The
Day of Judgment
The
General View of the Day of Judgment
•
Is it Scriptural?
•
The
Terms, Judgment and Day, Defined
•
Several Judgment Days Referred to in
the Scriptures
•
The
First Judgment Day and its Results
•
Another Appointed
•
The Judge
•
The Character of the Coming Judgment
•
Similarity and Dissimilarity of the
First and Second Judgments
•
The World’s Present Accountability
•
Two
Intervening Judgments and Their
Objects
•
Widely Different Estimates of the
Coming Judgment
•
How Prophets and Apostles Viewed it
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“GOD hath appointed a day in
which he will judge the world in
righteousness by that man whom
he hath ordained”—“Jesus Christ,
the righteous.” “For the Father
judgeth no man, but hath
committed all judgment unto the
Son.”
Acts 17:31; 1 John 2:1; John
5:22
A very
vague and indefinite idea prevails
in regard to the day of judgment.
The
view generally entertained is that
Christ will come to earth, seated
upon a great white throne, and that
he will summon saint and sinner in
rank and file before him to be
judged, amidst great convulsions of
nature—earthquakes, opening graves,
rending rocks and falling
mountains.
The
trembling sinners will be brought
from the depths of everlasting woe
to hear their sins rehearsed, only
to be again returned to an eternal
and merciless doom. The saints will
be brought from heaven to witness
the misery and despair of the
condemned, to hear again the
decision in their own cases, and to
return.
According to the prevailing theory,
all receive their sentence and
reward at death. This, which by way
of distinction is commonly called
the general judgment, is merely a
repetition of that first judgment,
but for no conceivable purpose,
since they claim that a decision
which is final and unalterable is
rendered at death.
The
entire time supposed to be assigned
to this stupendous work of judging
billions is a twenty-four hour day.
A discourse recently delivered to a
Brooklyn congregation voiced the
general view on this subject. It
affected to give a detailed account
of the work of the Day of Judgment,
representing it as completed within
the limits of a single literal day.
This is
a very crude conception, and is
entirely out of harmony with the
inspired Word. It is drawn from a
too literal interpretation of our
Lord’s parable of the sheep and the
goats. Matthew 25:31-46 It
illustrates the absurdity of
attempting to force a literal
interpretation upon figurative
language.
A
parable is never an exact statement,
but merely an illustration of a
truth by something which is in many
respects like it. If this parable
were a literal statement of the
manner in which the judgment will be
conducted, it would apply to literal
sheep and goats, just as it reads,
and not to mankind at all.
Let us
now look at a more Scriptural as
well as a more reasonable view of
the work and the result of the great
Judgment Day which God hath
appointed, with which reasonable and
Scriptural conclusions all parables
and figures should and do agree.
The
term judgment signifies more
than simply the rendering of a
verdict. It includes the idea of a
trial, as well as a decision based
upon that trial. This is true not
only of the English word judgment,
but also of the Greek word which it
translates.
The
term day, both in the
Scriptures and in common usage,
though most frequently used to
represent a period of twelve or
twenty-four hours, really signifies
any definite or special period of
time. Thus, for instance, we speak
of Noah’s day, Luther’s day,
Washington’s day.
Thus in
the Bible the entire time of
creation is called a day, where we
read of “the day that Jehovah
God made the earth and the heavens”
(Genesis 2:4)—a long, definite
period.
Then we
read of “the day of temptation
in the wilderness” — forty
years (Hebrews 3:8,9);
“the day of salvation” (2
Corinthians 6:2); also the
“day of vengeance,” “day of wrath”
and “day of trouble”
—terms applied to a period of forty
years in the close of the Jewish
age, and to a similar period of
trouble in the end of the Gospel
age.
Then
again we read of the “day of
Christ,” the “day of
judgment,” and “his day”—terms
applicable to the Millennial age, in
which Messiah will reign over, rule
and judge the world in
righteousness, granting trial as
well as rendering sentence.
