The Permission of Evil
and Its Relation to God’s Plan
Why
Evil was Permitted
•
Right and Wrong as Principles
•
The Moral Sense
•
God Permitted Evil, and Will
Overrule It for Good
•
God
not the Author of Sin
•
Adam’s Trial not a Farce
•
His Temptation Severe
•
He Sinned Wilfully •
The Penalty of Sin not Unjust, Nor
Too Severe
•
The Wisdom, Love and Justice
Displayed in Condemning All in Adam
•
God’s Law Universal.
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Why
does God Permit Evil?
Evil is that which produces
unhappiness; anything which either
directly or remotely causes
suffering of any kind–Webster.
This subject, therefore, not only
inquires regarding human ailments,
sorrows, pains, weaknesses and
death, but goes back of all these to
consider their primary cause—sin–and
its remedy. Since sin is the cause
of evil, its removal is the only
method of permanently curing the
malady.
No
difficulty, perhaps, more frequently
presents itself to the inquiring
mind than the questions,
Why did God permit the present reign
of evil? Why did he permit Satan to
present the temptation to our first
parents, after having created them
perfect and upright?
The
difficulty undoubtedly arises from a
failure to comprehend the plan of
God. God could have prevented the
entrance of sin, but the fact that
he did not should be sufficient
proof to us that its present
permission is designed ultimately to
work out some greater good. God’s
plans, seen in their completeness,
will prove the wisdom of the course
pursued.
Some
inquire, Could not God, with whom
all things are possible, have
interfered in season to prevent the
full accomplishment of Satan’s
design? Doubtless he could; but such
interference would have prevented
the accomplishment of his own
purposes.
His
purpose was to make manifest the
perfection, majesty and righteous
authority of his law, and to prove
both to men and to angels the evil
consequences resulting from its
violation. Besides, in their very
nature, some things are impossible
even with God, as the Scriptures
state. It is
“Impossible for God to lie.”
Hebrews 6:18
“He cannot deny himself.”
2 Timothy 2:13
He
cannot do wrong, and therefore he
could not choose any but the wisest
and best plan for introducing his
creatures into life, even though our
short-sighted vision might for a
time fail to discern the hidden
springs of infinite wisdom.
The
Scriptures declare that all things
were created for the Lord’s pleasure
(Revelation 4:11)—without doubt, for
the pleasure of dispensing his
blessings, and of exercising the
attributes of his glorious being.
And though, in the working out of
his benevolent designs, he permits
evil and evildoers for a time to
play an active part, yet it is not
for evil’s sake, nor because he is
in league with sin; for he declares
that he is
“Not a God that hath pleasure in
wickedness.”
Psalms
5:4
Though
opposed to evil in every sense, God
permits (i.e., does not
hinder) it for a time, because his
wisdom sees a way in which it may be
made a lasting and valuable lesson
to his creatures.
It is a
self-evident truth that for every
right principle there is a
corresponding wrong principle. For
instance, truth and falsity, love
and hatred, justice and injustice.
We distinguish these opposite
principles as right and
wrong, by their effects when put
in action.
That
principle the result of which, when
active, is beneficial and productive
of ultimate order, harmony and
happiness, we call a right
principle. The opposite, which is
productive of discord, unhappiness
and destruction, we call a wrong
principle.
The
results of these principles in
action we call good and
evil. The intelligent being,
capable of discerning the right
principle from the wrong, and
voluntarily governed by the one or
the other, we call virtuous or
sinful.
This
faculty of discerning between right
and wrong principles is called
the moral sense, or
conscience. It is by this moral
sense which God has given to man
that we are able to judge of God and
to recognize that he is good.
It is
to this moral sense that God always
appeals to prove his righteousness
or justice. By the same moral sense
Adam could discern sin, or
unrighteousness, to be evil,
even before he knew all its
consequences.
The
lower orders of God’s creatures are
not endowed with this moral sense. A
dog has some intelligence, but not
to this degree, though he may learn
that certain actions bring the
approval and reward of his master,
and certain others his disapproval.
He might steal or take life, but
would not be termed a sinner. Or he
might protect property and life, but
would not be called virtuous—because
he is ignorant of the moral quality
of his actions.
