THE
ATONEMENT BETWEEN GOD & MAN
<PAGE 421>
STUDY
XV
"A
RANSOM FOR ALL"
THE ONLY BASIS FOR AT-ONE-MENT
At-one-ment Impossible Without a Ransom--Secured but not Compelled--
To be the Ransomer Became a Favor--The Significance of Ransom
and Redeem--What Ransom was Paid for Man?--Justification by
Faith thus Secured--"Ye are Bought with a Price"--By
Whom?--Of Whom?--For what Purpose?--How Love Cooperated with
Justice--The "Ransom for All" was not Taken Back--Fatherhood
Rights of the First Adam Purchased by the Second Adam--Ransom
not Pardon--Man's Death not a Ransom--False Reasoning of Universalist
Theories--Justice not Obligated by the Ransom--The Only Name--The
Mediator's Method Typed in Moses--Ransom, Substitution--Was
a Different Plan Possible?
"There
is one God, and one Mediator between God and men, the Man Christ
Jesus, who gave himself a ransom for all, to be testified in due
time." 1 Tim. 2:5,6
AT-ONE-MENT
between God and man was wholly dependent upon the presentation
of an acceptable sacrifice for man's sins. Unless the divine sentence
or "curse" could be lifted from mankind, it would stand
as a perpetual embargo, to hinder man's recovery or restitution
back to divine favor, fellowship and everlasting life. Under the
divine law, the only word of God to man would be, You are a sinner;
through your own wilful transgression in Eden you have brought
your trouble upon yourself: I have pronounced the sentence of
death against you justly, and I cannot remove that sentence without
violating my own justice,
<PAGE 422> the very foundation of my throne,
my Kingdom. (Psa. 89:14) Hence your sentence must stand forever.
It must be met by you unless an acceptable substitute takes your
place under it.
We
have seen clearly that the penalty or sentence against mankind
was not eternal torture, but, as plainly and distinctly stated
by the Creator to Adam, it was death. To suppose that it was any
other penalty than death would be to suppose that God had dealt
dishonestly with Adam and Eve in Eden--that he misinformed and
deceived them. We have seen that a death sentence is a just sentence
against sin--that life being a conditional grant, the Creator
had full right to revoke it: but it requires no particular ability
of mind to discern that an eternity of torture for Father Adam
would not have been a just penalty for his partaking of
the forbidden fruit--even attaching to that act of disobedience
all the culpability of wilfulness and intelligence that can be
imagined; much more, it would not have been just to have permitted
such a sentence of eternal torture to be entailed upon the countless
millions of Adam's posterity. But the death sentence, with all
its terrible concomitants of sickness and pain and trouble, which
came upon Father Adam, and which descended naturally through him
to his offspring (inasmuch as an impure fountain cannot send forth
a pure stream), all can see to be both reasonable and just--a
sentence before which all mouths must be stopped; all must admit
its justice--the goodness and the severity of God.
Knowing
definitely the penalty pronounced against sin, we may easily see
what Justice must require as a payment of that penalty, ere the
"curse" could be lifted and the culprit be released
from the great prison-house of death. (Isa. 61:1) As it was
not because the entire race sinned that the sentence came, but
because one man sinned, so that sentence of death fell directly
upon Adam only, and only indirectly through him upon his race,
by heredity--and in full accord with these facts Justice may demand
only a corresponding price--Justice must, therefore, demand the
life of another as
<PAGE 423> instead of the life of Adam, before
releasing Adam and his race. And if this penalty were paid, the
whole penalty would be paid--one sacrifice for all, even
as one sin involved all. We have already seen that the
perfect Adam, the transgressor, who was sentenced, was not an
angel, nor an archangel, nor a god, but a man--in nature a little
lower than that of angels. Strictest Justice, therefore, could
demand as his substitute neither more nor less than one of Adam's
own kind, under similar conditions to his, namely, perfect, and
free from divine condemnation. We have seen that none such could
be found amongst men, all of whom were of the race of Adam, and
therefore sharers, through heredity, of his penalty and degradation.
Hence it was, that the necessity arose that one from the heavenly
courts, and of a spiritual nature, should take upon him the human
nature, and then give as substitute, himself, a ransom
for Adam and for all who lost life through him.
Amongst
the angels who had retained their first estate and loyalty to
God, no doubt there might have been many found who would gladly
have undertaken the accomplishment of the Father's will, and to
become man's ransom price: but to do so would mean the greatest
trial, the severest test to which loyalty to God could be exposed,
and hence the one who would thus manifest his devotion and his
loyalty and his faith would be worthy of having the very highest
position amongst all the angelic sons of God, far above the angels
and principalities and powers, and every name that is named. Moreover,
it was a part of the divine purpose to make use of this opportunity
to illustrate the fact that whoever seeks to exercise his own
selfish ambitions (as Satan did), shall be degraded, abased, while,
on the contrary, whoever shall most thoroughly humble himself,
in obedience to the Heavenly Father's will and plan, shall be
correspondingly exalted. God so arranged his plan as to make this
feature a necessity; to the intent that in this manifestation
of divine sympathy and love for the world, an opportunity might
also be afforded for the manifestation of the
<PAGE 424> love, humility and obedience of
the Only Begotten of the Father--his well-beloved Son, whom he
delighted to honor.
As
we have seen, our Lord Jesus (who, in his prehuman condition,
we recognize as the archangel, the highest or chief messenger,
the Logos, the Only Begotten of the Father, full of grace and
truth) had up to this time been the agent of Jehovah in all the
work of creation, and, as the first begotten, had been with the
Father from before the creation of all others, and had known him
intimately, had beheld his glory, and been the channel of his
power. And inasmuch as he was already the first, the chief in
the heavenly Kingdom, next to the Father, the Apostle informs
us that this work of redemption, this privilege of executing the
divine will in respect to man, was given to him as a mark of special
confidence, and as a favor because of the honors which according
to divine law must attach to so great obedience, humility and
self-sacrifice. (Matt. 23:12; James 4:10; 1 Pet. 5:6)
With confidence in the Son and desiring his attainment of the
high exaltation which would accrue as a result of that faithfulness,
the Father gave the first opportunity to him, who had, in all
the past, enjoyed pre-eminence in the divine plan, that thus he
might continue to be the pre-eminent one--"that in all things
he might have the pre-eminence: for it pleased the Father that
in him all fulness should dwell. And having made peace through
the blood of his cross, by him to reconcile all things unto himself;
by him, I say, whether they be things in earth or things in heaven
[fallen men and fallen angels, recovering and reconciling so many
of each as, under fullest opportunity, will return to divine favor]."
Col. 1:18-20
The
selection of a spirit being to become man's Redeemer does not
imply that the sacrifice of a spirit being's existence was necessary
as the redemption price of an earthly being's existence: quite
the contrary. Divine Justice could no more accept the sacrifice
of a spirit being for man than accept the sacrifice of bulls and
goats as the ransom price. As the blood of bulls and goats could
never take away
<PAGE 425> sin, because they were of an inferior
nature, so the death of angels or archangels could never have
taken away Adam's sin, nor become a suitable atonement sacrifice
for him, because these were not of his nature. It was man's
life that had been forfeited through sin, and only a man's
life could be accepted as the redemption price, the ransom-price.
It was for this cause that it was necessary that our Lord should
leave the glory of his prehuman condition, and humble himself,
and become a man, because only by becoming a man could he give
the ransom-price.
While
the Scriptures point out that our Lord humbled himself in leaving
the higher spiritual nature and in taking the lower human nature,
they nowhere point this out as being our sin-offering. On the
contrary, he humbled himself thus, in order that he might become
the sin-offering and pay our ransom price. The Apostle distinctly
points this out, saying, "Verily, he took not hold upon the
nature of angels [as though referring to the angels which sinned]
but he took hold on the seed of Abraham." Inasmuch as the
children whom God had foreseen and purposed to redeem, and to
deliver out of the bondage of sin and corruption, were partakers
of flesh and blood, "he also himself took part of the same
[flesh and blood, human nature]; that through death he might destroy
him that hath the power of death, that is, the devil," and
deliver them. (Heb. 2:14,16) He states the matter most explicitly,
saying, "As by a man came death, by a man also
came the resurrection of the dead." (1 Cor. 15:21) The
Apostle John bears similar testimony, saying, "The Word was
made flesh." (John 1:14) To this agree also the words
of our Lord Jesus, after he had come into the world and after
he had reached manhood's estate; he said, "God sent not his
Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through
him might be saved." (John 3:17) He does not intimate
that the world had yet been saved, or that anything had yet been
done for the world's salvation, except the sending of the
one who would redeem the world by the sacrifice of himself. The
first step
<PAGE 426> in the performance of his mission
was, as our Lord declared-- "The Son of Man came not to be
ministered unto, but to minister [to serve others], and to
give his life a ransom for many." (Mark 10:45)
Here we have proof positive that in the laying aside of the glory
which he had with the Father before the world was, and exchanging
the higher nature for the human nature, our Lord had not given
his life as a ransom, but had merely made the preparation for
that work which was immediately before him. This is further confirmed
by the fact that it was as soon as he had reached manhood's estate,
under the law, as soon as he was thirty years of age, he at once
presented himself a living sacrifice, consecrating his life, laying
it down, as represented in his symbolical immersion by John at
Jordan.
There
was fulfilled, as the Apostle points out, the prophecy of old,
"Lo I come (in the volume of the book it is written of me)
to do thy will, O God." He had come to do the will of God,
to offer the sacrifice for sins, and hence he had not previously
offered it. In that act of his consecration he presented himself
a living sacrifice to God's service, even unto death. Mark that
at this particular point the Apostle says he set aside the typical
Law Covenant sacrifices that he might establish the second, the
antitypical, the real sacrifice for sins, his own death (and his
members) for the sealing of the New Covenant between God and men,
by himself, the Mediator of the New Covenant. And our text tells
us the same thing, that it was the "man Christ Jesus
who gave himself a ransom for all"--not the prehuman
Logos.
The
First Step in the Program
The
Apostle (Heb. 2:5-9) reviews the entire plan of God, and noting
the divine promises of human restitution, quotes from the Prophet
David (Psa. 8:4-8), that the divine plan ultimately is to
have mankind perfect, as the lord of earth, controlling earth
and its creatures, in harmony with the laws of the divine Creator,
saying, "We see not yet all
<PAGE 427> things put under him [man--as indicated
in the prophecy]." We see not yet man in the image of God
and lord of earth; but we do see the divine purposes to this end
already begun. We see the first step in this program, viz., "We
see Jesus, made a little lower than the angels for the suffering
of death, crowned with glory and honor [the perfection of human
nature] that he by the grace of God should taste death for
every man [and thus make possible human restitution]."
We see the work of man's salvation thus begun by Jehovah, in providing
a suitable ransom price for our redemption, one equal in glory
and honor and absolute human perfection with the first man, Adam;
one who, to this end and for this purpose, had left the glories
of a higher nature, and been made lower than the angels, although
previously possessed of a higher nature than they. We see this
one provided for the very purpose of "tasting death for every
man." We see that he took the human nature "for the
suffering of death"--the very penalty that was against
our race. Seeing this, we can rejoice that the good purposes of
our Heavenly Father for our ransom and restitution, and full reconciliation
to himself, have been amply arranged for, and upon a plane of
absolute justice, by which God can be just and yet be the justifier
of them that believe in Jesus. Thus the sacrifice which our Lord
Jesus gave for man's sin was not a spiritual one, which would
not have been a proper, acceptable sacrifice because it would
not have been "a corresponding price"-- in every
particular the exact ransom price for Adam.
The
Significance of "Ransom" and "Redeem"
This
brings us to the consideration of the word ransom, which
in the New Testament has a very limited and very definite signification.
It occurs only twice. Once in our Lord's own description of the
work he was doing, and once in the Apostle's description of that
completed work--our text. The Greek word used by our Lord is lutron-anti,
which
<PAGE 428> signifies, "a price in offset,
or a price to correspond." Thus our Lord said, "The
Son of Man came...to give his life a ransom [lutron-anti--a
price to correspond] for many." (Mark 10:45) The Apostle
Paul uses the same words, but compounds them differently, anti-lutron,
signifying, "a corresponding price," saying, "The
man, Christ Jesus, gave himself a ransom [anti-lutron--corresponding
price] for all, to be testified in due time." 1 Tim. 2:6
There
is no room for quibbling or disputing the meaning of these texts.
Only by handling the Word of God deceitfully can any be blinded
to the force and real meaning of this, the Lord's testimony to
the work which has been accomplished by our great Mediator. And
the more this thought of a ransom--a "corresponding price"--is
considered, the more force does it seem to contain, and the more
light does it shed upon the entire work of the Atonement. The
thought, and the only thought, contained in it is that as Adam,
through disobedience, forfeited his being, his soul,
all his rights to life and to earth, so Christ Jesus our Lord,
by his death, as a corresponding price, paid a full and
exact offset for Father Adam's soul or being, and in consequence
for all his posterity--every human soul--sharers in his fall and
in his loss. Rom. 5:12
This
same thought is abundantly expressed in many other scriptures,
which speak of our Lord's work as that of redeeming, purchasing,
etc. We have directed special attention to the word "ransom,"
anti-lutron, because it presents the thought in the purest
and most unmistakable form. The words, "redeem," "redeemed,"
"redeemer" and "redemption," while they contain
the thought of a price being paid, contain the additional thought
of setting free, or liberating those for whom the price was paid.
Hence these words, both in the English and in the original, are
sometimes used in connection with the sacrifice, or giving of
the price of redemption, and at other times used with reference
to the setting at liberty of the redeemed ones, their deliverance.
