::page 103::
STUDY V
THE MANNER OF OUR LORD'S RETURN AND APPEARING
Harmony of the Manner of Our Lord's Second Advent with Other Features of the Divine Plan--How and When The Church shall See Him-- How and When the Glory of the Lord shall be so Revealed that All Flesh shall See it Together--Statements Apparently Conflicting Shown to be Harmonious--He Comes "As a Thief"--"Not with Outward Show"--And yet "With a Shout"--With "Voices"--And "With the Sound of the Great Trumpet"--"He Shall be Revealed in Flaming Fire, Taking Vengeance"--And yet, "He Shall So Come, in Like Manner" as He Went Away--Importance of Prophetic Time in this Connection Shown--Harmony of Present Indications.
THE view just had, of the speedy close of Gentile Times, and the assurance that the
consummation of the Church's hope must precede their close, only whets the
appetite of those now waiting for the consolation of Israel. Such will be hungering for
whatever information our Father may have supplied through the prophets, touching the
"harvest," the end, or closing period of this age--the separating of wheat from
tares among the living members of the nominal Church, and the time of the change of the
overcomers, to be with and like their Lord and Head.
But in order to appreciate the reasonableness of the prophetic teaching on
these deeply interesting subjects, it is absolutely necessary that we have clear views
both of the object of our Lord's second coming, and of the manner in
which he will be revealed. That the object of his coming is to reconcile
"whosoever will," of the world, to God, by a process of ruling, and teaching,
and disciplining, called judging and blessing, we trust all present readers have been
convinced in the reading of Volume I. The manner of the Lord's coming
::page 104::
and appearing, therefore, is of paramount importance, before proceeding in our study of
the time of the harvest, etc. The student must hold clearly in mind the object while
studying the manner of our Lord's return; and both of these, when he comes to study the
time. This is needful as an offset to the erroneous views, already preoccupying many
minds, based upon false ideas of both the object and the manner of our Lord's coming.
Grasp and hold in mind as firmly as possible the fact already demonstrated,
that God's plan is one harmonious whole, which is being wrought out through Christ; and
that the work of the second advent stands related to the work of the first as effect to
cause: That is, that the great work of Restitution at the second advent follows the work
of Redemption accomplished at the first advent as a logical sequence according to the
divine plan. Therefore the Lord's return is the dawn of hope for the world, the
time for the bestowment of the favors secured by the redemption--the Gospel Age being
merely an intervening parenthesis, during which the bride of Christ is selected, to be
associated with her Lord in the great work of restitution which he comes to accomplish.
And since the Church of Christ, which has been developing during the Gospel
age, is to be associated with her Lord in the great restitution work of the Millennial
age, the first work of Christ at the second advent must be the gathering of his elect
Church, to which reference is made through the Prophet (`Psa. 50:5`), saying, "Gather
my saints together unto me--those that have made a covenant with me by sacrifice."
This gathering or harvesting time is in the lapping period of the two ages. As will be
shown, it is a period of forty years, which both ends the Gospel age and introduces the
Millennial age. (See Vol. I,
pages 219-221;
::page 105::
234-237; and the Chart of the Ages.) This harvest period not only
accomplishes the separation of wheat from tares in the nominal Gospel church, and the
gathering and glorification of the wheat class, but it is also to accomplish the burning
(destruction) of the tares (as tares, or imitation wheat--not as individuals: the fire of
destruction is symbolic as well as the tares), and the gathering and destruction of the
corrupt fruitage of "the Vine of the earth" (human ambition, greed and
selfishness), which has been growing and ripening for centuries in the kingdoms of this
world and in the various civil and social organizations among men.
Although, when treating of the object of our Lord's return, we showed that it
would be a personal coming, let us again guard the student against confusion of
thought in considering the two apparently conflicting expressions of our Lord--"Lo, I
am with you alway, even unto the end of the world" (aionos age), and, "I
go to prepare a place for you, ...and will come again and receive you."
(`Matt. 28:20`; `John 14:2,3`) The following incident will serve as an illustration of the
harmony of the two promises: One friend said to another as they were about to part,
Remember, I will be with you through all your journey. How? Certainly not in person; for
there they took trains to go in opposite directions to distant points. The idea was that
in love, and thought, and care one for another, they would not be separated. In a similar
yet fuller sense, the Lord has always been with his Church, his divine power enabling him
to oversee, direct and assist them, from first to last. But we are now considering, not
our Lord's presence with us in this figurative sense, but the manner of his second
personal presence and appearing, "when he shall come to be glorified in his saints
and to be admired in all them that believe in that day."
The Scriptures teach that Christ comes again to reign; that he must reign
until he has put down all enemies--all
::page 106::
opponents, all things in the way of the great restitution which he comes to
accomplish--the last to be overthrown being death (`1 Cor. 15:25,26`); and that he will
reign for a thousand years. It is therefore only as should be expected, that we find a
much larger space in prophecy devoted to the second advent and its thousand years of
triumphant reign and overthrow of evil than to the thirty-four years of the first advent
for redemption. And as we have found that prophecy touches the various important points of
those thirty-four years, from Bethlehem and Nazareth to the gall and vinegar, the parted
raiment, the cross, the tomb and the resurrection, so we find that prophecy likewise
touches various points of the thousand years of the second presence, particularly their
beginning and ending.
The second presence of our Lord will cover a much longer period of time than
the first. The mission of his first advent was finished in less than thirty-four years,
while it will require a thousand years to accomplish the appointed work of his second
presence. And thus it may be seen at a glance that, while the work of the first advent was
no less important than that of the second advent--yea, though it was so important
that the work of the second advent could never have been possible without it--yet
it was not so varied, and hence required less description than the work of the second
advent.
In considering the second advent we must not, any more than at the first
advent, expect all prophecies to mark one particularly eventful moment of our Lord's
arrival and to call the attention of all men to the fact of his presence. Such is not
God's usual method: such was not the case at the first advent. The first advent of Messiah
was not marked by any sudden or surprising demonstration, out of the usual order of
things, but it was manifested and proven by the gradual fulfilment of prophecy showing to
thoughtful observers
::page 107::
that the events which should be expected were being accomplished on time. And thus it will
be at his second advent. It is of less importance that we discover the exact moment of his
arrival than that we discern the fact of his presence when he has arrived, even as at the
first advent it was important to be able to recognize his presence, and the sooner the
better, but much less important to know the exact date of his birth. In considering the
second advent, the act of coming and the moment of arrival are too frequently the thought,
whereas it should be thought of as a period of presence, as was the first advent.
The precise moment at which that presence would begin would then seem less important, and
his object and work during the period of his presence would receive the greater
consideration.
We must bear in mind, also, that our Lord is no longer a human being; that as
a human being he gave himself a ransom for men, having become a man for that very purpose.
(`1 Tim. 2:6`; `Heb. 10:4,5`; `1 Cor. 15:21,22`) He is now highly exalted, to the divine
nature. Therefore Paul said, "Though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now,
henceforth, know we him [so] no more." (`2 Cor. 5:16`) He was raised from the dead a
life-giving spirit being (`1 Cor. 15:45`), and not a man, of the earth
earthy. He is no longer human in any sense or degree; for we must not forget what we have
learned (See Vol. I, Chap. 10)--that natures are
separate and distinct. Since he is no longer in any sense or degree a human being, we must
not expect him to come again as a human being, as at the first advent. His second coming
is to be in a different manner, as well as for a different purpose.
Noting the fact that our Lord's change from human to divine nature
at his resurrection was even a greater change than the one which occurred some thirty-four
years previously, when he laid aside the glory of spiritual being and
::page 108::
"was made flesh," we may with great profit consider very minutely his every
action during the forty days after his resurrection before he went "to the
Father"; because it is the resurrected Jesus of those forty days who is to come
again, and not the man Christ Jesus who gave himself as our ransom, in death. He
who was put to death a flesh being was also in his resurrection quickened [made alive] a
spirit being. `1 Pet. 3:18`*
At his second advent he does not come to be subject to the powers that be, to
pay tribute to Caesar and to suffer humiliation, injustice and violence; but he comes to
reign, exercising all power in heaven and in earth. He does not come in the body of his
humiliation, a human body, which he took for the suffering of death, inferior to his
former glorious body (`Heb. 2:9`); but in his glorious spiritual body, which is "the
express image of the Father's person" (`Heb. 1:3`); for, because of his obedience
even unto death, he is now highly exalted to the divine nature and likeness, and
given a name above every name--the Father's name only excepted. (`Phil. 2:9`; `1 Cor.
15:27`) The Apostle shows that it "doth not yet appear" to our human
understanding what he is now like; hence we know not what we shall be like when made like
him, but we (the Church) may rejoice in the
----------
*In this passage, the words "in the" and
"by the" are arbitrarily supplied by the translators, and are misleading. The
Greek reads simply--"Put to death flesh, quickened spirit." Our Lord was put to
death a fleshly or human being, but was raised from the dead a spirit being. And since the
Church is to be "changed" in order that she may be like Christ, it is
evident that the change which occurred in the Head was of a kind similar to that described
as in reservation for the overcomers, who shall be changed from human to spiritual nature,
and made like him--"partakers of the divine nature." Hence, the following
description of the change of the saints is applicable also to their Lord; viz., "It
is sown in dishonor, it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in power;
it is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body."
::page 109::
assurance that we shall one day be with him, and like him, and see him as he is
(`1 John 3:2`)--not as he was at his first advent in humiliation, when he had laid aside
his former glory and for our sakes had become poor, that we through his poverty might be
made rich.
If we consider the wisdom and prudence of our Lord's methods of manifesting
his presence to his disciples after his resurrection, as well as previously, it may help
us to remember that the same wisdom will be displayed in his methods of revealing himself
at his second advent, both to the Church and to the world--methods not necessarily
similar, but in each case well suited to his object, which never is to alarm or excite
men, but to convince their cool, calm judgments of the great truths to be
impressed upon them. Our Lord's first advent was not a startling, exciting or alarming
event. How quietly and unobtrusively he came! So much so that only those who had faith
and humility were enabled to recognize in the infant of humble birth, in the man of
sorrows, in the friend of the humble and poor, and finally in the crucified one, the
long-looked-for Messiah.
After his resurrection, the manifestation of his presence would in the nature
of the case be a more astounding fact, particularly when his changed nature is taken into
consideration. Yet the fact of his resurrection, together with the fact of his changed
nature, had to be fully manifested, not to all the world at that time, but to chosen
witnesses who would give credible testimony of the fact to succeeding generations. Had all
the world been made acquainted with the fact then, the testimony coming down to our day
would probably have been much less trustworthy, being colored and warped by men's ideas
and mixed with their traditions so that the truth might appear almost or quite incredible.
But God entrusted it only to chosen, faithful and worthy witnesses; and as we notice the
account, let each mark how
::page 110::
perfectly the object was accomplished, and how clear, positive and convincing was
the proof of Christ's resurrection and change offered to them. Mark, too, the carefulness
with which he guarded against alarming or unduly exciting them while making manifest and
emphasizing these great truths. And be assured that the same wisdom, prudence and skill
will be displayed in his methods of making known the fact of his glorious presence at his
second advent. The cool, calm judgment will be convinced in every case, though the world
in general will need to be brought by severe discipline to the proper attitude to receive
the testimony, while those whose hearts are right will have the blessed intelligence
sooner. All the proofs of his resurrection and change to spiritual nature were not given
to his disciples at once, but as they were able to bear them and in the manner calculated
to make the deepest impression.
During the three and a half years of our Lord's ministry, his disciples had
sacrificed friends, reputation, business, etc., to devote time and energy to heralding
Messiah's presence and the establishment of his kingdom. But they had necessarily crude
ideas regarding the manner and time of their Master's exaltation, and of their promised
exaltation with him. Nor was full knowledge then necessary: it was quite sufficient that
they should faithfully take each step as it became due; hence the Master taught them
little by little as they were able to receive it. And near the close of his ministry he
said, "I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now. Howbeit,
when he, the Spirit of truth, is come, he will guide you into all truth... and show you
things to come, and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto
you." `John 16:12,13; 14:26`
Who can tell their great disappointment, even though so
::page 111::
far as possible they had been armed against it, when they saw him suddenly taken from them
and ignominiously crucified as a felon--him whose kingdom and glory they had been
expecting and declaring, and which only five days before his crucifixion had seemed to
them so near a realization. (`John 12:1,12-19`) Though they knew him to be falsely accused
and wrongfully crucified, this did not alter the fact that their long cherished national
hopes of a Jewish king, who would restore their nation to influence and power, together
with their own individual hopes, ambitions and air-castles of important offices and high
honors in the kingdom, were all suddenly demolished by this unfavorable turn which matters
had taken in the crucifixion of their king.
