THE 
                TIME IS AT HAND 
                
               
                
                <PAGE 249>  
              
                STUDY 
                  VIII 
                ELIAS 
                  SHALL FIRST COME 
                 
                  How This Important Prophecy Stands Related to the Second Advent--A 
                  Partial and Typical Fulfilment in John the Baptist--The Real 
                  Fulfilment --The Vision on the Holy Mount--Remarkable Correspondencies 
                  between Elijah, the Type and the Antitypical Elijah--The Time 
                  is at Hand--The Outlook--Elijah's Successor, Elisha.  
              
                "Behold, 
                I will send you Elijah the prophet before the coming of the great 
                and dreadful day of the Lord. And he shall turn the heart of the 
                fathers to the children, and the heart of the children to their 
                fathers, lest [i.e., or else] I come and smite the earth with 
                a curse." `Mal. 4:5,6` 
              IN 
                considering the evidences of the time being at hand for the establishment 
                of Messiah's Kingdom in the earth, this prophecy, showing the 
                priority of Elijah's coming, must not be overlooked. 
              The 
                expression of our text is peculiar. The thought seems to be that 
                Elijah's work will be to turn (i.e., convert) parents to 
                a humble, childlike condition, and, after making them teachable 
                as little children, to turn their hearts from error, sin and unfaithfulness, 
                and lead them back into harmony with their "fathers"--a 
                name given by Hebrews to their faithful patriarchs and 
                prophets. 
              Malachi's 
                prophecy, the last message sent by Jehovah to Israel, seems to 
                have deeply impressed them--especially the last two chapters, 
                which particularly refer to Messiah's coming, and to the special 
                trials which the day of the Lord's presence would bring with it. 
                (See `Mal. 3:1-3,13-18; 4:1-6`.) 
                Gathering from this that the testing would be peculiar, they took 
                comfort from the last verses quoted above, which  
                <PAGE 250> promised that Elijah the prophet, 
                who had once converted the entire nation from the worship of Baal 
                back to the worship of God, would come again to prepare them, 
                before this severe testing time which Messiah's coming would bring. 
              This 
                prophecy was not fulfilled at the first advent of our Lord--neither 
                the portion which relates to Messiah nor that which refers to 
                Elijah. The reference of the prophecy is evidently to the second 
                advent; to the coming of the "Messenger of the Covenant" 
                in glory and power; and to the testing and great trouble of the 
                Day of the Lord at that time. However, Christ's presentation to 
                typical Israel, and the great trouble which came upon them as 
                a nation when they rejected him, was, as God had foreseen and 
                intended, another shadow which further illustrated in many particulars 
                the things presented in this prophecy. John the Immerser, in the 
                spirit of Elijah, did a work for Israel similar to that of the 
                Elijah promised, but failed of success; and, as a result, trouble 
                (a curse) upon that nation followed. The real Elijah referred 
                to by the prophet was to do a great work for the whole "earth," 
                to prepare all mankind for the second advent; and he will for 
                a time also fail of success, and as a result the great time of 
                trouble (the curse) will smite the whole earth. 
              The 
                coming of Elijah mentioned by the prophet is "before" 
                this "great and dreadful Day of Jehovah."* And since, 
                as we have just shown, the great Day of Jehovah began in A.D. 
                1874, will continue forty years, and will end with the expiration 
                of Gentile Times in the complete overthrow of worldly and Satanic 
                dominion in the earth, and the full investiture of Immanuel--Christ 
                Jesus and his saints--with all power and dominion, it is important 
                for us to show here ---------- *See Vol. I, Chapter xv.  
                <PAGE 251> that Elijah has come. He 
                has failed to turn the hearts of the world to childlikeness and 
                to the [true] wisdom of the just; and therefore the great time 
                of trouble comes, as God foresaw and foretold. In it, God will 
                teach mankind by severe and bitter experiences lessons they need 
                to learn thoroughly, to prepare them to gratefully accept the 
                Christ-- Jehovah's Messenger of the New Covenant--with all the 
                just arrangements, laws, etc., of that covenant. 
              At 
                the first advent, as we have just seen, many of God's promises 
                and plans were carried out on a small scale with one nation, Israel, 
                as an illustration of the greater, grander realities to be accomplished 
                at Christ's second coming. And as the miracles, cures, etc., represented 
                the greater works of the Millennial age, and our Lord's riding 
                on the ass as King represented his assuming the greater power, 
                majesty and honor at the second advent as King of kings and Lord 
                of lords, so "the man Christ Jesus" and his little 
                band of disciples represented the Lord of Glory highly exalted, 
                associated with the saints, his bride and coheirs, at the second 
                advent. And thus John the Baptist and his disciples engaged 
                in the same work with and under him, in attempting to convert 
                Israel and to prepare them to receive Messiah, represented 
                the real Elijah (the true Christian church), whose work 
                has been to attempt the conversion of the world before 
                the coming of Messiah to the world--the spiritual Lord of glory 
                and King of kings. John the Immerser, in the spirit and power 
                of Elijah, failed to reform Israel, and, as a consequence (`Matt. 
                17:12`), Israel rejected Jesus in the flesh, and brought 
                upon themselves a great "day of vengeance," trouble 
                and wrath. (`Luke 21:22`) So, likewise, 
                only on the larger scale, the real and greater Elijah has 
                failed to convert and prepare the world to receive the King of 
                Glory, and now, consequently, the great day of wrath must come 
                upon  
                <PAGE 252> the world, to melt and mellow and 
                humble and prepare all to cry out from the heart--Hosannah! Blessed 