And the many foes of the doctrine of the ransom, of whom
the
<PAGE 429> chief is Satan, sometimes with
great cunning attempt to divert the attention away from the price
given for man's release from the curse of death, by pointing out
those texts of Scripture in which the words "redeem"
and "redemption" are applied merely as relating to the
full deliverance of mankind from death. By calling attention to
the deliverance, and "handling the Word of God deceitfully,"
they attempt to obscure the fact that the future deliverance,
and all the blessings that now or in the future will come to mankind
by divine grace, are of the Son, and through or by means of the
ransom-sacrifice of himself, which he gave on our behalf,
and which was "finished" at Calvary. John 19:30
The
translators of our Common Version English Bible unwittingly aided
these opponents of the ransom, by using the word "redeem"
to translate Greek words which have considerably different meanings.
That the English reader may have this matter clearly before his
mind, we will here cite all the various Greek words rendered "redeem,"
"redeemed" and "redemption," and following
each will give the definition furnished by the learned lexicographer,
Prof. Young, in his Analytical Concordance, as follows:
The
word "redeem" is sometimes used as the translation of
the Greek word agorazo. This word is defined by Prof. Young
to signify "to acquire at the forum." Still more literally,
it would signify, to purchase in the open market; for the root
of the word, agora, signifies market-place and is
so used repeatedly throughout the Scriptures: Matt. 20:3;
Mark 12:38; Luke 7:32; Acts 16:19. The following are
all the instances in which the word agorazo is translated
"redeemed" in the New Testament:
"Thou
wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood."
Rev. 5:9
"And
no man could learn that song, but the hundred and forty and four
thousand which were redeemed from the earth." Rev.
14:3
<PAGE 430>
"These
were redeemed from amongst men, being the first fruit unto
God and unto the Lamb." Rev. 14:4
The
thought in each of these cases is that of public purchase; and
all the other uses of this word agorazo, throughout the
New Testament, emphatically support a most commercial signification.
The word occurs in the New Testament in all thirty-one times.
In the above three instances it is rendered redeemed, in
thirteen instances bought, in fifteen instances buy.
We call especial attention to the signification of this word,
because the tendency to deny that there was a purchase of our
race effected by a price given for man's release from the
"curse" is prevalent and a growing one--very subversive
of the true "faith, once delivered to the saints."
Another
word rendered "redeem," "redeemed" and "redemption,"
is related to the above, and formed out of it by the addition
of a prefix, ex, which signifies out of--exagorazo.
Prof. Young gives to this word the definition, "to acquire
out of the forum." Still more literally, to publicly purchase
and take possession of. The only uses of this word
in the New Testament are as follows:
"Christ
hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law, being made
a curse for us." (Gal. 3:13) The Apostle is here pointing
out that Christians who had been Jews and had therefore been under
the Jewish or Law Covenant, had not only been purchased from under
its sentence, but were also released from its dominion. The word
agorazo signifies the purchase, and the prefix ex
signifies the release by that purchase, so that they were no longer
under the dominion of the Law.
"God
sent forth his son, made of a woman, under the Law, to redeem
them that were under the Law [Covenant], that we might receive
the adoption of sons." (Gal. 4:4,5) This is a similar
statement to the foregoing, and signifies the purchase of the
Jewish people from under the dominion of the Law, and the liberation
of believers from it, that they might become sons of God. Compare
John 1:12.
<PAGE 431>
"See
that ye walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise, redeeming
the time, because the days are evil." (Eph. 5:15,16;
Col. 4:5) This is a similar use of the word exagorazo:
the Lord's people realize that they are in the midst of evil,
the tendency of which is to absorb their energy, influence and
time in things sinful or foolish, or at least unprofitable, as
compared with the more weighty interests which lie closest to
their hearts, as children of God. We are, therefore, to purchase
and to secure out of the evil time, and apart from these
unfavorable influences, as large a proportion of time as may be
possible for devotion to higher interests--our own spiritual sustenance
and strengthening, and for the assistance of others in spiritual
things. Such purchase will cost us something of self-denial, of
gratification of our own natural appetites and tendencies, and
something also of the good opinion and fellowship of others, who
will "think it strange" that we run not with them to
the same excesses as formerly. 1 Pet. 4:4
Another
Greek word is also rendered "redeemed"-- namely lutroo.
Prof. Young defines lutroo to signify "to loose by
a price"--that is, to set free by the payment of a price.
The basis or root of this word is lutron, which, as noted
above with anti, used either as a prefix or a suffix, signifies
a corresponding price.
This
word, lutroo, occurs three times in the New Testament,
as follows:
"We
trusted that it had been he which should have redeemed
Israel." (Luke 24:21) The apostles were disappointed
at our Lord's death, and declared this disappointment by saying
that they had expected that the Lord would have set Israel at
liberty from the Roman yoke, by the payment of a price. They had
not yet been endued with the holy Spirit, and did not understand
the length and breadth, the height and depth of the divine plan,
by which not only Israel but the whole world was redeemed,
not only from the Roman yoke, but from Satan's yoke, and from
the great prison-house
<PAGE 432> of death, by the ransom price which
our Lord gave, and which was finished in death.
"Our
Savior, Jesus Christ, who gave himself, that he might redeem
us from all iniquity." (Titus 2:14) The price which our
Lord gave on behalf of mankind is not only intended to secure
to them an awakening from the tomb, in God's due time, during
the Millennium, and an opportunity then to come into harmony with
God on the terms of the New Covenant; but more than this, it means
to those who hear the good tidings now, a message of present relief
from the thraldom of iniquity--that we should no longer be servants
of sin, but should become the servants of him who died for us,
who bought us with his own precious blood.
"Ye
know that ye were redeemed, not with corruptible things,
as silver and gold, from your vain conversation, received by tradition
from your fathers; but with the precious blood of Christ, as of
a lamb without blemish and without spot." (1 Pet. 1:18,19)
The thought in this text is the same as in the preceding one.
It relates not so much to our ultimate deliverance from death,
in the resurrection, as to our present loosing from an
evil course, vain conversation, foolish talking, and iniquity
in general. This liberty was purchased for us by the blood
of Christ, as well as the grander liberty of the resurrection,
which is yet future. Without the payment of the ransom price,
without the satisfaction of Justice, God could not accept us as
sons, could not therefore deal with us as with sons, could not
seal us as his sons with the spirit of adoption into his family,
and hence these various agencies of his grace, which now are open
to believers, and which are to us the power of God unto
salvation, breaking in our hearts the power of sin, and establishing
instead the mind or spirit of the Lord, as the ruling power, could
not have come to us.
Another
Greek word, rendered "redemption" is lutrosis.
Prof. Young gives as its definition, "a loosing"--literally,
setting free, deliverance. This word does not contain the
thought of a price being paid, and hence it should not have
<PAGE 433> been rendered by our English word,
redemption, but rather by the word "deliverance." It
occurs twice:
"She,
coming in that instant, gave thanks likewise unto the Lord, and
spake of him [the babe Jesus] to all them that looked for redemption
[deliverance] in Jerusalem." (Luke 2:38) Anna
spoke to those who were looking for deliverance in Jerusalem--expecting
freedom from the Roman yoke, but not necessarily understanding
that the greater deliverance was to come by a payment of a ransom
price.
"Christ
being come an high priest...neither by the blood of goats and
calves, but by his own blood, he entered in once into the holy
place; having obtained eternal redemption [deliverance]
for us." (Heb. 9:11,12) The Apostle is not referring
to how our Lord obtained the eternal redemption of deliverance,
and hence makes no reference here to the price paid: he refers
merely to the present and future deliverance of God's people,
and not to the method by which that deliverance was secured, prior
to our Lord's entrance into the holy place--the sacrifice of himself
as man's ransom price.
Another
Greek word, translated "redeemed" in the New Testament,
is poieolutrosin. Prof. Young defines its meaning to be,
"to make a loosing," i.e., to set at liberty,
to deliver. It occurs but once.
"Blessed
be the Lord God of Israel; for he hath visited and redeemed
his people [literally, wrought redemption for his people]."
(Luke 1:68) The preceding verse shows that this expression
was a prophecy: things not completed are here mentioned as though
they had been accomplished: the first step toward Israel's deliverance
had been taken, and it was spoken of joyously as though the entire
matter were already accomplished. This word does not contain the
thought as to how the deliverance will be secured: other
scriptures show us that it is secured by the payment of a corresponding
price, a ransom, and is to come through the setting up of the
Kingdom of God. This word should not have
<PAGE 434> been translated "redeemed"
but rather delivered, as a guard against confusion of thought
by the English reader.
Another
Greek word, improperly rendered "redemption" is apolutrosis.
It contains no thought respecting a purchase price, but simply
signifies deliverance, setting free. Prof. Young defines
its meaning to be "a loosing away." The word
occurs ten times, and is only once properly translated "deliverance."
Note the following:
(1)
"Then look up and lift up your heads, for your redemption
[deliverance] draweth nigh." (Luke 21:28) There
is no reference here to the ransom or the conditions precedent
to the Church's deliverance, but merely to the deliverance itself.
(2)
"Being justified freely by his grace, through the redemption
[deliverance] that is in Christ Jesus." (Rom. 3:24)
The Apostle does not in these words refer to the ransom, but merely
to the deliverance which the Lord's people have, now reckonedly
and by and by prospectively, in the resurrection. He is treating
the matter from God's standpoint: believers are freely, unconditionally,
justified; aside from any works of merit on their part. This is
accomplished through the deliverance which God has provided
in Christ Jesus our Lord. In the following verse the Apostle proceeds
to show how this deliverance was effected, saying, "Whom
God hath set forth to be a propitiation [literally, a mercy seat
or channel of mercy] through faith in his blood [the sacrifice,
the ransom price given for the sins of the whole world]."
(3)
"Even we ourselves [the faithful Church] groan within ourselves,
waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption [deliverance]
of our body [the Church, the body of Christ, which is to be glorified
with the head in due time]." (Rom. 8:23) Nothing in this
statement has the slightest reference to the redemption accomplished
at Calvary, the purchase-price: it refers purely and solely to
the deliverance of the Church, which is to be a part of
the result of the redemption finished at Calvary--the ransom.
<PAGE 435>
(4)
"Christ Jesus who of God is made unto us wisdom and righteousness
and sanctification and redemption [deliverance]."
(1 Cor. 1:30) Nothing here has any reference to the redemption-price
paid at Calvary. The Apostle is speaking, not of what our Lord
did for us, but of what he is yet to do for us. He is our wisdom
in that we are to lay aside our own wills, and accept his will,
and thus have the spirit of a sound mind, and "walk in wisdom."
He is our righteousness, in that, as our representative, he gave
himself a ransom for all, and now in his righteousness
represents all those who come unto the Father by him. He is our
sanctification, in that, through his merit, we are accepted of
the Father as (reckonedly perfect) living sacrifices, while really
it is the power of Christ in us that enables us to present ourselves
living sacrifices, and to walk in his footsteps, and to fulfil
our covenant. He is our deliverance (mistranslated "redemption"),
in that the fact that he lives, who, by the grace of God, bought
us with his precious blood, is the guarantee that we shall live
also; that he will, in due time, deliver from the bondage of corruption,
death, his Church, which he purchased with his own blood. The
deliverance, and not the purchase, is here referred to. But it
is because he purchased that he has the right to be to any, wisdom,
justification, sanctification, deliverance.
(5)
"He hath made us accepted in the beloved, in whom we have
redemption [deliverance] through his blood, the
forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of his grace."
(Eph. 1:7) The Apostle does not here refer to the redemption
purchase at Calvary. On the contrary, he is speaking of our acceptance
with the Father, and declares that this acceptance with Jehovah
is based upon something which he did for us in the Beloved One,
our Lord Jesus, and through whose blood (the sacrifice, the ransom)
we have deliverance. The construction of the sentence shows
that the Apostle means that our deliverance is from the
sentence of sin, death, for he explains this deliverance
as being "the forgiveness of sins." The sense of the
passage, then, is this: The Heavenly Father,
<PAGE 436> who had already in his mind predestinated
the adoption of a "little flock" to be sons on the plane
of the divine nature, and joint-heirs with his first begotten
and well-beloved Son, our Lord, took the steps of grace necessary
to the accomplishment of this his purpose toward us. He made us
accepted in the Beloved; for in the Beloved, through his blood,
through his sacrifice, we have deliverance from the divine curse
and wrath--the forgiveness of our sins, from which we are made
free or justified.
(6)
"The earnest of our inheritance unto the redemption
[deliverance] of the purchased possession." (Eph.
1:14) The possession which Christ purchased by the
sacrifice for sins as man's substitute includes mankind in general
or so many as will accept the favor on the gospel conditions,
as well as the Church, the Bride. The time for the deliverance
is in the Millennial Kingdom and the Church is to be delivered
first--"early in the morning." But the earth was part
of man's original estate and was purchased by the same sacrifice
once for all: hence it too is to be delivered from its share of
the curse and shall become as the garden of the Lord-- Paradise.
The purchase is accomplished but the deliverance
waits for God's "due time."
(7)
"In whom we have redemption [deliverance] through
his blood, even the forgiveness of sins." (Col. 1:14)
This statement is similar to the foregoing. We, the Church, already
have deliverance, that is, the forgiveness of our sins,
and hence harmony with the Father. The word "redemption"
here has no reference to the sacrifice for sins, but merely to
its effect upon us, setting us free from our sins. The
Apostle, however, does not ignore the sacrifice, but declares
that our deliverance from the bondage and control of sin is through
the efficacy of our Lord's blood--his death, his sacrifice for
sins, the ransom paid.
(8)
"Grieve not the holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed
unto the day of redemption [deliverance]."
(Eph. 4:30) There is no reference here to the redemption sacrifice
finished
<PAGE 437> at Calvary. Yet not until that
sacrifice was finished, and its merits presented in the holy of
holies, and accepted by the Father, did the holy Spirit come upon
any to seal them as sons of God. But now these who have been sealed
are to maintain this seal of sonship, this begetting of the divine
nature, not to lose it. The sealing of the Spirit is the first-fruit
of the Spirit, and is all that is communicated during this present
life: for the full measure of the blessing of the divine nature
we must wait until the time appointed of the Father, "the
day of deliverance," the Millennial Day, in which
day the Scriptures declare, concerning the Church, the Bride of
Christ, "God shall help her early in the morning." (Psa.
