The Three Ways—
The Broad Way,
The Narrow Way,
The Highway
The Broad Road to
Destruction
•
The Narrow Way to Life
•
What is Life?
•
The Divine Nature
•
The Relationship of the Divine and
Human Natures
•
The Reward at the End of the Narrow
Way
•
The High Calling Limited to the
Gospel Age
•
Difficulties and Dangers of the
Narrow Way
•
The Highway of Holiness.
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“Wide is the gate of
destruction, and broad that way
leading thither; and many are
they who enter through it. How
narrow is the gate of life! how
difficult that way leading
thither! and how few are they
who find it!”
Matthew 7:13,14,
Diaglott translation
“And a highway shall be there,
and a way, and it shall be
called the way of holiness; the
unclean shall not pass over it;
but it shall be for those: the
wayfaring men, though fools,
shall not err therein. No lion
shall be there, nor any ravenous
beast shall go up thereon, nor
be found there; but they that
walk there shall be delivered.”
Isaiah 35:8,9
Three ways, the “broad road,”
the “narrow way” and the
“highway,” are thus brought to
our attention in the Scriptures.
The
Broad Road to Destruction
This road is thus named because it
is most easy to the degenerate human
race. Six thousand years ago, as a
sinner condemned to destruction,
Adam (and the race represented in
him) started upon this road, and
after nine hundred and thirty years
he reached its end—destruction.
As years and centuries have rolled
on, the downward path has become
more and more smoothly worn, and the
race has sped more and more rapidly
to destruction, the way becoming
daily more glazed and slimed and
slippery with sin. And not only does
the way grow more slippery, but
mankind daily loses the power of
resistance, so that now the average
length of human life is about
thirty-five years. Men now reach the
end of the road—destruction—nine
hundred years quicker than did the
first man.
For six thousand years the race has
steadily pursued the broad, downward
way. Only a few, comparatively, have
tried to change their course and
retrace their steps. In fact, to
retrace all the steps, and reach the
original perfection, has been
impossible, though the effort of
some to do so has been commendable,
and not without beneficial results.
For six thousand years sin and death
have reigned relentlessly over
mankind, and driven them upon this
broad road to destruction. And not
until the Gospel age was a
way of escape brought to
light. Though in previous ages rays
of hope were dimly seen in types and
shadows, which were joyfully hailed
and acted upon by a few, yet life
and immortality were not brought to
light until the appearing of our
Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, and
the proclamation by the apostles of
the good tidings of redemption and
remission of sins and a consequent
resurrection from the destruction.
2 Timothy 1:10
The teachings of Jesus and the
apostles bring to light life—a
restitution or restoration to life
for all mankind, as based upon the
merit and sacrifice of the Redeemer;
and they show this to be the
significance of many Old Testament
types. They also bring to light
immortality, the prize of the
high calling of the Gospel Church.
Although a way of escape from the
broad road to destruction has been
brought to light through the gospel,
the great mass of mankind heeds not
the good tidings, because depraved
by sin and blinded by the Adversary.
Those who now gratefully accept the
promise of life, restoration to
human existence, through Christ,
have pointed out to them a new way
which has been opened up, by which
consecrated believers may go beyond
the human nature and be changed to a
higher nature—the spiritual. This
new way “consecrated for us”—the
royal priesthood (Hebrews 10:20)—
our Lord called
“The Narrow Way to Life.”
Our Master tells us that it is
because of the narrowness of this
way that the many prefer to remain
on the broad road to destruction.
“Strait [difficult] is the gate and
narrow is the way that leadeth unto
life, and few there be that find
it.”
Before considering this way and its
dangers and difficulties, let us
notice the end to which it
leads—life. As already seen, life
may be enjoyed on various planes of
being, higher as well as lower than
human. Life is a broad and
comprehensive term, but here our
Lord uses it in reference to that
highest form of life, pertaining to
the divine nature —immortality—the
prize for which he invited us to
run.
