The
Restitution of All Things … George Hawton
When Peter stood up to
preach before the wondering crowd who were eye witnesses of the healing of the
lame man at the beautiful gate of the temple, he told his hearers in no
uncertain tones, "Ye denied the Holy One and the Just, and desired a
murderer to be granted unto you: and killed the Prince of life, whom God hath
raised from the dead" (Acts 3:14-15). But, after having said this,
he consoled them with these wonderful words: "And now, brethren, I wot
that through ignorance ye did it, as did also your rulers. But those things,
which God before had showed by the mouth of all His prophets, that Christ
should suffer, He hath so fulfilled. Repent ye therefore, and be converted,
that your sins may he blotted out, when the times of refreshing shall
come from the presence of the Lord; and He shall send Jesus Christ, which
before was preached unto You: Whom the heavens must receive until the times
of restitution of all things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of
all His holy prophets since the world began." (Acts 3:17-21)
Peter's statement speaks clearly of the times of the restitution of all things.
Restitution, according to the best English usage, means the act of restoring
something that has been taken away or lost; the act of making good or rendering
an equivalent as for loss or injury. (Funk and Wagnall's Dictionary) This is in
exact harmony with the Greek word temuriak which means
restoration.
Some will no doubt reply
to this by stating, as many do, that Peter was not promising that God would
restore everything but only those things of which the prophets had spoken. I
wish, however, to show as clearly as possible that the grammatical construction
of this sentence declares the exact opposite to be the truth. I mean that Peter
was actually saying that all the prophets from the beginning of the world had
prophesied that there would be a restoration of all things and that the
restoration would indeed be universal and would include all things. You will
notice that in the scripture quoted (Acts 3:21, King James Version)
there is a comma after the word things. This comma indicates that the clause
following : "which God hath spoken by the mouth of His holy prophets since
the world began" - is what is known as a nonrestrictive clause. A
nonrestrictive clause is one which can be omitted without changing or
destroying the meaning of the principal clause or main statement. (See
Mastering Effective English by Tressler-Lewis, Revised Edition, Pages 545-546.)
It simply adds further information. Now read the scripture, omitting the clause
in question, and you will find the meaning is clearly stated and nothing of the
sense is destroyed. If this clause were modifying the word things, it would be
restrictive and no comma would be used.
To this agree the words
of many scholarly translators, a few of whom I will quote here for the benefit
and understanding of all who read.
"That the Lord may
send Jesus, your long-decreed Christ, who must be kept in heaven till the
period of the great Restoration Ages ago God spoke of this by the lips
of His holy prophets." Moffatt.
"Heaven must
receive Him until those times of which God has spoken from the earliest ages
through the lips of His holy prophets - the times of the restitution of all
things." Weymouth
"He must remain in
heaven till the time for the universal reformation of which God told in
ancient times by the lips of His is holy prophets." Goodspeed.
"Whom it behooveth
heaven, indeed, to receive till times of a restitution of all things,
which God spake through the mouth of all His holy prophets from the age."
Young's literal.
We could easily fill the
page with the words of many other translators, but I think the above is
sufficient to testify that this is the true meaning of the words of Peter and
that he was teaching us and all who have ears to hear the Spirit's voice that
there is coming a time of universal restitution and reconciliation
in which all things will be restored, whether they be things in heaven, things
in earth, or things under the earth.
It should be very
evident to us all that, if the scripture says that all the prophets spoke of
the restitution of all things, then there should be some evidence that they
did. Though we have neither space nor ability to peruse all the inspired
teaching of the prophets concerning that coming age of blessedness and
restoration, it is time well spent to notice it at least in part. Isaiah
above all others seems to have been given the great prophecies of restoration
and they are so extensive that they seem to touch life and creation in every
phase. To me it is a most significant and wonderful thing to notice how the
prophets, while prophesying terrible doom on the unbelieving and rebellious
people, suddenly break off their message to revel in the coming glory. A good
example of this is found in the thirty-ninth chapter of Isaiah, in which
the prophet tells of Judah's coming captivity in Babylon. Then he breaks forth
with these revealing words of consolation: "Comfort ye, comfort ye My people,
saith your God. Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem, and cry unto her, that her
warfare is accomplished, that her iniquity is pardoned: for she hath
received of the Lord's hand double for all her sins. The voice of him that
crieth in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make straight in the
desert a highway for our God. Every valley shall be exalted, and every mountain
and hill made low: and the crooked shall be made straight, and the rough places
plain: and the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it
together: for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it." Isa 40:1-5
"The wilderness and
the solitary place shall be glad for them; and the desert shall rejoice, and
blossom as the rose. It shall blossom abundantly, and rejoice even with joy and
singing: the glory of Lebanon shall be given unto it, and the excellency of
Carmel and Sharon, they shall see the glory of the Lord, and the excellency of
our God. Strengthen ye the weak hands, and confirm the feeble knees. Say to them
that are of a fearful heart, Be strong, fear not: behold, your God will conic
with vengeance, even God with a recompense: He will come and save you.
Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf
shall be unstopped. Then shall the lame man leap as an hart, and the tongue
of the dumb sing: for in the wilderness shall waters break out, and streams
in the desert. And the parched ground shall become a pool, and the thirsty land
springs of water: in the habitation of dragons, where each lay, shall be grass
with reeds and rushes." Isa 35:1-7 With many such statements of restoration
and restitution does Isaiah picture the glory of those coming times as he
speaks of the restoration of nations, of Israelites, of Gentiles, of rugged
land and barren places as well as wonderful physical restoration, which
undoubtedly prefigures the coming state of incorruption and immortality.
Surely Daniel was
carried in spirit far into the times of restoration when he said, "I saw
in the night visions, and, behold, one like the Son of man came with the clouds
of heaven. and came to the Ancient of days, and they brought Him near before
Him. And there was given Him dominion, and glory, and a kingdom, that all
people, nations, and languages, should serve Him: His dominion is an
everlasting dominion which shall not pass away and His kingdom that which shall
not be destroyed “Dan 7:13-14.
Great as are these
prophecies, they are limited by man's ability or inability to understand them.
Like so many statements of scripture. they are really only shadows of things to
come. See Col 2:17 where Paul shows that meat and drink, holy days, new
moons and sabbaths are in reality shadows of things to come. A shadow is caused
when a body or some object obscures the light. It is not the shadow that is
important, but the body that made the shadow. That is why Paul says here that
new moons and feasts and holy days are shadows, but the body Christ. All these
things foreshadow the day when He will be all and in all, and when He will be our
sabbath of rest, our holy day and our meat and drink.
We have already noted
how the simple statement of Gen 1:26 - Let them have dominion over the
fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle. and over
all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth"
is really a foreshadowing of the day when God shall put all things under the
feet of man, who is being created in His own image. It seems only normal that
the prophets of the Old Testament were largely confined to prophecies
concerning Israel and her coming restoration, yet their prophecies reach out to
the Gentile nations and proclaim that all flesh shall see the glory of the
Lord. Wonderful and glorious as are the prophecies and shadows of the Old
Testament, it is not until we begin to see the vastly extended and infinitely
brighter light of the New Testament that the Picture of the complete
reconciliation of the universe begins to unfold before our wondering eyes.
The inability of God's
people to understand and accept the restitution of all things, which was spoken
of by all the prophets since the world began, may be traced to three great
faults in our traditional teaching. Firstly, very, very few
people are familiar with the truth that there is a coming age which the Bible
names the dispensation of the fullness of times (Eph 1:10), and
that that age above all others has been specially set aside for the work of
reconciling all things in heaven and in earth and bringing all things into
Christ. The age, as I will point out presently, is the age of the ages.
