Ransom
and Restitution
The Restitution
Guaranteed by the Ransom
•
Not Everlasting Life,
but a Trial for
it,Secured by the Ransom
•
The Conditions and
Advantages of the Trial
•
Christ’s Sacrifice
Necessary
•
How the Race Could be
and Was Redeemed by the
Death of One
•
Faith and Works Still
Necessary
•
The Wages of Willful Sin
Certain
•
Will there be Room on
the Earth for the
Resurrected Millions?
•
Restitution versus
Evolution
|
From
the outline of God’s revealed plan,
as thus far sketched, it is evident
that his design for mankind is a
restitution or restoration to the
perfection and glory lost in Eden.
The strongest, and the conclusive,
evidence on this subject is most
clearly seen when the extent and
nature of the ransom are fully
appreciated.
The restitution foretold by the
apostles and prophets must
follow the ransom as the just
and logical sequence. According
to God’s arrangement in
providing a ransom, all mankind,
unless they willfully resist the
saving power of the Great
Deliverer, must be delivered
from the original penalty,
“the bondage of corruption,”
death, else the ransom does not
avail for all.
Paul’s
reasoning on the subject is most
clear and emphatic. He says
(Romans 14:9),
“For to this end Christ
died and lived again, that he might
be Lord [ruler, controller] of both
the dead and the living.”
That is to say, the object
of our Lord’s death and resurrection
was not merely to bless and rule
over and restore the living of
mankind, but to give him authority
over, or full control of, the dead
as well as the living, insuring the
benefits of his ransom as much to
the one as to the other.*
*We may
properly recognize
an additional and a
still broader
meaning in the
Apostle’s words;
namely, that the
entire human family
was included in the
expression
“the dead.”
From God’s
standpoint the
entire race, under
sentence of death,
is treated as though
already dead
(Matthew 8:22);
hence the expression
“the living”
would apply beyond
the human family to
some whose lives had
not been
forfeited—the
angels.
|
He “gave himself a ransom
[a corresponding price] for
all,” in order that he
might bless all, and give to
every man an individual trial
for life. To claim that he gave
“ransom for all,”
and yet to claim that only a
mere handful of the ransomed
ones will ever receive any
benefit from it, is absurd; for
it would imply either that God
accepted the ransom-price and
then unjustly refused to grant
the release of the redeemed, or
else that the Lord, after
redeeming all, was either unable
or unwilling to carry out the
original benevolent design.
The unchangeableness of the
divine plans, no less than the
perfection of the divine justice
and love, repels and contradicts
such a thought, and gives us
assurance that the original and
benevolent plan, of which the
“ransom for all” was the
basis, will be fully carried out
in God’s “due time,” and will
bring to faithful believers the
blessing of release from the
Adamic condemnation and an
opportunity to return to the
rights and liberties of sons of
God, as enjoyed before sin and
the curse.
Let the actual benefits and results
of the ransom be clearly seen, and
all objections to its being of
universal application must vanish.
The “ransom for all”
given by “the man Christ
Jesus” does not give or
guarantee everlasting life or
blessing to any man; but it does
guarantee to every man
another opportunity or trial for
life everlasting.
The first trial of man, which
resulted in the loss of the
blessings at first conferred, is
really turned into a blessing of
experience to the loyal-hearted,
by reason of the
ransom which God has
provided. But the fact that men
are ransomed from the first
penalty does not guarantee that
they may not, when individually
tried for everlasting life, fail
to render the obedience without
which none will be permitted to
live everlastingly.
Man, by reason of present
experience with sin and its
bitter penalty, will be fully
forewarned; and when, as a
result of the ransom, he is
granted another, an individual
trial, under the eye and control
of him who so loved him as to
give his life for him, and who
would not that any should
perish, but that all should turn
to God and live, we may be sure
that only the willfully
disobedient will receive the
penalty of the second trial.
That penalty will be the second
death, from which there will be
no ransom, no release, because
there would be no object for
another ransom or a further
trial.
All will have fully seen and
tasted both good and evil; all
will have witnessed and
experienced the goodness and
love of God; all will have had a
full, fair, individual trial for
life, under most favorable
conditions. More could not be
asked, and more will not be
given. That trial will decide
forever who would be righteous
and holy under a thousand
trials; and it will determine
also who would be unjust, and
unholy and filthy still, under a
thousand trials.
It
would be useless to grant another
trial for life under exactly the
same circumstances; but though the
circumstances of the tried ones will
be different, more favorable, the
terms or conditions of their
individual trial for life will be
the same as in the Adamic trial.
The law of God will remain the
same—it changes not. It will
still say, “The soul that
sinneth, it shall die”;
and the condition of man will be
no more favorable, so far as
surroundings are concerned, than
the conditions and surroundings
in Eden; but the great
difference will be the increased
knowledge.
