The
Day of Jehovah
The “Day of Jehovah,”
the “Day of Vengeance,”
the “Day of Wrath”
•
A Time of Great
Trouble
•
Its Cause
• The
Bible’s Testimony Regarding it
•
Its Fire and Storm,
Its Shaking and Melting, Shown to be
Symbolic
•
David’s Testimony
•
The Revelator’s
Testimony
•
The Present Situation
and the Future Outlook
as Viewed by the
opposing Parties, Capitalists and
Wage-Workers
•
A Remedy Which Will
Not Succeed
•
The Veil Lifted and
Light Admitted Just in Due Time
•
The Proof of This
•
The Condition of the
Saints During the Trouble, and Their
Proper Attitude Toward It.
|
The
“Day of Jehovah” is
the name of that period of time in
which God’s kingdom, under Christ,
is to be gradually “set up”
in the earth, while the kingdoms of
this world are passing away and
Satan’s power and influence over men
are being bound. It is everywhere
described as a dark day of intense
trouble and distress and perplexity
upon mankind.
And
what wonder that a revolution of
such proportions, and necessitating
such great changes, should cause
trouble. Small revolutions have
caused trouble in every age; and
this, so much greater than any
previous revolution, is to be a time
of trouble such as never was since
there was a nation—no, nor ever
shall be. Daniel 12:1; Matthew
24:21,22
It is called the “Day of
Jehovah” because, though
Christ, with royal title and power,
will be present as Jehovah’s
representative, taking charge of all
the affairs during this day of
trouble, it is more as the General
of Jehovah, subduing all things,
than as the Prince of Peace,
blessing all.
Meantime, as false and imperfect
views and systems fall, the standard
of the new King will rise, and
eventually he shall be recognized
and owned by all as King of kings.
Thus it is presented by the prophets
as Jehovah’s work to set up
Christ’s dominion:
“ I will give
thee the Gentiles for
thine inheritance, and the
uttermost parts of the earth for
thy possession.”
Psalms 2:8
“In the days of these kings
shall the God of heaven set up a
kingdom.” Daniel 2:44
The
Ancient of days did sit, and there
was brought before him one like unto
a son of man, and there was given
him a dominion, that all
kingdoms should serve and obey him.
Daniel 7:9,13,14,22,27 Added to
these is Paul’s statement that, when
Christ shall accomplish the object
of his reign,
“Then shall the Son also
himself be subject unto him [the
Father] that put all
things under him.”
1 Corinthians 15:28
This period is called the “Day
of Vengeance of our God,”
and a “Day of Wrath.”
Isaiah 61:2; 63:1-4; Psalms 110:5
And yet the mind that grasps
only the idea of anger, or supposes
divine malice, seriously errs.
God has
established certain laws, in harmony
with which he operates, and those
who from any cause come into
conflict with these reap the penalty
or wrath of their own course. God’s
counsel to mankind has been
continually rejected, except by the
few; and, as we have shown, he
permitted them to have their own way
and to drop him and his counsels
from their hearts. Romans 1:28
He then
confined his special care to Abraham
and his seed, who professed to
desire his way and his service.
Their hardness of heart as a people,
and the insincerity of their hearts
toward God, not only naturally
prevented them from receiving
Messiah, but just as naturally
prepared them for and led them into
the trouble which terminated their
national existence.
And so the light borne in the world
during the Gospel age by the true
Church of Christ (the class whose
names are written in heaven) has
borne witness to the civilized world
of the difference between right and
wrong, good and evil, and of a
coming time in which the one will be
rewarded and the other punished.
John 16:8-11; Acts 24:25
This
would have had a wide influence upon
men had they heeded the Lord’s
instruction, but, willful as ever,
they have profited little by the
advice of the Scriptures, and the
trouble of the Day of the Lord will
come as a consequence of the
neglect.
Again,
it may be said to be the wrath of
God inasmuch as it comes through
disregard of his counsels, and as a
reward of unrighteousness.
Nevertheless, viewed in another
light, the trouble coming upon the
world is the natural or legitimate
result of sin, which God foresaw,
and against which his counsels would
have protected them, had they been
followed.
While God’s message to the Church
has been, “Present your bodies
a living sacrifice” (Romans
12:1), his message to the world has
been,
“Keep thy tongue from evil,
and thy lips from speaking
guile; depart from evil and do
good; seek peace and pursue it.”
Psalms 34:13,14
Few
have heeded either message. Only a
little flock sacrificed; and as for
the world, though it nailed up the
motto, “Honesty is the best policy,”
it has neglected in general to
practice it. It heeded rather the
voice of avarice—Get all you can of
riches and honor and power in this
world, no matter what the method by
which you obtain it, and no matter
who loses by your gain.
In a
word, the trouble of this Day of the
Lord would not come, could not come,
if the principles of God’s law were
observed to any considerable extent.
That law briefly summed up is—Thou
shalt love the Lord thy God with all
thy heart, and thy neighbor as
thyself. Matthew 22:37-39
It is
because the depraved or carnal mind
is opposed to this law of God, and
is not subject to it, that, as a
natural consequence, the trouble
will come, as reaping after sowing.
The carnal or depraved mind, so far
from loving its neighbor as itself,
has always been selfish and
grasping—often leading even to
violence and murder to get for self
the things possessed by others.
However exercised, the selfish
principle is always the same, except
as governed by circumstances of
birth, education and surroundings.
It has
been the same in every age of the
world, and will be, until, by the
force of the iron rule of
Messiah, not might nor greed, but
love, will decide what is
RIGHT, and enforce
it, until all may have opportunity
to learn the superior benefits of
the rule of righteousness and love
as compared with that of selfishness
and might. Until, under the
influence of the sunlight of truth
and righteousness, the selfish,
stony heart of man will become once
more as when God pronounced it
“very good”—a heart of
flesh. Ezekiel 36:26
Looking back, we can see without
difficulty how the change from
Godlike love and kindness to hard
selfishness came about. The
circumstances tending to promote
selfishness were encountered as soon
as man, through disobedience, lost
the divine favor and was exiled from
his Eden home, where his every want
had been bountifully supplied.
As our
condemned parents went forth and
began the battle of life, seeking to
prolong existence to its farthest
limit, they were met at once with
thorns and briers and thistles and
sterile ground. And the contending
with these produced weariness and
the sweat of face which the Lord had
declared.
Gradually the mental and moral
qualities began to dwarf from lack
of exercise, while the lower
qualities retained fuller scope from
constant exercise. Sustenance became
the principal aim and interest of
life; and its cost in labor became
the standard by which all other
interests were estimated, and Mammon
became master of men.
Can we
wonder that under such circumstances
mankind became selfish, greedy and
grasping, each striving for
most—first of the necessities, and
secondly of the honors and luxuries
bestowed by Mammon? It is but the
natural tendency of which Satan has
taken great advantage.
During past ages, under various
influences (among others, ignorance,
race prejudices, and national
pride), the great wealth of the
world has generally been in the
hands of the few—the rulers—to whom
the masses rendered slavish
obedience as to their national
representatives, in whose wealth
they felt a pride and an interest as
their own representatively.
But as
the time drew near in which Jehovah
designed to bless the world through
a Restitution at the hands of
Messiah, he began to lift up the
veil of ignorance and superstition,
through modern facilities and
inventions; and with these came the
general elevation of the people and
the decreasing power of earthly
rulers. No longer is the wealth of
the world in the hands of its kings,
but chiefly among the people.