It is the greatest age
of all ages and is the time in which the Almighty God brings to completion the
unfailing word spoken before time began, "Let its make man in our image
and after our likeness. " A bruised reed shall He not break, and the
smoking flax shall he not quench: He shall bring forth judgment onto truth. He
shall not fail nor be discouraged, till He have set judgment in the earth: and
the isles shall wait for His law." Isa 42:3-4. Secondly, God's
people fail to see the final restitution of all things because they also fail
to see the greatness of the work of Christ and the all-inclusive faith which
God the Father has in that marvelous work of redemption. Thirdly,
and perhaps most important of all, is the failure of God's people to see that
all things are of God, that He is working all things according to the Counsel
of His own will. Nothing has ever gone wrong with the merciful purpose of God.
Once these three truths become clear to the spiritual mind of a devout child of
God, then the mysteries of the ages disperse like mists before the rising sun
and all the parts of the puzzle begin to fall into their appointed place to
form a perfect blueprint of the progression of God's purpose through the ages.
Though I have dealt with
this third proposition many times in the past, because of its great importance
we shall consider it briefly in these pages also. When we are considering the
works of God, we must reverently call to mind that we are not dealing with one
whose power and might is only slightly greater than our own. God is not such an
one as ourselves. "Know ye that the Lord He is God: it is He that hath
made us, and not we ourselves. We are His people and the sheep of His
pasture." Psa 100:3. The Lord He is God! He hath set His throne in
the heavens and His kingdom ruleth over all. When we are speaking of God. we
are not speaking of an angel, or a seraphim, glorious in wisdom and knowledge
as such may be, but we are speaking of Him who created such celestial beings as
these granting them some small measure of His own wisdom and power. We are
speaking of Him who is omnipotent, omniscient, immutable, omnipresent,
eternal, full of loving kindness and tender mercies, who will not always -
vs chide nor be angry forever. He is the one who sees the end from the
beginning.
Yea, much greater still,
He is the end and He is the beginning He it is whose inscrutable wisdom laid
the foundations of the earth and hung it upon nothing. Job 26:7. He is
the Father of lights. With Him there is no variableness, neither shadow of
turning. "By His own will begat He us that we should be a kind of first
fruits of His creatures." And we know very well that first fruits is an
assurance of an abundant harvest to come.
Not only did He lay the
foundation of the earth in wisdom but He ordained the ages in His
understanding, appointing to each age some particular blessedness to be
fulfilled in its order as the divine intention progressed. (This was pointed
out in the article "The Six Water Pots of Stone," available upon
request.) He. who in wisdom laid the foundation of the earth, is almighty in
His power and ability to carry out the glory of His own Purpose. No power in
the universe can let or hinder Him. Satan has no power at all except by
divine consent and permission. as may be clearly seen in the story of God's
dealings with Job. When Satan was permitted by the Lord to tempt Job and
destroy all that pertained to him, it was for Job's own betterment and eternal
good this was done, and I do not think I am overstepping or demanding too much
of the type when I say that the whole story of Job becomes an allegory of the
entire human family, whom God in His wisdom has lowered into the realms of
death to be cruelly afflicted of the devil. From his hand we suffer great pain
and tribulation through our lack of understanding, but, when calamity has been
completed and every earthy stronghold and carnal argument has vanished away,
then comes the revelation of God Himself and of His perfect will; and,
following that, the restitution of all things, yea, double all things. Job
42:10. " I have heard of Thee by the hearing of the ear," cried
Job, "but now mine eye seeth Thee. Wherefore I abhor myself, and repent in
dust and ashes." Job 42:5-6 And so shall it be with all men and all
their frail arguments in the end. They will at last see the Lord and, seeing
Him and understanding His purpose, they will abhor the flesh and the world and
themselves and will repent. Then from the coldness of their death and the
darkness of their understanding shall come light and wisdom and truth, that the
latter end may be much more glorious than it was in Eden in the beginning.
Jesus is all this poor world needs today.
Blindly they strive, for sin darkens the way.
O, to draw back the grim curtains of night!
One glimpse of Jesus and all will be bright.
How can He who is
omniscient, omnipotent, and immutable ever fail in His purpose'? Why, my
brother, my sister, it is blasphemous to imagine that such a thing could possibly
be!
I do not believe that
the Bible anywhere teaches that man is a free moral agent.
That teaching is a figment of the imagination of the harlot church system. In
fact, the Bible teaches the exact opposite. It tells us, " It is not of
him that willeth or of him that runneth, but of God that showeth mercy." Rom
9:16. Someone will ask, "Will God save men eventually against their
will?" The answer is no! He will have no need to do that, for all Men will
be one hundred percent willing when God reveals Himself to them. Then the eyes
of the blind shall be opened and the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped. We
have only to consider the case of Saul of Tarsus to understand the
miraculous power of the Lord to change the leopard's spots and melt the heart
of stone. No man was evermore hateful toward Christ than Was Saul of Tarsus,
yet, when his turn came to see the light, he changed in an Instant, crying out
in fear and trembling and with bitter repentance. "Who art Thou,
Lord'?" and "What wilt Thou have me to do?" It is God that
controls the will, and He turns the hearts of mighty and rebellious kings as
easily as He turns the water courses. Even in the case of Pharaoh the
Lord Himself took the responsibility for the hardening of his heart. Had He not
done so, Pharaoh would have yielded long before he did. The truth is that
Pharaoh's hard heart was not hard enough to accomplish the difficult task the
Lord had appointed for him, so the Lord undertook to harden his heart on six
occasions until all His plan and will was accomplished through him.
There is an overwhelming
desire in my heart that God's dear people might know that "God is
God," glorious in power, fearful in praises, doing wonders. I long with a
great longing that His people will repent of ever having believed the insipid
and useless traditions that make the almighty God seem to be a victim of the
will of His own creation. It is my opinion that most of the theology of the
church system is insipid humbug that to render the almighty God impotent by robbing
Him of His omnipotence. It teaches that God gave His Son that all the world
through Him might be saved and then renders His sacrifice hopeless by leaving
ninety-nine percent of all His creatures in the hands of the devil for all
eternity. Such a doctrine as that belittles the power and wisdom of God and
does despite to the Spirit of grace, the atoning work of Christ and the
precious blood that He shed so that the world through Him might be saved.
Now our second
proposition was that Christians fail to see the restitution of all things
because they fail to see the greatness of the work of Christ, The
apostle John remarked that, if all the books were written that should be
written, the world itself would not contain them. Therefore we know before we
start that it would be completely impossible to do more than probe the fringes
of the greatness and completeness of the work of Christ, and to exhaust that
ocean of its truth is beyond the power of even the most inspired pen.
Nevertheless. there are one or two points which should be made clear. These, I
regret to say, I have never seen mentioned by sermon or writing in all the
years of my life.
The book of Romans is a
most remarkable book, and I think I cannot be far astray in saying that all
Paul's other epistles are sermons enlarging on texts from this book. This
remarkable book shows the progression of the plan of God from Alpha to Omega,
from beginning to end, from Eden to Eden, from paradise lost to paradise
regained, and from the fall of man in the beginning to the manifestation of the
sons of God in the end. Chapter 1 brings the whole world under
condemnation. Chapter 2 condemns the Jew. Chapter 3 shows how
both Jews and Gentiles are justified only by faith, and Chapter 4 proves
that this is so. Chapter 5, with its key expression ''much more"
repeated five times, shows with the greatest possible clearness that everything
that was lost in Adam has been regained, and much more, in Christ, as the
writer so clearly states in verse 18: "Therefore as by the offence
of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation; even so by the righteousness
of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life." Chapter
6 manifests the complete identity of the believer with Jesus Christ in
death, burial, and resurrection life. Chapter 7 sees the believer
delivered from the power of the carnal nature. Chapter 8 is the very
heart of the whole epistle - so much so that I am tempted to say that it is the
heart of the whole Bible and the very heart of all Christian experience from
the time the believer begins to walk in the Spirit until he emerges as a
manifested son of God, inseparable from Jesus Christ. We do not have space here
to mention the themes of the remaining eight chapters, but we trust this brief
synopsis may aid us in our understanding of the whole.