46:5) Whoever loses the holy Spirit and its seal will have
neither part nor lot in the first resurrection, in the morning
of "the day of [complete] deliverance" from the power
of sin and death.
(9)
"For this cause he is the mediator of the New Covenant, that
by means of death for the redemption [deliverance]
of the transgressions that were made under the first [previous]
covenant, they which are called might receive the promise of eternal
inheritance." (Heb. 9:15) Once more a faulty rendering
partially obscures the meaning; but when the thought is seen to
be deliverance, all is clear. To Israel our Lord's death
meant more than to the Gentiles. It meant not only redemption
from Adamic transgression, and its penalty, death, but it meant
additionally to the Jew deliverance from the "curse"
or penalty of the Law Covenant, which rested upon that nation,
because of failure to comply with its terms. The Israelites were
under the "curse" which came upon Adam, just the same
as the remainder of mankind; but additionally they were under
the "curse" of their Law Covenant, instituted through
Moses, its mediator, at Sinai. It is to this double "curse"
upon that people that reference is made in the hymn which says:
"Cursed by the Law, and bruised by the fall,
Christ hath redeemed us, once for all."
<PAGE 438>
(10)
"Others were tortured, not accepting deliverance."
(Heb. 11:35) This is the one instance in which the translators
have properly rendered this word: they probably tried to render
it "redemption," and found that it would make rather
strange reading to say, "not accepting redemption,"
and then translated it properly--"deliverance."
In
the Old Testament, the words "redeem," "redeemed,"
"redeemer" and "redemption" are generally
good translations of the original Hebrew words, for instance:
Gaal signifies, to free--by avenging or repaying. Young
"I
know that my Redeemer liveth." Job 19:25
"They
remembered...the high God, their Redeemer." Psa. 78:35
"Who
redeemeth thy life from destruction." Psa. 103:4
"One
of his brethren may redeem him: either his uncle or his
uncle's son may redeem him...or if he be able he may redeem
himself." Lev. 25:48,49
"Ye
have sold yourselves for naught and ye shall be redeemed
without money." (Isa. 52:3) Compare 1 Pet. 1:18.
"The
Redeemer shall come to Zion." Isa. 59:20
Our
object in citing the instances in which redemption appears
in our English New Testament, without the original Greek word
containing a thought of a ransom-price, is to guard the
reader against the deceptive methods of certain sophistical writers
and teachers. Denying the ransom, denying that the world
was purchased by our Lord's death, these are prone to cite
passages where the word redeem is improperly used for deliver,
and then give the inference that deliver is the only meaning
of redeem, in every instance. In view of the carelessness
of our translators the only safe and proper method to pursue in
a case such as this where much depends on the exact meaning of
a word, is to get at the original word and its meaning.
<PAGE 439>
We
have demonstrated that in many instances the holy Spirit has expressed
through the New Testament writers the thought of purchase
of our race and of corresponding price paid, in the very
strongest terms, interpretable only on the lines of commercial
transaction, or the substitution of the purchase price
for the thing bought. We have shown also that in other cases where
the word used merely means deliverance nothing conflicts
with the thought that such deliverance will be secured as a result
of a ransom [anti-lutron, corresponding price],
but that generally the context explicitly refers to the deliverance
as being thus secured.
But
while the Scriptures are thus explicit in their assurance that
our Redeemer bought the world with his own life, "his
own precious blood," it is merely in order to give God's
people "full assurance of faith," letting them know
that the remission of the death penalty is not a violation of
God's justice but its satisfaction by his love. It also assures
us of the unchangeableness of divine law, which could not
be broken, but instead provided redemption at so great a cost.
This assurance that God's love and justice operate in fullest
harmony, gives us confidence that the same principles will continue
to rule the universe forever--satisfies us that the "wrath,"
the "curse," will be lifted from all who come into harmony
with God through Jesus the Mediator, and that all who do not avail
themselves of this grace will be swallowed up of the Second Death--for
"the wrath of God abideth on them." Acts 3:23; John
3:36; Rev. 22:3
But
so far as the redeemed are concerned it matters not how God's
love and justice arranged the matter of our forgiveness, because
to them it is a free gift, to be had only by accepting it as such.
We cannot purchase it, nor can we compensate God for this "gift."
The question then arises, If it is a "gift" to us, why
should we trouble to investigate, or why should the Lord be particular
to reveal the fact that this gift was secured to us at a cost,
at a price, by the death of Christ? and why should the
Scriptures so particularly point out to us that his death was
the exact price, the corresponding
<PAGE 440> price, that was due for our sins?
We answer, that God thus explains to us the details of his operations
on our behalf, to the intent that we may the better understand
him and his laws, and their co-ordination and operation. He so
explains, in order that we may understand that he is not abrogating
or setting aside his own sentence against sin--that he is not
declaring sin allowable, permissible, excusable. He wishes us
to realize that his justice is absolute, and that there can be
no conflict by which his love could dominate or overpower and
overthrow the sentence of justice; that the only way that his
just sentence against sin and sinners could be set aside was by
meeting the requirements of justice with a corresponding price--"a
ransom." Man had sinned, man had been sentenced to death,
man had gone into death. There could be, therefore, no hope for
man except as love and mercy might provide a substitute for Father
Adam. And a substitute, as we have seen, must be of the same nature
as Adam, human nature; the substitute must be equally free from
sin, free from the curse, free from wrath; similarly holy, similarly
harmless, similarly separate from sin and sinners, similarly approved
of God, as was Adam before his transgression.
We
have seen that our Lord Jesus was made flesh--(not sinful flesh)
but holy, harmless, separate from sinners.25
We have seen that the man Christ Jesus was thus a perfect man,
the counterpart of the first man, Adam, and thus we see that he
was all ready to be our Redeemer, our ransom, to give his life
and all human rights for the purchase, the redemption, of Adam
and the race of Adam, which lost life and all human rights in
him. We have seen that our Lord, "the man Christ Jesus,"
did consecrate, did sacrifice, did give up on man's behalf all
that he had. This he clearly set forth in his teaching on
this subject. He represented himself as the man who found a treasure
hidden in a field, and who went and sold all that he had,
and bought that field. (Matt. 13:44)
<PAGE 441> The field represents the world
of mankind, as well as the earth itself. (Eph. 1:14) In this
world of mankind our Lord saw a treasure--prophetically he saw
the result of the redemptive work, the deliverance of many from
the bondage of corruption into the full liberty of sons of God
(the Church in this age, and the worthy of the world in the age
to come). It was in view of this treasure that the field was bought.
Speaking of the result of the ransom, and of the work of redemption,
as it shall finally be accomplished by the close of the Millennial
age, the Prophet speaking of our Lord says, "He shall see
of the travail of his soul, and shall be satisfied." (Isa.
53:11) Our Lord was fully satisfied to give his life, and
all he then had, to purchase the world.
What
Ransom Was Paid for Man?
What
our Lord did for us, what price he gave on our behalf, what he
surrendered, or laid down in death, since it was a corresponding
price, "a ransom for all," should correspond exactly
to whatever was man's penalty. Our Lord did not go to everlasting
torment, hence we have this indisputable testimony that everlasting
torment is not the wages of sin prescribed by the great Judge,
but merely a delusion, foisted upon mankind by the great Adversary,
and those whom he has deluded. So surely as that which our Lord
suffered in man's room and stead, as man's substitute, was the
full penalty which men would otherwise have been obliged to suffer,
so surely this is proof positive that no such punishment as eternal
torment was ever threatened or inflicted or intended. Those who
know the testimony of God's Word recognize its statements to be
that "Christ died for our sins"; that he "died
the just for the unjust, to bring us to God"; that "he
is the propitiation26
[hilasmos--satisfaction]
<PAGE 442> for our sins [the Church's sins],
and not for ours only, but also for the sins of the whole world";
that "the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all, and
by his stripes [the things which he suffered in our stead--self-denial
even unto death] we are healed." What harmony and
consistency is seen in this Scriptural view of matters; and how
utterly inconsistent are the unscriptural delusions of Satan,
handed us by tradition and popularly received! 1 Cor. 15:3;
1 Pet. 3:18; 1 John 2:2; Isa. 53:5,6
"The
wages of sin is death," "The soul that sinneth
it shall die," say the Scriptures. (Rom. 6:23;
Ezek. 18:4) And then they show us how completely this wage
has been met for us, in the declaration, "Christ died
for our sins, according to the Scriptures," and rose again
for our justification. (1 Cor. 15:3; Rom. 4:25) His death
was the ransom price, but his providing the ransom price
did not give justification. First, our Lord must present that
ransom price before the Father in our behalf; and this he did
when "He ascended up on high," there to appear in the
presence of God for us. He then and there imputed to the Church
the merit of his ransom sacrifice. Then comes justification
as a result, (1) of the ransom-sacrifice, and (2) its application
for all men who will believe and obey him. Thus the resurrection
and ascension of our dear Redeemer were necessary adjuncts to
make his death-sacrifice available.
"Without
the shedding of blood there is no remission of sins." (Heb.
9:22) Throughout the Law dispensation God emphasized this
feature of his arrangement by requiring
<PAGE 443> the blood of bulls and of goats;
not that these could ever take away sins, but that in due time
they might be recognized as types or illustrations of better sacrifices,
through which sins are blotted out and canceled. The expression,
"shedding of blood," signifies simple death, life poured
out, yet points to a sacrificial death, and not what is sometimes
termed a natural death--though strictly speaking no death is natural.
According to nature man was to live: death is the violation of
the law of man's being, resulting from transgression, and its
accompanying "curse" or sentence.
So
far as Justice was concerned, the Jews might have put our Lord
to death in any other form, and the requirements of Justice have
been equally well met. The necessary thing was surrender of his
innocent soul (being) as an off-set or in exchange for a guilty
soul (being) whose existence was forfeited through transgression.
Neither was it necessary, so far as the ransom feature was concerned,
that our Lord's person should be wounded, and his blood literally
shed or spilled on the ground. The penalty for sin was death,
the cessation of being, and when that was accomplished the penalty
was met. The requirement of the crucifixion and the pierced side
were for other considerations.
The
blood falling upon the earth, at the foot of the altar of sacrifice,
represented that not only mankind had been purchased, but that
the earth itself was included, and the blood was sprinkled upon
it. The shame and ignominy of the public crucifixion, as a malefactor,
was necessary, because our Heavenly Father had decided that the
testing of the obedience of our Lord Jesus should be to the utmost;
not only was he tested to see whether he would be willing to become
a man, but additionally, whether he would be willing to die
as man's ransom-price or substitute, and additionally, whether
or not he would be willing to suffer the very extreme of ignominy,
and thus prove to the last degree his worthiness of the greatest
exaltation at his Father's hands.
<PAGE 444>
The
Apostle presents the matter in this light; for after telling us
of how he left the heavenly glory for our sakes, and became a
man, he adds, "And being found in fashion as a man he humbled
himself, and became obedient unto death--even the death
of the cross. Wherefore, God hath highly exalted him, and given
him a name [title, honor, dignity] which is above every name"--the
Father's name or title excepted. (Phil. 2:8,9) Compare 1 Cor.
15:27.
Every
reference of Scripture to justification by faith--that
we are justified by the blood of Christ, etc., is a testimony
corroborative of the foregoing--that "God was in Christ reconciling
the world unto himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them,"
but imputing them unto "him who died for us and rose again."
(2 Cor. 5:19,21; 1 Thess. 4:14; 5:10) The guilt of
the sinner was borne by the Redeemer, who gave the full corresponding
price for our sins, that all seeking righteousness might be accepted
as righteous, through the merits of his sacrifice. (Rom. 5:17-19)
The fact that we needed to be justified or made right,
proves that we were wrong, unrighteous, unjust in God's sight.
The fact that men could not justify themselves by works was demonstrated
by Israel under their Law Covenant, and proves that this wrong
or sin was in the very natures of men; and this rendered it necessary
that we should be redeemed and justified through the merit and
sacrifice of another--a spotless Redeemer.
Justified
signifies to be made right; but we are not made right or
perfect actually: we are merely reckoned right or
perfect because of our faith in and acceptance of the righteousness
of Christ and his sacrifice on our behalf. Everywhere throughout
the Scriptures this power of justification on the part
of our Redeemer is attributed to his sacrifice on our behalf.
That our own works could not justify us, or make us acceptable
before God, see Gal. 2:16; Rom. 3:27,28. That the Law
could not justify those under it, see Gal. 5:4; Rom. 3:20.
That faith in Christ's finished work alone justifies, see Gal.
2:17; 3:13,14; Rom. 4:24,25, etc.
<PAGE 445>
Various
scriptures more or less distinctly speak of our being washed or
cleansed or purified from sin. All such scriptures are in support
of the doctrine of the ransom because it is distinctly stated
in the same connection that the cleansing power is "the blood
of Christ"--the merit of our Lord's sacrifice. See 1 John
1:7; Rev. 1:5; 1 Cor. 6:11; 2 Pet. 2:22; Titus
3:5; Heb. 9:14; 1 Pet. 1:19.
Justification
is symbolically represented as a robe of righteousness, of pure
linen, clean and white, by which the Lord covers the blemishes
and imperfections of all whom he accepts through faith in his
precious blood. All endeavors toward righteousness on our own
part, aside from the merit of Christ, are likewise symbolically
represented as "filthy rags" of our own righteousness.
