheat, and God never proposed to
recognize them as such. He merely permitted, "let,"
them both grow together until the harvest. It is from Babylon's
"cage" of unclean birds that God's people are called
out, that they may both enjoy the liberty and share the harvest
light and work, and prove themselves out of harmony with her errors
of doctrine and practice, and thus escape them and their reward--the
plagues coming upon all remaining in her.
These
plagues or troubles, foreshadowed in the troubles upon the rejected
Jewish house, are pictured in such lurid symbols in the book of
Revelation that many students have very exaggerated and wild ideas
on this subject, and are therefore unprepared for the realities
now closely impending. They often interpret the symbols literally,
and hence are unprepared to see them fulfilled as they will be--by
religious, social and political disturbances, controversies, upheavals,
reactions, revolutions, etc.
But
note another item here. Between the time when Babylon is cast
off, falls from favor (1878), and the time when the plagues or
troubles come upon her, is a brief interval, during which the
faithful of the Lord's people are all to be informed on this subject,
and gathered out of Babylon. This is clearly shown in the same
verse; for with the message, "Babylon is fallen," is
coupled the call, "Come out of her, my people, that
ye...receive not of her [coming] plagues." This same
interval of time, and the same work to be accomplished in it,
are also referred to in symbol, in `Rev.
7:3`. To the messenger of wrath the command is given, "Hurt
not the earth, neither the sea, nor the trees, until we
have SEALED the servants of our God in their foreheads."
The forehead sealing indicates that a mental comprehension of
the truth will be the mark or seal which will separate and distinguish
the servants of God from the servants and votaries
<PAGE 166> of Babylon. And this agrees with
Daniel's testimony: "The wise [of thy people] shall understand;
but none of the wicked [unfaithful to their covenant] shall understand."
(`Dan. 12:10`) Thus the classes are
to be marked and separated before the plagues come upon rejected,
cast off Babylon.
And
that this knowledge is to be both a sealing and a separating
agent is clearly implied in the verse before considered; for the
declaration is first made, that "Babylon is fallen,"
and that certain plagues or punishments are coming upon her, before
the Lord's people are expected to obey the command, "Come
out," based upon that knowledge. Indeed, we know that
all must be well "sealed in their foreheads" --intelligently
informed--concerning God's plan, before they can rightly appreciate
or obey this command.
And
is it not apparent that this very work of sealing the servants
of God is now progressing? Are we not being sealed in our foreheads?
and that, too, at the very proper time? Are we not being led,
step by step, as by the Lord's own hand--by his Word--to an appreciation
of truth and affairs in general from his standpoint--reversing
our former opinions derived from other sources, on many subjects?
Is it not true that the various divisions or sects of Babylon
have not been the channels through which this sealing has come
to us, but rather that they have been hindrances which prevented
its speedier accomplishment? And do we not see the propriety of
it, as well as of the Lord's declaration, that a separation of
wheat and tares must occur in the harvest? And do we not see it
to be his plan, to reveal the facts to his faithful, and then
to expect them to show their hearty sympathy with that plan by
prompt obedience? What if to obey and come out obliges us to leave
behind the praise of men, or a comfortable salary, or a parsonage
home, or financial aids in business, or domestic peace, or what
not?--
<PAGE 167> yet let us not fear. He who says
to us "Come!" is the same who said "Come!"
to Peter when he walked on the sea. Peter, in obeying, would have
sunk, had not the Lord's outstretched arm upheld him; and the
same arm supports them well who now, at his command, come out
of Babylon. Look not at the boisterous sea of difficulties between,
but, looking directly to the Lord, be of good courage.
The
command is Come, not Go; because in coming out of bondage to human
traditions, and creeds, and systems, and errors, we are coming
directly to our Lord, to be taught and fed by him, to be strengthened
and perfected to do all his pleasure, and to stand, and
not to fall with Babylon.
God's
Word reveals the fact that the nominal church, after its fall
from his favor and from being his mouthpiece (`Rev.
3:16`), will gradually settle into a condition of unbelief,
in which the Bible will eventually be entirely ignored in fact,
though retained in name, and in which philosophic speculations
of various shades will be the real creeds. From this fall the
faithful sealed ones will escape; for they will be "accounted
worthy to escape all these things that shall come to pass,
and to stand"--not fall, in the time of the Lord's presence.
(`Luke 21:36`) In fact, many are
already thus settling --retaining the forms of worship, and faith
in a Creator and in a future life, but viewing these chiefly through
their own or other men's philosophies and theories, and ignoring
the Bible as an infallible teacher of the divine purposes. These,
while retaining the Bible, disbelieve its narratives, especially
that of Eden and the fall. Retaining the name of Jesus, and calling
him the Christ and the Savior, they regard him merely as an excellent
though not infallible exemplar, and reject entirely his ransom-sacrifice--his
cross. Claiming the Fatherhood of God to extend to sinners, they
repudiate both the curse and the Mediator.
It
has not been generally observed that at the first advent
<PAGE 168> our Lord's ministry of three and
a half years, up to the casting off of the Jewish nation (their
church and nation being one), was a trial or testing of that polity
or system as a whole, rather than of its individual
members. Its clerical class-- Priests, Scribes and Pharisees--represented
that system as a whole. They themselves claimed thus to represent
Judaism (`John 7:48,49`), and the
people so regarded them; hence the force of the inquiry, Have
any of the rulers or Pharisees believed on him? And our Lord so
recognized them: he rarely rebuked the people for failure
to receive him, but repeatedly held responsible the "blind
leaders," who would neither enter into the Kingdom themselves,
nor permit the people, who otherwise would have received Jesus
as Messiah and King, to do so.
Our
Lord's constant effort was to avoid publicity--to prevent his
miracles and teachings from inciting the people, lest they
should take him by force, and make him king (`John
6:15`); and yet he constantly brought these testimonies
or evidences of his authority and Messiahship to the notice of
the Jewish clergy, up to the time when, their trial as a church-nation
being ended, their house or system was cast off, "left desolate."
Then, by his direction and under the apostles' teachings, all
efforts were directed to the people individually; and the cast
off church-organization and its officers, as such, were wholly
ignored.
In
evidence that during his ministry, and until their system was
rejected, the teachers and priests represented it, note the Lord's
course with the cleansed leper, as recorded in
`Matt. 8:4`. Jesus said to him, "See thou tell
no man; but go thy way, show thyself to the priest
and offer the gift that Moses commanded, for a testimony unto
THEM." The evidence or testimony was to be hidden from the
people for a time, but to be promptly given to their "rulers,"
who represented the Jewish church in the trial then in progress.
<PAGE 169> We
should notice particularly the object and results of the trial
of the Jewish church as a system, because of their typical bearing
upon the present trial of the Gospel Church, as well as their
relationship toward the entire plan of God. They professed, in
harmony with God's promises, to be the people ready for
the coming Messiah, the people whom he would organize, empower,
direct and use as his "own people," in blessing
all the other nations of the earth, by bringing all to a full
knowledge of God and to opportunities of harmony with his righteous
laws. God, though by his foreknowledge aware that Fleshly Israel
would be unfit for the chief place in this great work, nevertheless
gave them every opportunity and advantage the same as though he
were ignorant of the results. Meanwhile he disclosed his foreknowledge
in prophetic statements which they could not comprehend, lest
we should suppose that he had experimented, and failed,
in his dealings with the Jewish people.
So
long as Israel as a church-nation claimed to be ready, waiting
and anxious to carry out their part of the program, it was but
just that they should be tested, before God's further plan
should go into effect. That further plan was, that when the natural
seed of Abraham should, by their testing, be proved unfit for
the chief honor promised and sought, then an election or selection
should be made, during the Gospel age, of individuals worthy of
the high honor of being the promised seed of Abraham, and joint-heirs
with Messiah in the promised Kingdom, which would lift up and
bless all the families of the earth. `Gal.
3:16,27-29,14`
The
"seventy-weeks" (490 years) of divine favor promised
to the Jewish people could not fail of fulfilment; and hence in
no sense could Gentiles, or even Samaritans, be invited to become
disciples, or in any sense to be associated with the Kingdom which
Christ and the apostles preached. (`Acts
3:26`) "It was necessary that the word of God
[the invitation
<PAGE 170> to share the Kingdom] should first
have been preached to you," said Paul, addressing
Jews. (`Acts 13:46`) "Go not
into the way of the Gentiles, and into any city of the Samaritans
enter ye not; but go rather to the lost sheep of the house of
Israel"; and again: "I am not sent, except to the lost
sheep of the house of Israel," said the Master, sending forth
his disciples. `Matt. 10:5; 15:24`
The
entire "seventieth week," in the midst of which Christ
died--the seven years from the beginning of our Lord's ministry
to the sending of Peter to preach to Cornelius, the first Gentile
convert--was set apart by God's arrangement for the Jewish trial.
But instead of testing them as a whole (as a church-nation) all
of those seven years, that testing was "cut short in righteousness"--that
is, not to their disadvantage, but to their advantage. Because
it was evident, not only to God but to men also, that the Pharisees,
priests and scribes not only rejected, but toward the last hated,
the Lord Jesus and sought to kill him; therefore, when the time
had come for him to offer himself publicly as King, riding
to them on the ass, when not received by the representatives of
the church-nation, the King promptly disowned that system, though
the common people received him gladly and insisted on his recognition
as king. (`Mark 12:37`) Thus our
Lord cut short the further useless trial, in order that the remainder
of that "seventieth week" might be spent specially and
exclusively upon the people, the individuals of
that cast-off system--before the efforts of the ministers of the
new dispensation should be distributed broadcast to all nations.
And it was so; for our Lord, after his resurrection, when telling
his disciples that their efforts need no longer be confined to
Jews only, but might be extended to "all nations," was
particular to add--"beginning at Jerusalem."
(`Luke 24:47`) And he knew well that
their Jewish ideas would hinder them from going beyond the Jews
until
<PAGE 171> he should in due time open the
way--as he did at the end of their favor, by sending Peter to
Cornelius. Since that time, individual Jews and Gentiles have
shared the privileges of God's favor equally, both being alike
acceptable, in and through Christ; for in the present call "there
is no difference" so far as God is concerned--the difference
unfavorable to the Jew being his own prejudice against accepting,
as a gift through Christ, the blessings once offered him
upon condition of his actual compliance with the full letter and
spirit of God's law, which none in the fallen state could fulfil.
That
"seventieth week," with all the particulars of the testing
of Fleshly Israel, not only accomplished the purpose of testing
that system, but it also and specially furnished a typical representation
of a similar testing of the nominal Gospel Church or Spiritual
Israel, called "Christendom" and "Babylon,"
during seven corresponding years, which began the harvest of the
Gospel age--the period from October 1874 to October 1881. "Christendom,"
"Babylon," professes to see the failure of its prototype,
Fleshly Israel, and claims to be the true spiritual seed
of Abraham, and to be ready, waiting and anxious to convert the
heathen world, and to righteously rule and teach and bless all
nations, just as the Jewish system professed. The present is like
the typical age, also, in the fact that the leaders then had generally
come to regard the promises of a coming Messiah as figurative
expressions; and only the commoner class of the people expected
a personal Messiah. The learned among the Jews, then, ignored
an individual Messiah, and expected that their church-nation would
triumph over others by reason of its superior laws, and thus fulfil
all that the common people supposed would require a personal Messiah
to accomplish. (And this is the view that is still held by "learned"
Jewish teachers, or Rabbis, who interpret the Messianic
<PAGE 172> prophecies as applicable to their
church-nation, and not to an individual Savior of the world. Even
the prophecies which refer to the sufferings of Christ they apply
to their sufferings as a people.) Carrying out their theory, they
were sending missionaries throughout the world, to convert the
world to the Law of Moses, expecting thus to reach and "bless
all the families of the earth," aside from a personal Messiah.
To such an extent was this the case, that our Lord remarked it,
saying, "Ye compass sea and land to make one proselyte."
How
similar to this is the theory of nominal "Christendom"
today. The common people, when their attention is drawn to the
fact that the Lord promised to come again, and that the apostles
and prophets predicted that the Millennium, or Times of Restitution,
would result from the second coming of the Lord (`Acts
3:19-21`), are inclined to accept the truth and to rejoice
in it, just as a similar class did at the first advent. But today,
as eighteen hundred years ago, the chief priests and rulers of
the people have a more advanced (?) idea. They claim that the
promises of Millennial blessedness, of peace on earth and good
will among men, can and must be brought about by their efforts,
missions, etc., without the personal coming of the Lord Jesus;
and thus they make void the promises of the second advent and
the coming Kingdom.