What is life? We not only realize it
in ourselves, but we see its
operation in lower animals, and even
in vegetation, and we are told of
its existence in higher forms,
angelic and divine. How shall we
define a term so comprehensive?
While we may not be able to
discover the secret springs of life
in all, we may safely assume that
the Divine Being, Jehovah, is the
great fountain of all life, from
which all these springs are
supplied. All living things result
from and depend on him for life.
All
life, whether in God or in his
creatures, is the same: it is an
energizing principle, not a
substance. It is a principle which
inheres in God, but which in
his creatures results from
certain causes which God has
ordained, and of it he is therefore
the cause, the author or fountain.
Hence the creature is in no sense a
part or an offspring of the
Creator’s essence or nature, as some
imagine, but he is God’s handiwork
infused with life.
Recognizing the fact that only in
the divine nature is life
independent, unlimited, exhaustless,
ever continuous and neither produced
nor controlled by circumstances, we
see that of necessity Jehovah is
superior to those physical laws and
supplies which he ordained for the
sustenance of his creatures. It is
this quality, which pertains only to
the divine nature, that is described
by the term immortality.
As shown in the preceding chapter,
immortal signifies
death-proof, consequently disease
and pain-proof. In fact,
immortality may be used as a
synonym for divinity. From
the divine, immortal fountain
proceed all life and blessing, every
good and perfect gift, as from the
sun the earth receives her light and
vigor.
The sun is the great fountain of
light to the earth, illuminating all
things, producing many varieties of
color and shades of light, according
to the nature of the object upon
which it shines. The same sunlight
shining upon a diamond, upon a
brick, and upon various kinds of
glass, produces strikingly different
effects.
The light is the same, but the
objects upon which it shines differ
in their capacity to receive and to
transmit it. So with life: it all
flows from the one exhaustless
fountain. The oyster has life, but
its organism is such that it cannot
make use of much life, just as the
brick cannot reflect much of the
light of the sun.
So with each of the higher
manifestations of life, in beast,
fish and fowl. Like the various
kinds of glass under sunlight, so
these various creatures show forth
differently the various organic
powers they possess, when life
animates their organisms.
The polished diamond is so adapted
to the light that it appears as
though it possessed it within
itself, and were itself a miniature
sun. So with man, one of the
masterpieces of God’s creation, made
only “a little lower than the
angels.” He was so grandly
formed as to be able to receive and
retain life by the use of the means
which God supplied, and never grow
dim.
Thus was Adam before he fell grander
than any other earthly creature, not
by reason of any difference in the
life principle implanted, but
because of a grander organism.
Yet, let us remember that as the
diamond can reflect no light except
when shone upon by the sun, so man
can possess and enjoy life only as
the supply of life is continued.
Man has not inherent life: he is no
more a fountain of life than a
diamond is a fountain of light. And
one of the very strongest evidences
that we have not an exhaustless
supply of life in ourselves, or, in
other words, that we are not
immortal, is that since sin entered,
death has passed upon all our race.
God had arranged that man in Eden
should have access to
life-sustaining trees, and the
paradise in which he was placed was
abundantly supplied with numbers of
“every [kind of] tree” good
for food or for adornment. Genesis
2:9,16,17 Among the trees of life
good for food was one forbidden.
While for a time forbidden to eat of
the tree of knowledge, he was
permitted to eat freely of trees
which sustained life perfectly; and
he was separated from them only
after transgression, that thereby
the death-penalty might go into
effect. Genesis 3:22
Thus the glory and beauty of
humanity are seen to be dependent on
the continued supply of life, just
as the beauty of the diamond is
dependent on the continued supply of
sunlight. When sin deprived humanity
of the right to life, and the supply
was withheld, immediately the jewel
began to lose its brilliancy and
beauty, and finally it is deprived
of its last vestige in the tomb.