God
could have made mankind devoid of
ability to discern between right and
wrong, or able only to discern and
to do right. But to have made him
so would have been to make merely a
living machine, and certainly not a
mental image of his Creator.
Or he
might have made man perfect and a
free agent, as he did, and have
guarded him from Satan’s temptation.
In that case, man’s experience being
limited to good, he would have been
continually liable to suggestions of
evil from without, or to ambitions
from within, which would have made
the everlasting future uncertain.
An outbreak of disobedience and
disorder might always have been a
possibility; besides which, good
would never have been so highly
appreciated except by its contrast
with evil.
God
first made his creatures acquainted
with good, surrounding them with it
in Eden. Afterward, as a penalty
for disobedience, he gave them a
severe knowledge of evil.
Expelled from Eden and deprived of
fellowship with himself, God let
them experience sickness, pain and
death, that they might thus forever
know evil and the inexpediency and
exceeding sinfulness of sin.
By a
comparison of results they came to
an appreciation and proper estimate
of both.
“And the Lord said, Behold, the
man is become as one of us, to
know good and evil.”
Genesis 3:22
In this
their posterity share, except that
they first obtain their knowledge of
evil, and cannot fully realize what
good is until they experience it in
the Millennium, as a result of their
redemption by him who will then be
their Judge and King.
The
moral sense, or judgment of right
and wrong, and the liberty to use
it, which Adam possessed, were
important features of his likeness
to God. The law of right and wrong
was written in his natural
constitution. It was a part of his
nature, just as it is a part of the
divine nature.
But let
us not forget that this image or
likeness of God, this originally
law-inscribed nature of man, has
lost much of its clear outline
through the erasing, degrading
influence of sin. Hence it is not
now what it was in the first man.
Ability
to love implies ability to hate;
hence we may reason that the Creator
could not make man in his own
likeness, with power to love and to
do right, without the corresponding
ability to hate and to do wrong.
This liberty of choice, termed free
moral agency, or free will, is a
part of man’s original endowment.
This, together with the full measure
of his mental and moral faculties,
constituted him an image of his
Creator.
Today,
after six thousand years of
degradation, so much of the original
likeness has been erased by sin that
we are not free, being bound, to a
greater or less extent, by sin and
its entailments, so that sin is now
more easy and therefore more
agreeable to the fallen race than is
righteousness.
That
God could have given Adam such a
vivid impression of the many evil
results of sin as would have
deterred him from it, we need not
question, but we believe that God
foresaw that an actual experience of
the evil would be the surest and
most lasting lesson to serve man
eternally.
For
that reason God did not prevent but
permitted man to take his choice,
and to feel the consequences of
evil. Had opportunity to sin never
been permitted, man could not have
resisted it, consequently there
would have been neither virtue nor
merit in his right-doing.
God seeketh such to worship him as
worship in spirit and in truth. He
desires intelligent and willing
obedience, rather than ignorant,
mechanical service.
He
already had in operation inanimate
mechanical agencies accomplishing
his will, but his design was to make
a nobler thing, an intelligent
creature in his own likeness, a lord
for earth, whose loyalty and
righteousness would be based upon an
appreciation of right and wrong, of
good and evil.
The
principles of right and wrong, as
principles, have always existed,
and must always exist. All
perfect, intelligent creatures in
God’s likeness must be free to
choose either, though the right
principle only will forever
continue to be active.
The
Scriptures inform us that when the
activity of the evil principle has
been permitted long enough to
accomplish God’s purpose, it will
forever cease to be active, and that
all who continue to submit to its
control shall forever cease to
exist. 1 Corinthians 15:25,26;
Hebrews 2:14
Right-doing and right-doers, only,
shall continue forever.
But the
question recurs in another form:
Could not man have been made
acquainted with evil in some other
way than by experience?
There
are four ways of knowing things,
namely, by intuition, by
observation, by experience, and by
information received through sources
accepted as positively truthful.
An
intuitive knowledge would be a
direct apprehension, without the
process of reasoning, or the
necessity for proof. Such knowledge
belongs only to the divine Jehovah,
the eternal fountain of all wisdom
and truth, who, of necessity and in
the very nature of things, is
superior to all his creatures.
Therefore, man’s knowledge of good
and evil could not be intuitive.
