<PAGE 61>
STUDY
III
DAYS
OF WAITING FOR THE KINGDOM
--`DANIEL XII`--
The Kingdom Work Epitomized--The Waiting Period to be Marked
by Great Increase of Knowledge and of Travel--Sir Isaac Newton's
Foreview of Railroading--The 1260 Days--The Flood from the
Mouth of the Dragon--The 1290 Days Mark the Spread of an Understanding
of the Vision, Partially Correct--The Disappointment, Trial
and Consequences --The 1335 Days--The Blessing Then upon the
Faithful "Waiting" Ones--The Lord's Reference to
These Waiting Days, in The Parable of The Ten Virgins.
THE
"Time of the End" having been pointed out in
`chapter eleven`, `chapter twelve`
points to the Kingdom, and tells of waiting, etc., which
would precede its establishment, during the "Time of the
End." The first three verses express in few words the grand
outcome of God's plan.
"And
at [in] that time shall Michael stand up, the great prince which
standeth for the children of thy people: and there shall be
a time of trouble, such as never was since there was a nation,
even to that same time: and at that time thy people shall be
delivered, every one that shall be found written in the book.
And many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake,
some to lasting life, and some to shame and lasting contempt.
And they that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament
[the Sun--`Matt. 13:43`]; and they that turn many to righteousness
as the stars, for ever and ever."
<PAGE 62>
If,
in the `eleventh chapter`, the
summary of 2,300 years of the world's history was brief and
pointed, yet clear, this summary of Messiah's Millennial reign,
in three verses, is still more so. And yet it is all there.
Michael (which signifies "Who as God," or one representing
God) is the name here applied to our great Redeemer, who is
indeed the great Prince ordained of God to stand forth and deliver
Daniel's people, God's people--all who love God in truth and
sincerity-- Israelites indeed. (`Rom.
9:6,25,26`; `Gal. 6:16`)
He will deliver them from sin, ignorance, pain and death, and
from all the persecutions and besetments of Satan's blinded
servants, which have in the past almost overwhelmed them. All
found written in the Lamb's Book of life will be delivered forever,
from all enemies: those written as worthy during the Jewish
and Patriarchal ages as well as those written during the Gospel
age, and those who will be written during the Millennial age.
Though all God's people (all who, when brought to a knowledge
of him, love and obey him) will be delivered, yet the degrees
of honor to be granted to some--the overcomers--are carefully
noted; also the fact that some of the great ones of the past--Alexander,
Nero, Napoleon, the Caesars, the popes, etc.--whose talents,
misused, crushed while they dazzled the world, will be seen
in their true characters, and be ashamed and dishonored during
that Millennial age. Nor does this brief synopsis of Christ's
reign omit mention of the great time of trouble by which it
will be inaugurated--a time of trouble in comparison with which
no past revolution will compare, a trouble with which even the
French Revolution will be small, a time of trouble such as was
not since there was a nation, no, nor ever shall be; for this
great Prince, Michael, will not only conquer the whole world,
but his dominion is to be an everlasting dominion. Justice is
the foundation of
<PAGE 63> his throne, and when mankind has
once tasted of its benefits the great majority will never consent
to another, for his Kingdom will be "the desire of all
nations."
Here
the thread of this prophecy, having run its full length, stops,
and the remaining verses of the chapter are for the purpose
of furnishing (not to Daniel and his fellowservants in his day,
but to God's children, Daniel's fellowservants living in the
Time of the End) certain periods of 1260, 1290 and 1335 symbolic
days, respectively, by which, in the due time, we may be convinced,
concerning the time in which we are living that it is indeed
the Harvest time or "End" of the Gospel age.
Daniel,
who had heard the long account of the strifes between the kingdoms
of this world, and now finally of the triumph of God's Kingdom
in the hands of Michael, the great Prince, was anxious to know
when it would deliver the Lord's people. But he is told
(verse 4): "But thou, O Daniel, shut up the words, and
seal the book, even to the Time of the End: [then] many shall
run to and fro, and knowledge shall be increase."
Not
only does the general increase of knowledge experienced confirm
the teachings of `Daniel xi`, that
the Time of the End began in 1799, but the predicted running
to and fro --much and rapid traveling--also confirms it. These
all belong to the Time of the End. The first steamboat was operated
in 1807; the first steamcar in 1831; the first telegraph in
1844; yet today thousands of mammoth cars and steamships are
carrying multitudes hither and thither, "to and fro."
Sir
Isaac Newton, the celebrated astronomer of the seventeenth century,
was greatly interested in this statement by the Prophet Daniel,
and declared his belief that in fulfilment of it human knowledge
would so increase that men would possibly travel at the rate
of fifty miles an hour.
<PAGE 64>
Voltaire,
the noted French infidel, got hold of this statement and scornfully
remarked:
"Now
look at the mighty mind of Newton, the great philosopher who
discovered the law of gravitation: when he became an old man
and got into his dotage, he began to study the book called the
Bible, and in order to credit its fabulous nonsense he would
have us believe that the knowledge of mankind will yet be so
increased that we shall by-and-by be able to travel fifty miles
an hour! Poor dotard!"
Both
of these men died long before the Time of the End had brought
its wonderful increase of knowledge, which more than fulfils
the prediction of the Christian philosopher, based upon the
divine revelation.
Not
for Daniel, but for God's children living during the Time of
the End, was the conversation, etc., related in
`verses 5-7`: "And I, Daniel, looked, and behold
there were two others standing, one on this side of the bank
of the flood [Young's translation], and the other
on that side of the bank of the flood. And one said to the man
who was above the waters of the stream, 'How long shall it be
to the end of these wonders?' Then heard I the man clothed in
linen, who was above the waters of the flood; and he lifted
up his right hand and his left unto the heavens and swore by
the Everliving One that [the end should be] after a time, times
and half a time."
The
matter of special inquiry was the "abomination of desolation,"
of `chapter 11:31-33`, which Daniel
rightly associated with the terrible character seen in his previous
visions, recorded in `chapters 7:8-11,21,24-26
and 8:10-12, 24-26`.
The
time, times and half a time, or three and a half times or years
(360 x 3 1/2 = 1260 days, symbolic time--1260 literal years),
here mentioned, are elsewhere shown to be the period of Papacy's
power. Compare `Dan. 7:25; 12:7` and
`Rev. 12:14`
<PAGE 65> with `Rev.
12:6; 13:5`. The "flood" in or during which
these 1260 years of Papal power terminated--as shown by the
angel standing upon the flood, declaring the limit of
the times--symbolized a condition of things during the French
revolution already referred to. This is the same "flood"
mentioned in `Rev. 12:15,16`, where
it is shown more fully, as coming out of the mouth of the serpent
or dragon, and where its real object, from Satan's standpoint,
is explained to be to overwhelm the "woman" (the protesting
Church of God), as her three and a half times (1260 years) of
wilderness-hiding were about closing, and she was coming forward
into prominence "leaning on [the arm of] her beloved,"
The Word of God. `Songs of Solomon 8:5`
In
symbol, water generally represents truth, and the symbol
preserves its meaning even though it be said to issue from the
mouth of the dragon or serpent. The thought conveyed by this
symbol is that truth would issue forth through evil agencies,
and with an evil intent. And just this we find: the strength
of the French revolution lay in the fact that it was instigated
by many stern truths, regarding priest-craft and king-craft,
and regarding the individual rights and liberties of all. "The
Rights of Man" was indeed the watchword of that revolt
against civil and ecclesiastical oppression. Truths regarding
human rights were seen and expressed there which cause us surprise
when we consider the ignorance, superstition and servility of
that day, under which the masses had so long rested. Many of
the truths which then swept as a "flood" over
France, deluging it with blood, are now very generally accepted
among all civilized peoples; but they were too strong, and too
suddenly put, for that time.
