Our Lord’s Return—Its
Object,
the Restitution of All Things
Our Lord’s Second Advent
Personal and
Pre-Millennial
•
Its Relationship to the
First Advent
•
The Selection of the
Church and the
Conversion of the World
•
Election and Free Grace
•
Prisoners of Hope
•
Prophetic Testimony
regarding Restitution
•
Our Lord’s Return
Manifestly the Hope of
the Church and the World |
“AND He shall send Jesus
Christ, which [who]
before was preached unto you;
“Whom the heaven must
retain 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 3:20,21
That our Lord intended his disciples
to understand that for some purpose,
in some manner, and at some time, he
would come again, is, we presume,
admitted and believed by all
familiar with the Scriptures. True,
Jesus said,
“Lo, I am with you alway,
even unto the end of the age”
,
(Matthew 28:20)
and by his spirit and by his Word he
has been with the Church
continually, guiding, directing,
comforting and sustaining his
saints, and cheering them in the
midst of all their afflictions.
But though the Church has been
blessedly conscious of the Lord’s
knowledge of all her ways and of his
constant care and love, yet she
longs for his promised personal
return. When he said,
“If I go, I will come
again”,
(John
14:3)
he certainly referred to a
second personal coming.
Some think he referred to the
descent of the holy Spirit at
Pentecost; others, to the
destruction of Jerusalem, etc.
These apparently overlook the fact
that in the last book of the Bible,
written some sixty years after
Pentecost, and twenty-six years
after Jerusalem’s destruction, he
that was dead and is alive speaks of
the event as yet future, saying:
“Behold, I come quickly,
and my reward is with me.”
And the inspired John replies,
“Even so, come, Lord
Jesus.”
Revelation 22:12,20
Quite a number think that when
sinners are converted that forms a
part of the coming of Christ, and
that so he will continue coming
until all the world is converted.
Then, say they, he will have fully
come.
These evidently forget the testimony
of the Scriptures on the subject,
which declares the reverse of their
expectation: that at the time of our
Lord’s second coming the world will
be far from converted to God.
“In the last days
perilous times shall come, for
men shall be lovers of pleasure
more than lovers of God”
2 Timothy 3:1-4
“Evil men and seducers
shall wax worse and worse,
deceiving, and being deceived.”
Verse 13
They forget the Master’s special
warning to his little flock:
“Take heed to yourselves
lest that day come upon you
unawares, for as a snare shall
it come on all them
[not taking heed] that
dwell on the face of the whole
earth.”
Luke
21:34,35
Again, we may rest assured that when
it is said, “All kindreds
of the earth shall wail because of
him,” when they see him
coming (Revelation 1:7), no
reference is made to the conversion
of sinners.
Do all men wail because of the
conversion of sinners? On the
contrary, if this passage refers, as
almost all admit, to Christ’s
presence on earth, it teaches that
all on earth will not love his
appearing, as they certainly would
do if all were converted.
Some expect an actual coming and
presence of the Lord, but set the
time of the event a long way off,
claiming that through the efforts of
the Church in its present condition
the world must be converted, and
thus the Millennial age be
introduced.
They claim that when the world has
been converted, and Satan bound, and
the knowledge of the Lord caused to
fill the whole earth, and when the
nations learn war no more, then the
work of the Church in her present
condition will be ended. When she
has accomplished this great and
difficult task, the Lord will come
to wind up earthly affairs, reward
believers and condemn sinners.
Some scriptures, taken
disconnectedly, seem to favor this
view. But when God’s Word and plan
are viewed as a whole, these will
all be found to favor the opposite
view, viz.:
—that Christ comes before the
conversion of the world, and
reigns for the purpose of
converting the world;
—that the Church is now being
tried, and
—that the reward promised the overcomers is that after being
glorified they shall share with
the Lord Jesus in that reign,
which is God’s appointed means
of blessing the world and
causing the knowledge of the
Lord to come to every creature.
Such are the Lord’s special
promises:
“To him that overcometh
will I grant to sit with me in
my throne.”
Revelation 3:21
“And they lived and
reigned with Christ a thousand
years.”
Revelation 20:4
There are two texts chiefly relied
upon by those who claim that the
Lord will not come until after the
Millennium, to which we would here
call attention. One is,
“This gospel of the
Kingdom shall be preached in all
the world for a witness unto all
nations; and then shall the end
come.”
Matthew
24:14
They claim this as having reference
to the conversion of the world
before the end of the Gospel age.
But witnessing to the world does not
imply the conversion of the world.
The text says nothing about how the
testimony will be received. This
witness has already been given.
In 1861 the reports of the Bible
Societies showed that the Gospel had
been published in every language of
earth, though not all of earth’s
millions had received it. No, not
one half of the sixteen hundred
millions living have ever heard the
name of Jesus. Yet the condition of
the text is fulfilled: the gospel
has been preached in all the world
for a witness—to
every nation.
The Apostle (Acts 15:14) tells that
the main object of
the gospel in the present age is
“to take out a people”
for Christ’s name—the overcoming
Church, which, at his second advent,
will be united to him and receive
his name.
The witnessing to the world during
this age is a secondary object.
The other text is,
“Sit thou at my right
hand, until I make thine enemies
thy footstool.”
Psalms 110:1
The vague, indefinite idea regarding
this text seems to be that Christ
sits on a material throne somewhere
in the heavens until the work of
subduing all things is accomplished
for him through the Church, and that
then he comes to reign. This is a
misconception.
The throne of God referred to
is not a material one, but refers to
his supreme authority and rulership.
The Lord Jesus has been exalted to a
share in that rulership. Paul
declares,
“God hath highly exalted
him [Jesus] and
given him a name above every
name.”
He hath given him authority
above every other, next to the
Father. If Christ sits upon a
material throne until his enemies
are made his footstool [all
subdued], then of course he cannot
come until all things are subdued.