Man’s
knowledge might have come by
observation, but in that event there
must needs have been some exhibition
of evil and its results for man to
observe. This would imply the
permission of evil somewhere, among
some beings. Why not as well among
men, and upon the earth, as among
others elsewhere?
Why
should not man be the illustration,
and get his knowledge by practical
experience? It is so: man is gaining
a practical experience, and is
furnishing an illustration to others
as well, being “made a
spectacle to angels.”
Adam
already had a knowledge of evil by
information, but that was
insufficient to restrain him from
trying the experiment. Adam and Eve
knew God as their Creator, and hence
as the one who had the right to
control and direct them; and God had
said of the forbidden tree,
“In the day thou eatest thereof,
dying thou shalt die.”
They
had, therefore, a theoretical
knowledge of evil, though they had
never observed or experienced its
effects. Consequently, they did not
appreciate their Creator’s loving
authority and his beneficent law,
nor the dangers from which he
thereby proposed to protect them.
They therefore yielded to the
temptation which God wisely
permitted, the ultimate utility of
which his wisdom had traced.
Few
appreciate the severity of the
temptation under which our first
parents fell, nor yet the justice of
God in attaching so severe a penalty
to what seems to many so slight an
offense. But a little reflection
will make all plain.
The
Scriptures tell the simple story of
how the woman, the weaker one, was
deceived, and thus became a
transgressor. Her experience and
acquaintance with God were even more
limited than Adam’s, for he was
created first, and God had directly
communicated to him before her
creation the knowledge of the
penalty of sin, while Eve probably
received her information from Adam.
When
she had partaken of the fruit, she,
having put confidence in Satan’s
deceptive misrepresentation,
evidently did not realize the extent
of the transgression, though
probably she had misgivings, and
slight apprehensions that all was
not well. But, although deceived,
Paul says she was a transgressor–
though not so culpable as if she had
transgressed against greater light.
Adam,
we are told, unlike Eve, was not
deceived. 1 Timothy 2:14
Hence he
must have transgressed with a fuller
realization of the sin, and with the
penalty in view, knowing certainly
that he must die. We can readily see
what was the temptation which
impelled him thus recklessly to
incur the pronounced penalty.
Bearing
in mind that they were perfect
beings, in the mental and moral
likeness of their Maker, the godlike
element of love was displayed with
marked prominence by the perfect man
toward his beloved companion, the
perfect woman.
Realizing the sin and fearing Eve’s
death, and thus his loss (and that
without hope of recovery, for no
such hope had been given), Adam, in
despair, recklessly concluded not to
live without her. Deeming his own
life unhappy and worthless without
her companionship, he wilfully
shared her act of disobedience in
order to share the death-penalty
which he probably supposed rested on
her.
Both
were “in the transgression,”
as the Apostle shows. Romans 5:14; 1
Timothy 2:14
But
Adam and Eve were one and not
“twain.” Hence Eve shared the
sentence which her conduct helped to
bring upon Adam. Romans 5:12,17-19
God not
only foresaw that, having given man
freedom of choice, he would, through
lack of full appreciation of
sin and its results, accept it, but
he also saw that, becoming
acquainted with it, he would still
choose it, because that acquaintance
would so impair his moral nature
that evil would gradually become
more agreeable and more desirable to
him than good.
Still,
God designed to permit evil,
because, having the remedy provided
for man’s release from its
consequences, he saw that the result
would be to lead him, through
experience, to a full appreciation
of “the exceeding
sinfulness of sin” and
of the matchless brilliancy of
virtue in contrast with it—thus
teaching him the more to love and
honor his Creator, who is the source
and fountain of all goodness, and
forever to shun that which brought
so much woe and misery.
So the
final result will be greater love
for God, and greater hatred of all
that is opposed to his will, and
consequently the firm establishment
in everlasting righteousness of all
such as shall profit by the lessons
God is now teaching through the
permission of sin and correlative
evils.
However, a wide distinction should
be observed between the indisputable
fact that God has permitted sin, and
the serious error of some which
charges God with being the author
and instigator of sin. The latter
view is both blasphemous and
contradictory to the facts presented
in the Scriptures.
Those
who fall into this error generally
do so in an attempt to find another
plan of salvation than that which
God has provided through the
sacrifice of Christ as our
ransom-price.