(Isa. 64:6) True, certain scriptures refer to our efforts
towards righteousness, by obedience to the divine commands, as
a cleansing work, progressing throughout our entire Christian
course, as the Apostle expresses it, "Having our bodies washed
with pure water," and cleansing of the Church by the "washing
of water by the Word": and these are very proper presentations
of the cleansing of our hearts, the "putting away the filth
of the flesh": and these scriptures are very properly understood
to refer to a daily and a life work. But all these cleansings
of thoughts, words and acts--all these endeavors to bring our
mortal bodies into closer conformity to the will of God in Christ,
are based upon our previous acceptance of Christ and our justification
through faith in his blood. The Scriptural thought is that from
the time we consecrate ourselves to God, all our imperfections
are covered from the Lord's sight through the merit of the ransom-sacrifice,
provided by Jehovah's grace, and laid hold of and appropriated
by faith. Since only that which is perfect could be acceptable
of God, and since we, with all our efforts and washings, would
still be imperfect, it is manifest that our acceptance with the
Father is under the covering of the robe of Christ's righteousness,
his perfection reckoned or applied or imputed to us. Thus we are
first "accepted in the
<PAGE 446> beloved" (Eph. 1:6); and
then daily manifest our devotion to righteousness and our desire
to please the Lord by efforts toward holiness.
How
frequently the Scriptures refer to our Lord as our sin-offering,
"the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world!"
(John 1:29) All the sacrifices of the Law, all the blood shed
upon Jewish altars, pointed forward to this great sacrifice for
sin slain on our behalf; for, as the Apostle assures us, the blood
of bulls and of goats could never take away sin--only the antitypical
sacrifice could do this, "the precious blood." On this
subject of the sacrifice for sins, as presented in the New Testament,
see Heb. 9:12; 10:10; Eph. 5:2; 1 Cor. 5:7; 1
Pet. 2:22-24; 2 Cor. 5:21--Diaglott.
That
this sacrifice was for us, the Church, and for all mankind, is
likewise very clearly set forth in the Scriptures: "He, by
the grace of God tasted death for every man," the just for
the unjust, to bring us to God--to open up for us and for all
mankind a way of return or reconciliation to harmony with the
Heavenly Father, and thus indirectly to open up for us the way
back to eternal life, the Father's favor or blessing or gift for
all those who are truly his children. On this point see the following:
1 Thess. 5:10; Rom. 5:8; 1 Cor. 15:3; 2 Cor. 5:14,15;
John 10:15; 11:50-52; 1 Pet. 2:24; 3:18.
That
it was the death of the man Christ Jesus, his "blood,"
that secured our release from sin and death, is most unequivocally
stated in many scriptures, and can only be repudiated by denying
the inspiration of the Scriptures, or by "wresting the Scriptures,"
or by "handling the Word of God deceitfully." See 1
Pet. 1:2; Acts 4:12; 20:28; Rev. 5:9; 1:5;
Rom. 5:9; Heb. 13:12.
"Ye
Are Bought with a Price."
By Whom? of Whom? Why? and for What Purpose?
"Ye
are bought with a price; be not servants of men."
1 Cor. 7:23
<PAGE 447>
"Thou
hast redeemed [bought] us to God by thy blood." Rev.
5:9
"There
shall be false teachers among you, who shall privily bring in
damnable heresies, even denying the Lord that bought them."
2 Pet. 2:1
The
testimonies of Scripture, to the effect that man was "bought,"
are very unequivocal; and, as we have already shown, the Greek
word from which they are translated is agorazo, which signifies
a public purchase. The questions naturally arise, (1) By
whom was man purchased? (2) Of whom was man purchased? (3) Why
was man purchased? We consider these questions in their order.
(1)
The scriptures already cited clearly and unequivocally assert
not only that mankind was purchased, but that the Lord Jesus Christ
himself was the purchaser; and furthermore, these and other scriptures
assure us most distinctly that the purchase price was the precious
blood of Christ--the sacrifice of his own life, the death of the
man Christ Jesus, who gave himself a ransom [anti-lutron--a
corresponding price] for all. Considering this question already
indisputably proven, we proceed to the next.
(2)
Of whom was man purchased? Opponents of the truth sneeringly inquire
whether or not the Lord purchased us from the devil; and assert
that there was no one else to whom the price could be paid: for
according to the false reasoning of those who deny the ransom,
God would not be a party to such a transaction. Their claim is
that God was ever anxious for man's fellowship, and all along
has done all in his power to effect man's reconciliation and recovery
from sin and death. They reason therefore that God would not demand
a ransom price, before permitting man's release. We reply, that
such views are wholly contrary to the Scriptural teaching, which,
while representing that God is love, and that he has sympathy
for the sinner, declares also that God is just, and that man having
been justly sentenced,
<PAGE 448> cannot be justly released from
that sentence in any other manner than by the payment of a ransom
price for him.
While
the Scriptures declare that Satan is identified with the infliction
of the penalty, death, saying, "As the children are partakers
of flesh and blood [human nature], he likewise took part of the
same, that through death he might destroy him that hath the power
of death, that is, the devil," and elsewhere speak of Satan
as being the "prince of this world," nevertheless they
nowhere indicate that he has a title to rule authoritatively in
the world. (Heb. 2:14; John 14:30) On the contrary, the
Scriptures declare Satan to be the usurper, who, taking advantage
of man's fallen condition, has blinded his mind toward God, and
by deceiving man has enslaved him, through ignorance, superstition
and his own weaknesses. Satan's identity with sin constitutes
his power of death. Had it not been for sin, Satan could have
had no dominion over mankind. It was because of wilful sin that
man was cast off from divine favor; but it was subsequently, when
he did not wish to retain God in his thoughts, that God gave him
over to a reprobate mind, etc. (Rom. 1:28) The highest authority,
therefore, that Satan could claim in connection with the race
would be the power of a usurper and the weakness of his slaves.
Moreover,
since the divine sentence went forth, "Thou shalt surely
die," Satan and any other agency of evil is permitted
to cooperate in the carrying out of this divine decree. Thus does
God sometimes cause the wrath of man, and sometimes the wrath
of evil spirit beings, to work out his wonderful plans, and unintentionally
to praise him. (Psa. 76:10) But God has never recognized Satan
as the owner of the race. The race was God's creation, and owed
its all to him, but because of a failure to recognize him, and
to render obedience, it came under the sentence, the curse, of
divine law, as unworthy of life, and there it rests.
It
was divine Justice which smote our first parents with the curse
of death, and it is under the sentence of divine Justice that
the race still remains dead. Nor can there be a hope
<PAGE 449> of life for any, except through
the redemption which is in Christ Jesus. Since divine Justice
was the Judge whose sentence forfeited man's life, therefore to
divine Justice the ransom price must of necessity be paid, in
order to secure the release of the culprit Adam, and his race
sentenced in him.
Satan's
power, though willingly exercised by him, could not be exercised
were it not permitted by the great supreme Judge Jehovah, and
Jehovah would not have permitted the great calamity of death
to be inflicted upon mankind through Satan's agency or otherwise,
except as a just penalty for sin--the penalty of Jehovah's violated
law. Satan's power, like that of a hangman, is a delegated "power
of death." The hangman is merely the servant of the law,
to execute its penalties; and Satan, as the servant of the law
laid down by the supreme Judge of all creation, is permitted and
used for a time, as the executioner of the sentence pronounced:
"The wages of sin is death," "dying thou shalt
die."
If
a prisoner's ransom or fine were to be paid, it would not be offered
to the jailer or executioner, but to the Court whose sentence
demanded it. So likewise the ransom for sin could not be paid
to Satan (though to some extent he serves as an executioner of
the penalty) but must be paid to the power which condemned sin,
which decreed the penalty, and ordered the execution of the guilty.
Thus
would reason answer us, that the ransom-price for man's
sin should be paid to "God, the Judge of all." Now let
us inquire, What say the Scriptures respecting the sacrifice of
Christ, the offering which he made? Do they say that it was made
to Satan or to Jehovah God? We answer that in all the types of
the Jewish dispensation, which foreshadowed this better sacrifice,
which does take away the sin of the world, the offerings were
presented to God, at the hands of the priest, who typified our
Lord Jesus. See Lev. 4:3,4,24,29,31,34,35; 5:11,12; 9:2,6,7;
Exod. 30:10; 2 Chron. 29:7-11,20-24.
This
answers our question emphatically, and we need no
<PAGE 450> further testimony on the subject.
But if further and direct testimony is desired, it is found in
the words of the Apostle, viz., "If the blood of bulls and
of goats...sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh, how much
more shall the blood of Christ, who, through the eternal spirit,
offered himself without spot to God...and for this
cause he is the mediator of the New Covenant." Heb. 9:13-15,26;
7:27; 10:4-10,12,20; Eph. 5:2; Titus 2:14; Gal.
1:4; 2:20; 1 John 3:16; John 1:29; 1 Pet. 1:19;
1 Cor. 10:20; Rom. 12:1
Thus
we establish before our minds the scripturalness of this proposition,
that God did require and did accept the death of Christ as man's
ransom sacrifice.
(3)
Why was man purchased?
Because
in us, as fallen and imperfect creatures, the divine qualities
of justice, wisdom, love and power are very imperfect: some find
it more difficult than do others to grasp the reasonableness of
the divine method of requiring a ransom, and accepting it. Those
who cannot reason the matter out satisfactorily may very properly,
and should, acknowledge and accept the testimony of the divine
Word, irrespective of their ability to fully comprehend the why
and the wherefore of it. This is the safe and the proper course.
Nevertheless, let us offer some suggestions which may help some
to grasp the subject. As imperfect fallen creatures, in us these
various qualities, wisdom, love, justice and power are continually
in more or less antagonism with each other; but not so with our
Heavenly Father: in him each of these qualities is perfect, and
in perfect accord with the others. There is no clash. Wisdom first
surveyed the field, and laid out the best plan for man's salvation,
with the full consent of divine justice, love and power. Under
wisdom's direction, man was placed at once under a law, the penalty
of which was the forfeiture of his existence, and all the train
of woes accompanying death. Wisdom foreknew man's fall, through
inexperience, but felt justified in view of the beneficial lessons,
etc., in laying out the course of divine providence and dealings
as revealed in the Scriptures.
<PAGE 451>
As
soon as man violated the divine law, Justice stepped forward,
pronouncing him a rebel, who had come under the sentence of death,
and drove him from Eden, from the source of subsistence previously
arranged for him, and delivered him over to Satan, to be buffeted
by evil circumstances, and to the intent that the full penalty
of the violated law might be inflicted--"Dying thou shalt
die." While this element of the divine character (Justice)
was dealing with man, the Love element was not indifferent, but
it was powerless, for two reasons: First, it could not oppose
Justice, could not hinder the execution of the sentence, could
not deliver man from the power of Justice, because it is the very
foundation of the divine government; secondly, Love could not
at that time interfere to relieve man, by paying the ransom-sacrifice
for sin, because that would have been in opposition to the plan
already marked out by infinite Wisdom. Thus divine Love and divine
Power were held for the time, unable to relieve mankind, and compelled
to assent to the Justice of his execution and to the Wisdom which
permitted it to proceed through six thousand years of groanings,
tribulation--death. In harmony with this, Love did not move to
man's release, except to encourage and instruct him through promises
and typical sacrifices, foreshadowing the method by which Love
eventually, in Wisdom's due time, would accomplish man's rescue.
Thus Love waited patiently for the auspicious moment when, under
Wisdom's direction, it might act, and later might call to its
aid divine Power.
That
moment for Love to act finally came, in what the Scriptures term
"the fulness of time" (Gal. 4:4), "in due time"
(Rom. 5:6), when God sent forth his son as "the man Christ
Jesus," that "he by the grace [favor, bounty, mercy]
of God should taste death for every man." (1 Tim. 2:5;
Heb. 2:9) Not until then was the divine Love manifested to
mankind, although it had existed all along; as we read, "Herein
was MANIFESTED the Love of God," "in that
while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us." 1 John 4:9;
Rom. 5:8
<PAGE 452>
By
exercising itself in harmony with the law of God, and by meeting
the requirements of that law, divine Love did not conflict with
divine Justice. Love's method was not an attempt to overrule and
oppose the sentence, nor to interfere with its full execution,
but to provide a substitute, a ransom, for man. By meeting for
man the death-penalty inflicted by Justice, Love brought release
to mankind from the Adamic curse (death) which divine Justice
had inflicted. This was divine Love's triumph, no less than the
triumph of divine Justice. Love triumphed in offering the ransom-sacrifice,
Jesus, to Justice--the element of God's character which enforces
his righteous decrees and their penalties.
Nor
is Love's triumph yet complete. It has accomplished the ransom,
but its design is to accomplish more, viz., to effect a restitution
for all of mankind, willing after experience to return to loyalty
to God and his righteous law. But as Love waited more than four
thousand years, under the direction of divine Wisdom, before bringing
the ransom-sacrifice, so must it wait for nearly two thousand
years more, after the ransom-price has been paid, before the great
work of restitution shall even begin. (Acts 3:19-21) But Wisdom
permits Love in the meantime to operate upon a special class,
the "little flock," the elect of this Gospel age--to
take out from amongst the redeemed "a people for his name"--Christ's
Bride and joint-heir, the Church.
The
necessity for the purchase of the race by Christ lay then in the
fact that Father Adam had sold himself and his race into
sin (and its wages or penalty, death), for the price of disobedience.
(Rom. 7:14; 5:12) He needed to be bought back from
the slavery of sin; and the payment of the ransom-price was necessary
before any could be released from the sentence or start anew to
prove themselves worthy of life everlasting.
But
now let us take a still larger view of this purchase, and note
that our Lord Jesus became not only theoretically but actually
the owner, controller and father of the race, by
<PAGE 453> reason of paying its ransom-price:
in this purchase he took the place of Father Adam, who
had sold the race. As the race was sold by Adam
through sin, in self-gratification, in disobedience to God, so
the race was bought by the man Christ Jesus, by the sacrifice
of himself in obedience to the Father's will--a corresponding
price or ransom for Adam. The Scriptures present this thought,
saying, "Christ both died and rose and revived--that he
might be Lord both of the dead and the living." (Rom.
