Explanation of Chart
Representing the Plan of the Ages
The Ages
•
The Harvests
•
Planes of Actual and Reckoned
Standing
•
The Course of our Lord Jesus
•
The Course of His Followers
•
Three Classes in the Nominal
Church
•
Separation in the Harvest
•
The Anointed Class Glorified
•
The Great Tribulation Class
•
The Tares Burned
•
The World Blessed
•
The Outcome Glorious
|
Click Here to
see Chart
Above is a chart representing the
plan of God for the world’s
salvation. By it we have sought to
aid the mind, through the eye, in
understanding something of the
progressive character of God’s plan,
and the progressive steps which must
be taken by all who ever attain the
complete “change” from the human to
the divine nature.
First, we have an outline of the
three great dispensations, A, B,
C—the first of these, A,
lasting from man’s creation to the
flood; the second, B, from
the flood to the commencement of the
Millennial reign of Christ, at his
second advent; and the third, or
“Dispensation of the Fullness of
Times,” C, lasting from the
beginning of Christ’s reign for
“ages to come.” Ephesians 1:10;
2:7
These three great dispensations
are frequently referred to in the
Scriptures: A is called
“the world that was”;
B by our Lord Jesus is called
“this world,” by Paul
“the present evil world,” by Peter
“the world that now is.” C is
called “the world to come,
wherein dwelleth righteousness,”
in contrast with the present evil
world. Now evil rules and the
righteous suffer, while in the world
to come this order is to be
reversed: righteousness will rule
and evil-doers will suffer, and
finally all evil will be destroyed.
In
each of these three great
dispensations, epochs or
“worlds”
God’s plan with reference to men has
a distinct and separate outline; yet
each is but a part of the one great
plan which, when complete, will
exhibit the divine wisdom —though
these parts considered separately
fail to show their deep design.
Since the first “world”
(“heavens and earth,” or that order of
things) passed away at the time of
the flood, it follows that it must
have been a different order from
“this present evil world,” of which
our Lord said Satan is the prince;
hence the prince of this present
evil world was not the prince of the
world that was before the flood,
although he was not without
influence then. Several scriptures
throw light on God’s dealings during
that time, and thus give a clear
insight into his plan as a whole.
The thought suggested by these is
that the first “world,” or
the dispensation before the flood,
was under the supervision and
special ministration of angels, who
were permitted to try what they
could do to recover the fallen and
degenerate race. Doubtless, with
God’s permission, they were anxious
to try it; for their interest was
manifested in the singing and
shouting for joy over the works of
creation. Job 38:7
That angels were the permitted,
though unsuccessful rulers of that
first epoch is not only indicated by
all references to that period, but
it may reasonably be inferred from
the Apostle’s remark when,
contrasting the present dispensation
with the past and the future, he
says (Hebrews 2:5),
“Unto the angels hath he not
put in subjection the world to
come.”
No; that world is to be under the
control of the Lord Jesus and his
joint-heirs; and hence it will not
only be a more righteous
administration than that of
“the present evil world,” but it will
also be more successful than that of
the first world or dispensation
under the “ministration of
angels,” whose inability to
reclaim the race is manifest from
the fact that man’s wickedness
became so great that God in his
wrath and righteous indignation
destroyed with a flood the whole of
the race then living with the
exception of eight persons. Genesis
7:13
During the “present evil
world,”
man is permitted to try governing
himself; but by reason of the fall
he is under the control of Satan,
the “prince of this world,”
against whose secret machinations
and intrigues he has vainly striven
in his efforts at self-government
during the long period from the
flood to the present time.
This attempted reign of man under
Satan is to end in the greatest time
of trouble the world has ever known.
And thus will have been proven the
futility, not only of angelic power
to save the race, but also of man’s
own efforts to reach satisfactory
conditions.
The second of these great
dispensations, B, is composed
of three distinct ages, each of
which, as a progressive step, leads
upward and onward in God’s plan.
Age D was the one during
which God’s special dealings were
with such patriarchs as Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob.
Age E
is the Jewish Age, or the period
following the death of Jacob, during
which all of his posterity were
treated by God as his special
charge—“his people.”
To these he showed special favors,
and declared,
“You only have I known
(recognized with favor)
of all the families of the
earth.”Amos 3:2
These, as a nation, were
typical of the Christian Church, the
“holy nation, the peculiar
people.” The promises made to
them were typical of the
“better promises” made to us. Their
journey through the wilderness to
the land of promise was typical of
our journey through the wilderness
of sin to the heavenly Canaan. Their
sacrifices justified them typically,
not really; for the blood of bulls
and goats can never take away sin.
Hebrews 10:4
But in the Gospel Age, F,
we have the “better
sacrifices,”
which do make atonement for the sins
of the whole world. We have the
“royal priesthood,” composed of
all those who offer themselves to
God “living sacrifices,” holy
and acceptable, through Jesus
Christ, who is the Chief or
“High Priest of our profession.”
Hebrews 3:1
In the Gospel age we find the
realities of which the Jewish age
and its services and ordinances were
shadows. Hebrews 10:1
The Gospel age, F, is the
period during which the body of
Christ is called out of the world,
and shown by faith the crown of
life, and the exceeding great and
precious promises whereby (by
obedience to the call and its
requirements) they may become
partakers of the divine nature. 2
Peter 1:4
Evil is still permitted to reign
over or rule the world, in order
that by contact with it these may be
tried to see whether they are
willing to give up the human nature
with its privileges and blessings, a
living sacrifice, being made
conformable to Jesus’ death, that
they may be accounted worthy to be
in his likeness in the resurrection.
