THE
ATONEMENT BETWEEN GOD & MAN
<PAGE 405>
STUDY
XIV
THE
NECESSITY FOR THE ATONEMENT--
THE CURSE
The "Curse" a Present and Not a Future Evil--Where
and Why the Blight Came Upon All--When this "Wrath"
of God Against Sin Will Cease--"Escape" Now and in
the Future--Atonement Necessary, Because of the Plan Adopted
by God--Man an Example for Angels and for Future Creations.
"And
there shall be no more curse." Rev. 22:3
OUR
text is in full accord with the general tenor of the Scriptures,
that the time is coming when the work of Atonement shall be fully
accomplished, and when, as a result, the curse will be completely
lifted from man, and from the earth, his dominion. But this implies
that the curse is not yet lifted, that it still rests upon the
earth and upon mankind. Moreover, it implies that there was a
certain time when this curse came upon all, when it was first
inflicted upon mankind and the earth. Whoever will take the trouble
to investigate the matter will find so wonderful a harmony in
the Scriptures upon these three points as will probably astound
him, and convince him that the Scriptures are not of human origination,
but that although written by various persons, and at various periods,
during two thousand years, they are a unit in their testimony;
and upon no subject is their testimony more positive, consistent
and conclusive than on this subject of the curse, its effects
upon man, the redemption from it, and its ultimate removal.
The
curse upon mankind, as it is generally understood and preached,
is a future curse of eternal torment--not a
<PAGE 406> present curse. But according to
the Scriptures it is a present curse, viz., death, which will
be lifted in the future. Nor are we to think of this death-curse
in the usual limited manner-- as affecting a dying moment or a
few dying hours, or days, or a few moments, at the time we expire
or breathe out or lose the breath of life. On the contrary, to
realize what this death-curse is, we would require to have before
the mind's eye the first perfect man, with all his powers of mind
and body--the image of his Creator in his mental qualities, and
physically, as well as mentally and morally, "very good";
so pronounced by the very highest authority on the subject. Gen.
1:31
The
very brief scrap of history furnished us in Genesis, together
with the fact that the flood completely obliterated all evidence
of the genius and handiwork of the father of our race, and his
earliest progeny, give us no basis of calculations respecting
his mental and physical abilities. For information we are thrown
upon the fact that all God's work is "perfect," his
own declaration (Deut. 32:4); and his further declaration
that man "sought out many inventions," and defiled himself
(Eccl. 7:29); and the fact that even under the curse, and
under the unfavorable conditions in which man lived after being
thrust out of the Garden of Eden--despite all these unfavorable
conditions, so grandly perfect was this human organism that the
father of humanity was sustained for the long period of nine hundred
and thirty years. Gen. 5:5
It
is when we compare this physical vitality, unaided by large experience
in the development of medicines and sanitary arrangements, with
present conditions, and discern that with all of our advancement
in science, under the light and experience of centuries, nevertheless
today one-half the population die under ten years, and as a whole
the average of life is about thirty-three years, that we may judge
how much physical vitality we have lost since the fall--how much
the "curse" has affected us physically. And since we
know that mental and physical powers are largely co-ordinated
<PAGE 407> in man, so that the sounder the
physical organism, all things being equal, the stronger and the
truer should be the mental power and faculties, we may from this
gain quite a respectful view of the mental caliber of father Adam,
whom the great Creator pronounced very good, and considered worthy
to recognize as his son, his mental and moral likeness. Luke 3:38
And
mental and physical perfection, under the conditions presented
in the divine account of the creation, clearly and positively
imply moral perfection; for we are to remember that, according
to the Scriptures, moral obliquity and consequent degradation
had not set in. Nor is it supposable that man, without moral elements
to his mental development, would be described in the Scriptures
as a "very good" man, or as an image of his Creator.
To have created Adam perfect physically and perfect mentally,
except in moral qualities, would have been to make him a very
bad man, on the principle that the greater the abilities the greater
the villain, unless the abilities be under moral control.
The
death sentence, or "curse," pronounced against Adam,
viz., "Dying thou shalt die" (Gen. 2:17, margin),
was not merely against his muscles and physical frame--it included
the entire man, the mental as well as the physical; and this also
included the moral qualities, because they are a part of the mental.