                is he that cometh in the name of Jehovah! 
              It 
                is thus seen that the Church in the flesh (the Christ in 
                the flesh, Head and body) is the Elijah or forerunner of the Church 
                in glory, Jehovah's Anointed. Not the nominal church, but 
                the really consecrated Church, which on the other side of the 
                tomb will be the great Anointed Deliverer-- these constitute the 
                Elijah. Their mission is to reprove error and sin, and to point 
                to the coming Kingdom of glory. Our Lord Jesus and the apostles, 
                and all the faithful in Christ Jesus since, are of this great 
                antitypical Elijah, prophet or teacher--the same class (Head and 
                body) which shall shortly compose the King of Glory. The work 
                in which the Church is now engaged is merely preliminary to its 
                future work, so far as the reforming of the world is concerned. 
                In its kingly office the Church shall accomplish for the world 
                what it fails to do as the Elijah teacher. 
              Let 
                us not be misunderstood: We have heretofore shown that God's plan 
                does not extend to the converting of the world during the Gospel 
                age. He did not intend it to do so, but merely designed the selection 
                and trial of the Church now, and the blessing of the world through 
                the Church, the Christ, in an age to follow this. We do not contradict 
                this when we say that the Elijah (Christ in the flesh) has 
                tried to convert the world and failed, except in bringing 
                about partial reforms; for though God knew and foretold that our 
                mission to the world would be largely a failure, except in selecting 
                a choice little flock, yet, knowing that the effort would react 
                favorably upon ourselves, his commission to us through our Lord 
                was to try to convert the world, when he said, "Go 
                ye into all the world and preach the good tidings to every creature." 
                Seeing that he foretold our present failure, but our future success, 
                when he shall glorify and endue  
                <PAGE 253> us with divine power, we are enabled 
                to rejoice even while viewing the comparative failure of the past 
                eighteen centuries, realizing that the labor of the true Elijah 
                class has not been in vain, but has served the divine purpose 
                in developing the true Church while bearing witness before the 
                world--which will profit it in due time. 
              John 
                the Baptist was not actually Elijah returned to earth, neither 
                is the Church; but as it was true of John, that he did an Elijah 
                work to Israel (`Luke 1:17`) to prepare 
                them, and introduced the Lord in the flesh, so it is true of the 
                Church--it does the predicted Elijah work "in the spirit 
                and power of Elijah" to the world, and announces our Lord's 
                second advent in almost the same words which John used at the 
                first advent: "There standeth one among you whom ye know 
                not; He it is who, coming after me, is superior to me." 
                `John 1:26,27` 
              All 
                could not receive John's testimony nor realize that he was forerunner 
                to the King in the flesh. Had they done so, they would have been 
                prepared thereby to receive Jesus as their Messiah. To as many 
                of them as could and did accept John's message and receive Christ, 
                to these John did do the Elijah work. As our Lord said 
                to them of John (`Matt. 11:14`), 
                "If ye will receive it, this is the Elias which was 
                to come"; though John and his work did not complete the prediction 
                concerning Elijah, even as our Lord in the flesh did not 
                fulfil all that was predicted of Messiah. He was, to all who could 
                receive it, Jehovah's Anointed, even before he had finished his 
                work of sacrifice, or had been glorified, or had come again in 
                the exercise of the great office of Messiah or Deliverer. John, 
                at the first advent, was really a finishing out, in a measure, 
                of the type begun in the person and work of Elijah; and John's 
                work at the first advent foreshadowed the closing work of the 
                Church at the second advent. These, the feet of Christ in the 
                flesh--the feet of Elijah--announce  
                <PAGE 254> the Kingdom. (`Isa. 
                52:7`) To those who "can receive it" we 
                announce, as at hand, the reign of the Christ glorified; and likewise 
                to those who "can receive it" we have pointed 
                out the foretold antitypical Elijah. Some, probably, will not 
                "receive it," but will still look for some one man to 
                fulfil Malachi's predictions, and will "know not the time 
                of their visitation" until the great day of trouble is burning 
                as an oven. 
              It 
                will be seen, then, that the failure of the Elijah (the Christ 
                in the flesh) to convert and restore the world was as much a foreseen 
                result as was John's failure to convert Israel. Nevertheless it 
                will be the same Elijah class, only glorified and empowered, which 
                will during the Millennial age bless and teach the world and restore 
                all things, as promised by the mouth of all the holy prophets 
                (`Acts 3:19-21`); only in the name 
                and likeness the Elijah type ceases with our earthly career. In 
                harmony with this were our Lord's words in reply to his disciples 
                who asked, "Why then say the scribes that Elijah must first 
                come?" Our Lord's answer does not attempt a full explanation 
                of Elijah's being a type and John a continuation of the same while 
                at the same time a shadowy fulfilment of it, etc.--things which 
                the disciples were not then prepared to understand, and which 
                moreover were not then due to be understood; and hence, while 
                pointing out John's failure as a partial fulfilment of 
                the prophecy, our Lord adds, "Elijah truly shall* come, and 
                restore all things." (`Matt. 
                17:11`) Evidently he had in mind his own glorious work 
                of the coming age, associated with his glorified "body" 
                which the Gospel age would select and test. He was looking beyond 
                the veil to the Millennial age, and seeing the Elijah class caught 
                up in the chariots of fire in power and great glory--spiritual 
                exaltation. ---------- *Oldest Manuscripts omit first. 
                 