Indeed,
the prophecy clearly shows that the serpent, Satan, did not
intend what under God's providence has resulted, but the reverse.
In this he overreached himself, as he
<PAGE 66> has done on other occasions. Satan
will never send forth the waters of truth to bless and refresh
and release from bondage: on the contrary his effort has all
along been to blind and securely bind mankind under ignorance
and superstition; and this sudden flood of waters (truth) was
designed to act as an emetic, to lead to the casting out of
the food of liberty already being received by the people
from the Bible, as the result of the Reformation, and thus to
force rulers and teachers to oppose the truth through fear of
anarchy.
Satan's
design in instigating the French revolution was to create an
alarm throughout Europe, especially among the influential class,
unfavorable to liberty and to illustrate in France the theory
that, were the superstitions of Rome to be overthrown and liberty
to be given full sway, all law and order would speedily end.
This was a master-stroke of policy, worthy of its author, and
designed, as the prophet shows, to overwhelm the "woman"
(the reformed Church), and to drive all conservatives and peace-lovers--rulers
and ruled--back to union and harmony with Papacy. The failure
of the scheme was not due to lack of craftiness in its designer,
but to the overruling power of God, whereby he is able to cause
all things to work together for good.
In
this case God's plan, for the protection of the "woman"
(Church) from Satan's wiles and for causing the intended ill
to work out good, may be clearly traced, in exact fulfilment
of the prediction made seventeen hundred years before, viz:
"And the earth helped the woman, and the earth opened her
mouth and swallowed up the flood which the dragon cast out of
his mouth." The "earth," in symbol, as already
explained, represents society--order-loving people; and it is
a fact of history that the flood of truth which spread over
France--arraigning Papacy and its priest-craft, and monarchy
and its parasitic aristocracy, as the responsible causes of
much of the ignorance, poverty and superstition of the people--was
swallowed up, or absorbed
<PAGE 67> by the people of Europe generally
(the Roman "earth"). To such an extent was this the
case, that though Papacy and royal aristocracy were thoroughly
alarmed, they were also thoroughly separated, by the fall of
Papal influence as well as by Napoleon's armies. And when the
"man of destiny" was finally crushed, and the rulers
of Europe formed what was called "The Holy Alliance,"
for the suppression of the liberties of the people and the perpetuation
of their own thrones, it was too late to fetter the people;
for, having drunk up the flood of waters, they would not submit.
It was also too late to think of re-establishing Papacy, which
had been so terribly humiliated and whose anathemas against
liberty and the French had so reacted against itself; so the
pope was not even invited to join the "Holy Alliance,"
of which before he would have been the recognized head. Thus
the "woman," the reformed and progressing Church of
God, was helped, spared from being overwhelmed, and liberty
and truth stepped out to prominence before men; and from that
time forward the spirit of liberty and God's Word have led all
who were willing to follow, into more and more light and truth.
Here,
then, was the "flood" which marked both the end of
Papal power and the beginning of the Lord's "Day of Preparation"
or "Time of the End." It was on this flood that the
Lord's messenger was prophetically seen to stand, to announce
the close of the time, times and half a time. And this announcement
was made in reply to the query, "How long to the end of
these strange things?" The "strange things" or
"wonders" referred to were not the things of
`chapter 12:1-3`, relating to the Kingdom of God. Those
were not strange, but expected. The "strange things"
were the intervening troubles, persecutions and trials of God's
holy people, especially during, and as a result of, the
supremacy of the peculiar power or "horn," Papacy;
concerning which Daniel had before specially inquired. (`Dan.
7:19-22`)
<PAGE 68> The query was, How long will God
permit these wonderful perversions of the truth, this wonderful
deception of his children and the nations? The answer given
measures the Papal power, giving definitely the time of its
close, and adds, "When the crushing of the power of the
holy people is [thus] ended, all these [strange] things shall
be finished."
In
`verse 5`, Daniel is shown a person on each side of the
"flood," asking jointly when the strange things would
end. This seems to indicate that even when Papal power had ended,
people would be in doubt as before, as to whether or not its
persecuting and crushing power was really at an end. And no
wonder, when we remember that even after its power was broken,
after its "dominion was taken away," and even
while it was being consumed, this "horn," as recently
as 1870, uttered great words concerning its infallibility. Daniel,
representing the saints, says (`Dan. 7:11`),
"I watched it then [after its dominion was gone and it
was powerless longer to crush the truth, the power of the holy
people], because of the voice of the great words which
that horn spoke, and I saw that [it got no power over the holy
saints and the truth, but it did have another effect] the beast
was slain, the body thereof destroyed and given to the burning
flame"--general anarchy. The destruction of the remnant
of governments in the old Roman empire, caused by the misleading
influence of Papacy's continued bombastic utterances, even after
its dominion is gone, is thus shown.
Since
the close of the times of Papal power are not only thus clearly
fixed, as occurring during the French Revolution, but also by
the events of `chapter 11:40-44`,
which mark the very year 1799, we can readily measure backward
1260 years to note whether Papal power had its beginning there.
If we find that it had, we have our evidence as clear and strong
as faith could ask. Let us thus verify.
<PAGE 69>
Measuring
back 1260 years from 1799 would bring us to A.D. 539, where
we shall show the Papal power began. But the Papal system has
been such a mixture of state-craft and priest-craft, and had
such a small and gradual beginning, as well as gradual ending,
that a variety of opinions as to its commencement and close
would be reasonable as well as possible, until we obtain God's
fixed dates for its rise and fall, and see how very correct
they are. Papacy claimed supremacy in church and state affairs,
and mixed in politics, before it was recognized by opponents;
even as it has also attempted to exercise civil authority, and
has declared its head infallible, since the period at which
prophecy shows its power was broken and its consumption began.
But Papacy has not been recognized by the Italian people of
the province of Romagna since the spell of ignorance and superstitious
reverence was broken during the French Revolution. Though at
times, between revolutions, the pope has sat as nominal ruler
of the Papal states, it has been merely as a foreign invader,
the representative of Austria or France, whose troops by turns
protected him in office.
Now,
knowing that the 1260 years began at A.D. 539, we are enabled
to find what would not before have been recognized. Papists
themselves are more inclined to date their beginning of power
either at the conversion of Constantine and the nominal Christianizing
of the Roman empire in A.D. 328, or from the presentation of
the Papal states to the church by Charlemagne in A.D. 800. The
fact stands, however, that Constantine in no wise recognized
civil power as a right or possession of the church. On the contrary,
though he favored Christianity, it was rather the church that
made the emperor at least its associate head, so that
the emperor called church councils and meddled in church affairs,
though the church was not permitted to meddle in civil matters.
The date A.D. 539, shown by the prophetic measuring rod of 1260
years, is nearly midway between this
<PAGE 70> union of church and empire in
A.D. 328, and its full, complete recognition by Charlemagne,
as the head of all authority --the dispenser of civil as well
as religious authority--A.D. 800.
From
the time of Constantine, the bishops of Rome had held a most
prominent position before the world, and they began ere long
to claim an authority over all others--in the church as well
as in the world--demanding that some one person should
be recognized as an authority or head in the church, and that
the bishops of Rome should be that one. They claimed that Peter
as well as Paul had lived in Rome, and that Rome was thus constituted
the seat of apostolic authority, and also that, by reason of
its long having been the seat of the Caesars and the seat of
civil government, it held a place of authority in the minds
of the people.