If
they succeed in convincing
themselves and others that God is
responsible for all sin and
wickedness and crime,* and that man
as an innocent tool in his hands was
forced into sin, then they have
cleared the way for the theory that
not a sacrifice for our sins, nor
mercy in any form, was needed, but
simply and only JUSTICE.
*Two texts of
Scripture (Isaiah 45:7 and
Amos 3:6) are used to
sustain this theory, but by
a misinterpretation of the
word evil in both texts.
Sin is always
an evil, but an evil is not
always a sin. An earthquake,
a conflagration, a flood or
a pestilence would be a
calamity, an evil; but none
of these would be sins.
The word evil
in the texts cited signifies
calamities.
The same Hebrew word is
translated affliction in
Psalms 34:19; 107:39;
Jeremiah 48:16; Zechariah
1:15.
It is
translated trouble
in Psalms 27:5; 41:1; 88:3;
107:26; Jeremiah 51:2;
Lamentations 1:21.
It is
translated
calamities, adversity,
and distress
in 1 Samuel 10:19; Psalms
10:6; 94:13; 141:5;
Ecclesiastes 7:14; Nehemiah
2:17.
And the same
word is in very many places
rendered
harm,
mischief, sore, hurt,
misery, grief and sorrow.
In Isaiah 45:7 and Amos 3:6
the Lord would remind Israel
of his covenant made with
them as a nation. If they
would obey his laws he would
bless them and protect them
from the calamities common
to the world in general.
But that if they would
forsake him he would bring
calamities (evils) upon them
as chastisements.
See Deuteronomy
28:1-14,15-32; Leviticus
26:14-16; Joshua
23:6-11,12-16.
When calamities came upon
them, however, they were
inclined to consider them as
accidents and not as
chastisements. Hence God
sent them word through the
prophets, reminding them of
their covenant and telling
them that their calamities
were from him and by his
will for their correction.
It is absurd to use these
texts to prove God the
author of sin, for they do
not at all refer to sin.
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Thus,
too, they lay a foundation for
another part of their false theory,
viz., universalism, claiming that as
God caused all the sin and
wickedness and crime in all, he will
also cause the deliverance of all
mankind from sin and death. And
reasoning that God willed and caused
the sin, and that none could resist
him, so they claim that when he
shall will righteousness all will
likewise be powerless to resist him.
But in
all such reasoning, man’s noblest
quality, liberty of will or
choice, the most striking
feature of his likeness to his
Creator, is entirely set aside. Man
is theoretically degraded to a mere
machine which acts only as it is
acted upon.
If this
were the case, man, instead of being
the lord of earth, would be inferior
even to insects, for they
undoubtedly have a will or power of
choice. Even the little ant has been
given a power of will which man,
though by his greater power he may
oppose and thwart, cannot destroy.
God Seeks Voluntary Worship
True,
God has power to force man into
either sin or righteousness, but his
Word declares that he has no such
purpose. He could not consistently
force man into sin for the same
reason that “he cannot deny
himself.” Such a course would be
inconsistent with his righteous
character, and therefore an
impossibility.
He
seeks the worship and love of only
such as worship him in spirit and in
truth. To this end he has given man
a liberty of will like unto
his own, and desires him to
choose righteousness.
Permitting man to choose for
himself led to his fall from divine
fellowship and favor and blessings,
into death.
By his
experience in sin and death, man
learns practically what God offered
to teach him theoretically, without
his experiencing sin and its
results. God’s foreknowledge of what
man would do is not used against
him, as an excuse for degrading him
to a mere machine-being. On the
contrary, it is used in man’s favor.
God,
foreseeing the course man would take
if left free to choose for himself,
did not hinder him from tasting sin
and its bitter results
experimentally, but he began at once
to provide a means for his recovery
from his first transgression by
providing a Redeemer, a great
Savior, able to save to the
uttermost all who would return
unto God through him.
To this
end—that man might have a free
will and yet be enabled to
profit by his first failure in its
misuse, in disobedience to the
Lord’s will—God has provided not
only a ransom for all, but
also that a knowledge of the
opportunity thus offered of
reconciliation with himself shall be
testified to all in due time. 1
Timothy 2:3-6
The
severity of the penalty was not a
display of hatred and malice on
God’s part, but the necessary and
inevitable, final result of evil,
which God thus allowed man to see
and feel. God can sustain life as
long as he sees fit, even against
the destructive power of actual
evil.