                <PAGE 255>  
              A 
                woman is the figure used when the Church alone is referred 
                to, separate from her Lord and Head. Separate and distinct from 
                her Lord, the Bridegroom, she is an espoused virgin. But in this 
                instance a man, Elijah, is the figure used, because the work prefigured 
                is not the work of the Church separate from her Lord, but the 
                one work of both. Our Lord was the Head and Forerunner of the 
                Church in the flesh (the Elijah), as truly as he is Head of the 
                Church triumphant --the Christ. Other instances in which a man 
                is the figure used, when a joint work of Christ Jesus and 
                his body, the Church, is typified, are numerous: for instance, 
                Aaron and all his successors in the office of Chief Priest represented 
                the Lord and the under-priests, members of his body; Melchisedec 
                similarly represented the whole body in glory; so did Moses, 
                David and Solomon. Hence the use of Elijah as a figure, in representing 
                a united work of Christ and the Church, is in harmony with 
                the Scripture usage. 
              In 
                view of the class which Elijah represented, how forcibly eloquent 
                was that "vision" which the Lord showed to the 
                three disciples on the mount of transfiguration. (`Matt. 
                17:1-9`) It was a vision of the coming Kingdom, Peter tells 
                us. (`2 Pet. 1:16-18`) Our Lord, 
                transfigured, appeared radiant before their eyes, while a figure 
                of Moses represented the Mosaic or Law Dispensation and a figure 
                of Elijah represented the Gospel or Christian Dispensation. Both 
                dispensations look toward and point out and speak of the sacrifice 
                and sufferings of Christ and the glory to follow. 
              Before 
                leaving this subject we will point out some features and incidents 
                in the life of the Prophet Elijah, the type, comparing them with 
                the history of the Church, the antitypical Elijah, which will 
                certainly astonish all who have not noticed them heretofore. That 
                the comparison may be readily seen, we will place these in parallel 
                columns.  
                <PAGE 256>  
               
                ELIJAH 
               
                ---------- 
              Elijah 
                was persecuted for fidelity to truth and righteousness. 
               