It is in full confirmation of this that we see today that man
is a fallen being in every sense of the word; physically he is
degenerated, and his average of life has fallen, under most favorable
conditions, to thirty-three years; mentally and morally we also
see that he is very deficient, yet possessing organs capable of
much higher development than his short life will permit. Speaking
of man's moral abilities the Apostle declares, "There is
none righteous, no, not one;...all have sinned and come short
of the glory of God"; all are sharers of the original sin
and its consequences. Rom. 3:10,23
Further,
the Apostle points out that father Adam, when
<PAGE 408> tried at the bar of God, was a
wilful transgressor, and not a deceived one. (1 Tim. 2:14)
He thus shows us that in moral quality he was capable of obedience
to the divine requirements, for it would have been unjust on God's
part to have tried and to have condemned for failure a being who,
through defective creation, was incapable of standing the trial
successfully, rendering obedience to his commands. The fact that
Adam had a trial in which the issues were life and death everlasting,
and the fact that his failure under that trial was wilful, and
justly drew upon him the sentence of the great Judge to the full
penalty of the law, must prove to every unbiased, logical mind
that Adam was in every sense of the word perfect, and properly
susceptible of trial.
And
the fact that God, even after the ransom price has been paid,
refuses to try mankind again before the same supreme and unimpeachable
Court, and declares the reason to be that in a fallen condition
we are incapable of a trial at his bar of absolute justice, and
that by our best deeds none could be justified before him--all
this proves conclusively, not only that the race has grievously
fallen, but also proves that God would not have tried Adam at
all had he not been much better than we are, and thoroughly fit
for trial--a perfect man. It is in full accord with this thought
that God proposes the judgment of the Church during this Gospel
age, for the prize of eternal spirit being; and the judgment of
the world during the Millennial age, for the prize of everlasting
human perfection. "For the Father judgeth no man, but hath
committed all judgment unto the Son." John 5:22
Viewing
man as a whole (mentally, morally and physically one) as the Scriptures
do, we can see that the curse, the sentence of death, is in operation
against every part and element of his being; and looking about
us throughout the world, we find corroboration of this on every
hand. As, in the decay of physical powers, the weakest point with
some is
<PAGE 409> the stomach, with others the muscles,
with others the bones, so in viewing man as a whole, we find that
in some the greatest loss, decay, depravity, has been mental,
with others moral, with others physical, yet all are blemished
in all respects; all were hopelessly "lost" under this
curse. There can be no hope to any that he ever could recover
himself out of these bonds of corruption in which we are born,
as it is written, "I was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did
my mother conceive me." (Psa. 51:5) This death-curse
rests upon us from the moment of birth, and hence demonstrates
the fact that it is not the result of our individual sins, but
of inherited sins--a curse or blight which has reached us from
father Adam by heredity.
It
has been said that we are "born dying"; and how true
this is all can testify; dis-ease, decay, aches and pains,
weakness and sickness, are but the elementary processes of death
working in us. Thus, if it were not for the blindness superinduced
by Satan's deceptive misrepresentations of the divine plan, men
would on every hand readily see clear manifestations of the fact
of the curse, and the Apostle declares, "The wrath of God
is revealed against all unrighteousness," for the
least unrighteousness is sin. (Rom. 1:18) The Apostle does
not say that in a future life and in flames of torment the wrath
of God will be revealed, but he correctly states it as of the
present life and of the present time, and to be seen by all whose
eyes are open to see the true facts of the case. The wrath of
God is revealed by every physician's sign, which indicates disease
and death working in the race. The wrath of God is revealed by
every undertaker's sign, which calls our attention to the fact
that mankind is dying, that the wrath, the curse of God, is resting
upon the race. The wrath of God is revealed by every funeral procession,
every hearse, every graveyard, every tombstone, and by every piece
of crape and every badge of mourning. The wrath of God is not
only revealed against the grossest of sinners, but against all
unrighteousness, even the slightest. Hence
<PAGE 410> there is no escape, for there is
none righteous, no, not one; and hence the infants as well as
the gray-haired are subject to this "wrath," this "curse."
The
Prophet Job, in his distress under the curse, the wrath, cried
out, "O that thou wouldest hide me in sheol [oblivion]
until thy wrath be past [over; then] thou shalt call and
I will answer thee, for thou wilt have respect unto the works
of thy hands." (Job 14:13,15) This time of wrath which
has now lasted for six thousand years is to be brought to a close
by the great Day of Vengeance, in which Justice prescribes that
there shall be additional trouble upon mankind, because of the
rejection of greater opportunities and privileges, and a failure
to obey the laws of righteousness, to the extent that these laws
have been discerned by Christendom. Hence this Day of Vengeance
and of special wrath, additional to that which has prevailed previously,
it is declared, will be "A time of trouble such as was not
since there was a nation." The saints of God are assured
that they shall be accounted worthy to escape all those things
coming upon the world, and to stand before the Son of Man. They
shall escape this special wrath, but they do not escape the general
wrath which is revealed from heaven against all unrighteousness.
