The Kingdom of God
Prominence of the
Subject
•
The Character of the Kingdom
•
The
Kingdom During the Gospel Age
•
False
Views Corrected by Paul
•
Results
of False Ideas of the Kingdom
• Two Phases of the
Kingdom of God
•
The Spiritual Phase and its Work
•
The Earthly Phase and its Work
•
Their Harmonious Operation
•
The Glory of the Earthly Phase
•
The Glory of the Heavenly Phase
•
The Covenant Root from which These Branches Grow
•
The Earthly Phase of the Kingdom, Israelitish
•
The Lost Tribes
•
The Heavenly Jerusalem
•
Israel a Typical People •
Israel’s Loss and Recovery
•
The Elect Classes
•
The Heirs of the Kingdom
•
The Iron Rule
•
An Illustration of the Object of the Millennial Reign
•
The Kingdom Delivered to the Father
•
God’s Original Design Fully Accomplished
|
Any who
have not carefully examined this
subject, with concordance and Bible
in hand, will be surprised, on doing
so, to find its prominence in the
Scriptures. The Old Testament
abounds with promises and prophecies
in which the Kingdom of God and its
King, Messiah, figure as the very
center.
It was the hope of every Israelite
(Luke 3:15) that as a people God
would exalt their nation under
Messiah; and when the Lord came to
them, it was as their King, to
establish the long promised Kingdom
of God upon the earth.
John, the forerunner and herald of
our Lord Jesus, opened his mission
with the announcement,
“Repent ye; for the Kingdom of
Heaven is at hand.” Matthew 3:2 The Lord
commenced his ministry with the same
announcement exactly (Matthew 4:17);
and the apostles were sent forth to
preach the same message. Matthew
10:7; Luke 9:2
Not only was the kingdom the topic
with which the Lord began his public
ministry, but it was really the main
topic of all his preaching (Luke
8:1; 4:43; 19:11), other subjects
being mentioned merely in connection
with or in explanation of this one
subject.
The majority of his parables were
either illustrations of the kingdom
from various standpoints, and in
different features, or else served
to point out entire consecration to
God as essential to a share in the
kingdom, and to correct the Jewish
misapprehension that they were sure
of the kingdom because natural
children of Abraham, and hence
natural heirs to the promises.
Our Lord Jesus in his talks with his
followers strengthened and
encouraged their expectations of a
coming kingdom, saying to them,
“I appoint unto you a kingdom
as my Father hath appointed unto
me, that ye may eat and drink at
my table in my kingdom, and sit
on thrones, judging [ruling]
the twelve tribes of Israel.” Luke 22:29,30
And, again, “Fear not, little
flock; it is your Father’s good
pleasure to give you the
kingdom.”
Luke 12:32
And when, instead of being crowned
and enthroned, their recognized king
was crucified, his disciples were
sorely disappointed. As two of them
expressed it to the supposed
stranger on their way to Emmaus
after his resurrection, they had
“trusted that it had been he which
should have redeemed Israel”—
delivering them from the Roman yoke,
and making of Israel the Kingdom of
God in power and glory.
But they were sadly disappointed by
the changes of the few days
previous. Then Jesus opened their
understanding by showing them from
the Scriptures that his sacrifice
was needful first of all before the
kingdom could be established. Luke
24:21,25-27
God could have given to Jesus the
dominion of earth without redeeming
man; for “The Most High
ruleth over the kingdom of men, and
giveth it to whomsoever he
pleaseth.” Daniel 4:32
But God had a grander
design than could have been
accomplished by such a plan.
Such a kingdom could have brought
blessings which, however good, could
have been of only a temporary
character, since all of mankind were
under condemnation to death. To make
the blessings of his kingdom
everlasting and complete, the race
had first to be ransomed from death
and thus legally released from the
condemnation which passed upon all
in Adam.
That in explaining the prophecies
Jesus revived the disciples’ hope of
a coming kingdom is evident from the
fact that afterward, as he was
leaving them, they inquired,
“Lord, wilt thou at this
time restore the kingdom to
Israel?”
His answer, though not explicit, did
not contradict their hopes. He said,
“It is not for you to
know the times and seasons
which the Father hath put in his
own power.” Acts 1:6,7
True, the disciples at first, in
common with the entire Jewish
nation, had an imperfect conception
of the Kingdom of God in supposing
it to be exclusively an earthly
kingdom, even as many today err in
an opposite direction in supposing
it to be exclusively a heavenly
kingdom.
And many of the parables and dark
sayings of our Lord Jesus were
intended in due time to correct
these misconceptions. But he always
held forth the idea of a kingdom, a
government, to be established in
the earth and to rule among men.
And he not only inspired in them a
hope for a share in the kingdom, but
he also taught them to pray for its
establishment —
“Thy kingdom come; thy
will be done ON EARTH as it is
in heaven.”
To
the worldly-wise among the Jews, our
Lord seemed an impostor and fanatic;
and they considered his disciples
mere dupes. His wisdom and tact, and
his miracles, they could not well
gainsay, nor reasonably account for;
yet, from their standpoint of
unbelief, his claim that he was the
heir of the world, and would
establish the promised kingdom which
should rule the world, and that his
followers, all of them from the
humbler walks of life, would be
joint-rulers with him in that
kingdom, seemed too absurd for
consideration.
Rome, with its disciplined warriors,
its able generals and immense
wealth, was the master of the world,
and was daily growing more powerful.
Who, then, was this Nazarene? and
who were these fishermen, without
money or influence, and with but a
meager following among the common
people? Who were these that they
should talk about establishing the
kingdom long promised to be the
grandest and mightiest earth had
ever known?
The Pharisees, hoping to expose
the supposed weakness of our Lord’s
claims, and thereby to undeceive his
followers, demanded of him—When
will this kingdom which you preach
begin to make its appearance?—when
will your soldiers arrive?—when
will this Kingdom of God appear?
Luke 17:20-30
Our Lord’s answer would have given
them a new thought had they not been
prejudiced against him and blinded
by their own supposed wisdom. He
answered that his kingdom would
never appear in the manner in which
they expected it.
The kingdom which he preached, and
in which he invited his followers to
joint-heirship, was an invisible
kingdom, and they must not expect to
see it.
“He answered them, and said,
The Kingdom of God cometh not
with observation
[outward manifestation];
neither shall they say, Lo here!
or, lo there! for the Kingdom of
God is [to be] in your
midst.”*
In a word, he showed that when his
kingdom should come, it would be
everywhere present and everywhere
powerful, yet nowhere visible.
*The Diaglott and
Rotherham’s
translation render this
“among you,”
which is synonymous with
“in your midst.”
It certainly would agree
with no theory to insist
that the kingdom which
Jesus claimed to be
about to establish would
be within the hearts of
the Pharisees, whom he
styled hypocrites and
whited sepulchres.