And of
that period it is written: He shall
judge the world in righteousness,
and in his day shall show who is
that blessed and only potentate, the
King of kings and Lord of lords.
Acts 17:31;
1 Timothy 6:15
Why any
should suppose this day of judgment
to be of but twelve or twenty-four
hours, while recognizing the wider
meaning of the word day in
other similar cases, is beyond
comprehension, except upon the
supposition that they have been
influenced by tradition, without
proper evidence or investigation.
Those
who will carefully consult a
complete concordance of the Bible
with reference to the Day of
Judgment, and note the kind and
amount of work to be accomplished
within that period, will soon see
the absurdity of the common view,
and the necessity for giving to the
term day its wider
significance.
While
the Scriptures speak of a great
judgment or trial day yet future,
and show that the masses of mankind
are to have their complete trial and
final sentence in that day, they
also teach that there have been
other judgment days, during which
certain elect classes have
been on trial.
The
first great judgment [trial and
sentence] was at the beginning, in
Eden, when the whole human race, as
represented in its head, Adam, stood
on trial before God. The result of
that trial was the verdict— Guilty,
disobedient, unworthy of life. The
penalty inflicted was death—“Dying
thou shalt die.” Genesis
2:17, margin. And so “In Adam
all die.”
That
trial time in Eden was the world’s
first judgment day, and the decision
of the Judge (Jehovah) has ever
since been enforced.
“The wrath of God is revealed
from heaven against all
unrighteousness.”
It may
be seen in every funeral procession.
Every tomb is a witness to it. It is
felt in every ache and pain we
experience—all of which are results
of the first trial and sentence—the
righteous sentence of God, that we
are unworthy of life and the
blessings originally provided for
man when obedient and in God’s
likeness.
But
mankind are to be recovered from the
sentence of that first trial by the
one sacrifice for all, which the
great Redeemer provides.
All are
to be rescued from the grave and
from the sentence of death
—destruction— which in view of this
redemption is no longer to be
considered death in the full,
everlasting sense of the word, but
rather a temporary sleep. In the
Millennial morning all will be
awakened by the Life-giver who
redeemed all.
Only
the Church of believers in Christ
are yet in any sense released or
“escaped” from this original
sentence and penalty. Their escape
is not yet actual, but only
so reckoned by faith. “We
are saved by
hope” only.
Our
actual release from this death
penalty (incurred in Adam and
escaped from by getting into Christ)
will not be fully experienced until
the resurrection morning, when we
shall be satisfied to awake in our
Redeemer’s likeness.
But the
fact that we who have come to a
knowledge of God’s gracious plan in
Christ “have escaped the
corruption that is
[still] on the world,” so
far from proving that others will
have no future hope of escape,
proves rather the contrary of this.
We are first-fruits unto God of his
creatures.
Our
escape from death in Adam to life in
Christ is but a foretaste of the
deliverance of whosoever wills to be
delivered from the bondage of
corruption [death] to the liberty of
life proper to all whom God shall
recognize as sons.
All who
will may be delivered from death to
life, regardless of the distinctions
of nature God has provided for his
sons on different planes of being.
The Gospel age is the trial-day for
life or death to those called to the
divine nature.
But God
has appointed a day, in which he
will judge the world. How can this
be? Has God changed his mind? Has he
concluded that his decision in the
trial of the first man and the
general sentence were unjust, too
severe, that he now concludes to
judge the world individually? No;
were such the case, we should have
no better guarantee of a just
decision in the future trial than in
the past.
It is
not that God considers his decision
in the first judgment unjust, but
that he has provided a redemption
from the penalty of the first
judgment, in order that he may grant
another judgment (trial) under more
favorable conditions to the entire
race—all having then had experience
with sin and its results.
God has
not changed one iota from his
original purpose, which he formed
before the world began. He
distinctly informs us that he
changes not, and that he will by no
means clear the guilty.