Though wealth brings many evils, it
also brings some blessings: the
wealthy obtain better educations—but
thus they are lifted intellectually
above the poorer people and become
more or less associated with
royalty. Hence an aristocracy exists
which has both money and education
to back it, and to assist in its
avaricious struggle to get all it
can and to keep self in the front
rank at any cost.
But, as intelligence spreads, as the
people take advantage of educational
facilities, now so abundant, they
begin to think for
themselves.
With
the self-esteem and selfishness in
them led on by a little
learning—sometimes a dangerous
thing—they fancy that they see ways
and means by which the interests and
circumstances of all men, and
especially their own, can be
promoted at the cost of the fewer
numbers in whose hands the wealth
now lies.
Many of
these, doubtless, honestly believe
that the conflicting interests of
Mammon’s worshipers (themselves on
one side, and the wealthy on the
other) could be easily and fairly
adjusted; and no doubt they feel
that were they wealthy they would be
very benevolent, and quite willing
to love their neighbors as
themselves.
But
they evidently deceive themselves;
for in their present condition very
few indeed manifest such a spirit,
and he that would not be faithful in
the use of a little of this world’s
goods would not be faithful if he
had greater riches. In fact,
circumstances prove this; for some
of the hardest hearted and most
selfish among the wealthy are those
who have risen suddenly from the
humble walks of life.
On the contrary, while by no means
excusing but reproving covetousness
and grasping selfishness on the part
of all classes, it is but proper to
notice that the provision made for
the sick and helpless and poor, in
the way of asylums, hospitals,
poor-houses, public libraries,
schools and various other
enterprises. These, for the good
and comfort of the masses, rather
than of the wealthy, are maintained
mainly by taxes and donations from
the rich.
These
institutions almost always owe their
existence to the kindhearted and
benevolent among the rich, and are
matters which the poorer classes
have neither the time, nor generally
the necessary education or interest,
to bring into successful operation.
Nevertheless, today sees a growing
opposition between the wealthy and
laboring classes—a growing
bitterness on the part of labor, and
a growing feeling among the wealthy
that nothing but the strong arm of
the law will protect what they
believe to be their rights.
Hence,
the wealthy are drawn closer to the
governments; and the wage-working
masses, beginning to think that laws
and governments were designed to aid
the wealthy and to restrain the
poor, are drawn toward Communism and
Anarchy, thinking that their
interests would best be served
thereby, and not realizing that the
worst government, and the most
expensive, is vastly better than no
government at all.
Many scriptures clearly show that
this will be the character of the
trouble under which present civil,
social and religious systems will
pass away; that this is the way in
which increase of knowledge and
liberty will result, because of
man’s imperfection, mental, moral
and physical.
These
scriptures will be referred to in
due course; but here we can only
call attention to a few of the many,
advising our readers meanwhile that
in many of the prophecies of the Old
Testament in which Egypt, Babylon
and Israel figure so largely, not
only was there a literal fulfillment
intended, but also a secondary and
larger one.
Thus,
for instance, the predictions
regarding the fall of Babylon, etc.,
must be considered extravagant
beyond measure, did we not recognize
a symbolic and antitypical as well
as a literal Babylon.
The
book of Revelation contains
predictions recorded long after
literal Babylon was in ruins, and
hence evidently applicable only to
symbolic Babylon; yet the close
resemblance of the words of the
prophets, apparently directly
addressed to literal Babylon, are
thus shown to belong in an especial
sense to symbolic Babylon.
In this
larger fulfillment, Egypt represents
the world; Babylon represents the
nominal Church, called Christendom;
while, as already shown, Israel
often represents the whole world in
its justified condition, as
it will be—its glorious Royal
Priesthood, its holy Levites and its
believing and worshiping people,
justified by the sacrifice of the
Atonement, and brought into a
condition of reconciliation with
God.
To
Israel the blessings are promised,
to Egypt the plagues, and to strong
Babylon a wonderful, complete and
everlasting overthrow, “as a
great millstone cast into the sea”
(Revelation 18:21), never to be
recovered, but to be held in
everlasting odium.
The Apostle James points out this
day of trouble, and tells of its
being the result of differences
between capital and labor. He says:
“Come now, ye wealthy! wail ye,
howling at your hardships that
are coming upon you.
“Your wealth has rotted
[lost its value], and your
garments have become moth-eaten:
your gold and silver have become
rusted out, and their rust for a
witness to you shall be, and
shall eat your flesh as fire.
“Ye treasured it up in the last
days.
“Behold! the wages of the
workers who cut down your
fields—that which has been kept
back by reason of you [of
your hoarding] is
crying out;
and the outcries of those who
reaped, into the ears of the
Lord of the whole people have
entered.” James
5:1-4
He adds
that the class coming into trouble
has been used to luxury, obtained
largely at the cost of others, among
whom were some of the righteous, and
out of them, because they resisted
not, the very life had been crushed.
The Apostle urges the “brethren” to
bear patiently whatever their part
may be, looking beyond, and
expecting deliverance through the
Lord.
This
very condition of things can now be
seen approaching; and in the world,
among those who are awake,
“men’s hearts are failing them for
looking after the things that are
coming on the earth.”
All
know that the constant tendency of
our times is toward lower wages for
labor, unless where the prices are
artificially sustained or advanced
by labor combinations, strikes, etc.
With the present sentiment of the
masses, all can see that it is but a
question of time when the lowest
point of endurance will be reached,
and a revolt will surely result.
This
will alarm capital, which will be
withdrawn from business and
manufacturing channels and hoarded
in vaults and treasuries, to eat
itself up with charges for its
protection in idleness, to the great
annoyance of its owners.
This in
turn will certainly produce
bankruptcy, financial panic and
business prostration, because all
business of magnitude is now
conducted largely on credit.
The
natural result of all this will be
to throw out of employment tens of
thousands who are dependent on their
wages for daily bread, and to fill
the world with tramps and persons
whose necessities will defy all law.
Then it
will be as described by the prophet
Ezekiel 7:10-19, when the buyer need
not rejoice, nor the seller mourn;
for trouble will be upon the entire
multitude and there will be no
security of property.
Then
all hands will be feeble and
helpless to turn aside the trouble.
They will cast their silver in the
streets, and their gold will be
removed. Their silver and their gold
will not be able to deliver them in
the day of the Lord’s wrath.
It should not be forgotten that
though the last forty years of the
existence of Israel as a nation was
a day of trouble, a “day of
vengeance” upon that people,
ending in the complete overthrow of
their nation. Yet, their day of
wrath was but a shadow or type of a
still greater and more extensive
trouble upon nominal Christendom,
even as their past history as a
people during their age of favor was
typical of the Gospel age, as will
be conclusively shown hereafter.
All
then will see why these prophecies
concerning the Day of the Lord
should be, and are, addressed to
Israel and Jerusalem more or less
directly, though the connections
show clearly that all mankind is
included in the complete
fulfillment’s.
All
Classes to Be Punished
Take another prophetic testimony
(Zephaniah 1:7-9,14-18).
“The Lord hath prepared a
slaughter, he hath bid his
guests. [Compare
Revelation 19:17.]
And it shall come to pass in the
day of the Lord’s slaughter that
I will punish the princes and
the king’s children, and all
such as are clothed in imported
clothing.
And I will inflict punishment
[also] on all those
[marauders] who
leap over the threshold on that
day, who fill their masters’
houses with violence and deceit.