Now after Paul, in chapters
1 and 2, has brought all mankind under condemnation and the guilt of sin,
he proceeds to unfold God's one true method of justification. Having said in chapter
3, verse 20, "Therefore by the deeds of the law there shall no
flesh be justified in His sight, for by the law is the knowledge of sin,"
he says in verses 24, 25, and 26, "Being justified freely by His
grace through the redemption that is in Christ; whom God has set forth to be a
propitiation through faith in His blood, to declare His righteousness for the
remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God; to declare, I
say, at this time His righteousness: that He might be just, and the justifier
of him which believeth in Jesus." The word propitiate means to appease, to
soothe, and to conciliate. When Paul says, therefore, that God has set forth
Christ to be a propitiation, the great question that must be answered is this:
Whom is Christ propitiating? Whom is He appeasing? Whom is He soothing? Whom is
He conciliating? Is this propitiation for His benefit? Or is it for the
sinner's benefit? Is God trying to conciliate Himself or is He conciliating the
sinner" You know as well as I do that the church system has always erroneously
taught that it is God who must be propitiated. conciliated and soothed, but I
want you to know that Such teaching is utter rubbish and the brashest sort of
nonsense. It springs from that Romish tradition that likens God the Father to a
fearful and offended despot, spoiling for the blood of the offenders, and it
makes Christ to be the one who pleads with God on behalf of the victim until
the Father is consoled and conciliated The following words from a hymn show how
deeply engrained this error really is:
"Five bleeding wounds He bears Received on
Calvary;
They pour effectual prayers, They strongly plead
for me.
Forgive him, 0 forgive, they cry, Nor let the
ransomed sinner die.
"The Father hears Him pray, His dear anointed
One: He cannot turn away
The presence of His
son." etc. "My God is reconciled; His pardoning voice I hear,"
etc.
The opposite of all this
is the truth. It was God the Father who so loved the world that He gave His
only begotten Son. He did not give that Son as a propitiation for
Himself or to appease His own wrath. He gave Him for you and He gave Him for
me. He did not die that I might live, as is so commonly taught. He died that He
might give His life to me. And to this truth the scripture endlessly attests,
All sermons and songs that Picture God as a God of wrath who must be appeased
by the cruel death and bloody sweat of His Son
God hat set forth His
Son, Jesus Christ, to be a propitiation through faith in His blood. The idea
that God would set forth His Son to propitiate and appease Himself is
exceedingly absurd. There is not one scintilla of evidence in all the Bible
that would hint that God would ever need to be reconciled to man. It is man who
needs to be reconciled, not God. It is man who needs to be propitiated, not God.
God does not need to be reconciled, because He knows what the plan is. He
understands why the fall came. He takes the responsibility for the act of
subjecting the creature to vanity, and He also shoulders the responsibility of
raising that creature to a greater glory than he could possibly have had, had
there been no fall at all. Therefore, He has given His perfect Son. in whom is
life and from whom comes all life, as a propitiation that through His death on
the cross He might give His life to all mankind, as it is written: "Except
a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone; but if it die,
it bringeth forth much fruit." Life can only be released by death; and
that first and foremost, above all other, is the reason God gave His Son, who
to give us life became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross. Our
heavenly Father, full of all grace and truth, does not have to be reconciled to
man.
He does not have to be
propitiated, appeased, soothed, or conciliated. He gave His Son willingly, not
only for our pardon, but also to reconcile the man and dispose the man to His
loving favor that He might deliver him from sin and death. All this was done
as part of His is original intention to make man in His own image and
likeness. The death of the Son of God was the ultimate wickedness and the
blackest crime that sin was able to commit. Sin can reach no deeper depth than
the murder of God's Son, but God's intention was that He through death would
destroy him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, and deliver them
(all of us) who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to
bondage, so that what sin hoped would be the ultimate triumph proved to be its
own destruction. The death the great Redeemer died heralded the wonderful day
when death and sin will be abolished from the universe and there
will be a new heaven and a new earth, wherein dwelleth only righteousness.
The erroneous notion
that God must be propitiated and reconciled to man has given rise to all those
Romish doctrines such as prayers for the dead, intercession through the virgin
Mary, prayers to the saints, purgatory, indulgences, penance, and a host of
other unscriptural errors, all of which make God the Father to be a grudging
despot who needs to be placated continually and whose reluctant mercy may
diminish or increase as more or less is done to conciliate Him. All such
doctrine is hateful and does despite to the true spirit of grace and the
infinite love of our kind heavenly Father.
Let us notice one thing
further. Paul, writing that wonderful twenty-fifth verse, says, "Whom God
hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in His blood. Now who is it
that Paul says has faith in the blood of Christ? I know that all theology and
past teaching will oppose me, but the truth is simply this: It was God the
Father who had faith in His Son and in His blood, and because of that faith in
the blood of His Son, He openly declared His righteousness for the remission of
sins that are past, that is to say, all the sins of the world from Adam to the
cross, and undoubtedly for the ages ahead. The life is in the blood. Do not
forget that cardinal truth. So great was God's faith in the life blood of His
Son that was released by crucifixion and death that He declared the remission
of all the sins of the past, making Christ the justifier of all who believe in
Him. This surely is the meaning of the text. "To declare, I say, at this
time His righteousness: that He might be just, and the justifier of Him which
believeth in Jesus." Rom 3:26.
So, then, we see from
this that it was God who gave Christ to us as a propitiation and that that
propitiation was given to propitiate man, not God. Furthermore it was God
Himself who had faith in the blood of His Son that through Him all the world
will be saved. There can be no question about that; and, when this truth is
revealed to us, then our own faith rises up and we too have faith in that
mighty atonement, and we are justified and at the same time cleansed and made
righteous in the sight of God.
See how thoroughly the
truth concerning the faith of God is confirmed by verse three, which says,
"For what if some did not believe'? Shall their unbelief make the faith of
God without effect'? God forbid: yea, let God be true, but every man a liar; as
it is written, That Thou mightest be justified in Thy sayings and mightest
overcome when Thou art judged. " Rom 3:3,4. Thus these verses
clearly teach that it is God who propitiates man. and it is God first of all
who has faith in the blood of Christ for man's justification. What a tremendous
thing it is to know that by one stroke of faith in the blood of His Son. Jesus
Christ, God the Father remitted the sins of the past, which includes all the
generations before the cross, and that Christ after His death, according to the
faithful word of the apostle Peter, went in the Spirit and preached to the
spirits in prison, which had been disobedient when once the longsuffering of
God waited in the days of Noah while the ark was being prepared! See I Pet
3:18-21. And what did He preach to these long-departed Souls?
Well, I Peter 4:6
certainly answers that question! By it we are informed. "for this cause
was the gospel preached also to them that are (lead, that they might be judged
according to men in the flesh, but live according to God in the spirit. The
gospel was preached to them, informing them of the death of God's Son, who was
given as a propitiation and a reconciliation for them, and that God had faith
in the blood of His Son to deliver them from the bondage of corruption into the
glorious freedom of the sons of God. Shall our unbelief make the faith of ' of
God without effect? Certainly not! If we believe not, yet He abides faithful.
He cannot deny Himself. God's plan goes on just the same, and He will bring all
men to faith, each in his own order and in his own appointed time. Does my
unbelief make your faith of none effect? No! Certainly not! Much less then
shall the unbelief of the world or the unbelief of God's own children annul
God's faith in the great propitiation of His is Son or make it of none effect.
More and more I am
compelled to say that we are God's workmanship, created in Christ Jesus. He
doeth His will in the army of heaven and none can resist His intention. None
can hinder His cause. Therefore, when we do but faintly glimpse the immutable
purpose of God, we can see that the Father, before ever time began or sin
blighted our way, laid down the plan in every detail for the restitution of
all things.
Lastly, let us consider
briefly that great age which the word of God describes as the dispensation of
the fullness of times. Ephesians 1:10. Time is not eternity.
There are many times and many dispensations, but there is only one eternity.
Eternity does not begin; neither does it end, but times, dispensations,
and ages all have beginnings and all have ends. It is wrong to assert that,
when time ends, eternity will begin, because eternity has no beginning.