Psalms 17:15
The third great dispensation, C,
is to be composed of many ages—“The
Ages to Come.”
The first
of these, the Millennial age, G,
is the only one concerning
which we have any definite
information. It is the thousand
years during which Christ will reign
over and thereby bless all the
families of the earth, accomplishing
the “restitution of all things
spoken by the mouth of all the holy
prophets.” Acts 3:19-21
During that age, sin and death shall
be forever blotted out; for
“Christ must reign till he
hath put all enemies under his
feet....The last enemy that
shall be destroyed is death”—Adamic
death. 1 Corinthians 15:25,26
That will be the great
reconstruction period. Associated
with Christ Jesus in that reign will
be the Church, his bride, his body,
even as he promised, saying,
“To him that overcometh
will I grant to sit with me in
my throne, even as I also
overcame, and am set down with
my Father in his throne.”
Revelation 3:21
The “Ages to Come,”
H,
following the great reconstruction
period, are to be ages of
perfection, blessedness and
happiness, regarding the work of
which, the Scriptures are silent.
It is enough to know, at this
distance, that they will be ages of
glory and blessing under divine
favor.
Each of these dispensations has its
distinct seasons for the beginning
and development of its work, and
each ends with a harvest manifesting
its fruits.
The harvest at the close of the
Jewish age was a period of forty
years, lasting from the beginning of
Jesus’ ministry, when he was
anointed of God by the Spirit
(Acts 10:37,38), A.D. 29, until the
destruction of Jerusalem, A.D. 70.
In this harvest the Jewish age ended
and the Gospel age began. There was
a lapping of these dispensations, as
represented in the diagram.
The Jewish age ended in a measure
when, at the end of his three and
one-half years’ ministry, the Lord
rejected that nation, saying,
“Your house is left unto you
desolate.” Matthew 23:38 Yet
there was favor shown them for three
and one-half years after this, by
the confining to them of the Gospel
call, in harmony with the prophet’s
declaration (Daniel 9:24-27)
regarding seventy weeks (of years)
of favor toward them, in the midst
of the last of which, Messiah should
be cut off (die), but not for
himself.
“Christ
died [not for himself, but] for our
sins,” and thus
caused the sacrifice and the
oblation to cease, in the midst of
the week—three and one-half years
before the expiration of the seventy
covenant weeks of Jewish favor. When
the true sacrifice had been made, of
course the typical ones could no
longer be recognized by Jehovah.
There
was, then, a fuller sense in which
that Jewish age closed with the end
of the seventieth week, or three and
one-half years after the
cross—after which the Gospel was
preached to the Gentiles also,
beginning with Cornelius. Acts 10:45
This ended their age so far as God’s
favor toward and recognition of the
Jewish church was concerned; their
national existence terminated in the
great time of trouble which
followed.
In
that period of the Jewish harvest
the Gospel age had its beginning.
The design of this age is the call,
development and trial of “the
Christ of God”—Head and body.
This is the Spirit dispensation;
hence, it is proper to say that the
Gospel age began with the anointing
of Jesus “with the Holy
Spirit and with power” (Acts 10:38;
Luke 3:22; 4:1,18) at the time of
his baptism. In relation to the
Church, his body, it commenced three
and a half years later.
A
“harvest” constitutes the
closing period of the Gospel age
also, during which there is again a
lapping of two ages– the Gospel age
ending, and the Restitution or
Millennial age beginning.
The Gospel age closes by stages, as
did its pattern or “shadow,”
the Jewish age.
As there the first seven years of
the harvest were devoted in a
special sense to a work in and for
Israel after the flesh, and were
years of favor, so here we find a
similar seven years indicated as
having the same bearing upon the
Gospel Church, to be followed by a
period of trouble (“fire”)
upon the world, as a punishment for
wickedness, and as a preparation for
the reign of righteousness—of which
more again.
The
Path to Glory
K, L, M, N, P, R, each
represents a different plane.
N is the plane of
perfect human nature. Adam was
on this plane before he sinned; but
from the moment of disobedience he
fell to the depraved or sinful
plane, R, on which all his
posterity are born. This corresponds
to the “Broad Way”
which leads to destruction.
P represents the plane
of typical justification, reckoned
as effected by the sacrifices of the
Law. It was not actual perfection,
for “the Law made nothing
perfect.” Hebrews 7:19
N represents not only
the plane of human perfection, as
once occupied by the perfect man,
Adam, but also the standing of all
justified persons.
“Christ
died for our sins, according to the
Scriptures,” and in consequence all believers in
Christ—all who accept of his
perfect and finished work as their
justifier—are, through faith,
reckoned of God as justified, as
though perfect men, as though they
had never been sinners.
In God’s
sight, then, all who accept of
Christ as their Redeemer are reckonedly on the plane of human
perfection, N. This is the
only standpoint from which man may
approach God, or have any communion
with him. All on this plane God
calls sons—human sons. Adam was
thus a son (Luke 3:38), and had
communion before he became
disobedient. All who accept of our
Lord Jesus’ finished ransom work are
counted or reckoned as
restored to primitive purity; and
in consequence they have
fellowship or communion with God.
During the Gospel age God has made a
special offer to justified human
beings, telling them that on certain
conditions they may experience a
change of nature, that they may
cease to be earthly, human beings,
and become heavenly, spiritual
beings, like Christ, their Redeemer.
