THE
NEW CREATION
<PAGE 659>
STUDY
XVI
THE
PRESENT INHERITANCE OF THE
NEW CREATION
A First-Fruits of the Spirit--True versus False Hopes--Our Hope--The
Thief in Paradise--St. Paul's Earnest Desire--"Our Earthly
House" and "Our House from Heaven"--The Transfiguration
Scene--"The First that Should Rise from the Dead"--Present
Joys of the New Creation --"Ask, and Ye Shall Receive,
that Your Joy may be Full"-- Faith, a Fruit of the Spirit
and a Part of the Inheritance of the New Creation.
NOT
ALL of the blessings of the New Creation belong to the future--beyond
the veil. A first-fruits of the Spirit, a foretaste of coming
blessing, is granted New Creatures in the present life. Amongst
these first-fruits may be enumerated the various fruits and graces
of the holy Spirit--faith, hope, joy, peace, love, etc. Some may
claim that these are intangible and unreal; but we answer that
they are as real as the New Creatures are real; and just in the
same proportion as the New Creature grows, these elements of his
experiences, blessing and development increase. Indeed it will
be conceded that these same qualities, as they pertain to earthly
things, are the chiefest blessings of the natural man, the qualities
which give him his largest degree of blessing and privilege. The
New Creatures in Christ, having exchanged earthly hopes and privileges
and loves for the heavenly, find the latter much more precious
than those surrendered. Earthly loves are often fickle, generally
selfish. Earthly hopes are usually ephemeral and illusive. Earthly
joys are, at very best, of brief duration and shallow. Earthly
ambitions are rarely gratified, and even then have a bitter
<PAGE 660> with their sweet. Nevertheless,
we see the whole world striving to attain these ambitions, joys,
hopes, loves, and we are all witnesses that their chiefest pleasure
is in the pursuit-- that with attainment of any of them comes
a measure of disappointment.
Not
so with the New Creation. Their hopes, their joys, their loves,
their ambitions, grow continually, fed by the exceeding great
and precious promises of the divine Word. And they bring no disappointment,
but satisfaction and the peace of God which passeth all understanding
come more and more into their hearts, as the eyes of their faith
open wider and wider to comprehend the lengths and breadths, the
heights and depths of divine wisdom and love, to whose richest
blessing they are heirs and joint-heirs through Jesus Christ the
Lord.
This
land of promise which the New Creatures enter figuratively at
the moment of entire consecration, when they receive the spirit
of adoption, is a land flowing with milk and honey; and though
it has its trials, its conquests, its fightings within and without,
yet not only do its victories mean joy and peace, but, under divine
instruction and guidance, even its defeats are turned into sources
of hope and faith and joy, by him who is able and willing to make
all things work together for their good.
True
Versus False Hopes
The
Apostle calls our attention to the fact that Satan seeks to do
injury to the New Creation by presenting himself to them as an
angel, or messenger of light. When any confess that they have
been begotten of the light, the Truth, the holy Spirit, the Adversary
realizes that they are on the way to full escape from the darkness
and superstition and deception with which he has enveloped humanity.
He then transforms himself, and instead of attempting further
to lead directly into superstitions and darkness, he affects to
be a leader into more light; and although specially alert in this
direction at the present time when clearer light prevails, we
<PAGE 661> are not to forget that he has been
energetic in the same course ever since the Apostle wrote these
words. We find evidences of this in the various creeds of Christendom,
which mark endeavors to get out of darkness, but are replete with
false theories, false hopes of a seductive character. These, while
claiming to be helps to the Christian, claiming to honor God,
claiming to expound his Word, are really snares and entanglements
to hinder from a proper conception of the Truth. God's wonderful
provision of love and mercy, so reasonable in every particular,
has been opposed by the Adversary, not only directly but indirectly,
by setting before the Lord's people something which, to their
imperfect judgments, might at first appear to be grander hopes
and prospects than those set forth by the Truth. The tendency
of error, nevertheless, is further and further away from the Truth,
from the divine plan, from the simplicity of the Gospel, into
confusion of thought, superstition and priestcraft.
Amongst
these delusive hopes is the hope that when men die they are not
dead--that when dead they are more alive than they ever were.
This hope is introduced by the Adversary to antagonize the Scriptural
hope of a resurrection of the dead. One or the other of these
hopes must be false. The Adversary has succeeded remarkably in
foisting upon "Christendom" this false hope, which God's
Word does not support, and which is in direct conflict with the
teachings of the Word respecting the resurrection of the dead;
for if none are dead there could be no "resurrection of the
dead."
Another
of these false hopes is respecting the time of the rewarding of
the Lord's faithful. The Adversary has been equally successful
in deluding the nominal church into the belief that instead of
waiting for a resurrection of the dead, instead of hoping for
a share in the First Resurrection, as the time for receiving reward,
they should hope that the dead (are not dead, but) enter their
reward through the door of death, instead of by the door of resurrection,
as set forth throughout the Scriptures. These false hopes, like
all other false things, are injurious, however pleasing they may
<PAGE 662> momentarily appear. The Word of
God must be our guide, and it instructs us that our hopes respecting
future blessing, joy, etc., all rest in the resurrection of the
dead.
The
false expectations of the past, that the moment of death would
be the moment of heavenly glory (contrary not only to all the
facts and circumstances demonstrable to the human mind, but opposed
to a great mass of Scriptural testimony respecting the resurrection--which
awaits the second coming of our Lord for its fulfilment), have
been very injurious to the Lord's people, in that they have been
led away from his Word and from the true hopes which it inculcates,
and which are in full accord with the soundest of reason and all
the facts as we see them about us.
It
may be suggested that this hope of an instantaneous change to
the heavenly condition at the moment of death, is for the last
members of the New Creation the very hope advocated in this work.
This is true, but there is a reason for our supporting such a
hope in the present time which could not be adduced prior to 1878,
the date from which we claim this enlargement of the hope of the
Lord's people dates. This expansion of the hopes of the New Creation
in this harvest-time is in full accord with the Scriptures. Our
thought is not that all men, nor even the members of the New Creation
all down through the age, were changed in the moment of their
dying; but holding with the Scriptures that they fell asleep in
Jesus, we hold also with the same authority that their hope is
in the awakening which God has promised should come to them in
the new day, the Millennial day. Our hope, built upon the testimony
of the divine Word, is that we are already in the dawning of this
new day; that Immanuel is already present, establishing his Kingdom;
that the first part is the reckoning with his servants, as he
particularly pointed out in his parables illustrative of the work
to be accomplished at his return to take the Kingdom of earth.
The parables declare that he shall call his own servants, unto
whom he has committed the pounds
<PAGE 663> and talents, and that he will reckon
with these before beginning his reckoning with the world.
`Luke 19:15`; `Matt. 25:14`
This
work begins first with the house of God, the Church, the New Creation;
and, as already pointed out,59
1878, A.D., marked the date at which the "dead in Christ"
should rise "first." It is in full harmony with the
Scriptures, therefore, that we believe that the apostles and faithful
saints of the entire age, down to our own day, are already glorified,
already possessed of the glorious spiritual bodies promised them,
but, because "changed" and made like the Master himself,
and hence, as spirit beings, obscured from human sight, beyond
the veil. It is in full accord with this Scripturally built hope
that we teach that each member of the New Creation still in the
flesh will not need now to "sleep," and to wait for
the time and establishment of the Kingdom, because the King and
Kingdom already are here, the life-giving work of the new dispensation
has already commenced, the major portion of the elect New Creation
have already been glorified, and the living members merely receiving
the completion of their polishing and fitting and testing preparatory
to experiencing their share in the First Resurrection--to be "caught
away" or "changed" in a moment, in the twinkling
of an eye--to be, in the moment of death of the flesh, invested
with the new house, the spiritual body.