They share this with the world, in many respects, and yet there
is this finely drawn distinction, which the Scriptures clearly
point out, viz.:
Those
who accept Christ during this Gospel age, and who make full consecration
of themselves to him, are reckoned as having passed from death
unto life; as having escaped the wrath, the curse, "escaped
the corruption that is in the world." (2 Pet. 1:4; 2:18,20)
True, they are still in the world, still subject to death, and
may still share with the world the sickness, pain, sorrow and
trouble incidental to the curse, and from the worldly standpoint
there is no difference; but from the divine standpoint, which
is to be the believer's standpoint, there is a wide difference.
Such are not reckoned any longer as dying because of divine "curse"
or "wrath," but in view of their justification and
<PAGE 411> subsequent presentation as living
sacrifices their death is reckoned as a part of Christ's sacrifice.
As the Apostle expresses it, such are reckoned in death as dead
with Christ, sharers in his sacrifice, and not as dying with Adam,
like the remainder of the race. "If we be dead with Christ
we believe that we shall also live with him." Rom. 6:8
Likewise,
our share in physical troubles and pains is the result of physical
weaknesses, heredity, etc. The Lord assures us that whatever of
this kind shall be permitted in the case of such, should not be
regarded as manifestations of his wrath; but that all evils permitted
to come against these shall by divine wisdom and love and power
be overruled for their good, as disciplines to develop in them
more abundantly his Spirit, and thus ultimately, as his children,
to fit and prepare them for glory, honor and immortality--by working
out in them the peaceable fruits of righteousness, and thus preparing
them for a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory. (Phil.
2:13; Rom. 2:7; Heb. 12:11; 2 Cor. 4:17; 2 Pet.
1:4-11) Nevertheless, in all these respects these walk by
faith, not by sight. So far as outward sight is concerned, they
have nothing more than the world; indeed, God's people may sometimes
appear to have more difficulties, more trials, more troubles,
more pains, than the natural man, with whom God is not yet dealing,
because not yet brought into a condition of reconciliation and
at-one-ment with him. Even this increased requirement of faith
is of itself a blessing, a discipline, a development of character,
a good fruit of the Spirit.
But
we are viewing our subject--the necessity for atonement-- from
the standpoint of the world in general, all mankind. The curse,
sentence, or verdict of the divine law against all imperfection
is destruction. God created all things very good, and that is
the only condition in which anything will ever be wholly satisfactory
to him. The fact that for the time being he permits imperfect
things--imperfect beings, and imperfect conditions--is no proof
of a change of plan on the divine part: this period of imperfection
<PAGE 412> is permitted, because divine wisdom
has foreseen the possibility of a glorious outcome, and to this
end God is "working all things after the counsel of his own
will." (Eph. 1:11) He could, for instance, have destroyed
Satan, the moment he became a transgressor--likewise the angels
that fell, and man; and thus the generation of an imperfect race
would have been avoided. But the divine plan, on the contrary,
has been to permit the imperfect and sinful for a time to take
their own course in matters which shall not interfere with the
grand outcome of the divine arrangement, that thus an illustration
might be presented of the downward, degrading tendencies of sin,
in Satan, the fallen angels and in mankind.
The
fall of mankind under the just penalty of death, destruction,
was indirectly the result of Eve's lack of knowledge and her consequent
deception, and involves, through heredity, many who have not wilfully
and intelligently violated the divine law. This fact left the
opportunity open for the exercise of divine love and clemency,
and incidentally gave an illustration of the operation and co-ordination
of the divine attributes, which could not have been so thoroughly
manifested and exemplified in any other manner of which we can
conceive. It was, therefore, a part of the original design of
the Creator to reveal himself, the attributes of his character,
to his creatures--not only to mankind, but also to the angelic
hosts. Unquestionably, when the great plan of salvation shall
be fully consummated, the heavenly angels as well as the reconciled
of the world shall know of the divine character--wisdom, justice,
love and power--in a much larger degree than was ever before appreciated,
or than could have been appreciated, without the great lessons
now being taught through the permission of sin, and the redemption
promised under the divine plan, through Christ. This is intimated
by the Apostle Peter, who assures us that "the angels desired
to look into" these things--are deeply interested in them.