Some believers—justified
persons—are satisfied with what joy
and peace they have through
believing in the forgiveness of
their sins, and so do not heed the
voice which calls them to come up
higher.
Others, moved by the love of God as
shown in their ransom from sin, and
feeling that they are not their own,
having been bought with a price,
say, “Lord, what wilt thou have
me to do?” Such have the Lord’s
answer through Paul, who says,
“I beseech you, brethren,
by the mercies of God, that ye
present your bodies a living
sacrifice, holy, acceptable to
God, your reasonable service.”
Romans 12:1
What does the Apostle mean by thus
urging the presentation of ourselves
as living sacrifices? He means that
we should consecrate to God’s
service every power and talent we
possess, that henceforth we may live
not for self, nor for friends, nor
for family, nor for the world, nor
for anything else but for, and in
the obedient service of, him who
bought us with his own precious
blood.
But since God would not accept of
blemished or imperfect typical
sacrifices, and since we all became
sinners through Adam, can we be
acceptable sacrifices? Paul shows
that it is only because we are holy
that we are acceptable sacrifices.
We are not holy like Jesus, who knew
no sin, for we are of the condemned
race; nor yet because we have
entirely succeeded in reaching
perfection of conduct, for we reckon
not to have attained that perfection
to which we are called; but we have
this treasure in (fragile and leaky)
earthen vessels, that the glory of
our ultimate perfection may be seen
to be of God’s favor, and not of our
own ability. But our holiness, and
our acceptableness to God as
sacrifices, come from the fact that
God has justified us freely from all
sin, through our faith in Christ’s
sacrifice on our behalf.
As
many as appreciate and obey this
call rejoice to be accounted worthy
to suffer reproach for the name of
Christ, and look not at the things
that are seen, but at the things
that are not seen—at the “crown
of life”—“the prize of
our high-calling in Christ Jesus”
and “the glory that shall be
revealed in us.”
These, from the moment of
consecration to God, are no longer
reckoned as men, but as having been
begotten of God through the word of
truth—no longer human, but
thenceforth spiritual children. They
are now one step nearer the prize
than when they first believed. But
their spiritual being is yet
imperfect: they are only begotten,
not yet born of the Spirit.
They are embryo spiritual children,
on plane M—the
plane of spirit begetting. Because
begotten of the Spirit, they are no
longer reckoned as human, but as
spiritual; for the human nature,
once theirs, once justified, they
have now given up or reckoned
dead—a living sacrifice, holy,
acceptable to and accepted of God.
They are now new creatures in Christ
Jesus: old things (human hopes, will
and ambitions) have passed away, and
all things have become new; for
“ye are not in the flesh, but in the
spirit, if so be that the Spirit of
God dwell in you.” 2 Corinthians
5:17; Romans 8:9
If you have been begotten of the
Spirit, “ye (as human beings)
are dead, and your life is hid with
Christ in God.”
Plane
L
represents the condition of
perfect spiritual being; but
before plane L can be
reached, the conditions of our
covenant must be carried out. It is
one thing to covenant with God that
we will be dead to all human things,
and a further thing to perform that
covenant throughout our earthly
career—keeping the “body
under”
(dead), keeping our own will out of
sight, and performing only the
Lord’s will. The entrance upon plane
L is called birth, or the
full entrance into life as a spirit
being.
The entire Church will enter on this
plane when gathered out (selected)
from the world in the “harvest”
or end of the Gospel age. The
“dead in Christ shall rise first.”
Then we, who are alive and
remain, shall be changed in a
moment—made perfect spiritual
beings with bodies like unto
Christ’s glorious body (for “this
mortal must put on immortality”).
Then, that which is perfect having
come, that which is in part (the
begotten condition with the various
hindrances of the flesh to which we
are now subject) shall be done away.
But there is a still further step to
be taken beyond a perfection of
spiritual being, viz., to “the
glory that shall follow”—plane
K.
We do not here refer to a glory of
person, but to a glory of power or
office. The reaching of plane L
brings full personal glory; i.e.,
glorious being, like unto Christ.
But after we are thus perfected, and
made entirely like our Lord and
Head, we are to be associated with
him in the “glory” of power
and office—to sit with him in his
throne, even as he, after being
perfected at his resurrection, was
exalted to the right hand of the
Majesty on high. Thus shall we enter
everlasting glory, plane K.
Let us now carefully study the chart
and note its illustrations of the
various features of the plan of God.
In these illustrations we use the
pyramid figure to represent
perfection, because of its fitness
and because of evident reference to
it in the Scriptures.
Adam was a perfect being, pyramid
a.
Notice its position —on plane N,
which represents human perfection.
On plane R, the plane of
sin and imperfection or the depraved
plane, the topless pyramid, b,
an imperfect figure, represents
fallen Adam and his
posterity—depraved, sinful and
condemned.
Abraham
and others of that day, justified to
fellowship with God on account of
faith, are represented by a pyramid
(c) on plane N.
Abraham was a member of the depraved
human family and by nature belonged
with the rest on plane R; but
Paul tells us that Abraham was
justified by faith; that is, he was
reckoned of God a sinless and
perfect man because of his faith.
This, in God’s estimation, lifted
him up above the world of depraved
sinful men to plane N; and
though actually still imperfect, he
was received into the favor that
Adam had lost, viz., communion with
God as a “friend.” James 2:23
All on the perfect (sinless) plane
N are friends of God, and he
is a friend of theirs; but sinners
(on plane R) are at enmity
against God—“enemies through
wicked works.”