Neither did it end when time began, as so many charts indicate. Ages have their
place in eternity in the same way that minutes have their place in years,
except that years end and eternity does not. Therefore it is very important
that we make a clear distinction between ages, which belong to time, and
eternity. which is timeless. It is more important still that we, in our study
of the Bible, search out diligently those passages which refer to time and
those which refer to eternity. In making this search, I strongly recommend that
wherever possible the searcher avail himself of a good, exhaustive concordance
such as Young's Analytical or Strong's, available at almost any good book
store. Both of these give the correct meaning of every Greek and Hebrew word in
the Bible. I also highly recommend the use of the Emphatic Diaglott which
emphasizes emphatic word translation rather than any beauty of style.
It is most regrettable
that many Bible translators have been careless in their translation of words
that concern the ages. The common thought seems to have been that any age
following this present age must be identical with eternity, which. of course,
is gross error, and we get ourselves into all manner of confusion by thinking
that such is the case. For instance, according to the King James Version Jesus,
speaking of the blasphemy of the Holy Ghost, is clearly quoted as saying,
"He that blasphemeth the Holy Ghost hath never forgiveness." Mark
3:29. Because of this faulty rendering we have concocted the fallacious
notion of an unpardonable sin. But the Emphatic Diaglott translates the passage
correctly thus: "Whoever may blaspheme the Holy Spirit has no
forgiveness to the age, but is exposed to aionian (age lasting) judgment.
" The age referred to here is the millennial age. Likewise also the
passage in Matt 12:32: "…Whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost,
it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this world, neither in the world to
come." The word world here, as the margin of your Bible will probably
indicate, is translated from the Greek word aion, which means
age or some indefinite time. See also Young's Concordance. Hence the
translation should be, "It shall not be forgiven him, neither in this age
nor in the coming age." Diaglott. Jesus was born in the age of law.
Therefore, when He spoke of this age, He was speaking of the age of law, the
age to come being the age of grace in which we now live. Our problem concerning
the ages will be cleared up if we remember the following simple facts. The
Greek noun aion, which literally means an age, or an indefinite
period of time, (Young), has been translated into the following fifteen
different words and phrases in the King James Version of the New Testament: age
(2), beginning of the world (2), course (1), world (32), eternal (2), world
began (1), forever (27), for evermore (2), ever (1), while the world standeth
(1), for ever and ever (1), for ever and ever (20), for evermore (1), never
(7), world without end (I). Along with this the adjective aionios is translated
eternal 42 times, everlasting (25), and for ever (1). Yet all these words,
which YOU may look tip in your own concordance and at your leisure, come from
one original word, aion, which means age and should be so translated.
Anything and everything
that has to do with an age or a dispensation has to do with time and therefore has
both a beginning and an end. That which is eternal has nothing whatever to
do with time, because that which is eternal is timeless. Eternity cannot be
described as endless time, because there is no such element as time in
eternity. It may come as a great surprise to most readers to learn that the
Bible does not use any word that is equivalent to our English word eternal. All
God's dealings with man concern ages, dispensations, and times. It is not until
Christ delivers up a perfect universe to the Father that time will be no more,
and there will be no need of the sun to rule by day nor of the moon by night,
for the Lord God giveth them light. Where there is neither day nor night there
is no time. That is the eternal realm. In that realm there is not only no more
time, but a complete absence of things that belong to time - no pain, no
crying, no tears, no more hell, no more lake of fire no more judgment, and no
more death, for all the former things will have run their course of duty and
will have passed away. All will be perfect in God's universe. All will be
reconciled and all will be restored.
There are yet at least
two great ages to come, first, the kingdom age, which in scripture is often
referred to as the age, and following this there comes the age of the ages,
which in Eph 1:10 is named the dispensation of the fullness of times.
Our failure to recognize God's workings in that wonderful age of the fullness
of times is the reason so many thousands of God's good people fail to see the
restitution of all things.
Reading from the King
James Version, Eph 3:21 reads thus: "Unto Him be glory in the
church by Jesus Christ throughout all ages, world without end. Amen." Now
since the word world here is translated from the Greek aion, it can hardly be
called a good trans] at ion -simply because the word world is translated from
aion (age), and an age cannot be without end. The Emphatic Diaglott renders the
passage correctly by saying, "to Him be glory in the congregation by Jesus
Christ to all the generations of the age of the ages." This,
of course, conveys the Correct meaning. This age of the ages, which is
identical with the dispensation of the fullness of times, embraces some very
important teaching simply by reason of its name. First of all let us notice
that it is the age of the ages. I am not at all sure how many ages there
have been in the past. There could have been countless ages for aught I know. I
do know, however, that ages existed before Adam. There was a great age from
Adam to the flood and another great age front the flood to the resurrection of
Christ. The age of grace or the church age, of which we are now a part, runs
from the resurrection to the setting up of the king- The kingdom age, next in
order, will last at least one thousand years. Rev 20:4.
Then follows the age of
the ages, or the dispensation of the fullness of times. The term age of the
ages identifies this age as the greatest of all the ages. No age, not even the
kingdom age, can be compared to it. Just as the Song of Solomon is the song of
songs, that is, the greatest of all songs, and as the holy of holies is the
holiest of all, so the age of the ages is the greatest age of all
the ages, far surpassing even the millennial kingdom in its power and glory,
its revelation of God, and its wonderful reconciliation and restitution. Men
today use such terms as "the greatest day of my life," "our
finest hour," or the "day of days." It is in this same sense
that our almighty Father speaks of the dispensation of the fullness of times as
the age of the ages.
As we read Eph 3:21
from the Emphatic Diaglott. it may have escaped our notice that the text says,
"To Him be glory in the congregation by Jesus Christ to all the
generations of the age of the ages. " The expression, "to all the
generations of the age of the ages" gives us some slight conception of
just how long a period of time the age of the ages may be. In the mouth of two
or three witnesses shall every word be established, and I think it is of
singular interest that twice the inspired writers of scripture made clear
reference to a thousand generations. "Know ye therefore that the Lord Thy
God, He is God, the faithful God, which keepeth covenant and mercy with them
that love Him and keep His commandments to a thousand generations Deut 7:9.
And again, "Be ye mindful always of His covenant: the word which He
commanded to a thousand generations." I Chron 16:15. These
mighty statements of truth are not mere picturesque flourishes. These are
statements intended to tell us truth that belongs to the whole plan of redemption.
As yet I have not found
any man able to say accurately just how many years are encompassed by one
generation, but, supposing it to be such a small number as forty, a thousand
generations would comprise forty thousand years from the time God gave His
covenants to Abraham until the end of the dispensation of the fullness of
times. I am not trying to say or guess how long a period of time is indicated
by these thousand generations, but we may be certain that it was to them that
Paul was referring when he wrote, "To Him be glory in the church
throughout all generations of the age of the ages." Can you not see that
God has allotted almost infinite time to His Christ and the glorified church to
accomplish the purpose of the redemption and the reconciliation of all things?
There is yet one more
truth I would like to present concerning this age of the ages. That truth
concerns the name of the age, the dispensation of the fullness of times. Eph
1:10. Now all ages have to do with time and times, but there comes an hour
eventually when time has reached its fullness. When all other ages have run
their course. then we have come at last to the fullness of times. Time is full,
time is complete, and time shall be nor more. At the consummation of the
fullness of all time the purpose of God, laid down in the edict, "Let us
make man in our image and after our likeness, " is complete, and time
shall be nor more. The dispensation of the fullness of times is the eighth
dispensation. The dispensations of innocence, conscience, human government
promise, law, grace and the kingdom - these seven will have run their course
and all will end in judgment, but the dispensation of the fullness of times is
the eighth dispensation, and it will conclude all former things. It will end
death, judgment, pain and tears, and its final act will be the delivering up of
a perfect kingdom to the Father of all. Then TIME will have reached
its fullness and will be nor more.