The experience with evil,
contrasted with the experience
with good, which will accrue to
each during the trial of the
coming age, will constitute the
advantage by reason of which the
results of the second trial will
differ so widely from the
results of the first, and on
account of which divine Wisdom
and Love provided the
“ransom for all,” and
thus guaranteed to all the
blessing of a new trial. No more
favorable trial, no more
favorable law, no more favorable
conditions or circumstances, can
in any way be conceived of as
reasons for another ransom or a
further trial for any beyond the
Millennial age.
The
ransom given does not excuse sin in
any; it does not propose to count
sinners as saints, and usher them
thus into everlasting bliss. It
merely releases the accepting sinner
from the first condemnation and its
results, both direct and indirect,
and places him again on trial for
life, in which trial his own willful
obedience or willful disobedience
will decide whether he may or may
not have life everlasting.
Nor
should it be assumed, as so many
seem disposed to assume, that all
those who live in a state of
civilization, and see or possess a
Bible, have thus a full opportunity
or trial for life. It must be
remembered that the fall has not
injured all of Adam’s children
alike.
Some have come into the world so
weak and depraved as to be
easily blinded by the god of
this world, Satan, and led
captive by besetting and
surrounding sin; and all are
more or less under this
influence, so that, even when
they would do good, evil is
present and more powerful
through surroundings, etc., and
the good which they would do is
almost impossible, while the
evil which they would not do is
almost unavoidable.
Small indeed is the number of
those who in the present time truly
and experimentally learn of the
liberty wherewith Christ makes free
those who accept of his ransom, and
put themselves under his control for
future guidance. Yet only these few,
the Church, called out and tried
beforehand for the special purpose
of being co-workers with God in
blessing the world—witnessing now,
and ruling, blessing and judging the
world in its age of trial—yet enjoy
to any extent the benefits of the
ransom, or are now
on trial for life.
These few have reckoned
to them (and they receive by
faith) all the blessings of
restitution which will be
provided for the world during
the coming age. These, though
not perfect, not restored to
Adam’s condition actually, are
treated in such a manner as to
compensate for the difference.
Through faith in Christ they are
reckoned
perfect, and hence are restored
to perfection and to divine
favor, as though no longer
sinners. Their imperfections and
unavoidable weaknesses, being
offset by the ransom, are not
imputed to them, but are covered
by the Redeemer’s perfection.
Hence the Church’s trial,
because of her reckoned standing
in Christ, is as fair as that
which the world will have in its
time of trial.
The world will all be brought to
a full knowledge of the truth,
and each one, as he accepts of
its provisions and conditions,
will be treated no longer as a
sinner, but as a son, for whom
all the blessings of restitution
are intended.
One
difference between the experiences
of the world under trial and the
experiences of the Church during her
trial will be that the obedient of
the world will begin at once to
receive the blessings of restitution
by a gradual removal of their
weaknesses—mental and physical;
whereas the Gospel Church,
consecrated to the Lord’s service
even unto death, goes down into
death and gets her perfection
instantaneously in the first
resurrection.
Another difference between the
two trials is in the more
favorable surroundings of the
next age as compared with this,
in that then society,
government, etc., will be
favorable to righteousness,
rewarding faith and obedience,
and punishing sin; whereas now,
under the prince of this world,
the Church’s trial is under
circumstances unfavorable to
righteousness, faith, etc. But
this, we have seen, is to be
compensated for in the prize of
the glory and honor of the
divine nature offered to the
Church, in addition to the gift
of everlasting life.
Adam’s
death was sure, though it was
reached by nine hundred and
thirty years of dying. Since he
was himself dying, all his
children were born in the same
dying condition and without
right to life; and, like their
parents, they all die after a
more or less lingering process.
It should be remembered,
however, that it is not the pain
and suffering in dying, but
death—the extinction of life—in
which the dying culminates, that
is the penalty of sin.
The suffering is only incidental
to it, and the penalty falls on
many with but little or no
suffering. It should further be
remembered that when Adam
forfeited life, he forfeited it
forever; and not one of his
posterity has ever been able to
expiate his guilt or to regain
the lost inheritance. All the
race are either dead or dying.
And if they could not expiate
their guilt before death, they
certainly could not do it when
dead—when not in existence.
The penalty of sin was not
simply to die, with the
privilege and right thereafter
of returning to life. In the
penalty pronounced there was no
intimation of release. Genesis
2:17 The restitution, therefore,
is an act of free grace or favor
on God’s part. And as soon as
the penalty had been incurred,
even while it was being
pronounced, the free favor of
God was intimated, which, when
realized, will so fully declare
his love.
Had it
not been for the gleam of hope,
afforded by the statement that the
seed of the woman should bruise the
serpent’s head, the race would have
been in utter despair; but this
promise indicated that God had some
plan for their benefit. When to
Abraham God swore that in his seed
all the families of the earth should
be blessed, it implied a
resurrection or restitution of all;
for many were then dead, and others
have since died, unblessed.