The world of mankind after the
flood, represented by figure
d, was still on plane R—still
at enmity, where it continues until
the Gospel Church is selected and
the Millennial age begins.
“Israel after the flesh,” during
the Jewish age, when the typical
sacrifices of bulls and goats
cleansed them (not really, but
typically, “for the Law made
nothing perfect”— Hebrews
7:19), were typically justified,
hence they are (e) on plane
P, the plane of typical
justification, which lasted from the
giving of the Law at Mount
Sinai until Jesus made an end of the
Law, nailing it to his cross.
There the typical
justification ended by the
institution of the “better
sacrifices” than the Jewish
types, those which actually
“take away the sin of the
world” and “make the
comers thereunto [actually]
perfect.”
Hebrews 10:1
The fire of trial and trouble
through which fleshly Israel passed,
when Jesus was present, sifting them
and taking out of their nominal
church the wheat, the “Israelites
indeed,” and especially when,
after the separation of the wheat,
he
“burned up the chaff [the
refuse part of that system]
with unquenchable fire,”
is illustrated by figure f.
It was a time of trouble which they
were powerless to avert. See Luke
3:17,21,22; 1 Thessalonians 2:16.
Jesus, at the age of thirty
years, was a perfect, mature man (g),
having left the glory of the
spiritual condition and become a
man in order that he (by the
grace of God) should taste death for
every man.
The justice of God’s law is
absolute: an eye for an eye, a tooth
for a tooth and a life for a life.
It was necessary that a perfect
man should die for
mankind, because the claims of
justice could be met in no other
way.
The death of an angel could no
more pay the penalty and release man
than could the death of “bulls
and of goats, which can never take
away sin.”
Therefore, he who is termed
“the Beginning of the creation of
God” became a man, was
“made flesh,” that he might give
that ransom (corresponding price)
which would redeem mankind.
He must have been a perfect man
else he could have done no more than
any member of the fallen race to pay
the price.
He was
“holy, harmless, undefiled, and
separate from sinners.” He
took the same form or likeness which
sinners have—“the likeness of
sinful flesh”—the
human likeness.
But he took that likeness in
its perfection. He did not partake
of its sin nor did he share its
imperfection, except as he
voluntarily shared the sorrows and
pains of some during his ministry,
taking their pains and infirmities
as he imparted to them his vitality
and health and strength.
It is written that
“Himself took our infirmities and
bare our sicknesses” (Isaiah 53:4),
and “virtue [life, vitality,
vigor] went out of him and healed
them all.” Mark 5:30; Luke 6:19;
Matthew 8:16,17
Being found in fashion as a
(perfect) man, he humbled himself
and became obedient unto death. He
presented himself to God, saying,
“Lo, I come (in the volume of the
book it is written of me) to do thy
will, O God”—and symbolized
this consecration by a baptism in
water. When he thus presented
himself, consecrated his being, his
offering was holy (pure) and
acceptable to God, who showed his
acceptance by filling him with his
Spirit and power—when the holy
Spirit came upon him, thus anointing
him.
This filling with the Spirit was the
begetting to a new nature—the
divine—which should be fully
developed or born when he had fully
accomplished the offering—the
sacrifice of the human nature.
This begetting was a step up from
human conditions, and is shown by
pyramid h,
on plane M, the plane of
spirit begetting. On this plane
Jesus spent three and one-half years
of his life—until his human
existence ended on the cross.
Then, after being dead three
days, he was raised to life—to the
perfection of spirit being (i,
plane L), born of the Spirit—“the
first born from the dead.” “That
which is born of the Spirit
is spirit.”
Jesus,
therefore, at and after his
resurrection, was a spirit—a spirit
being, and no longer a human being
in any sense.
True, after his resurrection he had
power to appear, and did appear, as
a man, in order that he might teach
his disciples and prove to them that
he was no longer dead; but he was
not a man, and was no longer
controlled by human conditions, but
could go and come as the wind (even
when the doors were shut), and none
could tell whence he came or whither
he went.
“So is every one that
is born of the Spirit.”
John 3:8 Compare 20:19,26.
From the moment of his
consecration to sacrifice, at the
time of his baptism, the human had
been reckoned dead – and there the
new nature was reckoned begun, which
was completed at the resurrection,
when he reached the perfect spirit
plane, L, was raised a
spiritual body.
Forty days after his
resurrection, Jesus ascended to the
majesty on high—the plane of divine
glory, K (pyramid k).
During the Gospel age he has been in
glory (l), “set down
with the Father on his throne,” and
Head over his Church on earth—her
director and guide.
During this entire Gospel age
the Church has been in process of
development, discipline and trial,
to the intent that in the end or
harvest of the age she may become
his bride and joint-heir.
Hence she has fellowship in his
sufferings, that she may be also
glorified together with him (plane
K), when the proper time
comes.
The steps of the Church to glory are
the same as those of her Leader and
Lord, who
“hath set us an example that we
should walk in his footsteps”
—except that the Church starts from
a lower plane.
Our Lord, as we have seen, came into
the world on the plane of human
perfection, N, while all we of
the Adamic race are on a lower
plane, R—the plane of sin,
imperfection and enmity against God.
The first thing necessary for us,
then, is to be justified, and
thus to reach plane N. How is
this accomplished? Is it by good
works? No; sinners can do no good
works.