But if “right hand” in this text
refers, not to a fixed locality and
bench, but, as we claim, to power,
authority, rulership, it follows
that the text under consideration
would in no wise conflict with the
other scripture which teaches that
he comes to “subdue all
things unto himself”
(Philippians 3:21), by virtue of the
power vested in him.
To illustrate: Emperor William is on
the throne of Germany, we say, yet
we do not refer to the royal bench,
and as a matter of fact he seldom
occupies it. When we say that he is
on the throne, we mean that he rules
Germany. Right hand signifies the
chief place, position of excellence
or favor, next to the chief ruler.
Thus Prince Bismarck was exalted or
seated at the right hand of power,
by the German Emperor; and Joseph
was at the right hand of Pharaoh in
the kingdom of Egypt—not literally,
but after the customary figure of
speech.
Jesus’ words to Caiaphas agree with
this thought:
“Hereafter shall ye
see the Son of Man sitting on
the right hand of power,
and coming in the clouds of
heaven.”
Matthew 26:64
He will be on the right hand when
coming, and will remain on the right
hand during the Millennial age, and
forever.
A further examination of God’s
revealed plans will give a broader
view of the object of both the first
and second advents. We should
remember that both events stand
related as parts of one plan. The
specific work of the first advent
was to redeem men.
That of the second is to
restore, and bless, and
liberate the redeemed.
Having given his life a ransom for
all, our Savior ascended to present
that sacrifice to the Father, thus
making reconciliation for man’s
iniquity. He tarries and permits
“the prince of this world”
to continue the rule of evil, until
after the selection of
“the Bride, the Lamb’s wife,”
who, to be accounted worthy
of such honor, must overcome the
influences of the present evil
world.
Then the work of giving to the world
of mankind the great blessings
secured to them by his sacrifice
will be due to commence, and he will
come forth to bless all the families
of the earth.
True, the restoring and blessing
could have commenced at once, when
the ransom price was paid by the
Redeemer. Then the coming of
Messiah would have been but one
event, the reign and blessing
beginning at once, as the apostles
at first expected. Acts 1:6
But God had provided
“some better thing for us”—the
Christian Church. Hebrews 11:40
Hence it is in our interest that the
reign of Christ is separated from
the sufferings of the Head by these
nineteen centuries.
This period between the first and
second advents, between the ransom
for all and the blessing of all, is
for the trial and selection of the
Church, which is the body of Christ.
Otherwise there would have been
only the one advent, and the work
which will be done during the period
of his second presence, in the
Millennium, would have followed the
resurrection of Jesus.
Or, instead of saying that the work
of the second advent would have
followed at once the work of the
first, let us say rather that had
Jehovah not purposed the selection
of the “little flock,”
“the body of Christ,”
the first advent would not have
taken place when it did, but would
have occurred at the time of the
second advent, and there would have
been but the one.
God has evidently designed the
permission of evil
for six thousand years, as well as
that the cleansing and restitution
of all shall be accomplished during
the seventh thousand.
Thus seen, the coming of Jesus, as
the sacrifice and ransom for
sinners, was just long enough in
advance of the blessing and
restoring time to allow for the
selection of his “little
flock” of
“joint-heirs.”
This will account to some for the
apparent delay on God’s part in
giving the blessings promised, and
provided for, in the ransom. The
blessings will come in due time, as
at first planned, though, for a
glorious purpose, the price was
provided longer beforehand than men
would have expected.
The Apostle informs us that Jesus
has been absent from earth—in the
heaven—during all the intervening
time from his ascension to the
beginning of the times of
restitution, or the Millennial age—
“Whom the heaven must
retain until the
times of restitution of all
things.”
Acts 3:21
Since the Scriptures thus teach that
the object of our Lord’s second
advent is the restitution of all
things, and that at the time of his
appearing the nations are so far
from being converted as to be angry
(Revelation 11:18) and in
opposition, it must be admitted
either that the Church will fail to
accomplish her mission, and that the
plan of God will be thus far
frustrated, or else, as we claim and
have shown, that the conversion of
the world in the present age was not
expected of the Church. But that
her mission has been to preach the
Gospel in all the world for
a witness, and to prepare
herself under divine direction for
her great future work.
God has not yet by any means
exhausted his power for the world’s
conversion. Nay, more: he has not
yet even attempted
the world’s conversion.
This may seem a strange statement to
some, but let such reflect that if
God has attempted such a work he has
signally failed. As we have seen,
only a small fraction of earth’s
billions have ever intelligently
heard of the only name
whereby they must be saved.
We have only forcibly stated the
views and teachings of some of the
leading sects—Baptists,
Presbyterians and others—viz., that
God is electing or selecting out of
the world a “little flock,” a
Church.
They believe that God will do no
more than choose this Church, while
we find the Scriptures teaching a
further step in the divine plan—a
RESTITUTION for the
world, to be accomplished through
the elect Church, when completed and
glorified.
The “little flock,” the overcomers,
of this Gospel age, are only the
body of “The Seed” in or by whom all
the families of the earth are to be
blessed.
Those who claim that Jehovah has
been trying for six thousand years
to convert the world, and failing
all the time, must find it difficult
to reconcile such views with the
Bible assurance that all God’s
purposes shall be accomplished. His
Word shall not return unto him void,
but shall prosper in the
thing whereto it was sent.
Isaiah 55:11
The fact that the world has not yet
been converted, and that the
knowledge of the Lord has not yet
filled the earth, is a proof that it
has not yet been sent on that
mission.
This brings us to the two lines of
thought which have divided
Christians for centuries, namely,
Election and Free Grace. That both
of these doctrines, notwithstanding
their apparent oppositeness, have
Scriptural support, no Bible student
will deny.