These
pleas for supremacy were not readily conceded, however. The
spirit of rivalry was abroad, and other bishops in other large
cities claimed supremacy also, some upon one and some upon another
ground. It was not until A.D. 533 that the bishop of Rome was
thus recognized by the emperor, Justinian I. This was in connection
with a warm religious discussion in which the emperor took sides
with the bishop of Rome, recognizing the Virgin Mary's worthiness
of adoration, and disputing with the Eutychians and Nestorians
regarding distinctions and blendings of natures in our Lord
Jesus. The emperor feared that the discussion might divide the
church, and thus divide the empire which he was desirous of
more firmly uniting; for even at that early day the nominal
church and the empire were one and the same--"Christendom."
And desiring to have some authority as a standard to settle
the dispute, and to tell the people what to believe and what
to disbelieve, and finding the bishop of Rome already the most
popular of the claimants to primacy (popedom or headship), as
well as the one most "orthodox"--the one most nearly
in harmony
<PAGE 71> with the emperor's views on the
questions--Justinian, by documents, not only condemned the doctrines
of the Eutychians and Nestorians, but, addressing the bishop
of Rome as the Head of all the holy churches, and of
all the holy priests of God, thus acknowledged him, and desired
to assist the pope in putting down the heresy and in establishing
the unity of the church.
In
conjunction with this edict, the emperor thus addressed Pope
John, patriarch of Rome*:
"The
victorious Justinian, the devout, the fortunate, the renowned,
the triumphant, the ever august, to John, the most holy archbishop
of the fostering city of Rome, and patriarch. Rendering honor
to the Apostolic See and to your Holiness (as always was and
is our desire), and reverencing your Blessedness, as befits
a father, we have hastened to bring to the notice of your Holiness
everything which concerns the condition of the churches, since
it has always been our great desire to guard the unity of your
Apostolic See, and the standing of the holy churches of God,
which still maintains itself and endures unshaken, with nothing
to ---------- *"Victor Justinianus, pius, felix, inclytus,
triumphator, semper Augustus, Joanni sanctissimo Archiepiscopo
almae Urbis Romae et Patriarchae.
"Reddentes
honorem apostolicae sedi, et vestrae sanctitati (quod semper
nobis in voto et fuit et est), et ut decet patrem honorantes
vestram beatitudinem, omnia quae ad ecclesiarum statum pertinent
festinavimus ad notitiam deferre vestrae sanctitatis; quoniam
semper nobis fuit magnum studium, unitatem vestrae apostolicae
sedis, et statum sanctarum Dei ecclesiarum custodire, qui hactenus
obtinet, et in commote permanet, nulla intercedente contrarietate
Ideoque omnes sacerdotes universi Orientalis tractus et subjicere
et unire sedi vestrae sanctitatis properavimus. In praesenti
ergo quae commota sunt (quamvis manifesta et indubitata sint
et secundum apostolicae vestrae sedis doctrinam ab omnibus semper
sacertotibus firme custodita et praedicata) necessarium duximus,
ut ad notitiam vestrae sanctitatis perveniant. Nec enim patimur
quicquam, quod ad ecclesiarum statum pertinet, quamvis manifestum
et indubitatum sit, quod movetur, ut non etiam vestrae innotescat
sanctitati quae caput est omnium sanctarum ecclesiarum. Per
omnia enim (ut distum est) properamus honorem et auctoritatem
crescere vestrae sedis."
<PAGE 72> prevail against it. And so we
have hastened to make subject to the See of your Holiness, and
to unite with it, all the priests of the whole Eastern district.
At present, then, we have held it necessary that there come
to the notice of your Holiness the matters which are in commotion,
however plain and certain they are, and however firmly they
have always been guarded and declared by all the priests according
to the doctrine of your Apostolic See. For we do not permit
that any question be raised as to anything which concerns the
state of the churches, however plain and certain it be, that
be not also made known to your Holiness, who is the Head of
all the holy churches. For in all points (as has been said)
we are eager to add to the honor and authority of your See."
The
epistle next refers to certain views, styled heretical, which
were causing the commotion, and gives the emperor's faith as
in harmony with that of the Church of Rome. It concludes as
follows*: ---------- *"Suscipimus autem sancta quatuor
concilia: id est, trecentorum decem et octo sanctorum patrum
qui in Nicaena urbe congregati sunt: et centum quinquaginta
sanctorum patrum qui in hac regia urbe convenerunt: et sanctorum
patrum qui in Epheso primo congregati sunt: et sanctorum patrum
qui in Chalcedone convenerunt: sicut vestra apostolica sedis
docet atque praedicat. Omnes ergo sacerdotes sequentes doctrinam
apostolicae sedis vestrae ita credunt et praedicant.
"Unde
properavimus hoc ad notitiam deferre vestrae sanctitatis per
Hypatium et Demetrium, beatissimos episcopos, ut nec vestram
sanctitatem lateat, quae et a quibusdam paucis monachis male
et Judaice secundum Nestorii perfidiam denegata sunt. Petimus
ergo vestrum paternum afectum; ut vestris ad nos destinatis
literis, et ad sanctissimum episcopum hujus almae urbis, et
patriarcham vestrum fratrem (quoniam et ipse per eosdem scripsit
ad vestram sanctitatem, festinans in omnibus sedem sequi apostolicam
beatitudinis vestrae), manifestum nobis faciatis, quod omnes
qui praedicta recte confitentur, suscipit vestra sanctitas,
et eorum qui Judaice aussi sint rectam denegare fidem, condemnat
perfidiam. Plus enim ita circa vos omnium amor, et vestrae sedis
crescet auctoritas; et quae ad vos est unitas sanctarum ecclesiarum
inturbata servabitur, quando per vos didicerint omnes beatissimi
episcopi eorum, quae ad vos relata sunt, sinceram vestrae sanctitatis
doctrinam. Petimus autem vestram beautitudinem orare pro nobis,
et Dei nobis adquirere providentiam."
<PAGE 73>
"Now
we admit [the validity of] four sacred councils: that is, of
the 318 holy fathers who gathered in the city of Nicae [Council
of Nice], and of the 140 holy fathers who assembled in this
royal city [Council of Constantinople], and of the holy fathers
who first gathered in Ephesus [Council of Ephesus], and of the
holy fathers who assembled in Chalcedon [Council of Chalcedon],
as your Apostolic See teaches and affirms. All priests, therefore,
who follow the doctrine of your Apostolic See, so believe, and
confess, and affirm. Hence we have hastened to bring to the
notice of your Holiness, through Hypatius and Demetrius, most
blessed bishops, that it may not lie hidden from your Holiness
what [doctrines] have been wickedly denied by some few monks,
after the Jewish manner, according to the heresy of Nestorius.
We therefore seek your paternal regard, [praying] that by a
letter addressed to us and to the most holy bishops of this
fair city, and to the patriarch, your brother (since he himself,
too, has written by the same to your Holiness, hastening in
all points to follow the Apostolic See of your Blessedness),
you make manifest to us that your Holiness accepts all who duly
confess what is ordained, and condemns the heresy of these who
have dared, after the Jewish manner, to deny the true faith.
For thus the love of all for you and the authority of your See
will grow the greater; and the unity of the holy churches, which
has been disturbed, will be preserved to you, since through
you all the most blessed bishops will have learned the genuine
doctrine of your Holiness, as to those points which have been
referred to you. Now we entreat your Blessedness to pray
for us, and to obtain for us the protection of heaven."