We
could not commend ourselves to God,
so “God commended his love toward
us, in that, while we were yet
sinners, Christ died for us.”
Romans 5:8 Then the condition upon
which we come to the justified or
perfect human plane is that Christ
died for our sins, redeemed us and
lifted us up, “through faith
in his blood,” to the perfect
plane, from which, in Adam, we fell.
“We are justified
[lifted to
plane N] by faith.”
And “being justified by faith,
we have peace with God” (Romans
5:1), and are no longer esteemed by
God as enemies, but as justified
human sons, on the same plane as
Adam and our Lord Jesus, except that
they were actually perfect, while we
are merely reckoned so by God. This
reckoned justification we realize
through faith in God’s Word, which
says, Ye are “bought,” “redeemed,” “justified
freely from all things.”
We stand in God’s sight blameless,
spotless and holy in the robes of
Christ’s righteousness imputed to us
by faith. Our sins he consented to
have imputed to him, that he
might bear our penalty for us; and
he died on our behalf, as though he
were the sinner.
His righteousness is consequently
imputed to all who accept of his
redemption, and brings with it all
the rights and blessings originally
possessed before sin entered. It
restores us to life and to
fellowship with God. This fellowship
we may have at once by the exercise
of faith, and the life and fuller
fellowship and joy are assured—in
God’s “due time.”
But remember that while
justification is a blessed thing, it
does not change our nature:*
we are still human beings. We are
saved from the wretched state of sin
and alienation from God, and instead
of being human sinners we are human
sons; and now, because we are sons,
God speaks to us as such.
During the Gospel age he has been
calling for the “little flock”
of “joint-heirs,” saying,
“My son, give me thine heart”—that
is, give yourself, all your earthly
powers, your will, your talents,
your all, to me, even as Jesus hath
set you an example; and I will make
you a son on a higher plane than the
human. I will make you a spiritual
son, with a spirit body like the
risen Jesus—“the express image
of the Father’s person.”
If you will give up all of the
earthly hopes, ambitions, aims,
etc., consecrate the human nature
entirely, and use it up in my
service, I will give you a higher
nature than the rest of your race; I
will make you a “partaker of
the divine nature”—an
“heir of
God and a joint-heir with Jesus
Christ, if so be that you suffer
with him, that you may be also
glorified together.”
*The word nature
is used in an
accommodated sense
when it is said of a
man that he is
ill-natured.
Strictly speaking,
no man is evil by
nature.
Human nature is
“very good,”
an earthly image
of the divine
nature. So every man
is of a good nature,
the difficulty being
that this good
nature has become
depraved.
It is then
unnatural for a man
to be evil, brutal,
etc., and natural
for him to be
God-like. It is in
this, its primary
sense, that we use
the word nature,
above.
We are justified
by Christ to a full
return to all the
privileges and
blessings of our
human nature—the
earthly image of
God. |
Those who rightly value this prize
set before them in the gospel gladly
lay aside every weight and run with
patience the appointed race, that
they may win it. Our works were not
called for to secure our
justification: our Lord Jesus did
all the work that could be done to
that end, and when, by faith, we
accepted of his finished work, we
were justified, lifted to plane N.
But now, if we would go further, we
cannot go without works.
True, we must not lose our faith,
else we will thereby lose our
justification; but being justified,
and continuing in faith, we are able
(through the grace given unto us by
our begetting of the Spirit) to do
works, to bring forth fruit
acceptable to God. And God requires
this; for it is the sacrifice we
covenanted to make. God requires
that we show our appreciation of the
great prize by giving all that we
have and are for it; not to men, but
to God—a sacrifice holy and,
through Christ, acceptable to
him—our reasonable service.
When we present all these things, we
say: Lord, how wouldst thou have me
deliver this, my sacrifice, my time,
talent, influence, etc., to thee?
Then, examining God’s Word for an
answer, we hear his voice
instructing us to deliver our all
to him as our Lord Jesus did, by
doing good unto all men as we have
opportunity, especially to the
household of faith—serving them
with spiritual or with natural food,
clothing them in Christ’s
righteousness or with the earthly
raiment, as we may have ability, or
as they may need.
Having consecrated all, we
are begotten of the Spirit, we have
reached plane M; and now,
through the power given unto us, if
we use it, we will be able to
perform all of our covenant, and to
come off conquerors, and more than
conquerors, through (the power or
Spirit of) him who loved us and
bought us with his own precious
blood. But, thus walking in the
footsteps of Jesus,
“Ne’er think the victory
won,
Nor once at ease sit down.
Thine arduous work will not
be done
Till thou hast gained thy
crown.”
The crown will be won when we, like
our faithful Brother Paul, have
fought a good fight and finished the
course, but not sooner. Until then,
the flame and incense of our
sacrifice of labor and service must
ascend daily—a sacrifice of sweet
odor unto God, acceptable through
Jesus Christ, our Lord.
Those of this overcoming class who
“sleep” will be raised spirit
beings, plane L, and those of
the same class who are alive and
remain unto the coming of the Lord
will be “changed” to the same
plane of spirit being, and will not
“sleep” for a moment, though
the “change” will necessitate
the dissolution of the earthen
vessel. No longer weak, earthly,
mortal, corruptible beings, these
will then be fully born of the
Spirit—heavenly, spiritual,
incorruptible, immortal beings. 1 Corinthians 15:44,52
We
know not how long it will be after
their “change,” or perfecting
as spirit beings (plane L),
before they, as a full and complete
company, will be glorified (plane
K) with the Lord, united with
him in power and great glory.