The number eight ( 8
) in scripture is the number of new beginnings. That is why the dispensation of
the fullness of times is the eighth dispensation. If the first day of a month
falls on a Sunday, then the eighth day of the month is also a Sunday, as you
will see in the months of April and July, 1973. So, if the first day of man's
time was in Eden, then the fullness of time, the eighth day, brings us back to
Eden again, not in the weakness of the first Adam, but in the strength and
imperishable life of the last Adam.
Let us notice the extent
of the promises made for the age of the ages, for I think in so doing our
hearts will be assured that that age is indeed the age above all other ages.
Nothing can be compared to it. Even the blessed millennial kingdom has some
rebellion in it and ends with the armies of Satan gathering together against
the camp of the saints. But not this age of the ages!
Paul's epistle to the
Ephesians is a very wonderful book. Above all other of Paul's writings it
manifests God's purpose in calling and perfecting the church. Those foolish
people who in their willful and petulant ignorance dare to say. " If
God is going to save everyone, why need I bother?" really do not
deserve either recognition or an answer. Since my eyes have caught a glimpse of
the supernal glory of the work of reconciliation and my ears have heard the
word of Christ saying that He has committed to us the word of reconciliation,
my heart responds with the greatest eagerness, and, laying aside every earthly
weight, I grasp with joy the hope that is set before me. My hope has made me
like Elisha, who would not let his master out of his sight lest he miss the
double portion in store for him. Let the foolish delight themselves in their
God-rejection and idle words, for God has said, "Him that is filthy, let
him be filthy still, and he that is unholy, let him be unholy still." The
lake of fire that burns with refining brimstone is reserved for their purging
throughout the generations of the age of the ages, but let us, who are of the
light lay hold on the promise that is set before us, for herein is the
refining, the finishing of our faith.
So Paul wrote to the
Ephesians to lay the plan of God before them in the hope of quickening their
step and increasing their faith in God's purpose. Turning their eyes to their
ministry in the age of the ages, he wrote, "Having made known unto us the
mystery of His will, according to His good pleasure which He hath purposed in
Himself: that in the dispensation of the fullness of times He might gather
together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven, and which are
on earth; even in Him: In whom also we have obtained an inheritance, being
predestinated according to the purpose of Him who worketh all things after the
counsel of His own will: that we should be to the praise of His glory, who first
trusted in Christ." Eph 1:9-12 Is that promise not reason enough
for going all out that we may attain, since we have been predestined to such a
glory as this? This is the hope that consumes my life and all my waking hours,
and beside it all else is the grossest and lowest vanity. Stir yourself in
repentance and in prayer and consecration, ye worldly-minded, wealth-seeking
souls, for what shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his
own soul or be cast away to endure the lake of fire and brimstone until his
refining comes? Is it any wonder that Paul said, "I count all things but
loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I
have suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may win
Christ, and be found in Him, not having mine own righteousness, which is of the
law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is
of God by faith." Phil 3:8-9. It is when we begin to see the plan
of God that we willingly lay aside every weight and the sin that does so easily
beset us. It is when we see the plan of God that all things begin to make
sense, and then and then alone does our walk with Him become something real and
worthwhile.
Now I want you to pay
particular attention to what God says regarding the mighty work of the age of
the ages, the dispensation of the fullness of times. In it we are promised that
He will gather together in one all things in Jesus Christ, both which are in
heaven and which are on earth, even in Him. Eph 1:10. I don't know how
the Christian who disbelieves God's power to restore all things is going to
explain this mighty state Even blind unbelief can find no explanation for it,
for there is no way around it. This is a clear statement of reconciliation
definitely declaring that during the dispensation of the fullness of times all
things are to be gathered into His Son, Jesus Christ. The statement is
unconditional. There are no conditions attached in any way, shape or form. It
is an edict of the Almighty, and it is saying with the greatest power and
simplicity that He intends to restore absolutely everything and gather it all
into the Prince Redeemer, Jesus Christ, whether it be things in heaven or
things on earth.
The dispensation of the
fullness of times is the age of the ages. It is the greatest age
of all time, and with its end time shall be no more. The dispensation of the
fullness of times is the day of God. The present day with all its corruption is
the day of man. The millennial kingdom is the day of the Lord. 2 Pet 3:10,
The dispensation of the fullness of times is the day of God in which all things
are made new and we, according to His promise, look for new heavens and a
new earth wherein dwelleth righteousness. 2 Pet 3:13.
Because this final age
is the dispensation of the fullness of times, we know that it belongs to time.
Because it is the age of the ages, we know that ages have not yet passed away.
Many things are to be accomplished in that age that are at present far beyond
our comprehension. In it the Lord has declared, "Behold, I make all things
new." Rev 21:5. Before its end every knee shall have bowed and
every tongue will have confessed that Christ is Lord to the glory of God the
Father. In it the old heavens and the old earth pass away and a new heaven and
a new earth take their place. All the havoc caused by ages and dispensations of
man's evil reign will be cleared away and blotted out as things are made new.
The end of this present
age of grace will be marked by the resurrection of the just.
Rev 20:4. They will reign with Christ over all the earth for a period of
at least one thousand years. Few scriptures are more specific as to length of
time than this, in which the term one thousand years is used six times. First
Satan is bound for one thousand years, at which time the reign of the saints
for a thousand years begins. In Rev 20:5 we are distinctly told that the
rest of the dead did not live again until the thousand years were finished.
No unbeliever has part in the first resurrection. Then at the end of the
thousand years all the rest of the dead, both small and great, are raised to
stand before God to be justly judged before the great white throne, and
whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake
of fire, which is the second death. Rev 20:11-15.
I do not wish to
over-emphasize the importance of this article or the truth it contains, but I
am constrained to say that these truths are of immense importance because they
are foundational. Upon their firm footing rests the whole superstructure of
God's plan of the ages, If we cannot see how in the very beginning God created
man for the specific purpose of ruling the universe. and to have dominion over
all the vast universel with its infinite space and multi-billion galaxies, then
we have missed the heart of God's intention completely and we become doomed to
spend our lives in the idle pettifogging of the Romish and Protestant systems,
which give neither reason for man's existence nor cause for his humiliation and
fiery testings in the realm of death. Even redemption, full and complete as it
is and in spite of its infinite cost, will fail to reconcile and save more than
one percent of all creation, if the fruitless interpretation of the Babylonish
system are to be believed.
How different does all
this appear when our hearts grasp the understanding that before all things,
back of all things, beneath all things, and above all things is the majesty of
God's eternal intention and the immutability of His purpose to make man in the
image of Himself - infinite in wisdom, perfect in understanding, faultless in
counsel, almighty in power, un changeable in purpose, glorious in holiness,
fearful in praises, unswerving in faithfulness, and doing the wonders of God
throughout the universe as sons of God and members of His family, man complete
in God's image and likeness.
The answer to the
eternal question, "What is man that Thou art mindful of him,"
is two fold, because the question is two-fold. What is man? The answer by
example is JESUS CHRIST highly exalted, His name being above every name. He is
the first man and the last man. He is the beginning of the creation of God and
He is the end of the creation of God. We are His younger brothers, all members
of the same family, first being sons of men and secondly sons of God. What He
is we are becoming, to which the scripture clearly attests, saying, "As He
is, so are we in this world. " I John 4:17. Every creature, whether
of beasts or birds or fish or any plant or insect, brings forth seed after his
kind, and shall it be different with God? Shall He not bring forth after His
kind? Shall not be who is begotten of God be a son of God and a member of His
family? Did not Jesus settle the contention forever when He said, " If He called
them gods unto whom the word of God came, and the scripture cannot be broken,
say ye of Him whom the Father hath sanctified and sent into the world, Thou
blasphemest, because I said I am the Son of God?" John 10:35-36.
Jesus Christ was the Son of God and we, too, are sons of God because we are
members of the family of God.
The first part of the
question is, "What is man'!" The second part of the question is,
-That Thou art mindful of him?" Or, "What hast Thou in mind for
man?" The answer is that man will be given dominion, when his perfection
comes and his Christ-likeness is complete, over fish, over birds, and over the
beasts and creeping things of the earth. Gen 1:26. The fish represent
the things beneath. The birds represent the things in the heavens above. The
beasts and creeping things represent things on the earth. That is what God
decreed in the beginning, and that is His immutable intention now and in the
ages to come man in God's image, ruler and lord of the universe.