Well did the Master know how desolate and aimless and perplexed they would
feel; for thus it was written by the Prophet, "I will smite the Shepherd, and the
sheep shall be scattered." (`Zech. 13:7`; `Mark 14:27`) And during the forty days
between his resurrection and ascension, it was therefore his chief concern to gather them
again, and to re-establish their faith in him as the long-looked-for Messiah, by proving
to them the fact of his resurrection, and that since his resurrection, though retaining
the same individuality, he was no longer human, but an exalted spirit being, having
"all power in heaven and in earth." `Matt. 28:18`
He broke the news of his resurrection gradually to them-- first, through the
women (Mary Magdalene, and Joanna, Mary the mother of James and Salome, and others with
them--`Mark 16:1`; `Luke 24:1,10`), who came early to the sepulcher to anoint his dead
body with sweet spices. While they wondered whom they should get to roll away the stone
from the door of the sepulcher, behold, there was an earthquake, and when they came they
found the stone rolled
::page 112::
away, and an angel of the Lord sat upon it, who addressed them, saying, "Fear not,
for I know that ye seek Jesus which was crucified. He is not here; for he is risen, as
he said. Come, see the place where the Lord lay. And go quickly and tell his
disciples that he is risen from the dead; and behold, he goeth before you into Galilee;
there shall ye see him." `Matt. 28:5-7`
It seems that Mary Magdalene separated from the other women and ran to tell
Peter and John (`John 20:1,2`), while the others went to tell the rest of the disciples,
and that after she had left them Jesus appeared to the other women on the way, saying
(`Matt. 28:9,10`), "All hail." And they came and held him by the feet and
worshiped him. Then said Jesus unto them, "Be not afraid: go tell my brethren that
they go into Galilee [their home], and there shall they see me." And with fear and
joy they ran to tell the other disciples. In their mingled feelings of surprise,
perplexity, joy and fear, and their general bewilderment, they scarcely knew how to report
their strange and wonderful experience. When Mary met Peter and John she said sadly,
"They have taken away the Lord out of the sepulcher and we know not where they have
laid him." (`John 20:2`) The other women told how at the sepulcher they had seen a
vision of angels who said he was alive (`Luke 24:22,23`), and then how they afterward met
the Lord in the way. `Matt. 28:8,10`
The majority of the disciples evidently regarded their story merely as
superstitious excitement, but Peter and John said, We will go and see for ourselves; and
Mary returned to the sepulcher with them. All that Peter and John saw was that the body
was gone, that the grave clothes were carefully folded and laid by, and that the stone was
rolled away from the door. So in perplexity they turned away, though Mary still remained
there weeping. As she wept she stooped down and looked into the sepulcher and saw two
::page 113::
angels, who said, "Woman, why weepest thou?" She answered, "Because they
have taken away my Lord, and I know not where they have laid him." And as she turned
about she saw Jesus standing, but did not know him. He inquired, "Woman, why weepest
thou? whom seekest thou?" And she, supposing him to be the gardener, answered,
"Sir, if thou hast borne him hence, tell me where thou hast laid him, and I will take
him away." Then, in the old familiar tone which she quickly recognized, the Lord
said, "Mary!"
That was enough to establish her faith in the statement of the angel, that he
had risen, which until now had seemed like a dream or an idle tale; and in her joy she
exclaimed, "Master!" Her first impulse was to embrace him, and to tarry
in his presence. But Jesus gently informed her that there was a very important mission for
her to perform now, in bearing witness to the fact of his resurrection, and that she
should be in haste to carry the message and establish the faith of the other disciples,
still in perplexity and uncertainty, saying, "Touch [Greek, haptomai,
embrace] me not [do not tarry for further demonstration of your affection now]; for I am
not yet ascended to my Father [I will be with you for a short time yet]: but go to my
brethren and say unto them, I ascend unto my Father, and your Father, and to my God, and
your God." (`John 20:17`) Through the other women also he had sent them word that he
would meet them in Galilee.
Next, he overtook two of the sad and perplexed disciples as they walked from
Jerusalem to Emmaus, and inquired the cause of their sadness and despondency. (`Luke
24:13-35`) And one of them answered: "Art thou only a stranger in Jerusalem, and hast
not known the things which are come to pass there in these days? And he said unto them,
What things? And they said unto him, Concerning Jesus of Nazareth,
::page 114::
which was a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the people: and how the
chief priests and our rulers delivered him to be condemned to death, and have crucified
him. But we trusted that it had been he which should have redeemed Israel: and besides all
this, today is the third day since these things were done. [Here they were probably
calling to mind `John 2:19,21,22`.] Yea, and certain women also of our company made us
astonished, which were early at the sepulcher. And when they found not his body, they came
saying that they had also seen a vision of angels, which said he was alive. And certain of
them which were with us went to the sepulcher, and found it even so as the women had said;
but him they saw not."
No wonder they were perplexed; how strange it all seemed! how peculiar and
thrilling had been the events of the past few days!
Then the stranger preached them a stirring sermon from the prophecies,
showing them that the very things which had so disheartened them were the things which the
prophets had foretold concerning the true Messiah: that before he could rule and bless and
lift up Israel and all the world, he must first redeem them with his own life from the
curse of death, which came upon all through Adam, and that afterward, raised to life and
glory by Jehovah, their Master would fulfil all that was written by the prophets
concerning his future glory and honor, as truly as he had fulfilled those prophecies which
foretold his sufferings, humiliation and death. A wonderful preacher! and a wonderful
sermon was that! It started new ideas and opened new expectations and hopes. As they drew
near the village they constrained him to tarry with them, as it was toward evening and the
day was far spent. He went in to tarry with them; and as he sat at meat with them, he took
bread and brake and gave it to them. Then their eyes were opened; and he vanished out of
their sight.
::page 115::
Not until that moment did they recognize him, though they had walked, and
talked and sat at meat together. He was known to them not by face, but in the simple act
of blessing and breaking bread in the old familiar way, thus assuring their faith in what
they had already heard--that he had risen, and would see them again.
Then the two surprised and overjoyed disciples arose that same hour and
returned to Jerusalem, saying to each other, "Did not our hearts burn within us while
he talked with us by the way, and while he opened to us the Scriptures?" Arriving in
Jerusalem they found the others rejoicing also, saying, "The Lord is risen indeed,
and hath appeared to Simon." And they told what things were done in the way, and how
he was known of them in breaking of bread. Probably they were nearly all there that
evening, homes, business and everything else forgotten--Mary Magdalene with her tears of
joy, saying, I knew him the moment he called my name--I could not credit the angel's
assurance of his resurrection until then; and the other women telling their wonderful
experience of the morning, and how they had met him in the way. Then Simon had his story
to tell; and now here were two other witnesses from Emmaus. What an eventful day! No
wonder they desired to meet together on the first day of every week after that, to talk
the matter over and to call to mind all the circumstances connected with this wonderful
event of the Lord's resurrection, and to have their hearts "burn" again and
again.
While the excited and overjoyed little company were thus met and relating to
each other their several experiences, the Lord Jesus himself suddenly stood in their midst
(`Luke 24:36-49`) and said, "Peace be unto you!" From where had he come? All
such meetings were held secretly with closed doors, for fear of the Jews (`John
20:19,26`), but here was a sudden appearance without any visible
::page 116::
approach; and they were terrified, and supposed they had seen a spirit. Then he comforted
them, told them to calm their fears, and showed them his hands and his feet, saying,
"It is I, myself; handle me and see; for a spirit hath not flesh and bones, as ye see
me have." And while they yet believed not for joy, and wondered, he said unto them,
"Have ye here any meat?" and they gave him a piece of a broiled fish, and he
took it and did eat before them. Then he opened their understanding, their mental
eyes, and expounded the Scriptures to them, showing from the law and the prophets that
these things had come to pass exactly as foretold. But Thomas was absent (`John 20:24`);
and when the other disciples told him that they had seen the Lord, he would not believe
it, but said, "Except I shall see in his hands the print of the nails, and thrust my
hand into his side, I will not believe."
Eight days passed without further manifestations, and they had time calmly to
think and talk over the experiences of that wonderful day, when, the disciples being again
assembled as before, Jesus stood in their midst, just as on the first evening, saying,
"Peace be unto you." (`John 20:26`) This time Thomas was present, and the Lord
addressed him, saying, "Thomas, reach hither thy finger, and behold my hands; and
reach hither thy hand, and thrust it into my side; and be not faithless, but
believing." He thus showed that he knew what Thomas had said without being told, and
he gave that proof of his resurrection which Thomas had said would satisfy him; and with
joy Thomas answered, "My Lord and my God!"
After this, there must have been quite a long interval before there was any
further manifestation of the Lord's presence, and the disciples who were Galileans began
to think of home and the future; and remembering the Lord's message by the women, that he
would go before them into Galilee,
::page 117::
they went thither. Probably on their way, the Lord met them, as Matthew relates, in a
mountain. They were perplexed; they no longer felt the same familiarity they once had
toward him; he seemed so greatly changed since his crucifixion from what he used to be--he
appeared and disappeared in such peculiar times and places; he no longer seemed like
"the man Christ Jesus"; so Matthew says "they worshiped him--but some
doubted." After a few words with them the Lord "vanished" from their sight,
and left them to wonder what next would happen. For some time after their return to
Galilee nothing unusual occurred, and there was no further indication of the Lord's
presence. Doubtless they met together and talked over the situation, and wondered why he
did not appear to them more frequently.
As they waited, the days and the weeks seemed long. They had long ago given
up the ordinary pursuits of life, to follow the Lord from place to place, learning of him,
and preaching to others, "The kingdom of heaven is at hand." (`Matt. 10:5-7`)
They did not now wish to go back to the old pursuits; and yet, how should they proceed
with the Lord's work? They comprehended the situation clearly enough to know that they
could no longer preach as formerly the kingdom at hand; for all the people knew that their
Master and King had been crucified, and none but themselves knew of his resurrection.
While all of the eleven were thus perplexed and anxious, waiting for something, they knew
not what, Peter said, Well, it will not do to remain idle: I will go back to my old
fishing business; and six of the others said, We will do the same: we will go with you.
(`John 21:3`) And probably the rest also turned again to their old employments.
Who can doubt that the Lord was invisibly present with them many times as
they talked together, overruling and
::page 118::
directing the course of circumstances, etc., for their highest good? If they should have
great success and become swallowed up by interest in business, they would soon be unfit
for the higher service; yet if they should have no success, it would seem like forcing
them; so the Lord adopted a plan which taught them a lesson such as he often teaches his
followers, viz.: that the success or failure of their efforts, in any direction, he can
control if he please.
The old firm of fishermen reorganized: got together their boats, nets, etc.,
and went out for their first catch. But they toiled all night and caught no fish, and
began to feel disheartened. In the morning a stranger on shore calls to them to know of
their success. Poor success! We have caught nothing, they answer. Try again, said the
stranger. Now cast your net on the other side of the boat. No use, stranger, we have tried
both sides all night long, and if there were fish on one side, there would be on the
other. However, we will try again and let you see. They did so, and got an immense haul.
How strange! said some; but the quick and impressible John at once got the correct idea,
and said, Brethren, the Lord only could do this. Don't you remember the feeding of the
multitudes, etc? That must be the Lord on shore, and this is another way that he has
chosen to manifest himself to us. Don't you remember that it was just so when the Lord
first called us? Then, too, we had toiled all night and caught nothing until he called to
us, saying, "Let down your nets for a draught." (`Luke 5:4-11`) Yes, surely that
is the Lord, though, since his resurrection, we cannot recognize him by his appearance. He
now appears in a variety of forms; but we know each time that it is he by some peculiar
circumstance like this calling to mind some marked incident of our past acquaintance with
him.
And when they got to shore they found that Jesus had bread as well as fish,
and they learned the lesson, that under
::page 119::
his direction and care and in his service they would not be left to starve. (`Luke
12:29,30`) They did not ask him if he were the Lord; for on this as on other occasions,
the eyes of their understanding being opened, they knew him, not by
physical sight, but by the miracle. Then followed the instructions of that delightful
hour, reassuring Peter of his continued acceptance notwithstanding his denial of the Lord,
for which he repented and wept. He now learned afresh of his Master's love, and of his
continued privilege of feeding the sheep and the lambs. We seem to hear the Lord say, You
need not go back to the fishing business, Peter: I called you once to be a fisher of men,
and, knowing your heart to be still loyal and zealous, I renew your commission as a fisher
of men.
"And, eating together with them, he commanded them that they should not
depart from Jerusalem, but wait for the promise of the Father, which, saith he, ye have
heard of me. For John truly baptized with water; but ye shall be baptized with the holy
Spirit not many days hence." (`Acts 1:4` --margin) So they came to Jerusalem as
instructed, and here it was, forty days after his resurrection, that he met with them for
the last time and talked with them. They summoned courage this time to question him about
the kingdom he had promised them, saying, "Lord, wilt thou at this time restore the
kingdom to Israel?" This thought of the kingdom was the one uppermost in the mind of
every Jew. Israel, they understood, was to be chief among the nations under Messiah, and
they knew not of the long Times of the Gentiles, and saw not yet that the chief blessing
had been taken from fleshly Israel (`Matt. 21:43`; `Rom. 11:7`), and that they themselves
were to be members of the new (spiritual) Israel, the royal priesthood and holy nation,
through whom, as the body of Christ, the blessing of the world would come. They as yet
understood none of these
::page 120::
things. How could they? They had not yet received the holy Spirit of adoption as sons, but
were still under condemnation; because, though the ransom-sacrifice had been made by the
Redeemer, it had not yet been formally presented on our behalf in the Most Holy, even
Heaven itself. (`John 7:39`) Hence our Lord did not attempt any explanatory answer to
their question, but merely said, "It is not for you [now] to know the times
and seasons which the Father hath put in his own power. But ye shall receive power* after that the Holy Spirit is come upon you; and ye shall be witnesses
unto me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost part
of the earth." `Acts 1:7,8`
Then the Lord, who was walking with them, when they reached the Mount of
Olives, lifted his hands and blessed them, and he was parted from them and went upward;
and a cloud received him out of their sight. (`Luke 24:48-52`; `Acts 1:6-15`) They began
to see something more of God's plan now. The Lord who came down from heaven had returned
to the Father, as he had told them before he died--had gone to prepare a place for them
and would come again and receive them--had gone afar to receive the promised kingdom, and
to return (`Luke 19:12`); and meantime they were to be his witnesses in all the
earth to call and make ready a people to receive him when he would come to be glorified in
his saints, and to reign King of kings and Lord of lords. They saw their new mission, of
proclaiming to every creature a coming king from heaven, "with all
----------
*This promised power to know and to understand times and
seasons, and all things pertaining to a proper witnessing, applies to the whole
Church from first to last; and under the guidance and power of the holy Spirit, meat in
due season concerning every feature of the plan is provided, in order that we may be his
witnesses, even to the end of this age. Compare `John 16:12,13`.