Nevertheless, the promise is
still sure: all shall be blessed
when the times of restitution or
refreshing shall come. Acts
3:19 Moreover, since
blessing indicates favor, and
since God’s favor was withdrawn
and his curse came instead
because of sin, this promise of
a future blessing implied the
removal of the curse, and
consequently a return of his
favor. It also implied either
that God would relent, change
his decree and clear the guilty
race, or else that he had some
plan by which it could be
redeemed, by having man’s
penalty paid by another.
God did
not leave Abraham in doubt as to
which was his plan, but showed,
by various typical sacrifices
which all who approached him had
to bring, that he could not and
did not relent, nor excuse the
sin; and that the only way to
blot it out and abolish its
penalty would be by a
sufficiency of sacrifice to meet
that penalty. This was shown to
Abraham in a very significant
type: Abraham’s son, in whom the
promised blessing centered, had
first to be a sacrifice before
he could bless, and Abraham
received him from the dead in a
figure. Hebrews 11:19
In that figure Isaac typified
the true seed, Christ Jesus, who
died to redeem men, in order that
the redeemed might all receive the
promised blessing. Had Abraham
thought that the Lord would excuse
and clear the guilty, he would have
felt that God was changeable, and
therefore could not have had full
confidence in the promise made to
him.
He might have reasoned, If God
has changed his mind once, why
may he not change it again? If
he relents concerning the curse
of death, may he not again
relent concerning the promised
favor and blessing?
But God leaves us in no such
uncertainty. He gives us ample
assurance of both his justice
and his unchangeableness. He
could not clear the guilty, even
though he loved them so much
that
“He spared not his own
Son, but delivered him up
[to death] for us all.”
As the
entire race was in Adam when he
was condemned, and lost life
through him, so when Jesus
“gave himself a ransom for all”
his death involved the
possibility of an unborn race in
his loins.
A full satisfaction, or
corresponding price, for all men
was thus put into the hands of
Justice—to be applied “in
due time,” and he who
thus
bought all has
full authority to restore all
who come unto God by him.
“As by the offence of
one, judgment came upon all
men to condemnation, even so
by the righteousness of one,
the free gift came upon all
men unto justification of
life. For as by one man’s
disobedience many were made
sinners, so by the obedience
of one shall many be made
righteous.” Romans 5:18,19
The proposition is a plain one:
As many as have shared death on
account of Adam’s sin will have
life-privileges offered to them
by our Lord Jesus, who died for
them and sacrificially became
Adam’s substitute before the
broken law, and thus
“gave himself a ransom for all.”
He died,
“the just for the unjust, that
he might bring us to God.”
1 Peter 3:18
It should never be overlooked,
however, that all of God’s
provisions for our race
recognize the human will as a
factor in the securing of the
divine favors so abundantly
provided. Some have overlooked
this feature in examining the
text just quoted—Romans 5:18,19.
The Apostle’s statement,
however, is that, as the
sentence of condemnation
extended to all the seed of
Adam, even so, through the
obedience of our Lord Jesus
Christ to the Father’s plan, by
the sacrifice of himself on our
behalf, a free gift is extended
to all—a gift of forgiveness,
which, if accepted, will
constitute a justification or
basis for life everlasting.
And “as by one man’s
disobedience many were made
sinners, so by the obedience of
one many shall be [not were]
made righteous.” If the
ransom alone, without our
acceptance of it, made us
righteous, then it would have
read, by the obedience of one
many were
made righteous.
But
though the ransom-price has been
given by the Redeemer only a few
during the Gospel age have been made
righteous—justified—“through
faith in his blood.”
But since Christ is the
propitiation (satisfaction) for the
sins of the whole world, all men may
on this account be absolved and
released from the penalty of Adam’s
sin by him—under the New Covenant.
There
is no unrighteousness with God;
hence “If we confess our sins,
he is faithful and just to forgive
us our sins and to cleanse us from
all unrighteousness.” 1
John 1:9 As he would have been
unjust to have allowed us to escape
the pronounced penalty before
satisfaction was rendered, so also
he here gives us to understand that
it would be unjust were he to forbid
our restitution, since by his own
arrangement our penalty has been
paid for us. The same unswerving
justice that once condemned man to
death now stands pledged for the
release of all who, confessing their
sins, apply for life through Christ.
“It is God that
justifieth—who is he that
condemneth? It is Christ
that died; yea, rather, that
is risen again, who is even
at the right hand of God,
who also maketh intercession
for us.” Romans 8:33,
34
The
completeness of the ransom is
the very strongest possible
argument for the restitution of
all mankind who will accept it
on the proffered terms.
Revelation 22:17 The very
character of God for justice and
honor stands pledged to it;
every promise which he has made
implies it; and every typical
sacrifice pointed to the great
and sufficient sacrifice–
“The Lamb of God,
which taketh away the SIN OF
THE WORLD”—who is “the
propitiation [satisfaction]
for our sins [the Church’s],
and not for ours only, but
also for the sins of the
whole world.” John 1:29; 1
John 2:2
Since death is the penalty or
wages of sin, when the sin is
canceled the wages must in due
time cease. Any other view would
be both unreasonable and unjust.