This fact should lead us at once to
surmise that in some way both must
be true. In no way can they be
reconciled except by observing
heaven’s law, order,
and “rightly dividing
the word of truth” on this
subject.
This order, as represented in the
plan of the ages, if observed, will
clearly show us that while an
Election has been in progress during
the present and past ages, what is
by way of distinction designated
Free Grace is God’s gracious
provision for the world in general
during the Millennial age.
If the distinctive features of the
epochs and dispensations outlined in
a preceding chapter be kept in mind,
and all the passages relating to
Election and Free Grace be examined
and located, it will be found that
all those which treat of Election
apply to the present and past ages,
while those which teach Free Grace
are fully applicable to the next
age.
However, Election, as taught in the
Bible, is not the arbitrary
coercion, or fatalism, usually
believed and taught by its
advocates, but a selection according
to fitness and adaptability to the
end God has in view, during the
period appointed for that purpose.
The doctrine of Free Grace,
advocated by Armenians, is also a
much grander display of God’s
abounding favor than its most
earnest advocates have ever taught.
God’s grace or favor in Christ is
ever free, in the sense of being
unmerited.
But since the fall of man into sin,
to the present time, certain of
God’s favors have been restricted to
special individuals, nations and
classes, while in the next age all
the world will be invited to share
the favors then offered, on the
conditions then made known to all,
and whosoever will may come and
drink at life’s fountain freely.
Revelation 22:17
The Election of
the Ancients
Glancing backward, we notice
the selection or election of Abraham
and certain of his offspring as the
channels through which the promised
Seed, the blesser of all the
families of the earth, should come.
Galatians 3:29
We note also the selection of
Israel from among all nations, as
the one in whom, typically, God
illustrated how the great work for
the world should be
accomplished—their deliverance from
Egypt, their Canaan, their
covenants, their laws, their
sacrifices for sins, for the
blotting out of guilt and for the
sprinkling of the people, and their
priesthood for the accomplishment of
all this, being a miniature and
typical representation of the real
priesthood and sacrifices for the
purifying of the world of mankind.
God, speaking to the people,
said,
“You only have I known
of all the families of the
earth.”
Amos
3:2
This people alone was recognized
until Christ came; yes, and
afterwards, for his ministry was
confined to them. He would not
permit his disciples to go to
others—saying, as he sent them out,
“Go not into the way of
the Gentiles, and into any city
of the Samaritans enter ye not.”
Why so, Lord? Because, he
explains,
“I am not sent but to
the lost sheep of the house of
Israel.”
Matthew 10:5,6; 15:24
All his time was devoted to them
until his death. There was done his
first work for the world, the first
display of his free and
all-abounding grace, which in “due
time” shall indeed be a blessing to
all.
This, God’s grandest gift, was
not limited to nation or class. It
was not for Israel only, but for all
the world. For Jesus Christ, by the
grace of God, tasted death for
every man. Hebrews
2:9
And now also, in the Gospel age,
a certain sort of election obtains.
Some parts of the world are more
favored with the gospel (which is
free to all who hear) than others.
Glance at a map of the world and
see how small is the portion
enlightened or blessed in any
appreciable degree by the gospel of
Christ. Contrast yourself, with your
privileges and knowledge, with the
millions in heathen darkness today,
who never heard the call, and who
consequently were not called.
When the called-out company
(called to be sons of God, heirs of
God, and joint-heirs with Jesus
Christ our Lord—who have made their
calling and election sure) is
complete, then the plan of God for
the world’s
salvation will be only beginning.
Not until it is selected,
developed, and exalted to power,
will the Seed
bruise the serpent’s head.
“The God of peace shall
bruise Satan under your feet
shortly.”
Romans 16:20; Genesis 3:15
The Gospel age makes ready the
chaste virgin, the faithful Church,
for the coming Bridegroom. And in
the end of the age, when she is made
“ready” (Revelation 19:7), the
Bridegroom comes, and they that are
ready go in with him to the
marriage—the second Adam and the
second Eve become one, and then the
glorious work of restitution begins.
In the next dispensation, the
new heaven and the new earth, the
Church will be no longer the
espoused virgin, but the Bride.
Then shall
“The Spirit and the
Bride say, Come! And let him
that heareth say, Come! And let
him that is athirst come. And
whosoever will, let him take the
water of life freely.”
Revelation 22:17
The Gospel age, so far from
closing the Church’s mission, is
only a necessary preparation for the
great future work. For this promised
and coming blessing, the whole
creation groaneth and travaileth in
pain together until now, waiting for
the manifestation
of the sons of God. Romans 8:22,19
It is a blessed fact that free
grace in fullest measure, not merely
for the living but for those who
have died as well, is provided in
our Father’s plan as the blessed
opportunity of the coming age.
Some who can see something of
the blessings due at the second
advent, and who appreciate in some
measure the fact that the Lord comes
to bestow the grand blessing
purchased by his death, fail to see
this last proposition, viz.: that
those in their graves have as much
interest in that glorious reign of
Messiah as those who at that time
will be less completely under the
bondage of corruption—death.
But as surely as Jesus died for
all, they all must have the
blessings and opportunities which he
purchased with his own precious
blood. Hence we should expect
blessings in the Millennial age upon
all those in their graves as well as
upon those not in them.
Of this we will find abundant
proof, as we look further into the
Lord’s testimony on the subject. It
is because of God’s plan for their
release that those in the tomb are
called “prisoners of
hope.”
Is There Hope for
the Non-Elect?
It is estimated that about one
hundred and forty-three billions of
human beings have lived on the earth
in the six thousand years since
Adam’s creation. Of these, the very
broadest estimate that could be made
with reason would be that less than
one billion were saints of God.