14:9) It was by virtue of our Lord's death that he became
the master, ruler, father of the race, and obtained power to deal
with the race as with his own children, freed from the curse of
the divine sentence by his own sacrifice.
It
is in this sense of the word that our Lord has become the second
Adam--because he took the first Adam's position, as head of the
race, by purchasing, redeeming it, with his own life. But as it
was the man Christ Jesus who gave himself as the ransom-price,
it could not be the man Christ Jesus who would be the father of
the race. The man Christ Jesus laid down all that he had
for the redemption of the man Adam and his race, a full
corresponding price, a man for a man. The race of Adam not having
been born at the time of his transgression, was not directly,
but indirectly, sentenced, and consequently needed not to be directly,
but indirectly purchased. An unborn seed in the loins of the man
Christ Jesus became the offset or corresponding price for the
seed of Adam unborn at the time of his transgression.
The
Price Not Taken Back
As
we have already seen, the Scriptures clearly teach that our Lord
was put to death in flesh, but was made alive in spirit;
he was put to death a man, but was raised from the dead
a spirit being of the highest order of the divine nature:
having finished the work for which he had become a man, and having
performed the service acceptably to the Father,
<PAGE 454> he was raised from the dead to
exceeding honor and dignity, far above angels, principalities
and powers, and every name that is named.
Nor
could our Lord have been raised from the dead a man,
and yet have left with Justice our ransom-price: in order
to the release of Adam (and his condemned race) from the sentence
and prison-house of death, it was necessary, not only that the
man Christ Jesus should die, but just as necessary that
the man Christ Jesus should never live again, should remain
dead, should remain our ransom-price to all eternity.
For
our Lord Jesus to have been raised a man would have implied two
evils: (1) It would have implied the taking back of our ransom,
which would have left us as much under sentence of death as before.
(2) It would have implied to him an everlasting loss of the higher
nature which he had left in order to become a man, and to be our
Redeemer; and thus it would have implied that faithfulness to
God on his part had resulted in his everlasting degradation to
a lower nature. But no such absurdities and inconsistencies are
involved in the divine arrangement. Our Lord humbled himself,
and became a man, and as a man he gave up his life, the ransom-price
for the fallen man; and as a reward for this faithfulness, the
Heavenly Father not only restored him to conscious being, but
gave him a nature not only higher than the human, but higher also
than his own previous nature, making him partaker of the divine
nature, with its superlative qualities and honors. In his present
exalted condition death would be impossible--he is now
immortal.
Since
the man Jesus was the ransom-price, given for the purchase of
Adam and his race, it could not be that the man Jesus is the Second
Adam, the new father of the race instead of Adam; for the
man Jesus is dead, forever dead, and could not be a father
or life-giver to the world.
He
who now owns, by purchase, the title of father to the human family,
is the risen and glorified Jesus, partaker of
<PAGE 455> the divine nature--this is the
Second Adam. As we have already seen,27
our Lord Jesus in the flesh was not the Second Adam; he was not
a father of a race, but merely came to purchase Adam and his race,
and thus to become the father; and it took all that he had
to effect the purchase, and nothing was left. This is the Scriptural
thought, as presented by the Apostle: "The first man is of
the earth, earthy, the second man [the Second Adam] is the Lord
from heaven [at his second presence, during the Millennium]...
As we have borne the image of the earthly [Adam] we [the Church,
joint-heirs with Christ, and sharers of the exceeding great and
precious promises in the divine nature--Rom. 8:17; 2 Pet.
1:4] shall also bear the image of the heavenly [--the Second
Adam]." "And so it is written, the first man Adam was
made a living soul; the last [second] Adam was made a quickening
spirit; howbeit, that was not first which was spiritual, but
that which was animal, and afterward that which is spiritual."
1 Cor. 15:45-48
Carrying
further our question respecting why the race was bought, we have
the Apostle's testimony that by that purchase our Lord Jesus became
(that is, acquired the right to become) the mediator of the New
Covenant. (Heb. 8:6; 9:14-16) The New Covenant is an arrangement
which God provides, by and through which he can have mercy upon
the fallen race. The New Covenant could not go into effect without
a mediator. The mediator must guarantee to God certain things
on behalf of mankind. First of all he must redeem man, by paying
the full ransom-price, and this sacrifice, which our Lord Jesus
made, is therefore termed "the blood of the covenant,"
by which the covenant becomes effective, operative. Having purchased
the world of mankind from under the condemnation which rested
upon them, through sin, that he might seal the New Covenant and
make it operative, the Mediator is fully prepared and fully authorized
to do for the purchased race all that he can do
<PAGE 456> by way of bringing them back to
full human perfection, and into absolute harmony with God--that
then he may present them blameless and irreprovable before the
Father, in love, no longer needing the intervention of a special
covenant of reconciliation, nor a mediatorship. But that work,
so far from being yet accomplished, is only begun; hence the world
has not yet been accepted by the Father, and it will involve all
the restitution work of the Millennial age to fit and prepare
the willing and obedient for the full harmony of complete reconciliation
with the Father.
Meantime,
during this Gospel age, a little handful of the redeemed race
is called, and those who hear the divine call and approach the
Father through faith in the Mediator and his work are reckonedly
accepted as perfect, in order to permit them to present themselves,
with their Redeemer, as living sacrifices in the service of the
Father and his plan, and thus to develop in them the likeness
of God's dear Son--to the intent that if willingly and gladly
they suffer with him they may also be glorified with him by and
by, and made associates and joint-heirs with him in the Millennial
work of blessing the world under the terms of the New Covenant.
These, be it remembered, are exceptions to the remainder of mankind:
these, the "elect" of the Gospel age, are reckoned as
the "brethren" of Christ, the "Bride"
of Christ, the "Church which is his Body," but
never called "children" of Christ. These are accepted
of the Heavenly Father as sons, and begotten by the Word of truth
and the spirit of that Word to the heavenly nature. These, as
we have seen, may properly recognize Jehovah as their Father,
because directly begotten of him, and thus these are "brethren"
of Christ Jesus. 1 Pet. 1:3
For
the world in general, however, the divine plan is somewhat different:
instead of justifying them by faith, and then having them begotten
to the divine nature, etc., they wait over until the Millennial
age, and then, instead of being begotten of Jehovah to a new nature,
they get back their old nature, the human nature, freed of its
blemishes and corruption through sin. The hope of the world is
restitution
<PAGE 457> to "that which was lost"
in Eden. (Matt. 18:11; Acts 3:19-21) God's provision for
the world is just what we have seen in the ransom: the man Christ
Jesus laid down his human perfection, and all the rights and privileges
which that implied, to redeem for mankind "that which was
lost"--the human perfection lost in Eden, the human dominion
and all the rights and privileges of man, including his privilege
of fellowship with God and everlasting life. These things which
were purchased for mankind are the things which in due time are
to be offered to all mankind under the New Covenant.
The
fact that this Gospel age has been used of the Lord in selecting
the "body of Christ," means to the world that instead
of our Lord Jesus, the great Head of the Church, reserving to
himself alone the office of father or life-giver to the
world, he has associated with himself a "little flock,"
who have his own likeness, and who have participated in the sufferings
of this present time, and who are to be sharers in the glory to
come, and with him to constitute the great Prophet, the great
Priest, the great King, the great Life-giver or Father to the
world of mankind--to give life to whomsoever will receive it,
under the terms of the New Covenant. It is in harmony with this
thought that the Scriptures declare one of our Lord's titles to
be "the Everlasting Father." He has not yet fulfilled
this office in any sense or degree. But he who bought the world
at the cost of his own life has in his own power, by divine arrangement,
the full right, title and authority to communicate to so many
as will receive it, on his terms, all that was lost and
all that was bought again of life and human rights and
perfections, with an increase of knowledge.
Moreover,
as being the legitimate father of the race and as giving them
a life which had cost him his own, we find that the Scriptures
imply that the race of mankind is fully in the hands of the Lord
Jesus, to deal with them absolutely; and to judge of their worthiness
or unworthiness of eternal life. This, which he will do for the
world as its Father, during the next age, our Lord Jesus already
does for
<PAGE 458> his Church, his spouse, his Bride,
during this age; and herein the apostolic proposition is illustrated,
that as the Heavenly Father is the head of Christ, so Christ is
the head of the Church; as the husband he is the head of the wife
and of the family. Accordingly we read, "The Father judgeth
no man, but hath committed all judgment unto the Son." (John
5:22) The betrothed Bride of Christ has no standing with the
Father except in and through her beloved Bridegroom. Her requests
are made in his name, through his merit, and must continue so
to be made, until that which is perfect is come, when she shall
be received into glory--the full liberty of the sons of God, through
the first resurrection.
Similarly,
the world of mankind, the children of Christ, must all report
to him, as their Head, their Father, nor will they have any intercourse
with the heavenly Father, nor be recognized by him at all, until
after the Millennial age shall have restored and brought back
to perfection those who will avail themselves of those privileges.
But at the close of the Millennial age, when our Lord Jesus shall
deliver up the Kingdom to God, even the Father, then also shall
they be introduced to and come under the direct control of the
great, grand Father of all, Jehovah Almighty. 1 Cor. 15:24
From
this standpoint may be seen why our Lord Jesus is called the Father
of the redeemed and restored race, but was not recognized as the
Father of Adam or his children previously, although he was the
direct creator of Adam--as it is written, "Without him was
not anything made that was made." The difference lies in
the fact that in the original creation the Logos was the
agent of Jehovah, and performed a work wholly without expense
to himself; while as the Second Adam he will be giving to men
life-rights at his own cost, bought with his own precious blood.
Ransom
Not Pardon
The
failure to discern the distinction between ransom and pardon has
led to considerable confusion of thought on
<PAGE 459> the subject. Christian people of
general intelligence will quote texts relative to our being ransomed
from the tomb, redeemed from death, bought with a price, even
the precious blood of Christ, etc., and in the same breath they
speak of the Father's gracious pardon of all offenses. Seemingly
few think, though many must know, that pardon and ransom express
exactly opposite thoughts.
The
following primary definitions are from the Standard Dictionary:
Redeem--To
gain possession of by paying the price.
Ransom--The
amount or consideration paid for the release of a person held
in captivity, as a prisoner or slave.
Now
contrast with these the signification of:
Pardon--To
remit the penalty of; to let pass.
Webster--"To
refrain from exacting the penalty. In Law-- To release from a
punishment that has been imposed by sentence."
Notice
here also the definition of another word which though closely
related to pardon is not exactly the same, viz.--
Forgive--To
release from punishment--to cease to cherish resentment towards.
"The
law knows no forgiveness."
The
most ordinary mind must discern that the thought expressed by
"redeem" and "ransom" is opposed by and irreconcilable
with the thought expressed by the word pardon. But since
all of these words are used in the Scriptures in reference to
God's dealings with fallen man, many Bible students think of them
as used carelessly and synonymously in Holy Writ: and they then
conclude that they may take their choice and either attach the
definition of "pardon" to the words "ransom"
and "redeem" or vice versa the definitions of
"ransom" and "redeem" to the words "pardon"
and "forgive." This procedure is far from "rightly
dividing the word
<PAGE 460> of truth"; it is confounding
two separate and distinct matters, and the result is confusion.
With many the difficulty seems to be that they do not want and
therefore do not seek for the truth on the subject--fearing that
their no-ransom theories would thereby be condemned.
Nothing
can be clearer than that God did not pardon Adam's transgression
and remit its penalty: the facts all about us, in the groaning
and dying creation, no less than the testimony of God's Word concerning
"wrath of God revealed"-- the "curse" of death
as the wages of original sin, all testify loudly that God did
not pardon the world--did not remit its sin-penalty under which
it has suffered for over six thousand years. He who confounds
the justification of sinners through the merit of the sin-sacrifice
of Christ, the sinner's substitute or ransomer, with pardon
without payment, has not had his senses exercised properly. Had
God pardoned Adam he would have restored him to the privileges
of Eden and its life-sustaining orchard, and he would be living
yet, and his numerous family would not have died for "one
man's disobedience."
If
at any time God were to come to man's rescue and pardon
him, it would imply his full release from all the blight, disease,
pain and death: it would mean full restitution to all that was
lost. Evidently then God has not pardoned the original sin, but
still holds the resentment of his holy law and sentence against
the sinner. There is even no outward evidence to the world that
they have been redeemed, ransomed. Only believers yet know of
this and they receive it, not by sight, but by faith in the Lord's
Word; its many declarations to this effect we have already cited.
The sight-evidences proving the ransom will be discernible
during the Millennium, when the work of restitution is under way--
when the Redeemer begins the exercise of his purchased rights
as the Restorer.
The
words forgive and pardon are used not in respect
to the world and its original sin, but in respect to those
who
<PAGE 461> through faith in the Redeemer and
his work are reckoned as having passed from death unto life--from
sentence to justification. The great Mediator who bought them,
and who bought the charges which were against them, freely forgives
them and starts them afresh on trial for life--under the spirit
of the divine Law and not under its letter. And more than this
forgiveness of the past, he continues to forgive them and to pardon
all their offenses (which will not be wilful so long as they have
his new spirit or mind--1 John 3:9; 5:18)-- counting all
such unwilful blemishes of thoughts, words and deeds as a part
of the original sin and its depravity, still working in their
flesh through heredity. Similarly the Heavenly Father is said
to have mercy upon us, to forgive our trespasses,
and to extend his grace (favor) to us; but the explanation
is that all his grace is extended to us through our Lord Jesus'
sacrifice: we are "justified freely by his grace through
the redemption that is in Christ Jesus: whom God set forth
to be a propitiation [satisfaction] through faith in his blood--to
declare his righteousness for the remission [forgiveness]
of sins." (Rom. 3:24,25) Again, it is declared, "We
have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, according
to the riches of his grace." Eph. 1:7; Col. 1:14
"We
were reconciled to God by the death of his Son," i.e., God
ceased to resent our sins, because our ransom price had
been paid, as provided by himself, who so loved us that he gave
his Son to redeem us. Thus, too, "God was in Christ reconciling
the world to himself, not imputing their trespasses unto
them" (but unto his beloved Son, who freely gave himself
as our substitute). The sins were imputed to mankind until Jesus
died; then God forgave, i.e., ceased to impute to us
what had been paid by our Redeemer or Substitute. God did not
PARDON, i.e., "refrain from exacting the penalty,"
but "laid upon him [our Redeemer] the iniquity of us all."