`2 Cor. 5:1`; `1 Thess. 4:17`
In
considering this subject, however, we must have before our minds
not only these special hopes of this "harvest" time,
but also comprehensively what have been the hopes of all the brethren,
all the members of the New Creation--the hopes set before us in
the Gospel. Let the inspired Word declare these hopes, and then
let not the fact that they are very different from those generally
entertained by the so-called Christian world cause us concern.
True, the "Christian World," in its creeds, sets forth
a belief in the second
<PAGE 664> coming of Christ, and in the resurrection
of the dead, but these are merely verbal expressions by which
it seeks to maintain some relationship to the Scriptures. These
are not the hopes of the Christian World--the nominal church;
rather, they are its dread. They dread the second coming
of Christ rather than hope for it; and they dread the resurrection
of the dead rather than hope for it; because they have been misled
by the great Adversary into a misapprehension of the divine character
and plan, and generally believe that the second coming of Christ
means the end of hope, the end of probation, the end of mercy;
instead of understanding it, as the Scriptures point out, to be
really the beginning of great blessing of all the families of
the earth, which God long ago promised and has for four thousand
years been preparing.
Resurrection,
too, is regarded with dread, because false teaching has led to
the supposition that the spirit, or breath of life, has a consciousness
without a body, and that the body is a sort of prison-house from
which spirits are glad to be liberated--a return to which would
be in the nature of a punishment. Thus have the traditions of
men made void the Word of God, under the influence of the great
Adversary, the god of this world, who now blinds so many. But
let us look at the Scriptural testimony on this subject, and see
how clearly and explicitly it points in every instance to the
second advent of Christ, and to the resurrection as, first, the
hope of the Church, the New Creation, and second, the hope of
the world.
"Gird
up the loins of your mind, be sober, and set your hope perfectly
on the grace that is to be brought unto you at the revelation
of Jesus Christ." `1 Pet. 1:13`--R.V.
"Ourselves
also, which have the first-fruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves
groan within ourselves, waiting for our adoption, to wit, the
redemption [deliverance] of our body [the Church, the body of
Christ]. For we are saved by hope [not actually saved yet, but
merely in an anticipatory sense]."
`Rom. 8:23,24`--R.V.
"Blessed
be the God and Father of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, who
according to his great mercy begat us again unto a hope of life
by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, unto an inheritance
incorruptible,
<PAGE 665> undefiled, and that fadeth not
away, reserved in heaven for you, who by the power of God are
guarded through faith unto a salvation ready to be revealed in
the last time. Wherein [in which hope] ye greatly rejoice, though
now for a little while, if need be, ye have been put to grief
in manifold temptations: that the proving of your faith, being
much more precious than gold which perisheth, though it be proven
by fire, might be found unto praise and glory and honor at the
revelation of Jesus Christ." `1
Pet. 1:3-7`
"There
is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the
righteous Judge, shall give me at that day; and not to me only,
but unto all them also that love his appearing."
`2 Tim. 4:8`
"I
am not ashamed, for I know him whom I have believed, and am persuaded
that he is able to guard that which I have committed unto him
against that day." `2 Tim. 1:12`--R.V.
"We
should live soberly, righteously and godly in this present world,
looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the
great God and our Savior Jesus Christ, who gave himself for us."
`Titus 2:12-14`
"This
I [Paul] confess unto thee [Felix], that after the way which they
call heresy, so worship I the God of our fathers, believing all
things which are written in the Law and the prophets, having hope
toward God, which things also they themselves look for, that there
shall be a resurrection of the dead."
`Acts 24:14,15`
"Ye
are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God. When Christ,
who is our life, shall appear, then shall ye also appear with
him in glory." `Col. 3:3,4`
"For
the hope of the resurrection of the dead I am called in question
this day." `Acts 23:6`
"Jesus
said unto her, I am the resurrection and the life. He that believeth
on me, though he die, yet shall he live; and whosoever [then]
liveth and believeth on me shall never die."
`John 11:25,26`--R.V.
"The
hour cometh in which all that are in the tombs shall hear his
voice, and shall come forth; they that have done good unto the
resurrection of life [the First Resurrection]; and they that have
done ill [whose course in the present life will not pass the divine
approval as worthy of eternal life] unto the resurrection of judgment
[the gradual resurrection under disciplines and rewards during
the Millennial age]."60
`John 5:28,29`--R.V.
"In
my Father's house are many mansions; if it were not so, I would
have told you; I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and
prepare a place for you, I will come again and receive you unto
myself, that where I am there ye may be also."
`John 14:2,3`
"The
Son of Man shall come in the glory of his Father, with his angels;
and then he shall reward every man according to his works."
`Matt. 16:27`
"Behold,
I come quickly, and my reward is with me."
`Rev. 22:12`
"Behold
thy salvation cometh; behold his reward is with him."
`Isa. 62:11`
<PAGE 666>
"Be
patient, therefore, brethren, unto the presence [parousia] of
the Lord;...stablish your hearts, for the coming of the Lord draweth
nigh." `James 5:7,8`
"Say
unto them that are of a fearful heart, Be strong, fear not; behold
your God will come with vengeance, with the recompense of God;
he will come and save you. Then the eyes of the blind shall be
opened and the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped,...for in the
wilderness waters shall break out and streams in the desert."
`Isa. 35:4-6`
"At
that time thy people shall be delivered, every one that shall
be found written in the book [of life], and many of them that
sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some to lasting life
[the First Resurrection] and some to shame and lasting contempt
[dishonor--from which, however, they may be recovered by the restitution
processes then put into operation]; and they that be wise [the
little flock, the wise virgins] shall shine as the brightness
of the firmament [as the sun--`Matt. 13:43`], and they that turn
many to righteousness as the stars [luminaries] forever and ever...But
go thy way till the end be [till the "harvest" or end
of the age be come]: for thou shalt rest, and stand in thy lot
at the end of the days." `Dan.
12:1-3,13`. Vol. III, p. 83
"A
book of remembrance was written before him [Jehovah] for them
that feared the Lord; and that thought upon his name; and they
shall be mine, saith the Lord of hosts, in that day when I make
up my jewels." `Mal. 3:16,17`
Distorted
theories and fanciful imaginations come chiefly from human philosophers,
who had not the guidance of the lamp of the divine Word, and who
have so perverted the judgments of many of the Lord's dear saints
that the foregoing and many other explicit declarations respecting
the true hopes of the Lord's people are negatived and robbed of
their force and beauty and power by other more or less figurative
scriptures, which are so wrested out of their true position and
meaning as to make them antagonistic to these plain statements.
We must examine these in order to have the way of faith and hope
and obedience made clear and plain to the eyes of our understanding.
We will then proceed to note various other blessings additional
to our hopes, which belong to us in the present life, as a part
of the first-fruits of our inheritance.
The
Thief in Paradise
"He
said to Jesus, Remember me when thou comest into thy Kingdom.
And he [Jesus] said to him [the penitent thief], Indeed I say
to thee this day, thou shalt be with me in Paradise."