This broad estimate would leave
the immense aggregate of one hundred
and forty-two billions
(142,000,000,000) who went down into
death without faith and hope in the
only name given
under heaven or among men whereby we
must be saved. Indeed, the vast
majority of these never knew or
heard of Jesus, and could not
believe in him of whom they had not
heard.
What, we ask, has become of
this vast multitude, of which
figures give a wholly inadequate
idea? What is, and is to be, their
condition?
Did God make no provision for
these, whose condition and
circumstances he must have foreseen?
Or did he, from the foundation
of the world, make a wretched and
merciless provision for their
hopeless, eternal torment, as many
of his children claim?
Or has he yet in store for them,
in the heights and depths and
lengths and breadths of his plan, an
opportunity for all to come to the
knowledge of that only name,
and, by becoming obedient to the
conditions, to enjoy everlasting
life?
To these questions, which every
thinking Christian asks himself, and
yearns to see answered truthfully,
and in harmony with the character of
Jehovah, comes a variety of answers:
Atheism answers,
They are eternally dead: there
is no hereafter: they will never
live again.
Calvinism answers,
They were not elected to be
saved. God foreordained and
predestined them to be lost—to
go to hell—and they are there
now, writhing in agony, where
they will ever remain, without
hope.
Arminianism answers,
We believe that God excuses many
of them on account of ignorance.
Those who did the best they knew
how will be sure of being a part
of the “Church of the
First-born,” even though they
never heard of Jesus.
To this last view the majority of
Christians of all denominations
assent (notwithstanding the creeds
of some to the contrary), from a
feeling that any other view would be
irreconcilable with justice on God’s
part.
But do the Scriptures support
this last view? Do they teach that
ignorance is a ground of salvation?
No; the only ground of salvation
mentioned in the Scriptures is
faith in Christ as
our Redeemer and Lord.
“By grace are ye saved,
through faith.”
Ephesians 2:8
Justification by faith is the
underlying principle of the whole
system of Christianity. When asked,
What must I do to be saved? the
apostles answered, Believe on the
Lord Jesus Christ.
“There is none other
name under heaven given among
men whereby we must be saved.”
Acts 4:12 and
“Whosoever shall call
upon the name of the Lord shall
be saved.”
Romans 10:13
But Paul reasons that a man
must hear the gospel before he can
believe, saying,
“How then shall they
call on him in whom they have
not believed? and how shall they
believe in him of whom they have
not heard?”
Romans 10:14
Some claim that Paul teaches
that ignorance will save men, when
he says that
“The Gentiles, which
have not the law, are a law unto
themselves.”
Romans 2:14
They gather from this that the
law which their conscience furnishes
is sufficient to justify them.
But such persons misunderstand
Paul. His argument is that the whole
world is guilty before God. Romans
3:19 That the Gentiles, who had not
the written law, were
condemned, not justified,
by the light of conscience, which,
whether it excused them or accused
them, proved that they were short of
perfection and unworthy of life,
even as the Jews who had the written
law were condemned
by it.
“For by the law is the
knowledge of sin.”
Romans 3:20
The law given to the Jew
revealed his weakness, and was
intended to show him that he was
unable to justify himself before
God; for
“By the deeds of the Law
there shall no flesh be
justified in his
[God’s] sight.”
The written law
condemned the Jews, and the
Gentiles had light enough of
conscience to condemn them.
Thus every mouth is stopped from
claiming the right of life, and all
the world stands guilty before God.
Remembering the statement of
James (2:10), that whosoever shall
keep the whole law, except to offend
in one point, is guilty, and cannot
claim any blessing promised by the
Law Covenant, we realize that indeed
“There is none
righteous; no, not one.”
Romans 3:10
And thus the Scriptures close
every door of hope save one, showing
that not one of the condemned is
able to secure eternal life by
meritorious works, and that it is
equally useless to plead ignorance
as a ground of salvation.
Ignorance cannot entitle any one
to the reward of
faith and obedience.
Many Christians, unwilling to
believe that so many millions of
ignorant infants and heathen will be
eternally lost (which they have been
taught means to be sent to a place
of eternal and hopeless torment),
insist, notwithstanding these Bible
statements, that God will not
condemn the ignorant.
We admire their liberality of
heart and their appreciation of
God’s goodness, but urge them not to
be too hasty about discarding or
ignoring Bible statements. God has a
blessing for all, in a better way
than through ignorance.
But do these act in accordance
with their stated belief? No.
Though they profess to believe that
the ignorant will be saved on
account of their ignorance, they
continue to send missionaries to the
heathen at the cost of thousands of
valuable lives and millions of
money.
If they all, or even half of
them, would be saved through
ignorance, it is doing them a
positive injury to send missionaries
to teach them of Christ; for only
about one in a thousand believes,
when the missionaries do go to them.
If this idea be correct, it
would be much better to let them
remain in ignorance. For then a
much larger proportion would be
saved. Continuing the same line of
argument, might we not reason that
if God had left all men
in ignorance, all
would have been saved?
If so, the coming and death of
Jesus were useless, the preaching
and suffering of apostles and saints
were vain, and the so-called gospel,
instead of being good news, is very
bad news.
The sending of missionaries to
the heathen by those who believe the
Calvinistic or fatalistic view of
election, that the eternal destiny
of each individual was unalterably
fixed before he had an existence, is
even more absurd and unreasonable.
But the Bible, which is full of
the missionary spirit, does not
teach that there are several ways of
salvation—one way by faith, another
by works, and another by ignorance.
Neither does it teach the
God-dishonoring doctrine of
fatalism.
While it shows every other door
of hope closed against the race, it
throws wide open the one, only door,
and proclaims that whosoever will
may enter into life. It shows that
all who do not now see or appreciate
the blessed privilege of entering
shall in due time be brought to a
full knowledge and appreciation.