::page 121::
power in heaven and in earth," to be a much more important work than that of the
preceding years, when they heralded "the man Christ Jesus," and followed him who
was "despised and rejected of men." Their risen Lord was changed indeed, not
only in his personal appearance--appearing sometimes in one way and place, and again in a
different way and place, manifesting his "all power"--but he was changed in
condition or nature also. No longer did he appeal to the Jews, nor show himself to them;
for since his resurrection none saw him in any sense except his friends and followers. His
words, "Yet a little while, and the world seeth me no more," were thus
verified.
Thus was the faith of the apostles and of the early Church established in the
fact of the Lord's resurrection. Their doubts were scattered, and their hearts rejoiced;
and they returned to Jerusalem and continued in prayer and supplication and study of the
Scriptures, waiting for the adoption promised by the Father, and their endowment with
spiritual understanding, and with special miraculous gifts of power, to enable them to
convince true Israelites, and to establish the Gospel Church, at the day of Pentecost.
`Acts 1:14; 2:1`
Though our Lord at his second advent will not manifest his presence in the
same way that he did during those forty days after his resurrection, yet we have his
assurance that the "brethren shall not be in darkness." Nay, more: we shall have
an aid which they could not and did not have to help them during those forty days, viz.,
"power from on high," to guide us into the understanding of every truth
due to be understood, and, even as promised, to show us things to come. Hence in
due season we shall have full understanding of the manner, time and attendant
circumstances of his appearing, which, if carefully watched for and marked, will be no
less convincing than were the evidences of our Lord's resurrection
::page 122::
furnished to the early Church, although of a different kind.
That our Lord at his second advent could assume the human form, and
thus appear to men, as he did to his disciples after his resurrection, there can be no
question; not only because he thus appeared in human form during those forty days, but
because spirit beings have in the past manifested the power to appear as men in flesh and
in various forms. But such a manifestation would be out of harmony with the general tenor
of God's plan, as well as out of harmony with the Scriptural indications given, relative
to the manner of his manifestations, as we shall see. Instead, it is the Lord's plan that
his spiritual kingdom shall communicate, operate, and manifest its presence and power
through human, earthly agencies. Just as the prince of this world, Satan, though unseen by
men, exercises a wide influence in the world through those subject to him, and possessed
of and controlled by his spirit, so the new Prince of Peace, the Lord, will chiefly
operate in, and manifest his presence and power through, human beings, subject to him and
possessed of and controlled by his spirit.
Seeing with the natural eye and hearing with the natural ear are not all
there is of seeing and hearing. "No man hath seen God at any time" thus, yet all
God's children have seen him, and known him, and held communion with him. (`John 1:18;
5:37; 14:7`) We hear God's call, our "high calling," we hear
the voice of our Shepherd, and are constantly looking unto Jesus, and see
the prize, the crown of life which he promises--not by natural sight and hearing, but by
our understanding. Far more precious is the sight we have of our glorified Lord as the
spiritual, highly exalted King of glory, our Redeemer as well as our King, by the eyes of
our understanding and faith, than the sight afforded to the natural eye before Pentecost.
::page 123::
There was a necessity for our Lord's appearing in the manner he did to his
disciples, after his resurrection, which will not exist at his second advent. His object
then will be better served in a different way. In fact, to appear so at his second advent
would be detrimental to the purpose then to be accomplished. His object in appearing to
his disciples after his resurrection was to convince them that he who was dead is alive
forevermore, that they might go forth as witnesses to the fact of his resurrection (`Luke
24:48`), and that their testimony might be a sure foundation for the faith of coming
generations. Since no man can come to God acceptably, to receive the holy Spirit of
adoption, without faith in Christ, it became necessary, not only for the sake of
the disciples then, but for all since, that the evidences of his resurrection and
change should be such as natural men could grasp and appreciate. After
they had become partakers of the holy Spirit and understood spiritual things (See `1 Cor.
2:12-16`), they could have believed the angels at the sepulcher, that he had risen from
the dead condition, even if they had seen the fleshly body of the man Christ Jesus still
lying in the tomb; but not so before--the body must be away to make faith in his
resurrection possible to them. After the holy Spirit had enabled them to discern spiritual
things they could have believed the testimony of the prophets that he must needs die, and would
rise from the dead, and that he would be highly exalted as King of glory, without its
being needful for him to appear as a man, and assume various bodies of flesh as a
garment, so that they could handle him and see him ascend. But all this was
needful for them and for all natural men. By believing, we come to God by him and receive
forgiveness of sins and the Spirit of adoption, to understand spiritual things.
Even while removing the natural obstacles to faith, by assuming
human form, etc., our Lord convinced the disciples,
::page 124::
and made them witnesses to others, not by their natural sight and touch, but by
reasoning with them out of the Scriptures: "Then opened he their understanding, that
they might understand the Scriptures, and said unto them, Thus it is written, and thus it
behooved Christ to suffer and to rise from the dead the third day, and that repentance and
remission of sins should be preached in his name among all nations, beginning at
Jerusalem. And ye are witnesses of these things." (`Luke 24:45-48`)
Peter also states this object clearly, saying, "Him God raised up the third day, and permitted
him to become manifest--NOT TO ALL THE PEOPLE, but to those witnesses previously
chosen of God, to us, who did eat and drink with him after he arose from the dead. And he
commanded us to proclaim to the people that this [the resurrected Jesus] is he who has
been appointed by God the judge of the living and the dead." `Acts 10:40-42`. Diaglott
translation.
With our Lord, after his resurrection, it was simply a question of expediency
as to which way of appearing to his disciples would best accomplish his object, of making
known his resurrection and change of nature. Had he appeared as a flame of fire,
as the angel appeared to Moses in the burning bush (`Exod. 3:2`), he might indeed have
conversed with them, but the evidence thus given would have been far from being as
convincing as the method he did adopt, both to the apostles and to the world at large to
whom they witnessed.
If he had appeared in the glory of the spirit form, as the angel did to
Daniel (`Dan. 10:5-8`), the glory would have been greater than the witnesses could have
borne. They would probably have been so alarmed as to be unable to receive instructions
from him. To none except Paul did the Lord ever thus show himself; and Paul was so
overcome by that glimpse of his glory that he fell to the ground and was
::page 125::
blinded by its brightness, which was above that of the sun at noonday.
In our examination of the method of manifestation adopted by our Lord during
those forty days, we saw that he "permitted" himself to become manifest
even to the chosen witnesses only a few times, and then but briefly. The entire time that
he was manifest to them, had it all been crowded into one day instead of being at
intervals during the forty days, would probably have been less than twelve hours, or one
eightieth of that entire time. This being true, it is evident that he was present with
them unseen about seventy-nine eightieths of that period of forty days. And even
when they did have manifestations, they were not (except once, repeated to St.
Thomas) in a form exactly like the one they had known so intimately for three years, and
had seen but a few days before. It is not once intimated that they knew him by the
familiar features of his face, nor even that he was recognized by the same appearance as
in other manifestations.
Mary supposed him to be "the gardener." To the two on their way to
Emmaus he was "a stranger." He was also a stranger to the fishermen on the sea
of Galilee, and to the eleven in the upper room. On every occasion he was recognized by
his actions, his words, or the familiar tones of his voice.
When Thomas declared that only the proof which addressed his natural sight
and touch would be acceptable to him, the Lord, though he granted that demand, gently
reproved him, saying, Because thou has seen me, thou hast believed; blessed are those who
believe, not having seen. (`John 20:27-29`) The stronger evidence was that which
was not addressed to natural sight, and more blessed are those who hold themselves in
readiness to receive the truth through whatsoever proofs God is pleased to substantiate
it.
::page 126::
He thus showed them, not only that he now had the power to appear in a
variety of ways and forms, but also that no one of those bodies which they saw was his
spiritual, glorious body, though the facts of his resurrection and presence were thus
manifested to them. The different forms, and the long intervals of invisible presence with
no outward manifestation, made evident the fact that though their Lord and teacher was
alive and not yet ascended to the Father, he was now a spirit being, really invisible to
human sight, but with ability to manifest his presence and power in a variety of ways at
pleasure.*
The creating of the body and clothing in which he appeared to them, in the
very room in which they were gathered, was proof unquestionable that Christ was no longer
a human being, though he assured his disciples that the body which they saw, and which
Thomas handled, was a veritable flesh and bone body, and not a mere vision or appearance.+ As a human being he could not come into the room
----------
*The occurrence recorded by `Luke (4:30)` should not be
regarded as a case parallel to his appearing and vanishing after his resurrection. That
was not a disappearance in the sense of becoming invisible to the people. It was merely an
adroit, prompt movement, by which he eluded the murderous design of his enemies. Before
they had executed their plans for his death he turned about, and, passing through their
midst, no man had courage or power to molest him, because his hour had not yet come.
+Let no one hastily suppose that we are here following
Spiritism, Swedenborgianism or any other ism. We are simply following and
logically connecting the apostolic account. The vast difference between the Bible teaching
and that counterfeit of it promulgated by Satan, known as Spiritualism, we distinctly
discern and shall examine in a succeeding volume. Suffice it here to point out that
Spiritism affects to communicate between dead men and living men, while the Bible
condemns this (`Isa. 8:19`), and teaches that such communications as were true
have been made only by spirit beings, such as angels, and by our Lord; and not by our Lord
while he was "the man Christ Jesus," nor while he was dead, but after
his resurrection change, when he had become a life-giving or "quickening spirit"
being.
::page 127::
without opening the door, but as a spirit being he could, and there he instantly created
and assumed such a body of flesh and such clothing as he saw fit for the purpose intended.
Nor can we for a moment admit the suggestion offered by some, that our Lord
opened the doors without being observed; for the record is plain and clear that he came
and stood in their midst while the doors were shut--probably very carefully
barred and bolted too--"for fear of the Jews." `John 20:19,26`
The lesson of his changed nature was still further emphasized by his manner
of leaving their sight: "He vanished out of their sight." The human
body of flesh and bones, etc., and its clothing, which appeared suddenly while
the doors were shut, did not go out of the door, but simply disappeared or
dissolved into the same elements from which he had created them a few moments before. He vanished
out of their sight, and was no longer seen of them when the
flesh and bones and clothing in which he had manifested himself were dissolved, though
doubtless he was still with them-- invisibly present; and so also much of the time during
those forty days.
On special occasions, for special instruction, God has granted similar power
to other spirit beings, angels, enabling them to appear as men, in bodies of flesh and
bones which ate and talked to those they instructed, just as our Lord did. See `Gen. 18`;
`Judges 6:11-22; 13:3-20`; and the comments on these in Vol. I, pages 178 to 184.
The power manifested by our Lord, and the angels referred to, to create and
dissolve the clothing in which they appeared, was just as superhuman as the creating and
dissolving of their assumed human bodies; and the bodies were no more their glorious
spiritual bodies than were the clothes they wore. It will be remembered that the seamless
::page 128::
robe and other clothing which our Redeemer wore before his crucifixion had been divided
among the Roman soldiers, and that the grave clothes were left folded away in the
sepulcher (`John 19:23,24; 20:5-7`), so that the clothing in which he appeared on the
occasions mentioned must have been specially created, and probably was the most
appropriate for each occasion. For instance, when he appeared as a gardener to Mary, it
was probably in such apparel as a gardener would wear.
That the bodies in which our Lord appeared were real human bodies, and not
mere delusions, he gave them clearly to understand when he ate before them, and invited
them to handle him and see that the body was real flesh and bones, saying, "Why are
ye troubled?...Behold my hands and my feet, that it is I myself: handle me and see; for a
spirit hath not flesh and bones, as ye see me have."
Some Christians draw very absurd conclusions from this expression of our Lord
as to the verity of his assumed flesh and bone body. They regard the assumed body as his
spirit body, and declare that a spirit body is flesh and bones, and just like a human
body, excepting that an indefinable something, which they call spirit, flows through its
veins instead of blood. They seem to disregard the statement of our Lord, that this was
not a spirit body--that a spirit being has not flesh and bones. Do they also forget John's
statement, that "It doth not yet appear" what a spirit body is, and that we
shall not know until we are changed and made like him and see him, not as he was, but as
he is? (`1 John 3:2`) Do they also forget the Apostle Paul's express statement that "flesh
and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God?"--and his further assurance that therefore
all the heirs with Christ must also "be changed?" `1 Cor. 15:50,51`
Many Christians have the idea that our Lord's glorious
::page 129::
spiritual body is the very same body that was crucified and laid away in Joseph's tomb:
they expect, when they see the Lord in glory, to identify him by the scars he received on
Calvary. This is a great mistake, which a very little consideration should make
manifest--Firstly, It would prove that his resurrection body is not glorious or perfect,
but scarred and disfigured: Secondly, It would prove that we do know what a spirit body
is, notwithstanding the Apostle's statement to the contrary: Thirdly, It would prove that
our redemption price was taken back; for Jesus said, "My flesh I will give for the
life of the world." It was his flesh, his life as a man, his
humanity, that was sacrificed for our redemption. And when he was raised to life again by
the power of the Father, it was not to human existence; because that was sacrificed as our
purchase price. And if that price had been taken back, we would still be under the
condemnation of death, and without hope.