He will
exact the full penalty which he
justly pronounced. And that full
penalty has been provided by the
Redeemer or substitute whom God
himself provided—Jesus Christ, who,
“by the grace [favor]
of God, tasted death for every man.”
Our
Lord having provided a ransom for
Adam’s race, with his own life, can
justly give a new offer of life to
them all. This offer to the Church
is under the Covenant of sacrifice.
Psalms 50:5;
Romans 12:1
To the
world it will be under the New
Covenant. Romans 14:9; Hebrews
10:16; Jeremiah 31:31
We are
further informed that when God gives
the world this individual trial, it
will be under Christ as Judge, whom
Jehovah will thus honor because of
his obedience even unto death for
our redemption.
God has
highly exalted him, even to the
divine nature, that he may be a
Prince and a Savior (Acts 5:31),
that he may be able to recover from
death and grant judgment to all whom
he purchased with his own precious
blood.
God has
committed all judgment unto the Son,
and has given him all power in
heaven and in earth. John 5:22
It is,
then, the highly exalted, glorified
Christ, who so loved the world as to
give his life as its ransom-price,
who is to be the Judge of the world
in its promised future trial. And it
is Jehovah himself who has appointed
him to that office, for that very
purpose.
Since
such are the plain declarations of
the Scriptures, there is nothing to
dread, but on the contrary there is
great cause for rejoicing on the
part of all, in looking forward to
the Judgment Day.
The
character of the Judge is a
sufficient guarantee that the
judgment will be just and merciful,
and with due consideration for the
infirmities of all, until the
willing and obedient are brought
back to the original perfection lost
in Eden.
A
judge, in ancient times, was one who
executed justice and relieved the
oppressed. Note, for instance, how,
when under oppression by their
enemies because of transgression
against the Lord, Israel was time
and again released and blessed by
the raising up of judges. Thus we
read,
“When the children of Israel
cried unto Jehovah, Jehovah
raised up a deliverer,...Othniel.
And the spirit of Jehovah
came upon him, and he judged
Israel, and went out to war, and
prevailed, and the land had rest
forty years.”
Judges 3:9-11
So,
though the world has long been under
the power and oppression of the
adversary, Satan, yet shortly he who
pays for the sins of all with his
own precious blood will take his
great power and reign.
He will
deliver and judge
those whom he so loved as to
redeem. With this conclusion all
the prophetic declarations agree. It
is written:
“With righteousness shall he
judge the world, and the people
with equity.”
Psalms
98:9
This
coming judgment will be on exactly
the same principles as the first.
The same law of obedience will be
presented, with the same reward of
life, and the same penalty of death.
As the
first trial had a beginning,
progressed, and culminated with a
sentence, so also will the second.
The sentence will be life to the
righteous, and death to the
unrighteous.
The
second trial will be more favorable
than the first, because of the
experience gained under the results
of the first trial. Unlike the first
trial, the second trial will be one
in which every man will stand the
test for himself alone, and not for
another.
None
will then die because of Adam’s sin,
or because of inherited
imperfections. It shall no more be
said,
“The fathers have eaten a sour
grape and the children’s teeth
are set on edge; but he that
eateth the sour grape, his teeth
shall be set on edge.”
“The soul that sinneth, it shall
die.”
Ezekiel 18:4;
Jeremiah 31:29,30
And it
will be true of the world then, as
it is of the Church now, that a man
will not be judged according to that
which he hath not, but according to
that which he hath. 2 Corinthians
8:12
Under
the reign of Christ, mankind will be
gradually educated, trained and
disciplined until they reach
perfection. And when they have
reached perfection, perfect harmony
with God will be required, and any
who then fall short of perfect
obedience will be cut off, being
judged unworthy of life.
The sin
which brought death to the race
through Adam was simply one
disobedient act; but by that act he
fell from his perfection. God had a
right to demand perfect obedience of
him, since he was created perfect.