The only way, by which any and
all of the condemned race may come
to God, is not by meritorious works,
neither by ignorance, but by faith
in the precious blood of Christ,
which taketh away the sin of the
world. 1 Peter 1:19; John 1:29
This is the Gospel, the good
tidings of great joy,
“which shall be
unto ALL PEOPLE.”
Suppose we now look at these
things just as God tells us of them,
and leave the clearing of his
character to himself. Let us
inquire, What has become of the one
hundred and forty-two billions?
Whatever may have become of
them, we may be sure they are not
now in a condition of suffering.
Not only do the Scriptures teach
that full and complete reward is not
given to the Church until Christ
comes, when he shall reward every
man (Matthew 16:27), but that the
unjust are to receive their
punishment then also.
Whatever may be their present
condition, it cannot be their full
reward; for Peter says,
“The Lord knoweth how to
reserve the unjust unto the day
of judgment to be punished”
2 Peter 2:9
and he will do so.
But the thought that so many of our
fellow creatures should at any time
be lost from lack of having had the
knowledge which is necessary to
salvation would be sad indeed to all
who have a spark of love or pity.
Then, too, there are numerous
scriptures which it seems impossible
to harmonize with all this.
Let us see: In the light of the
past and the present as the only
opportunities, laying aside all hope
through a restitution in the coming
age, how shall we understand the
statements,
“God is love,”
and
“God so loved the world
that he gave his only begotten
Son, that whosoever believeth in
him should not perish”?
1 John 4:8; John 3:16
Would it not seem that if God
loved the world so much he might
have made provision, not only that
believers might be saved, but also
that all might hear in order to
believe?
Again, when we read,
“That was the true light
that lighteth every man that
cometh into the world”
(John 1:9),
our observation says, Not so. Every
man has not been enlightened. We
cannot see that our Lord has lighted
more than a few of earth’s billions.
Even in this comparatively
enlightened day, millions of heathen
give no evidence of such
enlightenment; neither did the
Sodomites, nor multitudes of others
in past ages.
Christ Died for
All
We read that Jesus Christ, by
the grace of God, tasted death
“for every man.”
Hebrews 2:9
But if he tasted death for the
one hundred and forty-three
billions, and from any cause that
sacrifice becomes efficacious to
only one billion, was not the
redemption comparatively a failure?
And in that case, is not the
Apostle’s statement too broad?
When again we read,
“Behold, I bring you
good tidings of great joy, which
shall be to ALL PEOPLE”
(Luke 2:10),
and, looking about us, see that it
is only to a “little
flock”
that it has been good tidings, and
not to all people, we would be
compelled to wonder whether the
angels had not overstated the
goodness and breadth of their
message, and overrated the
importance of the work to be
accomplished by the Messiah whom
they announced.
Another statement is,
“There is one God, and
one Mediator between God and
men, the man Christ Jesus, who
gave himself a ransom for all.”
1 Timothy 2:5,6
A ransom for all? Then why
should not all involved have some
benefit from Christ’s death? Why
should not all come
to a knowledge of the truth, that
they may believe?
Without
the key, how dark, how inconsistent,
these statements appear. But when
we find the key to God’s plan, these
texts all declare with one voice,
“ God is love.”
This key is found in the latter part
of the text last quoted—
“Who gave himself a
ransom for all, TO BE TESTIFIED
IN DUE TIME.”
God has a due time for
everything. He could have testified
it to these in their past lifetime.
But since he did not, it proves that
their due time must be future.
For
those who will be of the Church, the
bride of Christ, and share the
kingdom honors, the present is the
“due time” to hear.
Whosoever now has an ear to hear,
let him hear and heed, and he will
be blessed accordingly.
Though Jesus paid our ransom before
we were born, it was not our
“due time” to hear
of it for long years afterward.
Only the appreciation of it brought
responsibility; and this, only to
the extent of our ability and
appreciation.
The same principle applies to
all. In God’s due time it will be
testified to all, and all will then
have opportunity to believe and to
be blessed by it.
The prevailing opinion is that
death ends all probation. But there
is no scripture which so teaches.
All the above, and many more
scriptures, would be meaningless, or
worse, if death ends all hope for
the ignorant masses of the world.
The one scripture quoted to
prove this generally entertained
view is,
“Where the tree falleth,
there it shall be.”
Ecclesiastes 11:3
If this has any relation to
man’s future, it indicates that
whatever his condition when he
enters the tomb, no change takes
place until he is awakened out of
it. And this is the uniform teaching
of all scriptures bearing on the
subject, as will be shown in
succeeding chapters.
Since God does not propose to
save men on account of ignorance,
but
“Will have all men
to come unto the knowledge of
the truth”
(1
Timothy 2:4);
and since the masses of mankind have
died in ignorance; and since
“There is no work, nor
device, nor knowledge, nor
wisdom, in the grave”
(Ecclesiastes 9:10);
therefore God has prepared for the
awakening of the dead, in order to
knowledge, faith and salvation.
Hence his plan is, that
“As all in Adam die,
even so all in Christ shall be
made alive, but each one in his
own order”
—the Gospel Church, the Bride, the
body of Christ, first; afterward,
during the Millennial age, all who
shall become his during that
thousand years of his
presence (mistranslated
coming), the Lord’s
due time for all to know him, from
the least to the greatest.
1 Corinthians 15:22
As death came by the first
Adam, so life comes by Christ, the
second Adam. Everything that mankind
lost through being in the first Adam
is to be restored to those who
believe into the second Adam.
When awakened, with the
advantage of experience with evil,
which Adam lacked, those who
thankfully accept the redemption as
God’s gift may continue to live
everlastingly on the original
condition of obedience. Perfect
obedience will be required, and
perfect ability to obey will be
given, under the righteous reign of
the Prince of Peace. Here is the
salvation offered to the world.