His beauty consumes away like a
moth. Psalms 39:11 As the diamond
loses its beauty and brilliancy when
the light is withdrawn, so man loses
life when God withholds the supplies
from him.
“Yea, man giveth up the ghost
[life] and where is he?” Job
14:10
“His sons come to honor, and he knoweth it not; and they are
brought low, but he perceiveth
it not of them.” Verse 21
“For there is no work, nor
device, nor knowledge, nor
wisdom, in the grave whither
thou goest.” Ecclesiastes 9:10
But since a ransom has been found,
since the death penalty has been
provided by the Redeemer, the jewel
is to have its beauty restored, and
is again to reflect perfectly the
Creator’s image when the Sun of
Righteousness shall arise with
healing in his wings. Malachi 4:2 It
is because of the sin-offering, the
sacrifice of Christ, that
“All that are in their graves
shall come forth.”
There shall be a restitution of all
things; first an opportunity or
offer of restitution to all, and
ultimately the attainment of human
perfection by all who will obey the
Redeemer.
This, however, is not the reward to
which Jesus refers as the end of the
narrow way. From other scriptures we
learn that the reward promised to
those who walk the narrow way is the
“divine nature”—life
inherent, life in that superlative
degree which only the divine nature
can possess—immortality. What a
hope! Dare we aspire to such a
height of glory? Surely not without
positive and explicit invitation
could any rightfully thus aspire.
From 1 Timothy 6:14-16 we learn that
the immortal or divine nature was
originally the possession of
divinity only. We read:
“He
[Jesus] in his time [the
Millennial Age] will show who is
the blessed and only
potentate—the King of kings and
Lord of lords, who only hath
immortality, dwelling in the
light which no man can approach
unto, whom no man hath seen nor
can see.”
All other beings, angels, men,
beasts, birds, fish, etc., are but
vessels holding each its measure of
life, and all differing in
character, capacity, and quality
according to the organism which it
has pleased the Creator to provide
for each.
Further, we learn that Jehovah, who
alone possessed immortality
originally, has highly exalted his
Son, our Lord Jesus, to the same
divine, immortal nature; hence he is
now the express image of the
Father’s person. Hebrews 1:3 So we
read,
“As the Father hath LIFE IN
HIMSELF [God’s definition of
“immortality”—life in
himself—not drawn from other
sources, nor dependent on
circumstances, but independent,
inherent life], so hath he given
to the Son to have LIFE IN
HIMSELF.”
John 5:26
Since the resurrection of the Lord
Jesus, then, two beings are
immortal; and, amazing grace! the
same offer is made to the Bride of
the Lamb, being selected during the
Gospel age. Yet not all of the great
company who are nominally of the
Church will receive this great
prize, but only that “little
flock” of overcomers who so run
as to obtain it; who follow closely
in the Master’s footsteps; who, like
him, walk the narrow way of
sacrifice, even unto death.
These, when born from the dead in
the resurrection, will have the
divine nature and form. This
immortality, the independent,
self-existent, divine nature, is the
life to which the narrow way leads.
This class is not to be raised from
the tomb human beings; for we are
assured by the Apostle that, though
sown in the tomb natural bodies,
they will be raised spiritual
bodies. These all shall be
“changed,” and even as they once
bore the image of the earthly, human
nature, they shall bear the image of
the heavenly.
But “it doth not yet appear
what we shall be”—what a spiritual
body is; but “we know that
when he shall appear, we shall be
like him,” and share in
“the glory to be revealed.”
1 John
3:2; Colossians 1:27; 2 Corinthians
4:17; John 17:22; 1 Peter 5:10;
2 Thessalonians 2:14
Not only is this high calling to a
change of nature confined
exclusively to the Gospel age, but
it is the only offer of this age.
Hence our Lord’s words quoted at the
beginning of this chapter include on
the broad road to destruction all
who are not on the way to the only
prize now offered.
All others are still on the broad
road—these only have as yet escaped
the condemnation that is on the
world. This, the only way of life
now open, because of its difficulty,
finds few who care to walk in it.