He will demand the same of all men
when the great work of restoring
them is complete.
None
will be permitted to have
everlasting life who then in the
slightest degree fall short of
perfection. To fall short of
perfection, then, will be to sin
wilfully against full light and
perfect ability.
Any who
sin wilfully, against full light and
ability, will perish in the second
death. Should any one, during that
age of trial, under its full blaze
of light, spurn the offered favors,
and make no progress toward
perfection for a hundred years, he
will be reckoned unworthy of life
and will be “ ”cut off,“ ” though at
a hundred years he would be in the
period of comparative childhood.
Thus it is written of that day:
“As a lad shall one die a
hundred years old; and as a
sinner shall be accursed he who
dieth at a hundred years old.”
Isaiah 65:20—Leeser
Thus
all must have at least one hundred
years of trial. If not so obstinate
as to refuse to make progress, their
trial will continue throughout the
entire day of Christ, reaching a
culmination only at its close.
The
conclusion of the world’s coming
judgment is clearly shown in the
parable of the sheep and the goats
Matthew 25:31-46, in Revelation
20:15; 21:8 and in 1 Corinthians
15:25.
These
and other scriptures show that at
its close the two classes will have
been completely separated—the
obedient and the disobedient. Those
in harmony with the letter and the
spirit of God’s law, and those out
of harmony with it.
They
enter into everlasting life, and the
others are remanded to death,
extinction (“second death”), the
same sentence as in the first
judgment, from which they had been reckonedly released by Christ who
secured the right to release them by
the giving of their ransom—by his
death. This will be their second
death.
No
ransom will be given for them, and
there will be no release or
resurrection for them, their sin
being a willful, individual sin
against full light and opportunity,
under a most favorable, individual
trial.
We do
not wish to be understood as
ignoring the present responsibility
of the world, which every man has,
according to the measure of light
enjoyed, whether it be much or
little, whether it be the light of
nature or of revelation.
“The eyes of the Lord are in
every place, beholding the evil
and the good,” and
“God shall bring every work into
judgment, with every secret
thing, whether it be good or
whether it be evil.”
Proverbs 15:3; Ecclesiastes
12:14
The
good and the evil deeds of the
present time will receive a just
recompense of reward either now or
hereafter.
“Some men’s sins are open
beforehand, going before to
judgment, and some they follow
after.”
1 Timothy
5:24
No
others than the Lord’s favored
“little flock” have as yet
sufficient light to incur the final
penalty, the second death. We here
merely broach the subject of the
world’s present accountability,
leaving the particulars for
subsequent consideration.
A
period of about six thousand years
intervenes between the world’s first
and second judgment days. During
this long period God has been
selecting two special classes from
among men, and specially trying,
disciplining and training them to be
his honored instruments during the
period or day of the world’s
judgment.
These
two classes are respectively
designated by Paul (Hebrews 3:5,6)
as the house of sons and the house
of servants, the former being
composed of those overcomers tried
and found faithful during the
Christian dispensation, and the
latter being composed of the
faithful overcomers who preceded the
Christian dispensation. These
special selections in no sense
interfere with the judgment or trial
promised to the world of mankind in
the age to follow this Gospel
Dispensation.
Those
who successfully pass the trial for
either of these special classes will
not come into judgment with the
world, but will enter upon their
reward when the world is coming into
judgment. They will be God’s agents
in the blessing of the world—in
giving to men the instruction and
training necessary for their final
testing and judgment.
“Do ye not know that the saints
shall judge the world?”
1 Corinthians 6:2
These
specially selected classes, like the
rest of mankind, were once under the
Adamic condemnation, but became
sharers by faith in the benefits of
Christ’s death. After being first
justified by faith in God’s
promises, and having then fulfilled
the subsequent conditions of their
respective callings, they are
accounted worthy of high exaltation
to stations of honor and authority.