We have no more reason to suppose that our Lord's spirit body since his
resurrection is a human body than we have for supposing that his spirit body prior to his
first advent was human, or that other spirit beings have human bodies; for a spirit hath
not flesh and bones; and, says the Apostle Peter, our Lord was "put to death in the
flesh but made alive in spirit."
Our Lord's human body was, however, supernaturally removed from the tomb;
because had it remained there it would have been an insurmountable obstacle to the faith
of the disciples, who were not yet instructed in spiritual things--for "the spirit
was not yet given." (`John 7:39`) We know nothing about what became of it, except
that it did not decay or corrupt. (`Acts 2:27,31`) Whether it was dissolved into gases or
whether it is still preserved somewhere as the grand memorial of God's love, of Christ's
obedience, and of our redemption, no one knows--nor is such knowledge
::page 130::
necessary. That God did miraculously hide the body of Moses, we are assured (`Deut. 34:6`;
`Jude 9`); and that as a memorial God did miraculously preserve from corruption
the manna in the golden bowl, which was placed in the Ark under the Mercy Seat in the
Tabernacle, and that it was a symbol of our Lord's flesh, the bread from heaven, we also
know. (`Exod. 16:20,33`; `Heb. 9:4`; `John 6:51-58`) Hence it will not surprise us if, in
the Kingdom, God shall show to the world the body of flesh, crucified for all in giving
the ransom on their behalf--not permitted to corrupt, but preserved as an everlasting
testimony of infinite love and perfect obedience. It is at least possible that `John
19:37` and `Zech. 12:10` may have such a fulfilment. Those who cried, "Crucify
him!" may yet, as witnesses, identify the very body pierced by the spear and torn by
the nails and thorns.
To regard our Lord's glorious body as a body of flesh would not in the least
account for his peculiar and sudden appearings during those forty days prior to his
ascension. How could he so suddenly appear and then vanish? How was it that he kept
himself almost constantly invisible during those forty days? And why was it that his
appearance each time was so changed as not to be recognized as the same one seen on any
former occasion, or as the one so well known and loved by all, before his crucifixion,
only a few days previous?
It will not do merely to say that these were miracles, for then some use or
necessity for the miracles should be named. If his body after his resurrection were flesh
and bones, and the same body that was crucified, with all the features and scars, why
did he perform miracles which not only did not establish that fact, but which were likely,
we see, to teach the opposite?--that he himself was no longer human--flesh and bones--but
a spirit being who could go and come as the wind, so that none could tell whence he
::page 131::
came or whither he went, but who, for the purpose of instructing them, appeared as
a man in various bodies of flesh and bones which he created and dissolved as
occasion required.
Before our Lord's crucifixion, he had been on familiar terms with his
disciples, but after his resurrection, though he loved them none the less, his manner
toward them was more reserved. This was doubtless to impress them more forcibly with the
dignity and honor of his high exaltation, and to inspire due reverence for his person and
authority. Though as a man Jesus never lacked that dignity of deportment which commands
respect, yet a greater reserve was necessary and expedient after his change to the divine
nature. Such reserve has always been maintained by Jehovah toward his creatures, and is
expedient under the circumstances. This reserve marked all our Lord's interviews with the
disciples after his resurrection. They were very brief, even as he had said,
"Hereafter I will not talk much with you." `John 14:30`
Those who believe that our Heavenly Father is a spirit and not a man should
find no difficulty in realizing that our Lord Jesus, who is now exalted to the divine
nature, and who is not only a moral likeness of God but in fact "the express
image of the Father's person," is no longer a man but a spirit being, whom
no man hath seen nor can see without a miracle. It is just as impossible for men to see
the unveiled glory of the Lord Jesus as it is for them to behold Jehovah. Think for a
moment how even a reflection of the spiritual glory affected Moses and Israel at Sinai.
(`Heb. 12:21`; `Exod. 19; 20:19-21; 33:20-23; 34:29-35`) "So terrible was the
sight," so overwhelming and fear-inspiring, "that Moses said, I exceedingly fear
and quake." And though Moses was supernaturally strengthened to behold the glory of
the Lord, so that for forty days and forty nights, alone with
::page 132::
God, overshadowed by his glory and without either food or drink, he received and wrote the
divine law (`Exod. 34:28`), yet when he desired to see the Lord face to face he was told,
"Thou canst not see my face; for there shall no man see me and live." (`Exod.
33:20`) All that Moses ever saw, therefore, was an appearance representing God,
and nothing more was possible. This accords, too, with the Apostle's statements: "No man
hath seen God at any time"; he is the King immortal, invisible, whom no
man hath seen nor can [ever] see. (`1 Tim. 6:15,16`) But that spirit beings can and
do see God, who himself is a spirit being, is clearly stated. `Matt. 18:10`
If our Lord is still "the man Christ Jesus, who gave
himself a ransom for all" (`1 Tim. 2:5,6`)--if being put to death in the flesh
he was raised again in the flesh, and not, as the Apostle declares, a life-giving
spirit--then instead of being exalted higher than angels and every name that is named in
heaven as well as in earth, he is still a man. And if he retains the form of a servant,
which he took for the purpose of suffering death for every man, and is still a little
lower than the angels, he never can see God. But how unreasonable such a view when fully
examined in the light of apostolic testimony. Consider, too, that if our Lord's flesh,
that was pierced and wounded with nail and spear and crown of thorns, and marked with
sorrow, is his glorious spiritual body, and if the scars and marred human features are
part and parcel of the exalted Lord, he would be far from beautiful, even if we should
love the wounds endured for us. And if he thus bears an imperfect, scarred, marred body,
and if we shall be like him, would it not imply that the Apostles and saints who
were crucified, beheaded, stoned to death, burned, cut to pieces and torn by beasts, as
well as those who met with accidents, would each likewise bear his blemishes and scars?
And in that view would not heaven present a most awful spectacle--to all eternity? But
this is not
::page 133::
the case, and no one could long hold so unreasonable and unscriptural a view. Spirit
beings are perfect in every particular, and so the Apostle reminds the Church, who are
heirs of heavenly or spiritual glory and honor, that, though sown [in death] in weakness
[with marks and wounds, etc.] it [the being] is raised in power; though sown in dishonor
[with lines of care and sorrow, etc.] it is raised in glory; though sown a natural body
[literally, "an animal body"] it will be raised a spiritual body; and that as we
have borne the image of the earthly father, we shall bear the image of the heavenly Lord.
(`1 Cor. 15:42-51`) Our Lord Jesus for our sakes took and bore the image of the earthly
also, for a while, that he might redeem us. But in his resurrection he became the heavenly
Lord (`Rom. 14:9`), and we, if faithful, shall soon bear the image of the heavenly Lord
(spiritual bodies), as we now still bear the image of the earthly lord, Adam (human
bodies).
Remember Paul's case--In order that he might be one of the apostles, he must
be a witness--must see the Lord after his resurrection. He was not one of those
who saw the manifestations of resurrection and presence during the forty days, hence he
was given a special glimpse of the Lord. But he saw him, not as did the others--not veiled
in flesh and garments of various forms. And the merest glance at the unveiled glorious
person of our Lord caused him to fall to the ground blinded with a glory far "above
the brightness of the sun at noon-day": from which blindness, to restore him to even
partial sight required a miracle. (`Acts 9:17,18`) Did not Paul see the Lord as he is--a
spiritual being? And did not our Lord during the forty days appear as he was,
i.e., as he had been previously, for the special purposes and reasons already pointed out?
There is no room to doubt this. But the Lord had an object in appearing to Paul thus, just
as he had, and served another object by appearing differently
::page 134::
to the others. This object Paul shows, saying: "Last of all he was seen of
me also--as by one BORN BEFORE THE DUE TIME." (`1 Cor. 15:8`--literal
rendering) As the resurrection of our Lord was his birth from the dead, to the
full perfection of spiritual being (`Col. 1:18`; `Rom. 8:29`), so the resurrection of the
Church, the body of Christ, is here and elsewhere referred to as a birth. In our birth or
resurrection as spirit beings, we shall see the Lord as he is, just as Paul saw
him; but we, being changed or born then, as spirit beings, will not be stricken
down nor blinded with the sight of our Lord's glorious person. Paul's statement means that
he saw him as we shall see him--"as he is": he saw him as
all the body of Christ shall see him, but BEFORE THE DUE TIME, before he was born from the
dead, and therefore before able to endure it--yet "as" each one so born
shall in due time see him.
Moses, coming down from the mount to communicate to Israel the Law Covenant,
was a type of the greater Lawgiver and Mediator of the New Covenant, who at his second
advent shall come forth to rule and bless the world. Moses typified, therefore, the entire
Church, of which our Lord is the Head. Moses' face was caused to shine, so that the people
could not look at him, and he must thereafter wear a veil, as a type of the spiritual
glory of Christ, an illustration of the point we are now examining. Christ has the real
glory and brightness, the express image of the Father's person, and we shall be like him,
and no man can behold that glory; hence whatever manifestation of the Law-giver there will
be to the world when the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, the glory of the spiritual
persons cannot be seen. They will speak through the veil--under the cover. This, as well
as more, was meant by Moses' veil. `Exod. 34:30-33`
::page 135::
As we give the matter careful study, we come more and more to recognize the
divine wisdom displayed in the manner of revealing the resurrection of our Lord to the
apostles, that they should be thoroughly satisfied and reliable witnesses, and that the
meek of the world might be able to receive their testimony and believe that God raised our
Lord from the dead--that they might recognize him as the one that was dead, but is now
alive forevermore, and, believing, might come unto God by him. And as we consider him
under the leadings of the holy Spirit of truth, our minds expand and we see him no longer
the man Christ Jesus, but the Lord of glory and power, partaker of the divine nature. And
thus we know him, for whose coming and kingdom the Church has so earnestly prayed and
longed. And no one properly recognizing his great exaltation can expect at his second
coming the man Christ Jesus in the body of flesh prepared for sacrifice and wounded and given
in death as our ransom. Nor should we expect that at his second coming he would
"appear," or manifest himself, in various flesh and bone forms to the
world--that was needful for those early witnesses, but not so now. He will, as we
shall see, manifest his second presence very differently.
From what we have seen regarding spirit beings and their manifestations in
times past, it is evident that if our Lord were to manifest himself at his second advent
either by opening men's eyes to behold his glory, as he did with Paul and Daniel, or by
assuming a human body, it would be detrimental to the plan revealed in his Word. The
effect of appearing in glory to the world, their eyes being miraculously wrought upon to
enable them to see him, would be almost to paralyze them with the overwhelming sight,
while to appear as a man would be to lower the standard of dignity and give a
lower than the true estimate of the divine
::page 136::
nature and form. As neither would seem to be necessary or advisable now, we cannot presume
that either of these methods will be adopted.
On the contrary, we should expect that the Christ would be manifest in the
flesh of mankind in the same manner as when the Lord was "made flesh"
and dwelt among men, God was manifest in his flesh. Human nature, when perfect and in
harmony with God, is a likeness of God in the flesh; hence the originally perfect
Adam was a likeness of God, and the perfect man Christ Jesus was also; so that he could
say to the disciple Philip, who asked to see the Father, "He that hath seen
me hath seen the Father"--he hath seen the likeness of God in the flesh, "God
manifest in the flesh."
So, too, mankind in general, as its members come gradually back to the
long-lost image of God, will be fleshly images and likenesses of the Father and of the
Christ. At the very beginning of the Millennium, as we have seen, there will be samples of
perfect manhood before the world (Vol. I, pages 287-293): Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and
the holy prophets, already tried and approved, will be the "princes" among men,
the exponents and representatives of the spiritual, invisible kingdom. In these Christ
will be manifested-- in their flesh--even as the Father was manifested in his
flesh. And as "whosoever will" reaches perfection and comes into full harmony
with the will of Christ, every such one will be an image of God and of Christ, and in each
of these Christ will be manifested.
Because created in God's moral image, the perfect man, fully consecrated,
will be able to appreciate perfectly the holy Spirit and Word of God; and the glorified
Church will direct him. No doubt, too, visions and direct revelations, and general
communications between the spiritual kingdom and its earthly representatives and
exponents, will be much more free and general than similar communications
::page 137::
ever were before--more after the order of the communions of Eden, before sin brought
condemnation and separation from God's favor and communion.
Nothing, then, either in reason or in Scripture, demands that our Lord shall
at his second advent appear in various bodies of flesh and bones. That such a procedure is
not essential is evident from the success of Satan's kingdom, which operates through human
beings as agents. Those who partake of the spirit of evil and error represent the great
unseen prince, most fully. He is thus manifest in their flesh though himself a spirit
being, invisible to men.
The Christ "changed," made partakers of the divine nature, shall be
spirit beings as truly as is Satan, and equally invisible to men. Their operations will be
similar in manner, though directly opposite in character and results; their honored
agents, not bound and made slaves by ignorance and weakness, as are most of the servants
of Satan, but made perfect, and "free indeed," will act intelligently and
harmoniously, from choice and from love; and their appointments will be rewards of
righteousness.
Our Lord's presence will be manifested to the world by exhibitions
of "power and great glory," not, however, merely to the natural sight, but to
the eyes of their understanding, as they shall open to an appreciation of the great
changes which the new Ruler shall effect. His presence and righteous authority will be
recognized in both the punishments and the blessings that will flow to mankind from his
reign.