`Luke 23:42,43`
<PAGE 667>
Those
who consider salvation to be an escape from everlasting torture
to a paradise of pleasure, and dependent only on accidental circumstances
of favor, think they see exemplified in this narrative the doctrine
of election--that our Lord Jesus, pleased by the consoling
words of the one thief, elected him to heaven, and equally elected
that the other should suffer to all eternity, unpitied and unrelieved.
Truly, if God has made salvation such a lottery, such a chance
thing, those who believe it to be such should have little to say
against Church lotteries, and less against worldly ones.
But
this is not the case. This scripture has been much misunderstood.
To get its true import, let us take in the surroundings and connections.
The
Lord had just been condemned, and was now being executed on the
charge of treason against Caesar's government, in saying that
he was a king; though he had told them that his Kingdom was "not
of this world." There, upon the cross above his head, written
in three languages, was the crime charged against him: "THIS
IS THE KING OF THE JEWS." Those about knew of his claims
and derided him, except one of the thieves crucified alongside.
Doubtless he had heard of Jesus and his wonderful character and
works, and said in his heart: This is truly a strange and wonderful
man. Who can know that there is no foundation to his claims? He
certainly lives close to God. I will speak to him in sympathy:
it can do no harm. Then he rebuked his companion, mentioning the
Lord's innocence; and then the conversation above noted took place.
We
cannot suppose that this thief had correct or definite ideas of
Jesus--nothing more than a mere feeling that, as he was about
to die, any straw of hope was better than nothing. To give him
credit for more would be to place him in faith ahead of
all the Lord's apostles and followers, who at this time had fled
dismayed, and who, three days after, said: "We [had]
trusted that it had been he which should have redeemed Israel."
`Luke 24:21`
<PAGE 668>
We
can have no doubt as to the import of his petition. He meant that
whenever Jesus reached his Kingdom power, he desired to be favored,
cared for. Now note our Lord's answer. He does not say that he
has no kingdom; but, on the contrary, he indicates by his response
that the thief's request was a proper one. The word translated
"verily" or "indeed" is the Greek word "amen,"
and signifies "So be it," or "Your request
is granted." "I say to thee this day [this dark day,
when it seems as though I am an impostor, and I am dying
as a felon], thou shalt be with me in Paradise." The substance
of this promise is that, when the Lord has established his Kingdom
it will be a Paradise, and the thief will be remembered and be
in it. Notice that we have changed the comma from before to after
the word "today."
This
makes our Lord's words perfectly clear and reasonable. He might
have told the thief more if he had chosen. He might have told
him that the reason he would be privileged to be in Paradise was
because his ransom was then and there being paid. He might
have told him further that he was dying for and ransoming the
other thief also, as well as the whole gaping and deriding
multitude before him, the millions then entombed, and the millions
yet unborn. We know this, because we know that "Jesus Christ,
by the grace of God, tasted death for every man," "gave
himself a ransom for all," that all in due time might have
opportunity to return to the Edenic condition, forfeited by the
first man's sin, and redeemed for men by Christ's righteous sacrifice.
`Heb. 2:9`; `1 Tim. 2:5,6`;
`Acts 3:19`
As
already shown, the garden of Eden was but an illustration of what
the earth will be when fully released from the curse--perfected
and beautified. The word "paradise" is of Arabic origin,
and signifies a garden. The Septuagint renders
`Gen. 2:8` thus: "God planted a paradise in
Eden." When Christ shall have established his Kingdom, and
bound evil, etc., this earth will gradually become a paradise,
and the two thieves and all others that are in their graves shall
come into it, and then by becoming obedient to its laws they may
<PAGE 669> live in it and enjoy it forever.
We doubt not, however, that the kind words spoken in that dark
hour to the suffering Savior will no more lose a special and suitable
reward than the gift of a cup of water, or other small kindnesses,
done to those whom this King is "not ashamed to call his
brethren." `Matt. 10:42`
In
the Scriptures Paradise is used to describe man's primeval state
of bliss, in harmony with his Creator, before the curse and blight
of sin entered into the world. This Paradise lost to mankind is
promised to be restored; and in a more or less vague manner the
whole creation has been and is waiting and hoping for the Golden
Age thus to be inaugurated. The Scriptures present to us the thought
that the Paradise state has been redeemed for man by our Lord
Jesus' death, and that as a consequence a part of his glorious
restitution work will be to restore Paradise--"that which
was lost"--the purchased possession.
`Matt. 18:11`; `Eph. 1:14`;
`Rev. 2:7`
But
have we a right to alter the position of the comma? Certainly:
the punctuation of the Bible is not inspired. The writers of the
Bible used no punctuation. It was invented about four hundred
years ago. It is merely a modern convenience, and should be so
used as to bring out sense, in harmony with all other scriptures.
Instances
of a similar use of the word "today" in modern literature
are quite frequent; and in the Scriptures we call attention to
the following:
"Therefore
I command thee this thing today."
`Deut. 15:15`
"I
have set before thee this day life and good, and death and evil."
`Deut. 30:15`
"I
command thee this day to love the Lord thy God."
`Deut. 30:16`
"I
would to God that not only thou but also all that hear me this
day were both almost and altogether such as I am, save these bonds."
`Acts 26:29`
Not
only does the sense of this passage require the punctuation suggested,
but its harmony with all the remaining scriptures similarly demands
it, and there can be no reasonable or valid objection to it offered.
To suppose that our Lord went to Paradise immediately, would be
to suppose
<PAGE 670> an impossibility, for Paradise
has not yet been re-established. Furthermore, it is distinctly
stated that our Lord's body was buried in Joseph's tomb, and that
his soul, or being, went to sheol, hades, oblivion, and that he
was dead, and not alive in Paradise or elsewhere, in the
interim. The Scriptures distinctly assure us, not that our Lord
came down from heaven, or from Paradise, at his resurrection;
but that he "rose from the dead, on the third day, according
to the Scriptures." (`1 Cor. 15:4`)
Our Lord's own words, after his resurrection, were, "Thus
it is written, and thus it behooved Christ to suffer, and to rise
from the dead the third day." (`Luke
24:46`) Again he said to Mary, "I am not yet ascended
to my Father: but go to my brethren, and say unto them, I ascend
unto my Father and your Father; unto my God and your God."
`John 20:17`
St.
Paul's Earnest Desire
"For
me to live is [to live] for Christ, and to die, gain. But if to
live in the flesh, this is to me a fruit of labor; and what I
should choose I do not exactly know. I am indeed hard pressed
by the two things [I have an earnest desire for the returning
and being with Christ, since it is very much to be preferred];
but to remain in the flesh is more requisite on your account."
`Phil. 1:21-24`, Diaglott translation
It
will be observed that the chief difference between the above and
the common English version of this passage is the substitution
of the word "return" for the word "depart."
In justification of the use of the word "return" the
translator in a footnote says:
"To analusai, the loosing again or the returning,
being what Paul earnestly desired, could not be death or
dissolution, as implied by the word depart in the
common version; because it seemed a matter of indifference to
him which of the two-- life or death--he should
choose; but he longed for the analusai, which was a third
thing, and very much to be preferred to either of the other two
things alluded to. The word analusai occurs in
`Luke 12:36`, and is there rendered return--'Be
you like men waiting for their master, when he will return,'
<PAGE 671> etc. Jesus had taught his disciples
that he would come again, or return (`John
14:3,18`); thus, also, the angels said to them at his ascension.