It
would be as impossible for God to
sustain such a life everlastingly,
as it is for God to lie. That is, it
is morally impossible.
Such a
life could only become more and more
a source of unhappiness to itself
and others. Therefore, God is too
good to sustain an existence so
useless and injurious to itself and
others.
His
sustaining power being withdrawn,
destruction, the natural result of
evil, would ensue. Life is a favor,
a gift of God, and it will be
continued everlastingly only to the
obedient.
No
injustice has been done to Adam’s
posterity in not affording them each
an individual trial. Jehovah was in
no sense bound to bring us into
existence. Having brought us into
being, no law of equity or justice
binds him to perpetuate our being
everlastingly, nor even to grant us
a trial under promise of everlasting
life if obedient. Mark this point
well.
The
present life, which from the cradle
to the tomb is but a process of
dying, is, notwithstanding all its
evils and disappointments, a boon, a
favor, even if there were no
hereafter. The large majority so
esteem it, the exceptions (suicides)
being comparatively few. These our
courts of justice have repeatedly
decided to be mentally unbalanced,
as otherwise they would not thus cut
themselves off from present
blessings.
Besides, the conduct of the perfect
man, Adam, shows us what the conduct
of his children would have been
under similar circumstances.
Many
have imbibed the erroneous idea that
God placed our race on trial for
life with the alternative of
eternal torture, whereas nothing
of the kind is even hinted at in the
penalty. The favor or blessing of
God to his obedient children is
life—continuous life—free from pain,
sickness and every other element of
decay and death.
Adam
was given this blessing in the full
measure, but was warned that he
would be deprived of this “gift” if
he failed to render obedience to
God—
“In the day that thou eatest
thereof, dying, thou shalt die.”
He knew
nothing of a life in torment,
as the penalty of sin.
Life
everlasting is nowhere promised to
any but the obedient. Life is God’s
gift, and death, the opposite of
life, is the penalty he prescribes.
Eternal
torture is nowhere suggested in the
Old Testament Scriptures. Only a
few statements in the New Testament
can be so misconstrued as to appear
to teach it. These are found either
among the symbolisms of Revelation,
or among the parables and dark
sayings of our Lord, which were
not understood by the people who
heard them (Luke 8:10), and which
seem to be but little better
comprehended today.
“The wages of sin is
death.”
Romans 6:23
“The soul that sinneth,
it shall die.”
Ezekiel 18:4
Many
have supposed God unjust in allowing
Adam’s condemnation to be shared by
his posterity, instead of granting
each one a trial and chance for
everlasting life similar to that
which Adam enjoyed.
But
what will such say if it now be
shown that the world’s opportunity
and trial for life will be much more
favorable than was Adam’s; and that,
too, because God adopted this
plan of permitting Adam’s race to
share his penalty in a natural way?
We believe this to be the case, and
will endeavor to make it plain.
God
assures us that as condemnation
passed upon all in Adam,
so he has arranged for a new head,
father or life-giver for the race,
into whom all may be transferred by
faith and obedience. That as all in
Adam shared the curse of death, so
all in Christ will share the
blessing of restitution, the Church
being an exception. Romans
5:12,18,19
Thus
seen, the death of Jesus, the
undefiled, the sinless one, was a
complete settlement toward God of
the sin of Adam. As one man had
sinned, and all in him had shared
his curse, his penalty, so Jesus,
having paid the penalty of that one
sinner, bought not only Adam, but
all his posterity—all me—who by
heredity shared his weaknesses and
sins and the penalty of these—death.
Our
Lord, “the man Christ Jesus,”
himself unblemished, approved, and
with a perfect seed or race in him,
unborn, likewise untainted with sin,
gave his all of human life
and title as the full
ransom-price for Adam and the
race or seed in him when sentenced.
After
fully purchasing the lives of Adam
and his race, Christ offers to adopt
as his seed, his children, all of
Adam’s race who will accept the
terms of his New Covenant and thus
by faith and obedience come into the
family of God and receive
everlasting life.