[This shows not only that there
will be a great overthrow of
wealth and power in this time of
trouble, but that those who will
for the time be the instruments
of heaven in breaking down
present systems will also be
punished for their equally
unjust and unrighteous course;
for the coming trouble will
involve all classes, and bring
distress upon all the
multitude.]
“Nigh is the great Day of the
Lord: it is nigh. Nearer and
louder comes the uproar of the
Day of the Lord. There the
mighty shall shriek bitterly!
“That day is a day of wrath,
a day of distress and anxiety, a
day of wasting and desolation, a
day of darkness and
obscurity [uncertainty
and foreboding, as well as
present distress], a day
of clouds [trouble]
and tempestuous gloom, a day of
the trumpet [the seventh
symbolic trumpet, which sounds
throughout this day of
trouble—also called the trump of
God, because connected with the
events of this Day of the Lord]
and shouting against the fenced
cities and the high battlements
[clamorous and
conflicting denunciations of
strong and well-entrenched
governments].
“And I will bring distress upon
men, and they shall walk about
as blind men [groping in
uncertainty, not knowing what
course to pursue], because
they have sinned against
Jehovah.
“Their blood shall be poured out
as the dust, and their flesh
shall be as dung.
“Neither their silver nor
their gold shall be able to
deliver them in the day of the
Lord’s wrath [though
previously wealth could furnish
ease and every luxury],
but the whole land shall be
devoured by the FIRE of his
zeal; for destruction, yea,
quite sudden, will he prepare
for all them [the
wealthy] that dwell in the
land.”
This
destruction will destroy many of the
wealthy in the sense that they will
cease to be wealthy, though
doubtless it will also involve the
loss of many lives of all classes.
We shall not attempt to follow the
prophets in their details, from
various standpoints, of the trouble
of that day, but shall follow
briefly the thought last suggested
by the prophet above, namely, the
devouring of the whole earth
with the FIRE of God’s zeal.
This
prophet refers to the same fire,
etc., again (Zephaniah 3:8,9),
saying:
“Wait ye upon me, saith Jehovah,
until the day that I rise up to
the prey; for my decision is to
gather the nations
[peoples], to draw
together the kingdoms, to pour
upon them [the kingdoms]
my indignation, even all my
fierce anger.
[The gathering of the peoples of
all nations in common interest
in opposition to present
governments is growing; and the
result will be a uniting of the
kingdoms for common safety, so
that the trouble will be upon
all kingdoms, and all will
fall.]
“For all the earth shall be
devoured with the fire of my
zeal. Yea [then,
after this destruction of
kingdoms, after this destruction
of the present social order in
the fire of trouble], then
will I turn unto the people a
pure language [the pure
Word—uncontaminated by human
tradition], that they may
call upon the name of the Lord,
to serve him with one accord.”
This fire of God’s zeal is a symbol,
and a forcible one, representing the
intensity of the trouble and the
destruction which will envelop the
whole earth. That it is not a
literal fire, as some suppose, is
evident from the fact that the
people remain after it, and are
blessed.
That
the people who remain are not
saints, as some would suggest, is
evident from the fact that they are
then turned to serve the
Lord, whereas the saints are turned
(converted) already.*
*We
mention this as an
offset to the
argument of some who
regard the fire as
literal, and who
claim that the
literal earth is to
be melted, etc.
These, to fit their
theory, claim that
“the people,”
here mentioned, are
the saints, who,
after the earth has
melted and cooled
off, will return to
earth and build
houses and inhabit
them, plant
vineyards and eat
the fruit of them,
and long enjoy the
work of their hands.
They consider the
present few years as
a training or
preparation for
inheriting, and
forget that it would
be completely lost
in the aerial
experiences of the
thousand or more
years of waiting for
the earth to cool
off—according to
their theory.
This is a serious
mistake, and results
from too literal an
interpretation of
the figures,
parables, symbols
and dark sayings of
our Lord and the
apostles and
prophets. Following
up the same error,
these claim that
there will be no
mountains and seas
after this fire,
failing to see that
all these, as well
as the fire, are
symbols. |
Throughout the Scriptures, earth,
when used symbolically, represents
society; mountains represent
kingdoms; heavens, the powers
of spiritual control; seas,
the restless, turbulent,
dissatisfied masses of the world.
Fire
represents the destruction of
whatever is burned—tares, dross,
earth (social organization), or
whatever it may be.
And
when brimstone is added to
fire in the symbol, it
intensifies the thought of
destruction; for nothing is more
deadly to all forms of life than the
fumes of sulfur.
With this thought in mind, if we
turn to Peter’s symbolic prophecy of
the Day of Wrath, we find it in
perfect accord with the above
testimony of the prophets. He says:
“The world that was, being
overflowed with water, perished.
[Not the literal earth and
literal heavens ceased there,
but that dispensation or
arrangement of things, existing
before the flood, passed away.]
But the heavens and the earth
which are now [the
present dispensation] by
the same word [of divine
authority] are kept in
store, reserved unto fire.”
The
fact that the water was literal
leads some to believe that the fire
also must be literal, but this by no
means follows.
The
temple of God once was of literal
stones, but that does not set aside
the fact that the Church, which is
the true temple, is built up a
spiritual building, a holy temple,
not of earthly material. Noah’s ark
was literal, too, but it typified
Christ and the power in him which
will replenish and reorganize
society.
“The Day of the Lord will come
as a thief in the night [unobservedly],
in the which the heavens
[present powers of the air, of
which Satan is the chief or
prince] shall pass away
with a great [hissing]
noise, and the elements shall
melt with fervent heat;
“The earth [social
organization] also, and
the works that are therein
[pride, rank, aristocracy,
royalty], shall be burned
up.
“The heavens being on fire shall
be dissolved and the elements
shall melt with fervent heat.
“Nevertheless we, according to
his promise, look for new
heavens [the new
spiritual power—Christ’s
kingdom] and a new earth”
[earthly society organized
on a new basis—on the basis of
love and justice, rather than of
might and oppression]. 2
Peter 3:6,7,10-13
It should be remembered that some of
the apostles were prophets as
well—notably Peter, John and Paul.
While as apostles they were God’s
mouthpieces to expound the
utterances of preceding prophets for
the benefit of the Church, they were
also used of God as prophets to
predict things to come.
Prophecies which, as they become due
to be fulfilled, become meat in due
season for the household of faith,
to dispense which, God in his own
time raises up suitable servants or
expounders. (See our Lord’s
statement of this fact– Matthew
24:45,46.)
The apostles as prophets were moved
upon to write things which, not
being due in their day, they
could but imperfectly appreciate,
even as it was with the Old
Testament prophets. 1 Peter
1:12,13 Though, like them, their
words were specially guided and
directed so that they have a depth
of meaning of which they were not
aware when using them.
Thus
emphatically the Church is ever
guided and fed by God himself,
whoever may be his mouthpieces or
channels of communication.
A
realization of this must lead to
greater confidence and trust in
God’s Word, notwithstanding the
imperfections of some of his
mouthpieces.
The
Prophet Malachi (4:1) tells of this
Day of the Lord under the same
symbol. He says:
“The day cometh that shall
burn as an oven; and all the
proud, yea, and all
that do wickedly, shall be
stubble; and the day that cometh
shall burn them up...that it
shall leave them neither root
nor branch.”
Pride,
and every other cause from which
haughtiness and oppression could
again spring forth, will be entirely
consumed by the great trouble of the
Day of the Lord and by the after
disciplines of the Millennial
age—the last of which is described
in Revelation 20:9.