1 Pet. 1:12
As
we have seen, the sentence upon mankind is an absolutely
<PAGE 413> just one, and there would have
been no room whatever for appeal from that sentence on the score
of justice (it being admitted that Adam had a sufficiency of knowledge
of his Creator to command his implicit obedience, and it being
admitted also that it was but a just arrangement on God's part,
that the life which would not be used in harmony with his righteous
and benevolent arrangements should be forfeited, taken away).
Nevertheless, we can readily see that God could have devised a
different penalty in man's case, and that too without the violation
of any principle of justice. We have proof of this in his dealing
with the fallen angels. They were not put under a sentence of
death; the penalty imposed upon them, on the contrary, was that
they were restrained, and are still restrained, waiting
for a final trial. Jude 6
Similarly,
God could have permitted man to live out these six thousand years,
since his sin in Eden, without the impairment of his physical
system, without putting him under sentence and power of death.
Thus man, as well as the angels which kept not their first estate,
might have been reserved alive unto the judgment of the great
day, to have their cases finally disposed of. But God is not limited
in his operations, and the same variety which we observe in nature,
in that one flower differs from another flower in glory and beauty,
and one creature differs from another creature, so, under what
the Apostle designates "the much diversified wisdom of God"
(Eph. 3:10, Diaglott), God chooses one method of dealing
with the angels who sinned, and another method of dealing with
men who had become sinners. Divine wrath is manifested against
both: a wrath of love and justice, which hates all sin, all evil,
and will destroy it; but which will do all that can be done for
such of the evildoers as become loyal servants of righteousness,
after having a large experience with sin and with righteousness,
and their respective results.
In
dealing with man God chose to exemplify the ultimate end of sin
and sinners--destruction. This is testified in the
<PAGE 414> various statements made to man,
"The soul that sinneth it shall die"; "The wages
of sin is death." That is to say, in these declarations made
to man God is merely stating a general law, which ere long will
be the absolute rule of all his dominion--all creation, viz.,
that whatever is not perfect shall be destroyed, and that only
which is perfect, absolutely perfect, absolutely in harmony with
the divine will and purpose, shall continue to exist forever,
a blessing to itself, an honor to the Creator, and a benefit to
all his creatures.
But
while man has been the illustration of the operation of this principle,
so that every member of the human family has been cut off in death--"Death
passed upon all"--nevertheless, it is not the divine purpose
in thus making use of mankind as an illustration of the severity
of divine justice, in the extirpation of evil, to permit humanity
to suffer on account of being thus used as an illustration. On
the contrary, it is the divine arrangement that mankind shall
experience no less of divine mercy and favor and love than any
other of God's creatures. Hence it is that in due time God provided
redemption for all, fully adequate to the necessities of the case,
that as by one man's (Adam's) disobedience the many became sinners,
so by the obedience of one (Jesus) the many might become righteous.
Rom. 5:19
This
does not say, nor does it mean, that the many must become righteous
during this Gospel age or not at all: on the contrary, the Scriptural
declaration is that it will be but a "little flock"
that will become righteous during the present evil time--those
only who are specially drawn of the Father and called to the high
calling of joint-heirship with his Son. The residue of mankind
will not even be called or drawn, until the Christ (head and body)
has been lifted up both in sufferings and in glory, according
to our Lord's own statement, "I, if I be lifted up, will
draw all unto me." (John 6:44; 12:32) This universal
drawing belongs to the coming Millennial age, not to the present
nor to the past ages. It will not be the drawing of a few nor
of a class, nor of a nation,
<PAGE 415> as in the past, but the drawing
of all mankind, redeemed with the precious blood.