The teaching concerning the
lake of fire does not appear anywhere in scripture
except in the book of Revelation where it is spoken of in the following
scriptures: Rev 19:20, 20:10, 20:13-15, and 21:8. This last
scripture definitely states, " But the fearful, and unbelieving, and the
abominable, and murders, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and
all liars shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and
brimstone: which is the second death." There should be no
question remaining as to the certainty of this lake of fire; neither should
there be any doubt as to the awful consequence of having to be cast into it.
These scriptures with their dreadful foreboding should be a fearful warning to
all unthinking and foolish people who, because of their love for the baser
things, have dared to ask why we should serve God now if we are all going to be
saved eventually. Such people have no love for God, and they manifest by what
they say that their professed serving of God is only a pretense, arising - not
from any true love for Him - but from fear of punishment. It is not thus with
those who truly love God, for they serve not from fear, but from pure love and
devotion.
Because of the gross
misunderstanding of almost all people concerning the lake of fire, I would like
to make the following observations: First, to show the meaning of fire and
brimstone and, second. to show that the lake of fire is the second death.
In my study of the lake
of fire and brimstone I was very much helped and impressed by the understanding
given by Charles H. Pridgeon, M.A., and because of the excellency of his
work I would like to quote several paragraphs in full, knowing that my own
ability falls far short of his. The following paragraphs are from his excellent
work, Is Hell Eternal.
"The lake of fire
and brimstone signifies a fire burning with brimstone. The word brimstone, or
sulphur, defines the character of the fire.
"The word theion
(Greek), translated brimstone, is exactly the same word theion,
which means divine. Sulfur, or brimstone, was sacred to the deity among the
ancient Greeks, and was used to fumigate, to purify, and to cleanse and to
consecrate to the deity; for this purpose they burned it in their incense. The
verb derived from theion is theioo which means to hallow, to make divine, or to
dedicate to a god. (See Liddell and Scott Greek English Lexicon, 1897 Edition.)
"To any Greek, or
to any trained in the Greek language, a lake of fire and brimstone would
mean a lake of divine purification. The idea of judgment need not be
excluded. Divine purification and divine consecration are the plan) meaning in
ancient Greek. In the ordinary explanation this fundamental meaning of the word
is entirely left out, and nothing but eternal torment' is associated with it.
"The word TORMENT
needs study. In the New Testament the same word is used of one "sick
of' the palsy, grievously tormented." (Matt 8:6). It is used of the
disciples' ship in Galilee, and is translated "tossed with the waves"
(Matt 14:24) It is translated by the word tailing in Mark 6:48. It is
translated by the word vexed in speaking of Lot. (2 Pet 2:8). It is
translated by a word that means birth-pains (Rev 12:2). In other
scriptures it is translated by the word torment or tormented. The original idea
of the verb is "to put to the test by rubbing on a touchstone." Then
it means "to question by applying some test or torture to discover whether
true or not." The original idea was to test some metal that looked like
gold to find whether it was real or not. The meaning and usage of this word
harmonizes with the idea of divine purification and the torment which is the
test to find whether there has been any change in the sufferer or not. Through
the hidden loving purpose of God, every pang of torment will he a birth-pang; and
the grace of God will not be absent - and, as He says, "Behold, I am
making all things new" (literal), He will leave no spot in the universe
unrenewed, "Every knee shall bow and every tongue confess" (Phil
2:10,11, literal). The ages of the ages come to an end. "Then cometh
the end (I Cor 15:24-28). Time ceases. There will be no "day and
night" in eternity. The suffering lasts only while there is "day and
night". Rev 20:10." End of quotation.
I realize that the above
quotation covers the subject very briefly, but how can we put the ocean of
eternal truth into the cup of our human understanding? If there is to be a
restitution of all things. and the scripture is very clear on this issue, and
if it be completely correct, not only offers hope but expresses the ultimate
fulfillment of the purpose which was purposed in Christ Jesus before the world
began or before the ages were formed.
Everyone who considers
himself a student of God's word should familiarize himself with the facts I
have mentioned above. Purchase a good concordance such as Young's or Strong's
and learn how to use it. Also get a good Greek-English lexicon such as the
Emphatic Diaglott so that you can check these things out for yourself. Then you
will not have to depend on what I or some other human being has to say about
it. The fifty scholarly men who sat for ten years, translating the King James
Version of the Bible, produced a magnificent work. We cannot speak too highly
of it, and I sincerely doubt that any other work of translation has ever
remotely equaled its style and beauty; but with a task so great as theirs it is
no small wonder to discover that a few inconsistencies in translation
crept in. Many Christians fail to realize that no translation of the holy
scripture is inspired. Only the original writings by the apostles and the
prophets were inspired. Since, then, the original writing was done in Hebrew
for the Old Testament and Greek for the New Testament, all translating into the
multitudes of other languages has had to be done by learned scholars of Greek
and Hebrew, and these for the most part have done a masterful work.
No other book that ever
was written can be compared to the Bible, which is the word of God. Because the
Bible is a spiritual book, it has very little appeal to the natural mind. This
wonderful book of God does not unfold its mysteries to the careless reader. Its
parables were not written to make spiritual truth clear to the simple and
careless. Parables were not given that a child could understand, as we have been
taught in the past.
Parables were written
for exactly the opposite reason. Do you not remember that on one occasion, when
Jesus had been speaking to the people in parables, His disciples asked Him,
"Why speakest Thou unto them in parables?" Matt 13:10. He said
unto them. "Because it is given unto you to know the mysteries of the
kingdom of heaven but to them it is not given." Matt.13 11. Again
in Luke 8:10 we read, "But to others in parables, that seeing they
might not see, and hearing they might not understand," or, as He said in Matt
13:15, " By hearing ye shall hear, and shall Hot understand: and
seeing ye shall see, and not perceive." So you see from the words of Jesus
that parables were not given to make the mysteries clear to everybody. but
rather to hide the mystery from some and to reveal it by the Spit-it to those
who were ordained to understand.
This wonderful book is
literally packed full of mysteries, parables, types. shadows, and allegories,
which are only unfolded by the Holy Spirit when it is in the best interests of
God's infinite purpose to unfold them. It has been a thing of endless delight
and surpassing joy to me to have made the discovery that the Bible itself and
everything in it is a parable, setting forth by many means the intention of the
all-wise, all-powerful unchanging Lord. As these wonderful truths fall into
place before the eyes of my spirit, each one in its turn signifies the
immutable purpose of God, who, after having made a man of the clay, undertook
to lower the work of His hands into the fiery realm of death for his own
edification, his good, his learning and his understanding. Then comes the restoration
of the creation, not merely to what it was originally, but to an
exaltation so high that our minds completely fail to grasp its supernal
eminence. Even the life and experience of our Messed Redeemer becomes a parable
of the truth of restoration, for He, who was in the form of God and thought it
not robbery to be equal with God, humbled Himself take upon Himself the form of
a man, and. being found in fashion as a man, lie became obedient unto death,
even the death of the cross. Wherefore God hath highly exalted Him and given
Him a name which is above every name, that in the name of Jesus every knee
should bow, of things in heaven and things in earth, and that every tongue
should confess that He is Lord to the glory of God the Father. Can we not see
here how the Son was first lowered into death and then highly exalted? Have we
failed to perceive that "as He is, so are we in this world?" Is it
too much for us to believe the parable set forth here, pressing forward in
faith that we may attain the prize that is set before us as we look unto Jesus,
the author and finisher of our faith, who for the joy that was set before Him
endured the cross and despised the shame and is set down at the right hand of
the majesty on high? Is not this the "excellency of the knowledge of
Christ Jesus our Lord," for whom we have suffered the loss of all things
and do count them but dung that we may win Christ and be found in Him without
spot or blemish? So if the life of our Lord becomes a parable and a type, how
much more shall lesser things!