But, while pride (in all its forms
sinful and detestable) is to be
utterly rooted out, and all the
proud and wicked are to be utterly
destroyed, it does not follow that
there is no hope for a reformation
in this class.
No,
thank God: while this fire of God’s
just indignation will be burning,
the Judge will grant opportunity for
pulling some out of the consuming
fire (Jude 23). Those
only who refuse the aid will perish
with their pride; because they have
made it part of their character, and
refuse to reform.
The same prophet gives another
description of this day (Malachi
3:1-3), in which again, under
the figure of fire, he shows how
the Lord’s children will be
purified and blessed and brought
nigh to him by having the dross of
error destroyed:
“The Messenger of the Covenant,
whom ye delight in: behold, he
shall come, saith the Lord of
hosts.
“But who may abide the day of
his coming? and who shall stand
[the test] when he
appeareth? for he is as a
refiner’s fire:...and he shall
sit as a refiner and purifier of
silver:
“And he shall purify the sons of
Levi [typical of
believers, of whom the chief are
the Royal Priesthood] and
purge them as gold and silver,
that they may offer unto the
Lord an offering in
righteousness.”
Paul refers to this same fire, and
this refining process affecting
believers in the Day of the Lord
(1 Corinthians 3:12-15), and in
such a manner as to leave it beyond
all question that the symbolic fire
will destroy every error, and
thus effect purification of faith.
After
declaring that he refers only to
those building their faith upon the
only recognized foundation, Christ
Jesus’ finished work of redemption,
he says:
“Now if any man build
[character]
upon this foundation, gold,
silver, precious stones
[divine truths and
corresponding character, or]
wood, hay, stubble
[traditional errors and
corresponding unstable
characters], every man’s
work shall be made manifest;
“For THE DAY shall declare it,
because it shall be revealed by
FIRE; and so every one’s work
[2 Peter 1:5-11],
whatever it is, the same fire
will prove.”
Surely
even the most prejudiced will
concede that the fire which tries a
spiritual work is not literal fire;
fire is an appropriate symbol to
represent the utter destruction of
conditions represented here by wood,
hay and stubble. This fire will be
powerless to destroy the
faith-and-character structure built
with the gold, silver and precious
stones of divine truth, and founded
upon the rock of Christ’s
ransom-sacrifice.
The Apostle shows this, saying:
“If any man’s work abide
which he hath built thereupon
[upon Christ] he
shall receive a reward.
[His reward will be in
proportion to his
faithfulness in building, making
use of the truth in the
development of true
character—putting on the whole
armor of God.]
“If any man’s work shall be
consumed, he shall suffer loss
[loss of the reward, because of
unfaithfulness], but he
himself shall be preserved so as
through a fire”
—singed, scorched and alarmed. All
who build on the rock foundation of
Christ’s ransom are sure: none that
trust in his righteousness as their
covering will ever be utterly
confounded.
But
those who willfully reject
him and his work, after coming to a
clear, full knowledge thereof, will
be subject to the second death.
Hebrews 6:4-8; 10:26-31
In yet another way is this trouble
of the Day of the Lord symbolically
described. The Apostle shows
(Hebrews 12:26-29) that the
inauguration of the Law Covenant at
Sinai was typical of the
introduction of the New Covenant to
the world at the opening of the
Millennial age, or reign of Christ’s
kingdom.
He says
that in the type God’s voice shook
the literal earth, but now he hath
promised, saying,
“Yet once for all
[finally], I will shake not
only the earth, but the heaven
also.” Concerning this
the Apostle explains, saying,
“Now this [statement],
Yet once for all, denotes the
removal of the things shaken,
because they are fabricated
[false, made up, not the
true], so that the
unshaken things [true,
righteous things, only]
may remain.
“Wherefore, seeing that we are
to receive a kingdom which
cannot be shaken, let us hold
fast the favor through which we
may serve God acceptably with
reverence and piety; for
[as it is written],
Our God is a consuming fire.”
Thus we
see this apostle uses a storm to
symbolize the trouble of this Day of
the Lord, which he and others
elsewhere refer to under the symbol
of fire. The same events are here
noted that are described under the
fire symbol, namely, the sweeping
away of all falsities, both from
believers and from the world—errors
regarding God’s plan and character
and Word, and also errors as to
social and civil affairs in the
world.
It will
be good indeed for all to be rid of
these fabrications, which came to
man largely through his own depraved
desires, as well as by the cunning
craftiness of Satan, the wily foe of
righteousness; but it will be at
great cost to all concerned that
they will be swept away.
It will
be a terribly hot fire, a fearful
storm, a dark night of trouble,
which will precede the glorious
brightness of that Kingdom of
Righteousness which can never be
shaken, that Millennial day in which
the Sun of Righteousness will shine
forth in splendor and power,
blessing and healing the sick and
dying but redeemed world. Compare
Malachi 4:2 and Matthew
13:43.
David, the prophet through whose
Psalms God was pleased to foretell
so much concerning our Lord at his
first advent, gives some vivid
descriptions of this Day of Trouble
by which his glorious reign will be
introduced.
He uses
these various symbols—fire, storm
and darkness—alternately and
interchangeably, in his
descriptions. Thus, for instance, he
says (Psalms 50:3):
“Our God shall come, and shall
not keep silence: a fire shall
devour before him, and it shall
be very tempestuous round about
him.”
In Psalms 97:2-6:
“Clouds and
darkness are round about him:
righteousness and justice are
the support of his throne.
“A fire goeth before him and
burneth up his enemies round
about. His lightnings give light
to the world; the earth seeth it
and trembleth.
“The mountains melt away like
wax at the presence of the Lord,
at the presence of the Lord of
the whole earth. The
[new] heavens
[then] tell of his
righteousness, and all the
people see his glory.“”
Psalms 46:6: “The
peoples raged, the kingdoms were
moved: he uttered his voice, the
earth melted.”
Again (Psalms
110:2-6), “Rule thou in the
midst of thine enemies....The
Lord at thy right hand shall
crush kings in the day of his
wrath.
“He will judge among the
nations—there shall be a
fullness of corpses. He crusheth
the heads
[rulers] over many
countries.”
Again (46:1-5),
“God is our
protection;...therefore we will
not fear when the earth
[society] is transformed,
and when the mountains
[kingdoms] are swept into
the midst of the sea
[swallowed up by the turbulent
masses],
“When the waters thereof roar
and are troubled
[infuriated], when the
mountains shake with the
swelling thereof....God will
help her [the Bride, the
faithful “little flock”]
at the dawning of the morning.”
And in
the same Psalm, verses 6-10, the
same story is restated in other
symbols:
“The peoples rage, kingdoms
are displaced: he letteth his
voice be heard, the earth
[society] melteth.
Jehovah of hosts is with
us, a Tower for us
is the God of Jacob.”
Then,
viewing the results of that time of
trouble from beyond it, he adds:
“Come ye, behold the deeds of
the Lord—what desolations he
hath made in the earth....
“Desist [from your
former ways, O people] and
know [come to the
knowledge] that I am God.
I will be exalted among the
peoples, I will be exalted in
the earth.”
The
“new earth” or new order
and arrangement of society will
exalt God and his law, as over and
controlling all.
Another testimony in proof of the
fact that the Day of the Lord will
be a great day of trouble and of
destruction to every form of evil
(yet not a time of literal
burning of the earth) is furnished
in the last symbolic prophecy of the
Bible.