It has long been generally believed that distress and trouble come as
punishments for evil doing, upon the wicked. This seeming to be a natural and proper law,
people in general have accepted it, thinking that it should be so, even if it is not; yet
the hard facts of experience agree with the Bible, that in the past it has been the godly
who
::page 138::
have oftenest suffered afflictions and persecutions. (`2 Tim. 3:12`) But in the "Day
of Trouble," the period of forty years introducing Messiah's reign, this order will
begin to be reversed. In that day, evil powers are to be overthrown, and righteousness,
established by a gradual process, shall speedily work out a corresponding retribution to
evildoers, and blessings to them that do good--"Tribulation and anguish upon every
soul of man that doeth evil,...but glory, honor and peace to every man that worketh
good"--in that "day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God,
who will render to every man according to his deeds." (`Rom. 2:9,10,6,5`) And since
there is so much that is wrong now, the retribution will be very heavy at first, making a
"time of trouble such as was not since there was a nation." Thus, in vengeance,
and trouble, and wrath upon the nations, will the Lord reveal to the world the fact of the
change of dispensations, and the change of rulers. And thus, "When the judgments of
the Lord are in the earth, the inhabitants of the world will learn righteousness."
(`Isa. 26:5-11`) They will learn that under the new order of things right-doers are to be
exalted and evildoers restrained and punished. For clear prophetic testimony relative to
this kingdom and its operation on behalf of the humble, the upright, the poor, the needy
and the oppressed, and its overthrow of monopolies and every system of injustice and
oppression, and the general equalization of human affairs, read carefully `Psalm 72:1-19;
37:1-14`.
Our King will thus reveal himself gradually: some will discern the new Ruler
sooner than others, but ultimately "every eye shall see [horao--discern]
him." (`Rev. 1:7`) But "he cometh with clouds"; and while the clouds of
trouble are heavy and dark, when the mountains (kingdoms of this world) are trembling and
falling, and the earth (organized society) is being shaken, disintegrated, melted, some
will
::page 139::
begin to realize what we now proclaim as already at hand-- that the great day of Jehovah
has come; that the foretold day of trouble and wrath upon the nations is beginning; and
that Jehovah's Anointed is taking to himself his great power and beginning his work, of
laying justice to the line and righteousness to the plummet. (`Isa. 28:17`) And "he
must reign until" he shall have put down all authorities and laws on earth,
contrary to those which control in heaven.
As the trouble increases, men will seek, but in vain, for protection in the
"dens" and caves, the great rocks and fortresses of society (Free Masonry, Odd
Fellowship, and Trades Unions, Guilds, Trusts, and all societies secular and
ecclesiastical), and in the mountains (governments) of earth; saying, "Fall over* [cover, protect] and hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the
throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb; for the great day of his wrath is come."
`Rev. 6:15-17`
The idolatry of money in which the whole world has gone mad, and which is to
have so prominent a place in the trouble, causing not only anxiety for its accumulation,
but also for its preservation, is to be completely overthrown, as shown in `Isa. 2:8-21`;
`Ezek. 7:17-19`.
The great day of trouble will be recognized, and from its storm all will seek
protection, though few will recognize the judgments of the Lord then abroad in the world
as the result of his presence, the setting up of his authority, and the
----------
*The Greek word epi, here used, is generally translated on,
but has also the significance of over and about, and is so translated
many times in the common version. The thought is that of protection, not of destruction.
The common view of this passage, that it teaches that wicked men will get faith enough to
pray for literal mountains to fall, is absurd. The real fulfilment is already beginning:
the great, the rich, and no less the poor, are seeking to the mountains and rocks and
caves for shelter from the darkening storm of trouble which all see is gathering.
::page 140::
enforcement of his laws. In the end, however, all shall recognize ["see"]
the King of glory; and all who then love righteousness will rejoice to obey him and
conform themselves fully to his just requirements.
That will be a time of retribution upon all who by fraud or force, sometimes
in the name of the law and under its sanction, have unrighteously grasped the rights or
property of others. The retribution, as we have seen, will come from the Lord, through
the uprising of the masses of the people. In their distress, loathe to part with a dollar
or an acre, or an assumed right or dignity long enjoyed and long undisputed, yet seeing
the approaching retribution, many will seek the covering of the hitherto powerful
organizations--civil, social and ecclesiastical--to promote and shield their interests,
feeling that alone they must fall. But these shall not be able to deliver them in the day
of the Lord's anger. The approaching conflict and retribution will cause all the families
of the earth to wail; for it will be a time of trouble such as was not since there was a
nation--no, nor ever shall be again. It will be "because of him" that
they will wail; because of his judgments producing in a natural way the great trouble;
because the Lord ariseth to shake terribly the earth, and to destroy its corruptions.
(`Isa. 2:21`) So far-reaching will be the judgments and the trouble that none shall
escape. Ultimately every eye shall discern the change, and recognize that the Lord
reigneth. The trouble might be greatly lessened could men see and promptly act upon
principles of equity, ignoring and relinquishing all unjust privileges of the past, even
though legalized; but this, selfishness will not permit until the trouble shall break and
overthrow the proud, humble the powerful and exalt the meek.
But not until the great day of trouble is about closing-- not until the
Gentile kingdoms are ground to powder and utterly removed, no place being found for them
(A.D.
::page 141::
1915, as shown in the preceding chapter)--not until great Babylon is utterly overthrown
and her influence over the world broken--will the great mass of mankind come to realize
the true state of the case. Then they will see that the great trouble through which they
will have passed was that symbolically termed "The battle of the great day of God
Almighty" (`Rev. 16:14`); that in proportion as they have aided error and wrong, they
have been battling against the law and forces of the new empire and the new Ruler of
earth; and that in proportion as their tongues, and pens, and hands, and influence, and
means, were used to support the right and the truth on any subject, they had been
to that extent fighting on the Lord's side.
Some will learn the significance of the trouble more quickly than others,
because more teachable. And during all the trouble there will be in the world those who
will bear witness to its cause, declaring the Lord's presence and the setting up of his
kingdom which is in opposition to the powers of darkness to be the real cause of the
trouble and shaking and overturning of society, showing that all who oppose truth and
righteousness are the enemies of the new kingdom, and that unless they quickly surrender
they must soon suffer ignominious defeat. Yet the masses will be heedless of wise counsel,
as they have always been, until completely humbled under the iron rule of the new kingdom,
only at last realizing the folly of their course.
The true teacher and light bearer (`Matt. 5:14`), the true Church, the body
of Christ, is not to be left in darkness to learn of her Lord's presence by the
manifestations of his wrath and power, as the world will learn of it. For her
enlightenment special provision has been made. By the sure word of prophecy, which shines
as a light in a dark place,
::page 142::
she is clearly and definitely informed just what to expect. (`2 Pet. 1:19`) Through the
prophetic word, she shall not only be shielded from discouragement, and enabled to
overcome the besetments, snares and stumbling stones so prevalent in "the evil
day," and thus to stand approved of God, but she becomes the light-bearer and
instructor of the world. The Church is thus enabled to point out to the world the cause of
the trouble, to announce the presence of the new Ruler, to declare the policy, plan and
object of the new dispensation, and to instruct the world as to the wisest course to
pursue in view of these things. And though men will not give heed to the instruction until
the lesson of submission has been forced upon them by the trouble, it will greatly aid
them then in learning the lesson. It is to this mission of the "feet," or last
members of the Church, who will declare upon the mountains (kingdoms) the reign of
Christ begun, that `Isaiah 52:7` refers.
Seemingly Conflicting Scriptures
There are some statements of Scripture with reference to the manner of the
Lord's return and appearing which, until critically examined, appear to be contradictory
of each other. And no doubt they have for centuries served the divine purpose of
concealing the truth until the due time for it to be understood; and even then, from all
except the special class of consecrated ones for whom it was intended.
For instance, our Lord said, "Behold, I come as a thief";
and, "As it was in the days of Noah, so shall it be also in the days
of the Son of man [the days of his presence]: They did eat, they drank, they
married wives, they were given in marriage," "and knew not until the
flood came." "And when Jesus was questioned of the Pharisees when the Kingdom of
God should come, he answered them and said, The Kingdom of God cometh not with
observation" [marginal reading,
::page 143::
"not with outward show"]. `Rev. 16:15`; `Luke 17:26,27,20`; `Matt. 24:38,39`
These scriptures plainly state and illustrate the manner of the Lord's
coming. They show that he will be present unseen, doing a work of which the world for a
time will be entirely unaware. His arrival must therefore be in a quiet manner,
unobserved, and entirely unknown to the world, just "as a thief" would come,
without noise or other demonstration to attract attention. As in the days of Noah the
world went on with its affairs as usual, not in the least disconcerted, and without the
slightest faith in the preaching of Noah with reference to the coming flood, so in the
early part of the Day of the Lord, the world, having no faith in the announcement of his
presence and of the impending trouble, will go on as usual, giving no heed whatever to any
such preaching until, in the great flood of trouble, the old world--the old order of
things--goes down, passes away, preparatory to the full establishment of the new order,
the Kingdom of God under the whole heavens--"As it was in the days of Noah, so shall
it be also in the days [of the presence] of the Son of man."
On the other hand, we find scriptures which at first sight seem to be in
direct conflict with these; as, for instance: "The Lord himself shall descend from
heaven with a shout, with the voice of the Archangel, and with the trump
of God." "The Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty
messengers, in flaming fire, taking vengeance on them that know not God, and that obey not
the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ." "They [the world] shall see the
Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory." "Behold,
he cometh with clouds, and every eye shall see him." `1 Thess.
4:16`; `2 Thess. 1:7,8`; `Matt. 24:30`; `Rev. 1:7`
As seekers after truth, it will not do for us to say, in view of these
passages, that the majority of them seem to favor
::page 144::
whatever view we incline to prefer, and then to ignore the others. Until we have a view of
the matter in which every Bible statement finds a reasonable representation, we should not
feel sure that we have the truth on the subject. One statement of God is as true, and as
firm a foundation for faith, as a hundred. And it would be wiser to seek for a harmonious
understanding than to arrive at a conclusion or adopt a theory based on a one-sided
interpretation, and thus to deceive ourselves and others.
Christians generally make no effort to harmonize these statements, and
therefore their ideas are one-sided and incorrect. The last group of statements is just as
positive as the first, and apparently teaches the very reverse of a quiet, unobserved,
thief-like manner in the Lord's coming and presence. In addition to these statements, we
are referred to two other illustrations of the manner of his coming, viz.: "This same
Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come, IN LIKE MANNER as
ye have seen him go into heaven," and, "As the lightning cometh out of the east,
and shineth even unto the west, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be."
(`Acts 1:11`; `Matt. 24:27`) To reach a correct conclusion, these also must be given due
weight.
In our examination of the subject we should note that while our Lord stated,
as a positive fact, that his kingdom would be established without outward show, and that
his coming, his presence, would be as a thief, requiring close, attentive
watching to apprehend and discern it, all of the above texts generally cited as proof of
an outward, visible manifestation are in highly figurative language, except the
one which says that he will come in like manner as he went away. The symbolic must always
bend in interpretation to the plainer, more literal statements, as soon as their symbolic
character is recognized. Whenever a literal interpretation would do violence to reason,
and also place the
::page 145::
passage in direct antagonism to plain statements of Scripture, such passage
should be considered figurative, and its interpretation as a symbol should be sought in
harmony with obviously plain and literal passages, and with the general character and
object of the revealed plan. By recognizing and thus interpreting the symbols in this
case, the beautiful harmony of all the statements is manifest. Let us now examine them and
see how perfectly they agree with the statements which are not symbolic.
"The Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with
the voice of the Archangel, and with the trump of God."
(`1 Thess. 4:16`) The voice and the trumpet here mentioned correspond in every way with
the same figures used in `Rev. 11:15-19`--"The seventh angel sounded; and
there were great voices in heaven, saying, The kingdom of this world is become
the kingdom of our Lord, and of his Christ, and he shall reign forever and ever....And the
nations were angry, and thy wrath is come, and the time of the dead, that they should be
judged," etc. The same events are referred to in Daniel's prophecy: "And at that
time shall Michael [Christ] stand up [assume control], the great Prince,...and there shall
be a time of trouble such as never was since there was a nation,...and many of them that
sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake." And Paul adds to his mention of the
voices and the trumpet the statement, "And the dead in Christ shall rise first."
In `2 Tim. 4:1` he further states that Christ shall judge the quick (the living) and the
dead, at this time of his appearing and kingdom; and the beginning of this judgment of the
living nations is everywhere described as the greatest time of trouble the world has ever
known. `Dan. 12:1`
Thus Paul, John and Daniel evidently refer to the same time, the time of our
Lord's appearing, and the establishment of his kingdom in the midst of a great time of
::page 146::
trouble, and to the events preceding and introducing it. The same result is shown by each
writer to follow the standing up of Michael, the voices and the trumpet: namely, trouble
and wrath upon the nations and the resurrection of the dead. Next, mark the figure used:
"WITH A SHOUT." The Greek word here translated "shout" is
keleusma, which signifies a shout of encouragement. A shout implies a
public message designed for the ears, not of a few, but of a mixed multitude. It is
generally designed either to alarm and terrify or to assist and encourage. Or it may have
the one effect upon one class, and the reverse effect upon another, according to
circumstances and conditions.