(`Acts 1:11`) Paul believed this
doctrine and taught it to others, and was looking for and waiting
for the Savior's (analusai) return from heaven (`Phil.
3:20`; `1 Thess. 1:10; 4:16,17`) when he would 'ever
be with the Lord.'"
An
examination of the Greek word analusai shows that it is
used in Greek literature by Plato in both ways--as signifying
sometimes depart, and sometimes return; but the
word occurs only twice in the New Testament, here and in
`Luke 12:36`. In the latter instance, as stated above,
it is rendered "return," and manifestly could not be
otherwise rendered and preserve the sense. In the case we are
discussing (`Phil. 1:23`), we hold
that it should be rendered return, for the very simple
reason that, even when used to signify depart, it must
carry with it the thought of depart again--to depart to
a place where one had previously been. The Greek prefix ana
in ana-lusai signifies again as our prefix re
in re-turn signifies again. Hence, if rendered depart,
we would be obliged to add the thought re-depart or depart
again. And this would spoil the matter as related to St.
Paul; for he had never been with Christ in glory, and, hence,
could not "depart again" to be there with Christ.
But when we translate analusai "re-turning,"
and apply it to our Lord, every difficulty seems to be removed.
Let
us note the circumstances which gave rise to the expression. The
Apostle had been for some time a prisoner at Rome, and while at
times well treated by some of the Emperors, he was constantly
liable to be put to death on some caprice. He wrote this Epistle
in acknowledgment of a substantial gift from the Church at Philippi,
and took the opportunity to tell them fully of his own condition,
the progress of the Lord's work, etc., and to encourage them to
steadfastness to the end.
Since
they would like to know his prospects for release, he tells them
that enemies (seeing his liberty for two years--
<PAGE 672> `Acts 28:30`)
were explaining Christianity, hoping thereby to add affliction
and perhaps death to his bonds. (`Phil.
1:16-19`) But he realized the prayers of the Church on
his behalf and expected that his trial before Nero would result
in his deliverance--either by acquittal or by death. Then
he tells them that, as to his own preferences, it would
be difficult for him to choose between life (with its sufferings)
and death (with its rest from toil); but while he had no choice
as between these two things possible, he had a longing, an intense
desire, for a thing he well knew was impossible, a thing which
he knew, and had taught the Church, was a long way off (`2
Thess. 2:1-8`)--the returning of Christ and being
with him. Then, leaving the impossible and returning to the possibilities,
he assures them that he has a conviction that God has a work for
him yet to do for the Church, and that he would be released. And
although the Scriptures give no account of it, tradition declares
that he was acquitted by Nero and had some five years of liberty
and service before being rearrested and executed.
It
is worthy of note here that other words are repeatedly used in
the writings of both Paul and Luke when depart is manifestly
meant. And it should be remembered that Luke was the Apostle's
amanuensis, who traveled much with him and was accustomed to use
words in the same sense.
But
if any yet contend for the word "depart," rather than
"return," we submit the following:
No
doubt Paul would have desired, especially in view of his knowledge
that the Lord's second coming could not occur soon, that he might
depart to heaven or anywhere else in order to be with the Lord
at once. But he knew that such a desire could not be granted in
harmony with the divine plan; and hence, although it would have
been his earnest desire, it did not enter into consideration as
one of the possible things. He was still left in a strait of indecision
as to his own preference of the two possible things--to live and
serve the Church in suffering, or to die and rest from his labors--
waiting "for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing
<PAGE 673> of the great God [our Lord and
Savior Jesus Christ]," "who shall change our vile body
that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body."
`Titus 2:13`; `Phil. 3:21`
"Our Earthly House" and "Our
House from
Heaven"
-`2 Cor. 5:1-10`--
The
Apostle is writing to the New Creation respecting their condition--not
including the natural man. He recognizes the new will as the New
Creature, and the old body as its "tabernacle," or tent,
which is much better than none, though quite unsatisfactory. The
New Creature cannot feel perfectly at home in it, but earnestly
longs for the perfect body, to be his in the resurrection--his
permanent home, or share in the "mansion" our Lord promised
to prepare for the New Creation. (`John
14:2`) "We know that if our earthly house of this
temporary dwelling-place were dissolved, we have a permanent structure
of God, a house not made with hands [not produced by human powers],
everlasting, heavenly."
It
is true that in this present body, or temporary house of pilgrimage,
we groan--oppressed not only by the evil influence of the world
and the devil on every hand, but also and especially by the weaknesses
of our own flesh. For when we would do good, evil is present with
us, so that the good which we would do we are often hindered from
doing, while the evil which we do not approve often obtrudes itself
on us and requires to be continually resisted and overcome. As
the Apostle elsewhere declares, we "which have the first-fruits
of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting
for the adoption, to wit, the deliverance of our body"--the
Church, into the glorious likeness of our Lord.
But
our groaning is not with a desire to be unclothed. We do not wish
to be without a body, for that at very best all down through the
Gospel age would mean to be "asleep," waiting for the
resurrection morning to be "clothed upon
<PAGE 674> with our house from heaven,"
our new, perfect and permanent body, our "home." What
we prefer is not to have the little spark of present life extinguished,
but to have it swallowed up, absorbed into the perfect conditions
of the perfect life to which we are begotten. We long for resurrection
birth, with its perfect body.
"Now
he that hath wrought us for the selfsame thing is God, who also
hath given us the earnest of the Spirit." This perfect condition,
which we are to obtain in the resurrection, will be the grand
consummation of our salvation, which God has promised; and the
new mind, the new will begotten by the Word of truth, is reckoned
as the beginning of that New Creature, which will be perfected
in the divine nature when the first resurrection shall have completed
it. The holy Spirit granted us in the present time is a prepayment,
so to speak--an "earnest" or assurance of the grand
and gracious results for which we are hoping and striving, groaning
and praying.
"Therefore
we are always confident, knowing that, whilst we are at home in
the body [so long as we feel entirely contented with present conditions--ourselves
and our surroundings], we are absent from the Lord." If we
were living near to him, "walking with God," we would
not feel perfectly satisfied with present attainments, conditions,
etc.; but would feel like pilgrims and strangers, seeking a better
rest, a better home, "which God hath in reservation for them
that love him." But this, as the Apostle explains, is true
only of those who walk by faith and not by sight.
But
we are confident [full of faith toward God, we rejoice to walk
by faith], and are well pleased rather to be from home [homeless,
pilgrims and strangers on the earth] and to be at home with the
Lord" in the spirit of our fellowship.
For
this cause we are striving, that whether it be by and by when
we reach our home, or whether it be in the present time when we
are actually away from home, pilgrims and strangers, we strive
that we may be acceptable with the Lord; that we may have his
favor and blessing and realize
<PAGE 675> his fellowship and presence and
know that we shall ultimately be accepted by him.
"For
we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, that every
one may receive the things done in the body, according to that
he hath done, whether it be good or bad." All through this
pilgrimage we are standing at the bar of our Lord's judgment:
he is testing us, proving us, to see whether or not we love him
and the things which make for righteousness and peace; and if
so, how much we are willing to sacrifice for righteousness' sake.
He marks the degree of our love by the measure of our self-denials
and self-sacrifices for his sake, the Truth's sake.