Referring to this time when the Lord
will take his great power to reign,
the storm and fire are
thus described—
“And the nations were enraged
and thy wrath came.”
Revelation
11:17,18
And
again, “And out of his
mouth proceeded a two-edged
broadsword, that with it he
should smite the nations:
“And he shall rule them with a
rod of iron: and he treadeth the
winepress of the fierceness of
the wrath of Almighty God....
“And I saw the beast
[symbolic], and the kings
of the earth and their armies,
gathered together to make war
against him that sat on the
horse, and against his army.
“And the beast was taken, and
with him the false
prophet....These were cast alive
into a lake of fire burning with
brimstone.”
Revelation 19:15,19
We cannot here digress to examine
these symbols—“beast,” “false
prophet,” “image,” “lake of fire,”
“horse,” etc., etc. For this
the reader is referred to a
succeeding volume.
Now we
would have you notice that the great
symbolic BATTLE, and the
harvesting of the vine of the earth
here described as closing the
present age and opening up the
Millennial age (Revelation
20:1-3), are but other symbols
covering the same great and
troublous events elsewhere
symbolically called fire, storm,
shaking, etc.
In
connection with the battle and
winepress figures of Revelation,
note the striking harmony of Joel
2:9-16 and Isaiah 13:1-11,
in describing the same events by
similar figures. The variety of
symbolic figures used helps us to
appreciate more fully all the
features of that great and notable
Day of the Lord.
The Present Situation
We here leave the prophetic
statements regarding that day, to
mark more particularly the present
aspect of affairs in the world, as
we now see them shaping themselves
for the rapidly approaching
conflict—a conflict which, when its
terrible climax is reached, must
necessarily be a short one, else the
race would be exterminated.
The two
rival parties to this battle are
already visible. Wealth, arrogance
and pride are on one side, and
widely-prevailing poverty,
ignorance, bigotry and a keen sense
of injustice are on the other. Both,
impelled by selfish motives, are now
organizing their forces all over the
civilized world.
With
our eyes anointed with truth,
wherever we look we can see that the
sea and the waves are already
roaring and lashing and foaming out
against the mountains, as
represented in the threats and
attempts of anarchists and
discontents whose numbers are
constantly increasing.
We can
see, too, that the friction
between the various factions or
elements of society is rapidly
getting to the point described by
the prophets, when the earth
(society) will be on fire, and the
elements will melt and disintegrate
with the mutually generated heat.
It is of course difficult for
people, on whichever side of this
controversy they may be, to see
contrary to their own interests,
habits and education.
The
wealthy feel that they have a right
to more than their proportional
share of this world’s goods; a right
to purchase labor and every
commodity as low as they can; a
right to the fruit of their efforts.
They
feel that they have a right to use
their intelligence so to run their
business as to make profit for
themselves and to increase their
hoarded wealth, no matter who else
may be compelled by force of
circumstances to drag through life
with few of its comforts, even if
with all of its necessities.
They
reason thus: It is the inevitable;
the law of supply and demand must
govern; rich and poor have always
been in the world; and if the wealth
were evenly divided in the morning,
some would, through dissipation or
improvidence, be poor before night,
while others, more careful and
prudent, would be rich.
Besides, they will argue with
effect, Can it be expected that men
of greater brain power will
undertake vast enterprises,
employing thousands of men, with the
risks of large losses, unless there
be hopes of gain and some advantage?
The artisan and the laborer, on the
contrary, will say:
We see
that while labor enjoys many
advantages today above any other
day, while it is better paid, and
can therefore procure greater
comforts, yet it is in this enjoying
only its right, from which it has
long been debarred to some extent.
Labor is thus properly deriving a
share of the advantages of the
inventions, discoveries, increasing
knowledge, etc., of our time.
We
recognize labor as honorable, and
that, when accompanied with good
sense, education, honesty and
principle, it is as honorable, and
has as many rights, as any
profession. And, on the contrary, we
esteem idleness a discredit and
disgrace to all men, whatever their
talent or occupation in life.
All, to
be valued and appreciated, should be
useful to others in some respect.
But though realizing our present
improvement and advancement,
intellectually, socially and
financially, we realize this to be
more the result of circumstances
than of human design on the part of
either ourselves or our employers.
We see
our improved condition, and that of
all men, to be the result of the
great increase of intelligence,
invention, etc., of the past fifty
years particularly. These came up so
rapidly that labor as well as
capital got a lift from the tidal
wave, and was carried to a higher
level; and if we could see a
prospect that the flood tide would
continue to rise, and to benefit
all, we would feel satisfied; but we
are anxious and restless now because
we see that this is not the case.
We see
that the flood tide is beginning to
turn, and that whereas many have
been lifted high in wealth by it,
and are firmly and securely fixed
upon the shore of ease, luxury and
opulence, yet the masses are not
thus settled and secured, but are in
danger of being carried as low as
ever, or lower, by the undercurrent
of the now ebbing tide. Hence it is
that we are disposed to grasp hold
of something to insure our present
state and our further advancement
before it is too late.
To state the matter in other words,
we (artisans and laborers) see that
while all mankind has largely shared
the blessings of the day, yet those
who by reason of greater talent for
business, or by inheritance, or by
fraud and dishonesty, have become
possessors of tens of thousands and
millions of dollars, have not only
this advantage over all
others, but, aided by the mechanical
inventions, etc., they are in a
position to continue the ratio of
their increase in wealth, in
proportion to the decrease in the
wage-workers’ salaries.
We see
that unless we take some steps
toward the protection of the
increasing number of artisans
against the increasing power of
monopoly, combined with labor-saving
machinery, etc., the cold-blooded
law of supply and demand will
swallow us up completely. It is
against this impending disaster,
rather than against present
conditions, that we organize and
seek protective arrangements.
Each
day adds largely to our numbers by
natural increase and by immigration;
and each day adds to the
labor-saving machinery. Each day,
therefore, increases the number
seeking employment and decreases the
demand for their service.
The
natural law of supply and demand,
therefore, if permitted to go on
uninterruptedly, will soon bring
labor back where it was a century
ago, and leave all the advantages of
our day in the hands of capital. It
is this that we seek to
avert.
This ultimate tendency of many real
blessings to work injury, unless
restrained by wise and equitable
laws, was long since seen. But the
rapidity with which one
invention has followed another, and
the consequent increased demand for
labor in providing this labor-saving
machinery, has been so great that
the ultimate result has been
delayed. Instead, the world has
had a “boom”—an inflation of
values, wages, wealth, credits
(debts) and ideas—from which the
reaction is now commencing gradually
to take place.
In the last few years there have
been produced in vast quantities
agricultural implements of every
description which enable one man to
accomplish as much as five could
formerly.
This
has a two-fold effect: first, three
times as many acres are worked,
giving employment to three out of
the five laborers, thus setting two
adrift to compete for other labor;
secondly, the three who remain can,
by the use of the machinery, produce
as great a crop as fifteen would
have done without it.
The
same or greater changes are wrought
in other departments by similar
agencies; for instance, in iron and
steel making. Its growth has been so
enormous that the number of
employees has greatly increased,
notwithstanding the fact that
machinery has enabled one man at
present to accomplish about as much
as twelve did formerly.
One of
the results will be that very
shortly the capacity of these
extensive works will more than meet
the present enormous demands. The
demands, instead of continuing to
increase, will probably decrease;
for the world is fast being supplied
with railroads beyond present
needs. The yearly repairs on these
could probably be supplied by less
than one-half the present number of
establishments.