The aspect of affairs in the world for the past fifteen years very strikingly
corresponds with this symbol, in the outbursts of world-wide encouragement for all men to
wake up to a sense of their rights and privileges as men, and to consider their mutual
relationships, the principles upon which they are based and the ends which they should
accomplish. Where on the face of the earth is the civilized nation that has not heard the
shout, and is not influenced by it! The entire civilized world has, in the past few years
been studying political economy, civil rights and social liberties as never before in the
annals of history; and men are encouraging each other, and being encouraged, as never
before, to probe these subjects to the very foundation. The shout of encouragement started
by the increase of knowledge among men has already encircled the earth, and under its
influence men are banding themselves together, encouraged and assisted by men of brain and
genius, to contend and strive for both real and fancied rights and liberties; and as their
organizations increase and multiply, the shout grows louder and longer, and will by and by
result as foretold, in the great time of trouble and tumult of angry nations. This result
is graphically described by the Prophet--
::page 147::
"The noise of a multitude in the mountains [kingdoms] like as of a great people; a
tumultuous noise of the kingdoms of nations gathered together: the Lord of hosts mustereth
the host of battle." `Isa. 13:4`
"THE VOICE OF THE ARCHANGEL" is another striking symbol of similar
import. The name "archangel" signifies chief messenger; and
our anointed Lord himself is Jehovah's Chief Messenger--the "Messenger of the
Covenant." (`Mal. 3:1`) Daniel refers to the same personage, calling him Michael,
which name signifies who as God--an appropriate name for him who is "the
express image of the Father's person," and the representative of his authority and
power. The voice of the Archangel represents Christ's authority and command. This symbol,
then, represents Christ as taking control, or beginning his reign and issuing his
commands, his official orders, announcing the change of dispensation by the enforcement of
the laws of his kingdom.
The same thought is differently expressed by Daniel, when he says, Then shall
Michael, the great Prince, "stand up." To stand up signifies
to assume authority, to give commands. See "ariseth," `Isa. 2:19,21`.
Another illustration of this symbol is from David, who says of Christ prophetically,
"He uttered his voice; the earth melted." The great time of trouble will be
precipitated, and the earth (organized society) will melt, or disintegrate, under the
change of administration going into effect when the new King utters his voice of command.
At his command, systems of error, civil, social and religious, must go down, however old
or firmly entrenched and fortified they may be. The sword out of his mouth shall cause the
havoc: The truth on every subject, and in all its varied aspects, shall judge men, and,
under his power and overruling, shall cause the overturning of evil and error in all their
thousand forms.
"THE TRUMP OF GOD." Many seem thoughtlessly to entertain the idea
that this trumpet will be a literal sound on
::page 148::
the air. But this will be seen to be an unreasonable expectation, when it is noticed that
Paul here refers to what the Revelator designates "The Seventh Trumpet," the
"Last Trump" in a series of symbolic trumpets. (`Rev. 11:15`; `1 Cor.
15:52`) The proof that these references are to the same trumpet is found in the record of
the events connected with each. Paul mentions the resurrection, and the establishment of
the Lord's Kingdom, as connected with "the trump of God," and the Revelator
mentions the same with even greater minuteness. The propriety of calling the
"seventh," or "last trump," the "trump of God," is evident,
too, when we remember that the events mentioned under the preceding six trumpets of
Revelation refer to humanity's doings, while the seventh refers specially to the Lord's
work, and covers the "Day of the Lord." Since the six preceding trumpets were
symbols--and this is generally admitted by commentators and students who make any claim as
expositors of Revelation--it would be a violation of reason and common sense to expect the
seventh, the last of the series, to be a literal, audible sound on the air. And not only
so, but it would be out of harmony with the Lord's general methods, as well as with those
statements of Scripture indicating the secrecy of his coming; for a thief never
sounds a trumpet to announce his arrival.
The seven trumpets of Revelation are all symbolic, and represent seven great
periods of time and their events. The examination of these we leave for a subsequent
volume. Suffice it here to say that we find ourselves today in the midst of the very
events which mark the sounding of the seventh trumpet. The great voices, the increase of
knowledge, the angry nations, etc., taken in connection with time prophecies, establish
this as a fact. Many events are yet to transpire before this seventh or last trumpet
ceases to sound; as, for instance, the rewarding of the saints and
::page 149::
prophets, the resurrection of all the dead, etc. In fact, it covers the entire period of
the Millennial reign of Christ, as indicated by the events which are to transpire under
it. `Rev. 10:7; 11:15,18`
Thus we find the "shout," the "voice of the
Archangel" and "the trump of God" all symbols, and now in
process of fulfilment. Note carefully, too, the fact that each of the three prophecies
just referred to (`Dan. 12:1`; `Rev. 11:15`; `1 Thess. 4:16`) declares the Lord's presence
at the time when the events mentioned transpire. They were foretold for the very purpose
of indicating the manner in which his invisible presence would be manifested to
those who have faith in the word of prophecy. Paul says, "The Lord shall descend
with [literally in, or during] a shout," voice, trumpet, etc.; John
says that the kingdoms of this world become his, during the time of these events; and
Daniel says, "At that time shall Michael, the great Prince [Christ], stand up"
(be present) and take to himself his great power. If, therefore, we can recognize
the shout, the voices and the sounding of the great trumpet, we should accept them as
indications, not that the Lord will come soon, but rather that he has come and is now
present, and that the harvest work of gathering the wheat and burning the tares is already
under way. This we shall soon see is abundantly proved by time prophecies. Yet it is not
to the natural vision, but only to the eye of faith, through the sure word of prophecy,
that his presence and work can be discerned.
Just here another fact should not be overlooked, namely, that the
"Shout," the "Voice of the Archangel," and the "Trump of
God," as above explained, are all instrumentalities for the accomplishment of the
harvest work of the Gospel age. If, therefore, we see not only the meaning of these
symbols, but the foretold results actually taking place, we have additional proof
both that we have rightly
::page 150::
interpreted the symbols, and that we are now in this period called the
"harvest," in which the Gospel age and the Millennial age lap--the one closing
and the other opening. Many will need no aid in tracing a separating work now
going on between the truly consecrated and the merely nominal Christians. Many can see the
symbolic fire already under way, and can discern the "shout" of the people, the
command of the new King Immanuel and the events called the "seventh trumpet,"
and the "clouds" of trouble, in which the Lord comes, and from and in which his
power is to be manifested--subduing all things unto himself.
We have already (Vol.
I, p. 237) called attention to the fact, that the recognition of the harvest work in
actual process is proof of the Lord's presence, since he declared that he would be the
chief reaper and director of the entire work, and that this would be his first
work--"Behold, a white cloud, and upon the cloud one sat like unto the Son of man,
having on his head a golden crown, and in his hand a sharp sickle....And he that sat on
the cloud thrust in his sickle on the earth; and the earth was reaped." "In the
time of the harvest I will say to the reapers, gather" etc. (`Rev.
14:14,16`; `Matt. 13:30`) The harvest work will occupy forty years for its full
accomplishment, ending with A.D. 1914. Its various features will be accomplished
gradually, but all of its days are "days of the Son of Man"--days of our Lord's
presence and power--recognized in the end by all, but at first only by the class specified
by the Apostle--"Ye, brethren --not in darkness."
"IN FLAMING FIRE." The next of these symbolic statements can be
readily understood, if the meaning of the symbols, fire, etc., already explained (Vol. I, p. 317), be borne in
mind. It reads, "The Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels,
in flaming fire, taking
::page 151::
vengeance on them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus
Christ." `2 Thess. 1:8`
Expressed literally, we understand this to signify that in his day (the
Millennial age) our Lord's presence will be revealed or manifested to the world from his
position of spiritual control ("heaven"), in the wrath and punishment then
visited upon evil and evildoers. It will be consuming wrath, as indicated by the symbol, fire,
and will leave neither root nor branch of evil systems, error, oppression, or wilful
sinners; and all the proud, and all evildoers, shall be burned up as stubble in that
Millennial day. In its beginning-- in this "harvest" period--this fire will burn
very fiercely, consuming pride and evil, now of such rank growth. Happy those who will
surrender their pride and evil to be destroyed, that they themselves be not destroyed also
(in the "second death"), as some resisters will evidently be, during the
Millennial age. It is of this time that we read, "Behold, the day cometh that shall
burn as an oven; and all the proud, yea, and all that do wickedly, shall be stubble: and
the day that cometh shall burn them up, saith the Lord of hosts, that it shall leave them
neither root nor branch." `Mal. 4:1`
The "mighty angels," messengers, or agents of his power, are
various, and may properly be understood as applying to and including all the various
agencies, animate and inanimate, which shall be used by our Lord in the overthrow of the
evil systems of the present, and in the chastisement of evildoers.
While the wrath or vengeance of the Lord is thus to be expressed in flaming
fire, in consuming trouble, such as never before was known--so general and widespread, and
so destructive of evil--righteousness and the righteous will begin to be favored. And as
these dealings become more and more apparent, men will begin to draw the inference that a
new power has taken control of human affairs; and
::page 152::
thus the presence of our Lord as King of kings shall be revealed to the world.
"He shall be revealed in flaming fire, taking vengeance [both] on them that know not
God [who are not really acquainted with God, but who nevertheless fail to obey the light
of conscience, which all to some extent possess], and [also on those who, while knowing
God, yet] obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ."
Under the chastisements and increasing light and favorable opportunities of
the Millennial day, all will be brought to such a clear knowledge of the truth and the way
of righteousness as to be without the excuse of ignorance, or of inability to obey the
truth; and those who persistently continue enemies of God and righteousness shall
be punished with lasting destruction (a destruction from which there shall be no
resurrection) from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power.
"IN POWER AND GREAT GLORY." The next statement is to the effect
that the world will see the Son of man coming, before his kingdom is fully set up
or his joint-heirs are all gathered and exalted with him. And, seeing his coming, all the
tribes of the earth will mourn--"They shall see the Son of man coming with power and
great glory."
Already the world sees the clouds of trouble gathering and darkening; they
realize that a power is now at work in the affairs of men, with which they cannot cope;
the near future, from the present outlook, is dark and ominous to all who have sufficient
intelligence to mark the trend of events. Thinking men observe the persistency with which
questions of right and wrong, justice and injustice, are forced upon their
consideration, demanding an expression of their individual principles. Many
recognize the glory and power of earth's new Ruler, yet because clouds and
darkness are round about him they do not recognize the King himself. Men see the
clouds, and therefore see him coming in the
::page 153::
clouds with power and great glory [the glory of power and justice], but they do not
recognize him. Not until the clouds have let fall hail stones and coals of fire
(`Psa. 18:12,13`) to batter down men's pride, and selfishness, and prejudices, and consume
these, will the clouds disappear, and reveal the full majesty and glory of Christ's
presence. If men would consider, and hearken to the voice of the Lord, which now directs
the course of justice, and warns of impending retribution, the great disasters of the near
future would be averted; but "God speaketh once, yea, twice, yet man perceiveth it
not....Then he openeth the ears of men [in the thunder tones of "the day of
trouble"] and sealeth their instruction, that he may withdraw man from his [own]
purpose, and hide pride from man."
"Behold, he cometh with clouds," and in due time "every eye
shall see [discern] him," shall recognize his presence, power and authority; and all
must submit to it, whether willing or unwilling, until the loosing of Satan for a little
season, in the close of the Millennium, when after full experience their willingness or
unwillingness will be fully tested, and the unwilling will be destroyed--the second death,
symbolically called the lake of fire. `Rev. 21:8`
Thus seen, all of these symbolic explanations of the manner of our Lord's
coming accord perfectly with the plain statements which declare that his presence will be
a secret for a time, known only to those watching.
In Like Manner
What, now, is taught by the statement of the angel at the time of our
Lord's departure--`Acts 1:11`--"This same Jesus which is taken up from you into
heaven shall so come, in like manner, as ye have seen him go into heaven"?
A careful examination of this text will manifest its harmony with the
foregoing. Many seem to think the passage
::page 154::
reads, As you see the Lord ascend into heaven, so, in like manner, you shall see
him come again. Such should read it again and again, until they note the fact that it does
not say that those who saw him go will see him come, nor that any one else will see
him come. What it does say is, that the manner of his coming will be like
the manner of his going. What, then, was the manner of his going? Was it with
great splendor, and with great demonstration? Was it with trumpet sound and voices and a
great shout rending the air, and the Lord's person shining in supernatural glory and
brightness? If so, we should expect his coming again to be "in like manner."
On the other hand, was it not as quietly and secretly as was possible, consistent with his
purpose of having thoroughly convinced witnesses of the fact? None saw him, or knew of the
fact, except his faithful followers. His statement (`John 14:19`), "Yet a little
while and the world seeth me no more," has never yet been disproved; for none but the
brethren saw even his manifestations after his resurrection, and no others witnessed his
ascension. And in like manner as he went away (quietly, secretly, so far
as the world was concerned, and unknown except to his followers), so, in this
manner, he comes again. And as when he went away he lifted up his hands and blessed them,
so, when he comes again, it is that their joy may be full, as he said: "I will come
again, and receive you unto myself"; "I will see you again, and your heart shall
rejoice, and your joy no man taketh from you." `Luke 24:50,51`; `John 14:3; 16:22`
The angel seemed also to give special emphasis to the fact that the coming
again would be the coming of this very "same Jesus"--the same one who
left the glory which he had with the Father before the world was, and became man-- became
poor that we might be made rich; the same Jesus that died on Calvary; the same Jesus that
arose a quickening spirit the third day; the same Jesus that had manifested
::page 155::
his change during the forty days--THIS same Jesus now ascended upon high. Yes, it
is the same Jesus who has experienced two changes of nature--first from spirit to
human, and then from human to divine. These changes of nature have not destroyed his
individuality. His identity was preserved, as the angel thus assures us, whether the
philosophy of that fact be understood or not; and though we shall know him no more after
the flesh (as a man), but should remember his exaltation, that he is now of the divine,
spiritual nature, and should anticipate his coming in harmony with this change and
exaltation, yet we may remember that he is the same loving Jesus, and not changed
in this respect. It is "this same Jesus," who, though present forty days after
his resurrection, was seen of the disciples only, and by them but briefly, who in his
second presence will be as invisible to the world as during the forty days preceding his
ascension. We must remember that he does not come to give himself as a sacrifice, and
hence that he has no further use for a human body prepared for sacrifice. (`Heb. 10:5`)
That is all over now: he dies no more, but now comes to rule and bless and uplift the
redeemed race.