But this kingdom, when
established, will be “in
the midst of” or “among”
all classes, ruling and
judging all.
|
Thus he gave them an idea of
the spiritual kingdom which he
preached; but they were unprepared
and received it not. There was a
measure of truth in the Jewish
expectation concerning the promised
kingdom, which will in due time be
realized, as will be shown; but our
Lord’s reference here is to that
spiritual phase of the kingdom,
which will be invisible. And as this
phase of the kingdom will be
first set up, its presence will
be unseen, and for a time
unrecognized.
The privilege of heirship in this
spiritual phase of the Kingdom of
God was the only offer then being
made, and has been the one hope of
our calling during the entire Gospel
age, which then began. Hence Jesus
referred to it exclusively. Luke
16:16 This will be more clearly seen
as we proceed.
It
was probably because of this adverse
public sentiment, especially among
the Pharisees, that Nicodemus came
to Jesus by night, being anxious to
solve the mystery, yet apparently
ashamed to acknowledge publicly that
such claims had any weight upon his
mind.
The conversation between the Lord
and Nicodemus (John
3), though but partially recorded,
gives a somewhat further insight
into the character of the Kingdom of
God. Evidently the main points of
the conversation are mentioned that
from these we may readily gather the
drift of the whole, which we may
reasonably paraphrase as follows:
Nicodemus—
“Rabbi, we know that thou
art a teacher come from God; for
no man can do these miracles
that thou doest, except God be
with him.” Yet some of your
statements seem very
inconsistent to me, and I come
to ask an explanation.
For instance, you and your
disciples go about proclaiming,
“The kingdom of heaven is at
hand”; but you have neither
an army, nor wealth, nor
influence, and to all appearance
this claim is untrue; and in
this you seem to be deceiving
the people.
The Pharisees generally regard
you as an impostor, but I am
sure there must be some truth in
your teachings, “for no man
can do these miracles that thou
doest, except God be with him.”
The object
of my visit is to inquire of
what sort, when and whence is
this kingdom you proclaim? and
when and how is it to be
established?”
Jesus—
Your request to have a full
understanding concerning the
kingdom of heaven cannot now be
answered to your satisfaction;
not that I do not know about it
fully, but that in your present
condition you could not
understand or appreciate it, if
I would fully explain.
“Except a man be begotten*
from above, he cannot see
[Greek, eidon,+ know,
or be acquainted with] the
kingdom of God.”
Even my disciples have as yet
very indistinct ideas of the
character of the kingdom they
are proclaiming. I cannot tell
them, for the same reason that I
cannot tell you; and they could
not understand, for the same
reason.
But, Nicodemus, one peculiarity
of God’s dealings is that he
requires obedience to the light
already possessed before more
light is given; and in the
selection of those who shall be
accounted worthy to share the
kingdom, a manifestation of
faith is required. They must be
such as are willing to follow
God’s leading, step by step,
often seeing only the one
advance step clearly. They walk
by faith and not by sight.
Nicodemus—
But I do not understand you.
What do you mean? “How can a
man be begotten when he is old?
can he enter a second time into
his mother’s womb, and be born?”
Or do you mean that the
repentance preached by “John the
Immerser,” and signified by
baptism in water, is somehow a
symbolic birth?
I notice that your disciples
preach and baptize similarly. Is
this the new birth necessary to
those who would see or enter
your kingdom?
Jesus—
Our nation is a consecrated
nation, a covenant people. They
were all baptized into Moses in
the sea and in the cloud when
they left Egypt. God accepted
them in Moses, the mediator of
their covenant, at Sinai; but
they have forgotten their
covenant, some are openly living
as publicans and sinners, and
many others are self-righteous
hypocrites.
Hence John’s preaching and that
of my disciples is repentance—a
return to God and to a
recognition of the covenant
made; and the baptism of John
signifies this repentance and
reformation of heart and life,
and not the new birth.
But unless you have more than
this you will never see the
Kingdom. Except in addition to
the reformation symbolized by
John’s baptism you receive a
begetting and birth of the
spirit, you cannot see my
Kingdom.
Repentance will bring you back
to a justified condition; in
that condition you will be able
readily to recognize me as
Messiah, the antitype of Moses;
and thus consecrating to me you
will be begotten of the
Father to a new life and the
divine nature, which, if it
develop and become quickened,
will insure your being born
a new creature, a spirit being,
in the first resurrection; and
as such you shall not only see
but share the Kingdom.
The change to be wrought by this
new birth of the Spirit is truly
great, Nicodemus; for that which
is born of the flesh is flesh,
but that which is born of the
Spirit is spirit.
Wonder not, then, at my first
statement, that you must be
begotten from above ere you
can understand, know and
appreciate the things of which
you inquire. “Marvel not that
I said unto thee, Ye must be
born again.”
The difference between your
present condition, born of the
flesh, and the condition of
those born of the Spirit, who
shall enter into or constitute
the kingdom I am preaching, is
very great.
Let me give you an illustration
by which you will gain some idea
of the beings who, when born of
the Spirit, will constitute this
kingdom:
“The wind bloweth where it
listeth, and thou hearest the
sound thereof, but canst not
tell whence it cometh and
whither it goeth—so is every one
that is born of the Spirit.”
As the wind blows here and
there, you cannot see it, though
it exerts an influence all about
you. You know not whence it
comes nor where it goes.
This is as good an illustration
as I can give you of those born
of the Spirit in the
resurrection, those who will
“enter into” or constitute
the Kingdom which I am now
preaching.
They will all be as invisible as
the wind, and men, not born of
the Spirit, will neither know
whence they came nor whither
they go.
Nicodemus—
How can this be?—invisible
beings!
Jesus—
“Art thou a master in Israel,
and knowest not these things?”—that
spirit beings can be present,
yet invisible? Have you, who
attempt to teach others, never
read about Elisha and his
servant, or about Balaam’s ass?
and the many instances in the
Scriptures which illustrate this
principle, that spirit beings
can be present among men, yet
invisible?
Furthermore, you are of the
Pharisees, who professedly
believe in angels as spirit
beings. But this illustrates
what I told you at first: Except
a man be begotten from above, he
cannot see [know, become
acquainted with, or understand
as reasonable] the Kingdom of
God and the various things
connected with it.
If you would enter into and
become a joint-heir with me of
that kingdom which I am
announcing, you must follow the
light, step by step. As you do
so, more light will come, and
this as rapidly as you will be
prepared for it.
I have been preaching these
things now due which you can
understand, and performing
miracles, and you acknowledge me
to be a teacher come from God,
but you have not acted out your
faith and openly become my
disciple and follower. You must
not expect to see more, until
you live up to all you do see;
then God will give you more
light and evidence for the next
step.
“Verily, verily, I say unto
thee, we speak that we do
know, and testify that we
have seen, and ye [Pharisees] receive not our
witness. If I have told you
earthly things, and ye believe
not, how shall ye believe if I
tell you of heavenly things?”
It would be useless for me to
attempt to tell you of heavenly
things, for you would not be
convinced and my preaching would
seem the more foolish to you.
If what I have taught, which has
been of an earthly character, or
illustrated by earthly things,
which you could and do
understand, has not brought
conviction enough to your mind
to lead you openly to become my
disciple and follower, it would
be no more convincing to you if
I were to tell you of heavenly
things, of which you know
nothing; for no man has ever
ascended into heaven, hence none
could corroborate my testimony.