                ---------- 
              His 
                principal persecutor was Jezebel, the wicked queen of Israel, 
                who is mentioned by name as the type of the enemy of the saints. 
                `Rev. 2:20` 
               
                ---------- 
              Jezebel's 
                persecuting power was exercised through her husband, Ahab, the 
                king. 
               
                ---------- 
              Elijah 
                fled from Jezebel and Ahab, into the wilderness, to a place prepared 
                of God, where he was miraculously nourished. `1 Kings 17:5-9` 
               
                ---------- 
              Elijah 
                was "three years and six months" in the wilderness, 
                and during that time there was no rain, and a great famine was 
                in the land. `James 5:17`; `1 Kings 17:7; 
                18:2` 
               
                ---------- 
              After 
                the three and a half years, 1260 days, when Elijah returned from 
                the wilderness, the errors of Jezebel's priests were manifested, 
                the true God was honored, and copious rains followed. `1 Kings 
                18:41-45` 
               
                ---------- 
              The 
                king and the people at first rejoiced, and Elijah and his God 
                were honored; but the spirit of Jezebel was unchanged. She still 
                sought Elijah's life, and he was again compelled to flee into 
                the wilderness. `1 Kings 18:40,45,46; 19:1-4` 
               
                ---------- 
              Elijah's 
                career ended by his being taken from the earth. ---------------------------------------- 
                 
               
                THE CHURCH 
               
                ---------- 
              The 
                Church was persecuted for fidelity to truth and righteousness. 
               
                ---------- 
              The 
                principal persecutor was the apostate Church of Rome, which claims 
                to be a "queen" and ruler over spiritual Israel. 
                `Rev. 18:7` 
               
                ---------- 
              Papacy's 
                persecuting power was exercised through the Roman Empire, to which 
                she was joined. 
               
                ---------- 
              The 
                true Church fled into the symbolic wilderness--or condition of 
                isolation--to her place, prepared of God, where she was sustained. 
                `Rev. 12:6,16` 
               
                ---------- 
              The 
                Church was three and a half symbolic years (a day for a year-- 
                1260 literal years) in the wilderness condition, during which 
                there was a spiritual famine because of the lack of truth--the 
                living water. Comp. `Rev. 12:6; 11:3`; `Amos 
                8:11`. 
               
                ---------- 
              At 
                the end of 1260 years the power of the truth and its witnesses 
                was manifested (A.D. 1799); and since then the truth has flowed 
                at the rate of millions of Bibles every year, refreshing the world 
                and bringing forth fruit. 
               
                ---------- 
              The 
                Bible has brought such blessings that the empires of earth recognize 
                the Lord's hand; yet the principles of Papacy--Jezebel--in 
                so-called Protestant sects compel the saints again to flee into 
                the wilderness condition. 
               