But
thus to speak of our bodies as houses can be true only of the
"saints," the "New Creatures" in Christ. Others
of mankind have not duality of nature, and could not properly
apply to themselves such expressions as that of
`Romans 8:10,11`, "If Christ be in you the body
is [reckoned] dead because of sin; but the spirit alive
because of [the imputed] righteousness" of Christ. The new
nature of the saints, begotten by the Word of truth, is really
only the new will, which, however, is thenceforth addressed
as the real person, and it alone is recognized of God, who knows
us not after the flesh but after the spirit of our new minds--Christ-minds.
Notice also `Romans 6:3,4`. These
"New Creatures" have an old man, or outward man, that
is perishing, and a new man, inward man, or hidden man of the
heart, who is being renewed day by day.
`2 Cor. 4:16`; `Col. 3:9,10`;
`Eph. 4:23,24`;
`1 Pet. 3:4`
The
Transfiguration Scene
Little
did the disciples imagine that our Lord's statement that some
of them should not taste of death until they had seen the Son
of Man coming in his Kingdom, would be fulfilled within six days
to Peter, James and John in the Mount of Transfiguration. Yet
so it was; and evidently it produced a great and designed effect
upon the witnesses, one of whom, writing respecting it, says (`2
Pet. 1:16-18`),
<PAGE 676> "We have not followed cunningly
devised fables, when we made known unto you the power and coming
of our Lord Jesus Christ, but were eyewitnesses of his majesty.
For he received from God the Father honor and glory, when there
came such a voice to him from the excellent glory, This is my
beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. And this voice which came
from heaven we heard, when we were with him in the holy mount."
The
transfiguration scene was not all that it appeared. It was a "vision,"
as our Lord explained to the disciples when they were coming down
from the mount. In this vision, as in all visions, the unreal
appears real. Just so it was in the vision of John, on the Isle
of Patmos, described in the book of Revelation. He saw, he heard,
he talked; yet the things thus shown him in the vision were not
realities--not beasts with many heads and many horns, and angels
and vials and thrones, nor real dragons, etc., merely a vision.
And a vision was in every sense of the word just as good, and
really better suited to the purpose than realities would have
been.
"The
First that Should Rise from the Dead"
Moses
and Elias were not present on the mountain, personally, but were
merely represented to the disciples in the vision. We know this
not only from our Lord's statement, that it was a "vision,"
but also from his statement that no man had ascended up to heaven.
(`John 3:13`;
`Acts 2:34`) We know also that Moses and Elijah
could not have been there, since they were not resurrected from
the dead; because our Lord Jesus himself was the "First-fruits
of them that slept"--"The first-born from the dead,
that in all things he might have the pre-eminence."
`1 Cor. 15:20`; `Col. 1:18`
Furthermore
the Apostle to the Hebrews distinctly mentions Moses and the prophets
(which would include Elijah) and their faithfulness in the past
and their acceptance with God; but he points out that they had
not yet received their reward, and that they would not receive
it until after we (the Gospel Church) shall have received our
reward as
<PAGE 677> joint-heirs with Christ in his
Kingdom. "These all, having obtained a good report through
faith, received not the [blessings of the] promise; God having
provided some better thing for us, that they without us should
not be made perfect." `Heb. 11:39,40`
Since,
then, the appearance of Moses and Elias with our Lord was an appearance
merely, we properly inquire, What was the significance or meaning
of this vision? We reply, It was a tableau, illustrative of the
glorious Kingdom of Christ, as our Lord had predicted, and as
Peter understood it and expressed it. In this tableau, the three
disciples formed no part. They were merely witnesses. Christ was
the central figure; his features and garments, shining with miraculous
lustre, represented in figure the glories which belong to the
spirit nature, which our Lord received at his resurrection, "the
express image of the Father's person." It is this same spirit
glory that is represented in the visions of Revelation, where
our Lord is represented with eyes as a flame of fire, and his
feet bright as burning brass, etc. (`Rev.
1:14,15; 2:18`) At his second advent our Lord will no longer
be flesh, because, as he testified, "flesh and blood cannot
inherit the Kingdom of God." He is now, and ever will be,
a glorious spirit being of the highest order--the divine nature:
and the transfiguration was intended to convey to the minds of
his disciples a faint conception of the glory which excelleth.
Moses
represented the faithful overcomers who preceded our Lord, described
by the Apostle (`Heb. 11:39,40`),
who cannot be made perfect until the Kingdom shall have
been established. Elijah represented the overcomers of the Gospel
age. See Vol. II, Chap. viii.
Present
Joys of the New Creation
"These
things have I spoken unto you, that my joy might remain in you,
and that your joy might be full."
`John 15:11`
All
who from a standpoint outside the "house of sons"--
those who have not consecrated themselves, and have not
<PAGE 678> therefore become members of the
New Creation, the Royal Priesthood--seeing that the members of
the body of Christ have, like their Lord, made a full consecration
of self and every earthly interest to the Lord and his cause,
are apt to consider that in this sacrifice every joy is lost.
But every member of the New Creation knows the contrary, and can
testify that this is a great mistake--that though some earthly
joys, once held very dear, are sacrificed one by one, in their
places come heavenly joys that far more than compensate for the
loss. As our Lord again said, "Ye shall be sorrowful, but
your sorrow shall be turned into joy." (`John
16:20`) The New Creation must all taste of the bitter cup
which the Lord drained to the dregs; they must all be touched
with sympathy for the infirmities of the flesh; they must all
realize distinctly the exceeding sinfulness and bitterness of
sin; they must all be tested concerning their loyalty to the heavenly
Father, and their willingness to sacrifice every earthly thing
as the interest of his cause and faithfulness to the right may
demand. But blessings come through all such tears and sorrows
and disappointments-- the blessings of a realization of divine
approval, a joy superior to that of the natural man, the joys
of the Lord, fellowship and communion with the Father.
There
could be no such joys were it not for our blessed hopes. If our
joys were dependent upon circumstances of this life merely, we
should be without joy; and, as the Apostle has declared, be "of
all men most miserable." (`1 Cor. 15:19`)
It is when hope has laid firm hold upon the exceeding great and
precious promises of God's Word, that joys spring up as flowers
in a desert, vivified by our tears-- such flowers of joy and blessing
as the poor world in its wilderness condition could not produce
or imagine. And as our joys depend upon our hopes they depend
also upon our activities. It is not sufficient that a promise
has been left us, and that our hope has grasped the promise. By
divine arrangement the joy which springs into being through the
implanted hopes and prospects must be nourished by prayer,
<PAGE 679> and by activity in the Lord's service.
Our Lord indicates the close relationship between prayer and the
perpetuation of our joys, saying:
"Ask and Ye Shall Receive, that Your
Joy may be Full"
--`John 16:24`--
"In
thy presence is fulness of joy; at thy right hand are pleasures
forevermore," declares the prophet. (`Psa.
16:11`) It is because prayer brings the soul into the presence
of the Lord that it prepares the way for divine blessing and superlative
joys. Evidently the opening of the way for the Lord's people to
approach the throne of grace is not with the object of their changing
the divine will or plans. Such a thought is incompatible with
every reasonable consideration of the subject; hence, the Lord
instructs us that proper praying is not along the line of making
requests that our wills be done, in opposition to the divine will,
but along the line of full submission to the latter. The Apostle
declares of some, "Ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask
amiss"--in harmony with your own desires, and not in harmony
with the divine arrangement and plan. `James
4:3`
Along
the same line our Lord admonished: "Use not vain repetitions,
as the Gentiles do, for they think they shall be heard for their
much speaking; but your heavenly Father knoweth what things
ye have need of before ye ask him. Be not careful [worried],
therefore, respecting what ye shall eat or what ye shall drink,
and wherewithal ye shall be clothed, for after these things do
the Gentiles seek; but seek ye primarily the Kingdom of God and
righteousness in harmony with it, and all these needful earthly
things shall be added unto you--by your Father in heaven, according
to his wisdom." (`Matt. 6:25-34`)
Again, our Lord says, "If ye abide in me, and my words abide
in you, ye shall ask what ye will and it shall be done unto you."