I, who descended from heaven,
alone understand heavenly
things. “No man hath ascended
up to heaven, but he that came
down from heaven, even the Son
of man.”* A knowledge of the
heavenly things can be received
only after the begetting of the
Spirit; and the heavenly things
themselves, when born of the
spirit, spirit beings.
Thus it required patience on the
Lord’s part, in declaring the nature
of the kingdom to those whose
prejudices and education hindered
their seeing anything except
distorted views of the earthly phase
of it. Nevertheless the selection of
a proper class to share Messiah’s
kingdom proceeded, though but a few
were selected from Israel, to whom
exclusively it was offered for seven
years.
As God had foreseen, through their unreadiness for it, and their
failure to grasp and comply with the
conditions presented, the privilege
of sharing in Messiah’s kingdom
passed from them as a people, only a
remnant of whom received it, and
came to the Gentiles to take out of
them also “a people for his
name.” And among these also only
a remnant, a “little flock,”
appreciate the privilege and are
counted worthy of joint-heirship in
his kingdom and glory.
Serious has been the error
introduced into the nominal
Christian Church, which
misinterprets this promised kingdom
to mean merely the Church nominal in
its present condition, and its work
merely a work of grace in the hearts
of believers; and to such an extreme
has this error been carried that the
present unholy alliance and reign of
the Church nominal with the world is
believed by many to be the reign of
the Kingdom of God on the earth.
True,
there is a sense in which the Church
is now the Kingdom of God, and a
work of grace is now going on in the
hearts of believers; but to consider
this all, and to deny a veritable
future Kingdom of God yet to be
established under the whole heavens,
in which the will of God will be
done as it is in heaven, is to make
void and meaningless the strongest
and most pointed promises recorded
by our Lord and the apostles and
prophets, for our encouragement and
help in overcoming the world.
In
the parables of our Lord, the Church
is frequently called the kingdom;
and the Apostle speaks of it as the
kingdom over which Christ now
reigns, saying that God hath
translated us out of the kingdom of
darkness into the kingdom of his
dear Son. We who accept of Christ
now recognize his purchased right of
dominion, and render him grateful
and voluntary obedience before he
forcibly establishes it in the
world.
We recognize the difference between
the laws of righteousness, which he
will enforce, and the kingdom of
darkness supported by the usurper,
at present the prince of this world.
Faith in God’s promises thus changes
our allegiance, and we reckon
ourselves subjects of the new
prince, and, by his favor,
joint-heirs with him in that kingdom
yet to be set up in power and great
glory.
But this fact by no means disannuls
the promises that ultimately
Christ’s kingdom shall be “from
sea to sea, and from the river to
the ends of the earth” (Psalms
72:8); that all nations shall serve
and obey him; and that unto him
every knee shall bow, of things both
in heaven and on earth. Daniel 7:27;
Philippians 2:10 Rather, on the
contrary, the selection now of the
“little flock” confirms those
promises.
When
the parables of our Lord are
carefully examined, it will be found
that they clearly teach that the
coming or setting up of the Kingdom
of God in power is future; and, as a
matter of course, not until the King
comes.
Thus the parable of the young
nobleman going into a far country to
receive a kingdom and to return,
etc. (Luke 19:11-15), clearly
locates the establishment of the
Kingdom at the return of Christ. And
the message sent by the Lord to the
Church long years afterward was,
“Be thou faithful unto death,
and I will give thee a
crown of life.” Revelation 2:10
From this it is evident that the
kings who will reign with him will
not be crowned nor reign as kings in
this life.
The Church at present, therefore, is
not the Kingdom of God set up in
power and glory, but in its
incipient, embryo condition. And so,
indeed, all the expressions of the
New Testament with reference to it
teach. The kingdom of heaven now
suffers violence at the hands of the
world; the King was maltreated and
crucified; and whosoever will follow
in his footsteps shall suffer
persecution and violence in some
form.
his, it will be observed, is true
only of the real Church, and
not of the nominal one. But the
promise is held out that if now we
(the Church, the embryo kingdom)
suffer with Christ, we also, in due
time, when he takes to himself his
great power and reigns, shall be
glorified and shall reign with him.
James (2:5), in harmony with our
Lord’s teaching, tells us that God
has chosen the poor and despised
according to this world’s standards,
not to reign now, but as “heirs
of the kingdom which he hath
promised.” The Lord says,
“How hardly shall they that
have riches enter into the
Kingdom of God.”
Mark 10:23
It is evident that he does not mean
the nominal Church, which is now
reigning with the world; for the
rich are pressed into it. Peter
exhorts the heirs of the kingdom to
patience, perseverance, virtue and
faith, saying:
“Brethren, give diligence to
make your calling and election
sure; for if ye do these things
ye shall never fall; for so an
entrance shall be ministered
unto you abundantly into the
everlasting kingdom of our Lord
and Savior, Jesus Christ.” 2
Peter 1:10,11
Paul’s statement in Romans 14:17 is
supposed by some to refer to a
figurative kingdom; but when
examined in the light of the
context, it is evident that the
passage means simply this: We,
brethren, translated now into the
kingdom of God’s dear Son, have
certain liberties as to our food,
etc., which we had not as Jews under
the law (verse 14); yet let us
rather not use this liberty if it
cause brethren who do not yet
realize it to stumble and violate
their consciences.
Let us not, by our liberty as to our
food, ruin our brother for whom
Christ died; but let us remember
that the privileges of the kingdom,
both now and in the future, consist
of much greater blessings than
liberty as to food; namely, in our
liberty as to right-doing, our peace
toward God through Christ, and our
joy in participating in the holy
Spirit of God. These liberties of
the kingdom (now and ever) are so
great that the minor liberty as to
food may well be sacrificed, for the
present, for our brother’s good.
Thus, no matter from what scripture
standpoint we look, the idea that
the kingdom promises are mythical
deceptions, or that our present
conditions fulfil these promises, is
contradicted.
With
the early Church, the promises of
kingdom honor and joint-heirship
with the Master were strong
incentives to faithfulness under
present trials and persecutions,
which they had been forewarned to
expect; and in all the words of
comfort and encouragement in the
Apocalypse, given to the seven
churches, none shine out more
clearly and forcibly than those
which declare,
“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”; and,
“To
him that overcometh will I give
power over the nations.”
These are promises which could not
reasonably be misconstrued to apply
to a present work of grace in the
heart, nor yet to a reign over the
nations in the present life; since
they who would overcome must do so
by death in the service, and
thus gain the kingdom honors.
Revelation 20:6
But human nature seeks to avoid
suffering and is ever ready to grasp
honor and power; hence we find that
even in the apostles’ day some in
the Church were disposed to
appropriate the promises of future
honor and power to the present life,
and were beginning to act as though
they thought the time had already
come for the world to honor and even
to obey the Church.
The Apostle Paul writes, correcting
this error, knowing that such ideas
would have an injurious effect upon
the Church by cultivating pride and
leading away from sacrifice. He says
to them, ironically, “Now ye are
full, now ye are rich; ye have
reigned as kings without us.”