The fact that no recovery from
the Adamic loss is yet
accomplished, though nearly two
thousand years have elapsed
since our Lord died, is no more
an argument against restitution
than is the fact that four
thousand years elapsed before
his death a proof that God had
not planned the redemption
before the foundation of the
world.
Both the two thousand years
since and the four thousand
years before the death of Christ
were appointed times for other
parts of the work, preparatory
to “the times of
restitution of all things.”
Let no
one hastily suppose that there is in
this view anything in conflict with
the teaching of the Scriptures that
faith toward God, repentance for sin
and reformation of character are
indispensable to salvation. This
feature will be treated more at
length hereafter, but we now suggest
that only the few have ever had a
sufficiency of light to produce full
faith, repentance and reformation.
Some have been blinded in part,
and some completely, by the god
of this world, and they must be
recovered from blindness as well
as from death, that they,
each for himself, may have a
full chance to prove, by
obedience or disobedience, their
worthiness or unworthiness of
life everlasting. Then those who
prove themselves unworthy of
life will die again—the second
death—from which there will be
no redemption, and consequently
no resurrection.
The death which comes on account
of Adam’s sin, and all the
imperfections which follow in
its wake, will be removed
because of the redemption which
is in Christ Jesus; but the
death which comes as a result of
individual, willful apostasy is
final. This sin hath never
forgiveness, and its penalty,
the second death, will be
everlasting— not everlasting
dying, but everlasting death—a
death unbroken by a
resurrection.
The
philosophy of the plan of redemption
will be treated in a succeeding
volume. Here we merely establish the
fact that the redemption through
Christ Jesus is to be as
far-reaching in its blessed results
and opportunities as was the sin of
Adam in its blight and ruin—that all
who were condemned and who suffered
on account of the one may as surely,
“in due time,” be set
free from all those ills on account
of the other. However, none can
appreciate this Scriptural argument
who do not admit the Scriptural
statement that death— extinction of
being—is the wages of sin.
Those who think of death as life
in torment not only disregard
the meaning of the words
death and life, which
are opposites, but involve
themselves in two absurdities.
It is absurd to suppose that God
would perpetuate Adam’s
existence forever in torment for
any kind of a sin which he could
commit, but especially for the
comparatively small offence of
eating forbidden fruit.
Then, again, if our Lord Jesus
redeemed mankind, died in our
stead, became our ransom, went
into death that we might be set
free from it, is it not evident
that the death which he suffered
for the unjust was of exactly
the same kind as that to which
all mankind were condemned? Is
he, then, suffering eternal
torture for our sins? If not,
then so surely as he died
for our sins, the punishment for
our sins was death, and not life
in any sense or condition.
But,
strange to say, finding that the
theory of eternal torture is
inconsistent with the statements
that “the Lord hath laid upon
him the iniquity of us all,”
and that Christ “died for our
sins,” and seeing that one
or the other must be dropped as
inconsistent, some are so wedded to
the idea of eternal torture, and so
prize it as a sweet morsel, that
they hold to it regardless of the
Scriptures, and deliberately deny
that Jesus paid the world’s
ransom-price, though this truth is
taught on every leaf of the Bible.
Is Restitution Practicable?
Some
have supposed that if the
billions of the dead were
resurrected, there would not be
room for them on the earth; and
that if there should be room for
them, the earth would not be
capable of sustaining so large a
population. It is even claimed
by some that the earth is one
vast graveyard, and that if all
the dead were awakened they
would trample one upon another
for want of room.
This is
an important point. How strange
it would be if we should find
that while the Bible declares a
resurrection for all men, yet,
by actual measurement, they
could not find a footing on the
earth! Now let us see: figure it
out and you will find this an
unfounded fear. You will find
that there is an abundance of
room for the “restitution
of all,” as “God
hath spoken by the mouth of all
his holy prophets.”
Let us
assume that it is six thousand years
since the creation of man, and that
there are fourteen hundred millions
of people now living on the earth.
Our race began with one pair, but
let us make a very liberal estimate
and suppose that there were as many
at the beginning as there are now;
and, further, that there never were
fewer than that number at any time,
though actually the flood reduced
the population to eight persons.
Again, let us be liberal, and
estimate three generations to a
century, or thirty-three years
to a generation, though,
according to Genesis 5, there
were but eleven generations from
Adam to the flood, a period of
one thousand six hundred and
fifty-six years, or about one
hundred and fifty years to each
generation.
Now let us see: six thousand
years are sixty centuries; three
generations to each century
would give us one hundred and
eighty generations since Adam;
and fourteen hundred millions to
a generation would give two
hundred and fifty-two billions
(252,000,000,000) as the total
number of our race from creation
to the present time, according
to this liberal estimate, which
is probably more than twice the
actual number.