                ---------- 
              The 
                saints will be changed from earthly to heavenly conditions.  
                <PAGE 257>  
              These 
                are striking coincidences, and are not accidental. And the fact 
                that Elijah was to come before the great day, and that now 
                we have found in the Church the antitypical Elijah to whom Malachi 
                the prophet referred and whom John the Baptist further typified, 
                should be esteemed another evidence that the time is at 
                hand--that the great Day of the Lord has come. But, beyond this, 
                there are in this type suggestions, supported by other scriptures, 
                designed to guide and to prepare the saints to act well their 
                part, and to strengthen and sustain them in the stormy day just 
                upon us. 
              We 
                have no desire to draw before the mind a dark picture: we would 
                prefer to think of and point out the glory to follow the great 
                day of wrath, and the joys of the incoming Millennial Day, rather 
                than the afflictions and discouragements of the nearer future 
                which precedes full sunrise. But it is necessary that the saints 
                should be at least in some measure forewarned of impending events, 
                that when such come to pass they may not be alarmed or disheartened, 
                but being forearmed may know how to meet them; and also that they 
                may more fully appreciate the blessings of the present, so as 
                diligently to "work while it is called day; for the 
                night [a much darker time in comparison with the present, called 
                day] cometh, wherein no man CAN WORK." 
              The 
                present little season, before the storm-cloud bursts upon the 
                world, is a most favorable time for the work of the Elijah class, 
                and corresponds to the successful days of both Elijah and John. 
                It is favorable for personal growth in grace and knowledge, and 
                also for the spread of the truth--the most favorable time that 
                has ever been known. How the early truth-seekers, the Bereans, 
                for instance, would have rejoiced at such students' helps as we 
                now possess, in the way of complete and printed Reference Bibles, 
                Concordances, Histories, Cyclopedias, Dictionaries and other valuable 
                works of reference, at prices within the reach of all,  
                <PAGE 258> and accessible to all without price 
                in the public libraries of even moderate-sized towns; and in addition 
                to all these, the increasing light of the dawning Millennial day, 
                and the ability of all classes to read and think intelligently 
                for themselves. With such helps more can be learned of God's Word 
                and plan in a day than it was possible to learn in a year in less 
                favored times. Nor has there ever been a time so favorable for 
                Christian effort, or so spurring to Christian zeal and activity, 
                as this time of the glorious harvest message of the Lord's presence 
                and the glad tidings of the approaching kingdom. 
              If 
                we would travel from place to place, to meet with believers, we 
                can do as much traveling in a week as Paul could do in a month 
                or more, and with much more comfort. If we would preach by voice, 
                we can do so with none to molest or make us afraid; and we live 
                at a time when the masses of the people can read and write, which 
                only the very few could do in times past, and when the printed 
                gospel is cheap, convenient, and often more effective than oral 
                sermons. The willing heart can do far more thus than Aquila and 
                Priscilla could do in their way and time with the same amount 
                of effort. We can preach with both the printed and the written 
                page through the agency of the wonderful mail systems of our day, 
                to friends and strangers the world over, and at almost no cost. 
              But 
                the Apostle, referring to the nominal Church in the last days, 
                asserts that "the time will come when they will not 
                endure sound doctrine." (`2 
                Tim. 4:3`) While this is true now, in the same sense that 
                it has been true for centuries, it is to have a more forcible 
                and clear fulfilment future. It is true now that the Church nominal 
                will not endure preachers who ignore their creeds and "preach 
                the Word," the "whole counsel [plan] of God"; but 
                having "itching ears" they love human speculations on 
                evolution, and philosophies falsely  
                <PAGE 259> so-called, rather than the Word 
                of God. And yet, because they cannot hinder it, they endure the 
                sound doctrine to some extent--to an extent far beyond what Rome 
                in her palmy days would have endured. 
              Just 
                before the words we have here cited, the Apostle refers directly 
                to the perilous times of the last days of this age (`2 
                Tim. 3:1-13`), pointing out its high-minded, pleasure-loving 
                and good-despising characteristics, with its formalism, covetousness, 
                pride and unthankfulness; and he declares that (in the Church) 
                evil men and leaders-astray (from the truth) shall grow worse 
                and worse, deceiving others, and being deceived themselves by 
                their sophistries. And since the Apostle was thinking and writing 
                specially about the last days, and not about the middle ages, 
                we are surely justified in querying whether a time may not be 
                but a short distance before us, in these "last days," 
                when sound doctrine will not be endured or permitted to 
                any degree. 
              While 
                it is true now, to a large extent, that none are permitted to 
                buy or sell [trade in the truth] in the common marts or synagogues, 
                except those who have the mark of the beast or the number of his 
                name (`Rev. 13:17`), yet the fully 
                consecrated have learned that magnificent temples of fashion, 
                called churches, are no more necessary to the preaching of the 
                gospel now than they were in the days of the apostles, and that 
                grand organs and trained choirs are not necessary accompaniments 
                to attract the attention of the people; for now, as in the early 
                days, the common people hear the gospel gladly on the street corners, 
                in the market places, through the mails and from the printed page. 
                The question is, May not this statement of the Revelator mean 
                still more than is at present experienced? and, like the Apostle 
                Paul's statement, may it not imply that a time will come, in the 
                last days, when sound doctrine will not be endured at all? 
                May not ours in this respect correspond somewhat to the  
                <PAGE 260> experience of John the Baptist (the 
                type), who was shut up in prison? In other words, What may we 
                expect between the present comparatively favorable time--though 
                it is not without its difficulties--and the coming blessed time 
                of unhindered righteousness? Will it continue to be as favorable 
                as the present for labor in the vineyard--or more so, or less 
                so? Let us notice what these types indicate; for since our Lord 
                has directed our attention to them, whatever we find in the life 
                and experience of either Elijah or John which seems to fit well 
                to the experience of the Church, and to the testimony regarding 
                her future earthly course, we are justified in recognizing as 
                typical. 
              Elijah 
                was separated from earthly scenes by a chariot of fire, representative 
                of the spiritual glory and exaltation awaiting, at the end of 
                the earthly racecourse, those of the Church alive and remaining 
                to the last days. But we should also remember that it was by a 
                whirlwind or storm that he was taken away; and a storm is the 
                symbol of trouble, as much as the fiery chariot is a figure of 
                victory and glorious escape from that trouble. 
              John 
                the Baptist's closing experiences are still more clearly marked 
                by the trouble feature. Though he was not obeyed by the people 
                (`Matt. 17:12`), they for a short 
                time recognized him as a servant and prophet of God (`John 
                5:35`); yet when he had announced the presence of Messiah 
                his influence soon began to wane, as he had testified it would 
                do, saying of Christ, "He must increase, but I must decrease." 
                So it must be in the end of this age: the work of the John class 
                (the Elijah class) closes with the announcement that the Kingdom 
                of Heaven is at hand, and that the King is present. This is now 
                being done; and the exact words of John's testimony apply with 
                equal force at this time of the Lord's second advent: "There 
                standeth one among you [present] whom ye know not," 
                "whose fan is in his  
                <PAGE 261> hand, and he will thoroughly purge 
                [cleanse] his [threshing] floor, and gather his wheat into the 
                garner; but he will burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire"--the 
                great time of trouble. `John 1:26`; 
                `Matt. 3:12` 
              As 
                John decreased--his special work being accomplished when his message 
                was delivered--so the Church in the flesh must decrease when its 
                last message is given, until the last member has laid down his 
                consecrated life, and passed beyond the veil into "glory," 
                thenceforth to be a member of the glorious, reigning Christ. As 
                John said that Jesus must increase, so now that the real kingdom 
                is about to be established we can confidently say that the King 
                is present, and that his kingdom must increase until it fills 
                the earth. And John's announcement of the "harvest" 
                work--the gathering of the wheat, and the trouble coming upon 
                the chaff--also finds its parallel in the present time. 
              John's 
                liberty was restrained soon after the delivery of his message, 
                announcing the present One and the work before him; and 
                he was cast into prison because he had reproved the king of improper 
                union with a woman (`Matt. 14:4`). 
                And though the faithful children of God have often pointed out 
                that union between the Church and the civil power is out of order, 
                being in the Scriptures termed harlotry (`Rev. 
                17:5`), and though in a great measure the world has withdrawn 
                from the churches, the union still exists, and the Scriptures 
                seem to point out that, in the time of trouble approaching, the 
                nominal churches, professedly virgins of Christ, will be on the 
                side of the kings of the earth, and united to them; and the true 
                Church, like its type, John the Baptist, will be unpopular and 
                restrained of liberty, because of faithfulness in opposing and 
                condemning error. 
              In 
                John's case as well as in Elijah's it was a woman that persecuted--a 
                king acting as her agent and tool: with the true Church it has 
                been in the past that which these symbolize,  
                <PAGE 262> and doubtless will be so in the 
                future--the nominal church represented by a woman and civil government 
                by a king. Not only does prophecy point out a closer union between 
                these than at present exists, but any close observer can see that 
                the principal lever by which the royal aristocracy rules 
                the masses is the superstition that God appointed these "great 
                men," though often both weak and vicious, to rule over them; 
                and that to rebel against tyranny and injustice, and to claim 
                justice, liberty and equal rights, is to oppose God's will. Hence 
                the tendency of governments and churches is toward open or secret 
                union for their mutual welfare in the coming storm. 
              Not 
                only so, but the coming struggle between the aristocracy and the 
                masses of every civilized land will be so peculiar, so unlike 
                any former experience, that moderate, conservative, religiously-inclined 
                people, fearing the utter wreck of society in chaos and anarchy, 
                will naturally prefer monarchy, oppression and bondage to anything 
                certain to be worse. Hence such will affiliate with church and 
                empire, with wealth and aristocracy, in the general effort to 
                repress and prevent that irrepressible conflict--"The battle 
                of the great day of God Almighty." 
              Eventually, 
                probably the only exceptions to this course, among the lovers 
                of peace and true religion, will be those to whom the King of 
                kings is pleased, through his Word, to reveal his plans (`John 
                16:13`), and who have full confidence in his wisdom and 
                love, as well as in his power to make all things work out according 
                to his promises. Only such, among the conservative, order-loving 
                people, as see the part which the coming social revolution must 
                play in God's plan, in removing effete systems whose day is past, 
                and in preparing the world, by a great leveling process, for the 
                Millennial reign of righteousness, will be able to comprehend 
                the situation and to act accordingly. But these will be misunderstood, 
                 