And then he adds, earnestly,
“I
would to God ye did reign, that we
[persecuted apostles] also
might reign with you.”
1 Corinthians 4:8
They were enjoying their
Christianity by trying to get out of
it and with it as much honor as
possible; and the Apostle well knew
that if they were faithful as
followers of the Lord they would be
in no such condition. Hence he
reminds them that if indeed the
long-looked-for reign had begun,
he also would be reigning no
less than they, and of the fact that
he by faithfulness was a sufferer
for the truth’s sake, which was a
proof that their reign was
premature, and a snare rather than a
glory. Then, with a touch of irony,
he adds,
“We [apostles and
faithful servants] are fools
for Christ’s sake, but ye are
wise in Christ; we are weak, but
ye are strong; ye are honorable,
but we are despised.”
I do
not write these things merely to
shame you: I have a better and a
nobler object— TO WARN YOU;
for the path of present honor leads
not to the glory and honor to be
revealed; but present suffering and
self-denial are the narrow path to
glory, honor, immortality and
joint-heirship in the kingdom.
Wherefore, I beseech you, be ye
followers of me. Suffer and be
reviled and persecuted now, that you
may share with me the crown of life,
which the Lord, the righteous judge,
will give me at that day; and
not to me only, but unto all those
that love his appearing.
1 Corinthians 4:10-17; 2 Timothy 4:8
But, after a great deal of
persecution had been faithfully
endured by the early Church,
theories began to spread to the
effect that the mission of the
Church was to conquer the world,
establish the kingdom of heaven on
earth and reign over the nations
before the Lord’s second advent.
This laid the foundation for worldly
intrigue, pomp and pride,
ostentatious show and ceremony in
the Church, which was designed to
impress, captivate and overawe the
world, and which led step by step to
the great claims of Papacy that as
God’s kingdom on earth it had a
right to command the respect and
obedience to its laws and officers
of every kindred, nation, and
people.
Under this false claim (and they
seemingly deceived themselves as
well as others) Papacy for a time
crowned and uncrowned the kings of
Europe, and still claims the
authority which it is now unable to
enforce.
The same idea through Papacy has
come down to Protestantism, which
also claims, though more vaguely,
that somehow the reign of the
Church is in progress; and like the
Corinthians its adherents are
“full” and “rich,” and
reign “as kings,” as
graphically described by our Lord.
Revelation 3:17,18
Thus it has come to pass that the
merely nominal members of the
Church—those not really converted,
not really wheat, but tares, mere
imitations of the wheat—far
outnumber the true disciples of
Christ. And these are much opposed
to every real sacrifice and
self-denial, do not suffer
persecution for righteousness’
[truth’s] sake, and at most hold to
only a form of fastings, etc.,
instead.
They are really reigning with the
world and are not in the line of
preparation for sharing in the real
kingdom which is to be set up by our
Lord at his second presence.
To
any careful observer, there is a
manifest incongruity between this
view and the teaching of Jesus and
the apostles. They taught that there
can be no kingdom until the King
comes. Revelation 20:6; 3:21;
2 Timothy 2:12 Consequently the
kingdom of heaven must suffer
violence until that time,
when it shall be set up in glory and
power.
Two
Phases of the Kingdom of God
While it is true, as stated by our
Lord, that the Kingdom of God
cometh not—does not make its
first appearance—with outward show,
in due time it is to be made
manifest to all by outward, visible
and unmistakable signs. When fully
set up, the Kingdom of God will be
of two parts, a spiritual or
heavenly phase and an earthly or
human phase.
The spiritual will always be
invisible to men, as those composing
it will be of the divine, spiritual
nature, which no man hath seen nor
can see (1 Timothy 6:16; John 1:18);
yet its presence and power will be
mightily manifested, chiefly through
its human representatives, who will
constitute the earthly phase of the
Kingdom of God.
Those who will constitute the
spiritual phase of the kingdom are
the overcoming saints of the Gospel
age—the Christ, head and
body—glorified. Their resurrection
and exaltation to power precedes
that of all others, because through
this class all others are to be
blessed. Hebrews 11:39,40 Theirs is
the first resurrection.
Revelation 20:5*
*In this verse the words
“But the rest of
the dead lived not again
until the thousand years
were finished”
are spurious. They are
not found in the oldest
and most reliable Greek
MSS, the Sinaitic,
Vatican Nos. 1209 and
1160, nor the Syriac MS.
We must remember that
many passages found in
the modern copies are
additions which do not
properly belong to the
Bible. Since commanded
not to add to the Word
of God, it is our duty
to repudiate such
additions as soon as
their spurious character
is established. The
words indicated probably
crept into the text by
accident, in the fifth
century; for no MS of
earlier date (either
Greek or Syriac)
contains this clause. It
was probably at first
merely a marginal
comment made by a
reader, expressive of
his thought upon the
text, and copied into
the body of the text by
some subsequent
transcriber who failed
to distinguish between
the text and the
comment.
However, the repudiation
of this clause is not
essential to the “Plan”
as herein set forth; for
the rest of the
dead--the world at
large--will not live
again in the full sense,
in the perfect sense
that Adam lived before
he sinned and came under
the sentence
“dying thou shalt die.”
Perfect life without
weakness or dying is the
only sense in which God
recognizes the word
life. From his
standpoint all the world
has already lost life,
is dying, and might now
be more properly
described as dead than
as alive.
2Corinthians 5:14;
Matthew 8:22
The word resurrection
(Greek, anastasis)
signifies raising up. As
related to man, it
signifies raising up man
to that condition from
which he fell, to full
perfection of
manhood--the thing lost
through Adam. The
perfection from which
our race fell is the
perfection to which they
will gradually rise,
during the Millennial
age of restitution or
resurrection (raising
up). The Millennial age
is not only the age of
trial, but also the age
of blessing, and through
resurrection or
restitution to life all
that was lost is to be
restored to all who,
when they know and have
opportunity, gladly
obey. The process of
resurrection will be a
gradual one, requiring
the entire age for its
full accomplishment;
though the mere
awakening to a measure
of life and
consciousness, as at
present enjoyed, will of
course be a momentary
work. Consequently it
will not be until the
thousand years are
finished that the race
will have fully attained
the complete measure of
life lost in Adam. And
since anything short of
perfect life is a
condition of partial
death, it follows that,
although the above words
are no part of the
inspired record, it
would be strictly true
to say that the rest of
the dead will not live
again (will not regain
the fulness of life
lost) until the thousand
years of restitution and
blessing are complete.
|
The great work before this glorious
anointed company—the Christ–
necessitates their exaltation to the
divine nature: no other than divine
power could accomplish it. Theirs is
a work pertaining not only to this
world, but to all things in
heaven and in earth—among
spiritual as well as among human
beings. Matthew 28:18; Colossians
1:20; Ephesians 1:10; Philippians
2:10; 1 Corinthians 6:3
The work of the earthly phase of the
Kingdom of God will be confined to
this world and to humanity. And
those so highly honored as to have a
share in it will be the most exalted
and honored of God among men. These
are the class referred to in Chapter
VIII (page 145), whose judgment day
was previous to the Gospel age.