Thus
the Redeemer will “see his
seed [as many of Adam’s seed as
will accept adoption, upon
his conditions] and prolong his
days [resurrection to a higher
than human plane, being granted him
by the Father as a reward for his
obedience],” and all in
the most unlikely way; by the
sacrifice of life and posterity. And
thus it is written:
“As all in Adam die,
even so all in Christ shall be
made alive.” Corrected
translation,
1 Corinthians 15:22
The
injury we received through Adam’s
fall (we suffered no injustice) is,
by God’s favor, to be more than
offset with favor through Christ.
All will sooner or later (in God’s
“due time”)
have a full opportunity to be
restored to the same standing that
Adam enjoyed before he sinned.
Those
who do not receive a full knowledge
and, by faith, an enjoyment of this
favor of God in the present time
(and such are the great majority,
including children and heathen) will
assuredly have these privileges in
the next age, or “world
to come,” the
dispensation or age to follow the
present.
To this
end,
“All that are in their
graves...shall come forth.”
As each
one (whether in this age or the
next) becomes fully aware of the
ransom-price given by our Lord
Jesus, and of his subsequent
privileges, he is considered as on
trial, as Adam was. Obedience
brings lasting life, and
disobedience lasting death—the
“second death.”
Perfect
obedience, however, without perfect
ability to render it, is not
required of any. Under the Covenant
of Grace, members of the Church
during the Gospel age have had the
righteousness of Christ imputed to
them by faith, to make up their
unavoidable deficiencies through the
weakness of the flesh.
Divine
Grace will also operate toward
“whosoever will”
of the world during the Millennial
age. Not until physical perfection
is reached (which will be the
privilege of all before the
close of the Millennial age) will
absolute moral perfection be
expected.
That
new trial, the result of the ransom
and the New Covenant, will differ
from the trial in Eden, in that in
it the acts of each one will affect
only his own future.
But
would not this be giving some of the
race a second chance to gain
everlasting life?
We
answer—The first chance for
everlasting life was lost for
himself and all of his race,
“yet in his loins,”
by father Adam’s disobedience. Under
that original trial
“condemnation passed upon all men.”
God’s
plan was that through Christ’s
redemption-sacrifice Adam, and
all who lost life in his
failure, should, after having tasted
of the exceeding sinfulness of sin
and felt the weight of sin’s
penalty, be given the opportunity to
turn unto God through faith in the
Redeemer.
If any
one chooses to call this a “second
chance,” let him do so. It must
certainly be Adam’s second chance,
and in a sense at least it is the
same for all of the redeemed race,
but it will be the first
individual opportunity of his
descendants, who, when born, were
already under condemnation to death.
Call it
what we please, the facts are the
same. All were sentenced to death
because of Adam’s disobedience, and
all will enjoy (in the Millennial
age) a full opportunity to
gain everlasting life under the
favorable terms of the New Covenant.
This,
as the angels declared, is “
Good tidings of great joy which
shall be unto all people.”
As the Apostle declared, this grace
of God—that our Lord Jesus “gave
himself a ransom for all”—must
be “testified” to all
“in due time.”
Romans 5:17-19; 1 Timothy 2:4-6
Men,
not God, have limited to the Gospel
age this chance or opportunity of
attaining life. God, on the
contrary, tells us that the Gospel
age is merely for the selection of
the Church, the royal priesthood,
through whom, during a succeeding
age, all others shall be brought to
an accurate knowledge of the truth
and granted full opportunity to
secure everlasting life under the
New Covenant.
But
what advantage is there in the
method pursued?
Why not
give all men an individual chance
for life now, at once, without the
long process of Adam’s trial and
condemnation, the share by his
offspring in his condemnation, the
redemption of all by Christ’s
sacrifice, and the new offer to all
of everlasting life upon the New
Covenant conditions?
If evil
must be permitted because of man’s
free moral agency, why is its
extermination accomplished by such a
peculiar and circuitous method?
Why
allow so much misery to intervene,
and to come upon many who will
ultimately receive the gift of life
as obedient children of God?
Ah!
that is the point on which interest
in this subject centers. Had God
ordered differently the propagation
of our species, so that children
would not partake of the results of
parental sins— weaknesses, mental,
moral and physical. Had the
Creator so arranged that all should
have a favorable Edenic condition
for their testing, and that
transgressors only should be
condemned and “cut off,” how many
might we presume would, under all
those favorable conditions, be found
worthy, and how many unworthy of
life?