(Isa. 53:6) "He bore [the penalty of] our sins in his
own body on the tree." (1 Pet. 2:24) And thus we see
how God forgave us freely "for Christ's sake"--because
he paid the penalty which
<PAGE 462> was the full satisfaction of justice.
1 John 1:7; 2:12; Eph. 4:32; Acts 4:12; 10:43;
13:38; Luke 24:47
Let
it not be misunderstood that God compelled the just one
to die for the unjust. Justice could not inflict the punishment
of the guilty upon the innocent unless the innocent one freely
gave himself as a substitute for the guilty. This our Lord
Jesus did. The Scriptures declare that he laid down his life of
himself; not for fear of divine wrath; not because compelled;
but "for the joy that was set before him [the joy of obedience
to the Father, the joy of redeeming and restoring mankind, and
of bringing many sons to glory] he endured the cross." Heb.
12:2
The
Greek words (apoluo, aphiemi and aphesis)
translated "forgiveness," "forgiven" and "forgive,"
in the New Testament, have the same significance as the corresponding
English words: "To release from punishment, to cease to cherish
resentment towards." But let us mark well that the meaning
is not as some seem to infer--to send away without an equivalent,
as the English word pardon would imply. It is not that
God will let the sinner go unconditionally, but, as Scripturally
declared, God will let go the prisoners out of the pit (out of
death), because he has found a ransom. (Job 33:24)
The man Christ Jesus gave himself a ransom (a corresponding
price) for all. (1 Tim. 2:6) Therefore all that are in their
graves (prisoners in the pit) shall hear his voice and come forth,
in due time--when the Redeemer shall "take to himself his
great power and reign."
Though
the word pardon does not occur in the New Testament, a
Greek word of nearly the same meaning does occur-- karazomai.
It signifies, to forgive freely. We will give some illustrations
of the use of this word, from which it will be seen that it does
not oppose but confirms the statement that our Father does not
pardon, or unconditionally set sinners free from sin's
penalty. The word karazomai occurs in all only twelve times,
as follows: "Forgiving one another...even as Christ
forgave you" (Col. 3:13); "When they had
nothing to pay he frankly forgave them both"; "He
to whom he forgave most." Luke 7:42,43
<PAGE 463>
Here
are four instances in which free forgiveness or pardon
is meant. But notice, it is not Jehovah, but Christ Jesus and
the disciples who do the free forgiving. Our Lord Jesus
was in the very act of paying the ransom price of Simon, Mary
and others, and realizing that Justice would be satisfied by his
act, he, as the purchaser, could freely forgive them. The
very object of his purchasing sinners was, that he might freely
release them from sin's condemnation. Had our Lord Jesus been
unwilling to pardon those whom he had purchased with his
own blood, had he still held against them the wages of Adam's
sin, his sacrifice would have been valueless to them; it
would have left all as they were--"cursed"-- condemned.
On the other hand, had the Father pardoned us, Christ's
death would have been useless, valueless, as it would have accomplished
nothing.
All
will admit that God is just; and if so, he did not inflict too
severe a penalty on man when he deprived him of life. Now if that
penalty was just six thousand years ago, it is still a just penalty,
and will be just for all coming time. If the penalty was too severe
and God pardons the sinner (releases him from further continuance
of the penalty) it proves either that God was at first unjust,
or is so now. If it was right six thousand years ago to deprive
mankind of life because of sin, it would always be wrong to restore
the life unless the pronounced penalty were justly canceled by
the payment of an equivalent price. And this could only be accomplished
by the willing sacrifice of another being of the same kind,
whose right to life was unforfeited, giving himself as a substitute
or ransom.
"Forever
firm God's Justice stands
As mountains their foundations keep."
This
very principle of justice which underlies all of our Father's
doings, is the ground of our strong confidence in all his promises.
The Scriptures declare that he is the same yesterday, today and
forever, that with him is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.
(James 1:17) If he were so
<PAGE 464> changeable as to condemn the race
to death in Adam's day, and six thousand years after were to revoke
his own decision, what assurance could we have that in six thousand
years, more or less, he might not change again, and remand us
to the prison-house of death by revoking the pardon of some or
of all? As a race of sinners we have no foundation whatever for
hope of a future everlasting life except in the fact that by God's
grace Christ died for us and thus satisfied the claims of Justice
against us.
So
then, so far as Jehovah is concerned, we are forgiven through
his own provision--through Christ. And so far as our relationship
to the Lord Jesus, who bought us, is concerned, he freely
pardons all who would come unto the Father by him. And
so far as we are concerned, the results attained by God's plan
are most favorable--to us it amounts to the same as though the
Father had pardoned us unconditionally and without a ransom,
except that a knowledge of the fact enables us to reason
with God, and to see how, though our sins were as scarlet, we
are made whiter than snow, and how God is just while justifying
and releasing us. Thus God has furnished us a sure foundation
for faith and trust.
Does
Not Death Cancel Man's Debt?
When
once it is recognized that "the wages of sin is death"--not
eternal torment--there is with many a tendency toward false reasoning
on this subject, which evidently is abetted by the great Adversary.
This false reasoning proceeds to say, If the wages of sin is death,
every man who dies pays the penalty of his sin: consequently,
the argument is, there would be no necessity for a Redeemer and
a ransom price--each one ransoming himself, redeeming himself
by paying his own penalty. The argument is that Justice has no
further claim upon man after death--having expended its force--having
satisfied its own claims in his destruction; hence it is claimed
that a resurrection of the dead would be
<PAGE 465> next in order, and the proper thing.
This view would make the divine requirement of a ransom-sacrifice
for man's sin an injustice, a double payment of the penalty.
Whether
this reasoning be true or false, it evidently is in violent conflict
with the Scriptures, which declare, to the contrary, our need
of a Savior, and that it was essential that he should give a ransom-price
for us, before we could be released from the penalty of Adam's
sin, and have any right to a future life. We have already referred
to these scriptures, and they are too numerous to be now repeated,
hence we will confine ourselves to exposing the fallacy of the
above claim; endeavoring to show that correct reasoning on the
facts is in absolute accord with the Scriptural testimony, that
the death of our Lord Jesus, as our ransom-price, was essential,
that God might be just and yet be the justifier of him that believeth
in Jesus, accepting him as his Redeemer.
Had
the penalty against sin been merely dying--had the Lord
said to Adam, Because of your sin you must experience the trying
ordeal of dying! then, indeed, the penalty would be met
by Adam and others dying. But such is not the penalty:
the penalty is death, not dying; and death is the
absence of life, destruction. Hence for man to pay his penalty
would mean that he must stay dead, devoid of life forever.
"The soul [being] that sinneth it shall die." As already
pointed out, this destruction of the soul (being) according
to the sentence would have been everlasting, except for the redemption
accomplished by our Lord. It is in view of that redemption that
death is turned into what is figuratively termed a "sleep"--in
view of that redemption there will be an awakening from this sleep
of death in due time, accomplished by the Redeemer, with the full
consent of divine Justice, whose demands he met. Thus, as we have
seen, had it not been for the redemption, Adamic death would have
been what the Second Death is to be, viz., "everlasting
destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory
of his power." When once the proper view of the subject is
obtained,
<PAGE 466> there can be no further doubt in
the mind of any reasonable person that paying the penalty of sin
takes all that a man has, and leaves nothing either to suffer
or enjoy. On the other hand, the more we investigate from this
standpoint, the more clearly we may see the seriousness of the
difficulty in which our race was involved under the divine sentence;
and the more will we appreciate the necessity for the ransom.
And seeing this feature of the subject clearly will show us clearly
also that when our Lord Jesus did become our Redeemer, when he
did give himself as our ransom-price, it meant to him what the
original penalty would have meant to us, viz., that "the
man Christ Jesus" suffered for us death, in the most absolute
sense of the word, "everlasting destruction." Hence
we know Christ no more after the flesh. The flesh,
the human nature, was given as our ransom-price, and the fact
that it was not taken back is our guarantee that all the blessed
provisions of that ransom are available to the entire human family
under the terms of the New Covenant--that all the perfections
and rights which belonged to our dear Redeemer as a man were given
in exchange for Adam's similar rights, which had been forfeited
through disobedience; and that these, therefore, are to be given
to all who will accept them upon the divine terms, 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
"Who
Will Have All Men to Be Saved"
"Who
will have all men to be saved and to come unto the knowledge of
the truth." 1 Tim. 2:4
Another
danger of false reasoning on the subject of the ransom besets
the pathway of some. Many who at one time readily believed the
testimony of men, without Scriptural evidence, to the effect that
the wages of sin is eternal torment, and that all were sure to
get that eternal torment except "the pure in heart,"
the "little flock," the "elect"
<PAGE 467> Church, having once gotten free
from that terrible delusion, are inclined to go to the opposite
extreme, and to accept in some shape or form the doctrine of universal
everlasting salvation.
The
vast majority of those who take hold of this "Universalist"
error deny the ransom in toto; but a few take hold of it
because of faith in the ransom--whose operation, however,
they fail to distinctly understand. This class is very apt to
seize upon the scripture above cited, and to satisfy themselves
with the following process of reasoning: If God wills to have
all men to be saved, that settles it; for the time is coming that
his will shall be done on earth as in heaven. Therefore, say they,
we perceive that the ransom given for all by the
man Christ Jesus is to secure the will of God by securing the
salvation of all. They proceed to entrench themselves in their
error by saying, When we look at it, since God accepted the ransom-sacrifice
of Jesus, he is bound in justice to save all the sinners,
and to give back to them again the eternal life lost in Eden.
We state their position as strongly as possible, to the intent
that it may be answered to their satisfaction, and beyond all
cavil.
The
difficulty with this reasoning is that it is not sufficiently
comprehensive. It takes hold of a few points of Scripture, and
neglects many which should be granted a hearing, and whose testimony
should have weight in reaching a conclusion. Besides, it only
partially quotes, and misinterprets, the Scriptures supposed particularly
to support it.
Our
Heavenly Father declares, "I have no pleasure in the death
of him that dieth, saith the Lord God: wherefore turn yourselves,
and live ye." (Ezek. 18:32) This great favor of an offer
of life through a Ransomer to the condemned world is not a new
thing on our Heavenly Father's part. He changes not; he has always
had this good will towards his creatures. He could have made them
mere machines, intellectually and morally, without liberty to
will or to do contrary to his good pleasure; but he chose not
to make human
<PAGE 468> machines, but to make beings in
his own image, in his own likeness--with liberty of choice, freedom
of will, to choose good or evil. He seeketh not such to worship
him as could not do otherwise, nor such to worship him as would
do so under constraint, but, as he declares, "He seeketh
such to worship him as worship him in spirit and in truth"--voluntarily,
from love and appreciation of his principles of righteousness,
and of himself, which these represent. John 4:23
Nevertheless,
it was while God had this same good will toward men that he permitted
Adam to take his own choice of obedience or disobedience, and
when he chose the disobedience, this same God, who has no pleasure
in the death of him that dieth, pronounced the penalty, and for
six thousand years has enforced its execution. And now that he
has provided a redemption in Christ Jesus, and an opportunity
for every member of the human family to return to harmony with
himself, and to obtain through Christ eternal life, he at the
same time most unquestionably sets up conditions necessary
to the obtaining of this eternal life. The terms of the New Covenant
are a renewed heart and a right spirit toward God, and a full
obedience to him. And the fulfilment of the requirements of this
New Covenant is only possible through the help of the Mediator
of that Covenant, and hence the declaration is that, He that hath
the Son may have the life, and he who does not obtain an interest
in the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on
him. John 3:36
This
is in perfect accord with the statement that God hath no pleasure
in the death of him that dieth, and also in accord with the statement
in the New Testament, that "God wills all men to be saved,
and to come to a knowledge of the truth." Nevertheless, the
Scriptures point out that those who reject the offers of divine
mercy in Christ are thereby doing despite unto divine favor, and
will surely die the Second Death, the wages or penalty of their
choosing sin instead of righteousness.
Notice
further: this text under consideration indicates
<PAGE 469> merely that it is the will of God
that all mankind should be saved from the ignorance and blindness
and degradation which has come upon the race as a result of Adam's
sin. There is no reference here to an everlasting salvation,
but merely to a recovery from the loss sustained through Adam:
and it should not be forgotten that Father Adam did not lose eternal
life, for although he had a perfect life, and was free from all
elements of death, he was, nevertheless, placed in Eden on
probation, to see whether, by obedience to God, he would develop
a character in harmony with God, and so be accounted worthy of
everlasting life. Consequently, when Adam and his race are redeemed
from the curse of death, this redemption or salvation from the
sentence of death does not entitle them to everlasting life, but
merely entitles them to the favorable conditions of Father Adam,
and to a fresh trial as to worthiness for everlasting life.
This
fresh trial secured for Adam and all his race will indeed be more
favorable in some respects than was Adam's original trial, because
of the large increase of knowledge. Man has had an opportunity
to learn the exceeding sinfulness of sin, and will have an opportunity
to learn the blessedness of righteousness, and of God's grace
in Christ. This knowledge will be of service to all who will use
it, during the fresh trial for eternal life in the Millennial
age--when for a thousand years the whole world of mankind shall
be in judgment or trial for eternal life, before the great white
throne. Rev. 20:4
It
is this salvation from the "curse," this recovery
back to favorable opportunities of knowledge, that God
wills; and on account of this he has appointed the Mediator between
God and man, the man Christ Jesus, who gave himself a ransom for
all, to be testified in due time.