The
trial or judgment of both these
classes has been much more severe
than the trial of the world will be
in its judgment day. Because these
have had to withstand Satan, the
prince of this world, with all his
wiles and ensnarements, while in the
world’s judgment day Christ will be
reigning, and Satan will be bound,
that he may not deceive the nations.
Revelations 20:3
These
have suffered persecution for
righteousness’ sake, while then men
will be rewarded for righteousness,
and punished only for
unrighteousness. These have had
great stumbling blocks and snares in
the way, which will be removed when
the world is placed on trial.
Though
the trial of these two special
companies has been much more severe
than the trial of the world will be,
the rewards are correspondingly
greater.
Under
the sophistries of the great
deceiver, Satan, both the world and
the Church nominal have been robbed
of the blessed assurances of the
coming time of righteous judgment.
They know that the Bible tells of a
coming judgment day, but they regard
it with only fear and dread; and
because of this fear, there is to
them no more unwelcome tidings than
that the day of the Lord is at hand.
They
put it far away from them, and do
not wish to hear it even mentioned.
They have no idea of the blessings
in store for the world under that
glorious reign of him whom God hath
appointed to judge the world in
righteousness.
Among
the greatest of the blinding
influences which Satan has devised
to keep men in ignorance of the
truth regarding the judgment day
have been the errors which have
crept into the creeds and hymn books
of the various religious sects. Many
have come to esteem these errors as
of paramount importance to the Word
of God.
How
differently did the prophets and
apostles regard that promised day of
judgment! Note the exultant
prophetic utterance of David. 1
Chronicles 16:31-34 He says:
Let the Heavens be Glad!
And Let the Earth Rejoice! And let men say among the nations,
Jehovah reigneth! Let the sea roar, and the fullness
thereof. Let the fields rejoice, and all that
are therein. Then
shall the trees of the wood sing
aloud at the presence of Jehovah,
BECAUSE HE COMETH TO JUDGE THE
EARTH. O give thanks unto Jehovah, for
He is good, for His mercy endureth forever.
To the
same day the Apostle also points,
assuring us that it will be a
glorious and desirable day, and that
for it the whole creation is
groaning and travailing in pain
together—waiting for the great Judge
to deliver and to bless the world,
as well as to exalt and glorify the
Church. Romans 8:21,22
In John
5:28,29 a precious promise for the
world of a coming judgment-trial
for life everlasting is, by a
mistranslation, turned into a
fearful imprecation. According to
the Greek, they that have done
evil—that have failed of divine
approval—will come forth unto
resurrection [raising up to
perfection] by judgments, “stripes,”
disciplines. See the Revised
Version.
Afterward
God’s ways are equal:
storm or calm,
Seasons of peril and of
rest,
The hurting dart, the
healing balm,
Are all apportioned as
is best.
In judgments oft
misunderstood,
In ways mysterious and
obscure,
He brings from evil
lasting good,
And makes the final
gladness sure.
While Justice takes its
course with strength,
Love bids our faith and
hope increase:
He’ll give the chastened
world at length
His afterward of peace. |
When the
dread forces of the gale
His
sterner purposes
perform,
And human
skill can naught avail
Against
the fury of the storm,
Let
loving hearts trust in
Him still,
Through
all the dark and devious
way;
For who
would thwart His blessed
will,
Which
leads through night to
joyous day?
Be still
beneath His tender care;
For he
will make the tempest
cease,
And bring
from out the anguish
here
An
afterward of peace. |
Look up, O
Earth; no
storm can
last
Beyond the
limits God
hath set.
When its
appointed
work is
past,
In joy thou
shalt thy
grief
forget.
Where
sorrow’s
plowshare
hath swept
through,
Thy fairest
flowers of
life shall
spring,
For God
shall grant
thee life
anew,
And all thy
wastes shall
laugh and
sing.
Hope thou in
Him; His
plan for
thee
Shall end in
triumph and
release.
Fear not,
for thou
shalt surely
see
His
afterward of
peace. |
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