Thus we are brought in contact with
the peculiar condition in which
there is an over-production, causing
idleness occasionally to both
capital and labor, while at the same
time some lack the employment which
would enable them to procure
necessities and luxuries and thus in
a measure cure the over-production.
And
the tendency toward both
over-production and lack of
employment is on the increase, and
calls for a remedy of some kind
which society’s physicians are
seeking, but of which the patient
will not make use.
While, therefore (continues the
wage-worker), we realize that as the
supply begins to exceed the demand,
competition is greatly reducing the
profits of capital and machinery.
Throughout the world, competition is
distressing the rich by curtailing
their profits, and in some cases
causing them actual loss instead of
profit.
Yet we
believe that the class which
benefited most by the “boom” and
inflation should suffer most
in the reaction, rather than that
the masses should suffer from it.
To this
end, and for these reasons,
wage-workers are moving to obtain
the following results—by legislation
if possible, or by force and
lawlessness in countries where, for
any cause, the voice of the masses
is not heard, and the interests of
the masses are not conserved:
It is proposed that the hours of
labor be shortened in proportion to
the skill or severity of the labor,
without a reduction of wages, in
order thus to employ a greater
number of persons without increasing
the products, and thus to equalize
the coming over-production by
providing a larger number with the
means of purchasing.
It is
proposed to fix and limit the rate
of interest on money at much less
than the present rates, and thus
compel a leniency of the
lenders toward the borrowers or
poorer class, or else an idleness or
rusting of their capital.
It is
proposed that railroads shall either
be the property of the people,
operated by their servants,
government officials, or that
legislation shall restrict their
liberties, charges, etc., and compel
their operation in such a manner as
to serve the public better.
As it
is, railroads built during a period
of inflated values, instead of
curtailing their capital to conform
to the general shrinkage of values
experienced in every other
department of trade, have multiplied
their originally large capital
stocks two or three times (commonly
called watering their
stocks), without real value being
added.
Thus it
comes that great railroad systems
are endeavoring to pay interest and
dividends upon stocks and bonded
debts which on an average are four
times as great as these railroads
would actually cost today
new. As a consequence the
public suffers.
Farmers
are charged heavily for freights,
and sometimes find it profitable to
burn their grain for fuel; and thus
the cost of food to the people is
greater without being to the
farmer’s advantage.
It is
proposed to remedy this matter, so
that railroads shall pay to their
stockholders about four per cent on
their present actual value, and not
four to eight per cent, on three or
four times their present value, as
many of them now do, by preventing
competition through pooling
arrangements.
We well know, says the artisan, that
in the eyes of those who hold
watered railroad stocks, and other
stocks, this reduction of profits on
their invested capital will seem
terrible, and will come like drawing
teeth. They will feel that their
rights (?) to use their
franchises granted by the people, to
squeeze from them immense profits,
based upon fictitious valuations,
are being grievously outraged, and
that they will resist it all they
know how.
But we
feel that they should be thankful
that the public is so lenient, and
that they are not required to make
restitution of millions of dollars
already thus obtained.
We feel
that the time has come for the
masses of the people to share more
evenly the blessings of this day of
blessings. To do this it is
necessary so to legislate that all
greedy corporations, fat with money
and power derived from the public,
shall be restrained, and
compelled by law to serve the
public at reasonable rates. In no
other way can these blessings of
Providence be secured to the masses.
Hence,
while great corporations,
representing capital, are to a large
extent a blessing and a benefit, we
are seeing daily that they have
passed the point of benefit and are
becoming masters of the people, and
if unchecked will soon reduce
wage-workers to penury and slavery.
Corporations, composed of numbers of
people all more or less wealthy, are
rapidly coming to occupy the same
relation to the general public of
America that the Lords of Great
Britain and all Europe occupy toward
the masses there, only that the
corporations are more powerful.
To accomplish our ends, continue the
wage-workers, we need organization.
We must have the cooperation of the
masses or we can never accomplish
anything against such immense power
and influence. And though we are
organized into unions, etc., it must
not be understood that our aim is
anarchy or injustice toward any
class.
We, the
masses of the people, simply desire
to protect our own rights, and those
of our children, by putting
reasonable bounds upon those whose
wealth and power might otherwise
crush us– which wealth and power,
properly used and limited, may be a
more general blessing to all. In a
word, they conclude, we would
enforce the golden rule—
“Do unto others as you would
that they should do to you.”
Happy would it be for all concerned
if such moderate and reasonable
means would succeed; if the rich
would rest with their present
acquirements and cooperate with the
great mass of the people in the
general and permanent improvement of
the condition of all classes; if the
wage-workers would content
themselves with reasonable demands;
if the golden rule of love and
justice could thus be put in
practice. But men in their present
condition will not observe this rule
without compulsion.
Though
there be some among the artisans of
the world who would be thus moderate
and just in their ideas, the
majority are not so, but will be
extreme, unjust and arrogant in
their ideas and demands, beyond all
reason. Each concession on the part
of capitalists will but add to such
demands and ideas; and all having
experience know that the arrogance
and rule of the ignorant poor are
doubly severe.
And so
among those of wealth—some are fully
in sympathy with the laboring
classes, and would be glad to act
out their sympathy by making such
arrangements as would gradually
effect the needed reforms; but they
are greatly in the minority and
wholly powerless in the operating of
corporations and to a great extent
in their private business.
If they
be merchants or manufacturers, they
cannot shorten the hours of labor or
increase the wages of their
employees; for competitors would
then undersell them, and financial
disaster to themselves, their
creditors and their employees would
follow.
Thus we see the natural cause of the
great trouble of this “Day of
Jehovah.” Selfishness, and
blindness to all except their own
interests, will control the majority
on both sides of the question.
Wage-workers will organize and unify
their interests, but selfishness
will destroy the union; and each,
being actuated mainly by that
principle, will scheme and conspire
in that direction. The majority,
ignorant and arrogant, will gain
control, and the better class will
be powerless to hold in check that
which their intelligence organized.
Capitalists will become convinced
that the more they yield the more
will be demanded, and will soon
determine to resist all demands.
Insurrection will result; and in the
general alarm and distrust capital
will be withdrawn from public and
private enterprises, and business
depression and financial panic will
follow.
Thousands of men thrown out of
employment in this way will finally
become desperate. Then law and order
will be swept away—the mountains
will be swallowed up in that stormy
sea.
Thus
the social earth will melt, and the
governmental heavens (church and
state) will pass away; and all the
proud, and all who do wickedly, will
be as stubble. Then the mighty men
will weep bitterly, the rich will
howl, and fear and distress will be
upon all the multitude.
Even
now, wise, far-seeing men find their
hearts failing them as they look
forward to those things coming upon
the world, even as our Lord
predicted. Luke 21:26
The
Scriptures show us that in this
general rupture the nominal church
(including all denominations) will
be gradually drawn more and more to
the side of the governments and the
wealthy, will lose much of its
influence over the people, and will
finally fall with the governments.
Thus the heavens [ecclesiastical
rule], being on fire, will pass away
with a great hissing.
All this trouble will but prepare
the world to realize that though men
may plan and arrange ever so well
and wisely, all their plans will
prove futile as long as ignorance
and selfishness are in the saddle
and have the control.
It will
convince all that the only feasible
way of correcting the difficulty is
by the setting up of a strong and
righteous government, which will
subdue all classes, and enforce
principles of righteousness, until
gradually the stony-heartedness of
men will, under favorable
influences, give place to the
original image of God.