The
present chief priests and rulers, the "clergy" of "Christendom,"
deceiving themselves as well as the people, claim, and seemingly
believe, that their missionary efforts are just about to succeed,
and that, without the Lord, they are now upon the eve of introducing
to the world all the Millennial blessings portrayed in the Scriptures.
The
foundation of this delusion lies partly in the fact that the increase
of knowledge and of running to and fro in the earth, incident
to this "Day of His Preparation," have been
<PAGE 173> specially favorable to the spread
of the commerce of civilized nations, and the consequent increase
of worldly prosperity. The credit of all this Babylon coolly appropriates
to herself, pointing out all these advantages as the results of
her Christianizing and energizing influences. She proudly points
to the "Christian nation" of Great Britain, and to her
wealth and prosperity, as results of her Christian principles.
But what are the facts? Every step of progress which that nation
or any other nation has made has been only to the extent of the
effort exercised to cast off the yoke of Babylon's oppression.
In proportion as Great Britain threw off the fetters of Papal
oppression, she has prospered; and in proportion as she continued
to hold and to be influenced by the Papal doctrines of church
and state union, of divinely appointed kingly and priestly authority
and oppression, and to submit to the tyranny of greed and selfishness,
to that extent is she degraded still.
Greed
for gold and ambition for power were the energies by which the
ports of heathen lands were reluctantly opened up to the commerce
of so-called Christian nations, to English and German rum and
opium, and to American whiskey and tobacco. The love of God and
the blessing of the heathen nations had no place in these efforts.
Here is an apparently small item of current history that ought
to startle the consciences of so-called Christian nations, if
they have any. The Mohammedan Emir of Nupe, West Africa, recently
sent the following message to Bishop Crowther, of the Niger mission:
"It
is not a long matter; it is about barasa [rum]. Barasa, barasa,
barasa! It has ruined our country; it has ruined our people very
much; it has made our people mad. I beg you, Malam Kip, don't
forget this writing; because we all beg that he [Crowther] should
ask the great priests [the committee of the Anglican Church Mission
Society] that they
<PAGE 174> should beg the English Queen [Head
of the Church of England] to prevent bringing barasa into this
land.
"For
God and the Prophet's sake! For God and the Prophet, his messenger's
sake, he must help us in this matter --that of barasa. Tell him,
may God bless him in his work. This is the mouth word from Malike,
the Emir of Nupe."
Commenting
on this a Baptist journal remarks:
"This
humble negro ruler reveals in this letter a concern for his people
which Christian monarchs and governments have not yet reached;
for no European Christian ruler, and no President of the United
States, has ever yet so appealed in behalf of his people. In all
the addresses opening Parliaments, in all the Presidential messages,
no such passage has ever been found. All shame to our Christian
rulers! Gain, the accursed hunger for gold, is the law with merchants;
and these are the darlings and lords of governments."
Then,
in the name of truth, we ask, Why call these Christian governments?
And the government of the United States is no exception, though
so many persist in denominating it a Christian government, while
properly it does not recognize the undeserved title, though urged
to do so by zealous sectarians. From Boston, vast cargoes of rum
are continually sent to Africa, unchecked by the government, and
with its full permission, while it grants licenses to tens of
thousands to manufacture and deal out to its own citizens the
terrible "fire-water," made doubly injurious and seductive
by what is called rectifying, that is, by the legalized mixture
of the rankest poisons. All this, and much more, is justified
and defended by "Christian" statesmen and rulers of
so-called Christian nations, for revenue--as the easiest
way of collecting from the people a share of the necessary expenses
of the government. Surely this is prostitution of the lowest and
worst type. Every thinking man must see how out of place is the
name Christian, when applied to even the very best of present
governments. The attempt to
<PAGE 175> fit the name Christian to the characters
of "the kingdoms of this world," ruled by the "prince
of this world"--Satan-- and imbued with the "spirit
of the world," has perplexed all truly Christian hearts,
deluded by this error of supposing the present governments of
the world to be in any sense Christ's Kingdom.
Says
Cannon Farrar in the Contemporary Review:
"The
old rapacity of the slave-trade has been followed by the greedier
and more ruinous rapacity of the drink-seller. Our fathers tore
from the neck of Africa a yoke of whips: we have subjected the
native races to a yoke of scorpions. We have opened the rivers
of Africa to commerce, only to pour down them the raging phlegethon
of alcohol, than which no river of the Inferno is more blood-red
or accursed. Is the conscience of the nation dead?"
We
answer, No! The nation never was Christian, and consequently never
had a Christian conscience or a Christian spirit. The most
that can be said of it is, that the light from God's truly consecrated
children has enlightened, refined and shamed into a measure of
moral reform the public sentiment of those nations in which they
"shine as lights."
In
like manner a similarly horrid traffic was forced upon China and
Japan, against their earnest protest, by the same Christian (?)
governments. In 1840 Great Britain began a war with China, called
the "Opium War," to compel the Chinese government, which
wished to protect its people from that terrible curse, to admit
that article. The war resulted favorably to the devil's side of
the question. British warships destroyed thousands of lives and
homes, and forced the heathen Chinese ruler to open the empire
to the slower death of opium--the intoxicant of China. The net
revenue of the British government from this drug, after paying
large expenses for collecting the revenue, amounted, according
to official reports published in 1872,
<PAGE 176> to over $37,000,000 for the preceding
year. This, $37,000,000 per year, was the inspiring cause of that
war, the very reverse of love for either the present or future
welfare of the Chinese. The clause in the treaty providing protection
to Christian missionaries was merely a morsel cunningly thrown
in to appease the consciences of justice-loving people--to make
a great crime appear to be a mercy, in kindness done. In the treaty
at the end of the war, certain ports were made free to British
trade, and similar treaties with other nations followed, and some
good results were thereby secured. One of these was the opening
of China to civilizing influences. But the fact that a few Christian
men and women stepped to the front to teach the people some of
the principles of righteousness is not to be reflected to the
credit of the British nation, whose object was trade, and
which, for greed of gold, and not for the good of the Chinese
or the glory of God, waged an unholy and unjust war upon a people
not so skilled in the devilish art.
Along
with other vices, "Christendom" has taught the nations
the worst form of idolatry, the idolatry of self and wealth and
power, for which professedly Christian men and nations are willing
to defraud, to injure and even to kill one another. It has also
taught them blasphemy and sacrilege in every language; for every
ship's crew, from every professedly Christian nation, blasphemes
the name of Christ. But, while such has been the influence of
the so-called Christian nations, from their midst have also gone
some noble missionaries of the cross, some real servants of God,
and also some less noble, the servants of men--in all, however,
but a mere handful--to tell the heathen about Christ and real
civilization.
It
is not the earnest missionaries but the sanguine home officers
of missionary societies, who have little idea of, and often little
actual interest in, the real situation in foreign lands, and whose
views are based mainly upon the large
<PAGE 177> sum annually collected and expended,
who think the heathen world almost converted, and their efforts
about to eventuate in the promised Millennial blessings, without
the Lord's second coming. Missionaries who have been to the front
confess, generally, to great discouragement, except when they
can stimulate their hope out of all proportion to actual experience
and sound judgment. Thus, one such-- Rev. J. C. R. Ewing, D. D.--who
had spent nine years in mission work in India, in delivering a
discourse recently before the Young Men's Christian Association
of Pittsburgh, Pa., admitted that the present effect of
civilization and missionary effort is not only to break down the
heathen religions, but to abolish all religious faith and to make
the people infidels. But his strong hope is that the next step
will be from Infidelity to Christianity--an unreasonable hope,
surely, as all experience here, in civilized lands, most certainly
proves. We extract from the public press reports of his discourse,
as follows:
"India
owes more to the direct and indirect influences of Christianity
than to any other one thing. It has done much to break down the
old idea of material gods, and in its stead to set up the idea
of a single supreme God, that the people of the West [Europe and
America] entertain. [A more explicit statement would be that they
are receiving the idea, common to Atheism, that Nature is the
supreme and only God.]
"Among
the 263,000,000 of people in that country there are 10,000,000
young men who speak the English language and are instructed in
the Western ideas that we are taught. The higher caste are thoroughly
learned in the literature, the religion and the sciences that
are the basis of the education of the people of this country.
The old idea of a vengeful God, who must be propitiated by numerous
gifts and many prayers, has given way to the modern spirit of
Infidelity. The educated men of the East no longer believe in
the gods of their fathers. They have abandoned them forever, and
replaced them with the teachings of Colonel Robert G. Ingersoll,
<PAGE 178> of Paine, of Voltaire, of Bradlaugh
and of every other atheistical and pantheistical teacher. This
skeptical age will soon pass away, and the West, just as it has
given India her ideas, will give her the religion of the Christian
God.
"The
young men of India are well educated, acute observers, intelligent,
well posted in all the affairs of other nations besides their
own, and, though it may seem strange, well acquainted with our
Bible. Indeed, they know it so well that none but a man thoroughly
conversant with its teachings, and the Christian theology, could
hope to be able to successfully answer all the objections they
bring forward against it. The popular idea, that a missionary
sits in the shade of a tree and teaches naked savages who gather
around him, is an exploded one. In India the missionary meets
intelligent and educated men, and he must be well equipped to
influence them. They are, besides being intelligent, a fine looking
people, amiable, courteous, gentlemanly, and treat all foreigners
with the greatest consideration and respect."
The
obstinate facts he cites certainly do not warrant the gentleman's
unreasonable hopes. Experience has surely proved that the bungling
arguments of sectarianism, whose errors distort and vitiate what
truth they possess, seldom make converts of either honest or scoffing
skeptics. Surely, all but the blind can see that if the ten
hundred millions of heathendom were converted to the condition
of the four hundred millions* of so-called Christendom,
the question would be an open one, as it was in the Jewish age
(`Matt. 23:15`), whether they would
not be two-fold more fit for destruction than they were in their
original heathen superstitions. Surely no sane mind could claim
that conversion to such a condition as that of so-called Christendom
would fulfil the description of the Millennial peace and good
will, foretold ---------- *Of these 400,000,000, Roman and Greek
Catholics together claim 280,000,000, while Protestants claim
120,000,000.
<PAGE 179> by the prophets, and briefly summed
up in our Lord's prayer, in the words, "Thy kingdom come;
thy will be done on earth, as it is done in heaven."
`Luke 11:2`
Is
it at all surprising that this mass of four hundred millions,
professedly constituting the Church of Christ, and calling itself
his Kingdom--"Christendom"--is disowned by the Lord,
and by him given the more appropriate name, Babylon (mixture,
confusion)? And is it any wonder that with their ideas of the
Kingdom of Christ, and of the manner and results of its spread
throughout the world, these should be unprepared for the real
Kingdom, and unwilling to receive the new King, as, for similar
reasons, the rulers of the typical house were unprepared at the
first advent? Nor can it be doubted that those emperors, kings
and princes who now use influence and power chiefly for self-aggrandizement,
and who equip and maintain millions of armed men to protect and
to continue them in their imperial extravagances and lordly positions,
would rather see millions slaughtered, and other millions made
widows and orphans, as in the past, than that they should part
with their present advantages. Is it any wonder that these should
neither desire, nor expect, nor believe in the kind of Kingdom
promised in the Scriptures?--a kingdom in which the high and lofty
and proud shall be brought low, and the lowly lifted up to the
general, proper and designed level? Is it any wonder that all
in sympathy with any kind of oppression, extortion, or grinding
monopoly, by which they obtain, or hope to obtain, unjust advantage
over their fellow-creatures, would be slow to believe in the Kingdom
of righteousness in which no injustice and overreaching will be
permitted? Especially, can we wonder that such are slow to believe
this Kingdom nigh, even at the doors?
Nor
can we wonder that the great ones, the chief priests and rulers
of "Christendom," looking each to gain from his own
quarter or sect (`Isa. 56:11`), fail
to recognize, and therefore
<PAGE 180> reject, the spiritual King now
present, as the teachers of the fleshly house rejected him when
present in the flesh. And as the Lord rejected, cut off and cast
away from favor, into a fire of trouble, many of the "natural
branches" of the olive tree, preserving only the Israelites
indeed as branches, do we not see that, in the harvest of this
age, the same wisdom tests the "wild branches" also
(`Rom. 11:21,22`), and cuts off from
favor and fatness of the root [the Abrahamic promise] this great
mass of professed branches, whose character and aims and dispositions
are foreign and wild indeed --very different from the promise
and plan of God represented in the root?