Having been tried and found
faithful, in the awakening they will
not be brought forth to judgment
again, but will at once receive the
reward of their faithfulness—an
instantaneous resurrection to
perfection as men. (Others
than these and the spiritual class
will be gradually raised to
perfection during that Millennial
age.) Thus this class will be ready
at once for the great work before it
as the human agents of the Christ in
restoring and blessing the remainder
of mankind.
As the spiritual nature is necessary
to the accomplishment of the work of
Christ, so perfect human nature is
appropriate for the future
accomplishment of the work to be
done among men. These will minister
among and be seen of men, while the
glory of their perfection will be a
constant example and an incentive to
other men to strive to attain the
same perfection. And that these
ancient worthies will be in the
human phase of the kingdom and seen
of mankind is fully attested by
Jesus’ words to the unbelieving Jews
who were rejecting him. He said,
“Ye shall see Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob, and all the
prophets, in the Kingdom of
God.”
It should be noticed also, that the
Master does not mention that he or
the apostles will be visible with
Abraham. As a matter of fact, men
will see and mingle with the earthly
phase of the kingdom, but not with
the spiritual; and some will, no
doubt, be sorely vexed to find that
they rejected so great an honor.
We
are not given explicit information
as to the exact manner in which
these two phases of the heavenly
kingdom will harmoniously operate;
but we have an illustration of the
manner in which they may
operate, in God’s dealings with
Israel through their
representatives, Moses, Aaron,
Joshua, the prophets, etc.—though
the coming manifestations of divine
power will far exceed those of that
typical age; for the work of the
coming age comprises the awakening
of all the dead and the restoration
of the obedient to
perfection.
This work will necessitate the
establishment of a perfect
government among men, with perfect
men in positions of control, that
they may rightly order the affairs
of state. It will necessitate the
appointment of proper educational
facilities of every character, as
well as philanthropic measures of
various kinds.
And this noble work of thus
elevating the race by sure and
steady steps (under the direction of
the unseen spiritual members of the
same kingdom) is the high honor to
which the ancient worthies are
appointed, and for which they will
come forth prepared soon after the
final wreck of the kingdoms of this
world and the binding of Satan,
their prince. And as the divinely
honored representatives of the
heavenly kingdom, they will soon
receive the honor and cooperation of
all men.
To gain
a place in the earthly phase of the
kingdom of God will be to find the
gratification of every desire and
ambition of the perfect human heart.
It will be a glorious and satisfying
portion from the first entrance into
it, and yet the glory will
accumulate as time advances and the
blessed work progresses.
And when, at the end of a thousand
years, the great work of restitution
is accomplished by the Christ (in
great measure through the agency of
these noble human co-workers); when
the whole human race (except the
incorrigible—Matthew 25:46;
Revelation 20:9) stands approved,
without spot, or wrinkle, or any
such thing, in the presence of
Jehovah, these who were instrumental
in the work will shine among their
fellowmen and before God and Christ
and the angels, as “the stars
forever and ever.” Daniel 12:3
Their work and labor of love will
never be forgotten by their grateful
fellowmen. They will be held in
everlasting remembrance. Psalms
112:6
But great as will be the
accumulating glory of those perfect
men who will constitute the earthly
phase of the kingdom, the glory of
the heavenly will be the glory that
excelleth. While the former will
shine as the stars forever, the
latter will shine as the brightness
of the firmament—as the sun. Daniel
12:3
The honors of heaven as well as of
earth shall be laid at the feet of
the Christ. The human mind can
approximate, but cannot clearly
conceive, the glory to be revealed
in the Christ through the countless
ages of eternity. Romans 8:18;
Ephesians 2:7-12
It
is through these two phases of the
kingdom that the promise to Abraham
is to be verified—
“
In thee and in thy seed shall
all the families of the earth be
blessed.”
“Thy seed shall be as the
sand of the sea, and as
the stars of heaven”
—an earthly and a heavenly seed, both
God’s instruments of blessing to the
world. Both phases of the promises
were clearly seen and intended by
God from the beginning, but only the
earthly was seen by Abraham.
And though God selected from the
natural seed the chief of the
spiritual class (the apostles and
others), and proffered the chief
blessing, the spiritual, to all of
that nation living in the due time
for that heavenly call, this was
just so much beyond what Abraham
ever saw in the covenant—
favor upon
favor.
Paul (Romans 11:17) speaks of the Abrahamic covenant as a root out of
which fleshly Israel grew
naturally, but into which the
Gentile believers were grafted
when the natural branches were cut
off because of unbelief. This proves
the double fulfillment of the
promise in the development of the
two seeds, earthly (human) and
heavenly (spiritual), which will
constitute the two phases of the
kingdom.
This root-covenant bears these two
distinct kinds of branches, each of
which in the resurrection will bear
its own distinct kind of perfect
fruitage—the human and spiritual
classes in kingdom power.
In
order of development it was first
the natural (earthly), afterward the
heavenly rulers; but in order of
grandeur of position and time of
installment, it will be first the
spiritual, afterward the natural;
and so there are last which shall be
first, and first which shall be
last. Matt. 19:30; Luke 16:16
The promise made to Abraham, to
which Stephen refers (Acts 7:5), and in which Israel
trusted, was earthly: it related to
the land. God “promised
that he would give it to him for a
possession,” said Stephen. And
God said to Abraham,
“Lift up now thine eyes, and
look from the place where thou
art, northward and southward and
eastward and westward; for all
the land which thou seest,
to thee will I give it, and to
thy seed forever.
And I will make thy seed as
the dust of the earth, so that
if a man can number the dust of
the earth, then shall thy seed
be numbered.
Arise, walk through the land,
in the length of it and in the
breadth of it; for I will give
it unto thee.”
Genesis 13:14-17
Stephen shows that this promise
must yet be fulfilled; for he
declares that God gave Abraham
“none inheritance in it [in the
land], no, not so much as to set his
foot on.”
The Apostle, writing of this same
class of ancient worthies —Abraham
among others—agrees with Stephen’s
statement that the promise to
Abraham has not yet been fulfilled;
and he goes further and shows that
those earthly promises cannot and
will not be fulfilled until the
still higher heavenly promises
concerning the Christ (Head and
body) are fulfilled.
He says of them:
“These all died in
faith, not [i.e.,
without] having received
[the fulfillment of]
the promise, God having provided
some better thing for us
[the Christ],
that they without us should not
be made perfect.”
Hebrews 11:13,39,40
Thus is shown again that the
Redeemer and Restorer is spiritual,
having given up the human a
sacrifice for all, and that from
this spiritual class when highly
exalted all blessings must proceed,
whoever may be honored as its
instruments or agents. Romans 12:1;
Galatians 3:29
The
earthly phase of the kingdom is thus
seen to be Israelitish; and around
this fact cluster those many
prophecies which relate to the
prominence of that nation in God’s
plan for the future blessing of the
world, when their tabernacle, fallen
in the dust, shall be restored, and
Jerusalem shall be a praise in the
whole earth.