                <PAGE 263> and their endeavors to point out 
                the true state of the case, and the real and only remedy, will 
                probably be interfered with by those who do not see the grand 
                outcome, and who, because unwilling to submit their own wills, 
                ideas and plans, are unable to see God's plans. When repressive, 
                restrictive and coercive measures are thought to be necessary, 
                such measures will probably include not only labor organizations 
                and the publications which advocate their rights and wrongs, but 
                also such others as point out the plan of God, and the real cause 
                and only remedy for the great distress of the nations. Yes, the 
                time is probably not many years distant, when repressive measures 
                may be brought to bear against every effort of the saints to spread 
                the good news of the coming kingdom, all on the plea that the 
                general interests and the public welfare demand such a course. 
              Thus 
                would be fulfilled the predictions of the 
                `Second Psalm`, and probably in the end with more bitterness 
                than can now well be imagined, though it has been partially fulfilled 
                already upon the Head of the body. `Acts 
                4:25-29` 
              The 
                same necessity for restricting liberty on political and social 
                questions will probably be supposed to apply equally to freedom 
                of expression on religious questions, which really lie at the 
                foundation of all liberty. It would not be surprising if a "strong 
                government," a monarchy, would some day replace this present 
                Great Republic; and it is entirely probable that one common standard 
                of religious belief will be deemed expedient and will be promulgated, 
                to teach outside of which will be treated and punished as a political 
                offense. Such a persecution would not only furnish, in the end 
                or harvest of this age, another parallel to the harvest of the 
                Jewish age (`Acts 4:10-13,23-30; 5:29-41; 
                11:19`), but would also give a wider and deeper significance 
                to the words of the Apostles Paul and John (`2 
                Tim. 4:3`; `Rev. 13:17`), 
                 