If the
one instance of Adam be taken as a
criterion (and he certainly was in
every respect a sample of perfect
manhood), the conclusion would be
that none would have been found
perfectly obedient and worthy;
because none would possess that
clear knowledge of and experience
with God, which would develop in
them full confidence in his laws,
beyond their personal judgment.
We are
assured that it was Christ’s
knowledge of the Father that enabled
him to trust and obey implicitly.
Isaiah 53:11
But let
us suppose that one-fourth would
gain life; or even more, suppose
that one-half were found worthy, and
that the other half would suffer the
wages of sin—death. Then what?
Let us
suppose the other half, the
obedient, had neither experienced
nor witnessed sin. Might they not
forever feel a curiosity toward
things forbidden, only restrained
through fear of God and of the
penalty? Their service could not be
so hearty as though they knew good
and evil, and hence had a full
appreciation of the benevolent
designs of the Creator in making the
laws which govern his own course as
well as the course of his creatures.
Then,
too, consider the half that would
thus go into death as the result of
their own willful sin. They would be
lastingly cut off from life, and
their only hope would be that God
would in love remember them as his
creatures, the work of his hands,
and provide another trial for them.
But why
do so? The only reason would be a
hope that if they were re-awakened
and tried again, some of them, by
reason of their larger
experience, might then choose
obedience and live.
But
even if such a plan were as good in
its results as the one God has
adopted, there would be serious
objections to it.
“But we had the sentence of
death in ourselves,
that we should not trust in
ourselves,
but in God which raiseth the
dead:
“Who delivered us from so great
a death,
and doth deliver: in whom we
trust that he will yet deliver
us.”
II Corinthians 1:9,10
How
much more like the wisdom of God to
confine sin to certain limits, as
his plan does.
How
much better even our finite minds
can discern it to be, to have but
one perfect and impartial law, which
declares the wages of willful sin to
be death—destruction—cutting off
from life.
God
thus limits the evil which he
permits, by providing that the
Millennial reign of Christ shall
accomplish the full extinction of
evil and also of willful evil-doers,
and usher in an eternity of
righteousness, based upon full
knowledge and perfect free-will
obedience by perfect beings.
But
there are two other objections to
the plan suggested, of trying each
individual separately at first. One
Redeemer was quite sufficient in the
plan which God adopted, because only
one had sinned, and only
one had been condemned.
(Others shared his
condemnation.)
But if
the first trial had been an
individual trial, and if one-half of
the race had sinned and been
individually condemned, it would
have required the sacrifice of a
redeemer for each condemned
individual.
One
unforfeited life could redeem one
forfeited life, but no more. The one
perfect man, “the man
Christ Jesus,” who
redeems the fallen Adam (and our
losses through him), could not have
been “a ransom
[a corresponding price] for
ALL” under any other
circumstances than those of the plan
which God chose.
If we
should suppose the total number of
human beings since Adam to be one
hundred billions, and that only
one-half of these had sinned, it
would require all of the fifty
billions of obedient, perfect men to
die in order to give a ransom
[a corresponding price] for all
the fifty billions of
transgressors.
So by
this plan also death would pass upon
all. Such a plan would involve no
less suffering than is at
present experienced.
The
other objection to such a plan is
that it would seriously disarrange
God’s plans relative to the
selection and exaltation to the
divine nature of a “little
flock,”
the body of Christ, a company of
which Jesus is the Head and Lord.
God
could not justly command the fifty
billions of obedient sons to give
their rights, privileges and lives
as ransoms for the sinners. Under
his own law their obedience would
have won the right to lasting life.
Hence,
if those perfect men were asked to
become ransomers of the fallen ones,
it would be God’s plan, as with our
Lord Jesus, to set some special
reward before them, so that they,
for the joy set before them, might
endure the penalty of their
brethren.
If the
same reward should be given them
that was given to our Lord Jesus,
namely, to partake of a new nature,
the divine, and to be highly exalted
above angels and principalities and
powers, and every name that is
named—next to Jehovah (Ephesians
1:20,21), then there would be an
immense number on the divine plane,
which the wisdom of God evidently
did not approve.