We find statements by both prophets
and apostles which clearly indicate
that in the times of restitution
Israel as a nation will be the first
among the nations to come into
harmony with the new order of
things; that the earthly Jerusalem
will be rebuilt upon her old heaps;
and that their polity will be
restored as in the beginning under
princes or judges. Isaiah 1:26;
Psalms 45:16; Jeremiah 30:18
And what could be more reasonably
expected than that Israel should
first of all rejoice to recognize
the prophets and patriarchs? and
that their acquaintance with and
long discipline under the law should
have prepared them for tractability
and obedience under the authority of
the kingdom? And while Israel will
be the first of the nations to be
recognized and blessed, it is
written also of Israel that
“The Lord shall save the tents of
Judah first.”
We
do not deem it of importance to
enter into a discussion as to where
the “lost tribes” of Israel
are to be sought. It may or may not
be true, as some claim, that those
“lost tribes” are traceable
to certain civilized nations of the
present day. But though some of the
suggested proofs are not
unreasonable, yet, as a whole, it is
largely inference and guess-work.
But should it yet be clearly
demonstrated that some of the
civilized nations are descendants of
the lost tribes, it would prove
no advantage to them under the
“heavenly” “high calling,”
which, since their national
rejection, knows no difference
between Jew and Greek, bond and
free. Should such evidence ever
become clear (which as yet it is
not), it would be in perfect harmony
with the prophecies and promises
relating to that nation yet awaiting
fulfillment in and under the earthly
phase of the kingdom.
Natural attachment, as well as a
still surviving measure of trust in
the long unfulfilled promises, and
all their natural prejudices, will
be favorable to Israel’s general and
speedy acceptance of the new rulers;
while their habits of measurable
obedience to the law will also be
favorable to their speedy harmony
with the principles of the new
government.
As
Jerusalem was the seat of empire
under the typical Kingdom of God, it
will again occupy the same position,
and be “the city of the Great
King.” Psalms 48:2; Matthew 5:35
A city is a symbol of a kingdom or
dominion, and so God’s Kingdom is
symbolized by the New Jerusalem, the
new dominion coming from heaven to
earth.
At first it will consist of only the
spiritual class, the Bride of
Christ, which, as seen by John, will
gradually come down to earth; that
is, it will gradually come into
power as the present empires break
in pieces, during the Day of the
Lord. In due time, however, the
earthly phase of this city or
government will be established,
parts or members of which will be
the ancient worthies.
There
will not be two cities
(governments), but one city, one
heavenly government, the one for
which Abraham looked, “a
city which hath foundations”—a
government established in
righteousness, being founded upon
the sure rock foundation of the
righteousness of Christ the
Redeemer, the value of man’s ransom
which he gave, and the firmness of
divine justice, which can no more
condemn the redeemed than it could
previously excuse the guilty. Romans
8:31-34; 1 Corinthians 3:11
Glorious City of Peace! whose walls
signify salvation, protection and
blessing to all who enter it, whose
foundations laid in justice can
never be moved, and whose builder
and designer is God! It is in the
light which will shine from this
glorious city (kingdom) of God that
the nations (people) will walk on
the highway of holiness, up to
perfection and to full harmony with
God. Rev. 21:24*
*The following words are
omitted from this verse
by the most authentic
ancient manuscripts,
viz., “of them
which are saved,”
also “and
honor.” The
latter words are also
lacking from verse 26. |
When
mankind reaches perfection at the
close of the Millennial age, as
already shown, they will be admitted
into membership in the Kingdom of
God and given the entire control of
earth as at first designed—each man
a sovereign, a king. This is clearly
shown in the symbolic prophecy of
John (Revelation 21:24-26); for in
vision he not only saw the people
walk in the light of it, but he saw
the kings enter it
in glory; yet none could enter who
would defile it.
None can become identified with that
city (kingdom) who has not first
been thoroughly tested; none who
would work, or love to work, deceit
and unrighteousness; only those whom
the Lamb will write as worthy of
life everlasting, and to whom he
will say,
“Come, ye blessed of my
Father, inherit the kingdom
prepared for you.”
It should be remembered,
then, that though undoubtedly
the literal city of Jerusalem
will be rebuilt, and though
probably it will become the
capital of the world, yet many
prophecies which mention
Jerusalem and its future glories
refer, under that as a symbol,
to the Kingdom of God to be
established in great splendor.
Concerning the future glory of the
earthly phase of the kingdom as
represented in Jerusalem, the
prophets speak in glowing terms,
saying:
“Break
forth into joy, sing together,
ye waste places of Jerusalem;
for the Lord hath comforted his
people, he hath redeemed
Jerusalem.”
“Behold, I create Jerusalem a
rejoicing, and her people a
joy.”
“Rejoice ye with Jerusalem and
be glad with her,...that ye may
be delighted with the abundance
of her glory; for saith the
Lord, Behold, I will extend
peace to her like a river, and
the glory of the Gentiles like a
flowing stream.”
“At
that time they shall call
Jerusalem the throne of the
Lord, and all nations shall be
gathered unto it.”
“And
many people shall go and say,
Come ye, and let us go up to the
mountain [kingdom] of the Lord,
to the house of the God of
Jacob; and he will teach us of
his ways, and we will walk in
his paths; for out of Zion [the
spiritual phase] shall go forth
the law, and the word of the
Lord from Jerusalem”—the
earthly phase.
Isaiah
52:9; Isaiah 65:18; Isaiah
66:10-12; Jeremiah 3:17; Isaiah
2:3
When considering the many
precious promises of future
blessing made to Israel, and
expecting an accurate
fulfillment of them to that
people, it is proper that we
should remember that as a people
they are typical, as well as
actual. In one aspect they are
typical of the whole world of
mankind; and their Law Covenant,
of obedience and life, was
typical of the New Covenant to
be established with the world
during the Millennial and future
ages.
The blood of atonement under their
typical covenant, and the priesthood
which applied it to that nation,
typified the blood of the New
Covenant and the Royal Priesthood
which will, during the Millennium,
apply its cleansings and blessings
to the whole world. Thus their
priesthood typified the Christ, and
that nation typified all for whom
the real sacrifice was made, and to
whom the real blessings will come—“every
man,” “the whole world.”
Then let us remember that though the
future blessings, like the past,
will be to the Jew first, and also
to the Gentile, it will be in the
matter of time only that the Jews
will have the precedence to divine
favor; and this we have shown would
be a natural consequence of their
training under the Law, which in due
time will serve its purpose to bring
them to Christ.
Though it brought only a remnant of
them at the first advent, it will
bring them as a people at the second
advent, and as a people they will be
a first-fruit among the nations.
Ultimately every blessing promised
to Israel, except those pertaining
to the elected classes, will have,
not only its actual fulfillment in
that people, but also its
antitypical fulfillment in all the
families of the earth. Under that
government
“God will render to
every man according to his
deeds—glory, honor, and peace
to every man that worketh good,
to the Jew first, and also to
the Gentile; for there is no
respect of persons with God.”