Pope
John replied to the above, under date of March 24th, A.D. 534.*
---------- *We quote as follows from his reply:
"Gloriosissimo
et clementissimo filio Justiniano Augusto,
"Johannes Episcopus Urbis Romae.
"Inter
claras saptentiae ac mansuetudinis vestrae laudes, Christianissime
principum, puriore luce tanquam aliquod sydus irradiat, quod
amore fidei, quod charitatis studio edocti ecclesiasticis disiplinis,
Romanae sedis reverentiam conservatis, et ei cuncta subjicitis,
et ad ejus deducitis unitatem, ad cujus auctorem, hoc est apostolorum
primum, Domino loquente praeceptum est, Pasce oves meas:
Quam esse omnium
<PAGE 74>
Upon
the same occasion the emperor wrote to the patriarch of Constantinople.
The first paragraph of his letter we quote, as follows*:
"Epiphanius,
the most holy and most blessed Archbishop of this royal city,
and Ecumenical Patriarch:-- Wishing your Holiness to know all
matters which relate to the condition of the church, we have
held it necessary to make use of these ecclesiastical compends,
and through these to make manifest what movements are already
started, although we are persuaded that you also know of these.
And since we had ascertained that certain ones, aliens from
the Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, had followed the heresy
of the impious Nestorius and Eutyches, we promulgated an ecclesiastical
edict (as your Holiness also knows) in which we censured the
madness of the heretics. In no manner whatever have we changed,
or shall we change, or have we (as your Holiness also knows)
passed beyond ---------- vere ecclesiarum caput, et patrum regulae
et principum statuta declarant, et pietatis vestrae reverendissimi
testantur affatus.*** Proinde serenitatis vestrae apices, per
Hypatium atque Demetrium, sanctissimos viros, fratres et coepiscopos
meos, reverentia consueta sescepimus: quorum etiam relatione
comperimus, quod fidelibus populis proposuistis edictum amore
fidei pro submovenda haereticorum intentione, secundum apostolicam
doctrinam, fratum et coepiscoporum nostrorum interveniente consensu.
Quod, quia apostolicae doctrinae convenit, nostra auctoritate
confirmamus." *"Epiphanio sanctissimo et beatissimo
Archiepiscopo Regiae hujus Urbis et Ecumenico Patriarchae.
"Cognoscere
volentes tuam sanctitatem ea omnia quae ad ecclesiasticum spectant
statum: necessarium duximus, hisce ad eam uti divinis compendiis,
ac per ea manifesta eidem facere, quae jam moveri coepta sunt,
quamquam et illa eandem cognoscere sumus persuasi. Cum itaque
comperissemus quosdam alienos a sancta, catholica, et apostolica
ecclesia, impiorum Nestorii et Eutychetis sequutos deceptionem,
divinum antehac promulgavimus edictum (quod et tua novit sanctitas)
per quod haereticorum furores reprehendimus, ita ut nullo quovis
omnino modo immutaverimus, immutemus aut praetergressi simus
eum, qui nunc usque, coadjuvante Deo, servatus est, ecclesiasticum
statum (quemadmodum et tua novit sanctitas) sed in omnibus servato
statu unitatis sanctissimarum ecclesiarum cum ipso S. S. Papa
veteris Romae, ad quem similia hisce perscripsimus. Nec enim
patimur ut quicquam eorum, quae ad ecclesiasticum spectant statum,
non etiam ac ejusdem referatur beatitudinem: quum ea sit caput
omnium sanctissimorum Dei sacertotum; vel eo maxime quod, quoties
in eis locis haeretici pullularunt, et sententia et recto judicio
illius venerabilis sedis coerciti sunt."
<PAGE 75> that position of the church which,
by the favor of God, has as yet been preserved; but in all respects
the unity of the most holy churches with his SUPREME
HOLINESS, THE POPE OF ANCIENT ROME (to whom we have written
in like manner), has been maintained. For we do not suffer that
any of those matters which relate to the state of the church
be not also referred to HIS BLESSEDNESS, since he is the
head of all the most holy churches of God; even especially
for this reason, that as often as heretics have sprung up in
those parts, they have been repressed [literally, pruned off,
as the sprouts of a tree] by the wisdom and righteous decisions
of that venerable See."
The
letters from which we have given the foregoing extracts may
be found complete, together with the Edict of Justinian* referred
to, in the Volume of the Civil Law. Codicis lib. I tit. i
This,
the first official recognition of Papacy's claims, was afterward
confessed more and more pointedly by Phocus and succeeding emperors.
But
even after being recognized as a ruler, a sacerdotal emperor,
for the time it was of no special advantage to Papacy, beyond
the empty name; for Justinian was far from ---------- *An extract
from this edict reads as follows:
"Imp.
Justinian. A. Constantinopolitis.
"Cum
Salvatorem et Dominum omnium Jesum Christum verum Deum nostrum
colamus per omnia, studemus etiam (quatenus datum est humanae
menti assequi) imitari ejus condescensionem seu demissionem.
Etenim cum quosdam invenerimus morbo atque insania detentos
impiorum Nestorii et Eutychetis. Dei et sanctae catholicae et
apostolicae ecclesiae hostium, nempe qui detrectabant sanctam
gloriosam semper virginem Mariam Theotocon sive Deiparam appellare
proprie et secundum veritatem: illos festinavimus quae sit recta
Christianorum fides edocere. Nam hi incurabiles cum sint, celantes
errorem suum passim circumeunt (sicut didicimus) et simpliciorium
animos exturbant et scandalizant, ea astruentes quae sunt sanctae
catholicae ecclesiae contraria. Necessarium igitur esse putavimus,
tam haereticorum vaniloquia et mendacia dissipare, quam omnibus
insinuare, quomodo aut sentiat sancta Dei et catholica et apostolica
ecclesia, aut praedicent sanctissimi ejus sacerdotes; quos et
nos sequuti, manifesta constituimus ea quae fidei nostrae sunt;
non quidem innovantes fidem (quod absit) sed coarguantes eorum
insaniam qui eadem cum impiis haereticis sentiunt. Quod quidem
et nos in nostri imperii primordiis pridem satagentes cunctis
fecimus manifestum."
<PAGE 76> Rome, with his capital at Constantinople.
Rome, and Italy in general, was under the sway of another kingdom--the
Ostrogoths--who did not recognize the bishop of Rome as supreme
pontiff; for they were mainly Arians in faith. Papacy, therefore,
was exalted and advantaged in name only, by the emperor's recognition,
until the fall of the Ostrogothic Monarchy, when its exaltation
became an actual fact. Indeed, as if by a preconcerted arrangement,
the emperor at once (A.D. 534) sent Belisarius and an army into
Italy, and in six years after the pope's recognition by the
emperor, the Ostrogothic power was vanquished, and their king
Vitiges and the flower of his army were taken with other trophies
to Justinian's feet. This was in A.D. 539, which is therefore
the point of time from which we should reckon the "Desolating
Abomination set up." Papacy there had its small
beginning. There the little, peculiar "horn" noted
in Daniel's prophecy (`Dan. 7:8,11,20-22,25`),
just began to push itself up, upon the Roman beast. It began
to form or take root two centuries before, and in two centuries
after its small appearance its "look was more stout than
its fellows"--the other horns, authorities or powers, in
the territory of the old empire--and its eyes, and its mouth
speaking great swelling words, began to develop; and it lorded
it over the other horns, claiming divine right to do so.