Where
shall we find room enough for this
great multitude? Let us measure the
land, and see. The State of Texas,
United States, contains two hundred
and thirty-seven thousand square
miles.
There are twenty-seven million
eight hundred and seventy-eight
thousand four hundred square
feet in a mile, and, therefore,
six trillion six hundred and
seven billion one hundred and
eighty million eight hundred
thousand (6,607,180,800,000)
square feet in Texas.
Allowing ten square feet as the
surface covered by each dead
body, we find that Texas, as a
cemetery, would at this rate
hold six hundred and sixty
billion seven hundred and
eighteen million and eighty
thousand (660,718,080,000)
bodies, or nearly three times as
many as our exaggerated estimate
of the numbers of our race who
have lived on the earth.
A
person standing occupies about
one and two-thirds square feet
of space. At this rate the
present population of the earth
(one billion four hundred
million persons) could stand on
an area of eighty-six square
miles—an area much less than
that of the city of London or of
Philadelphia. And the island of
Ireland (area, thirty-two
thousand square miles) would
furnish standing room for more
than twice the number of people
who have ever lived on the
earth, even at our exaggerated
estimate.
There is not much difficulty, then,
in settling this objection. And when
we call to mind the prophecy of
Isaiah 35:1-6, that the earth
shall yield her increase; that the
desert shall rejoice and blossom as
the rose; that in the wilderness
shall waters break out, and streams
in the desert, we see that God
indicates that he has foreseen all
the necessities of his plan, and
will make ample provision for the
needs of his creatures in what will
seem a very natural way.
Restitution Versus Evolution
It may
be objected by some that the
testimony of the Scriptures
concerning human restitution to
a former estate is out of
harmony with the teachings of
science and philosophy, which,
with
apparent reason, point
us to the superior intelligence
of this twentieth century, and
claim this as conclusive
evidence that primeval man must
have been, in comparison, very
lacking in intelligence, which
they claim is the result of
development. From this
standpoint, a restitution to a
former estate would be far from
desirable, and certainly the
reverse of a blessing.
At
first sight such reasoning
appears plausible, and many seem
inclined to accept it as truth
without careful examination,
saying, with a celebrated
Brooklyn preacher, If Adam fell
at all his fall was upward, and
the more and faster we fall from
his original state the better
for us and for all concerned.
Thus
philosophy, even in the pulpit,
would make the Word of God of no
effect, and if possible convince us
that the apostles were fools when
they declared that death and every
trouble came by the first man’s
disobedience, and that these could
be removed and man restored to
divine favor and life only by means
of a ransom. Romans
5:10,12,17-19,21; 8:19-22; Acts
3:19-21; Revelation 21:3-5
But let us not hastily conclude
that this philosophy is
impregnable; for should we be
obliged to discard the doctrines
of the apostles relative to the
origin of sin and death, and of
restitution to an original
perfection, we should, in
honesty, be obliged to reject
their testimony entirely and on
every subject, as uninspired and
consequently without special
weight or authority. Let us,
then, in the light of facts,
briefly examine this growingly
popular view and see how deep is
its philosophy.
Says an
advocate and representative of this
theory: “Man was first in a stage of
existence in which his animal nature
predominated, and the almost purely
physical ruled him; then he slowly
grew from one state to another until
now, when the average man has
attained to a condition in which, it
might be said, he is coming under
the rule of the brain. Hence this
age may be regarded and designated
as the Brain Age. Brain pushes the
great enterprises of the day. Brain
takes the reins of government; and
the elements of the earth, air and
water are being brought under
subjection. Man is putting his hand
on all physical forces, and slowly
but surely attaining such power over
the domain of nature as gives
evidence that ultimately he may
exclaim, in the language of
Alexander Selkirk, ’I am monarch of
all I survey.’”
The
fact that at first glance a theory
appears reasonable should not lead
us hastily to accept it, and to
attempt to twist the Bible into
harmony with it. In a thousand ways
we have proved the Bible, and know
beyond peradventure that it contains
a superhuman wisdom which makes its
statements unerring. We should
remember, too, that while scientific
research is to be commended, and its
suggestions considered, yet its
conclusions are by no means
infallible.
And what wonder that it has
proven its own theories false a
thousand times, when we remember
that the true scientist is
merely a student attempting,
under many unfavorable
circumstances, and struggling
against almost insurmountable
difficulties, to learn from the
great Book of Nature the history
and destiny of man and his home.
We
would not, then, either oppose or
hinder scientific investigation; but
in hearing suggestions from students
of the Book of Nature, let us
carefully compare their deductions,
which have so often proved in part
or wholly erroneous, with the Book
of Divine Revelation, and prove or
disprove the teachings of scientists
by “the law and the
testimony. If they speak not
according to this word, it is
because there is no light in them.”
Isaiah 8:20
An accurate knowledge of both
books will prove them to be
harmonious; but until we have
such knowledge, God’s Revelation
must take precedence, and must
be the standard among the
children of God, by which the
supposed findings of fallible
fellowmen shall be judged.