It
is not strange that the present harvest witnesses the separation
of true Christians from mere professors, as in the Jewish harvest
a separation of Israelites indeed from mere professors was accomplished.
It is only what we might reasonably have expected, even had there
been no revelation made to us in God's Word, showing the fact
of the rejection of the mass, as Babylon. Compare
`Rom. 11:20-22` with `Rev. 3:16;
18:4`.
The
rejection of Babylon ("Christendom"), in 1878, was the
rejection of the mass of professors--the "host," as
it is termed by Daniel, to distinguish it from the sanctuary or
temple class. The sanctuary class will not be given up, nor left
desolate. No, thank God, the sanctuary is to be glorified; the
glory of the Lord is to fill his temple, when its last living
stone is polished and approved and set in place. (`1
Pet. 2:5,6`) We have seen how such a sanctuary class has
existed throughout the age, how it was defiled, and its precious
vessels (doctrines) profaned, and how its cleansing from error
has been gradually effected. This class had all along been the
real Church, even while the nominal systems were still in a measure
recognized and to some extent used. After the rejection of the
nominal systems, however,
<PAGE 181> now as in the Jewish harvest, the
real Church or Sanctuary class alone is recognized and used as
God's mouthpiece. Caiaphas, a chief-priest of Fleshly Israel,
was used as the agent of God to deliver a great lesson and prophecy
only a few days before that system was cast off. (See
`John 11:50,51,55; 18:14`.) But we have no intimation in
the Scriptures, nor any reason for supposing, that God ever used
or recognized that church-nation, its rulers and representatives,
after it was cast off. And this same lesson should be recognized,
here, in connection with Babylon. She is "spewed
out" of the Lord's mouth; and neither the voice of the Bridegroom
nor of the bride shall be heard in her any more forever.
`Rev. 18:23`
It
is in vain that some attempt to make a plea for their quarter
of Babylon, and, while admitting the general correctness of the
prophetic portrait, to claim that their sect, or their particular
congregation, is an exception to the general character of Babylon,
and that, therefore, the Lord cannot be calling upon them to withdraw
from it formally and publicly, as they once joined it.
Let
such consider that we are now in the harvest time of separation,
and remember our Lord's expressed reason for calling us out of
Babylon, namely, "that ye be not partakers of her sins."
Consider, again, why Babylon is so named. Evidently, because of
her many errors of doctrine, which, mixed with a few elements
of divine truth, make great confusion, and because of the mixed
company brought together by the mixed truths and errors. And since
they will hold the errors at a sacrifice of truth, the latter
is made void, and often worse than meaningless. This sin, of holding
and teaching error at the sacrifice of truth is one of which every
sect of the Church nominal is guilty, without exception. Where
is the sect which will assist you in diligently searching the
Scriptures, to grow thereby in grace and in the
<PAGE 182> knowledge of the truth? Where is
the sect which will not hinder your growth, both by its doctrines
and its usages? Where is the sect in which you can obey the Master's
words and let your light shine? We know of none.
If
any of God's children in these organizations do not realize their
bondage, it is because they do not attempt to use their liberty,
because they are asleep at their posts of duty, when they should
be active stewards and faithful watchmen. (`1
Thess. 5:5,6`) Let them wake up and attempt to use the
liberty they think they possess; let them show to their fellow-worshippers
wherein their creeds fall short of the divine plan, wherein they
diverge from it and run in direct opposition to it; let them show
how Jesus Christ by the favor of God tasted death for every
man; how this fact, and the blessings flowing from it, shall
"in due time" be testified to every man; how in "the
times of refreshing" the blessings of restitution shall flow
to the whole human race. Let them show further the high calling
of the Gospel Church, the rigid conditions of membership in that
body, and the special mission of the Gospel age to take out this
peculiar "people for his name," which in due time is
to be exalted and to reign with Christ. Those who will thus attempt
to use their liberty to preach the good tidings in the synagogues
of today will succeed either in converting whole congregations,
or else in awakening a storm of opposition. They will surely cast
you out of their synagogues, and separate you from their company,
and say all manner of evil against you, falsely, for Christ's
sake. And, in so doing, doubtless, many will feel that they are
doing God service. But, if thus faithful, you will be more than
comforted in the precious promises of `Isaiah
66:5` and `Luke 6:22`--"Hear
the word of the Lord, ye that tremble at his Word: Your brethren
that hated you, that cast you out for my name's sake, said, Let
the Lord be glorified [we do this for the Lord's glory]: but he
<PAGE 183> shall appear to your joy, and they
shall be ashamed." "Blessed are ye when men shall hate
you, and when they shall separate you from their company, and
shall reproach you, and cast out your name as evil, for the Son
of man's sake. Rejoice ye in that day, and leap for joy; for,
behold, your reward is great in heaven; for in like manner did
their fathers unto the prophets." But, "Woe unto you
when all men shall speak well of you; for so did their fathers
to the false prophets."
If
all with whom you worship as a congregation are saints--if all
are wheat, with no tares among them--you have met a most remarkable
people, who will receive the harvest truths gladly. But if not,
you must expect present truth to separate the tares from the wheat.
And more, you must do your share in presenting these very truths
which will accomplish the separation.
If
you would be one of the overcoming saints, you must now be one
of the "reapers" to thrust in the sickle of truth. If
faithful to the Lord, worthy of the truth and worthy of joint-heirship
with him in glory, you will rejoice to share with the Chief Reaper
in the present harvest work--no matter how disposed you may be,
naturally, to glide smoothly through the world.
If
there are tares among the wheat in the congregation of which you
are a member, as is always the case, much will depend upon which
is in the majority. If the wheat preponderates, the truth, wisely
and lovingly presented, will affect them favorably; and the tares
will not long care to stay. But if the majority are tares--as
nine-tenths or more generally are--the effect of the most careful
and kind presentation of the harvest truth will be to awaken bitterness
and strong opposition; and, if you persist in declaring the good
tidings, and in exposing the long established errors, you will
soon be "cast out" for the good of the sectarian
<PAGE 184> cause, or have your liberties so
restrained that you cannot let your light shine in that congregation.
Your duty then is plain: Deliver your loving testimony to the
goodness and wisdom of the Lord's great plan of the ages, and,
wisely and meekly giving your reasons, publicly withdraw from
them.
There
are various degrees of bondage among the different sects of Babylon--"Christendom."
Some who would indignantly resent the utter and absolute slavery
of individual conscience and judgment, required by Romanism, are
quite willing to be bound themselves, and anxious to get others
bound, by the creeds and dogmas of one or another of the Protestant
sects. True, their chains are lighter and longer than those of
Rome and the Dark Ages. So far as it goes, this surely is good--reformation
truly--a step in the right direction--toward full liberty--toward
the condition of the Church in the apostolic times. But why wear
human shackles at all? Why bind and limit our consciences at all?
Why not stand fast in the full liberty wherewith Christ hath made
us free? Why not reject all the efforts of fallible fellowmen
to fetter conscience and hinder investigation?--not only the efforts
of the remote past, of the Dark Ages, but the efforts of the various
reformers of the more recent past? Why not conclude to be as was
the apostolic Church?--free to grow in knowledge as well
as in grace and love, as the Lord's "due time" reveals
his gracious plan more and more fully?
Surely
all know that whenever they join any of these human organizations,
accepting its Confession of Faith as theirs, they bind
themselves to believe neither more nor less than that creed expresses
on the subject. If, in spite of the bondage thus voluntarily yielded
to, they should think for themselves, and receive light from other
sources, in advance of the light enjoyed by the sect they have
joined, they must either prove untrue to the sect and to their
covenant with it, to believe nothing contrary to its Confession,
or else they
<PAGE 185> must honestly cast aside and repudiate
the Confession which they have outgrown, and come out of such
a sect. To do this requires grace and costs some effort, disrupting,
as it often does, pleasant associations, and exposing the honest
truth-seeker to the silly charges of being a "traitor"
to his sect, a "turncoat," one "not established,"
etc. When one joins a sect, his mind is supposed to be given up
entirely to that sect, and henceforth not his own. The sect undertakes
to decide for him what is truth and what is error; and he, to
be a true, staunch, faithful member, must accept the decisions
of his sect, future as well as past, on all religious matters,
ignoring his own individual thought, and avoiding personal investigation,
lest he grow in knowledge, and be lost as a member of such sect.
This slavery of conscience to a sect and creed is often stated
in so many words, when such a one declares that he "belongs"
to such a sect.
These
shackles of sectarianism, so far from being rightly esteemed as
shackles and bonds, are esteemed and worn as ornaments, as badges
of respect and marks of character. So far has the delusion gone,
that many of God's children would be ashamed to be known to be
without some such chains--light or heavy in weight, long or short
in the personal liberty granted. They are ashamed to say that
they are not in bondage to any sect or creed, but "belong"
to Christ only.
Hence
it is that we sometimes see an honest, truth-hungry child of God
gradually progressing from one denomination to another, as a child
passes from class to class in a school. If he be in the Church
of Rome, when his eyes are opened, he gets out of it, probably
falling into some branch of the Methodist or Presbyterian systems.
If here his desire for truth be not entirely quenched and his
spiritual senses stupefied with the spirit of the world, you may
a few years after find him in some of the branches of the Baptist
<PAGE 186> system; and, if he still continues
to grow in grace and knowledge and love of truth, and into an
appreciation of the liberty wherewith Christ makes free, you may
by and by find him outside of all human organizations, joined
merely to the Lord and to his saints, bound only by the tender
but strong ties of love and truth, like the early Church.
`1 Cor. 6:15,17`; `Eph. 4:15,16`
The
feeling of uneasiness and insecurity, if not bound by the chains
of some sect, is general. It is begotten of the false idea, first
promulgated by Papacy, that membership in an earthly organization
is essential, pleasing to the Lord and necessary to everlasting
life. These earthly, humanly organized systems, so different from
the simple, unfettered associations of the days of the
apostles, are viewed involuntarily and almost unconsciously by
Christian people as so many Heaven Insurance Companies, to some
one of which money, time, respect, etc., must be paid
regularly, to secure heavenly rest and peace after death. Acting
on this false idea, people are almost as nervously anxious to
be bound by another sect, if they step out of one, as they are
if their policy of insurance has expired, to have it renewed in
some respectable company.
But
no earthly organization can grant a passport to heavenly glory.
The most bigoted sectarian (aside from the Romanist) will not
claim, even, that membership in his sect will secure heavenly
glory. All are forced to admit that the true Church is the one
whose record is kept in heaven, and not on earth. They deceive
the people by claiming that it is needful to come to Christ
through them--needful to become members of some sectarian
body in order to become members of "the body of Christ,"
the true Church. On the contrary, the Lord, while he has not refused
any who came to him through sectarianism, and has turned no true
seeker
<PAGE 187> away empty, tells us that we need
no such hindrances, but could much better have come to him direct.
He cries, "Come unto me"; "take my yoke
upon you, and learn of me"; "my yoke is easy and my
burden is light, and ye shall find rest to your souls." Would
that we had given heed to his voice sooner. We would have avoided
many of the heavy burdens of sectism, many of its bogs of despair,
many of its doubting castles, its vanity fairs, its lions of worldly-mindedness,
etc.
Many,
however, born in the various sects, or transplanted in infancy
or childhood, without questioning the systems, have grown free
in heart, and unconsciously beyond the limits and bounds of the
creeds they acknowledge by their profession and support with their
means and influence. Few of these have recognized the advantages
of full liberty, or the drawbacks of sectarian bondage. Nor was
the full, complete separation enjoined until now, in the harvest
time. Now the Lord's words are heard, Come out from among them:
be ye clean (free, both from wrong practices and from false doctrines),
ye who bear the vessels (truths-- doctrines) of the Lord.