We have already
considered how Adam's dominion over the fish beneath the earth, the animals on
the earth, and the birds above the earth was a prophetic foreshadow of man's
eventual glory as judge and ruler of the universe under God's authority and
with the mind of Christ. Furthermore in His saying, " Let its make man in
our image and after our likeness," He was saying that this was His
unchanging intention, not only for Adam, but for mankind as a whole. The first
man was presented faultless two thousand years ago, and His beautiful
perfection is a pledge and guarantee that before the age of the ages has run
its course all men will be presented faultless before the throne of His glory
with exceeding joy It cannot be otherwise, for we see Jesus, who was made a
little lower than the angels for the suffering of death, crowned with glory and
honor that He by the grace of God should taste death for every man. And He,
tasting this death, for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross,
despising the shame, and is set down at the right hand of the majesty on high,
henceforth expecting until His enemies be made His footstool, or a resting
place for His feet.
Paul gave us a
remarkable clue to these great mysteries when He explained that the whole
national existence of Israel was a parable or an allegory teaching great
spiritual things. -These things happened unto them for ensamples: and they are
written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the world (ages) are
come," he said. I Cor 10:11. You know the history of Israel as well
as I do. You have read of their beginnings, their rebellion against God and
their punishments, and how some of them have been scattered among all nations
while other of their tribes have become mighty nations in the earth, though
they are so blind that the vast majority of their people have completely lost
sight of their national identity. Shall we believe that all these people will
be cast away and lost forever? Or shall we let our faith embrace the immutable
promise of God, as Paul has said, "Hath God cast away His people? God
forbid . . . God hath not cast away His people which He foreknew." Rom
11:1-2. Then by his pertinent question and its positive answer the apostle
explains the mystery of their being cast away, for he says, "If the
casting away of them be the reconciling of the world what shall the receiving
of them be, but life from the dead?" Rom 11:15. Someone will say,
"I cannot understand this mystery," and I confess I cannot understand
it either. But shall my unbelief make the faith of' God of none effect? God
forbid. Rom 3:3. "But I would not, brethren, that ye should be
ignorant of this mystery, mystery, lest ye should be wise in your own conceits;
that blindness in part is happened to Israel (all Israel) until the fullness of
the Gentiles (nations) be come in. And so shall all Israel be saved." Rom.11:25.
Well. what do you think of that? Shall we not say that God is true though every
man be a liar? In the light Of Such fathomless wisdom is it any great wonder
that the apostle breaks off in the midst of his explanation to burst forth into
heavenly praise crying, "O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and
knowledge of God! How unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways past finding
out! For who hath known the mind of the Lord? Or who hath been His counselor?
Or who hath first given to Him, and it shall be recompensed to him again? For
of Him, and through Him and to Him, are all things: to whom be glory forever.
Amen." Rom 11:13.
Can we now open the eyes
of our understanding to behold the parable from the life of Job? Notice how
this perfect and upright man, who feared God and stayed clear of every evil,
was delivered into the hand of the enemy that through his dreadful experience
in the valley of the shadow of death he might come forth refined by its fire
and brimstone. Was it not the torment and tribulation of this first death that
delivered his soul from all his carnal arguments and set him free from every
last remaining trace of self-righteousness, until from out the fire and
brimstone of his experience - yea, the fiery trial that was to try him - he
came forth as gold tried in the fire with shining face and glorified vision,
crying, "I have heard of Thee by the hearing of the ear: but now mine eye
seeth Thee. Wherefore I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes." Job
42:5-6. Certainly we can see all these things, but let us notice still
further how this man, who lost all things when he was lowered into such a
fearful death, a loss that included both his riches and his family, had all
restored when the fire had devoured his corruption - and not only restored, but
restored double in all things until he was much richer and exceedingly more
famous and influential than he had ever been before. Shall we not see in this
story a parable of the history of all mankind from the time man was lowered
into this realm of death, passing through the fiery furnace of affliction into
the image of God and the restitution of all things? Let us not be like those
adamant folk who, because of their impenetrable hardness, seeing, see not and
hearing, hear not, neither do they understand, but let us see with our eyes and
hear with our ears and understand with our hearts and lay hold of the promise
of restoration that is clearly set before us.
What shall we say of Nebuchadnezzar,
who through God's decree left his high estate and was lowered into the realm of
the beasts and was given a beastly mind? There in the degrading realm of beasts
he remained until he learned that God is all in all. Then, when seven
times had passed over him, his humiliation and repentance were complete, the
glory of his kingdom was restored to him and he, walking in harmony with God,
commanded all men everywhere to fear and tremble before the God of heaven. In
my book, The Mind of Christ, (free upon request), I have gone into greater
detail to show that the experience of this man was a parable of the experience
of all mankind from the time of their transgression and humiliation until the
exceeding glory of that day when all will possess the mind of Christ and all
will be fully restored.
I suppose I could fill
whole volumes with the unfolding of these blessed things, but I shall now leave
the parables, the types, the shadows and prophecies of the Old Testament to
speak of Jesus Christ our Lord and show how His life and ministry was a
prophecy, a parable, a living witness and testimony of the restitution of all
things. Hear Him as He reads this scripture: "The Spirit of the Lord is
upon Me, because He hath anointed Me to preach the gospel to the poor; He hath
sent Me to heal the broken-hearted, to preach deliverance to the captives, and
recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty them that are bruised, to
preach the acceptable year of the Lord." Luke 4:18,19. The
acceptable year of the Lord is nothing less than the kingdom of God, that
millennial kingdom for which all creation groans. The day of the vengeance of
our God Isa 61:2) 1 believe to be identical with the dispensation of the
fullness of times, the age of the ages, in which the Lord through the fiery
Judgment of the second death will gather into Himself everything in heaven and
in earth. Eph 1:10.
Our Lord Jesus Christ
did not attempt to heal every diseased person during His brief ministry on
earth; neither did He deliver every captive nor restore sight to all the eyes
that were blind. He did not set at liberty all that were bruised, nor did He
heal all that were broken-hearted. It was never God's intention that all the
ills of earth should be cured during the short period of His first advent. The
ministry of Jesus, wonderful and remarkable as it was, was only to be a
beginning, a foreshadowing and an ensample of that mighty work of
restoration, reserved for the kingdom age, which will be completed when the
body of Christ is complete. The truth that His earthly ministry was only the
beginning seems to be taught in the words spoken of the miracle performed at
the wedding in Cana of Galilee, "This beginning of miracles did Jesus and
manifested forth His glory," (John 2:11), and is certainly
confirmed by Luke's words, "All that Jesus began to do and teach." Acts.
1:1.
There was a day when the
disciples came to Jesus with the question, "Why then say the scribes that
Elias must first come? And Jesus answered and said unto them, Elias truly shall
first come, and restore all things. But I say unto you that Elias is come already,
and they knew him not, but have done unto him whatsoever they listed. Likewise
also shall the Son of man suffer of them." Matt 17:10-12. Then they
understood that He spoke of John the Baptist, but I am not so sure that this
was His final meaning. At any rate the restoration was not to be completed
then. His ministry was to be only a foreshadow of the restoration of all
things, which, though begun in some small degree then, would not be completed
until the age of the ages. In my meditations before God I have become convinced
that the mighty signs and wonders wrought by the hand of our Lord Jesus Christ
were not wrought entirely for the sake of those few tormented people who were
healed and delivered from their afflictions, but this manifestation of His glory
was intended to be a literal and living witness, a life full of prophetic acts
foreshadowing the kingdom of God and the final dispensation of the fullness of
times that will complete the restoration of all things. The gospel Jesus was
preaching was not the gospel of grace. It was the gospel of the kingdom of God
and His mighty works were a foreshadow of that acceptable day of the Lord. Luke
4:19. The acceptable day of the Lord is the kingdom day. As the vision on
the Mount of Transfiguration was a miniature foreview of the kingdom of God (Matt
16:28), so the entire ministry of Jesus Christ was a foreshadow of the
extent and fullness of all the mighty wonders that are reserved for that
wonderful sabbath day which is to come.