The masses of mankind in their
weakness prefer the broad, easy way
of self-gratification.
The narrow way, while it ends in
life, in immortality, might be
called a way of death, since its
prize is gained through the
sacrifice of the human nature even
unto death. It is the narrow way
of death to life. Being
reckoned free from the Adamic guilt
and the death penalty, the
consecrated voluntarily surrender or
sacrifice those human rights,
reckoned theirs, which in due time
they, with the world in general,
would have actually received.
As “the
man Christ Jesus”
laid down or sacrificed his life for
the world, so these become
joint-sacrificers with him. Not that
his sacrifice was insufficient and
that others were needed; but
while his is all-sufficient, these
are permitted to serve and to suffer
with him in order to become his
bride and joint-heir. So, then,
while the world is under
condemnation to death, and is dying
with Adam, this “little
flock,” through the process of
faith reckonings and sacrifice,
already described, are said to die
with Christ.
They sacrifice and die with
him as human beings, in order to
become partakers of the divine
nature and glories with him;
for we believe that if we be dead
with him, we shall also live
with him. If we suffer with
him, we shall also be glorified
together. Romans 8:17 and 2
Timothy 2:11,12
In
the beginning of the Millennial age,
those who now walk the narrow way
will have gained the great prize for
which they ran, immortality; and
being thus clothed with the divine
nature and power, they will be
prepared for the great work of
restoring and blessing the world
during that age.
With the end of the Gospel age, the
narrow way to immortality will
close, because the select “little
flock” that it was designed to
test and prove will have been
completed. “Now is the accepted
[Greek, dektos, acceptable or
receivable] time”—the time in
which sacrificers, coming in the
merit of Jesus and becoming dead
with him, are acceptable to
God—a sacrifice of sweet odor.
Death, as the Adamic penalty, will
not be permitted forever; it will be
abolished during the Millennial age;
as a sacrifice it will be
acceptable and rewarded only during
the Gospel age.
It
is only as “new creatures”
that the saints of this age are on
the way to life; and only as human
beings are we consecrated to
destruction, as sacrifices. If, as
human creatures, we be dead with
Christ, as new, spiritual beings, we
shall live with him. (Romans 6:8)
The mind of God in us, the
transformed mind, is the germ of the
new nature.
The new life would be easily choked;
and Paul assures us that when
begotten of the spirit through the
truth, if we live after the flesh,
we shall die (lose our life), but if
we, through the spirit, do mortify
(put to death) the deeds of the body
(the disposition of the human
nature), we (as new creatures) shall
live; for the sons of God are those
led by the spirit of God. Romans
8:13,14 This is a thought of utmost
importance to all the consecrated;
for if we have covenanted with God
to sacrifice the human nature, and
if that sacrifice was accepted by
him, it is useless to attempt to
take it back.
The human is reckoned of God as dead
now, and must actually die, never
again to be restored. All that can
be gained, then, by turning back to
live after the flesh, is a little
human gratification at the expense
of the new spiritual nature.
There are, however, many consecrated
ones desirous of the prize,
and who have been begotten of the
spirit, who are partially overcome
by the allurements of the world, the
desires of the flesh, or the arts of
the devil. They partially lose sight
of the prize set before us, and try
to walk upon a middle road—to keep
the favor of God and the favor of
the world, forgetting that “the
friendship of the world is enmity
with God” (James 4:4), and that
the instructions to those running
the race for the prize are, Love not
the world, and, Seek not honor one
of another, but that honor which
cometh from God only. 1 John 2:15;
John 5:44
These, who love the present
world, but who have not wholly
forsaken the Lord and despised their
covenant, receive a scourging and
purifying by the fire of affliction.
As the Apostle expresses it, they
are delivered over to Satan for the
destruction of the flesh, that the
spirit (the newly begotten nature)
may be saved in the day of the Lord
Jesus. 1 Corinthians 5:5 And if
rightly exercised by the discipline,
they will finally be received into
the spiritual condition.