Romans 2:6,10,11
The Apostle Paul calls our attention
specially to the sureness of God’s
promises to Israel in the future,
and shows what favors they lost by
unbelief, and what favors are still
sure. He says that it was because of
pride, hardness of heart and
unbelief that Israel as a people had
not obtained that
for which they sought—the chief
place in divine favor and service.
Paul’s reference here is not to all
the generations of Israel, from
Abraham down, but to those
generations living at the time of
the first advent; and his words
would apply to all their generations
which have lived during the Gospel
age, the age wherein the chief favor
has been offered—the high calling
to the divine nature and joint-heirship
with Jesus.
This favor Israel as a people has
failed to recognize and lay hold of.
And though God visited the Gentiles
and called many of them through the
gospel, they, like fleshly Israel,
will fail to obtain the heavenly
prize. Nevertheless, a class, a
remnant, a little flock from among
all the called ones, heeds the call,
and, by obedience and
self-sacrifice, makes its calling
and election sure.
Thus what Israel as a people failed
to obtain, and what the nominal
Christian Church also fails to
obtain, is given to the elect or
selected class, the faithful—“body
of Christ”—elect or chosen
(according to the foreknowledge of
God) through sanctification of the
spirit and belief of the truth. 2
Thessalonians 2:13; 1 Peter 1:2
But
though, through the rejection of
Messiah, Israel did lose all this
special favor, yet Paul shows that
this did not prove them entirely cut
off from favor; for they still had
the same privilege of being grafted
into Christ and the spiritual favors
which the rest of mankind enjoyed,
if, during the time that call was
being made, they accepted in faith;
for, argues Paul, God is as able to
graft them in again as to graft in
wild branches, and as willing, if
they continue not in unbelief. Romans 11:23,24
“Whereof the law was our school
master to bring us unto Christ,
that we might be justified to
Christ.” Galatians 3:24
Moreover, Paul argues that though
Israel lost the chief blessing,
“which he seeketh for,”
the chief place in God’s kingdom,
yet it remains that great promises
are still due to be fulfilled toward
that people; for, he reasons, God’s
gifts, callings, covenants and
promises are not to be turned aside
unfulfilled.
God
knew the end from the beginning; he
knew that Israel would reject
Messiah; and his unequivocal
promises to them in view of this
knowledge give us assurance that
Israel is yet to be used of the Lord
in service, as his agency in
blessing the world, though
“Israel hath not obtained that which
he seeketh for”—the chief
favor.
Paul then proceeds to show that
God’s covenant promises to Israel
were of such a nature as to leave it
open and indefinite whether as a
people they would be the heavenly or
the earthly seed—whether they would
inherit and fulfil the higher or the
lower service mentioned in the
promises.
God kept secret the higher spiritual
favor until due time, and the
promises made to them mentioned the
earthly favor only, though He
favored them by the first offer of
the spiritual favors also, and so
offered them more than he had ever
promised. In a word, the heavenly
promises were hidden in the earthly.
These promises, says Paul, cannot
fail, and the offering of the hidden
favor first, and Israel’s blind
rejection of it, in no way
invalidates or disannuls the other
feature of the promise.
Hence he declares that though Israel
as a nation is cast off from favor
during the time the Bride of Christ
is being selected from both Jews and
Gentiles, yet the time will come
when, the Deliverer (Christ, Head
and body) being complete, divine
favor will return to fleshly Israel,
and the glorious Deliverer will turn
away ungodliness from Jacob,* and so
all Israel will be saved [recovered
to favor], as it is written by the
prophet. The Apostle’s words are:
“Brethren, that you may
not be conceited with
yourselves, I wish you not to be
ignorant of this secret, that
hardness in some measure has
happened to Israel until
the fullness of the Gentiles may
come in [until the full
number selected from the
Gentiles has been completed].
And then all Israel will be
saved, as it has been written,
“The Deliverer
[Christ, Head and body]
shall come out of Zion and shall
turn away ungodliness from
Jacob.’ And ’This is the
covenant with them from me, when
I shall take away their sins.’
“In relation to the GLAD
TIDINGS, indeed, they are
enemies on your account; but in
regard to the election they are
[still] beloved
on account of the fathers,
because the gracious gifts and
calling of God are not things to
be repented of.
“Besides, as you
[Gentiles] were
once disobedient to God, but
have now obtained mercy by their
disobedience; so also, now,
these have disobeyed so that
they may obtain mercy through
your mercy
[at
the hands of the glorified
Church].
“For God shut up
together all, for disobedience,
that he might have mercy on all.
[Compare Romans
5:17-19.] O the depth of
the riches and wisdom and
knowledge of God.”
Romans 11:25-33
*Spiritual Israel is
never called
“Jacob.” |
Heirs of the Kingdom
“Who shall ascend into
the hill [literally
mountain,
symbol of kingdom] of
Jehovah? or who shall stand in
his holy place [temple]?
He that hath clean hands and a
pure heart.”
Psalms 24:3,4
The
city of Jerusalem was built upon a
mountain top—a double top; for it
was separated by the valley
Tyropoeon into two parts. Still it
was one city, surrounded by one
wall, with bridges connecting the
two divisions. On one of these
mountain tops the Temple was built.
This might be understood to
symbolize the union of the kingly
and the priestly qualities in the
glorified Church; or, the one
Kingdom of God with its two
phases—the spiritual temple, not of
earthly origin, but of a new,
heavenly or spiritual nature
(Hebrews 9:11), separate from, yet
united with, the earthly phase.
David appears to refer to the two
places. It was an honor to be of the
city at all, and a still greater
honor to ascend into the holy
temple, into the sacred precincts of
which only the priests were
permitted to enter. And David shows
that purity of life and honesty of
heart are necessary to any who would
attain either honor.
They that would be of the Royal
Priesthood are exhorted to purity,
even as the high priest of our
profession is pure, if they would be
accounted worthy of joint-heirship
with him. And he that hath this hope
in him purifieth himself, even as he
is pure.
This, as already shown, is a purity
of intent, reckoned
to us as absolute or actual purity,
Christ’s imputed purity supplying
our unavoidable deficiency, and
compensating for our unavoidable
weaknesses, while we walk
after the spirit and not
after the flesh.
But
let it not be forgotten that purity,
sincerity, and entire consecration
to God are essential to all those
who would enter the Kingdom of God
in either phase. It was thus with
those ancient worthies who will
inherit the earthly phase of the
kingdom under Christ. They loved
righteousness and hated iniquity,
and were deeply grieved and penitent
when overtaken by a fault, or
stumbled by a weakness or besetment.
So, too, it has been with the
faithful of the Gospel age; and so
it will be with all in the
Millennial age, when the spirit of
God, the spirit of truth, is poured
upon all flesh. The overcomers of
that age will also need to strive
for purity of heart and life, if
they would have a right under God’s
arrangement to enter into the
city—the kingdom prepared for them
from the foundation of the
world—the original dominion
restored.