                <PAGE 264> and to the typical illustrations 
                of the close of the earthly career of the true Church, as represented 
                in Elijah's whirlwind departure and John the Baptist's imprisonment 
                and beheading. 
              Two 
                lessons we may draw from this to advantage, whether future developments 
                shall prove that we have read the prophetic testimony correctly 
                or incorrectly; and they are these: First, we should be so prepared, 
                so armed and so thoroughly furnished with the invincible truth, 
                that persecution would move us only to greater zeal, and not lead 
                us through surprise or fear to lower our standard, nor to surrender 
                when the kings of the earth stand up, and, with the religious 
                rulers of the people, are gathered against us, and against the 
                truths to which God has granted us the privilege of witnessing, 
                as his servants and ambassadors. (`1 John 
                3:1`) Second, such reflections relative to the future, 
                contrasted with the privileges of the present, should serve to 
                stimulate every consecrated child of God to make diligent use 
                of the present grand harvest opportunities and privileges, remembering 
                that "he that reapeth receiveth wages," as truly as 
                he that planted and watered, and that now is pre-eminently a time 
                for gathering fruit unto eternal life. The little quiet 
                of the present favorable time, with its greater liberties and 
                advantages in every way, is divinely arranged in order to the 
                sealing of the true servants of God in their foreheads (intellectually, 
                with the truth). `Rev. 7:3`  
               