They will have everlasting, spirit
life as angels have it, but will
lose the prize of immortality. They
will serve God in his temple, and
stand before the throne,
having palms in their hands
(Revelation 7:9-17); but though that
will be glorious, it will not be so
glorious as the position of the
“little flock” of overcomers,
who will be kings and priests unto
God, seated with Jesus in the
throne as his bride and
joint-heir, and with him crowned
with immortality.
Ours is a rugged, steep, narrow way,
and were it not that strength is
furnished for each successive step
of the journey, we could never reach
the goal. But our Captain’s word is
encouraging: Be of good cheer; I
have overcome; my grace is
sufficient for thee, for my strength
is made perfect in weakness. John
16:33; 2 Corinthians 12:9
The difficulties of this way are to
act as a separating principle to
sanctify and refine a “peculiar
people” to be
“heirs of God and joint-heirs with
Jesus Christ.”
In view of these things, let us come
boldly to the throne of grace, that
we may obtain mercy and find grace
to help in time of need, while we
fight the good fight of faith and
lay hold on “the crown of
glory”—
immortality, the divine nature. 2
Timothy 4:8; 1 Peter 5:4
The
Highway of Holiness
While the special hope of the Gospel
age is so surpassingly glorious, and
the way to it is correspondingly
difficult —narrow, hedged in by
hardships and dangers at every
step—so that few find it, and
obtain the great prize at its end,
the new order of things in the age
to come is to be entirely different.
As a different hope is held out, so
also a different way leads to
it.
The way to immortality has been a
way which required the sacrifice of
the otherwise lawful and proper
hopes, ambitions and desires—the
sacrifice forever of the human
nature. But the way to human
perfection, to restitution, the hope
of the world, requires only the
putting away of sin: not the
sacrifice of human rights and
privileges, but their proper
enjoyment. It will lead to personal
purification and restoration to the
image of God as enjoyed by Adam
before sin entered the world.
The way back to actual human
perfection is to be made very plain
and easy; so plain that none may
mistake the way; so plain that
“the wayfaring man, and those
unacquainted therewith, shall not go
astray” (Isaiah 35:8 —Leeser);
so plain that none will need to
teach his neighbor, saying, Know the
Lord, for all shall know the Lord
from the least unto the greatest.
Jeremiah 31:34
Instead of being a narrow way that
few can find, it is termed “a
highway,” a public roadway—not
a narrow, steep, rugged, difficult,
hedged byway, but a way specially
prepared for easy travel—
specially arranged for the
convenience and comfort of the
travelers. Verses 8 and 9 show that
it is a public road, open to all the
redeemed —every man.
Every man for whom Christ died, who
will recognize and avail himself of
the opportunities and blessings
purchased by the precious blood, may
go up on this Highway of Holiness to
the grand goal of perfect
restitution to human perfection and
everlasting life.
Nor will these be
reckoned justified and
granted a reckoned standing of
holiness and perfection in the sight
of God; when started upon this
highway of holiness they may go up
thereon to actual perfection,
as a result of endeavor and
obedience, to which all things will
be made favorable by their Redeemer,
then reigning in power.
Each individual will, according to
his necessities, be aided by the
wise and perfect administration of
the new kingdom. This, as will occur
to some, is the legitimate result of
the ransom. Since our Lord, the man
Christ Jesus, gave himself a ransom
for all, and desires all to come to
a knowledge of the truth, and
thereby to actual perfection, why
does he not at once make a good and
broad highway for all?
Why does he not remove the
obstructions, the stumbling-stones,
the pitfalls and snares? Why not
help the sinner back to full harmony
with God, instead of making the way
narrow, rugged, thorny, hard to
find, and still harder to walk in?