This unifying and full glorification
of the entire body of Christ with
the Head we understand to be the
“marriage of the Lamb” to his
Bride, when she shall fully enter
into the joys of her Lord.
Look
again at the chart—n,
m, p, q are four distinct
classes which unitedly represent the
nominal Gospel Church as a whole,
claiming to be the body of Christ.
Both the n and m
classes are on the spirit-begotten
plane, M.
These two
classes have existed together
throughout the Gospel age; both
covenanted with God to become living
sacrifices; both were “accepted
in the beloved” and begotten by
the Spirit as “new creatures.”
The difference between them is this:
n represents those who are
fulfilling their covenant and are
dead with Christ to earthly will,
aims and ambitions, while m
represents the larger company of the
spirit-begotten children who
have covenanted, but who, alas!
shrink back from the performance of
their covenant. The n class
consists of the overcomers who will
be the Bride of Christ, who will sit
with the Lord in his throne in
glory—plane K.
This is the “little flock” to
whom it is the Father’s good
pleasure to give the Kingdom. Luke
12:32 Those of the m class
shrink from the death of the human
will, but God still loves them, and
therefore will bring them by the way
of adversity and trouble to plane
L, the perfect spiritual plane.
But they will have lost the right to
plane K, the throne of glory,
because they were not overcomers.
If we prize our Father’s love, if we
desire our Lord’s approval, if we
aspire to be members of his body,
his Bride, and to sit in his throne,
we must fulfil our covenant of
sacrifice faithfully and willingly.
The majority of the nominal
Church is represented by section
p.
Notice that they are not on plane
M, but on plane N. They
are justified but not sanctified.
They are not fully consecrated to
God, and not begotten, therefore, as
spirit beings. They are higher than
the world, however, because they
accept of Jesus as their ransom from
sin; but they have not accepted the
high-calling of this age to become
part of the spiritual family of God.
If they continue in faith and fully
submit to the righteous laws of
Christ’s Kingdom, in the Times of
Restitution, they will finally
attain the likeness of the perfect
earthly man, Adam. They will
completely recover all that was lost
through him. They will attain the
same human perfection, mental, moral
and physical, and will again be in
the image of God, as Adam was; for
to all this they were redeemed. And
their position of justification,
plane N, as those who have
heard and believed in the salvation
through Christ, is a special
blessing which they by faith enjoy
sooner than the general world (for
all shall be brought to an accurate
knowledge of the Truth, in the
Millennial age).
These, however, will have had the
advantage of an earlier start and
some progress in the right
direction. But class p fails
to improve the real benefit of this
faith justification in the present
time. It is granted now for the
special purpose of enabling some to
make the acceptable sacrifice, and
to become the n class as
members of “the body of
Christ.”
Those of class p receive the
favor of God [justification] “in
vain”
(2 Corinthians 6:1): they fail to
use it to go on and present
themselves acceptable sacrifices,
during this time in which sacrifices
are acceptable to God. Those of this
class, though not
“saints,”
not members of the consecrated
“body,” are called
“brethren” by the
Apostle. Romans 12:1 In the same
sense the entire race, when
restored, will forever be brethren
of the Christ, and the children of
God, though of a different nature.
God is the Father of all in
harmony with him, on every plane and
of every nature.
Another class connected with the
nominal Church, which never did
believe in Jesus as the sacrifice
for its sins, and which consequently
is not justified—not on plane N—is
represented below plane N, by
section q.
These are “wolves in sheep’s
clothing”; yet they call
themselves Christians, and are
recognized as members of the nominal
Church.
They are not truly believers in
Christ as their Redeemer; they
belong to plane R; they are
part of the world, and are out of
place in the Church and a great
injury to it. In this mixed
condition, with these various
classes, n, m, p, and q,
mingling together and all calling
themselves Christians, the Church
has existed throughout the Gospel
age.
As our Lord foretold, the nominal
kingdom of heaven (the nominal
Church) is like a field sown with
wheat and tares. And he said he
would “let both grow together
until the harvest” in the end of
the age. In the time of harvest he
will say unto the reapers (“the
angels”— messengers), Gather
together the tares and bind them in
bundles to burn them, but gather the
wheat into my barn. Matthew
13:38,41,49
These words of our Lord show us that
while he purposed that both should
grow together during the age, and be
recognized as members of the nominal
Church, he also purposed that there
should come a time of separation
between these different elements,
when those who are truly the Church,
his saints (n) approved and
owned of God, should be made
manifest. Matthew 13:39
During the Gospel age the good
seed has been growing, and tares or
counterfeits also. “The good
seed are the children of the
kingdom,”
the spiritual children, classes
n and m, while “the
tares are the children of the wicked
one.”
All of class q, and many of
class p, are therefore
“tares”; for “no man
can serve two masters,” and
“his servants you are to whom you
render service.” As those in class p
do not consecrate their service and
talents to the Lord that bought
them—a reasonable
service—doubtless they give much of
their time and talent really in
opposition to God, and hence in the
service of the enemy.
Now notice on the chart the harvest
or end of the Gospel age; notice the
two parts into which it is
divided—seven years and
thirty-three years, the exact
parallel of the harvest of the
Jewish age.