`Isa. 52:11`
Now
the ax is laid to the root of the nominal Christian system--Babylon,
"Christendom"--as it was to the nominal Jewish system
at the first advent; and the great system in which the "fowl
of heaven" delight to roost, and which they have grievously
befouled (`Luke 13:18,19`), and which
has in fact become "a cage of every unclean and hateful bird"
(`Rev. 18:2`), is to be hewn down,
and shall deceive the world no longer. Instead, the true olive
tree, whose roots are the true promises of God, and whose branches
are the truly and fully consecrated and faithful ones of this
Gospel age, whose names are "written in heaven,"
will be seen to be the true and only joint-heir and Bride of the
Lamb. `Rev. 17:14`
<PAGE 188>
The Testing and Sifting of the Sanctuary Class
Though
coming out of Babylon is one step, and a long one, in the direction
of complete overcoming, it is by no means the last one; and we
should be careful to guard against a disposition to rest after
every advance step of the way.
"Ne'er think the victory won,
Nor once at ease sit down:
Thine arduous work will not be done
Till thou hast gained thy crown.
"A cloud of witnesses around
Hold thee in full survey.
Forget the steps already trod,
And onward urge thy way."
The
step out of Babylon has generally been preceded by other steps
of obedience, which in turn have exercised and strengthened the
character for subsequent conflicts and victories. And it will
be followed by various other tests and opportunities for overcoming,
in view of which Paul (`Gal. 5:1`)
wrote, "Stand fast in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made
us free, and be not entangled again with a yoke of bondage."
Every one who comes to realize the liberty of the sons of God
and full freedom from Babylon's bondage should expect to meet
other attempts of the great adversary to bring him into other
bondages, or to stumble him. The Lord permits these severe testings,
that the class now sought may be manifested, and prepared for
his service in the Kingdom of glory.
An
illustration of this testing and sifting took place in the Jewish
harvest, foreshadowing what we may expect here. The temple or
sanctuary class at the first advent was represented by the Lord's
disciples, of whom he said, "Ye are clean, but not all [of
you]"; and following the casting off of nominal Israel (A.D.
33) came a severe testing to those representing God's temple,
the clean and the unclean, to separate
<PAGE 189> them. Peter was sifted, and almost
failed (`Luke 22:31`;
`Matt. 26:74,75`; `John 21:15-17`);
but, being "clean," true at heart, he was enabled to
come off victorious. Judas also was tested, and he proved to be
unclean, willing to sell the truth for earthly advantage, to deny
the Lord for money, even while kissing him in profession of love.
Just
so there is here, in this harvest, a cleansed sanctuary, and,
closely associated with it, some who are not clean. And since
the casting off of Babylon in 1878, and the call there made, to
come out of her, a testing and sifting work has been going on
amongst those who have come out. Doubtless Peter and Judas were
illustrations of similar classes here, among those who have come
out of Babylon, and who have been cleansed from many of her doctrinal
pollutions-- a class which remains faithful to the Lord and the
truth, and another class which proves unfaithful, which does not
follow on to know the Lord, but which turns aside to evil and
false doctrines, often worse than those from which they had escaped.
This
testing and sifting of the temple class, in this harvest since
1878, were foreshadowed by our Lord's typical act of cleansing
the typical temple after assuming the office of King and pronouncing
judgment against the nominal Jewish church. After declaring their
house left unto them desolate, he proceeded to the temple in Jerusalem,
typical of the true temple or sanctuary, and, making a scourge
of small cords, he used it in driving out the money changers;
and he overturned the tables of them that sold doves.
The
scourge of small cords used in that typical act represented the
various truths, used in the present harvest among the temple class,
to correct and prove, and to separate the unclean. The truths
now made manifest reveal so clearly the perfect will of God, the
import of full consecration to his service, and the narrowness
of the way which must be traveled
<PAGE 190> by those who walk in the Master's
footprints, that those who have joined themselves to this class
from any unclean motives are continually scourged by the truth,
until constrained to separate themselves from the sanctuary class.
Though
several of our Lord's parables show the general separation of
the "sanctuary" class from the "host," or
general mass of professing Christendom, there are two which go
still further and show the testing and sifting, afterward, of
the sanctuary class--the separation of the overcomers, who shall
inherit the Kingdom (`Rev. 3:21`),
from others of the honestly consecrated, who, overcome by the
spirit of the world, neglect to sacrifice present advantages and
honors of men, for the higher honors of God.
The
parable of the Ten Virgins, while it shows the entire virgin or
consecrated class being separated from Babylon, marks distinctly
a testing and separation to take place in this class also--a separation
of wise virgins, full of faith and fervent love and the
spirit of prompt obedience, from foolish virgins,
who allow their first love and fervency of spirit to cool, and
their faith and promptness of obedience consequently to abate.
The wise, living in full harmony with their covenant of entire
consecration to God, and earnestly watching for the Lord's promised
return, are prepared to appreciate the glad harvest message, to
recognize the foretold indications of the Master's presence, and
to stand whatever tests he may see fit to apply, to prove their
loyalty and faithfulness. These, awake and watching, hear the
Master's knock, through the words of the prophets, announcing
his presence; and to them present losses and crosses, meekly borne
for the truth's sake, are welcomed as the harbingers of a more
lasting peace and joy and glory and blessing to follow.
When
the knock of prophecy was heard announcing the
<PAGE 191> Lord's presence in the autumn of
1874, almost immediately it began to be recognized; and quickly
the cry was raised, "Behold the Bridegroom! go ye out to
meet him." And this cry still goes forth, and will continue
until all of the consecrated virgin class have heard, and
have had their faith and loyalty tested by it. The wise, with
lamps (the Word of God) trimmed and burning, and with oil (the
holy spirit) in their vessels (their hearts), will all recognize
the Lord's presence; and, by ordering their conduct and affairs
in harmony with their faith, they will go "forth" to
meet the beloved Bridegroom, and sit down with him at the marriage
feast.
The
marriage custom of the Jews formed a beautiful illustration of
the Church's betrothal and marriage with Christ, her Lord. The
espousal or betrothal was a formal agreement made with solemn
covenants of fidelity on each side. The woman continued in her
father's house until she was taken to the home of her husband,
usually about a year after betrothal or marriage. The consummation
of the union consisted in the receiving of the wife to the home
prepared for her by the husband, and was celebrated with a great
feast lasting several days--called the Nuptial Feast. At a fixed
hour the bridegroom set out for his bride, who was waiting in
readiness to receive him and to accompany him to their future
home and to the feast which he had provided, followed by her virgin
companions with lamps and all the necessary preparations.
In
the parable no mention is made of the bride, but all of the "wise
virgins" are mentioned as those for whom the Bridegroom comes,
and who accompany him and enter to the feast of joys prepared.
And this is both proper and necessary; because the Bride of Christ
is composed of many members or persons, most beautifully represented
in the wise virgins. The foolish virgins who obtain the light
and
<PAGE 192> experience later, but who will
fail to obtain the high exaltation of the "wise," faithful
Bride class, will no doubt be the class mentioned (`Psa.
45:14,15`) as "the virgins her companions which follow
her," who in due time will be favored, but not so highly,
by the King.
The
attitude of the wise virgins, ready, waiting and anxious for the
Bridegroom's coming, fitly represents the only proper attitude
of the Lord's betrothed, the truly consecrated Church. For a bride
to neglect or to be unprepared for this, the most eventful moment
of life, would prove her unfitness for the honor; and so it is
with the Church: "He that hath this hope in him purifieth
himself," seeks to be in an attitude of heart and life pleasing
to the Bridegroom, and is longing and waiting for the blessed
union and feast promised by him who said, I go to prepare a place
for you, and will come again and receive you unto myself.
Two
things are evident from this parable: first, that this special
feature of truth (the knowledge of the Bridegroom's presence)
is not intended for the world in general, nor for the nominal
church in general, but only for the virgin or consecrated class;
second, it is evident that this message of the Bridegroom's presence
will cause the separation which will test and prove each individual
of the virgin class and clearly manifest the wise, faithful, worthy
ones from the unfaithful, unwise virgins.
Oh,
what riches of grace are contained in this glorious message, "Behold
the Bridegroom!" As yet it is a great secret known only among
the saints; for the world cannot receive it. It is foolishness
unto them, and will be, until the virgins have all heard, and
the wise among them have fully entered in; until "the door
is shut," and the "flaming fire" of the great time
of trouble then to ensue will cause every eye to see (recognize)
the Lord's presence and reign begun.
With
what kingly grace the message of Jehovah comes to
<PAGE 193> his humble servants and handmaidens--"Hearken,
O daughter, and consider, and incline thine ear; forget also thine
own people and thy father's [Adam's] house [the human relationships,
hopes, aims and ambitions]; so shall the King [the Lord Jesus]
greatly desire thy beauty: for he is thy Lord; and worship thou
him." (`Psa. 45:10,11`) And
who are these who will receive such favor? They are the "called,
and accepted, and faithful." "The King's daughter
[Jehovah's daughter; for as such the Bride of Christ is owned]
is all glorious within." Her beauty is the beauty
of holiness. Outwardly, before the world, she is not glorious;
and, like her Lord in his humiliation, she is despised and rejected
of men. But she will not always be so: having followed him in
his humiliation, she shall also share in his glory. As a new creature,
she will in due time be clothed with his divine nature-- "Her
clothing [when glorified] is of wrought gold"--gold being
a symbol of the divine nature. "She shall be brought unto
the king in raiment of needle work"--in the simple white
robe of her Lord's own furnishing, the robe of his righteousness,
upon which she will have wrought, with much carefulness, the beautiful
adornments of the Christian graces. And great will be the rejoicing
in heaven and in earth at her abundant entrance into the King's
palace (`2 Pet. 1:5-8,11`): many
will say, "Let us be glad and rejoice and give honor to him;
for the marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife hath made herself
ready." (`Rev. 19:7`) "And
the daughter of Tyre [the strong ones of earth] shall be there
with a gift; even the rich among the people shall entreat thy
favor....I will make thy name to be remembered in all generations:
therefore shall the people praise thee forever and ever."
`Psa. 45:12-17`
Truly
"wise" will those of the consecrated prove to be who,
neglecting worldly enchantments, and earthly hopes and prizes,
and with hearts yearning and waiting for the
<PAGE 194> Beloved, are found ready and proved
worthy of the great exaltation promised, as the Bride, the Lamb's
wife.
"Bride of the Lamb, thy charms,
Oh, may we share."
Since
taking their lamps and following the Bridegroom represents leaving
all else to follow Christ in this time of his presence, it is
equivalent to leaving Babylon, where the virgins have mainly been;
because the truth manifested in the light of harvest clearly indicates
this separation of wheat from tares. Careful trimming reveals
this fact to the wise virgins possessing the holy spirit of consecration
and obedience. Such as have this "oil" will have the
light also; and such, appreciating the privilege, will gladly
and promptly "follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth."
The
foolish virgins, on the contrary, lacking sufficiency of oil,
fail to get clear light on the subject of the Bridegroom's presence;
and, being overcharged with the cares, plans, etc., of the present
life, they fail to investigate the subject fully, and consequently
are halting and undecided about leaving Babylon, and are measurably
indifferent to, and incredulous of, the whole subject. And even
if, urged by others, they reluctantly take their departure, like
Lot's wife, they are constantly inclined to look back. For such
the Lord left the injunction, "Remember Lot's wife."
(`Luke 17:32`) And again he said,
"No man having put his hand to the plow, and looking back,
is fit for the Kingdom of God.
There
is nothing in the parable to indicate that the foolish virgins
will be aware of their foolishness, until the opportunity of going
in to the feast has passed by. Then they will realize how foolish
they were in expecting to be owned of the Lord as his Bride and
joint-heirs, when they were at most but lukewarm and distant followers.
Many now "highly esteemed among men," and noted for
their "wonderful works," will be among the disappointed.
<PAGE 195>
And the Door was Shut
The
proclamation of the Bridegroom's presence, the going forth to
meet him, and the entering in with him to the marriage, still
continue, and will continue, until all the wise virgins are
"sealed in their foreheads" with a knowledge of harvest
truth sufficient to separate them from Babylon, and to enable
them to enter in with the Bridegroom to the feast prepared. Then,
when all the virgins have been tested by this present truth, the
door of opportunity will be shut, and no more will be permitted
to enter to the feast; for, said the Master, I am "he that
openeth, and no man shutteth, and shutteth and no man openeth."
(`Rev. 3:7`) And when the foolish
virgins come knocking and seeking admittance, after the door is
shut, saying "Master, Master, open it for us," he will
answer them, saying, "Indeed, I say unto you, I recognize
you not." Those who are ashamed of him and of his words now,
and therefore indifferent to them, of such will he then be ashamed,
when he is about to appear in glory and power with all his holy,
faithful messengers--the wise virgins exalted and glorified with
him.