                "Let the 'little while' between 
               
                In its golden light be seen."  
              The 
                Master saith: "Work while it is called day; for the 
                night cometh, when no man can work." "Labor not for 
                the meat that perisheth, but for that which endureth unto everlasting 
                life." 
              So, 
                then, in the present due time, we see that Elijah the prophet 
                came, as foretold, before the great and notable day  
                <PAGE 265> of the Lord. And we hear his closing 
                testimony, like that of John, saying, "There standeth one 
                among you whom ye know not"--whose fan is in his hand, and 
                he will thoroughly cleanse his threshing-floor: he will gather 
                his wheat into the garner, and burn up the tares [as tares--not 
                as men] with unquenchable fire in the great time of trouble--the 
                curse, which must needs come to prepare the way of the Great King 
                of kings. He must increase, but the Elijah must decrease and finally 
                be entirely restrained. Not only do we hear this testimony from 
                a few of the Elijah class now, but every one who is of the Elijah 
                class will ere long be found proclaiming this message and engaging 
                in the Elijah work. Such only as are thus faithful will be of 
                the glorified Elijah, and permitted to share in the work of restitution 
                of all things which, during the Millennium, will be a grand success. 
                A depth of significance is found in the meaning of the name Elijah. 
                It signifies God [mighty-one] of Jehovah. It is 
                thus a fitting name for the Lord's Anointed, whose grand work 
                will be to restore all things which God hath spoken by the mouth 
                of all his holy prophets since the world began. 
              Concluding 
                this subject, we notice briefly the fact that in the close of 
                the Prophet Elijah's career he called Elisha, who, after sacrificing, 
                left all and followed with Elijah, and became his successor as 
                prophet when Elijah was taken away in the whirlwind--receiving 
                his mantle of authority and a large degree of his spirit and power. 
                (`2 Kings 2:9-16`) And since Elijah 
                represented the Body of Christ in the flesh--the overcoming Church, 
                a company, a number--it is but reasonable that we should conclude 
                that Elisha represented a class also; a class which will come 
                into deep sympathy with the Elijah class, and follow the Lord's 
                leading with it; and yet a class which will not be expecting to 
                be glorified. These will be separated, by the "whirlwind" 
                of trouble, from the Elijah class, yet nevertheless will retain 
                an interest and will receive a blessing. After Elijah was gone, 
                 
                <PAGE 266> Elisha became bold and powerful, 
                so that the theologians of that day ("sons of the prophets") 
                said, The spirit of Elijah rests upon Elisha now! 
              The 
                meaning of the name Elisha is mighty deliverer, 
                and the career of Elisha was one of restitution work. This doubtless 
                foreshadows a work by a class which in the future will be the 
                active agents among men in carrying on the restitution work in 
                the power of the then glorified Church. Among other wonderful 
                works, Elisha healed the waters, so that there should not be thence 
                any more death or barren land; he increased the poor widow's oil 
                to cancel her debt; he raised the Shunamite's son to life; and 
                when there was famine in the land, and the mess of pottage for 
                the theologians ("sons of the prophets") was found to 
                be poisoned, so that none could eat of it, Elisha healed it and 
                made it wholesome for food. He caused bread sufficient for only 
                a few to more than supply a large number. He healed the leprosy 
                of Naaman. He was also God's agent in the anointing of Jehu, at 
                whose hands, according to the word of the Lord by Elijah, the 
                royal family of Ahab, including Jezebel, was entirely cut off, 
                and all her priests as well. `2 Kings 2:19-22; 
                4:1-7,18-44; 5:1-14; 9:1-37; 10:28` 
              It 
                is not difficult to trace in these works of Elisha what bears 
                a close resemblance to the very restitution work which may be 
                expected ere long, when the waters of truth shall no longer be 
                brackish with error, being healed at the very spring by a clearer 
                understanding of the Word of God; when the poor shall be helped 
                to secure the oil of joy for the spirit of heaviness; when the 
                dead shall be restored; when in the famine the food (truth) shall 
                be made wholesome and plentiful; and when the powers and systems 
                represented by Ahab and Jezebel, and all who unite with them against 
                the Lord, shall be fully and finally overthrown. 
  
                
                 
              THE 
                TIME IS AT HAND  |