(`John 15:7`) The following conditions
are all-important:
(1)
The one offering the prayer must be in Christ--must
<PAGE 680> have come into vital relationship
with him by the acceptance of the merit of his atonement sacrifice,
and by a consecration to his will and service; and, more than
this, he must continue to abide thus in Christ as a member of
his body, as a member of the New Creation, in order to have the
privileges of prayer here referred to.
(2)
He must also let the Lord's Word abide in him; he must partake
of the Word of truth and grace if he would have the wisdom necessary
to ask, in harmony with the Lord's will, things which he would
be pleased to grant-- otherwise, even though in Christ a New Creature,
his prayers might frequently go unanswered, because "amiss."
It is only those who profess both of these qualifications who
may expect to approach the throne of heavenly grace with full
confidence, full assurance of faith that their petitions will
be answered--in God's due time. Only such can realize fullness
of joy.
As
the Scriptures explain, prayer is the attempt to gain access to
the presence of God, and to hold communion with him. Who then
may approach the throne of the heavenly grace to "obtain
mercy and find grace to help in every time of need?" (`Heb.
4:16`) We answer, with the Apostle, that the world in general
does not have this access, does not have this privilege of prayer.
True, indeed, millions of heathen people are offering prayers
to Deity with varying conceptions of who and what he is; but their
prayers are not acceptable to God. "He that cometh unto God
must believe that he is [must recognize him as the self-existing
One], and that he is the rewarder of those who diligently seek
him [seek to know him, to obey him, to serve him]." (`Heb.
11:6`) Cornelius was one of this latter kind, who recognized
the true God and reverenced him, and sought to know and do his
will; and, as soon as the divine plan had reached the necessary
stage of development to permit God's favor to be extended to the
Gentiles, his prayers and his alms received a response. He was
not, however, permitted to have communion with God in the full,
proper sense; but was instructed to
<PAGE 681> send for Peter, who would tell
him "words" by which he might be brought from
his condition of alienation and separation into a condition of
harmony and sonship, in which he would have the privilege of a
son--the privilege of access to the Father at the throne of heavenly
grace.
The
generally loose ideas which prevail in respect to this subject,
under which it is supposed that any person, anywhere, and at any
time and under any conditions, may approach the throne of grace
with acceptance, are erroneous. As it was necessary, before Cornelius
could use this privilege of prayer-communion, that he should hear
and believe and accept the words of Peter--explaining to
him the redemption through the blood of Christ and the reconciliation
thus effected and the privilege thus granted of being brought
into God's family--so a like knowledge is equally necessary for
every person.
The
Apostle Paul expresses the same thought, declaring that Christ
opened up for us "a new and living way," or "a
new way of life," through the veil--that is to say, his flesh;
and that we may have boldness as brethren to enter into
the holiest by the blood of Jesus. Such "brethren,"
related to the great High Priest over the house of God, are exhorted
to "draw near with a true heart, in full assurance of faith,"
recognizing that their sins and iniquities have been fully covered,
and that they themselves have been fully accepted of the Father.
(`Heb. 10:17-22`) Again, the same
Apostle declares that it is we who have an High Priest
who can be touched with the feeling of our infirmities, who may
"therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we
may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need."
`Heb. 4:15,16`
But
while only the consecrated class, the under-priesthood, the New
Creation, are thus encouraged to approach the throne with courage
and confidence, very evidently all who even but tentatively belong
to the "household of faith" may to some extent enjoy
the privileges of thanksgiving and praise, and may rejoice in
God, in a realization of the
<PAGE 682> provision he has made for the complete
forgiveness of sins through the merit of the atonement. Nevertheless,
it is not their privilege to come with boldness, or in any other
manner, into the Holy of Holies. Only the consecrated, the New
Creation, the members of the body of the Priest, are privileged
to enter into the presence of God in prayer in this special sense;
and they only, therefore, may have the fulness of joy which the
Master promised. Hence, while we may not even suggest to unbelievers
the propriety of prayer, but should first instruct them with the
"words," as Peter instructed Cornelius, that they may
know him upon whom they must believe before they could have any
standing before God, we may nevertheless, encourage all who have
believed on the Lord Jesus to give thanks and to offer praise
to the Father through Jesus Christ. Such should, however, be given
freely to understand that their tentative justification through
faith is not the accomplishment of the divine will in them, but
merely the beginning of the proper course of approach to God--the
first step in that approach--and that the second step of full
consecration to the divine will must be taken by those who would
enjoy the proper privileges of prayer, of communion with God and
of the fulness of joy associated therewith.
It
should be pointed out to them that a failure to take the second
step would imply a disposition to receive the grace of God [justification]
in vain. (`2 Cor. 6:1`) After enjoying
prayer-privileges of this kind for a season, and refusing to go
on to make a full consecration of themselves to the Lord, these
should very properly feel a diffidence in respect to prayer--should
feel it to be improper to be continually receiving divine favors
and asking for more, while withholding from the Lord the consecration
of their hearts--their reasonable service. As the consecrated
class is in the Scriptures designated the spouse of Christ, so
the general household of faith would properly represent those
to whom the privileges of espousal are thrown open. The New Creation,
as the espoused Bride of Christ, having surrendered heart
<PAGE 683> and tongue and every power and
energy to its Lord and his service, may reasonably and gratefully
accept from him the blessings, privileges, protection, supervision
and gifts which he has been pleased to promise to it as his espoused
Bride.
As
a woman who had rejected a suitor and had refused to give him
her hand and heart could not reasonably look to him afterward
for the care and protection and blessing and privileges and joys
which he had already freely tendered her, so those who continually
reject divine favor, to the extent of refusing to make a consecration
of their little all to the Lord, could not with any propriety
look to him, or ask of him the blessings which he has promised
to those who love him and who manifest their love by their devotion,
their consecration. A proper recognition should be made of this
distinction between those who merely believe in the forgiveness
of sins at the hands of the Lord and those who have appreciated
that favor and gone on to consecration and full relationship with
the Lord. The fact that these divinely drawn lines between the
different classes of believers are not more clearly recognized
is a disadvantage to both. The distinction between the believers
and unbelievers should be sharply defined. All of the former should
be recognized as brethren, "of the household of faith,"
but not so the latter. Again, the distinction between those believers
who have consecrated themselves and those who have not should
be clearly traced, and the former should be recognized as the
Church, the New Creation, the Royal Priesthood, to whom all the
exceeding great and precious promises belong.
If
these distinctions were clearly recognized it would be of advantage
(1) to the world, leading to more thorough investigation and a
more tangible faith; (2) of advantage also to the unconsecrated
believers, leading them to realize that unless they go on to a
full consecration they are not joint-heirs with the saints in
any sense of the word, either in the future glories or the present
privileges and joys. (3) To realize this would, we believe, have
also a stimulating effect upon the unconsecrated, leading them
more frequently to a
<PAGE 684> positive decision by dispelling
their unfounded imaginings that somehow or other merely believing
in Christ, without consecration, constitutes them sons of God
and heirs, and entitles them to participate in the richest divine
promises which lay hold upon the present life and that which is
to come.