This harvest, like the Jewish one,
is to be first a time of trial and
sifting upon the Church, and
afterward a time of wrath or pouring
out of the “seven last
plagues”
upon the world, including the
nominal Church. The Jewish Church
was the “shadow” or pattern
on the fleshly plane of all that the
Gospel Church enjoys on the
spiritual plane. That which tried
fleshly Israel in the harvest of
their age was THE TRUTH then
presented to them.
The truth then due was the sickle,
and it separated the “Israelites
indeed” from the nominal Jewish
Church; and of the true wheat there
was but a fragment compared to the
professors. So also is the harvest
of this age. The harvest of the
Gospel age, like that of the Jewish
age, is under the supervision of the
chief reaper, our Lord Jesus, who
must then be present. Revelation
14:14
The first work of our Lord in
the harvest of this age will be to
separate the true from the false.
The nominal Church, because of her
mixed condition, the Lord calls
“Babylon”—confusion; and the
harvest is the time for separating
the different classes in the nominal
Church, and for ripening and
perfecting the n class. Wheat
will be separated from tares, ripe
wheat from unripe, etc. Those in
class n are a “first
fruits” of the wheat, and after
being separated they will, in due
time, become Christ’s Bride, and be
forever with and like her Lord.
The separation of this little flock
from Babylon is shown by figure
s. She
is on the way to become one
with the Lord, and to bear his name
and share his glory. The glorified
Christ, Head and body, is shown by
figure w.
Figures
t, u, and v represent
Babylon—the nominal Church—falling,
going to pieces during “the
time of trouble” in the “day
of our Lord.” Though this may seem
to be a dreadful thing, yet it will
actually be of great advantage to
all the true wheat. Babylon falls
because she is not what she claims
to be.
The Church nominal contains many
hypocrites, who have associated
themselves with her because of her
honorable standing in the eyes of
the world, and who, by their conduct
are making Babylon a stench in the
nostrils of the world. The Lord
always knew their real character,
but, according to his purpose he
lets them alone until the harvest,
when he will
“Gather out of [or from]
his kingdom [true Church,
and bind in bundles] all
things that offend, and them
which do iniquity, and cast them
into a furnace of fire
[trouble, destructive to
their nominal system and false
profession].... Then shall
the righteous [the n
class] shine forth as
the sun in the kingdom of their
Father.” Matthew
13:41-43
The trouble coming upon the Church
will be occasioned in great measure
by the growth of Infidelity and Spiritism, of various kinds, which
will be severe trials because
Babylon holds so many doctrines
contrary to God’s Word.
As in the harvest of the Jewish age
the cross of Christ was to
the Jew, expecting glory and power,
a stumbling block, and to the
worldly-wise Greek, foolishness, so
in the harvest of the Gospel age it
will again be the stone of stumbling
and rock of offense.
Every one who has built upon Christ
anything else than the gold, silver
and precious stones of truth, and a
character consistent therewith, will
find himself sorely beset during the
time of wrath (“fire“”); for
all the wood, hay and stubble of
doctrine and practice will be
consumed.
Those who have built properly, and
who consequently possess the
approved character, are represented
by figure s,
while t represents the
“great company,” begotten of
the Spirit, but who have built with
wood, hay and stubble—wheat, but
not fully ripened at the time of the
gathering of the first fruits (s).
They (t) lose the prize of
the throne and the divine nature,
but will finally reach birth as
spirit beings of an order lower than
the divine nature.
Though these are truly consecrated,
they are overcome by the worldly
spirit to such an extent that they
fail to render their lives in
sacrifice.
Even in “the harvest,” while
the living members of the Bride are
being separated from others by the
truth, the ears of others,
including class t, will be
dull of hearing. They will be slow
to believe and slow to act in that
time of separation.
They will, no doubt, be greatly
dismayed when they afterward realize
that the Bride has been completed
and united to the Lord, and that
they, because so listless and
overcharged, have lost that great
prize.
The beauty of God’s plan, which they
will then begin to discern as one of
love, both for them and for all the
world of mankind, will quite
overcome their grief, and they will
shout
“Alleluia! for the Lord God
omnipotent reigneth. Let us be
glad, and rejoice, and give
honor to him, for the marriage
of the Lamb is come, and his
wife hath made herself ready.”
Revelation 19:6,7
Notice, too, the abundant provision
of the Lord: the message is sent to
them– Though you are not the Bride
of the Lamb, you may be present at
the marriage supper—
“Blessed are they which are
called unto the marriage supper
of the Lamb.” Verse
9
This company will, in due time,
through the Lord’s chastisements,
come fully into harmony with him and
his plan, and will wash their robes,
that they may ultimately reach a
position next to the Bride—y,
on the spiritual plane, L.
Revelation 7:14,15
The time of trouble, as it will
affect the world, will be after
Babylon has begun to fall and
disintegrate. It will be an
overturning of all human society and
governments, preparing the world for
the reign of righteousness.
During the time of trouble, fleshly
Israel (e), which was cast
off until the fullness of the
Gentiles be come in, will be
restored to God’s favor, and the
Gospel Church, or spiritual Israel,
will be completed and glorified.
During the Millennial age Israel
will be the chief nation of earth,
at the head of all on the earthly
plane of being, into oneness and
harmony with which all the obedient
will be gradually drawn.
Their restoration to perfect human
nature, as well as that of the world
in general, will be a gradual work,
requiring all of the Millennial age
for its full accomplishment. During
that thousand years’ reign of
Christ, the results of Adamic death
will be gradually swallowed up or
destroyed.