This
statement, that it is God's will that "all men should be
saved" from the Adamic sentence, finds a parallel in the
statement by the same Apostle, in Rom. 11:26, "And so
all Israel shall be saved." The thought in this last passage
is not that all Israel shall be saved eternally, but merely
that all Israel shall be saved from their blindness--in
the sense of being
<PAGE 470> recovered from the blindness which
came upon them as a people as a result of their national rejection
of the Messiah. So the thought of the text is also limited and
applies only to the Adamic catastrophe: God wills that all men
should be saved, not only from the just sentence which he pronounced
and which cut short Adam's trial (this he has already accomplished
in the death of his Son) but he also wills that all men shall
be recovered from the ignorance and blindness with which Satan
since the fall has darkened their minds: "The god of this
world has blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the
light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God,
should shine unto them." (2 Cor. 4:4) God wills that
all should be so saved from all the train of evils following Adam's
sin and curse, that they may come to a knowledge of the truth.
Why does he will this? To the intent that having a clear knowledge
of the truth they may make the very best possible use of the new
trial for life secured for them by their Redeemer's ransom-sacrifice.
It is for the carrying out of this, God's will, that the Redeemer
will inaugurate his Millennial Kingdom, which will first bind
Satan (restrain all outside evil influences) and then release
man from his blindness--as it is written, "the eyes of the
blind shall be opened." (Isa. 35:5) For the same reason,
viz., that the new trial shall be most favorable for man, it is
the divine arrangement that its work shall be done gradually and
require a thousand years.
Justice
Not Obligated by the Ransom
The
claim that God is now bound, by his own justice, to restore every
man, is another mistake. On the contrary, we find that God has
assumed no obligation: he has merely sold the race to the
Lord Jesus Christ, who, as we have seen foregoing, "bought
us with his own precious blood." The Heavenly Father has
assumed no responsibilities for the race; he is not dealing with
the race; he does not even propose that
<PAGE 471> he will do the judging of them,
to see whether or not they shall attain to worthiness of eternal
life: on the contrary, we are assured that he has committed the
whole matter to the Son, who bought the race, and hence
is Lord of the race, its master, controller, owner, Judge, Prophet,
Priest, King, and who, in harmony with the Father's plan, is arranging
to identify with himself the elect Church of this Gospel age,
for the great work of the world's enlightenment and the restitution
of the obedient.
The
fact that the Heavenly Father disposed of the entire race to our
Lord Jesus does not imply any lack of interest on his part, but
is so arranged in order to meet the requirements of his law. The
divine laws are inflexible, and make no allowance for any degree
of imperfection or sin; because those laws are arranged for perfect
beings: for our Heavenly Father never created anything imperfect.
Whatever there is of imperfection and sin has been of depravity
subsequent to his creative operation. If he should admit of sin
in mankind, and deal with imperfect man directly, it would mean
(1) that all would quickly be sentenced as imperfect and unworthy,
or (2) that God would pass over and fail to condemn our faults
and condone our imperfections, which would be in violation of
the laws of his empire. Hence it is for man's benefit as well
as for the preservation of his own laws inviolate that the Father
has turned the entire race over to the hands of Jesus, its Redeemer.
Jesus can deal with the race so as to be merciful (not
just) toward the imperfect ones seeking perfection, until he shall
have brought them step by step, up, up, up to perfection
at the close of the Millennium-- when those who shall have obeyed
the great Prophet will be ready to be transferred out of his Mediatorial
hands into the Father's hands; having attained through Christ
the perfection approved of the divine standard; while all others
will be cut off in the Second Death. (Acts 3:23) It is in
view of the fact that even with past sins blotted out our present
imperfections would bring a fresh sentence of death if on
trial before the Father's court of absolute
<PAGE 472> justice, that the Apostle, cautioning
us against trifling with the opportunities afforded us in Christ,
declares, "It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of
the living God." (Heb. 10:31) The divine arrangement
for sinners knows no mercy except in and through Christ and his
work of atonement and restitution, as our Mediator: outside this
provision God's law is stern justice, with no allowances, ready
to consume as a fire everything blemished.
Who
cannot see that if God could deal with the sinners, and, condoning
their sins, accept their best endeavors, though imperfect, there
would have been no necessity for a Redeemer nor for a New Covenant
in his blood? Moreover, every one of the holy angels might consistently,
if they chose, say--God condoned one sin in the human family;
he would be no less merciful toward us; hence if we desire to
do so, we will be at liberty to commit one sin, and may rely upon
divine mercy's forgiveness of it, and that God would not cast
us off from his fellowship. And thus, to all eternity, there might
be danger of sin on the part of those who had not already dabbled
in it. Each one who would thus venture on divine mercy, overriding
divine justice, and divine law, to the excusement of one sin,
and be forgiven, would constitute another argument why every one
of the holy angels should take a trial at sin, and experience
divine forgiveness. Seeing this, it does not surprise us that
God, in the interest of all his holy creatures, as well as for
his own pleasure, decides that he will recognize nothing short
of perfection in any creature, and makes Justice the foundation
of his throne. Psa. 89:14
"No
Other Name--Whereby We Must Be Saved"
From
this standpoint, we see more clearly than ever before that all
divine mercies toward the fallen race are extended in and through
Christ--that the Heavenly Father extends no mercies personally,
or independently of the Son, and that "there is no other
name under heaven given
<PAGE 473> amongst men whereby we must be
saved." (Acts 4:12) We see too that the work of the Savior
is not accomplished merely in purchasing the race, but that after
purchasing them it is necessary that he should be the Great Physician,
to heal them of sin-sickness, and to restore them to life and
to all the perfections of their nature, and thus eventually, through
the processes of restitution during the thousand years of his
reign, to make ready as many as will obey him for presentation
to the Father at the end of the Millennium, in absolute perfection.
Looking,
then, to the Mediator, in whose hands has been placed "all
power" to save, we inquire whether or not he proposes that
those whom he redeemed shall all be eternally saved, or whether
or not he has placed limitations upon the matter. We find that
the Scriptures clearly state that there are limitations: for instance,
when describing the Millennial age as the time when the Adamic
curse shall be set aside, and be no longer in operation upon men,
and when it shall no longer be the proverb, The fathers have eaten
a sour grape and the children's teeth are set on edge; the declaration
is that every man who then dies shall die for his own sin, and
not for the sin of another. (Jer. 31:29,30) We find the declaration
also, that when the Lord is the ruler amongst the nations, "the
evildoer shall be cut off." (Psa. 37:9) We find that
the Apostle Peter, after telling about these "times of restitution,"
the Millennial age, declares that then "it shall come to
pass that whosoever will not hear [obey] that Prophet [the Christ
glorified--head and body] shall be cut off from amongst
his people"--the Second Death. (Acts 3:19-23) Referring
to this same type, another of the apostles declares: "He
that despised Moses' law died without mercy....Of how much sorer
[severer] punishment suppose ye shall he be thought worthy, who
hath trodden under foot the Son of God and hath counted the blood
of the covenant wherewith he was sanctified [made acceptable to
God, justified] an unholy [lit. common, ordinary] thing,
and hath done despite unto the Spirit of [divine]
<PAGE 474> grace?...It is a fearful thing
to fall into the hands of the living God." "For if we
sin wilfully, after that we have received the knowledge of
the truth [the knowledge of God's grace in Christ, to which
God wills that all shall come some time] there remaineth no more
sacrifice for sins [the atonement for Adamic sin will not cover
wilful sins against light and knowledge], but a certain fearful
looking for of judgment [retribution] and fiery indignation which
shall devour the adversaries." Heb. 10:26-31
Here
we are clearly shown that adversaries of the antitypical Moses
(the glorified Christ) shall be devoured or destroyed in a still
more severe manner than were those who opposed Moses. But if those
who opposed Moses were punished with death, how can those who
oppose Christ be more severely dealt with? We answer, that the
death inflicted by Moses merely affected the remnant of Adamic
life remaining, but could not affect the real being or soul which
God purposed to redeem and did redeem by Christ's ransom-sacrifice.
He, however, who after knowledge of his redemption refuses to
obey the antitypical Moses, will be punished more severely in
that he will not only lose a few years of his condemned life,
but lose his soul, his being, his existence forever, and that
without hope of recovery--for such, and all adversaries, will
be devoured as stubble, as thorns and thistles, cumberers of the
ground.
Similarly,
throughout the entire New Testament, the testimony is conclusive
that the law of God against sin will be radically enforced by
the Mediator, and that the only deviations from its absolute rule
will be allowances for the weaknesses and ignorance of the people;
that as these weaknesses and ignorance are overcome during the
Millennial age, by the process of restitution, the requirements
of the law of Justice will become more and more exacting, until
finally the judgment by which our Lord Jesus will in the end of
the Millennial age test all who still remain will be no less severe,
no less crucial, than that of the Heavenly Father: and under this
trial all will fall into the Second Death who either practice
sin or sympathize with it in any form or
<PAGE 475> degree. Perfection having then
been attained by the worthy of the race, through the processes
of restitution, the demands of Justice will be in full conformity
to all the dictates of righteousness, in word, in deed and in
thought.
We
can see thus God's will shall be accomplished on earth as in heaven--remembering
(1) that it is God's will that all should be recovered from the
Adamic curse, and brought to a knowledge of the truth; (2) that
it is the will of God that eternal life should be given to all
the obedient; (3) that it is equally the will of God that all
the disobedient "shall be destroyed from amongst the
people." This feature of God's will shall be done on earth,
also, and none can hinder it.
Some
have assumed that since the ransom was provided to the intent
that all mankind should be recovered out of the Adamic transgression,
therefore an instantaneous restitution to full perfection
of the human nature is to be expected for the world of mankind.
But such an expectation is neither Scriptural nor reasonable.
Nothing in the Scriptures intimates that the restitution work
shall be an instantaneous one, but on the contrary, that it will
be a gradual one. The inclination to look for instantaneous restitution
to absolute perfection of the human nature is the result of false
reasoning. It assumes that the race could not be properly on trial
for eternal life, under equally favorable circumstances with Father
Adam, except by being made perfect, as he was, but we will demonstrate
that this is incorrect-- that they can receive a much more favorable
trial while imperfect. It assumes that the weaknesses and imperfections
common to all mankind through the fall would be insurmountable
barriers, which would hinder the redeemed ones from rendering
obedience to the divine law, but we shall see that God's provision
abundantly meets the necessities of the case. We answer, that
on the contrary, if mankind in general were placed back again,
by an instantaneous restitution, to the perfection of human nature
as enjoyed by Adam, it would mean:
(1)
That as perfect beings they should be required to obey
<PAGE 476> the perfect law of God perfectly;
and that no excuse should be made for them, as none was made for
father Adam. While a few of the race might pass such a trial favorably,
because of present experience with sin, and the lessons learned
thereunder, yet we are to remember that the majority of the race
would be just as deficient in knowledge of sin and its
penalty as was father Adam, because the majority of the race have
died in infancy, and of the remainder a large proportion have
died in comparative ignorance of the distinctions between right
and wrong.
(2)
Such a procedure would, to a large extent at least, make void
the great lesson which God had been teaching the world for six
thousand years, respecting the sinfulness of sin, the undesirability
of sin; for the majority have thus far had comparatively little
knowledge of righteousness. Their course of instruction will only
be complete to mankind by the lessons on the opposite side of
the question, the wisdom and profit of righteousness to be inculcated
during the Millennial age.
(3)
The race, if restored instantly, would be practically a new race,
to which all experiences would be comparatively lost; because
no member of it would be able to thoroughly identify himself,
a perfect being, with perfect faculties and powers, with the being
who now has such imperfect faculties and powers: and with infants,
who had never come to a knowledge even of themselves, there could
not be the slightest identification. So, if this were God's plan,
he might just as well have created millions of human beings at
first, in Eden, and have tried them all, as to adopt a plan which
would place millions in a similar position, by restitution, with
no benefit whatever from present experiences with sin.
(4)
If each individual were thus instantaneously made perfect there
would be no opportunity for the operation of the Church, with
their Lord, as the seed of Abraham, to bless the world, to fulfil
toward it the office of the "Royal Priesthood." (Gal.
3:16,29) The divine provision for a "Royal Priesthood"
implies weakness, imperfection, on the
<PAGE 477> part of some whom the priests are
to help and instruct, and from whom they are to accept sacrifice
and offerings for sin, and to whom they are to extend mercy and
forgiveness of sins. There could be no room for such a priesthood,
if the plan of God were one of instantaneous restitution at the
second advent.
(5)
If the restitution were to be an instantaneous work, why should
a thousand years be appointed, as "times of restitution,"
when one year would be an abundance of time for an instantaneous
restitution to human perfection and for a trial such as Adam passed
through?
(6)
If mankind were instantly brought to absolute perfection, it would
imply that there would be no room for mercy on their account.
There could be no plea for mercy for wilful, deliberate, intentional
transgression. Furthermore, each individual who would transgress,
would individually bring himself under the sentence of death,
as a wilful sinner, and no redemption for these would be possible:
unlike the case of Adam, where "by one man's disobedience"
a whole race was involved, and another perfect man became the
redeemer of that race. In this case each individual would be a
personal transgressor, and come personally under the sentence
of death. To release again from the penalty of even one transgression
would require a life for a life for each individual transgressor:
a million transgressors would require a million sacrificial deaths
of the perfect and holy if their sins would be atoned for; but
God having made a full provision for all in Christ, has
made no provision for any further sacrifice for sins. Nor could
these, after being once restored to perfection by Christ, claim
anything further under the merit of his sacrifice, because they
would have received all the gracious effects intended and secured
by his ransom. There would remain to them no further share in
the sacrifice for sins, if they had once experienced full restitution.