The
bruised reed we would not break, and the smoking flax we would
not quench; but we would have the bruised reeds realize that in
order properly to share in the blessings of God, present or future,
they must avail themselves of divine favor upon divine conditions--they
must wholly consecrate themselves, if they would cease to be bruised
reeds, and become useful in the Lord's service. The smouldering
faith we would not quench, but would fan it into a flame of sacred
love which would induce a full consecration of self-- a full sacrifice,
according to the divine invitation, and thus lead to participation
in the joys present and to come.
As
we have already noted,61
the Apostle declares that the children of believers are counted
in with them as sharers in the divine grace of justification--as
no longer unholy, but justified in a tentative sense. This
justified standing and its relationship to divine care and providence
continues from birth until the age of discretion; and such children
evidently have much the same privilege as the justified in the
matter of prayer, receiving also in like proportion of the joys
and blessings resulting. From earliest infancy they should be
taught to regard the Almighty, the God of their parents, as their
God, and from an early age they should be given to understand
that as the parent has his standing with God through Christ, so
indirectly the child has its standing and relationship with Christ
through his parent. The consecrated parent or parents in every
Christian home may be considered, therefore, as in a sense the
priests of the household, and while the child may properly be
encouraged to pray to the Lord, the lesson should not be neglected
that the family and all of its interests and concerns
<PAGE 685> are under divine supervision as
a family, on account of the consecrated parent or parents, members
of the New Creation. The child should be taught to look eagerly
forward to the time when its expansion of mind and judgment would
properly permit it to make full consecration of itself to the
Lord, and thus to enter into the privileges and joys promised
to such.
While
the New Creatures in Christ Jesus are exhorted in the above text
not to seek for, not to be anxious concerning, and not to pray
for earthly things--what ye shall eat, what ye shall drink, and
wherewithal shall ye be clothed, but to trust all these matters
to the wisdom and love of the Father --they are instructed concerning
one thing which the Father will be very pleased to have them pray
for, and concerning which he will be pleased to answer their petitions
largely. That one thing for which they should specially seek and
specially pray is the holy Spirit--the spirit of holiness, the
Spirit of God, the Spirit of Christ, the Spirit of the Truth,
the spirit of a sound mind, the spirit of love. The Master's words
are, "If ye, then, being evil, know how to give good [earthly]
gifts unto your children, how much more shall your heavenly Father
give the holy Spirit to them that ask him?"
`Luke 11:13`
Here,
then, we have distinct information respecting what should be the
basis of all our petitions, if we would have them answered. Thus
we must pray if we would not ask amiss. Our affections must be
set on things above, and not on things beneath--upon the robe
of Christ's righteousness and our future glorious apparel, when
we shall be like our Lord and see him as he is, rather than on
earthly apparel. Our affections must be upon the spiritual food--upon
the bread which came down from heaven, and upon all the precious
promises of God of which Christ is the center and substance. These
we must seek, these we must appropriate; and for these, therefore,
the substance of our prayers will be. Thus our watching, praying
and daily seeking will be in full accord. Moreover, thanksgiving
must largely take the place of requests, from the time that we
learn of the lengths
<PAGE 686> and breadths and heights and depths
of the divine provision, for both the New Creation and for our
dear ones according to the flesh, and for all the families of
the earth. What could we ask for more or better than God has already
promised?
Surely
we could ask nothing more than has been promised respecting the
future glories of the New Creation; nor could we ask more respecting
the present joys of the same class. Every provision that reason
could imagine, every want, every necessity, has already been anticipated
for us and provided--given to us for the taking. We merely lack
wisdom as to how to take, how to appropriate these divine provisions.
Giving thanks, therefore, we merely ask for wisdom and grace so
to partake of them that our joy may be full. Our requests, therefore,
must be for increased filling with the holy Spirit--wisdom from
above.
What
more could we ask on behalf of the world than divine providence
has already arranged? Nothing! The glorious "times of restitution"
promised in the Word more than meet all the grandest anticipations
or hopes that the wisest of men could have ever entertained. We
can, therefore, only thank God and acknowledge his goodness, seeking
to cooperate therewith, and to realize our need of wisdom. Hence
the invitation that we may ask this help of God's holy Spirit
or power--"wisdom from on high." "If any of you
lack wisdom let him ask of God, that giveth to all liberally and
upbraideth not." (`James 1:5`)
By this wisdom we may be enabled so to conduct ourselves, so to
speak and act, as will be helpful to others; and in this direction,
therefore, should be our prayers, that we may cooperate with God
along the generous, benevolent lines which he has already marked
out--to ask a betterment of which would be an absurdity.
This
great privilege of access to the presence of God, of entering
by faith into the Most Holy, of approaching the throne of grace,
and obtaining mercy and finding help in every time of need, may
be adapted to all the varying conditions with which we are surrounded.
<PAGE 687>
It
is ours for personal use--that we may individually closet ourselves
with the Lord and commune with him; and by his mercy this communion
with him, this separation from distracting things, may be enjoyed
when actually withdrawn from the company of others. Where this
is impossible, and where no opportunity comes for bowing the knees,
and raising the voice even to a whisper, it is the privilege of
the New Creation to have access to the Father in mental communion.
When on the street, when surrounded by confusion and turmoil,
the heart may uplift itself and seek both wisdom and strength
at the throne of grace. How blessed are these privileges! Those
who most use them most enjoy them. Unlike earthly things, they
become the more precious as they become the more familiar.
Prayer
in the family circle is the going of the family into the "secret
closet"--into the Lord's presence, away from the world. This
may not always be possible; but where the opportunity exists,
it should not be neglected. If, however, favorable occasion cannot
be made, doubtless the Lord will take the will as instead of the
performance, and grant blessings accordingly. The influence of
the family altar and of the prayer incense ascending therefrom
to the heavenly Father, and the acknowledgment there made of his
grace, mercy, power and blessing, are sure to bring additional
blessing, not only to the Royal Priest who serves his family thus,
but to every member of that family. A feeling of reverence for
God, of responsibility to him and a realization of his loving,
protecting care, goes with that family throughout the day. And
if in the evening it be possible again to gather as a family to
acknowledge divine mercies, and to render thanks, the blessing
is only increased, as was the widow's cruse of oil, as it was
poured forth continually into vessel after vessel.
`2 Kings 4:1-7`
Prayer
in the Church is the going of the Lord's family into the "secret
closet" of divine presence, apart from the world. It is vitally
necessary to its progress, its health, its spiritual development.
Its neglect is sure to result in a loss of power, a loss of privilege
and service, and a corresponding
<PAGE 688> loss of joy. We are wholly out
of sympathy, however, with the kind of public praying referred
to by a Boston newspaper, when, in reporting a religious meeting,
it said: "Rev. Dr. ------ made the most beautiful and eloquent
prayer ever offered to a Boston audience!" There is too much
of this matter of praying to the audience instead of praying to
God. The Scriptures not only encourage public and audible prayers
amongst the Lord's people, but point out, also, that he who prays
should remember his audience in connection with his ministry,
and perform the service so that he who hears may be able to say
"Amen," whether audibly or in his heart.