The
shut door, it will be perceived, has nothing whatever to do with
the worldly. It is the door to the marriage feast; and it never
was open to any except the consecrated, the virgin class. No other
class was ever invited to enter it; and it closes when the harvest
truths have sifted and separated all the warm, earnest covenant-keepers
from the cold, lukewarm and overcharged, who neglect to fulfil
their covenant. Thank God, it is not the door of mercy that here
closes, nor even the door of all favor; but it is the door to
that one chief favor of joint-heirship with Christ as his
Bride. But when it closes against the foolish virgins, and will
never again open to their knock, though it leave them standing
without, exposed to the great tribulation of the "evil day,"
where there will be weeping and wailing and gnashing of
<PAGE 196> teeth, it still leaves them in
the arms of God's love and mercy, and even under his favor and
special care; for the great tribulations through which they shall
pass are designed to purify and purge those then repentant virgins,
and thereby to fit them as vessels of honor for the Master's use,
though not for the chief honor to which they were originally called,
but of which they proved themselves unworthy. Partaking to some
extent of the spirit of Babylon, giving to her the weight of their
influence, however small, they are reckoned of God as partakers
of her sins and therefore as unworthy to escape the plagues coming
upon her. These plagues are necessary, not only for Babylon's
destruction, but also for the purification and separation of the
hitherto unripe wheat remaining in her; the foolish virgins, measurably
intoxicated and overcome with the wine of Babylon.
The
going in with the Lord to the marriage was beautifully illustrated
by the happy bridal procession which escorted the Jewish bride
to her husband's home, with music and lighted lamps and every
demonstration of joy. Thus she entered in to the joy of her Lord
and to the feast which he had provided. Thus the wise virgins
are now entering in. The joy begins when they first hear of the
Bridegroom's presence. Gladly they leave all else for his company
and the prepared feast. Already by faith they are enjoying the
coming feast, as the present Bridegroom makes known to them the
exceeding great and precious things in reservation for his elect
Bride, and reveals to them his great work of blessing and restoring
the world, in which it will be the privilege of the Bride to share.
Surely, as we enter the reception room and see evidences of the
coming feast of Kingdom favor, we are already entering into the
joys of our Lord. Already we have a foretaste of the good things
to come. Already we are feasting, mentally, upon the richest bounties
of his grace.
<PAGE 197> By faith we are already seated
at the Master's table, and he himself, according to promise (`Luke
12:37`), has come forth and is serving us.
This
feasting by faith on the precious truths disclosed during this
harvest time began in 1875, at the close of the 1335 days (`Dan.
12:12`), in the beginning of the harvest, and is the blessedness
foretold by the prophet, saying, "Oh, the blessedness of
him that waiteth earnestly, and cometh unto the thousand three
hundred five and thirty days!"
The Wedding Garment Test
Another
of our Lord's parables (`Matt. 22:1-14`)
shows a still further testing of the sanctuary class--a testing
and separation even among those who have heard and recognized
the harvest message. The "wise virgins" of the one parable,
who enter with the Bridegroom to the wedding, and the "guests"
of this parable, are the same class of consecrated ones, who thus
far have shown themselves faithful and obedient. In fact, this
class is represented by many different figures, each of which
has, as an illustration, its own peculiar force. They are represented
as wise virgins, as servants waiting for their Lord's return from
a wedding, as guests at a wedding, and as a bride. They are the
body of Christ, the prospective bride of Christ, soldiers under
Christ their Captain, branches in Christ the vine, olive branches
in Christ, living stones in a temple of which Christ is the chief
corner stone, pupils under Christ as their teacher, sheep over
whom he is Shepherd, etc., etc. In considering these figures,
we must remember that they are distinct and separate illustrations,
entirely independent of each other, and seek to gather from each
the lesson which it was designed to impart. If we endeavor to
blend the illustrations, and wonder how a stone in a temple can
be a branch in a vine, how sheep can be soldiers, or how the guests
at a wedding can be
<PAGE 198> the servants, or the bride, we
fail entirely to comprehend them. Actually we are not called
to be guests at the marriage supper of the Lamb, nor servants
waiting for his return from the wedding, but we are called to
be the bride, though in some respects we must be like servants
and like these guests--like faithful servants in our vigilance
and watchfulness, and like guests in another respect.
This
parable serves to show what could not be illustrated under the
figure of the bride, which represents the elect church collectively
as Christ's joint-heir. This shows both the character of the readiness
required, and also the inspection of each individual which shall
reject some and accept others. Those thus inspected are represented
as already in the guest chamber. They are the wheat reaped or
gathered out from amongst the tares, the wise virgins separated
from the foolish. They have heard and received the harvest truths,
and are rejoicing by faith in anticipation of the glory and blessing
to follow their full union with the Lord. Hitherto they all have
run well; but until he reach the end of his course, "let
him that thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall."
The
condition of acceptableness and readiness for the marriage is
symbolized in this parable under the figure of the wedding
garment. It was a custom at Jewish weddings for the host to
provide dresses of ceremony--white linen robes-- for all the guests;
and for any guest to discard the wedding robe presented by the
host on such an occasion, and to appear in his own clothing, would
have been considered a shameful impropriety, significant of pride
and of disrespect for his entertainer.
As
a symbol, the wedding garment clearly illustrates the righteousness
of Christ, provided by our host, Jehovah (`Rom.
8:30-34`), imputed to every one believing and trusting
in him, without which no one is acceptable at the marriage
<PAGE 199> of the Lamb, and without which
no guest is admitted. The invitation and the wedding robe are
both necessary, and the parable shows that only those so attired
are admitted even to the ante-chamber of special preparation--into
the light of present truth, where the bride makes herself finally
ready. (`Rev. 19:7`) The robe and
the invitation received and accepted, these guests spend the short
time just prior to the marriage feast (the harvest time) in adjusting
their robes and giving to themselves and to each other the finishing
touches of preparation. And, while thus engaged, they are together
feasting already, by faith, on the prospect before them. The Bridegroom,
the grand future work, the glorious inheritance and the present
work of preparation are the constant themes of their thoughts
and conversation.
In
this ante-chamber (this favored time and condition), brilliantly
lighted with the clear unfolding of divine truth now due, both
the facilities for, and the inspiration to, the final adornment
and complete readiness for the marriage feast are granted. But,
nevertheless, the parable shows that even under these specially
favorable conditions, some, here represented by "one,"
will insult the host, the King, by despising and taking off the
wedding garment.
The
unmistakable teaching of this parable then is, that the final
general test of those "wise virgins," who have thus
far been found ready and worthy, and who have therefore been ushered
into much of the harvest light, will be a test of their appreciation
of the fact, often testified to in the Scriptures, that they are
accepted to the feast, not in their own merit, solely, but primarily
because their nakedness and many imperfections are covered by
the merit of him who gave his life as their ransom price, and
whose imputed righteousness, as a robe, alone makes them presentable
and acceptable before the King. All must wear the robe. Each may
embroider his own with good works.
<PAGE 200> How
remarkable and significant that this should be the great,
general, closing test. Our Heavenly Father is evidently determined
that none shall be of the bride company except such as realize
clearly their own nothingness, and that the great Bridegroom is
their Redeemer, as well as their Lord and Teacher.
It
seems strange, too, that any who had run well so far along the
course should fall when so near the fruition of their hope; yet,
when warned of such a possibility, it behooves all the consecrated
to watch and pray, lest they enter into temptation;
for in these last days come the perilous times foretold by the
Apostle. (`1 Tim.
4:1`; `2 Tim. 3:1; 4:3-5`)
And yet the times are not so perilous that divine grace is unable
to sustain those who lean confidently upon the Omnipotent Arm.
Indeed, those who humbly keep the narrow way of sacrifice
were never before so well sustained, or so fully equipped with
the whole armor of God. But, strange as it may seem, the very
abundance of God's favors, the very clearness of the unfoldings
of the Lord's gracious plans (for using the Church during the
Millennium to bless all the families of the earth), instead of
leading to humility and a greater appreciation of the wonderful
ransom price, through which release from condemnation is accomplished,
and our call to the divine nature and joint-heirship with Christ
is secured, seems to have the opposite effect upon some. Such
seem to lose sight of their personal unworthiness, as well as
of the Lord's unblemished perfection; and, instead of realizing
themselves to be at best "unprofitable servants," they
seem to see, in their own little self-denials for the truth's
sake, something wonderful--the equivalent of what our Lord Jesus
did--and feel that they as much as he are indispensable
to the execution of the great plan of the ages which the Scriptures
reveal. Such are guilty of "not holding the Head," and
his great work of redemption, in
<PAGE 201> proper respect. (`Col.
2:19`) These stand condemned of "counting the blood
of the covenant wherewith they were sanctified" (and
accepted) a common or ordinary thing. (`Heb.
10:29`) These do despite to the very spirit of God's favor,
when they reject the "way"--the only way--and the only
name given under heaven and among men, whereby we must be saved
from Adamic condemnation and fully reconciled to God.
These
are represented in the parable by the one "bound," hindered
from making further progress toward the feast, or even toward
a further appreciation of its blessings and joys; and these will
finally be cast out of the light entirely, into the "outer
darkness" of the world, to share in the anguish and vexations
of the great time of trouble. To these, therefore, the very truths
now unfolding, designed for our good and development, become an
occasion of stumbling, because they are not rightly exercised
by them. And as Israel, so long specially favored of God, became
proud, and began to think themselves actually worthy of
those favors, and indispensable to the divine plan, so that God
cast them off from all favor, so now it will be with those who,
though they have hitherto run well, fail to keep humble, and begin
to think themselves worthy to stand before God in their
own righteousness, and who assume a right to partake of the feast
without the wedding robe of Christ's imputed righteousness.
Peculiarly
sad though it be, this feature of prophecy, shown in the parable
under consideration, is also fulfilling before our eyes, forming
another link in the great chain of evidence that we are in the
"harvest." Some of those enjoying present spiritual
favors have thus disdained and cast aside the wedding robe; and,
though still speaking of Christ as Lord, they despise and deny
the importance and efficacy of the very transaction by which he
became Lord, and on
<PAGE 202> account of which they were counted
worthy of an invitation to the marriage. (`Rom.
14:9; 5:2`) They boldly claim to need no Redeemer; and
with subtle sophistries and misapplications of Scripture they
convince themselves and others that they get into the sheepfold
by another way without being ransomed--in their own righteousness,
which the Apostle terms "filthy rags"; and some claim
that they need no Advocate or Ransom, but were unalterably elected
by God to heavenly glory.
This
taking off of the wedding garment, by a rejection of the value
of Christ's ransom-sacrifice, first made its appearance amongst
those in the light of present truth in the summer of 1878; and
since that time it has been testing all who entered into the light
of the guest-chamber, the harvest light. In the very presence
of the Bridegroom the error has gained a footing; and some are
casting aside the indispensable wedding robe. And what a commotion
it has caused among the guests! what division! what sifting! Those
who discard the robe seem anxious to have others do the same;
and these strive while the faithful remonstrate; and the work
of division goes on, even in the very guest-chamber; and doubtless
it will continue up to the very last hour prior to the marriage.
Meanwhile,
the invisible but present Bridegroom-King marks the faithful worthy
ones who shall taste of his supper; and he permits, and in the
parable foretold, this final test. Of those who have discarded
the robe he inquires, "Friend [comrade], how camest thou
in hither, not having a wedding garment?"--a gentle but very
forcible reminder that the wearing of the robe was the very condition
of his admission to the favors enjoyed, and that he had been provided
one gratis. And we challenge any who now deny the value of Christ's
death as their ransom-price, to say that they came into the present
light--the knowledge of the
<PAGE 203> Lord's presence and the other deep
things of God, now so clearly seen--without, at the time of entrance,
being clothed in this garment. No one ever entered in without
the robe: others cannot see the deep things of God. (`1
Cor. 2:7-14`) Just as in the parable, so now, when this
question is put to those who have rejected the robe, they are
"speechless." They cannot deny that it was while wearing
the robe they were admitted; and they do not like to acknowledge
it.
"Then
said the King unto his servants, Bind him hand and foot, and cast
him into outer darkness." The "outer darkness"
is the darkness that envelops the worldly-wise, the darkness of
human reasoning undirected by God's Word and unsquared by his
revealed plan of ransom and restitution. The binding or restraining
makes an example of such before the company of the consecrated,
and helps all the truly loyal ones to see most clearly the necessity
and value of the robe in the King's estimation. The servants who
are directed to do the binding are those who have the truth on
the subject, and who can bind the influence of such with
Scriptural testimonies on the value and necessity of the precious
blood and the robe of righteousness which it purchased for us.