The
Prophet had said that three horns would be plucked up, or rooted
out, to make room or prepare the way for this peculiar power
or "horn." And so we find it: Constantine built Constantinople,
and removed his capital thither; this, though favorable to Papacy's
development in the seat of the Caesars, was unfavorable to the
empire; and soon it was found expedient to divide the empire,
and Italy was thenceforth
<PAGE 77> known as the Western Empire, whose
seat or capital was at Ravenna. This was one of the "horns":
it fell, A.D. 476, at the hands of the Heruli, another of the
horns, which established itself on its ruins. Next came the
Ostrogothic kingdom, another "horn," overthrowing
the Heruli and establishing itself as ruler of Italy, A.D. 489.
And, as we have just seen, it was during the power of this "horn"
(the third to be rooted out to make way for the papal horn)
that Justinian acknowledged the papal supremacy; and it was
by his orders, and by his general and his army, that it was
plucked up. And, as we have seen, its plucking up was necessary
to the advancement of Papacy to power, as a peculiar blending
of political and religious power--a peculiar "horn,"
differing from its fellows. Indeed, it seems not improbable
that the Papacy was secretly favorable to the fall of each of
these "horns" or powers, hoping thus to open the way
to its own exaltation, just as it finally resulted.
With
the overthrow of the Ostrogoths, the Roman emperor was recognized
for some time as the ruler of Italy, and was represented by
Exarchs; but since these had their capital at Ravenna, and not
at Rome, and since they had come to recognize the Papacy in
the manner shown, it follows that from A.D. 539 Papacy was recognized
as the chief authority in the city of Rome; and that from that
date (when it was "set up") it began to grow and thrive
as a "horn" or power among the other
"horns" or powers, representing the formerly united
power of Rome. The fact of the greatly disturbed condition of
Italy, and especially of Rome, about this period, subject to
the pillage of invaders from the North, as well as to heavy
taxes by whichever master was nearest at the time, helped to
break up political loyalty to the imperial power at Constantinople;
so that the church-rulers, always with them, speaking the same
language, and sharing their advantages and losses, were readily
accepted
<PAGE 78> by the people as the advisers,
protectors and rulers of the city of Rome and its environs.
No
doubt, indeed, the object of Justinian in acknowledging the
claims of the bishop of Rome to superiority over others was
also in part to gain his cooperation in the war he was about
to wage against the Ostrogoths, to regain Italy as a part of
the Eastern Roman Empire; for the influence of the pope and
the church was by no means inconsiderable even then; and to
have them on his side in the war was half the conquest won,
at the very outstart.
Though
the Goths rebelled against the empire, and sacked the city of
Rome, they did not re-establish their rule, and its only government
was that of the church. And though the Lombard kingdom soon
came in and established its rule over most of Italy, even overthrowing
the rule of the Eastern empire established by Justinian in the
hands of the Exarchs, yet be it carefully noted that the Lombards
recognized the authority of the Papacy in Rome. It was not until
near the end of that kingdom, in the eighth century, that any
serious attempts were made against the Papal authority, the
narrative of which only serves to establish the fact that the
popes in turn were Rome's real rulers, the claimed "successors
of the Caesars"--"the spiritual Caesars"-- though
they claimed the protection of the government at Constantinople
as long as it advantaged them to do so. When the Lombards finally
sought to take possession of Rome, the pope appealed to the
French king to protect the church (Papacy), and to maintain
them in their long uninterrupted control of what they called
"The Patrimony of St. Peter," which they claimed*
had been bestowed upon the church by Constantine. ----------
*That those claims were false, and based upon forgeries--"The
Forged Decretals"--is now freely acknowledged, even by
Roman Catholics. Constantine made no such gift: Papacy grew
into its power and control of Rome, as we have here described.
<PAGE 79>
The
French kings, Pepin and Charlemagne, each in turn brought his
army for the protection of Papacy's dominion, and vanquished
the Lombards. It was the latter of these who in A.D. 800 formally
presented to Papacy several states known as the "Papal
States," already referred to-- additional to the
city and suburbs of Rome, actually held by Papacy from A.D.
539. So, then, the Lombard Kingdom or "horn" did not
hinder, nor occupy the place of, the papal horn, as some have
surmised, even though it did sometimes crowd it.
Of
this attack by the Lombards upon Rome, Gibbon says:
"A
memorable example of repentance and piety was exhibited by Lutiprand,
king of the Lombards. In arms, at the gate of the Vatican, the
conqueror listened to the voice of Gregory I, withdrew his troops,
resigned his conquest, respectfully visited the church of St.
Peter, and, after performing his devotions, offered his sword
and dagger, his cuirass and mantle, his silver cross and crown
of gold, on the tomb of the apostle." But "His successor,
Astolphus, declared himself the equal enemy of the emperor and
the pope:...Rome was summoned to acknowledge the victorious
Lombard as her lawful sovereign....The Romans hesitated; they
entreated; they complained; and the threatening barbarians were
checked by arms and negotiations until the popes had
engaged the friendship of an ally and avenger beyond the Alps."
The
pope (Stephen III) visited France, and succeeded in getting
the needed assistance; and, says Gibbon, returned as a conqueror
at the head of a French army which was led by the king [Pepin]
in person. The Lombards, after a weak resistance, obtained an
ignominious peace, and swore to restore the possessions
and to respect the sanctity of the Roman Church.
As
an illustration of the claims of the popes and of the kind of
power by which they claimed and held dominion, we quote again
from Gibbon a letter of Pope Stephen III,
<PAGE 80> sent at this time to the king
of France. The Lombards had again assaulted Rome, shortly after
the French army had retired, and the pope desired fresh assistance.
He wrote in the name of the Apostle Peter, saying:
"The
Apostle assures his adopted sons, the king, the clergy and the
nobles of France, that, dead in the flesh, he is still alive
in the spirit; that they now hear, and must obey, the
voice of the founder and guardian of the Roman church; that
the Virgin, the angels, the saints, the martyrs, and all the
host of heaven unanimously urge the request, and will confess
the obligation; that riches, victory and paradise will
crown their pious enterprise, and that eternal damnation
will be the penalty of their neglect, if they suffer his tomb,
his temple and his people to fall into the hands of the perfidious
Lombards." And Gibbon adds, "The second expedition
of Pepin was not less rapid and fortunate than the first: St.
Peter was satisfied; Rome was again saved."
As
this beginning of Papacy's dominion was obscure, and
yet important to be recognized clearly, it has seemed to us
to require careful marking as above. And in concluding the proof,
that A.D. 539 was the date prophetically pointed out, we quote
corroborative testimony from Roman Catholic writings,
as follows:
"After
the downfall of the Western Roman empire the political influence
of the popes in Italy became of still more importance, from
the fact that the popes had to take under their protection the
unfortunate country, but particularly Rome and its environs,
which were so often changing masters and continually exposed
to the invasions of coarse and brutal conquerors. While the
successors of St. Peter were so energetically interesting themselves
in the welfare of the inhabitants of Italy, the latter were
totally neglected by the Eastern Roman emperors who still laid
claim to rule the land. Even after Justinian I had reconquered
a part of Italy [A.D. 539] and converted it into a Grecian province,
the lot of the inhabitants was no better; for the Byzantine
emperors could only exhaust by taxation the subjects of the
Exarchate
<PAGE 81> of Ravenna, but in no way could
they afford her the necessary protection.
"Under
these circumstances it happened that the...emperors ...lost
all actual power, and remained only in name masters
of the government, while the popes, in virtue of the needs of
the moment, came practically in possession of that supremacy
over the Roman domain....This spontaneous result
of generous exertion was in after times acknowledged as a lawful
acquisition [by Pepin and Charlemagne]....Pepin, as contemporary
writers express it, 'restored' the conquered territory
to the Apostolic See. This donation or restitution of
Pepin was confirmed and enlarged by his son Charlemagne, who
in A.D. 774 put an end to the Lombard rule in Italy. In this
legitimate way, the TEMPORAL POWER AND SOVEREIGNTY OF THE
POPES was, by divine providence, gradually established."