But
while holding to this principle, let
us see whether there is not some
other reasonable solution of the
increased knowledge and skill and
power of man than the theory of
Evolution—that though originally
developed from a very low order of
being, man has now reached the
superior or “Brain Age.” Perhaps
after all we shall find that the
inventions and conveniences, the
general education and wider
diffusion and increase of knowledge,
are not attributable to a greater
brain capacity, but to more
favorable circumstances for the use
of brains.
That the brain capacity today is
greater than in by-gone ages, we
deny; while we freely admit
that, owing to advantageous
circumstances, the use of what
brain capacity men have today is
more general than at any former
period, and hence makes a much
larger showing. In the study of
painting and sculpture, do not
the students of this “Brain Age”
go back to the great masters of
the past? Do they not by so
doing acknowledge a brain power
and originality of design as
well as a skill of workmanship
worthy of imitation?
Does not the present “Brain Age”
draw largely upon the original
designs of the past ages for its
architecture? Do not the orators
and logicians of this “Brain
Age” study and copy the methods
and syllogisms of Plato,
Aristotle, Demosthenes and
others of the past? Might not
many of the public speakers of
today well covet the tongue of a
Demosthenes or an Apollos, and
much more the clear reasoning
power of the Apostle Paul?
To go
still further back: while we might
well refer to the rhetorical powers
of several of the prophets, and to
the sublime poetic paintings
interspersed throughout the Psalms,
we refer these “Brain Age”
philosophers to the wisdom and
logic, no less than to the fine
moral sensibilities, of Job and his
comforters.
And what shall we say of Moses,
“learned in all the wisdom of
the Egyptians”? The laws given
through him have been the
foundation for the laws of all
civilized nations, and are still
recognized as the embodiment of
marvelous wisdom.
The exhuming of ancient buried
cities reveals a knowledge of
the arts and sciences in ages
past which is surprising some of
the philosophers of this
so-called “Brain Age.” The
ancient methods of embalming the
dead, of tempering copper, of
making elastic glass and
Damascus steel, are among the
achievements of the remote past
which the brain of the present
age, with all its advantages, is
unable either to comprehend or
to duplicate.
Going
back four thousand years to about
Abraham’s time, we find the Great
Pyramid of Egypt—an object of wonder
and amazement to the most learned
scientists of today. Its
construction is in exact accord with
the most advanced attainments of
this “Brain Age” in the sciences of
Mathematics and Astronomy. It
teaches, positively, truths which
can today be only approximated by
the use of modern instruments.
So striking and clear are its
teachings that some of the
foremost astronomers of the
world have unhesitatingly
pronounced it to be of divine
origin. And even if our “Brain
Age” evolutionists should admit
that it is of divine
arrangement, and that its wisdom
is superhuman, they must still
admit that it is of human
construction.
And the fact that in that
remote day any set of men had
the mental capacity to work out
such a divine arrangement as
very few men today would be
capable of doing with a model
before them, and with all modern
scientific appliances at hand,
proves that our “Brain Age”
develops more self-conceit than
circumstances and facts warrant.
If, then, we have proven that the
mental capacity of today is not
greater than that of past ages, but
probably less, how shall we account
for the increase of general
knowledge, modern inventions, etc.?
We trust we shall be able to show
this reasonably and in harmony with
Scripture.
The
inventions and discoveries which are
now proving so valuable, and which
are considered proof that this is
the "Brain Age," are really very
modern--nearly all having come
within the past century, and among
the most important are those of the
last threescore years; for instance,
the application of steam and
electricity--in telegraphy,
railroading and steamboating, and to
the machinery of the various
mechanical industries.
If,
then, these be evidences of
increased brain power, the "Brain
Age" must be only beginning, and the
logical deduction is that another
century will witness every form of
miracle as an everyday occurrence;
and at the same ratio of increase,
where would it eventuate?
But let
us look again: Are all men
inventors? How very few there are
whose inventions are really useful
and practical, compared with the
number who appreciate and use an
invention when put into their hand!
Nor do we speak disparagingly of
that very useful and highly-esteemed
class of public servants when we say
that the smaller number of them are
men of great brain-power.
Some of the most brainy men in
the world, and the deepest
reasoners, are not mechanical
inventors. And some inventors
are intellectually so sluggish
that all wonder how they ever
stumbled into the discoveries
they made.
The great principles
(electricity, steam power,
etc.), which many men in many
years work out, apply and
improve upon, time and again,
were generally discovered
apparently by the merest
accident, without the exercise
of great brain power, and
comparatively unsought.
From a
human standpoint we can account
for modern inventions thus: The
invention of printing, in A.D.
1440, may be considered the
starting point. With the
printing of books came records
of the thoughts and discoveries
of thinkers and observers,
which, without this invention,
would never have been known to
their successors.
With books came a more general
education and, finally, common
schools. Schools and colleges do
not increase human capacity, but
they do make mental exercise
more general, and hence help to
develop the capacity already
possessed.