And
this is just what God has promised
to accomplish for all, by and
through the Millennial Reign of
Christ, which Jehovah introduces by
the chastisements and lessons of
this day of trouble. Ezekiel
11:19; 36:25,36; Jeremiah 31:29-34;
Zephaniah 3:9; Psalms 46:8-10
Though this day of trouble comes as
a natural and unavoidable result of
man’s fallen, selfish condition, and
was fully foreseen and declared by
the Lord, who foresaw that his laws
and instructions would be
disregarded by all but the few until
experience and compulsion force
obedience, yet all who realize the
state of things coming should set
themselves and their affairs in
order accordingly.
Thus we
say to all the meek—the
humble of the world, as well as the
body of Christ:
“Seek ye the Lord, ye
meek of the earth which have
wrought his judgment
[his will]; seek
righteousness; seek meekness,
that ye may be partially hidden
in the day of the Lord’s anger.”
Zephaniah 2:3
None
will entirely escape the trouble,
but those seeking righteousness and
rejoicing in meekness will have many
advantages over others.
Their
manner of life, their habits of
thought and action, as well as their
sympathies for the right, which will
enable them to grasp the situation
of affairs, and also to appreciate
the Bible account of this trouble
and its outcome, will all conspire
to make them suffer less than
others—especially from harassing
fears and forebodings.
The trend of events in this Day of
the Lord will be very deceptive to
those not Scripturally informed. It
will come suddenly, as fire
consuming chaff (Zephaniah 2:2), in
comparison to the long ages past and
their slow operation; but not
suddenly as a flash of lightning
from a clear sky, as some
erroneously expect who anticipate
that all things written concerning
the Day of the Lord will be
fulfilled in a twenty-four hour day.
It will
come as “a thief in the
night,” in the sense that
its approach will be stealthy and
unobserved by the world in general.
The trouble of this day will be in
spasms. It will be a series of
convulsions more frequent and severe
as the day draws on, until the final
one.
The
Apostle so indicates when he says—“as
travail upon a woman.” 1
Thessalonians 5:2,3 The relief
will come only with the birth of the
NEW ORDER of things—a new
heavens (the spiritual control of
Christ) and a new earth (reorganized
society) wherein dwelleth
righteousness (2 Peter 3:10,13)—in
which justice and love, instead of
power and selfishness, will be the
law.
Each time these labor pangs of the
new era come upon the present body
politic, her strength and courage
will be found less, and the pains
severer. All that society’s
physicians (political economists)
can do for her relief will be to
help, and wisely direct the course
of the inevitable birth—to prepare
gradually the way for the event.
They cannot avert it if they would;
for God has decreed that it shall
come to pass.
Many of
society’s physicians will, however,
be totally ignorant of the real
ailment and of the necessities and
urgency of the case. These will
undertake repressive measures; and
as each paroxysm of trouble passes
away, they will take advantage of it
to fortify the resistive appliances,
and will thereby increase the
anguish.
While
they will not long delay the birth,
their malpractice will hasten the
death of their patient; for the old
order of things will die in the
labor of bringing forth the new.
To lay aside the forcible figure
suggested by the Apostle, and speak
plainly: The efforts of the masses
for deliverance from the grasp of
Capital and machinery will be
immature; plans and arrangements
will be incomplete and insufficient,
as time after time they attempt to
force their way and burst the bands
and limits of “supply and demand”
which are growing too small for
them.
Each
unsuccessful attempt will increase
the confidence of Capital in its
ability to keep the new order of
things within its present limits,
until at length the present
restraining power of organizations
and governments will reach its
extreme limit. The cord of social
organism will snap asunder, law and
order will be gone, and widespread
anarchy will bring all that
the prophets have foretold of the
trouble “such as was not since
there was a nation”—and,
thank God for the assurance added—“nor
ever shall be” afterward.
The deliverance of Israel from Egypt
and from the plagues which came upon
the Egyptians seems to illustrate
the coming emancipation of the
world, at the hands of the greater
than Moses, whom he typified. It
will be a deliverance from Satan and
every agency he has devised for
man’s bondage to sin and error.
And as
the plagues upon Egypt had a
hardening effect as soon as removed,
so the temporary relief from the
pains of this Day of the Lord will
tend to harden some, and they will
say to the poor, as did the
Egyptians to Israel, “Ye are
idle,” and therefore
dissatisfied! and will probably,
like them, attempt to increase the
burden. Exodus 5:4-23
But in
the end such will wish, as did
Pharaoh in the midnight of his last
plague, that they had dealt more
leniently and wisely long ago.
Exodus 12:30-33
To mark
further the similarity, call to mind
that the troubles of this Day of the
Lord are called “seven vials
of wrath,” or “seven
last plagues,” and that it
is not until the last of these that
the great earthquake
(revolution) occurs, in which every
mountain (kingdom) will disappear.
Revelation 16:17-20
Another thought with reference to
this Day of Trouble is that it has
come just in due time—God’s
due time. In the next volume of this
work, evidence is adduced from the
testimony of the Law and the
Prophets of the Old Testament, as
well as from Jesus and the apostolic
prophets of the New Testament, which
shows clearly and unmistakably that
this Day of Trouble is located
chronologically in the beginning of
the glorious Millennial reign of
Messiah.
It is
this necessary preparation for the
coming work of restitution in the
Millennial age that precipitates the
trouble.
During the six thousand years
interim of evil, and until the
appointed time for the establishment
of the righteous and powerful
government of Christ, it would have
been a positive injury to fallen men
had they been afforded much idle
time, through an earlier development
of present labor-saving machinery,
or otherwise.
Experience has given rise to the
proverb that “Idleness is the mother
of vice,” thus approving the wisdom
of God’s decree,
“In the sweat of thy face shalt
thou eat bread till thou return
unto the dust.”
Like
all God’s arrangements, this is
benevolent and wise, and for the
ultimate good of his creatures.
The
trouble of the Day of the Lord,
which we already see gathering,
confirms the wisdom of God’s
arrangement; for, as we have seen,
it comes about as the result of
over-production by labor-saving
machinery, and an inability on the
part of the various elements of
society to adjust themselves to the
new circumstances, because of
selfishness on the part of each.
An unanswerable argument, proving
that this is God’s due time for the
introduction of the new order of
things, is that he is lifting the
veil of ignorance and gradually
letting in the light of intelligence
and invention upon mankind, just as
foretold, when foretold, and with
the results predicted. Daniel
12:4,1
Had the
knowledge come sooner, the trouble
would have come sooner; and though
society might have reorganized after
its storm and melting, it would have
been not a new earth [social
arrangement] wherein righteousness
would prevail and dwell, but a new
earth or arrangement in which sin
and vice would have much more
abounded than now.
The
equitable division of the benefits
of labor-saving machinery would in
time have brought shorter and
shorter hours of labor; and thus,
released from the original
safeguard, fallen man, with his
perverted tastes, would not have
used his liberty and time for
mental, moral and physical
improvement, but, as the history of
the past proves, the tendency would
have been toward licentiousness and
vice.
The partial lifting of the veil
now prepares thousands of
conveniences for mankind, and thus
furnishes, from the outstart of the
age of restitution, time for
education and moral and physical
development, as well as for
preparation for the feeding and
clothing of the companies who will
from time to time be awakened from
the tomb.