The Iron Rule
Many erroneously suppose that when
Christ’s Millennial Kingdom is
inaugurated every one will be
pleased with its ruling. But not so.
Its regulations will be far more
exacting than those of any previous
government, and the liberties of the
people will be restricted to a
degree that will be galling indeed
to many now clamoring for an
increase of liberty.
Liberty to deceive, to misrepresent,
to overreach and to defraud others,
will be entirely cut off. Liberty to
abuse themselves or others in food
or in drink, or in any way to
corrupt good manners, will be
totally denied to all. Liberty or
license to do wrong of any sort will
not be granted to any.
The only liberty that will be
granted to any will be the true and
glorious liberty of the sons of
God—liberty to do good to
themselves and others in any and in
every way; but nothing will be
allowed to injure or destroy in all
that Holy Kingdom. Isaiah 11:9;
Romans 8:21
That rule will consequently be felt
by many to be a severe one, breaking
up all their former habits and
customs, as well as breaking up
present institutions founded upon
these false habits and false ideas
of liberty. Because of its firmness
and vigor, it is symbolically called
an iron rule—
“He shall rule them with
a rod of iron.”
(Compare Revelation 2:26,27; Psalms
2:8-12 and 49:14.) Thus will be
fulfilled the statement,
“Judgment will I lay to
the line and righteousness to
the plummet. And the hail
[righteous judgment]
shall sweep away the refuge of
lies, and the waters
[truth] shall overflow
the hiding place,”
and every hidden thing shall be
revealed. Isaiah 28:17 Matthew
10:26
Many will feel rebellious against
that perfect and equitable rule
because accustomed in the past,
under the rule of the present
prince, to lord it over their fellow
mortals, and to live wholly at the
expense of others without rendering
compensating service.
And many and severe will be the
stripes which a present life of
self-indulgence and gratification
will naturally
demand and receive under that reign,
before such will learn the lessons
of that kingdom —equity, justice,
righteousness. Psalms 89:32; Luke
12:47,48 The lesson on this subject
comes first to the living
generation, and is near at hand.
James 5
But, blessed thought! when the
Prince of Life has put in force the
laws of righteousness and equity
with an iron rule, the masses of
mankind will learn that
“Righteousness exalteth
a nation, but sin is a reproach
to any people.”
They will learn that God’s plan and
laws are best in the end for all
concerned, and ultimately they will
learn to love
righteousness and hate iniquity.
Psalms 45:7; Hebrews 1:9 All who
under that reign have not learned to
love the right will be counted
unworthy of lasting life and will be
cut off from among the people. Acts
3:23; Revelation 20:9; Psalms 11:5-7
The Kingdom Everlasting
“Jehovah shall be King
over all the earth in that day.”
Zechariah 14:9
The kingdom which Jehovah will
establish in the hands of Christ
during the Millennium will be
Jehovah’s kingdom, but it will be
under the direct control of Christ,
as his vicegerent, in much the same
manner as the Southern States were
dealt with after the Rebellion by
the United States government.
The Southern States for a while were
not permitted to govern themselves
by electing their own
officers, lest
they should not conform to the
Constitutional laws of the Union;
but governors, with full power to
act, were placed in control for the
purpose of reconstructing those
state governments and bringing them
back into full harmony with the
central government.
Thus the special reign of Christ
over the affairs of earth is for a
limited time and for a particular
purpose, and it will terminate with
the accomplishment of that purpose.
Man, through rebellion, forfeited
his God-given rights—among others,
self-government in harmony with
Jehovah’s laws. God, through Christ,
redeems all those rights, and
secures the right for man not only
to return personally to his former
estate, but also to return to his
former office as king of earth.
But
to bring man back, as God designs,
in the way best suited to impress
the lesson of present
experience—namely, by requiring him
to put forth effort toward his own
recovery —will require a strong, a
perfect government. And this honor
of completing man’s recovery, the
right to which he died to secure, is
conferred upon Christ; and
“he must reign until he
hath put all enemies under his feet”—until
none exist who do not recognize,
honor and obey him.
Then, having accomplished his
mission as regards the
reconstruction or restitution of
mankind, he will deliver up the
kingdom to God, even the Father, and
mankind will deal directly, as at
first, with Jehovah—the mediation
of the man Christ Jesus having
accomplished fully and completely
the grand work of reconciliation. 1 Corinthians 15:25-28
The kingdom, when delivered up to
the Father, will still be the
Kingdom of God, and the laws will
always be the same. All mankind,
then perfectly restored, will be
capable of rendering perfect
obedience, in letter as well as in
spirit; while now, the spirit of
obedience or endeavor to observe
God’s law is all of which men are
capable.
The full letter of that perfect law
would condemn them at once to death.
2 Corinthians 3:6 Our acceptableness
now is only through Christ’s ransom.
Until
actually perfect, “It is a
fearful thing to fall into the hands
of the living God.” Hebrews
10:31 Now, and until actually
perfect, none could stand before the
law of exact justice: all need the
mercy provided freely under Christ’s
merit and sacrifice.
But when Christ delivers up the
kingdom to the Father, he will
present them faultless
before him, fit and able to enjoy
everlasting blessedness under
Jehovah’s perfect law. All
fearfulness will then be gone, and
Jehovah and his restored creatures
will be in perfect harmony, as at
first.
When, in the end of the Millennial
age, Christ delivers up the dominion
of earth to the Father, he does so
by delivering it to mankind as the
Father’s representatives, who were
designed from the first to have this
honor. 1 Corinthians 15:24; Matthew
25:34 Thus the Kingdom of God lasts
forever. And so we read in our
Lord’s words:
“Then shall the King say
to them on his right hand
[those who, during the
Millennial reign, will have
attained the position of favor
by harmony and obedience],
Come, ye blessed of my Father
[you whom my Father
designs thus to bless],
inherit the kingdom prepared
FOR YOU from the foundation of
the world.”
This
kingdom and honor prepared for man
should not be confounded with that
still higher kingdom and honor
prepared for the Christ, which were
“ordained before
the world unto our
glory”
(1 Corinthians 2:7), and to
which we were chosen in Christ
before the
foundation of the world. And though
the special
intervention and reign of the Christ
over earth will close, as foreshown,
we must not conclude that Christ’s
glory and dominion and power will
then cease.
Nay, Christ is associated forever
with all the divine glory and power
at the right hand of Jehovah’s
favor; and his Bride and joint-heir
will forever share his increasing
glory. What wondrous works in other
worlds await the power of this
highly exalted agent of Jehovah, we
will not here surmise, further than
to suggest the infinitude and
activity of divine power, and the
boundlessness of the universe.
Truly, then, in whatever phase of
the kingdom our interest centers, it
is “the desire of all
nations”; for under it all
will be blessed. Hence, all may
earnestly long for that time; and
all may well pray,
“Thy Kingdom come, thy
will be done on earth as it is
in heaven.”
It is for this that ignorantly the
whole creation has long been
groaning and waiting—waiting for
the manifestation of the Sons of
God, the kingdom which will crush
out evil and bless and heal all
nations. Romans 8:19; 16:20 |