The
above quotations are from "The History of the Catholic
Church," by H. Brueck, D.D., Vol. I, pp. 250,251. As this
is a standard work among Roman Catholics, used in their colleges
and seminaries, and approved by papal dignitaries, its testimony
is of value, touching the gradual rise of the temporal
power of Papacy, and the time when its beginning was
favored by circumstances. It proves that the fall of the Ostrogothic
kingdom in A.D. 539 was, as clearly indicated by the prophetic
measure (1260 years), the exact point of time when this desolating
and, in the sight of God, abominable system was "set
up."
In
harmony with the same line of thought, and in the endeavor clearly
to establish the fact that Papal authority began before
the day of Charlemagne, another Catholic work, The Chair
of St. Peter, in a chapter on "The growth of the temporal
power" (page 173), says: "Rome was ruled nominally
only by a Patrician appointed by the emperor, but in reality,
through the force of circumstances, the popes became the supreme
lords of the city." In proof of this authority and rulership,
the writer proceeds to cite historic proofs of the power of
the popes, and of the powerlessness of the
<PAGE 82> nominal rulers. He refers to Pope
Gregory the Great (A.D. 590-- only fifty years after Papacy
was "set up") as an illustration of power already
possessed by the popes, saying:
"We
find him dispatching Leontius as governor to Nepi in Etruria,
enjoining on the inhabitants that they should obey him as they
would himself. Again he appoints Constantius to the important
post of governor of Naples. Next he writes to the bishops about
the defense and provisioning of their respective cities;
issues orders to the military commanders. ...In a word,
he becomes the actual ruler and protector of Italy; so
that he is fully justified in saying, 'Whoever fills my place
as pastor is gravely occupied with external cares, so that it
frequently becomes uncertain whether he discharges the functions
of a pastor or of a temporal prince.'"
So
great as this was the growth of temporal power in the short
space of fifty years from its small beginning, A.D. 539. We
may therefore feel assured that the 1260 years, or three and
a half times, of papal dominion, are well and clearly marked
at both ends.
Daniel,
who had heard the limit placed upon the power of the abomination
to desolate the Church and to crush the truth, the power of
the Lord's people, saw that this would not still usher in the
kingdom of Michael (Christ), and the exaltation of the saints
to power, but that it would merely grant them release from their
oppressor. This, therefore, was still not the understanding
which he desired: "I heard, but I [still] understood not.
Then said I, O my lord, what shall be later than [or after]
these things? And he said, Go thy way, Daniel [it is useless
for you to try to comprehend the matter], for the words are
closed up and sealed till the Time of the End. From the time
that the continual sacrifice shall be taken away and the desolating
abomination set up [A.D. 539] shall be a thousand two
hundred and ninety days [years. Then] many shall purify [separate]
themselves, yea, make themselves white, yea, be tried as by
fire; but the
<PAGE 83> wicked shall
do wickedly, and none of the wicked shall understand; but the
wise shall understand [then]. Oh! the blessedness of him who
is waiting earnestly when the thousand three hundred and five
and thirty [1335] days touch. And thou, go [thy way] till the
end: and thou shalt rest, and rise again for thy lot [portion,
reward] after the end of the days."
`Dan. 12:8-13`
The
careful student will note that these 1290 and 1335 prophetic
days, literal years, have the same starting point as the 1260
years of papal power to crush, viz., from the time the desolating
abomination was "set up"--A.D. 539. Where two events
occurring at different times are mentioned, as in this case--the
taking away of the "daily" (or, more correctly, the
continual sacrifice), and the setting up of the
abomination --we must always reckon from the time that both
were true. The taking away of the "continual sacrifice,"
we will show in the next chapter, occurred some years before
the setting up of the abomination in 539; and it was
the important item which caused it to be named "the abomination."
We should and do, therefore, reckon the "setting up"
of the abomination from the last of these two events.
And
note, further, that both of these measures are given in answer
to Daniel's question as to what would occur to God's holy ones
after their power (the truth) would be released from Papal crushing,
(that is, after 1799), and before the setting up of the kingdom
of Messiah--Michael. The reply in substance is that Daniel need
not hope to understand further, but that in thirty years
after the beginning of the Time of the End (1260 + 30 = 1290),
a purifying, cleansing, refining work would begin among the
holy people, in connection with which an understanding of the
prophecy would be granted to the wise among this tried, cleansed,
separated class; yet the knowledge would be so communicated
that the ungodly and unpurified would not receive or
<PAGE 84> believe it. It was shown, further,
that the right understanding of the vision would be far
from complete or full; in fact it would be deficient in some
of its chief elements until 45 years later (1290 + 45 = 1335),
or 75 years after the beginning of the Time of the End, A.D.
1799 (1260 + 75 = 1335). This is clearly indicated by the Hebrew
text, which represents the matter as though the watchers, who
already have seen something, and are waiting patiently, would
suddenly (when "1335 days" had passed) get a full,
clear view, far beyond their expectations. "Oh! the blessedness
of him!"
Reckoning
from A.D. 539, the 1290 symbolic days ended in 1829, and the
1335 days in the close of 1874. Let the reader judge carefully
how accurately these dates mark the understanding of the vision,
and all the prophecies connected with the Time of the End, and
the separating, cleansing, and refining as by fire, to bring
God's children to the childlike, humble, trustful condition
of mind and heart, needful that they might be ready to receive
and appreciate God's work in God's way and time.
A
religious movement culminated in 1844, the participants in which
were then, and since, generally known as "Second Adventists"
and "Millerites," because they expected the second
advent of the Lord to occur at that date, and because a Mr.
William Miller was the leader and prime mover. The movement,
which began about 1829, had before 1844 (when they expected
the Lord's return) attracted the attention of all classes of
Christian people, especially in the Eastern and Middle States
where it amounted to an excitement. A long while before this,
Prof. Bengel, in Tubingen, Germany, began to call attention
to the prophecies and the coming Kingdom of Messiah, while the
celebrated missionary Wolff did the same in Asia. The center
of the work, however, was America, where social, political and
religious
<PAGE 85> conditions have favored, more
than elsewhere, independence in Bible study as well as in other
matters; just as the first advent movement was confined to Judea,
though all the devout Israelites, everywhere, heard more or
less of it. `Acts 2:5`
All
know something of the failure of Brother Miller's expectations.
The Lord did not come in 1844, and the world was not burned
up with fire, as he had expected and taught others to expect;
and this was a great disappointment to those "holy people"
who had so confidently looked for Christ ("Michael")
then to appear and to exalt them with him in power and glory.
But, notwithstanding the disappointment, the movement had its
designed effects--of awakening an interest in the subject of
the Lord's coming, and of casting reproach upon the subject
by reason of mistaken expectations. We say designed effects
because without a doubt the hand of the Lord was in it. It not
only did a work corresponding to that of the first advent movement,
when our Lord was born, when the wise men came from the East
and when "all men were in expectation of him" (`Matt.
2:1,2`; `Luke 3:15`),
but it corresponded with it in time also, being just thirty
years before the anointing of our Lord, at thirty years of age,
at the beginning of his work as Messiah. That "Miller movement,"
as it is slightingly called, brought also an individual blessing
to the "holy people" who participated in it: it led
to a careful searching of the Scriptures, and to confidence
in God's Word above the traditions of men; and it warmed and
fed and united the hearts of God's children in unsectarian fellowship;
for those interested were of all denominations, though principally
Baptists. It is since that movement ended, that some
of these have organized and bound themselves as new sects, thus
blinding themselves to some of the blessings due in the "harvest."