Our Lord furnished us a most beautiful illustration of the manner in which
his presence will be revealed, when he said, "As the bright-shining emerges from the
east, and illuminates even unto the west, so will be the presence of the Son of
man." (`Matt. 24:27`) That most translations of this verse are faulty in using the
word lightning, where sunlight is meant, is evident; for lightning flashes do not come out
of the east and shine unto the west. They just as frequently come from other quarters, and
rarely, if ever, flash clear across the heavens. The Lord's illustration, and the only one
which will comport with his words, is the sun's brightness, which does invariably emerge
from the east and shine even unto the west. The Greek word astrape, here used, is
::page 156::
thus shown to be improperly translated in this text, and also in the account of the same
words by `Luke (17:24)`. Another instance of the use of this word astrape by our
Lord is found in `Luke 11:36`, where it applies to the brightness of a candle, and in the
common version is rendered "bright-shining." Incorrect ideas of the manner of
our Lord's coming and revealing, firmly fixed in the minds of translators, led them into
this error of translating astrape by the word "lightning." They
supposed that he would be revealed suddenly, like a flash of lightning, and not gradually,
like the dawning sunlight. But how beautiful is the figure of sunrise, as illustrating the
gradual dawning of truth and blessing in the day of his presence. The Lord associates the
overcomers with himself in this figure, saying, "Then shall the righteous shine forth
as the Sun in the Kingdom of their Father." And the Prophet, using the same figure,
says, "The Sun of righteousness shall arise with healing in his beams." The
dawning is gradual, but finally the full, clear brightness shall thoroughly
banish the darkness of evil, ignorance, superstition and sin.
An imperfect translation of the word parousia has further tended to
obscure the sense of this passage. In the Emphatic Diaglott and in Prof. Young's
translation it is rendered presence; in Rotherham's it is arrival; while
in the common version it is rendered coming. And though the text of the Revised
Version retains this last erroneous rendering--coming-- yet in the marginal
reading it acknowledges "presence" to be the true definition of the
Greek. The Greek word parousia invariably signifies personal presence, as having
come, having arrived; and it should never be understood as signifying to be on the way, as
the English word coming is generally used. The text under consideration therefore
teaches that as the sunlight gradually dawns, so shall the
::page 157::
presence of the Son of man be gradually manifested or revealed.
Together with this illustration, our Lord coupled words of caution to guard
us against certain errors which would be advanced about the time of his second advent,
calculated to lead his Church astray. "Behold, I have told you before. Wherefore, if
they shall say unto you, Behold, he is in the desert; go not forth: behold, he is in the
secret chambers; believe it not. For as the bright shining [sun] cometh out of the east
and [gradually] shineth even unto the west, so shall be the presence of the Son
of man." Thus does our Lord put us on guard against two errors rapidly growing in our
day. One is the claim that our Lord will come in the flesh, in the wilderness or desert of
Palestine; and, so believing, many have gone thither, and are waiting to see Jesus in the flesh,
with the scars, as when crucified. Expecting him as he was, and not "as he
is," they seriously err, and blind themselves to the truth, as did the Jews at the
first advent. These false expectations lead this class to interpret literally the
statement of the prophet (`Zech. 14:4`), "His feet shall stand in that day upon the
Mount of Olives," etc.* Blinded by false expectations, they do not see that the
"feet" in this passage are figurative, as truly as in `Psa. 91:12`; `Isa. 52:7`;
`Psa. 8:6; 110:1`; `Eph. 6:15`; `Deut. 33:3`; and in many other passages. If they knew what
to expect, they would know not to go to Jerusalem to look for the man Christ
Jesus; for the highly exalted king comes as the sunlight, making his presence and
influence felt the world over. Wherefore, "Go not forth."
"If they shall say, Behold, he is in the secret chambers; believe it
not." Spiritism, ever ready to deceive by counterfeits,
----------
*We leave the examination of this prophecy for another occasion.
::page 158::
and ever ready to use advanced truths as a garment of light (`2 Cor. 11:13,14`), has not
hesitated to claim that we are in a period of dispensational change, the dawning of a
glorious age. Among other such things, some of them even teach that Christ is present,
and, we doubt not, ere long they will give seances at which they will claim to
show him in the secret chambers. Should the error present itself in this form, or
any other, let us remember our Lord's words and repudiate all such claims as false,
knowing that not thus will he reveal his presence, but "as the
sunlight," emerging gradually-- "the Sun of righteousness shall arise with
healing in his beams."
Our Lord's Parousia in the Harvest
The Greek is a very exact language: a fact which greatly enhances its value in giving exact expression to truth. Thus, for instance, in our common English Bibles, the word come is used to translate thirty-two Greek words, each of which has a fine shade of difference. Instances: ephistemi signifies to overtake, as in `Luke 21:34`--"come upon [overtake] you unawares"; sunerchomai signifies to gather, or come together, as in `1 Cor. 11:18`--"come together in the church"; proserchomai signifies to approach, or come toward, as in `Heb. 4:16`--"Let us therefore come boldly"; heko signifies to arrive, or have come, or came, as when the action of coming is completed, as in `John 2:4` --"Mine hour is not yet come"; enistemi signifies to be present, and is so translated, except in two instances where it should be so rendered: `2 Tim. 3:1`--"Perilous times shall come"--be present; and `2 Thess. 2:2`--"That the day of Christ is at hand"--present. Parousia, too, signifies presence, and should never be translated coming, as in the common English Bible, where it is twice rendered properly, presence. (`2 Cor. 10:10`; `Phil. 2:12`) The "Emphatic Diaglott," a very
::page 159::
valuable translation of the New Testament, renders parousia properly, PRESENCE,
in almost every occurrence of the word. The two Greek words, heko and parousia,
and their use in the New Testament, are what we desire to notice at present, and
particularly the latter of these; because a correct appreciation of their significance
sheds light upon the manner of our Lord's return, through passages in which they occur,
while the common but erroneous translation beclouds the very point it should illuminate.*
With the correct thought as to the meaning of parousia in mind--not
that of coming, as being on the way, but presence, as after arrival--let
us examine some passages in which the word is used. And from these we will learn that presence
does not necessarily imply sight, but that it is applicable also to things present but
unseen. Thus, for instance, angels, spirit beings, can be present with us, yet unseen, as
our Lord was present in the world and often with the disciples during the forty
days after his resurrection, without being seen of the world, or by his disciples except
on the few brief occasions already referred to. Those days were days of his parousia
(presence), as much as the preceding thirty-three and a half years had been.
In the conversation previous to the question of `Matt. 24:3`, our Lord had
foretold the destruction of the temple, and the rejection of Israel after the flesh until
a time when they would gladly recognize him as their Messiah and say, "Blessed is
he." He had told his disciples that he would go away, and come again and receive them
unto himself. He
----------
*The word parousia occurs twenty-four times in the
Greek Testament, and is only twice in the English com. ver. (`2 Cor. 10:10`; `Phil. 2:12`)
correctly translated presence. The other occurrences, in which it is
mistranslated coming, are as follows: `Matt. 24:3,27,37,39`; `1 Cor. 15:23;
16:17`; `2 Cor. 7:6,7`; `Phil. 1:26`; `1 Thess. 2:19; 3:13; 4:15; 5:23`; `2 Thess.
2:1,8,9`; `James 5:7,8`; `2 Pet. 1:16; 3:4,12`; `1 John 2:28`.
::page 160::
called their day the "harvest," or end of that age, and he had told them of a
future "harvest" at the time of his second coming. (`Matt. 9:37,38; 13:39,40`)
Doubtless remembering that few recognized him as the Christ at his first advent, they
wanted to know how he might be surely recognized at his second advent--expecting
probably that his second advent would occur in their day. Hence their inquiry, "What
shall be the sign [indication] of thy parousia [presence] and of the end of the
age?"
Because of their disposition to mix the closing events of the Jewish age, or
harvest, in which they already were, with the then future "harvest," or end of
the Gospel dispensation, our Lord gave quite a detailed account of events which must
intervene, indicating a lapse of a considerable period between, yet giving no
clear idea of its length; for even he did not then know how long it would be. `Mark 13:32`
Our Lord's reply in `verses 1 to 14` covers the entire Gospel age; and his
words in `verses 15 to 22` have a double application --literally to the close of the
Jewish age, and figuratively to the end of this Gospel age, of which the Jewish age was a
shadow. `Verses 23-26` contain words of warning against false Christs, and in `verse 27`
he reaches their question regarding his parousia, and declares [properly
translated], "as the bright shining [the sunlight] cometh out of the east and shineth
even unto the west, so shall the parousia [the PRESENCE] of the Son of man
be." The sunlight becomes present instantly, yet noiselessly; and it is first
discerned by those who are first awake.
Leaving other intermediate features of our Lord's discourse for examination
in their appropriate place, we note his second reference to their question regarding his parousia
in `verses 37 and 39`. He says, "As the days of Noah, so shall also the parousia
[PRESENCE] of the Son of man be." Notice,
::page 161::
that the comparison is not between the coming of Noah and the coming of
our Lord, nor between the coming of the flood and the coming of our
Lord. The coming of Noah is not referred to at all; neither is the coming
of our Lord referred to; for, as already stated, parousia does not mean coming,
but presence. The contrast, then, is between the time of the presence of Noah
among the people "before the flood," and the time of the presence of
Christ in the world, at his second advent, before the fire--the extreme trouble
of the Day of the Lord with which this age ends.
And though the people were wicked in Noah's day, before the flood,
and will be wicked in the time of our Lord's presence, before the hot fire of
trouble comes upon them, yet this is not the point of comparison or
likeness to which our Lord refers; for wickedness has abounded in every age. The point of
comparison is stated clearly, and is readily seen if we read critically: The people,
except the members of Noah's family, were ignorant of the coming storm, and unbelieving
as to the testimony of Noah and his family, and hence they "knew not";
and this is the point of comparison. So shall also the PRESENCE of the Son of man
be. None but those of the family of God will believe here: others will "know
not," until society, as at present organized, begins to melt with the fervent heat of
the time of trouble now impending. This is illustrated by the words, "As in the days
that were before the flood, they were eating, drinking and marrying [`Luke
(17:28)` adds "planting and building"], until the day Noah entered into the ark,
and knew not,...so shall also the parousia [the presence] of the Son of man
be." In the time of the presence of the Son of man, therefore, the world
will go on with its eating, drinking, planting, building and marrying --not mentioned as
sinful doings, but as indicative of their ignorance of his presence, and of the
trouble that will prevail in the world. This, then, is our Lord's answer to the
::page 162::
question of the disciples--What shall be the sign [indication] of thy [parousia]
presence and of the end or harvest of the age? In substance, he says: There will be no
sign for the worldly masses; they will not know of my presence and the new dispensational
changes. Only the few will know, and they will be taught of God (in a way not here
explained) before there is any sign (indication) which the worldly could discern.
Luke's account of this same discourse (`Luke 17:26-29`), though not in the
same words, is in perfect accord. Luke does not use the word parousia, but he
expresses this exact thought, saying: "As it was in the days of Noe, so
shall it be also in the days of the Son of man"--in the days of his presence.
Not before his days, not after his days, but in (during)
his days, the world will be eating, drinking, marrying, buying, selling, planting and
building. These scriptures, then, clearly teach that our Lord will be present in
the end of this age, entirely unknown to the world, and unseen by them.
Though there shall never be another flood to destroy the earth
(`Gen. 9:11`), it is written that the whole earth shall be devoured with the fire
of God's jealousy (`Zeph. 3:8`)--not the literal, physical earth in either case, but the
existing order of things in both cases: in the first instance
accomplished by drowning all the people except Noah's family; in the last, by burning all
except the family of God in the symbolic fire--the great trouble of the Day of the Lord.
The faithful children of God shall be counted worthy to escape all those things coming on
the earth (`Luke 21:36`): not necessarily by being taken away from the earth, but possibly
by being rendered fire-proof, as in the typical illustration of the three Hebrews who
walked in the midst of the fiery furnace heated seven times, on whose garments, even, was
not the smell of fire; because one like unto the Son of God was present with them. `Dan.
3:19-25`
::page 163::
Next we will notice scriptures which teach that many in the Church will, for
a time, be ignorant of the Lord's presence, and of the "harvest" and the ending
of this age, while he is actually present, and the harvest work in progress.
The closing verses of `Matt. 24, from verse 42` on, are very significant. In
`verse 37` our Lord had shown that the world would not know of the parousia of
the Son of man; and now he cautions his professed disciples that, unless on their guard
they will be similarly in darkness relative to his parousia. He says,
"Watch, therefore; for ye know not what hour your Lord doth come [erchomai--arrive]."
If people were expecting a thief at a definite time, they would stay awake so as not to be
taken unawares: so you should be ever awake, always ready, and always watching for the
first evidence of my parousia. In reply to your question, "When
shall these things be?" I merely tell you to watch and be ready, and when I arrive,
when I am present, I will communicate the fact to all who are watching and
faithful, and they only will have any right to know. All others should and must be in
outer darkness, and must learn with and as the world-- through trouble.
"Who, then [in the "harvest"], is a faithful and wise
servant, whom his Master shall make* ruler over his household,
to give them meat in due season? Blessed that servant whom his Master on coming [erchomai--when
he arrives] shall find so doing. Verily, I say unto you, he shall make him ruler
over all his goods"--all the vast storehouse of precious truth shall be opened to
such faithful servants, to arm and supply and feed the entire household of faith.
But if the servant's heart is not right, he will say, My Master tarries [has not
arrived], and may smite [oppose and contradict] his fellow servants [those who differ
with him;
----------
*Sinaitic and Vatican MSS read "shall make."