In struggling against these arguments of Scripture, the disrobed
ones are forced, by their own arguments and efforts to justify
themselves, out of the light into the "outer darkness."
To them, as to the world, the cross of Christ is now a stumbling-block
and foolishness; but to the faithful, consecrated ones it is still
"the power of God and the wisdom of God."
But
let it not be overlooked that those of the parable who are "bound"
and "cast into outer darkness" must first have been
in the light of harvest truth; and consequently their responsibility
and penalty are greater than the responsibility and penalty of
those who never enjoyed such favor. Thousands in the nominal Church
will doubtless follow the
<PAGE 204> teaching of prominent leaders among
them, in discarding faith in the efficacy of the precious blood
of Christ as the sinner's ransom-price, who will not be accountable
for the step to the fullest extent; because they have not been
sufficiently enlightened with reference to it.
Thousands
of professed Christians have never believed in Christ as their
ransom or substitute, and have never worn the robe of his imputed
righteousness. These, of course, are not noticed in the parable.
The parable refers only to a very limited class, all of whom have
once clearly appreciated the ransom, and while so appreciating
it had, under the favor which it secured, entered into the special
light of the harvest time--the time of the King's presence, just
before the feast. With what care should those who have been once
enlightened, and who have tasted of the good word of God and the
powers of the age to come, guard against the merest suggestion
to a step so disloyal, unjust and disastrous.
`Heb. 10:26-31`; `6:4-8`
In
considering these parables, we must not make the mistake of presuming
that all the wise virgins have already gone into the marriage--to
the guest-chamber of special and final preparation--and that the
door is shut before the inspection referred to in this parable
begins. The door of opportunity still stands open to all the consecrated,
robed by faith in the wedding garment of Christ's righteousness;
the message, "Behold, the Bridegroom!" is still going
forth; the wise virgins are still going out to meet him, and entering
in with him to the marriage; and the foolish have not yet returned
with oil in their vessels. But, since "the King came in"
(since 1878, the parallel in time to our Lord's typical assumption
of the office of King of the Jews--`Matt. 21:1-13`), the inspection
of the guests and the testing of their appreciation of the wedding
robe have been in progress. And while more of the wise virgins
are still learning of the Bridegroom's
<PAGE 205> presence and joyfully coming in
to the feast, some of those already in are proving themselves
unworthy to stay in, and have been, and are being, bound hand
and foot; and their appreciation and apprehension of present truth--
of the Lord's presence and the present and future work--begin
to grow more and more dim, as, borne along by false reasonings
upon false premises, they gradually or rapidly, according to temperament,
gravitate toward worldly views of things--the "outer darkness"
of the world, when contrasted with the inner light, now accessible
to the properly robed saints. And, doubtless, all the virgins
who come in must be tested upon this subject. Happy and fearless,
in this testing, will be all who from the heart can say:
"My hope is built on nothing less
Than Jesus' blood and righteousness.
I dare not trust the sweetest frame,
But wholly lean on Jesus' name.
On Christ, the Solid Rock, I stand;
All other ground is sinking sand." And such can exultantly
sing:
"The Prince of my peace is now present,
The light from his face is on me.
O listen! beloved, he speaketh:
'My peace I now give unto thee.'
The cross well covers my sins;
The past is under the blood;
I'm trusting in Jesus for all;
My will is the will of my God."
The End of the High Calling is Not
The Closing of the Door
The
Scriptures do not give the exact date at which the door to the
marriage feast will close, though they show plainly that it will
not be closed until all the "virgins" shall
<PAGE 206> have had an opportunity to enter,
and after all the "wise" or ready ones have done so.
An
open "door" symbolizes an opportunity of entrance
to certain conditions and privileges; a shut door represents
the termination of such privilege or opportunity. The privilege,
invitation or opportunity of the Gospel age, granting, under restrictive
conditions, to believers in Christ, entrance into joint-heirship
with him in the heavenly Kingdom and to the divine nature, is
the "door" by which we "have access into
this grace [favor] wherein we stand"; namely, into the hope
of sharing the glory of God. (`Rom. 5:2`)
This door, which has stood open throughout the entire age, is
sometime to be closed; and the door in the parable of the virgins
marks this close--the termination of all such opportunities and
privileges. This parable of the virgins merely portrays the events
in the close of this age among those of the true Church living
at that time. The "door" of this parable represents
that certain special privileges, the consummation and goal of
all the favors of the Gospel age, will be open to the "wise
virgins" in the time of harvest; and the closing of the door
when all of this class shall have availed themselves of such privileges
represents the close of all the favor and privileges of
the Gospel age; because the feast represents in full the Gospel
advantages and privileges, being a representation of the grand
consummation to which all other favors lead-- the promised Kingdom
glories.
Consider
this "door" of opportunity and privilege, soon to close.
Our Lord called it a gate, and said that during the Gospel age
it would be difficult both to find and to enter it, and advised
us to make great effort to enter, if we would share the immortality
and Kingdom honors, to which it and no other door leads. He said,
therefore, "Strive to enter in at the strait gate; for many,
I say unto you, shall seek to enter in and shall not be able,
when once the Master of the
<PAGE 207> house hath risen up and shut to
the door." (`Luke 13:25`) This
narrow way, as we have already seen,* is the way of self-sacrifice
in the interest of the Lord's plan and work. The way is made narrow
by the circumstances of the present time, by the opposition of
the worldly spirit against truth and righteousness, so that whoever
walks in the footprints of our Leader and Forerunner will find
the way narrow or difficult and must suffer persecution. To walk
in this way, as our Lord set us an example that we should follow
in his steps, implies not only a passive conformity to his disposition
or spirit, but also an active, energetic zeal in the promulgation
of his truth at all hazards. And all who walk in this narrow way,
faithful as he was faithful, unto death, have fellowship in his
sufferings, and will also in due time have fellowship in his glory,
at the marriage feast--in the glory to be revealed at his appearing
and Kingdom. `Phil. 3:10`;
`1 Pet. 4:13`
In
view of its glorious termination, the opportunity to walk in this
narrow way of self-sacrifice for the truth's sake is the grandest
privilege that was ever offered to any creature. The privilege
of suffering with Christ and in his cause, after first recognizing
him as our Redeemer, is therefore the door, and the only door
of opportunity, by which the glory to follow, as the bride and
joint-heir of Christ, can be reached.
There
are three ways in which the closing of this door might be indicated:
first, by a definite Bible statement of the exact date; second,
by such a reversal of public sentiment with reference to the truth,
that fidelity and zeal in its service would no longer meet with
opposition, and when suffering with Christ for the truth's sake
(`Rom. 8:17`) would be no longer
possible; or third, by such a condition of affairs ----------
*Vol. I, page 203.
<PAGE 208> obtaining in the world that all
opportunity for such service would be effectually obstructed,
thus leaving no opportunities for candidates to enter into the
work and to develop and prove their love and faithfulness by their
activity and endurance.
Though
we are definitely informed that the door will be shut sometime
within this harvest period or end of the age, the Bible does not
give the exact date; and, although after the great time of trouble
there will be a grand reversal of public sentiment in favor of
truth and justice, we have no intimation whatever that such a
condition of affairs will obtain until after the harvest period
is fully ended. But we have a clear intimation that the door
will be shut in the manner last named; for, before the Millennial
day breaks, we are forewarned of a dark night wherein no man can
labor-- "The morning cometh, and also the night."
`Isa. 21:12`. See also Vol. II, chap. viii.
The
narrow way opened to us is the privilege and opportunity of cooperating
with our Lord now, when to manifest his spirit of meekness and
zeal and loyalty to God and his truth will be at the cost of earthly
advantage; when to champion his cause and the truths which he
advanced will make us, to say the least, very unpopular; and when
our endeavors to honor his name and bless our fellowmen with the
truth, by letting our light shine, bring upon us reproach, misrepresentation
and persecution in some form. And if, as we have seen, the narrow
gate-way opened means the privilege of thus sacrificing,
faithfully, unto death, at whatever cost, it follows that the
closing of all such opportunity for such fellowship of
service and suffering would be the closing of the door,
the barring of the narrow way to the future glory and joint-heirship;
our reign with Christ being conditioned on our faithfulness in
his service, which now means suffering with him.
`Rom. 8:17; 6:8`
<PAGE 209> And
suffering with Christ, we have seen, is not the ordinary suffering,
common to all in the fallen state, but only such sufferings as
are the results, more or less directly, of the following of Christ's
example, in advocating unpopular truths and in exposing popular
errors. Such were the causes of the sufferings of Christ; and
such will be the causes of persecution, suffering and loss to
all who follow in his footsteps. They will have fellowship in
his sufferings now, and in the end will be accounted worthy to
share in the reward of such faithfulness to principle. This, throughout
the Gospel age, has meant self-sacrificing labor and endurance
of reproach in the sowing and watering of the seed of Christ's
doctrines; and now, in the close of the age, it means a similar
fidelity and endurance in the harvest work now in progress --even
to the laying down of life, whether it be required by the gradual
process of working it out in the Master's service, a dying daily,
or by being brought more abruptly to a martyr's sudden death.
The
worthiness of the espoused virgin Church to be the bride, the
Lamb's wife, consists not merely in sinlessness, though she will
be holy and "without blemish"--"without spot or
wrinkle or any such thing" (`Eph. 5:27`),
made "whiter than snow" in the great fountain of redeeming
love, her Redeemer's merit. This much is necessary to all
who will ever be accounted worthy of lasting life on any plane.
But to be the bride of the Lamb, she must not only be a virgin
in purity, and in addition be free from sinful alliance and coquetry
with the world, but she must be more, much more than this. She
must so closely resemble her Lord, and so closely follow his footsteps
and his counsel, that she will on this account be a sufferer,
a martyr, as he was, and for the sake of the same principles
of truth and righteousness. She must prove that she possesses
a consuming love for the Bridegroom, and an untiring devotion
to his name and principles,
<PAGE 210> so as to be willing to be despised
and rejected of the worldly, as he was, for the sake of obedience
to his doctrines.
To
develop and demonstrate this character, she must be tried
and tested. Her confidence, her endurance, her fidelity to her
Lord, through evil as well as good, must be developed and proved.
And only such as are thus developed and tested and by the test
proved faithful, will ever be owned and recognized as the bride
and joint-heir of the Lord, the heir of all things. As it is written,
"Blessed the man that endureth under temptation: because,
having become [thus] approved, he will receive the crown of life
which the Lord hath promised to them that love him"--thus
intensely. Thus, rightly understood, every trial of our fidelity
should be joyfully met as a fresh opportunity to show the Bridegroom
the depth and strength of our love, and another proof of worthiness
of his love and confidence and of the promised exaltation. Those
who will share with the Lord the coming glory must not only be
called and accepted, but also faithful, even
unto death. `Rev. 17:14`
Thus
the door of opportunity to engage, with Christ our Lord, in the
work of the Gospel age, will be closed when "the night cometh
wherein no man can work." And all who have not previously
by faithful service, developed the necessary character and proved
their sympathy, devotion, love and zeal for the Lord and his truth
(`Matt. 10:37`;
`Mark 8:38`), will then be
too late to do so. As represented in the parable, they will thus
be proved to be "foolish virgins," for letting slip
the great and glorious opportunity to suffer with and on behalf
of him with whom they would gladly reign. By that time, the full
number predestinated by God to constitute and complete the Church
will have been called, chosen, and by trial proved faithful--"copies
of the likeness of his Son." (`Rom.
8:29`) The harvest will be past, the summer time of favor
ended, and only the burning of the tares will remain, to clear
the field (the world of mankind) and to prepare
<PAGE 211> it fully for the much more extensive
sowing of the Millennial age.
The
closing in of this night will evidently put a stop to any further
labor to disseminate the truth, which, misunderstood by the public
generally, will probably be accused of being the cause of much
of the anarchy and confusion then prevailing, instead of being
seen in its true light as a foreshadowing of the divine mind and
revelation concerning coming troubles of the world and their true
causes. Nor should we expect that the coming of night and the
closing of the door will be sudden, but rather that it will be
a gradual obstructing and closing down of the harvest work.