Furthermore, these fifty billions,
under such circumstances, would all
be on an equality, and none
among them chief or head, while the
plan God has adopted calls
for but one Redeemer, one highly
exalted to the divine nature, and
then a “little flock” of those
whom he redeemed, and who
“walk in his footsteps”
of suffering and self-denial, to
share his name, his honor, his glory
and his nature, even as the wife
shares with the husband.
Those
who can appreciate this feature of
God’s plan, which, by condemning all
in one representative, opened
the way for the ransom and
restitution of all by one
Redeemer, will find in it the
solution of many perplexities.
They
will see that the condemnation of
all in one was the reverse of an
injury. It was a great favor to
all when taken in connection
with God’s plan for providing
justification for all through
another one’s sacrifice.
Evil
will be forever extinguished when
God’s purpose in permitting it shall
have been accomplished, and when the
benefits of the ransom are made
co-extensive with the penalty of
sin.
It is
impossible, however, to appreciate
rightly this feature of the plan of
God without a full recognition of
the sinfulness of sin, the nature of
its penalty—death, the importance
and value of the ransom which
our Lord Jesus gave, and the
positive and complete restoration of
the individual to favorable
conditions, conditions under which
he will have full and ample trial,
before being adjudged worthy of the
reward (lasting life), or of the
penalty (lasting death).
In view
of the great plan of redemption, and
the consequent “restitution of
all things,” through Christ,
we can see that blessings result
through the permission of evil
which, probably, could not otherwise
have been so fully realized.
Not
only are men benefited to all
eternity by the experience gained,
and angels by their observation of
man’s experiences, but all are
further advantaged by a fuller
acquaintance with God’s character as
manifested in his plan.
When
his plan is fully accomplished, all
will be able to read clearly his
wisdom, justice, love and power.
They
will see the justice which could not
violate the divine decree, nor save
the justly condemned race without a
full cancellation of their penalty
by a willing redeemer.
They
will see the love which provided
this noble sacrifice and which
highly exalted the Redeemer to God’s
own right hand, giving him power and
authority thereby to restore to life
those whom he had purchased with his
precious blood.
They
will also see the power and wisdom
which were able to work out a
glorious destiny for his creatures,
and so to overrule every opposing
influence as to make them either the
willing or the unwilling agents for
the advancement and final
accomplishment of his grand designs.
Had
evil not been permitted and thus
overruled by divine providence, we
cannot see how these results could
have been attained. The permission
of evil for a time among men thus
displays a far-seeing wisdom, which
grasped all the attendant
circumstances, devised the remedy,
and marked the final outcome through
his power and grace.
During
the Gospel dispensation sin and its
attendant evils have been further
made use of for the discipline and
preparation of the Church. Had sin
not been permitted, the sacrifice of
our Lord Jesus and of his Church,
the reward of which is the divine
nature, would have been impossible.
It
seems clear that substantially the
same law of God which is now over
mankind, obedience to which has the
reward of life, and disobedience the
penalty of death, must ultimately
govern all of God’s intelligent
creatures. That law, as our Lord
defined it, is briefly comprehended
in the one word, Love.
“Thou shalt love the
Lord thy God with all thy heart,
and with all thy soul, and with
all thy strength, and with all
thy mind; and thy neighbor as
thyself.”
Luke 10:27
Ultimately, when the purposes of God
shall have been accomplished. The
glory of the divine character will
be manifest to all intelligent
creatures.
The
temporary permission of evil will be
seen by all to have been a wise
feature in the divine policy. Now,
this can be seen only by the eye of
faith, looking onward through God’s
Word at the things spoken by the
mouth of all the holy prophets since
the world began—the restitution of
all things.
The
Day Is At Hand
Poor, fainting pilgrim,
still hold on thy way
-The dawn is near!
True, thou art weary
now; But yon bright ray
becomes more clear.
Bear up a little longer, wait
for rest;
Yield not to slumber, Though
with toil oppressed.
The night of life is
mournful, but look on -
The dawn is near!
Soon will earth’s
shadowed scenes and
forms be gone; yield not
to fear!
The mountain’s summit
will, Ere long, be
gained,
And the bright world of
joy and peace attained.
‘Joyful through hope’
thy motto still must be
The dawn is near!
What glories will that
dawn unfold to thee! Be
of good cheer!
Gird up thy loins; bind
sandals on thy feet.
The way is dark and long;
The end is sweet.
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