::page 164::
those, therefore, who are declaring the opposite--My Lord does not tarry, but has come,
is present]. Such may eat and drink with the intemperate [become intoxicated with
the spirit of the world], but the Master of that servant will come [Greek, heko--will
have arrived] in a day not expected, and in an hour in which that servant is not aware,
and will cut him off [from being one of the servants privileged to hand meat in due season
to the household], and will appoint him his portion with the hypocrites. [Though not a
hypocrite but a genuine servant, he must, because unfaithful and overcharged, have his
portion with the hypocrites in the perplexity and trouble coming upon Babylon.]
"There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth."
The foregoing, carefully examined, clearly teaches us that in the end of this
age there will be one class denying that the Lord is present (not denying that he
will come sometime, but that he has come), and smiting or harshly opposing those fellow
servants who must therefore be teaching the opposite--that the Lord has come. Which is the
faithful, truthful servant, and which the one in error, is clearly stated by our Lord. The
faithful one whom he finds giving seasonable "meat" will be exalted and given
fuller stewardship over the storehouse of truth, with increased ability to bring it forth
to the household, while the unfaithful one will be gradually separated and drawn into
closer and closer sympathy with the mere professors or hypocrites. And note the fact that
the unfaithful is thus cut off, or separated, at a time of which he is not aware--in
the harvest time--while his Lord is really present unknown to him, searching for
and gathering his jewels. `Matt. 13:30`; `Psa. 50:5`; `Mal. 3:17`; `Matt. 24:31`
We particularize here, merely to show that, in answer to the question of the
disciples about signs and evidences of his second presence, our Lord taught that
neither the world nor
::page 165::
the unfaithful servants would be aware of it, until the intense fire of trouble is at
least commenced. And the faithful evidently will see him present merely by the
eye of faith-- through the Scriptures written aforetime for their learning, to be
apprehended as they become due. Present truths on every subject are parts of "his
goods" and treasures new and old which our Lord had laid up for us and now freely
gives us. `Matt. 24:45-47`
While thus, by foretold indications, the Lord made ample preparation to
enable the Church to recognize his presence when due, though they should not see him with
the natural eye, he also carefully warned us against deceptions which should
arise--deceptions which should appear so plausible as to deceive the very elect, if it
were possible. But it is not possible, because all the elect give earnest heed to the
warning, and studiously acquaint themselves with the foretold indications of his presence,
and are watching for their fulfilment. Those otherwise minded are not of the elect class.
Only the overcomers are to reign with the Lord. These deceptions, as will be shown in a
succeeding chapter, are already in existence, and are deceiving many. But, thank God, the
elect are forewarned and forearmed, and shall neither be deceived nor disheartened. Though
clouds and darkness are round about him, they recognize his presence, and rejoice that
their deliverance draweth nigh. If any man should say unto you, Lo, here is Christ, or
there [in any particular place], believe it not. And if they shall say unto you,
Behold, he is in the desert, go not forth: behold he is in the secret chambers, believe it
not; for as [like] the bright shining sunlight, which gradually dawns upon and fills the
earth, so shall his presence be. (`Matt. 24:23,26,27`) It will be manifested as
foretold, by the dawning light of truth--truth on every subject, as we now see it so
rapidly and gloriously unfolding. A few years more, and the Sun of righteousness
::page 166::
will have fully risen with healing in its beams to bless and raise up the death-stricken
world.
In view of the evidences presented in this and the preceding and following
chapters, we have no hesitation in announcing the heart-cheering intelligence, that the
harvest of the Gospel age is upon us, and that the Master is again present as the Chief
Reaper--not in the flesh, as in the Jewish harvest, but in power and great glory, as the
"highly exalted," divine Christ whose glorious body is now "the express
image of the Father's person," though his glorious person is graciously veiled from
human sight. He is inaugurating his reign of righteousness; his sickle of truth is
separating; he is gathering together into oneness of heart and mind the ripe first-fruits
of spiritual Israel; and soon that elect "body" complete shall rule and bless
the world.
This announcement is here made, in order that as we proceed the reader may
have the clearer idea of what the time prophecies most particularly indicate, when it
shall be shown that the harvest, and all its attendant events, are now
chronologically due, and coming to pass as foretold.
Thus seen, these time prophecies and all this particularity of instruction
with reference to the manner and the attending circumstances of the Lord's appearing were
not given to alarm the world, nor to satisfy idle curiosity, nor to awaken a sleeping
nominal church; but they were given in order that those who are not asleep, and not of the
world, but who are awake, consecrated and faithful, and earnest students of their Father's
plan, may be informed of the significance of transpiring events, and not be in darkness on
a subject and with regard to events in no other way discernible with certainty--the
harvest, the presence of the great Reaper, the threshing and sifting of the true wheat,
the bundling and burning of the tares in the time of trouble, etc.
::page 167::
Scoffing Foretold
The Apostle Peter describes how some of the unfaithful servants and
hypocrites will scoff during the presence of the Lord, even as they scoffed in
the days of Noah. (`2 Pet. 3:3,4,10,12`) Notice that the Apostle wrote to the Church, and
that the scoffers he describes are in the nominal church and professedly
interested in the Lord's work and plan, and believers, therefore, that he will come
some time. The scoffing described is on the very subject here noticed, and such as we
hear and shall hear from professed Christians, whenever the subject of the Lord's presence
and harvest work, etc., is presented. Christians generally, until they investigate the
subject, have such ideas of literal manifestations of fire, trumpets, voices, etc., and of
seeing the Lord descending through the air, a shining body of flesh, that when they hear
of his invisible presence, without taking time to investigate a subject upon
which they feel so sure, busied with worldly plans, and intoxicated with the spirit of the
world, they will dismiss the matter quickly as unworthy of investigation.
It is to this class of professed Christians that the Apostle refers, saying,
"In the last days [in the closing years of the Gospel age--in the
"harvest"] shall come scoffers, walking after their own desires [plans,
theories, etc.], asking, Where is the promise of his presence [parousia]?
for ever since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as at present from the
beginning of creation." When referred to our Lord's statement (`Matt. 24:37-39`;
`Luke 17:26`) that in his days, in the days of his presence, things
would indeed continue as before; and that, as in Noah's day, men would be eating,
drinking, marrying, planting and building; and that, as then, the world would know not
of his presence, and read not the signs
::page 168::
of the speedy and great changes just at hand, they are too busy to consider the testimony
carefully, and only continue to scoff.
Ah! says Peter, they forget the great change which occurred in the days of
Noah; and then, under the symbol of fire, he describes the overwhelming flood of trouble
which shall shortly overtake the whole world, utterly overthrowing all civil and
ecclesiastical rule [the heavens] and melting the entire social fabric [the
earth]--producing anarchy and social chaos until the new heavens [ruling powers-- the
Kingdom of God] shall be fully established, as well as a new earth [society organized on a
new and better basis, of love, equality and righteousness]. The Apostle then reminds us
(`verse 8`) that this Day of the Lord's presence, for which the Church has long
hoped and looked, is a thousand-year day--the Millennium of Christ's reign.
In `verse 10` he assures us that "the Day of the Lord will arrive
[Greek, heko] as a thief"* [unobservedly,
quietly: it will be present, while some are scoffing and smiting those fellow-servants who
declare the truth]. The Apostle then exhorts the saints to separateness from the world;
that they be not swallowed up by politics, money-getting, etc., but that they set their
affections on higher things. He says, Seeing that in God's plan present earthly conditions
are only temporary and will soon give place to the better order, what manner of persons
ought we to be, in respect to holy conduct and piety?--"looking for the
PRESENCE [parousia] of the Day of God"--watching for the evidences (signs)
to prove that it has come.
And, thanks be to God, his provision is so abundant that all those of piety,
who are looking for that day, will know of it before the full bursting forth of
the fire of wrath. Through
----------
*Old Manuscripts omit here the words, "in the night."
::page 169::
Paul he assures us that none of the children of the light will be left in darkness, that
that day should come upon them unawares. (`1 Thess. 5:4`) Hence, though we are already in
the day of the Lord's presence, and in the beginning of the great fire of
trouble, we see that it is even as shown us in symbol (`Rev. 7:1,2`)--the storm is held in
check until the faithful servants of God are "sealed in their foreheads:" i.e.,
until such are given an intellectual appreciation of the time, presence,
etc., which will not only comfort them, and shield them, but also be a mark, seal
or evidence of their sonship, as indicated by our Lord when he promised that the holy
Spirit should show to the faithful "things to come." `John 16:13`
Some take Peter's statement literally, that "the heavens being on fire
shall be dissolved and pass away with a great noise"; and also the Revelator's
description of the same events, by a very similar symbol, "The heaven departed as a
scroll when it is rolled together." It would seem, however, that one glance upward at
the myriad gems of night shining through millions of miles of space, with nothing between
to roll away, or to take fire, should be argument enough in one moment to convince such
that they had erred in supposing these statements to be literal--should convince them that
their expectation of a literal fulfilment is absurd in the extreme.
So, then, God veiled from mankind under figures of trumpets, voices, fire,
etc., information (which was not for the worldly to know, but only for the "little
flock" of consecrated saints) regarding the harvest, the Lord's presence, his
spiritual kingdom, etc.; and yet he arranged them so that, in due time, they would speak
clearly and emphatically to the class for whom he intended the information. As at the
first advent, so to a similar consecrated class it may now be said, in the time of the
second advent--"Unto you it
::page 170::
is given to know the mysteries of the kingdom of God; but unto them that are without, all
these things are done in parables" --in figures and dark sayings--in order that, even
though having the Bible before them, others than the consecrated may not really see and
understand. `Mark 4:11,12`
The world is not ignorant of the unprecedented events and circumstances of
the present time, and their increasing noteworthiness with every passing year; but not
perceiving the grand outcome, these only fill their minds with dark forebodings of evil.
As foretold, they are in fear, looking forward to those things that are coming on the
earth; for already the powers of the heaven (the present ruling powers) are being shaken.
Connecting The Prophetic Chain
In the preceding chapter we presented evidence showing that the
"Times of the Gentiles," or their lease of dominion, will run fully out with the
year A.D. 1914, and that at that time they will be overturned* and
Christ's Kingdom fully established. That the Lord must be present, and set up his Kingdom,
and exercise his great power so as to dash the nations to pieces as a potter's vessel, is
then clearly fixed; for it is "in the days of these kings"--before their
overthrow--i.e., before A.D. 1914--that the God of heaven shall set up his Kingdom. And IT
shall break in pieces and consume all these. (`Dan. 2:44`) And in harmony with
this, we see all about us evidence of the beginning of the smiting, shaking, and
overturning of the present powers, preparatory to the establishment of the kingdom
"which cannot be moved"--the strong government.
The next chapter will present Bible evidence that 1874 A.D. was the exact
date of the beginning of the "Times of
----------
*How long it will require to accomplish this overturning we
are not informed, but have reason to believe the period will be "short."
::page 171::
Restitution," and hence of our Lord's return. Since that date he has been verifying
his promise to those in proper attitude of watchfulness--"Blessed are those servants
whom the Lord when he cometh shall find watching: Verily, I say unto you, that he shall
gird himself, and make them to sit down to meat, and will come forth and serve them."
(`Luke 12:37`) Even so, he has opened unto us the Scriptures, showing us truth concerning
his present glorious nature, the object, manner, and time of his coming, and the character
of his manifestations to the household of faith and to the world. He has drawn our
attention to the prophecies which definitely locate us on the stream of time, and has
shown us the order of his plan of operations in this harvest time. He has shown us, first
of all, that it is a harvest of the saints, a time for their full ripening, and for their
separation from the tares; and secondly, that it is a time for the world to reap its
whirlwind harvest--for the reaping of the vine of the earth, and the treading of its
fruitage in the winepress of the wrath of Almighty God. He has shown us that both of these
ripenings (`Rev. 14:1-4,18-20`) will be completed in a period of forty years, ending with
the year A.D. 1915.
But while the reader is thus informed of what will be proved in succeeding
chapters, he must not expect to have passages of Scripture pointed out in which these
matters and these dates are plainly written. On the contrary, he must bear in mind that
all these things have been hidden by the Lord, in such manner that they could not
be understood or appreciated until the due time had come, and then only by his earnest,
faithful children, who esteem truth as more precious than rubies, and who are willing to
seek it as men search for silver. Truth, like silver, must be not only mined, but also
refined, separated from dross, before its value can be appreciated. The things here stated
in few
::page 172::
words will be proved point by point; and while many may prefer to take a statement without
the trouble of verifying it from the Scriptures, this will not be the case with the real
truth-seeker. He must, so far as possible, make every point, argument and proof his own,
direct from God's Word, by tracing all the connections and thus convincing himself of the
truthfulness of the account presented.
Though the Lord provides it, and the servants bring forth the "meat in
due season for the household," yet each, to be strengthened thereby, must eat for
himself.
"Mine eyes can see the glory of the coming of the Lord;
He is trampling out the winepress where His grapes of wrath are stored;
I see the flaming tempest of His swift-descending sword.
Our King is marching on."
"I can see His coming judgments, as they circle all the earth,
The signs and groanings promised, to precede a second birth;
I read His righteous sentence in the crumbling thrones of earth.
Our King is marching on.
"The 'Gentile Times' are closing; for their kings have had their
day;
And with them sin and sorrow will forever pass away;
For the tribe of Judah's 'Lion' now comes to hold the sway.
Our King is marching on.
"The seventh trump is sounding, and our King knows no defeat:
He will sift out the hearts of men before His Judgment Seat.
Oh, be swift, my soul, to welcome Him, be jubilant, my feet.
Our King is marching on."