The
present is the time for the sealing of the servants of God in
their foreheads, before the storm of trouble bursts (`Rev.
7:2,3`); and every wise virgin should appreciate this privilege
of the present, both for his own intellectual sealing with the
present truth, and also for engaging in the harvest work of sealing
others of the wheat class and gathering them into the barn of
security, before the night cometh and the door of opportunity
to labor is shut.
That
the present, most favorable opportunity is but a brief one, is
manifest from the fact that only twenty-four years of the harvest
period remain, the close of which will witness the end of the
reign of evil and the ushering in of the glorious Millennial Day;
and within this period the dark night of the world's greatest
tribulation must find place. The great darkness which must precede
the glorious day is drawing on: "the morning cometh, and
also the night"--"a time of trouble such as was not
since there was a nation."
Observe
that, when this night cometh, when the reapers must cease
their labors, it will prove that this final work of the Gospel
age is accomplished; that the elect number of the Bride of Christ
have all been "sealed," and "gathered"
<PAGE 212> into a condition of separateness
from the worldly--into the barn condition (`Matt.
13:30`); for God will not permit anything to put an end
to his work until it is finished. Then, all the true and faithful
servants of God will have been sealed in their foreheads; and,
the work of the Gospel age being finished, no more can enter into
that work or reap its rich reward, foretold in the "exceeding
great and precious promises" as the reward of the faithful
who enter while the "door" is open.
`2 Peter 1:4`
But
we are not to gather from this that all, as quickly as proved
faithful, will at once enter into their reward. Possibly some
such may live on, far into that dark night of trouble--though
our expectation is to the contrary. "Here is the patience
of the saints; here are they that keep the commandments of God,
and the faith of Jesus." Having put on the whole armor of
God, and boldly withstood error by clear and fearless presentation
and defense of the truth, during this evil day, when giant errors
so boldly and defiantly stalk abroad, the saints are exhorted,
"Having done all, to stand," clad in full armor, with
the sword of the spirit ever ready for defense, and with watchfulness
and perseverance and prayer for all saints. All will have need
of patience, that after having done the will of God they may receive
the promise. `Rev. 14:12`;
`Eph. 6:13`; `Heb. 10:36`
The
ending of the high calling to joint-heirship with our Lord Jesus
in the Kingdom of God, it should be distinctly understood, is
not the shutting of the door in the parable of the virgins. Though
the general "call" to this favor ceased in 1881, the
"door" is yet open. The call is the general invitation
of God, to all justified believers in the Redeemer, to follow
in his footsteps of self-sacrifice, even unto death, and thereby
prove their worthiness to reign with him in glory. This favor
had a definite time for beginning: the waiting disciples were
accepted to it on the day of Pentecost, A.D. 33.
<PAGE 213> And it has had, as already shown,
a definite time of ending; viz., October 1881.*
On
the other hand, the closing of the "door," in the parable
of `Matt. xxv`, marks the full end
of all opportunity for any, even of the "called" ones,
thereafter to attain the prize of the high calling. It marks the
end of all opportunity to prove worthy of the prize by faithfulness
in the service: all opportunity for service will there terminate,
in the "night" wherein no man can work. (`John
9:4`) It is manifest, therefore, that the door, or opportunity,
thus to make our calling and election sure, does not necessarily
close when the call, or general invitation to all believers to
enter, ceases to go forth. And, while the door stands open, it
indicates that any believer who is anxious to enter and ready
to comply with the conditions may yet do so, even though the general
"call" or invitation to enter is no longer sent out.
As a matter of fact, the door or opportunity to labor and sacrifice
has not yet closed, though the general call ceased in 1881.
The
Gospel age has been the calling time--first, for calling sinners
to repentance and to faith in Christ the Redeemer; and, second,
for calling these justified ones to the high privilege of joint-heirship
with Christ in his Kingdom, on the condition of following now
in his footprints of self-sacrifice, even unto death--as the condition
of acceptance to the Kingdom work and honors of the coming Millennial
age. When, therefore, the Lord tells us that the closing period
of the age will be a harvest time, it indicates clearly a radical
change--from sowing to reaping, from calling to testing the called
and closing the work begun by the call.
As
an illustration of the change in the character of the work at
the close of the Gospel age, our Lord gave the parable of the
drag-net. (`Matt. 13:47-50`) "The
Kingdom of ---------- *See Vol. II, Chapter vii.
<PAGE 214> heaven is like unto a net that
was cast into the sea and gathered fish of every kind; which,
when it was full, they [the fishermen] drew to shore, and sat
down, and gathered the good into vessels and cast the bad away.
So shall it be at the end of the age [the harvest,
`Matt. 13:39`]: the angels [messengers, servants of God]
shall come forth and separate the wicked from among the just,
and shall cast them into the furnace of fire [the great time of
trouble]: there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth."
This parable represents the nominal Christian
Church as the nominal prospective Kingdom of God--the net
cast into the sea (the world), which gathered fish
(men--`Matt. 4:19`) of every kind (real Christians,
half deceived and deluded Christians, and multitudes of hypocrites);
which, when it is full (in the fulness of God's time), is drawn
to shore. It shows that the "every sort" gathered into
the nominal Church are not fit for the Kingdom, whatever else
they may be fit for; that at the close of the age--in the harvest
time--the call or invitation to a place in the Kingdom would cease
by God's arrangement, as represented by the dragging of the net
to shore; and that then a different work would be commenced by
the fishermen--namely, a separating, a dividing work, which will
accomplish the gathering of the desired sort and the rejection
of others who are unworthy of the favor to which they had been
called; for "many are called, but few chosen."
`Matt. 22:14`
The
separating work of this parable is the same as that shown in the
parable of the wheat and the tares, which teaches us to expect
a discontinuance of the sowing (the calling), and a change from
that work to the work of reaping. The Lord's servants, who, under
his direction, will thus change the work, are in both parables
called angels--special messengers of God. They are his faithful
disciples who, walking very humbly, and near to the Lord, and
very earnestly
<PAGE 215> seeking to know his plan and to
cooperate in his work, are not left in darkness concerning his
times and seasons. (`Matt.
13:11`; `1 Thess. 5:4`;
`Jer. 8:7-12`) Of course, this reaping and gathering
relates only to those living in the harvest time, and not to those
who died previously; each of whom, as he finished his course,
was noted, and separated to await his proper position in or out
of the glorified little flock, the Kingdom proper.
`2 Tim. 4:8`
The
net was not intended to catch all the fish of the sea. Our Lord,
the great Chief Fisherman, designed to catch a particular number
of fish of a particular kind, no matter how many of other varieties
went into the net with them; and when the full number of the desired,
peculiar kind, have entered the net it is ordered ashore for the
purpose of sorting and separating. When the net is thus ordered
ashore, the commission given at the beginning of the age, to cast
the net into the sea (`Matt. 28:19; 24:14`),
should be understood as at an end; and all who would continue
to be coworkers with the Lord must give heed to his directions,
and no longer give their time to general fishing, but to the present
work of selecting and gathering. And as the truth then due was
the agency for calling, so truth, "present truth," harvest
truth, is now the Lord's agency for testing and dividing.
When,
therefore, the Lord's servants hear his voice, through his Word,
declaring that the time has come to stop sowing and to begin reaping,
to stop catching and go to sorting the fish, to stop calling and
to preach the harvest message now due to those already called,
they will, if faithful, gladly and promptly obey. Such, therefore,
instructed of the Master concerning his plan of the ages, and
not in darkness as to the times and seasons in which we are living,
should no longer be going forth seeking to sow the good seed of
the Kingdom in the field or world of mankind, but
<PAGE 216> should be "giving meat in
due season to the household of faith"--scattering among the
Lord's professed children the good tidings of the Kingdom at hand,
and of the great joy and blessing it will soon bring to all people.
And,
strange to say, it is this message of God's loving provision,
in the ransom, for the restitution of all things, by and through
Christ Jesus and his glorified body, the Church, God's Kingdom
(this message, which should rejoice, refresh and unite all loving
Christian hearts), that is to develop and draw into heart-union
the true class only, to test them and to separate them from the
nominal mass.
Shortly
the harvest will be ended, and then both he that sowed and he
that reaped will rejoice together. Now, the reapers must hasten
the work, and should feel so concerned about its full accomplishment
as to pray the Lord of the harvest, the Chief Reaper, to send
forth more laborers into his harvest. It will not be long before
the plowman of the next dispensation (the great trouble foretold,
which will prepare the world for the Millennial seed-sowing) shall
overtake the reaper of this dispensation.
`Amos 9:13`
Israel's Seventieth Week a Figure of
The Close of Gospel Favor
It
will be remembered that Israel's "seventieth week"--
the last seven years of their favor--was very exactly marked at
its beginning, middle and close; and we believe for the very purpose
of giving us clearly defined dates in the close of the Gospel
age of favor to Spiritual Israel. We have seen that the beginning
of that week was to Fleshly Israel the date of the beginning of
their harvest testing, in A.D. 29. It was marked by our Lord's
baptism and recognition as Messiah at Jordan, when the reaping
work began--the parallel to which, here, is the recognition of
the presence of the Lord, in A.D. 1874, at the beginning of this
harvest.
<PAGE 217> The
middle of that covenant week, A.D. 33, was the date of the rejection
of Israel as a system or church-nation, and was marked by our
Lord's death on the cross, and by his words just before his death,
"Your house is left unto you desolate." And the parallel
to that, here, is the rejection from favor and the fall of the
sectarian systems, called Christendom or "Babylon,"
in 1878.
The
last half of Israel's covenant week (3 1/2 years, from A.D. 33
to 36) was not a period of national or sectarian favor, but of
individual favor, granting the Israelites (not as formerly through
the channels of the nominal Church, but individually, if
they would receive it) all the favors and special privileges of
the Abrahamic covenant, down to the end of those seventy symbolic
weeks, the limit of their favor, marked by the sending of favor
to Cornelius and Gentiles in general. So in the parallel, here:
the 3 1/2 years from April, 1878, where so-called Christendom,
or "Babylon," was rejected from favor, to October, 1881,
was the closing period of the favor of the high calling
to individual believers. Thus, the general "call"
(the favor of this Gospel age) ceased with October, A.D.
1881, just as the corresponding date, October, A.D. 36, witnessed
the end of Jewish favor.
The
Jewish favor consisted in the offer to Israel of the Kingdom--the
call of the natural children of Abraham to avail themselves
of the privileges and opportunities granted them under their Law
Covenant. This call, favor or privilege ceased totally
and forever with the end of their covenant week. The Gospel
favor consisted in the offer of the Kingdom (exclusively) to believers
in Christ--the "high calling" of all reconciled
to God under the Grace Covenant, who might avail themselves of
the opportunities thus granted (and become members of the Abrahamic
"seed" which is to bless the world) by joining
with Christ Jesus, their Redeemer, in his covenant of self-sacrifice;
the test
<PAGE 218> which must demonstrate their worthiness
to share in Christ's coming work and glory. And it is this favor,
this "call" or invitation, which we have seen ceased,
totally and forever, in October 1881, the parallel point of time
to the end of the Jewish call or favor.
Be
it noted, that the stopping of the Jewish favor or call was followed
by another general call, which, ignoring them and their past favor,
nevertheless included any of them who afterward, by becoming believers,
became worthy of that world-wide call to the honor of the Kingdom.
The stopping of their past favor was just as actual as though
they had not been invited to anything after their favor ceased;
just as actual as though they had afterward been invited to a
lower favor; but it is not as noticeable, because the general
Gospel call, which did not exclude them, was the same call broadened
and deepened; made applicable to all believers in Christ,
of every nation.
The
stopping of the favor or "call" here, in 1881, is followed,
or rather lapped upon, by the general call of the whole world
to the Millennial blessings and favors upon conditions of faith
and willing obedience (not however a sacrifice unto death). This
however, is a lower call, a lesser favor than that which ceased;
a call to enjoy blessings under the Kingdom, but not to be parts
of the anointed, Kingdom class. And this change--this stopping
of the higher favor and beginning of a lesser favor will be little
noticed in the present time, by reason of the fact that the great
prize of the Kingdom and joint-heirship with Christ as partakers
of the divine nature, has been generally lost sight of in the
Church. The highest conception of reward generally held by Christians
for centuries past is, that in their resurrection they will be
given perfect bodies; and, freed from sickness, pain and sorrow,
will enjoy God's favor and have everlasting life. And this conception,
though far short of the real
<PAGE 219> privileges under the "high
calling" of the Gospel age, is really a fair conception of
the blessed privileges to be granted during the Millennial age
to the world in general-- to as many of them as will then yield
obedience and come into harmony with God.