As knowledge becomes more
general and books more common,
the generations possessing these
have a decided advantage over
previous generations; not only
in that there are now a thousand
thinkers to one formerly, to
sharpen and stimulate each other
with suggestions, but also in
that each of the later
generations has, through books,
the combined experience of the
past in addition to its own.
Education and the laudable
ambition which accompanies it,
enterprise, and a desire to
achieve distinction and a
competency, aided by the record
and descriptions of inventions
in the daily press, have
stimulated and brightened man’s
perceptive powers, and put each
upon the alert to discover or to
invent, if possible, something
for the good and convenience of
society. Hence we suggest that
modern invention, looked at from
a purely human standpoint,
teaches, not an increase of
brain capacity, but a sharpened
perception from natural causes.
And now we come to the Scriptures to
see what they teach on the subject;
for while we believe, as suggested
above, that invention and the
increase of knowledge, etc., among
men are the results of natural
causes, yet we believe that
these natural causes were all
planned and ordered by Jehovah God
long ago, and that in due time they
have come to pass—by his overruling
providence, whereby he
“worketh all things after the
counsel of his own will.”
Ephesians 1:11
According to the plan revealed
in his Word, God purposed to
permit sin and misery to misrule
and oppress the world for six
thousand years, and then in the
seventh millennium to restore
all things, and to extirpate
evil—destroying it and its
consequences by Jesus Christ,
whom he hath afore ordained to
do this work.
Hence, as the six thousand years
of the reign of evil began to
draw to a close, God permitted
circumstances to favor
discoveries, in the study of
both his Book of Revelation and
his Book of Nature, as well as
in the preparation of mechanical
and chemical appliances useful
in the blessing and uplifting of
mankind during the Millennial
age, now about to be introduced.
That this was God’s plan is
clearly indicated by the
prophetic statement:
“O Daniel, shut up the
words, and seal the book,
even to the time of the end;
[then] MANY SHALL
RUN TO AND FRO, and
KNOWLEDGE
[not capacity]
SHALL BE INCREASED,”
“and none of the wicked
shall understand [God’s plan
and way], but the wise shall
understand”;
“and there shall be
A TIME OF TROUBLE
SUCH AS NEVER WAS
since there was a nation,
even to that same time.”
Daniel 12:1,4,10
To some
it may appear strange that God
did not so arrange that the
present inventions and blessings
should sooner have come to man
to alleviate the curse. It
should be remembered, however,
that God’s plan has been to give
mankind a full appreciation of
the curse, in order that when
the blessing comes upon all they
may forever have decided upon
the unprofitableness of sin.
Furthermore, God foresaw and has
foretold what the world does not
yet realize, namely, that his
choicest blessings would lead to
and be productive of greater
evils if bestowed upon those
whose hearts are not in accord
with the righteous laws of the
universe.
Ultimately it will be seen that
God’s present permission of
increased blessings is a
practical lesson on this
subject, which may serve as an
example of this principle to all
eternity—to angels as well as to
restored men. How this can be,
we merely suggest:
First:
So long as mankind is in the
present fallen or depraved
condition, without stringent
laws and penalties and a
government strong enough to
enforce them, the selfish
propensities will hold more or
less sway over all. And with the
unequal individual capacities of
men considered, it cannot
possibly happen otherwise than
that the result of the invention
of labor-saving machinery must,
after the flurry and stimulus
occasioned by the manufacture of
machinery, tend to make the rich
richer, and the poor poorer.
The manifest tendency is toward
monopoly and self-
aggrandizement, which places the
advantage directly in the hands
of those whose capacity and
natural advantages are already
the most favorable.
Secondly: If it were possible to
legislate so as to divide the
present wealth and its daily
increase evenly among all classes,
which is not possible, still,
without human perfection or a
supernatural government to regulate
human affairs, the results would be
even more injurious than the present
condition. If the advantages of
labor-saving machinery and all
modern appliances were evenly
divided, the result would, ere long,
be a great decrease of hours of
labor and a great increase of
leisure. Idleness is a most
injurious thing to fallen beings.
Had it not been for the
necessity of labor and sweat of
face, the deterioration of our
race would have been much more
rapid than it has been. Idleness
is the mother of vice; and
mental, moral and physical
degradation are sure to follow.
Hence the wisdom and goodness of
God in withholding these
blessings until it was due
time for their introduction
as a preparation for the
Millennial reign of blessing.
Under the control of the
supernatural government of the
Kingdom of God, not only will
all blessings be equitably
divided among men, but the
leisure will be so ordered and
directed by the same
supernatural government that its
results will produce virtue and
tend upward toward perfection,
mental, moral and physical.
The present multiplication of
inventions and other blessings
of increasing knowledge is
permitted in this “day of
preparation” to come about in so
natural a way that men flatter
themselves that it is because
this is the “Brain Age”; but it
will be permitted in great
measure to work out in a manner
very much to the disappointment,
no doubt, of these wise
philosophers. It is the very
increase of these blessings that
is already beginning to bring
upon the world the time of
trouble, which will be such as
never has been since there was a
nation.