It would be quite
impossible for us here and now to trace the full glory which each act in His
mighty ministry foreshadowed, yet be it known that each and every wonder of His
life from the miraculous draught of wine at the wedding feast in Cana of
Galilee to the healing of the ear of the centurion's servant tells us some new
story of the wonders that are to be when He is King of kings and Lord of lords
in the ages yet to come. The changing of water to wine at the wedding feast
portrays the difference between our present realm of death, and that wonderful
realm of life when He has taken His bride, the New Jerusalem, and that age of
the ages begins. However, to avoid any doubt as to my meaning, we will consider
just a few events in the life of Jesus that clearly demonstrate how His whole
life and ministry was a prophetic foreshadow of the acceptable day of the Lord,
which is the kingdom age of one thousand years. We will certainly not try to
cover all the events, but if you will think each one out for yourself in the
Spirit and with the mind of Christ, you will uncover a whole realm of truth
hitherto hidden from your eyes.
Among the first of the
works Jesus did was His calling of the twelve disciples. This is a very
important and significant thing. These men were chosen to minister with Him and
were given power over all manner of sickness and disease and over demons. The
common thought prevalent in our day is the notion that the main purpose of this
present age of grace is the conversion of the world and the salvation of as
many as possible. The real truth is that this entire age has been set aside in
the wisdom of God to "take out a people for His name." Acts 15:14,
According to James this is in harmony with the prophecies of the Old Testament.
These people who are now being "taken out" from the mass of mankind
are a people being prepared to reign with Christ in the kingdom of God, and
they will be used in that wonderful ministry of destroying the works of the
devil. Therefore, when Jesus in this age of grace speaks to the heart of any man
or woman, saying, "Follow Me," it is an extremely important
event. I am not saying that all who are thus called will be chosen, for
"many are called, but few are chosen" (Matt.22:14), and those
who are finally with Him are "called, chosen and faithful." Rev
17:14. Only those who lay aside their own minds and become possessed of the
mind of Christ will have any hope of reigning in His kingdom. The carnally
minded, though they are believers and though they be saved, will not reign with
Christ in that wonderful kingdom.
No carnality will reign
with Him. Only those whom the scripture speaks of as "in Christ" will
reign with Him; and I shall add that the term in Christ excludes most of the
professing Christians. While some will have an abundant entrance (2 Pet 1:11),
others will be saved so as by fire" (1 Cor 3:15). Let us neither
forget nor neglect these things, but let us lay aside every weight and the sin
which does so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the race before us,
looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith, who for the joy that
was set before Him endured the cross, despised the shame, and is set down at
the right hand of the majesty on high.
In the Gospel of Mark
the mighty works of Jesus are recorded in quick succession. Immediately after
He called His disciples, Jesus is seen entering the synagogue, and there He
taught a doctrine that astonished the people. Mark 1:21. Let me say that if
ever the truth is told in our modern synagogues, those steepled houses that men
speak of as churches, the people who hear will be astonished. They will either
accept the message as wonderful and life-giving or else they will brand the
messenger a heretic, a false prophet, or a nut and cast him out. What Jesus
taught He taught with authority (Mark 1:22), and authority in teaching
is something the people are not accustomed to. What a watered-down gospel the
poor people have been compelled to hear decade after tiresome decade, and
century after weary century! The wicked thought now prevalent in the minds of
preachers is to give the people what they want. They do not give them what they
need as shepherds should do, but they prophesy falsely, and the people love to
have it so. Jer 5:31.
The next great thing of
note was the discovery that right in the synagogue there was a man possessed
with an unclean spirit, and he cried out, saying, "Let us alone; what have
we to do with Thee, thou Jesus of Nazareth. Art Thou come to destroy us? I know
Thee who Thou art, the Holy One of God." Mark 1:24. Now I wonder
who that man was who was possessed with an unclean spirit? I dare not be
certain, but I will tell you who he may have been and who he probably was. He
was probably the leader of the synagogue. Are you horrified at my suggestion?
Well, you need not be, for I have on my desk at this moment a large picture of
a preacher with a reverse collar and all the regalia of a minister, marching
with a crowd of homosexuals, all replete with signs and banners, agitating for
public acceptance and recognition. Do you know what Moses said of homosexuals?
He said they should be cut off from among the people. Lev. 18:22-29. Yet
in our day these abominable demon-possessed people are being ordained as
ministers of the gospel! If Jesus walked into their congregation today, He
would have no choice but to cast the devil out of them, for all homosexuals
and lesbians are sodomites and possessed with an unclean spirit.
There are other devils
in the church system besides this one. There are false prophets, covetous,
boasters, men who do not believe in the resurrection, the blood of Christ, the
Holy Spirit, or regeneration. The Roman system from start to finish is a
"do it yourself" religion. I do not hesitate to say that all who are
rubbing shoulders with it and glorying in ecumenism and the charisma of the
whole evil business are coming under the control of Satan and the power of
devils working miracles. Rev 16:13,14. Have you never read this
scripture? "Babylon the great is fallen, is fallen, and is become the
habitation of devils, and the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of every
unclean and hateful bird." Rev 18:2.
Following the casting
out of the unclean spirit, Mark tells of the healing of the fever. Mark
1:29-31. The whole church system and the entire world system is in a
dreadful burning fever. Men's hearts are failing them for fear and for looking
after the things that are coming upon the earth, for even the powers of the
heavens are being shaken. Nations are rising against nations, kingdoms against
kingdoms, states against states, provinces against provinces, husbands against
wives, children against parents, man against the elements, the floods, the
earthquakes. The sea, the land, and the air groan because of the awful
pollution. The whole creation is in a ferment. But Jesus, the Prince of Peace,
took the fevered woman by the hand, and the fever left her. So it will be when
the kingdom shall come and the saints shall reign. The fever will be gone and
hushed will be all the vain strivings of sinful men.
Following the account of
all these works of power comes the announcement of the healing of all that were
sick. Mark 1:32
At even, when the sun
did set,
The sick, 0 Lord, around
Thee lay;
O with what divers pains
they met,
And with what joy they
went away!
This mighty manifestation
of His power was also a foreshadow of that coming day when all who dwell in the
light of His throne will be free from the sorrows of the past; for there shall
be no more sickness, no more pain, nor sorrow nor death nor sighing. Neither
shall there be any more tears, for the former things are passed away. Rev
21:4. Our Lord Jesus Christ, when He healed the sick who came to Him, was
not making an effort to cure the world that then was of all sickness and
disease. Had that been His intention, he would not have ceased until His work
was done. Because He came preaching the kingdom of God, He was demonstrating
the glory and the power of that coming kingdom and showing us the wealth of its
glory by doing for the few what will be done for the all when the light of His
kingdom shall cover all the earth as the waters now fill the sea.
Thy kingdom come!
Thy will be done in
earth!
Even as it is done in
heaven!
Then in Mark 1:40-45
we have the account of the healing of the leper. Leprosy is always considered
to be typical of sin. It is a disease in the blood. It is a fearful, wasting
disease that has always forced men to live separate from all society. This
disease was always considered incurable by human means. Leprosy is a physical
type of inbred sin. Poor mankind in his blindness vainly hopes for a remedy,
but there is no healing medicine for that which has rotted the flesh away. Only
Jesus Christ can heal the wasted body or soul. All our efforts at
self-reformation are useless, for they leave the soul even as it was. The blood
of Jesus Christ, the Son of God, cleanses from all sin, and there is no other
remedy either in heaven above or in earth beneath; neither is there any other
name given among men whereby we must be saved.
So Jesus cleansed the leper. His divine power alone could cleanse the filth away. What heart is so vile that He cannot cleanse it? In that coming age, when the knowledge of the Lord fills the earth as the waters cover the sea, the multitude of the nations will walk the highway to Jerusalem where His throne abides, for "in that day there shall be a fountain opened to the house of David and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem for sin and for uncleanness." Zech.13:1. "And the Lord sh