A failure rightly to divide the Word
of truth, and to see that the
present narrow way leads to the
special prize, and is for the trial
and selection of a little flock of
joint-heirs, the body of Christ,
which, when selected and exalted
with their Head, shall bless all
nations, has led some to very
confused ideas on the subject.
Failing to see God’s plan, many try
to preach a highway of holiness, an
easy way to life, in the present
age, when no such way exists, and
they confuse and compromise the
matter to fit the facts and the
Scriptures with their mistaken
theories.
On the highway soon to be opened,
only sinful things will be
prohibited, while those who travel
the narrow way must deny themselves
and sacrifice many things not
sinful, as well as war continually
against besetting sins. This is a
pathway of sacrifice, as that of the
coming age is to be a highway of
righteousness.
Of
that highway it is significantly
stated in symbolic language that
“No lion shall be there, nor any
ravenous beast shall go up thereon;
it shall not be found there.”
Isaiah 35:9 How many frightful lions
are now in the way of those who
would be glad to forsake sinful
ways, and to pursue righteousness!
There is the lion of a degenerate
public sentiment, which deters many
from venturing to obey the dictates
of conscience in matters of everyday
life—dress, home, and business
arrangements, etc.
The lion of temptation to strong
drink hinders thousands who would be
glad to see it removed.
Prohibitionists and temperance
workers now find a Herculean task on
their hands, which only the
authority and power of the next age
can remove; and the same may be said
of other worthy efforts at moral
reform. “Nor shall any
ravenous beast go up thereon.”
No giant corporations, organized to
advance selfish, individual
interests at the expense of the
general good, will be tolerated.
“They shall not hurt nor destroy
in all my holy mountain” (kingdom)
saith the Lord. Isaiah 11:9
Though there will be difficulties to
labor against in overcoming
propensities to evil, etc., yet, in
comparison with the narrow way of
this age, that will be an easy way.
The stones (stumbling-stones) shall
all be gathered out, and the
standard of truth shall be lifted up
for the people. Isaiah 62:10
Ignorance and superstition
will be things of the past, and
righteousness will receive its due
reward, while to evil will be meted
out its just deserts. Malachi
3:15,18 By wholesome chastisements,
fitting encouragements and plain
instructions, as returned prodigals,
mankind will be trained and
disciplined up to the grand
perfection from which father Adam
fell. Thus
“The ransomed of the Lord
shall return [from destruction,
by the grand highway of
holiness]...with songs and
everlasting joy upon their
heads; they shall obtain joy and
gladness, and sorrow and sighing
shall flee away.”
Isaiah 35:10
Our Lord referred to but two of
these ways, because the third was
not yet due to be opened up—just as
when announcing the good tidings, he
said, “This scripture is
fulfilled in your ears,” but
omitted mentioning the “day
of vengeance,” because it was not
then due. Compare Luke 4:19 and
Isaiah 61:2. Now, however, as the
narrow way draws to a close, the
grand highway of righteousness
begins to be seen more and more
distinctly, in the light of the
dawning day.
Thus we have found a “Broad
Road,” on which at present the
masses of mankind travel, deluded by
the “prince of this world,”
and led by perverted tastes. We have
found that it was opened up and that
our race was started in its headlong
course upon it by “one man’s
disobedience.”
We have found that the “Highway
of Holiness” is to be opened up
by our Lord, who gave himself a
ransom for all and redeems all
from the destruction to which the
“Broad Road” leads, and that it
will, in due time, be accessible and
easy for all the redeemed ones whom
he bought with his own precious
blood.
We have found, furthermore, that the
present “Narrow Way,” opened
up by the merit of the same precious
blood, is a special way leading to a
special prize, and is made specially
narrow and difficult as a test
and discipline for those now being
selected to be made partakers of the
divine nature and joint-heirs
with our Lord Jesus in the Kingdom
of glory soon to be revealed for the
blessing of all. Such as have
this hope—who see this
prize—may count all other hopes as
but loss and dross in comparison. Philippians 3:8-15 |