<PAGE 86>
While,
as the reader will have observed, we disagree with Mr. Miller's
interpretations and deductions, on almost every point--viewing
the object, as well as the manner and the time,
of our Lord's coming, in a very different light--yet we recognize
that movement as being in God's order, and as doing a very important
work in the separating, purifying, refining, and thus making
ready, of a waiting people prepared for the Lord. And not only
did it do a purifying and testing work in its own day, but,
by casting reproach upon the study of prophecy and upon the
doctrine of the Lord's second advent, it has ever since served
to test and prove the consecrated, regardless of any association
with Mr. Miller's views and expectations. The very mention of
the subject of prophecy, the Lord's coming and the Millennial
Kingdom, now excites the contempt of the worldly-wise, especially
in the nominal church. This was undoubtedly of the Lord's providence,
and for a purpose very similar to the sending of the infant
Jesus for a time to Nazareth, "that he might be called
a Nazarene," though really born in the honorable city of
Bethlehem. That evidently was in order that the truth might
separate the "Israelites indeed" from the chaff of
God's chosen nation. The chaff was driven off by the statement
that our Lord was a Nazarene; for they reasoned, "Can any
good thing come out of Nazareth?" Just so some now contemptuously
inquire, "Can any good thing come out of Adventism?"
and dismiss unconsidered the testimony of the Lord and the apostles
and prophets. But the humble, holy ones, wise in God's sight
though foolish in the world's estimation, take no such attitude.
But
the "Miller movement" was more than this: it was the
beginning of the right understanding of Daniel's visions,
and at the right time to fit the prophecy. Mr. Miller's application
of the three and a half times (1260 years) was practically the
same as that we have just given, but he made the
<PAGE 87> mistake of not starting the 1290
and 1335 periods at the same point. Had he done so he would
have been right. On the contrary, he started them thirty years
sooner--about 509 instead of 539, which ended the 1335 days
in 1844, instead of 1874.* It was, nevertheless, the beginning
of the right understanding of the prophecy; for, after all,
the 1260 period, which he saw correctly, was the key; and the
preaching of this truth (even though in combination with errors,
and misapplications, and false inferences) had the effect of
separating and purifying "many," and at the very time
the Lord had foretold.
Not
understanding the manner nor the object of the Lord's return,
but expecting a sudden appearance, and the end of all things
in one day, he supposed all the time prophecies must end there;
and it was his aim and effort to force them all to this common
terminus: hence his failure-- beyond which God did not then
enlighten any, further enlightenment not being then due.
Mr.
Miller was an earnest and esteemed member of the Baptist Church;
and, being a careful student of the Scriptures, the prophecies
began to open before him. After becoming thoroughly convinced
himself, as to the correctness of his applications, he began
to disseminate his views among ministers, chiefly Baptists at
first, but afterward among all classes and all denominations.
As the work spread, he, with many colaborers, traveled and preached
extensively. The beginning of this work among the Baptist ministers
was, as nearly as can be learned from his memoirs, in 1829,
Elder Fuller of the Baptist Church at Poultney, Vt., being the
first convert to preach his views in public. In a letter written
about three years after, Mr. Miller says: ---------- *We have
been unable to secure Mr. Miller's writings to compare his interpretations.
We have merely learned the dates at which he applied the prophetic
numbers.
<PAGE 88>
"The
Lord is scattering the seed. I can now reckon eight ministers
who preach this doctrine, more or less, besides myself. I know
of more than one hundred private brethren who say that they
have adopted my views. Be this as it may, 'The truth is mighty
and will prevail.'"
Thus
it will be seen that the separating work of the "Miller
movement" had its beginning at the time foretold-- at the
end of the 1290 days, 1829.
Now,
how about the waiting earnestly until the 1335 days had
been touched? Who have thus waited?
Some
of God's children, the "holy people," the writer among
the number, though not associated with the "Miller movement,"
nor with the denomination subsequently organized, which calls
itself the "Second Advent Church," have been looking
and "earnestly waiting" for Michael's Kingdom; and
gladly we bear testimony to the "blessedness" of the
wonderfully clear unfoldings of our Father's plan, at and since
the fall of 1874--the end of the 1335 days.
Words
fail us to express this blessedness! Only those who have been
refreshed in spirit with this new wine of the Kingdom could
appreciate it, if we could describe it. It is therefore something
to be felt, rather than told. It was at and since the ending
of those 1335 prophetic, symbolic days that the precious views
of the Lord's presence, and the fact that we are even
now living in the time of the "harvest" of this Gospel
age, and in the time of the setting up of Michael's (Christ's)
Kingdom, came to be known.
Oh,
the blessedness of this favored time! Oh, the harmony, the beauty,
the grandeur of the divine plan as it began to unfold when the
1335 days were "touched!" It is to express, as far
as lies within our power, this "blessedness" and fuller
unfolding of the divine plan, now due to be understood
by all the "holy people" now living, that this SCRIPTURES
STUDIES series is being published. None but the
<PAGE 89> "holy people" will understand
it. It is granted as a favor. "None of the wicked shall
understand"; and those of the "holy people" who
have fellowship with the worldly, who unwisely stand
in the assemblies of the wicked, and sit in the seat of the
scorner, shall not understand, and shall not be able to experience
this blessedness, now due only to those "holy" ones,
truly "wise," who delight in the Law of the Lord and
meditate [study] therein day and night.
`Psa. 1:1,2`
This
message concerning Michael's Kingdom, gradually opening from
1829 onward, is symbolically represented in the book of
`Revelation (chap. 10:2,8-10)` as a "little book,"
which the "wise" of the "holy people," represented
by John, are instructed to eat. And John's experience, as expressed
in `verse 10`, is the experience
of all who receive these truths. They bring wondrous sweetness:
Oh, the blessedness! But the after effects are always more or
less a blending of the bitterness of persecution with the sweetness.
And the effect upon those who patiently endure to the end is
to purge, purify and refine, and thus to make the bride of Christ
ready for the marriage and exaltation, due toward the close
of the Day of Preparation.
Concerning
this disappointment, which we have shown was nevertheless a
blessing and a beginning of the correct interpretation of the
vision, the Prophet Habakkuk is caused to write a word of encouragement,
saying (`chap. 2:2`), "Write
the vision, make it plain upon tables [charts], that he [desiring]
may read it readily...Though it tarry, wait for it ["Oh,
the blessedness of him that waiteth unto the 1335 days!"],
for it will surely come; it will not tarry." Its seeming
tarrying or delay was not so, but a partial mistake on the part
of Mr. Miller, foreknown and permitted by the Lord for the testing
of his "holy people."
As
an evidence of the consecration, Bible study and faith engendered
by this movement, we quote from a letter written
<PAGE 90> by Mr. Miller, after the disappointment
of 1844, to those who had been disappointed with him, as follows:
"We
thank God always on your behalf, when we hear, as we already
have, that your and our late disappointment has produced in
you, and we hope in us also, a deep humiliation, and a careful
inspection of our hearts. And though we are humbled, and in
a measure pained, by the jeers of a wicked and perverse generation,
we are not terrified nor cast down. You can, all of you, when
inquired of for the reasons of your hope, open your Bibles,
and with meekness and fear show the inquirer why you hope in
the glorious appearing of the great God and our Savior, Jesus
Christ. You need not in a single instance refer the inquirer
to your minister, for the reason of your faith. Your creed is
the Scriptures;... your philosophy is the wisdom which cometh
down from God; your bond of union is the love and fellowship
of the saints; your teacher is the Holy Spirit; and your professor
is the Lord Jesus Christ....We exhort you, by all the love and
fellowship of the saints, to hold fast to this hope. It is warranted
by every promise in the Word of God. It is secured to you by
the two immutable things--the council and oath of God, in which
it is impossible for him to lie. It is ratified and sealed by
the death, blood, and resurrection, and life of Jesus Christ....Never
fear, brethren; God has told you what to say. Do as he bids
you, and he will take care of the consequences. God says, 'Say
unto them, The days are at hand, and the effect of every
vision.' [See `Ezek. 12:22,23`]...It
is to me almost a demonstration that God's hand is in this thing.