Let us now consider another text
which is generally ignored except by
Universalists; for, although we are
not Universalists, we claim the
right to use, and believe, and
rejoice in, every testimony of God’s
Word. It reads,
“We trust in the living
God, who is the Savior of
all men, specially of
those that believe.”
1 Timothy 4:10
God will save all men, but will
not specially (“to the
uttermost”) save any except
those who come unto him through
Christ. God’s arbitrary salvation of
all men is not such as will conflict
with their freedom of will, or their
liberty of choice, to give them life
against their wills:
“I have set before you,
this day, life and death;
choose life, that ye may
live.”
Simeon contrasted these two
salvations, saying,
“Mine eyes have seen thy
salvation,...a light to
lighten the nations, and
the glory of thy people,
Israel[ites indeed].”
This is in harmony with the
declaration of the Apostle, that the
fact that Jesus Christ, the
Mediator, gave himself a ransom for
all is to be testified to
all IN DUE TIME. This is
that which shall come to all men,
regardless of faith or will on their
part.
This good tidings
of a Savior shall be to all people
(Luke 2:10,11), but the special
salvation from sin and death will
come only to his
people (Matthew 1:21)—those who
believe into him—for we read that
the wrath of God continues to abide
on the unbeliever.
John 3:36
We see, then, that the general
salvation, which will come to every
individual, consists of light from
the true light, and an opportunity
to choose life. As the great
majority of the race is in the tomb,
it will be necessary to bring them
forth from the grave in order to
testify to them the good tidings of
a Savior.
Also, that the special salvation
which believers now enjoy in hope
(Romans 8:24), and the reality of
which will, in the Millennial age,
be revealed, also, to those who
“believe in that day,”
is a full release
from the thralldom of sin, and the
corruption of death, into the
glorious liberty of children of God.
But attainment to all these
blessings will depend upon hearty
compliance with the laws of Christ’s
Kingdom—the rapidity of the
attainment to perfection indicating
the degree of love for the King and
for his law of love.
If
any, enlightened by the Truth, and
brought to a knowledge of the love
of God, and restored (either
actually or reckonedly) to human
perfection, become
“fearful,” and
“draw back” (Hebrews
10:38,39), they, with the
unbelievers (Revelation 21:8), will
be destroyed from among the people.
Acts 3:23 This is the second death.
Thus we see that all these hitherto
difficult texts are explained by the
statement—“to be
testified in due time.”
In due time, that
true light shall lighten every man
that has come into the world.
In due time, it
shall be “good tidings
of great joy to all people.”
And in no other way can these
scriptures be used without wresting.
Paul carries out this line of
argument with emphasis in
Romans 5:18,19. He reasons that, as
all men were condemned to death
because of Adam’s transgression, so
also, Christ’s righteousness, and
obedience even unto death, have
become a ground of justification.
As all lost life in the first Adam,
so all, aside from personal demerit,
may receive life by accepting the
second Adam.
Restitution Taught
by All Holy Prophets
Peter tells us that this
restitution is spoken of by the
mouth of all the holy prophets. Acts
3:19-21 They do all teach it.
Ezekiel says of the valley of dry
bones,
“These bones are the
whole house of Israel.”
To this Paul’s words agree Romans
11:25,26—
“Blindness in part is
happened to Israel until the
fullness of the Gentiles
[the elect company, the
bride of Christ] be come
in; and so all Israel shall be
saved,” or brought back
from their cast-off condition;
for
“God hath not cast away
his people which he foreknew.”
Verse 2
They were cast off from his
favor while the bride of Christ was
being selected, but will be
reinstated when that work is
accomplished. Verses 28-33 The
prophets are full of statements of
how God will plant them again, and
they shall be no more plucked up.
“Thus saith the Lord,
the God of Israel,...I will set
mine eyes upon them for good,
and I will bring them again to
this land; and I will build them
and not pull them down, and I
will plant them and not pluck
them up.
And I will give them an
heart to know me, that I am the
Lord; and they shall be my
people, and I will be their God,
for they shall return unto me
with their whole heart.”
Jeremiah 24:5-7; 31:28; Jeremiah
32:40-42; 33:6-16
These cannot merely refer to
restorations from former captivities
in Babylon, Syria, etc., for they
have since been plucked up.
Furthermore, the Lord says,
“In those days, they
shall say no more, The fathers
have eaten a sour grape, and the
children’s teeth are set on
edge,
“But every one
[who dies] shall die for
his own iniquity.”
Jeremiah 31:29,30
This is not the case now. Each does
not now die for his own sin, but for
Adam’s sin—“In Adam all
die.”
He ate the sour grape of sin,
and our fathers continued to eat
them, entailing further sickness and
misery upon their children, thus
hastening the penalty, death. The
day in which “every man
[who dies] shall
die for his own sin,” only,
is the Millennial or Restitution
day.
Though many of the prophecies
and promises of future blessing seem
to apply to Israel only, it must be
remembered that they were a typical
people. Hence the promises made to
them, while sometimes having a
special application to themselves,
generally have also a wider
application to the whole world of
mankind which that nation typified.
While Israel as a nation was
typical of the whole world, its
priesthood was typical of the elect
“little flock,” the
head and body of Christ, the
“Royal Priesthood.” The
sacrifices, cleansings and
atonements made for Israel typified
the “better sacrifices,”
fuller cleansings and real atonement
“for the sins of the whole
world,” of which they are a
part.
And not only so, but God
mentions by name other nations and
promises their restoration. As a
forcible illustration we mention the
Sodomites. Surely, if we shall find
the restitution of the Sodomites
clearly taught, we may feel
satisfied of the truth of this
glorious doctrine of Restitution for
all mankind, spoken by the mouth of
all the holy prophets.