Its various stages—sickness, pain
and weakness, as well as the
tomb—will yield obedience to the
Great Restorer’s power, until at the
end of that age the great pyramid of
our chart will be complete.
The Christ (x) will be the
head of all things—of the great
company, of angels, and of men—next
to the Father; next in order or rank
will be the great company, spirit
beings (y), and next, angels;
then Israel after the flesh (z),
including only Israelites indeed, at
the head of earthly nations; then
the world of men (W),
restored to perfection of
being, like the head of the human
race, Adam, before he sinned. This
restoration will be accomplished
gradually during the Millennial
age—the “times of
restitution.”
Acts 3:21
Some, however, will be destroyed
from among the people: first, all
who, under full light and
opportunity, for one hundred years
refuse to make progress toward
righteousness and perfection (Isaiah
65:20); and second, those who,
having progressed to perfection, in
a final testing at the close of the
Millennium prove unfaithful.
Revelation 20:9
Such die the second death, from
which there is no resurrection or
restitution promised. But one full
individual trial is provided. But
one ransom will ever be given.
Christ dieth no more.
When we look at our Father’s great
plan for the exaltation of the
Church and the blessing through it
of Israel and all the families of
the earth by a restitution of all
things, it reminds us of the song of
the angels
“Glory to God in the highest;
on earth, peace, good will
toward men!”
That will be the consummation of
God’s plan—“the gathering
together of all things in Christ.”
Who will then say that God’s plan
has been a failure? Who will then
say that he has not overruled evil
for good, and made the wrath of both
men and devils to praise him?
The figure of a pyramid not only
serves well the purpose of
illustrating perfect beings, but it
continues to answer the purpose of
illustration in representing the
oneness of the whole creation, as in
the fulfillment of God’s plan it
will be one when the harmony
and perfection of all things will be
attained under the headship of
Christ, the Head, not only of the
Church which is his body, but also
of all things in heaven and in
earth. Ephesians 1:10
Christ Jesus was the “beginning,” “the head,” “the topstone,” the
“chief (upper)
corner-stone”
of this grand structure, which
as yet is only commenced; and into
harmony with the lines and angles of
the top-stone must every understone
be built. No matter how many kinds
of stones may be in this structure,
no matter how many distinct natures
there may be among God’s sons,
earthly and heavenly, they all, to
be everlastingly acceptable to him,
must be conformed to the image of
his Son.
All who will be of this building
must partake of the spirit of
obedience to God, and of love toward
him and all his creatures (so amply
illustrated in Jesus), the
fulfillment of the law—Thou shalt
love the Lord with all thy heart,
mind, soul and strength, and thy
neighbor as thyself.
In
the process (as God’s Word outlines
this gathering together in one of
all things, both heavenly and
earthly, under one head), Christ
Jesus, the Head, was first selected;
secondly, the Church, which is his
body. Angels and other spirit
classes will rank next; then the
worthies of Israel and the world.
Beginning with the highest, the
ordering shall proceed until all who
will shall have been brought
into harmony and oneness.
One peculiarity is that this tried,
chief, corner top-stone is laid
first and called a foundation
stone. Thus is illustrated the fact
that the foundation of all hope
toward God and righteousness is
laid, not on the earth, but in the
heavens. And those built under it
and united to this heavenly
foundation are held to it by
heavenly attractions and laws.
And though this order is the very
opposite of an earthly building, how
appropriate that the stone in whose
likeness the entire structure is to
be found should be laid first. And
how appropriate also to find that
our foundation is laid upward,
not downward; and that we, as
living stones, are “built up
into him in all things.”
Thus the work will progress during
the Millennial age, until every
creature, of every nature, in heaven
and in earth, will be praising and
serving God in conformity with the
lines of perfect obedience. The
universe will then be clean; for in
that day
“It shall come to pass that
the soul that will not hear that
Prophet shall be cut off from
among the people”—in the
second death. Acts 3:22,23
The Tabernacle in the
Wilderness
The same lesson shown in the Chart
of the Ages is here taught in this
divinely arranged type, the lessons
of which will be more fully examined
subsequently. We place it alongside,
that the different planes or steps
to the Holy of Holies may be duly
noted or appreciated, as teaching
the same steps already examined in
detail.
Outside the court of the tabernacle
lies the whole world in sin, on the
depraved plane, R. Entering
through the “gate” into the
“court,” we become believers
or justified persons, on
plane N.
Those who go forward in consecration
press to the door of the Tabernacle,
and, entering in (plane M),
become priests. They are
strengthened by the
“shew
bread,” enlightened by
the
“candlestick” and enabled
to offer acceptable incense to God
by Jesus Christ at the
“Golden
Altar.”
Finally, in the first resurrection,
they enter the perfect spiritual
condition, or
“Most Holy”
(plane L), and are then
associated with Jesus in the glory
of the Kingdom, plane K.
The Blessed Hope
“A little while, earth’s fightings will be over;
A little while, her tears be
wiped away;
A little while, the power of Jehovah
Shall turn this darkness to
Millennial Day.
“A little while, the ills that
now o’erwhelm men
Shall to the memories of the
past belong;
A little while, the love that once
redeemed them
Shall change their weeping
into grateful song.
“A little while! ’Tis ever
drawing nearer...
The brighter dawning of that
glorious day.
Praise God, the light is hourly
growing clearer,
Shining more and more unto
the perfect day.” |
|