Many thousands have been made to study the Scriptures by the
preaching of the time....God's wisdom has in a great measure
marked out our path, which he has devised for such good as
he will accomplish in his own time and manner."
One
of our Lord's parables was given expressly to illustrate this
period of waiting, from the disappointment of 1844 to
the realizations at the end of the "1335 days." We
refer to--
<PAGE 91>
The Parable of the Ten Virgins
--`Matt. 25:1-12`--
This
parable begins with "then," thus indicating that it
was not applicable at once, in the Lord's day, but sometime
in the future. "Then shall the Kingdom of heaven
[in its embryo condition--represented by some or all of the
holy people, probationers for heirship in that Kingdom] be likened
unto ten virgins, who took their lamps and went forth to meet
the Bridegroom. And five of them were wise and five were foolish."
The
numbers are not significant; neither are the proportions. The
parable teaches a movement among the heirs of the Kingdom, in
expectation of meeting the Bridegroom--a movement in which two
classes would be manifested, here styled "wise" and
"foolish." The word "virgin" signifies pure;
so these represented in the parable, both the wise and the foolish,
represent "holy people." In fact, no lovers of the
Bridegroom, longing to meet him, can be lovers of sin, even
though many of them are "foolish."
The
movement noted by our Lord in this parable corresponds exactly
to one which began with the "Miller movement," and
which is still in progress. That, though begun by a Baptist,
was an undenominational movement, joined in by the most devout
and faithful of all denominations. Accounts of those times,
of their fervency of zeal, etc., fill our hearts with admiration
for men and women who had the honesty to act out their convictions,
even though we cannot coincide with those convictions. Money
was poured out like water, in printing tracts and papers in
various languages, and in sending the message the world over.
It is said that in the churches of all denominations a revival
spirit spread, and that in some congregations, where all were
under the influence of this teaching, those who had money to
<PAGE 92> spare piled it upon a table in
front of the pulpit, where it was free to all needing it; and
the sincerity and zeal of believers at that time were such that,
it is said, the money thus consecrated to the Lord needed no
guarding, as those who did not need it would not touch it.
The
virgins of the parable are shown as all having lamps trimmed
and giving them light. These lamps represent the Scriptures
("Thy word is a lamp to my feet"); and such a general
trimming of lamps--searching the Scriptures--by all classes
of Christians probably never before took place. The oil represents
the spirit of the truth. It was manifest, then, in the lamps
of all; but all had not the spirit of the truth in themselves--the
"vessels."
The
disappointment of 1844 is briefly recorded in the parable, by
the statement that "the Bridegroom tarried"-- i.e.,
he seemed to the expectant ones to tarry. And the confusion
and darkness experienced by all, and the many false and visionary
views entered into by some who were there disappointed, are
shown in the parable by the statement: "While the Bridegroom
tarried, they all slumbered and slept." Yea, and
in their darkness and slumber many of them dreamed strange,
unreasonable things.
But
the parable shows a second movement, similar, and yet different,
among the same virgins. The same general class is referred to
but not necessarily the same individuals. As the first movement
was the result of light upon the prophecy, regarding the time
for Messiah's second advent as the Bridegroom of the Church,
so was the second movement. But there are several differences.
In the first, the lamps of all the virgins burned alike, and
the company expecting the Bridegroom was mixed; whereas in the
second movement, while all will be aroused, only those will
be led out who have the spirit of the truth in their hearts,
as well as a knowledge of the Bible--a trimmed lamp. Disappointment
<PAGE 93> was predicted for the first movement,
and waiting for the 1335 days was necessary; but the second
was not a disappointment, and a waiting was no longer necessary;
for fulfilment came exactly at the close of the 1335 prophetic
days--in October 1874. It was just following the close of the
1335 years, the period of "waiting," that the fact
of our Lord's presence, as taught by the foregoing prophecies,
began to be recognized. It was very early in the morning of
the new age, but it was the "midnight" hour, so far
as the deep slumbering of the virgins was concerned, when the
cry (which is still ringing) went forth, "Behold the Bridegroom!"--not
Behold the Bridegroom cometh,* but Behold he has come,
and we are now living "in the [parousia] presence
of the Son of man." And such has been the character of
the present movement, since that date: a proclamation of the
Lord's presence and of the kingdom work now in progress.
The writer, and colaborers, proclaimed the fact of the Lord's
presence, demonstrating it from prophecy, and on charts
or tables, such as are used in this book, until the fall of
1878, when arrangements were made for starting our present publication,
"ZION'S WATCH TOWER, and Herald of Christ's Presence."
By the Lord's blessing, millions of copies of this publication
have carried abroad the tidings that the time is fulfilled,
and that the Kingdom of Christ is even now being set up,
while the kingdoms and systems of men are crumbling to their
utter destruction.
The
parable forewarns us that, though all the virgin class trim
their lamps, all cannot see. Only those who have the
oil in their vessels (in themselves--the fully consecrated)
can get the light from their lamps, and appreciate the facts.
The others (all the pure, the virgins) will get the oil and
the light sometime, and be greatly blessed by it; but only those
filled ---------- *The oldest Greek manuscripts (Sinaitic
and Vatican) omit cometh, and read, "Behold the
Bridegroom!"
<PAGE 94> with the oil, the spirit of the
truth, will have the light in season and get the great blessing.
Only these go in with the Bridegroom to the marriage. The oil,
or spirit of consecration, and its attendant light cannot be
communicated from one virgin to another. Each for himself must
be filled with the spirit; each must get his own supply of this
oil (the Truth, and its spirit of consecration and holiness);
and the cost is considerable in the way of self-denial and misrepresentation
and fiery trial. Experience in the great time of trouble will
be the market in which the foolish virgins will purchase their
oil. But it will then be too late to go into the marriage, as
members of the Bride, the Lamb's wife. The Scriptures point
out, however, that, as vessels unto "less honor,"
these, repentant of their folly, will not be destroyed; but,
being thus fitted for the Master's use, they shall yet serve
him in his temple.
Recurring
to the angel's words to `Daniel--verse
13` reads: "But go thou thy way till the end; for
thou shalt rest, and arise again for thy lot [portion, reward]
at [after] the end of the [1335] days"--during the harvest
then beginning.
In
the expression, "Go thou thy way till the end," the
"end" should be noticed as of very different
significance from the "Time of the End." "The
harvest is the end of the age"; and the harvest,
as already shown, is the period of 40 years from the fall of
A.D. 1874, the termination of the "1335 days," to
the fall of A.D. 1914. And Daniel is to receive his portion,
reward or lot in the Kingdom of Michael (Christ), together with
all the holy prophets, as well as the saints of the Gospel age,
at the end of this "harvest" period; the saints
being first in order, as well as in honor, in that Kingdom.
(`Heb. 11:40`) See SCRIPTURE STUDIES,
Vol. I, page 288.