The
prophet Daniel, as quoted above,
links together the increase of
knowledge and the time of
trouble. The knowledge causes
the trouble, because of the
depravity of the race. The
increase of knowledge has not
only given the world wonderful
labor-saving machinery and
conveniences, but it has also
led to an increase of medical
skill whereby thousands of lives
are prolonged, and it has so
enlightened mankind that human
butchery, war, is becoming less
popular, and thus, too, other
thousands are spared to multiply
still further the race, which is
increasing more rapidly today,
perhaps, than at any other
period of history.
Thus, while mankind is
multiplying rapidly, the
necessity for his labor is
decreasing correspondingly; and
the “Brain Age” philosophers
have a problem before them to
provide for the employment and
sustenance of this large and
rapidly increasing class whose
services, for the most part
supplanted by machinery, can be
dispensed with, but whose
necessities and wants know no
bounds. The solution of this
problem, these philosophers must
ultimately admit, is beyond
their brain capacity.
Selfishness will continue to
control the wealthy, who hold
the power and advantage, and
will blind them to common sense
as well as to justice; while a
similar selfishness, combined
with the instinct of
self-preservation and an
increased knowledge of their
rights, will nerve some and
inflame others of the poorer
classes, and the result of these
blessings will, for a
time, prove terrible—a time of
trouble, truly, such as was not
since there was a nation—and
this, because man in a depraved
condition cannot properly use
these blessings unguided and
uncontrolled.
Not until the Millennial reign
shall have rewritten the law of
God in the restored human heart
will men be capable of using
full liberty without injury or
danger.
The day
of trouble will end in due time,
when he who spake to the raging Sea
of Galilee will likewise, with
authority, command the raging sea of
human passion, saying, “Peace! Be
still!” When the Prince of Peace
shall “stand up” in
authority, a great calm will be the
result.
Then
the raging and clashing elements
shall recognize the authority of
“Jehovah’s Anointed,”
“the glory of the Lord shall be
revealed, and all flesh shall
see it together”; and in
the reign of the Christ thus
begun“shall all the
families of the earth be
blessed.”
Then men will see that what they
attributed to evolution or natural
development and the smartness of the
“Brain Age” was, instead, the
flashings of Jehovah’s lightnings
(Psalms 77:18) in “the day of his
preparation” for the blessing of
mankind. But as yet only the saints
can see, and only the wise in
heavenly wisdom can understand this;
for “The secret of the Lord is
with them that fear him; and he will
show them his covenant.” Psalms
25:14
Thanks be to God, that while
general knowledge has been
increased, he has also arranged
that his children need “not be
unfruitful in the knowledge of
the Lord” and in the
appreciation of his plans. And
by this appreciation of his Word
and plans we are enabled to
discern and to withstand the
vain philosophies and foolish
traditions of men which
contradict the Word of God.
The
Bible account of man’s creation is
that God created him perfect and
upright, an earthly image of
himself; that man sought out various
inventions and defiled himself
(Genesis 1:27; Romans 5:12;
Ecclesiastes 7:29); that, all
being sinners, the race was unable
to help itself, and none could by
any means redeem his brother or give
to God a ransom for him (Psalms
49:7,15); that God in compassion
and love had made provision for
this; that, accordingly, the Son of
God became a man, and gave man’s
ransom-price; that, as a reward for
this sacrifice, and in order to the
completion of the great work of
atonement, he was highly exalted,
even to the divine nature; and that
in due time he will bring to pass a
restitution of the race to the
original perfection and to every
blessing then possessed.
These things are clearly taught
in the Scriptures, from
beginning to end, and are in
direct opposition to the
Evolution theory; or, rather,
such “babblings of
science, falsely so called,”
are in violent and
irreconcilable conflict with the
Word of God.
“Still
o’er earth’s sky the clouds of anger
roll,
And God’s revenge hangs heavy on her
soul;
Yet shall she rise—though
first by God chastised—
In glory and in beauty
then baptized.
“Yes,
Earth, thou shalt arise; thy Father’s aid
Shall heal the wound His chastening hand
hath made;
Shall judge the proud
oppressor’s ruthless
sway,
And burst his bonds, and cast his cords
away.
“Then on
your soil shall deathless verdure spring;
Break forth, ye mountains, and ye valleys sing!
No more your thirsty rocks shall frown forlorn,
The unbeliever’s jest, the heathen’s scorn.
“The
sultry sands shall tenfold harvests yield.
And a new Eden deck the thorny field.
E’en now we see, wide-waving o’er the land,
The mighty angel lifts his golden wand.
“Courts the bright
vision of descending
power,
Tells every gate and
measures every tower;
And chides the tardy
seals that yet detain
Thy Lion, Judah, from
his destined reign.”
—Heber
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