And
furthermore, it locates the time of
trouble just where it will be of
benefit to mankind, in that it will
give them the lesson of their own
inability to govern themselves, just
at the Millennial dawn, when, by the
Lord’s appointment, he who redeemed
all is to begin to bless them with
the strong rule of the iron rod, and
with full knowledge and assistance
whereby they may be restored to
original perfection and everlasting
life.
Duty and Privilege of the Saints
An important question arises
regarding the duty of the saints
during this trouble, and their
proper attitude toward the two
opposing classes now coming into
prominence.
That
some of the saints will still be in
the flesh during at least part of
this burning time seems possible.
Their position in it, however, will
differ from that of others, not so
much in that they will be
miraculously preserved (though it is
distinctly promised that their bread
and water shall be sure), but in the
fact that, being instructed from
God’s Word, they will not feel the
same anxiety and hopeless dread that
will overspread the world.
They
will recognize the trouble as the
preparation, according to God’s
plan, for blessing the whole world,
and they will be cheered and
comforted through it all. This is
forcibly stated in Psalms 91;
Isaiah 33:2-14,15-24.
Thus comforted and blessed by the
divine assurance, the first duty of
the saints is to let the world see
that in the midst of all the
prevailing trouble and discontent,
and even while they share the
trouble and suffer under it, they
are hopeful, cheerful and always
rejoicing in view of the glorious
outcome foretold in God’s Word.
The Apostle has written that
“Godliness with contentment
is great gain”;
and
though this has always been true, it
will have double force in this Day
of the Lord, when discontent is the
chief ailment among all worldly
classes. To these the saints should
be a notable exception.
There
never was a time when
dissatisfaction was so widespread;
and yet there never was a time when
men enjoyed so many favors and
blessings.
Wherever we look, whether into the
palaces of the rich, replete with
conveniences and splendors of which
Solomon in all his glory knew almost
nothing, or whether we look into the
comfortable home of the thrifty and
temperate wage-worker, with its
evidences of taste, comfort, art and
luxury, we see that in every way the
present exceeds in bountiful supply
every other period since the
creation, many-fold. Yet the people
are unhappy and discontented.
The
fact is that the desires of a
selfish, depraved heart know no
bounds. Selfishness has so taken
possession of all, that, as we look
out, we see the whole world madly
pushing and driving and clutching
after wealth. A few only being
successful, the remainder are
envious and soured because they are
not the fortunate ones, and all are
discontented and miserable—more so
than in any former time.
But the saint should take no part in
that struggle. His consecration vow
was that he would strive and grasp
and run for a higher, a heavenly
prize, and hence he is weaned from
earthly ambitions, and labors not
for earthly things, except to
provide things decent and
needful; for he is giving heed
to the course and example of the
Master and the apostles.
Therefore they have contentment
with their godliness, not because
they have no ambition, but because
their ambition is turned heavenward
and absorbed in the effort to lay up
treasure in heaven and to be rich
toward God; in view of which, and of
their knowledge of God’s plans
revealed in his Word, they are
content with whatever of an earthly
sort God may provide. These can
joyfully sing:
“Content, whatever
lot I see,
Since ’tis God’s
hand that leadeth
me.”
But alas! not all of God’s children
occupy this position. Many have
fallen into the discontent prevalent
in the world, and are robbing
themselves of the enjoyments of life
because they have left the Lord’s
footsteps and are casting their lot
and taking their portion with the
world —seeking earthly things
whether attaining them or not,
sharing the world’s discontent, and
failing to realize the contentment
and peace which the world can
neither give nor take away.
We urge the saints, therefore, to
abandon the strife of greed and
vainglory and its discontent, and to
strive for the higher riches and the
peace they do afford. We would
remind them of the Apostle’s words:
“Godliness with contentment is
great gain; for we brought
nothing into this world, and it
is certain we can carry nothing
out. And having
[needful] food and
raiment, let us therewith be
content.”
“But they that will
[to] be rich
[whether they succeed or not]
fall into temptation and a
snare, and into many foolish and
hurtful lusts which drown
[sink] men in ruin and
destruction.
“For a root of all vices is the
love of money [whether
in rich or poor], which
some being eager for were led
away from the faith and pierced
themselves through with many
pangs.
“But thou, O man of God, flee
from these, and be pursuing
righteousness, godliness, faith,
love, endurance, meekness; be
contesting in the noble contest
of the faith, lay hold on
everlasting life, unto which
thou wast called and didst make
a noble covenant.” 1
Timothy 6:6-12
If the example of the saints is thus
one of contentment and joyful
anticipation, and a cheerful
submission to present trials in sure
hope of the good time coming, such
living examples alone are valuable
lessons for the world. And in
addition to the example, the counsel
of the saints to those about them
should be in harmony with their
faith.
It
should be of the nature of ointment
and healing balm. Advantage should
be taken of circumstances to point
the world to the good time coming,
to preach to them the coming Kingdom
of God, and to show the real cause
of present troubles, and the only
remedy.
The
poor world groans, not only under
its real, but also under its fancied
ills, and especially under the
discontent of selfishness, pride and
ambitions which fret and worry men
because they cannot fully satisfy
them.
Hence,
while we can see both sides of the
question, let us counsel those
willing to hear to contentment with
what they have, and to patient
waiting until God in his due time
and way brings to them the many
blessings which his love and wisdom
have provided.
By probing and inflaming either real
or fancied wounds and wrongs, we
would do injury to those we should
be helping and blessing, thus
spreading their discontent, and
hence their trouble. But by
fulfilling our mission, preaching
the good tidings of the ransom
given for ALL, and the
consequent blessings to come
to ALL, we shall be true
heralds of the kingdom —its
ambassadors of peace. Thus it is
written,
“How beautiful upon the
mountains [kingdoms]
are the feet of him
[the last members of the body of
Christ] that bringeth good
tidings, that publisheth peace,
that bringeth good tidings of
good.” Isaiah 52:7
The troubles of this “Day of
Jehovah” will give
opportunity for preaching the good
tidings of coming good, such as is
seldom afforded, and blessed are
they who will follow the footsteps
of the Master, and be the good
Samaritans binding up the wounds and
pouring in the oil and wine of
comfort and cheer
The
assurance given such is that their
labor is not in vain; for when the
judgments of the Lord are in the
earth, the inhabitants of the world
will learn righteousness.
Isaiah 26:9
The sympathy of the Lord’s children,
like that of their heavenly Father,
must be largely in harmony with the
groaning creation, striving for any
deliverance from bondage. Although
they should, like him, remember and
sympathize with those of the
opposing classes whose desires are
to be just and generous, but whose
efforts are beset and hindered, not
only by the weaknesses of their
fallen nature, but also by their
surroundings in life, and their
association with and dependence upon
others.
But the
Lord’s children should have no
sympathy with the arrogant,
insatiate desires and endeavors of
any class. Their utterances should
be calm and moderate, and always for
peace where principle is not at
stake.
They
should remember that this is the
Lord’s battle, and that so far as
politics or social questions are
concerned, they have no real
solution other than that predicted
in the Word of God.
The
duty of the consecrated, therefore,
is first of all to see that they are
not in the way of Jehovah’s chariot,
and then to “stand still and
see the salvation of God,”
in the sense of realizing that it is
no part of their work to share in
the struggle, but that it is the
Lord’s doing, through other
agencies.
Regardless of all such things, they
should press along the line of their
own mission, proclaiming the
heavenly kingdom at hand as the only
remedy for all classes, and their
only hope. |