As
a matter of fact, then, the only ones who see clearly the peculiarly
high and grand features of the call of the Gospel age--the only
ones, therefore, who could announce or explain this calling--are
the very ones who are also shown from God's Word that the time
limit of this call was reached in October, 1881. Others, while
quoting the Apostle's words concerning a "high calling of
God in Christ," really explain the lower call which belongs
to the Millennial age. Hence the general Gospel call, the true
one, is ended. None can extend it. Some cannot because they do
not understand it and could not give it, and some because they
know it to be at an end.
But
though the general "call" has ceased, the "door"
is not yet shut. The end of the "call" and the shutting
of the "door" are distinct and separate. The "door"
stands open for some to enter the race, for the great prize of
joint-heirship in the Kingdom, after the general "call"
has ceased. God had predetermined a fixed number to constitute
the Church, "the body of Christ"; and there can be neither
one member superfluous nor one lacking. (See this typically taught
in `Lev. 21:17-23`.) It follows that
he could not call or invite to that honor more than would
complete the number he had determined. And, in October 1881, his
Word shows, this full number had been secured. But, since some
of those who responded under the general call and made the covenant
with him will fail to keep their covenant, fail so to run as to
obtain the prize, the "door" stands open after the general
call has ceased, to permit the entrance to the race, to self-sacrifice
in the service of the truth, of some to take the
<PAGE 220> places of such as may, during
the inspection, cast aside the wedding garment of Christ's righteousness;
and also of such others as, having made the covenant of self-sacrifice
in the service, love the present world, become overcharged with
its cares or pleasures, and fail to perform the requirements of
their covenant.
And,
again, it should be noted that the ending of the call in 1881
in no way interfered with the privileges of the thousands who
had already accepted the call and become God's consecrated servants:
it put none out who were in. Nor does it imply that no more can
come in: it was merely the stopping of God's general invitation.
The
fact that you may only recently have come to a clear knowledge
of the exceeding great and precious promises of the things which
God hath in reservation for them that love him does not prove
that you were not called and accepted as a runner for this great
prize long before you understood how great and grand is the prize.
The fact is, not one who accepts the call is able, at first, to
comprehend fully either the roughness and narrowness of the way
or the grandeur of the prize to be attained at its farther end.
The clearness of our comprehension of the promises is to us the
power of God working in us to strengthen us and to enable us to
overcome present obstacles and trials. The exceeding great and
precious promises are unfolded to us gradually, as we prove faithful
and go on, in order that by these--by the strength and courage
which they infuse--we may be enabled so to run as to obtain the
prize. `2 Pet. 1:4`
The
class to receive the prize is not only called and chosen (accepted),
but also faithful. And though the general call has ceased,
it is evident that the testing of the faithfulness of the called
ones is not yet finished. The faithful are being sealed, and separated
from those who are unfaithful to their covenant of self-sacrifice;
and the wise virgins are being separated
<PAGE 221> from the foolish, whose folly consists
in supposing that they can run for and win the world's prizes
of honor, wealth, etc., and at the same time run faithfully the
race for the great prize of glory, honor and immortality--the
very conditions of which render such a dual course impossible.
"A double-minded man is unstable in all his ways." "Ye
cannot serve God and mammon." `Jas.
1:8`, `Matt. 6:24`
When
all the faithful "wise virgins" have been proved so,
and have entered in to the joys of the Lord, the "door"
of opportunity to become of that class will close; and no
more can enter it. When all the wise have entered in, the number
predestinated will be complete; and then the Master will rise
up and shut the door. (`Luke
13:24,25`; `Matt. 25:10`)
Our Lord himself tells us that then many will begin to
see matters differently--to see what privileges and opportunities
for sacrifice they once enjoyed and missed. But when they seek
entrance, the Master will tell them, I do not recognize you as
my bride--she is complete, and I have but one. But, thank God,
other scriptures show that the foolish virgins, though thus rejected
from the high calling, for which their conduct when on trial will
have proved them unworthy, will nevertheless be favored, and will
be known in a humbler capacity in the Lord's household.
Therefore,
before the door shuts, before the full number of the faithful
is completed, let each strive to make his calling and election
sure; and to this end let us permit the Lord, by these precious
promises and these explanatory parables, to work in us to will
and to do his good pleasure.
But
some may yet say, I fear that I am not one of those called before
the general call ceased in 1881, because I was then not only wholly
ignorant of the deep things of God's promises, but more: I was
wholly a stranger to God, and even an enemy of his, far from any
covenant with him to do him service, and far from any such desire.
Only recently I
<PAGE 222> came to know God, at all; recently
I took Christ's yoke upon me to learn of him; and still more recently
I learned of the privilege of suffering with Christ now, by self-denials
in his service, and that such joint-sacrificers are by and by
to be made joint-inheritors with him in the glorious work of the
Millennium. And now, after seeing these glories, after admiring
these precious things, and after setting myself to run this race
for this wonderful prize, must I conclude that it is not open
to me, because enough to fill the number had already been called?
I would not think to change the divine arrangement, or to ask
that another be added beyond the limit determined by divine wisdom,
but I shall feel keenly my misfortune.
To
such we answer: Run on. Your case is not so dark as it seems to
you. The "door" is not yet "shut." Remember
that if all who had accepted the call when it closed should
prove faithful to their covenant, there would be none too many,
but just enough. Remember, too, that your observation as well
as the Scriptures, indicates that of the many who accept the call
few will be chosen, because but few prove faithful to their covenant
when on trial. As one after another some of the called ones prove
unfaithful, their opportunities, their places of labor
and their crowns of reward are transferred to others. One
of these places of labor and one of these crowns of reward may
be transferred to you, and your name may be written on the scroll
of life as a probationary member of the Bride of Christ, in the
place of one erased as unworthy. See `Rev.
3:5`; `Heb. 12:23`.
Those
who can grasp these precious promises and who have the desire
to work in the vineyard have a strong evidence that they have
been begotten of the spirit;* for the human mind, even when justified,
is unable to grasp the deep things intended by God for
those only who have consecrated ---------- *See Vol. I, page 226.
<PAGE 223> themselves and been accepted. (`1
Cor. 2:6-16`) And the Lord is too loving and too just to
authorize in the hearts of any hopes which could never be realized.
To be begotten of the spirit, through the Word of truth, implies
an ultimate birth to spirit conditions, unless the one as begotten
prove himself unworthy--unfaithful. "Cast not away, therefore,
your confidence, which hath great recompense of reward."
The Eleventh Hour
`Matt. 20:1-16`
This
parable seems to have been given specially to teach a lesson for
this time. The laborers are those earnest, consecrated children
of God who throughout this Gospel age-- the "day" of
the parable--are faithfully spending their time and energy, not
in the service of self, the service of mammon, but in the service
of God. Only the faithful therefore are represented by
the laborers, all of whom get the same reward, the Kingdom honors
represented in the parable by the "penny."
The
generality of the call and the need of laborers are represented
by the four calls--early in the morning, at nine o'clock, at noon,
and at three o'clock in the afternoon. Yet the exact, clear understanding
of what the wages should be was mentioned only at the beginning:
the householder then "agreed" to give them a
penny for the service. So the promise of the Kingdom was clearly
understood by the early Church, but afterward was in the main
lost sight of and not clearly enunciated. The living members of
Christ's Church laboring in his vineyard at any time during
this Gospel age represent all the laborers. And the parable
shows, as its particular feature, a class who enter this service
of the Lord when the day's work is about done, at the "eleventh
[the last] hour." They are represented as some desirous of
engaging in the Master's service, but too late, the general
call having
<PAGE 224> ended. They say--"No man hath
hired us," we were too late to get into the service under
the call.
The
Master responds by pointing to the door of opportunity for doing
and suffering in his service not yet "shut" the close
of which will be indicated by the coming of "the night in
which no man can work." But he says nothing about
what the reward will be; though in employing the others under
his general call, he said, "Whatsoever is right I will give
you"*--a portion of the pay at first "agreed"
upon.
So,
during the Gospel age, our Lord has continually, through his mouthpieces
in the Church, invited all believers to enter into his service.
The full reward, the divine nature and Kingdom glory, was clearly
stated and well understood at first; but, although repeated throughout
the age, it has not since been clearly understood because
of the great falling away from the truth. But now we have come
to the close of the Gospel day of service--to the "eleventh
hour." It is past the time for calling laborers for
this day. Yet, some are now standing by and saying, We have not
been called into the work; "no man hath hired us"; we
have no promise of labor, nor of a reward if we should find work;
the call is ended, the day's work is nearly done; there are enough
laborers without us. But to these the Master would have us say,
as his mouthpieces, "Go ye also into my vineyard"; I
promise nothing, the general call is ended, the time is short,
the time for labor is nearly ended, "the night cometh wherein
no man can work"; but go in, show your love and zeal, and
leave the rewarding to my generosity.
And
this is all we can say; the only hope we can hold out is that
no man ever labored for our Master who will not receive abundantly
more than he could ask or expect. And ---------- *The oldest Greek
Manuscripts, the Sinaitic and the Vatican, omit from
`Matt. 20:7` the words, "and whatsoever is right
that shall ye receive."
<PAGE 225> then we know that some of the places
in the work will be vacated by reason of some not continuing faithful,
and that the crowns of reward set apart for such will be given
to others who, by faithfulness and self-sacrifice, prove themselves
worthy of the work and the reward.
So,
then, if any have but recently come to know and love our Lord,
and desire to serve him and his truth, let not such be discouraged
because the general call ended in 1881. If you see the "door"
of opportunity for sacrifice and service open before you, enter
in. But enter quickly; for the night of darkness and of intense
opposition to the truth will ere long be upon us and will hinder
you from engaging in the service. "The morning cometh, and
also the night." "The night cometh in which no man can
work." When that is true, you may know that "the door
is shut," that all the wise virgins have entered in, that
all have been proved, and that all vacancies have been acceptably
filled. All the special "servants of God" having by
that time been "sealed in their foreheads" (given an
intellectual appreciation of God's plan), the four winds will
be loosed (`Rev. 7:1-3`), and will
produce the great "whirlwind" of trouble in the midst
of which the remnant of the Elijah class will be "changed,"
and exalted to Kingdom glory.
What
a lesson is here for those who have covenanted with the Lord to
serve him first and chiefly, and who are neglecting his work to
strive with time and thought and means for the transient joys
and prizes which the world offers. These the Lord urges, saying,
"Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee a crown
of life." "He that overcometh [who conquers in
himself the spirit of the world], the same shall be clothed in
white raiment; and I will not blot out his name out of
the book of life, but I will confess his name before my Father
and before his holy servants." "Hold fast that which
thou hast, that no man take thy crown."
`Rev. 2:10; 3:5,11`
<PAGE 226>
Let Us Go Forth
--`Hebrews 13:13`--
"Silent, like men in solemn haste,
Girded wayfarers of the waste,
We pass out at the world's wide gate,
Turning our back on all its state;
We press along the narrow road
That leads to life, to bliss, to God.
"We cannot and we would not stay;
We dread the snares that throng the way;
We fling aside the weight and sin,
Resolved the victory to win;
We know the peril, but our eyes
Rest on the splendor of the prize.
"No idling now, no wasteful sleep,
From Christian toil our limbs to keep;
No shrinking from the desperate fight;
No thought of yielding or of flight;
No love of present gain or ease;
No seeking man or self to please.
"No sorrow for the loss of fame;
No dread of scandal on our name;
No terror for the world's sharp scorn;
No wish that taunting to return.
No hatred can to hatred move,
And enmity but kindles love.
"No sigh for laughter left behind,
Or pleasures scattered to the wind;
No looking back on Sodom's plains;
No listening still to Babel's strains;
No tears for Egypt's song and smile;
No thirsting for its flowing Nile.
"What though with weariness oppressed?
'Tis but a little and we rest.
This throbbing heart and burning brain
Will soon be calm and cool again;
Night is far spent and morn is near--
Morn of the cloudless and the clear.
"'Tis but a little and we come
To our reward, our crown, our home!
Another year, or more, or less,
And we have crossed the wilderness;
Finished the toil, the rest begun,
The battle fought, the triumph won!"
--H. Bonar
THY
KINGDOM COME |