Nevertheless,
this drawing will not mean compulsion; for just as it is possible
for the Father's drawing to be resisted in the present age, so
that many are called but few will be chosen, so also it will be
possible for the drawing of Christ to be resisted by the world
of mankind in the next age. However, the Scriptures assure us
that the way will be made so plain, and the conditions so reasonable,
that only those who love sin, and deliberately choose it, after
they have come to a knowledge of righteousness and of truth, will
be amongst the resisters of that great Prophet, and be destroyed
by him in the Second Death. Acts 3:23
Viewing
the divine dealings with mankind from the standpoint of the close
of the Millennial age, we see that so far from the divine course
working any unkindness toward mankind, the execution of the extreme
penalty of the divine law against us, accompanied as it has been
with the operation of divine mercy, through Christ, in ransom
and restitution, has really been a great blessing. But this cannot
be seen except from the one standpoint. From this standpoint we
see not only the sorrow and trouble and pain, the dying and the
crying of the present time, the just penalty of transgression,
its natural result, indeed, but we see also the redemption of
man from sin and its curse, purchased by the Redeemer at Calvary,
and to be accomplished by the same Redeemer subsequently--the
Church being selected during this Gospel age, according to the
divine program, to be his Bride and joint-heir in the Kingdom.
Severe
as death, the penalty for Adam's sin, has been (including all
the pain and sorrow and trouble of this dying state for the past
six thousand years), we believe that man's portion has been more
favorable than that of the angels who kept not their first estate,
and who were not sentenced to death, and who, therefore, did not
lose their vital energies in death, nor experience sickness or
pain, but who have merely been restrained of their liberties,
and of the fellowship
<PAGE 416> of the holy. Had man been treated
similarly to these fallen angels, and left in possession of his
liberties in respect to the earth, etc., we can imagine what a
terrible condition of things would have prevailed by the present
time--how evil would have multiplied itself without restraints,
how keenness and cunning in wrongdoing would have increased the
sorrows of earth. Even as it is, we can see that even the short
lives of men suffice to develop a wonderful genius for selfishness,
a wonderful wisdom for self-aggrandizement, and the oppression
of fellow-creatures. When we consider that many of the millionaires
of our day were poor boys, and that their accumulations of a hundred
or two hundred millions of dollars were made in less than fifty
years, what could we expect of such genius, if it had centuries
for the scope of its operation? Carried to its legitimate result,
it undoubtedly would have resulted in the enslavement and utter
degradation, to bestiality, of a large proportion of the human
family in the interest of the few masterminds in cunning and avarice.
Viewing
the matter from this standpoint, our hearts uplift in thankfulness
to God that the form of the "curse" or sentence that
came upon us was that which the Lord has permitted--dying thou
shalt die. And if, in the meantime, our experiences, as a race,
have been an object lesson, not only to ourselves, but to the
holy angels and to the fallen angels, we may rejoice the more:
and for aught we know it may be God's intention to use this one
great lesson of the exceeding sinfulness of sin, and its unavoidable
results, in other worlds of sentient beings not yet created. And
who knows but that in the far distant future, instructors in righteousness
for as yet uncreated billions will be drawn from among the worthy
of earth's redeemed and restored race, who have had an actual
experience with sin and who will be able to speak from experience,
in guarding others against the least deflection from absolute
obedience to the divine will.
<PAGE 417>
An
illustration of this principle, of overruling a disadvantage into
a blessing to those who are used as an illustration, we see in
Israel. As a nation, Israel was called out from the other nations,
and used as a typical people. Their Law Covenant, while apparently
an advantage, strictly speaking constituted for them a second
trial, failure in which brought them under a second condemnation--apparently
leaving them, as a people, more thoroughly condemned than the
remainder of the world, whom God had already proposed (in his
covenant with Abraham), should be justified by faith since
none could be justified by works of Law. Israel's Covenant called
for perfect works, and being unable through inherited weakness
of the flesh to render perfect works, Israel fell under the "curse"
or death-sentence of their own Covenant. Thus that Covenant which
was ordained to life (which purported to give life everlasting)
was found to be unto death. (Rom. 7:9-14) But although
God thus used Israel as a typical people and as an illustration
of the fact that no imperfect man can keep the perfect
law of God, he did not permit this use of them, which involved
their condemnation, to work their everlasting ruin; and consequently,
when redeeming the remainder of mankind, his plan was so arranged
that the same sacrifice by which all the race of Adam was redeemed
by Christ, affected also the one specially favored nation, which
under the Law Covenant was also the one specially condemned nation.
(Rom. 2:11-13; 3:19-23) It was to this end that our Lord
was born under the Law Covenant, in order that he might redeem
those who were condemned under that law, with the same sacrifice
by which he redeemed all the world of mankind, condemned originally
in Adam. Gal. 4:4,5
We
see then that the necessity for reconciliation between God and
man, the necessity for their at-one-ment, lies in the fact that
God himself is the source of life, and that if everlasting life
be enjoyed by any of his creatures, it must be as his gift.