`1 Cor. 14:13-17`
It
was the wisdom from above, the holy Spirit, which guided the Apostle
Paul when going into a new city with the Gospel, to seek out those
assembled at a place "where prayer was wont to be made."
(`Acts 16:13`) And it is a fact,
still, that both the knowledge and the love of God abound most
amongst those of his people who pray one for another, that their
joy may be full. However many meetings the Lord's people may have
for the study of his Word, and for the building up of one another
in the most holy faith, we advocate that no service be considered
as properly commenced except the Lord's blessing upon the study
be first invoked; and that no meeting be considered properly closed
until the Lord be thanked for the privilege and blessings enjoyed,
and for his blessing bestowed--that the Word of his grace may
be meat indeed to the hearts of those who have heard with sincere
desire to know and do his will.
Faith a Fruit of the Spirit and a Part of the
Present Inheritance of the New Creation
Faith
must be ours before we can become children of God at all--yea,
before our justification--for we are "justified by faith"
ere we receive peace with God and forgiveness of sins. This faith
which we had before we received the holy Spirit cannot, therefore,
be the faith which is the fruit of the Spirit--the gift of the
Spirit. Faith is the operation, the exercise,
<PAGE 689> of our minds in respect to God
and his promises. Those who cannot exercise confidence in God,
whether because of ignorance or because of fallen conditions of
the mind, are in a state in which it is impossible for them to
be blessed under the provisions of this Gospel age; but not in
a condition which would bar them from a share in the blessings
of the age to come--the Millennial age. The call of this Gospel
age is to those who can and who will walk by faith, not by sight--and
whoever cannot or will not so walk cannot now walk with God. "Without
faith it is impossible to please God." Whoever has not such
faith to begin with can make no beginning at the present time;
and even if he have the faith to begin with, unless it grows and
develops he will lack the power of being an overcomer; because
"This is the victory that overcometh the world, even our
faith." `1 John 5:4`
We
should recognize a wide difference between faith and credulity.
Millions of people are credulous and superstitious, and believe
a thousand and one unreasonable things for which they have no
adequate evidences. Nor are these superstitious people, believing
what they ought not to believe, to be found only in heathen lands.
Millions of them bear the name of Christian, with some denominational
attachment. Superstition and credulity are to be condemned, reproved,
avoided, overcome. The true faith is to be encouraged, built up,
strengthened, caused to grow. The faith of God is the faith, confidence,
trust, which builds upon the divine promises and not upon human
traditions, philosophies or imaginings.
If
we believe that God is what his name implies, the self-existing
One, the all-powerful, all-wise, all-just and all-loving Creator,
and if we believe that he is the rewarder of those who diligently
seek him, the effect will be that we will seek him--seek to know
and to understand his Word; and that knowing and understanding
it, we will have confidence in it; and that having confidence
in it, we will direct our course in life accordingly. This beginning
of faith, under divine favor, is pointed to Christ as the new
and living
<PAGE 690> way of reunion with God and return
to his favor. As this faith grasps Jesus, and exercises itself
in obedience, it increases, and the Lord's blessing comes upon
it the more, enlightening it respecting the terms of acceptance
and of membership in the New Creation. The growing faith grasps
the promises of God--of becoming heirs of God and joint-heirs
with Jesus Christ the Lord and Redeemer. The result is the blessing
of the Spirit--the begetting, the anointing, the adoption as sons.
The
further result is the greater enlightenment with the light of
the golden candlestick in the Holy, enabling the eye of faith
to see things not seen from without--to recognize the High Priest's
special ministry in respect to the light, in respect to the shewbread,
in respect to the incense of the golden altar, and at the mercy
seat beyond the veil. As the living, obedient faith gradually
takes in these various features of divine favor and blessing,
as revealed in the divine Word, it grows stronger and stronger,
clearer and clearer, and becomes an elementary part of the new
mind. It sees from this vantage point things which it could not
see previously, and respecting which the Apostle declares, "Eye
hath not seen nor ear heard, neither hath entered into the heart
of man [the natural man] the things which God hath in reservation
for those who love him." `1 Cor. 2:9`
Through
the Word of promise, illustrated by the Spirit, it sees exceeding
great and precious things, heavenly things, the glories to be
attained in the First Resurrection--the Kingdom, then to be established--the
reign of righteousness bringing blessing to all the families of
the earth-- the subjugation of sin and the destruction of every
individual and thing that will not cooperate to the glory of God
and in accordance with the divine law of love. The New Creature
sees all this with the eye of faith, the eye of understanding;
and the Apostle assures us that this eye can behold many of these
things that are not clear and distinct to the natural man--because
"God hath revealed them
<PAGE 691> unto us by his Spirit, which searcheth
all things, yea, the deep things of God."
`1 Cor. 2:9,10`
This
Spirit-begotten faith in things not seen as yet is a part of the
present inheritance of the New Creation, and is intimately associated
with its every hope and every joy-- giving the only possible foretaste
of the "glories to follow." Indeed, as the Apostle explains,
it is the foundation upon which all our joys and hopes are builded.
"Faith is the substance of things hoped for; the evidence
of things not seen." By it things that are not yet seen become
as tangible to our minds as the things that are seen; yea, says
the Apostle, from this standpoint we learn to esteem that the
things we see with our natural eyes are temporal, while the things
we do not see with our natural eyes, but behold with the eyes
of our faith, are the real, the tangible, the eternal ones.
How
necessary faith is to the attainment and retention of our present
inheritance, the foretaste of coming blessings, is clearly shown
by the Apostle James, who, after saying, "If any of you lack
wisdom let him ask of God that giveth to all liberally and upbraideth
not, and it shall be given him"-- adds, "But let him
ask in faith, nothing wavering. For he that wavereth is like a
wave of the sea, driven with the wind and tossed. For let not
that man think that he shall receive anything of the Lord. A double-minded
man is unstable in all his ways." (`James
1:5-8`) The Apostle thus shows how impossible it would
be for anyone to become an overcomer without becoming strong in
faith. Hence, the Scriptures everywhere inculcate growth in faith,
and all of the Lord's people need to pray as did the apostles,
"Lord, increase our faith"; and praying thus they need
to use the means which God has designed for the fulfilment of
this prayer. If their prayer be sincere they will use those means
earnestly--they will seek the Lord in prayer, seek to know his
Word, seek to obey it, seek and enjoy his service, seek to put
on all the graces of the Spirit; and this being their attitude
they will have strong faith, full assurance of faith, and "shall
never
<PAGE 692> fall, but so an entrance shall
be ministered unto them abundantly into the everlasting Kingdom
of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ"--in due time.
`2 Pet. 1:10,11`
The
Life-Song of the New Creation
My life flows on in endless song;
Above earth's lamentation,
I catch the sweet, not far-off hymn,
That hails a New Creation.
Through all the tumult and the strife,
I hear the music ringing;
It finds an echo in my soul--
How can I keep from singing?
What though my joys and comfort die!
The Lord my Savior liveth;
What though the darkness gather round!
Songs in the night he giveth.
No storm can shake my inmost calm,
While to that refuge clinging;
Since Christ is Lord of heaven and earth,
How can I keep from singing?
I lift mine eyes; the cloud grows thin;
I see the blue above it;
And day by day this pathway smooths,
Since first I learned to love it.
The peace of Christ makes fresh my heart,
A fountain ever springing;
All things are mine since I am his--
How can I keep from singing?
THE
NEW CREATION
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