But
now let us consider the reasonableness of the divine plan of a
gradual restitution, progressing proportionately
<PAGE 478> with man's growing at-one-ment
with the Creator and his law--and the benefits of this plan to
mankind.
(1)
All are to be awakened from the Adamic death, as though from a
sleep, by virtue of the ransom given: this will be the first step
in restitution blessings. They will then be under the care, charge,
supervision, of the Royal Priesthood, whose experience with sin,
and with victory over sin, in this Gospel age, will well fit and
prepare them to be patient and helpful toward those over whom
they will reign, as Kings as well as Priests. Rev. 5:10
The
identity of the individual will be preserved, by reason of his
being awakened to exactly the same conditions which he lost in
death; and the various steps of his progression out of sin and
the weaknesses of the present time will be most profitable lessons
to him, as respects sin and as respects the benefits of righteousness.
Thus, step by step, the great Redeemer will lift up toward perfection
the world of mankind, which shall make progress toward perfection
in proportion as it wills so to do; and those who will
not progress, under all the knowledge and opportunities then accorded
them, will, at the age of one hundred years, be cut off from the
land of the living, in the Second Death, without hope of any future
recovery or opportunity; because having had the opportunity in
their hands, and having come to a considerable knowledge of right
and wrong, they spurned the grace of God in Christ, in that they
neglected the instructions of the great Prophet, and refused to
make progress along the highway of holiness. (Isa. 65:20;
35:8) Nevertheless, as the Prophet points out, when dying
at one hundred years of age, they may be considered merely as
children, because all who will to make any progress might have
continued to live at least until the end of the Millennial age.
(2)
In taking these steps upward along the highway of holiness, during
the Millennial age, the world, while still imperfect, will be
to that extent still covered by the merit of the
<PAGE 479> ransom-sacrifice while learning
gradually valuable lessons, and cultivating various fruits of
the Spirit: and in the meantime breaks or blemishes, through indiscretion,
or through attempts to try other methods, would still come in
as part of their Adamic weakness, and to that extent be forgivable
at the hands of the great Priest.
To
claim that either physical perfection or perfection of knowledge
is necessary to a trial for life or death everlasting, is to deny
that the Church is now thus on trial: whereas all must concede
the Scriptural declarations to the contrary. Nor will such perfections
be essential to the world's trial. The world will indeed, as we,
be brought first to a knowledge of God's grace in Christ before
any trial can begin, and this God has promised they shall have.
As a covering for their inherited weaknesses, they will have the
merit of Christ, the Mediator of the New Covenant, while
attaining perfection. Not until the end of Messiah's reign
will the obedient attain to complete perfection.
(3)
The Scriptures represent the Millennium as the Judgment Day for
the world saying--"God hath appointed a day in the which
he will judge the world in righteousness by that man [the Christ,
head and body] whom he hath ordained." (Acts 17:31) If
it were God's plan to coerce all the world or to everlastingly
save every member of Adam's race, why call the coming age a Day
of Judgment? Judgment signifies trial, testing,
and this implies the rejection of the unfit as much as it implies
the acceptance and blessing of those proved worthy. And the judgment
is unto life or death everlasting.
Note
our Lord's parable of the sheep and the goats, applicable not
to the Gospel age, but to the world in the Millennium. It opens
with "When the Son of Man shall come in all his glory"--and
sit upon his glorious throne--a time when, according to his promise,
his bride, the "elect" Church shall share his throne
and glory--"then shall be gathered before him all nations,"
and he shall judge them, separating the sheep to the right hand
of his favor and the
<PAGE 480> goats to the left hand of disfavor.
This separating and judging will occupy the entire Millennial
age, and at its close the "sheep" will all be welcomed
to the Father's favor--everlasting life, and the disobedient "goats,"
with Satan their leader, and all evildoers, shall be punished
with "everlasting destruction," everlasting
cutting off from life--symbolized by a lake of fire and brimstone--the
Second Death.
The
Scriptures represent the judgment of that great Millennial Judgment
Day as before a great white throne of purity and justice, and
portray the decision of the Judge to the effect that those who
have, during that time, cultivated and developed the spirit of
the Heavenly Father, the spirit of love, to perfection, shall
be accounted as the Lord's people and be granted "the Kingdom
prepared for them [the earthly Kingdom] from the foundation of
the world." Others, who during that favorable opportunity,
shall fail to develop to the fullest extent the spirit of love
as their character, in the likeness of the Lord, shall be accounted
the Lord's opponents, and, with Satan, such shall be destroyed.
Compare Rev. 20:9-13.
Ransom--Substitution
The
doctrine of substitution, clearly taught in the Scriptures, and
firmly held for centuries by Christian people, is today giving
way, because under clearer reasoning than in the past it is being
generally discerned that if eternal torment be the wages of sin,
and if our Lord Jesus were our substitute in the payment of our
penalty, this would imply that, as our substitute, he must be
eternally tormented, else we could not be set free from sin. This
reasoning is sound enough: the difficulty is that the premise
is a false one. Eternal torment is not the wages of sin--not the
penalty against man. Nevertheless, in the minds of many, there
remains a general prejudice against the thought of substitution,
even after seeing that the wages of sin is death, and that our
Lord Jesus could be and was man's substitute in death, and suffered
<PAGE 481> exactly what man was to suffer,
in the most positive and absolute sense. Many are prejudiced against
this word, substitution, and inquire, Is the word, "substitution"
used in the Scriptures? If not, why use it?
We
answer that the word "substitution" is an English word
and that no English words are used in the Scriptures, which were
written in Greek and Hebrew. If, however, the translators of our
English version had chosen so to do, they could, with perfect
propriety, have used the word "substitution," because
the Greek unquestionably contains the thought of substitution
and substitute, in many places. The fact that the word does not
occur is merely because the translators did not happen to use
it; and inasmuch as we are seeking to impress the thought of the
original Scriptures upon our minds, therefore it is proper that
this word "substitute" should be impressed, because
whatever is in opposition to the thought contained in the word
substitute is equally in opposition to the thought contained
in the word ransom. As we have already seen, the Scriptures
abound with declarations that we were bought with the precious
blood of Christ; that he released us by giving his own soul unto
death to ransom ours. What is this but substitution?
When
a thing is bought, that which is paid for the purchased
thing is substituted for it. For instance, if we purchased
a loaf of bread for a piece of money, we exchange the money for
the bread, i.e., we substitute the money for the bread. If a farmer
takes a sack of wheat to the mill, and receives therefore an equivalent
value in flour, the wheat has become a substitute for the flour,
and the flour a substitute for the wheat. The one is a corresponding
price, a ransom, a substitute for the other. Thus it was that
in the most absolute sense of the word, our Lord, the man Christ
Jesus, gave himself into death, as a ransom, a substitute, in
death for Father Adam (and the race that had lost life in him)--a
ransom for all, a substitute, a corresponding price. Indeed, the
facts of this case are more exact than almost any other case that
we could suppose, except it would be in an exchange of
<PAGE 482> prisoners during war, when there
is generally a great particularity to exchange private for private,
colonel for colonel, general for general, a corresponding price
being required on each side, man for man. The purchase of the
bread with money is not so perfect an illustration; because the
bread and the silver, although of the same value, are not
of the same kind. In the case of man's redemption God required
that there be absolute correspondence in nature, in perfection,
in everything--a perfect substitute, a thoroughly corresponding
price had to be paid, before the race could be liberated from
the divine sentence.
One
use of the word "substitute," common amongst men, has
served to confuse the thought in this respect. In war time, when
a draft becomes necessary, and a man is drafted for army service,
he is sometimes permitted to find a substitute, who takes his
place, serves in his stead, in the army--the man who provides
the substitute being thereafter free from all obligations to military
service. This particular use of the word "substitute"
in connection with military matters, is harmonious enough in the
sense that the man who is accepted by the government officer as
a substitute for the one released must be up to the physical standards
demanded at the time; secondly, he must be a man who has not himself
been drafted, and who, therefore, is free to offer himself as
a substitute. These features correspond to the case we are considering.
Our Lord proposed to be the substitute in Father Adam's place:
he met all the requirements of the divine government, in that
he was in every way qualified to be the substitute of Adam. He
met also the requirement that he was not already under the sentence
of death when he took our place and offered himself and was accepted.
He had free life to give for Adam's forfeited life.
But
here the correspondency between the two substitutions ends, because,
in the case of the soldier, the draft or sentence was to participate
in the war, and its difficulties, trials, etc., whereas, in the
case of Adam, the draft, the sentence,
<PAGE 483> was to death. The harmony between
these two uses of the word "substitute" ends when the
soldier is accepted and goes into the army-service--this corresponding
to God's acceptance of the offering of our Lord Jesus and his
start to go into death. Because the substituted soldier was accepted
to the army, therefore the name of the drafted man was stricken
off the lists of the drafted, as exempted; and when Christ entered
death for Adam, Adam's name was stricken off the lists, so far
as the divine condemnation was concerned. The parallel extends
no further.
We
doubtless do wisely not to unnecessarily obtrude this word "substitution"
upon those who already are prejudiced, through a misunderstanding
of the subject, and who, because of this prejudice, might be hindered
from giving the subject a proper and thorough and unbiased consideration.
Nevertheless, we should see to it especially in our own hearts
that we are thoroughly loyal to the thought of substitution, which
is the thought of the ransom. Whoever, after a proper understanding
of the subject, does not believe that Christ was our substitute,
is not exercising faith in the ransom, and is therefore lacking
of the faith which justifies before God.
Was
No Other Plan of Salvation Possible?
Many,
who see the subject of the ransom only imperfectly, are inclined
to dispute the matter, and to say that they cannot see why God
could not have saved the world in some other way than by the death
of his Son, as man's substitute or ransom-price. We answer them,
that they are taking an improper view of the matter. The question
they should ask themselves is not whether God could have adopted
some other way, but, did he adopt some other way, or did he adopt
the plan of the ransom?
Unquestionably
the divine wisdom could have adopted another plan of salvation
for mankind, but we may just as positively set it down that no
other plan could have been
<PAGE 484> devised that would have been better,
and so far as our judgment and knowledge go, no other plan could
have been devised, even by the Almighty, that would have been
so good as the plan he has adopted, all the connecting circumstances,
conditions and desired results being taken into consideration.
The fact that God did adopt a different plan in dealing with the
fallen angels proves, we may say, that he could have adopted a
different plan in dealing with fallen man. He could have done
with man as he did with the angels, but,28
as we have seen, this would have been no more favorable, perhaps
less desirable, in the judgment of many.
Even
if we should suppose that a similar number of the human family
would be blessed and ultimately restored by such a dealing on
God's part, we would see other disadvantages in this method, viz.,
(1) how much more terrible would have been the moral degradation
of our race, had it been left in possession of its complete mental
and physical powers, and merely permitted to break down morally!
How much of sin can be thoroughly learned in the short period
of ten, twenty, fifty or a hundred years, and what depths of wickedness
might have been explored and exploited had mankind continued to
live with unimpaired powers for six thousand years, separated
from God, but not condemned to death!
(2)
Such a plan of salvation even if it should reach, eventually,
as large a number as the plan God has adopted, would never have
revealed to us to the same extent the qualities of the divine
character. (a) We see God's Justice in the infliction of the death
penalty, even upon those who "did not sin after the similitude
of Adam's transgression," but who were merely born in sin,
shapen in iniquity, brought forth sinners, by heredity. (Rom.
5:14,12; Psa. 51:5) He has revealed to us thus, a justice
which will by no means clear the guilty, and will recognize nothing
short of absolute perfection. (b) He thus revealed to us a love,
far
<PAGE 485> greater than we could otherwise
have conceived of--which followed us, and which laid hold upon
us "while we were yet sinners," at the cost of the great
ransom-price for our recovery. (c) The adoption of this plan of
sentencing man to death, redeeming him from death, and subsequently,
in due time, restoring him from death by a resurrection, furnishes
an opportunity for the display of divine power far beyond
anything connected with the work of creation, grand and wonderful
as all that was; for unquestionably it requires a greater power
to accomplish the divine promise of a resurrection of the millions
of beings who have lived and who have died--to bring them forth,
identically the same as they were before, even in their own consciousness--
than was required for the creation of the one man. (d) This divine
plan, when fully consummated, will show forth divine wisdom
in a way in which no other plan could have shown it, so far as
we are able to consider other plans. It will show how God knew
the end from the beginning, and how he has been working all things
according to the counsel of his own will, even while men and angels
saw not the purpose and the intention of his operations, and even
while the fallen angels and Satan supposed that they were frustrating
the divine will. It will be demonstrated beyond peradventure that
God is able to cause all things to work together for good, for
the accomplishment of the divine purpose. In the end it will be
demonstrated that the Word that goeth forth out of his mouth does
not return unto him void, but accomplishes that which he pleases,
and prospers in the thing whereunto he sent it. Isa. 55:11
Furthermore,
in adopting with man the plan pursued with the angels who sinned,
or indeed in any other plan that we can conceive of, there could
not have been so grand an opportunity for the election of the
Gospel church to be the body of Christ; for there would not have
been the same grand opportunity for the testing of the loyalty
and obedience of the Logos to the Heavenly Father, and consequently
of his exaltation to be a participator in the divine
<PAGE 486> nature--nor an opportunity for
a little flock of the redeemed to walk in his footsteps. And finally,
we see that these lessons are not merely for humanity, but also
for all the intelligent creatures of God, on every plane of being;
and not only for a few centuries, but for all eternity.
"O
the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God.
How unsearchable are his decisions, and his ways past finding
out. For who hath known the mind of the Lord, or who hath been
his counselor?...For of him and through him and to him are all
things: to whom be glory forever. Amen." Rom. 11:33-36
THE
ATONEMENT BETWEEN GOD & MAN |