"The gift of God is eternal life, through Jesus Christ
<PAGE 418> our Lord." (Rom. 6:23)
According to the principles of the divine government and law,
God cannot look upon sin with any degree of allowance (Hab. 1:13);
he cannot condone sin, nor admit its necessity in any degree.
Perfect himself, his decree is that none imperfect shall be recognized
as his sons, for whom everlasting existence is provided. And hence,
since man, through the fall, had not only come under a sentence
of death, but additionally, had defiled, degraded, depraved himself,
and largely obliterated the divine likeness from his mind and
conscience, therefore the only hope for everlasting life lies
in some power or way or agency through which two things can be
accomplished: (1) The release of mankind from the death sentence
inflicted by Justice; (2) the lifting up of mankind out of the
degradation of sin and depravity to the conditions of absolute
holiness and perfection from which he fell. If these two things
can be effected, then there is hope. If they cannot both be effected,
man has not the slightest hope of everlasting life. In vain do
we look for help in the fallen human family, for although some
are less fallen than others, less depraved, all have sinned, all
have come short of the glory of God. If there were one righteous
one, he might, indeed, give a ransom for his brother (for Adam
and all condemned in Adam's transgression), and thus, under divine
arrangement, become the savior (deliverer) of his race from the
sentence; but none such could be found. "There is none righteous;
no, not one." Psa. 49:7; Rom. 3:10,23
God,
in his wisdom, had foreseen all this, and had provided for it
all, before he began the creation of mankind, and in due time
he manifested his plan for man's recovery from his blight of condemnation
and depravity. When there was no eye to pity, and no arm to save,
then God's arm brought salvation. The arm (power) of the Lord
revealed, stretched down from heaven for man's help out of the
horrible pit of death, and out of the miry clay of sin and depravity,
was our Lord Jesus. (Psa. 40:2; Isa. 53:1) Through him
God's declared purpose is--
<PAGE 419>
(1)
The ransom of mankind from the power of the grave, from the sentence
of death, from the "curse," from the "wrath"
that now rests upon the world. This ransom has been accomplished
in the death of our Lord Jesus Christ: Divine Justice is fully
met, and the whole world of mankind is reckonedly transferred
to the Lord Jesus Christ, as his purchase, bought with the precious
blood.
(2)
He is now choosing out from the redeemed race the "little
flock" of joint-heirs, who because of self-sacrificing devotion
to him shall be reckoned as sharers in his sufferings and
sacrifice, and be granted a share also in his heavenly glories
and future work of blessing the world--the fruit of his sacrifice.
(3)
The work of restitution is to be accomplished by this great Redeemer
and his joint-heir, his Bride, the Church, during "the times
of restitution of all things which God hath spoken by the mouth
of all his holy prophets since the world began." (Acts 3:19-21)
And when the wilfully wicked, rejectors of the divine grace and
mercy, under the terms of the New Covenant, shall have been destroyed
by this great Mediator, Christ, and the remainder of the redeemed
race shall be turned over to the Heavenly Father, perfect and
complete, fully restored to his own likeness, and with increased
knowledge of him and of righteousness and of sin--gained through
the experiences of the present reign of sin, as well as under
the reign of righteousness during the times of restitution--then
the great work of Atonement will be complete. All who see this
matter clearly can readily discern the necessity for the Atonement:
that there can be no blessing of mankind except by bringing them
into absolute harmony with their Creator; and that such a reconciliation
necessitates first of all a redemption of the sinner--a payment
of his penalty. For God must be just in justifying the sinners,
else he never will justify them. Rom. 3:26
In
view of the foregoing we see clearly that the number atoned for
by our Lord's sacrifice for sins--the general lifting of the "curse"
legally--gives no criterion by which we
<PAGE 420> may judge the number who will by
obedience of faith get actually free from sin and its curse and
return to at-one-ment with the Father, by availing themselves
of the opportunities opened to all by our dear Redeemer. There
is no proposition on God's part, nor any reasonable ground for
supposition on man's part that divine favor and life everlasting
through Christ will ever be attained by any except those who shall
come into the fullest heart-harmony with God, and with all his
laws of righteousness. We rejoice, however, that the knowledge
of God's grace and other opportunities far better than are now
enjoyed by the world shall in God's "due time" be extended
to every creature. 1 Tim. 2:6
THE
ATONEMENT BETWEEN GOD & MAN |