And why should not the
Sodomites have an opportunity to
reach perfection and everlasting
life as well as Israel, or as any of
us? True, they were not righteous,
but neither was Israel, nor were we
who now hear the gospel.
“There is none righteous; no, not
one,” aside from the
imputed righteousness of Christ, who
died for all.
Our Lord’s own words tell us
that although God rained down fire
from heaven and destroyed them all
because of their wickedness, yet the
Sodomites were not so great sinners
in his sight as were the Jews, who
had more knowledge. Genesis 19:24;
Luke 17:29
Unto the Jews of Capernaum he
said,
“If the mighty works
which have been done in thee had
been done in Sodom, it would
have remained until this day.”
Matthew 11:23
Future Blessings
for the Sodomites
Thus our Lord teaches that the
Sodomites did not have a full
opportunity; and he guarantees them
such opportunity when he adds (verse
24),
“But I say unto you,
that it shall be more tolerable
for the land of Sodom, in the
day of judgment, than for thee.”
The character of the Day of
Judgment and its work will be shown
in succeeding pages. Here we merely
call attention to the fact that it
will be a tolerable
time for Capernaum, and yet
more tolerable for Sodom.
Though neither had yet had
full knowledge, nor all the
blessings designed to come through
the “Seed,” yet Capernaum had sinned
against more light.
And if Capernaum and all Israel
are to be remembered and blessed
under the “New Covenant,” sealed by
the blood of Jesus, why should not
the Sodomites also be blessed among
“all the
families of the earth”? They
assuredly will be.
And let it be remembered that
since God “rained down
fire from heaven and destroyed them
all”
many centuries before Jesus’ day,
when their restoration is spoken of,
it implies their awakening, their
coming from the tomb.
Let us now examine the prophecy
of Ezekiel 16:48-63. Read it
carefully. God here speaks of
Israel, and compares her with her
neighbor, Samaria, and also with the
Sodomites, of whom he says,
“I took them away as
I saw good.”
Neither Jesus nor the Prophet
offers any explanation of the
seeming inequality of God’s dealings
in destroying Sodom and permitting
others more guilty than Sodom to go
unpunished. That will all be made
clear when, in “due
time,”
his great designs are made manifest.
The Prophet simply states that
God “saw good” to
do so, and Jesus adds that it will
be more tolerable for them in the
day of judgment than for others more
guilty.
But upon the supposition that
death ends all probation, and that
thereafter none may have opportunity
to come to a knowledge of the truth
and to obey it, we may well inquire,
Why did God see good to take away
these people without giving them a
chance of salvation through the
knowledge of the only name whereby
they can be saved?
The
answer is, because it was not yet
their due time. In “due
time” they will be awakened
from death and brought to a
knowledge of the truth, and thus
blessed together with all the
families of the earth, by the
promised “Seed.” They will then be
on trial for everlasting life.
With this thought, and with no
other, can we understand the
dealings of the God of love with
those Amalekites and other nations
whom he not only permitted but
commanded Israel to destroy, saying,
“Go, smite Amalek and
utterly destroy all that they
have, and spare them not; but
slay both man and woman, infant
and suckling, ox and sheep,
camel and ass.” 1 Samuel 15:3
This apparently reckless
destruction of life seems
irreconcilable with the character of
love attributed to God, and with the
teaching of Jesus, “Love
your enemies,” etc., until
we come to recognize the systematic
order of God’s plan, the “due time”
for the accomplishment of every
feature of it, and the fact that
every member of the human race has a
place in it.
We can now see that those Amalekites, Sodomites and others
were set forth as examples of God’s
just indignation, and of his
determination to destroy finally and
utterly evildoers. Examples which
will be of service not only to
others, but also to themselves, when
their day of judgment or trial
comes.
Those people might just as well
die in that way as from disease and
plague. It mattered little to them,
as they were merely learning to know
evil, that when on trial, in due
time, they might learn
righteousness, and be able to
discriminate and choose the good and
have life.
But
let us examine the prophecy further.
After comparing Israel with Sodom
and Samaria, and pronouncing Israel
the most blameworthy (Ezekiel
16:48-54), the Lord says,
“When I shall bring
again their captivity, the
captivity of Sodom and her
daughters, and the captivity of
Samaria and her daughters, then
will I bring again the captivity
of thy captives in the midst of
them.”
The captivity referred to can
be no other than their captivity in
death. Those mentioned were then
dead. In death all are captives; and
Christ comes to open the doors of
the grave, and to set at liberty the
captives. Isaiah 61:1; Zechariah
9:11
In verse 55 this is called a
“return to their former
estate”—a restitution.
Some,
who are willing enough to accept of
God’s mercy through Christ in the
forgiveness of their own trespasses
and weaknesses under greater light
and knowledge, cannot conceive of
the same favor being applicable
under the New Covenant to others.
Though they seem to admit the
Apostle’s statement that Jesus
Christ, by the favor of God, tasted
death for every man.
Some of these suggest that the
Lord must, in this prophecy, be
speaking ironically to the Jews,
implying that he would just as
willingly bring back the Sodomites
as them, but had no intention of
restoring either. But let us see how
the succeeding verses agree with
this idea. The Lord says,
“Nevertheless, I
will remember my covenant
with thee in the days of thy
youth, and I will
establish unto thee an
everlasting covenant.
“Then, thou shalt
remember thy ways and be
ashamed, when thou shalt receive
thy sisters....
“And I will
establish my covenant with thee,
and thou shalt know that I am
the LORD;
“That thou mayest
remember and be confounded, and
never open thy mouth any more
because of thy shame, when I am
pacified toward thee for all
that thou hast done, saith the
Lord GOD.”
When a promise is thus signed
by the Great Jehovah, all who have
set to their seal that God is true
may rejoice in its certainty with
confidence; especially those who
realize that these New Covenant
blessings have been confirmed of God
in Christ, whose precious blood is
to seal the covenant.
To
this Paul adds his testimony,
saying,
“And so all Israel
[living and dead]
shall be saved
[recovered from blindness],
as it is written, ’There shall
come out of Zion the Deliverer,
and shall turn away ungodliness
from Jacob.
“For this is my
covenant unto them when I shall
take away their sins.’
“...They are beloved for
the fathers’ sakes;
“Because the gracious
gifts and callings of God are
not things to be repented of.”
Romans 11:26-29
We
need not wonder that Jews,
Sodomites, Samaritans,
and all mankind, will be
ashamed and confounded when in his
own “due time” God
shows forth the riches of his favor.
Yea, many of those who are now God’s
children will be confounded and
amazed when they see how God
so loved THE WORLD, and how
much his thoughts and plans were
above their own.
Christian people generally
believe that God’s blessings are all
and only for the selected Church,
but now we begin to see that God’s
plan is wider than we had supposed.
Though he has given the Church
“exceeding great and
precious promises,” he has
also made bountiful provision for
the world which he so loved as to
redeem.
The Jews made a very similar
mistake in supposing that all the
promises of God were to and for them
alone. But when the
“due time” came and the Gentiles
were favored, the remnant of Israel,
whose hearts were large enough to
rejoice in this wider evidence of
God’s grace, shared that increased
favor, while the rest were blinded
by prejudice and human tradition.
Let those of the Church who now
see the dawning light of the
Millennial age, with its gracious
advantages for all the world, take
heed lest they be found in
opposition to the advancing light,
and so for a time be blinded to its
glory and blessings.
How different is this glorious
plan of God for the selection of a
few now, in order to the blessing of
the many hereafter, from the
distortions of these truths, as
represented by the two opposing
views—Calvinism and Arminianism.
The former both denies the Bible
doctrine of Free Grace and miserably
distorts the glorious doctrine of
Election. The latter denies the
doctrine of Election and fails to
comprehend the blessed fullness of
God’s Free Grace.
Calvinism says: God is all-wise; he
knew the end from the beginning; and
as all his purposes shall be
accomplished, he never could have
intended to save any but a few, the
Church. These he elected and
foreordained to be eternally saved;
all others were equally foreordained
and elected to go to eternal
torment; for
“Known unto God are
all his works from the beginning of
the world."
This
view has its good features. It
recognizes God’s omniscience. This
would be our ideal of a
great God, were it not that
two essential qualities of greatness
are lacking, namely, love and
justice, neither of which is
exemplified in bringing into the
world one hundred and forty-two
billions of creatures doomed to
eternal torture before they were
born, and mocked with protestations
of his love.
Since God is love, and justice
is the foundation of his throne,
such cannot be his character.
Arminianism says: Yes, God is
love; and in bringing humanity into
the world he meant them no
harm—only good. But Satan succeeded
in tempting the first pair, and thus
sin entered into the world, and
death by sin. And ever since, God
has been doing all he can to deliver
man from his enemy, even to the
giving of his Son.
And though now, six thousand
years after, the gospel has reached
only a very small proportion of
mankind, yet we do hope and trust
that within six thousand years more,
through the energy and liberality of
the church, God will so far have
remedied the evil introduced by
Satan that all then living may at
least know of his love, and have an
opportunity to believe and be saved.
While this view presents God as
a being full of loving and
benevolent designs for his
creatures, it implies that he lacks
ability and foreknowledge adequate
to the accomplishment of his
benevolent designs: that he is
deficient in wisdom and power.
From this view it would appear
that while God was engaged in
arranging and devising for the good
of his newly-created children, Satan
slipped in and by one master-stroke
upset all God’s plans to such an
extent that, even by exhausting all
his power, God must spend twelve
thousand years to reinstate
righteousness, even to such a degree
that the remainder of the race who
still live will have an opportunity
to choose good as readily as evil.
But the one hundred and
forty-two billions of the past six
thousand years, and as many more of
the next, are, according to this
view, lost to all eternity, in spite
of God’s love for them, because
Satan interfered with his plans.
Thus Satan would get thousands into
eternal torment to one that God
saves to glory.
This view must exalt men’s
ideas of the wisdom and power of
Satan, and lower their estimation of
these attributes in God, of whom the
Psalmist to the contrary declares
that,
“He spake and it was
done; he commanded and it stood
fast.”
But no: God was not surprised
nor overtaken by the adversary;
neither has Satan in any measure
thwarted his plans. God is, and
always has been, perfect master of
the situation, and in the end it
will be seen that all has been
working together to the
accomplishment of his purposes.
While the doctrines of election
and free grace, as taught by
Calvinism and Arminianism, could
never be harmonized with each other,
with reason, or with the Bible, yet
these two glorious Bible doctrines
are perfectly harmonious and
beautiful, seen from the standpoint
of the plan of the ages.
Seeing, then, that so many of the
great and glorious features of God’s
plan for human salvation from sin
and death lie in the future, and
that the second advent of our Lord
Jesus is the designed first step in
the accomplishment of those long
promised and long expected
blessings, shall we not even more
earnestly long for the time of his
second advent than the less informed
Jew looked and longed for his first
advent?
Seeing that the time of evil,
injustice and death is to be brought
to an end by the dominion of power
which he will then exercise, and
that righteousness, truth and peace
are to be universal, who should not
rejoice to see his day?
And who that is now suffering
with Christ, inspired by the
precious promise that
“if we suffer with him we shall also
reign with him,” will not lift up
his head and rejoice at any evidence
of the approach of the Master,
knowing thereby that our deliverance
and our glorification with him draw
nigh?
Surely all in sympathy with his
mission of blessing and his spirit
of love will hail every evidence of
his coming as the approach of the
“great joy which shall be to
all people.” |