UNFULFILLED PROPHECY
Unfulfilled Prophecy and "The Hope of the Church"
BY SIR ROBERT ANDERSON, K.C.B., LL.D.
PREFACE
I responded with real pleasure to a request from the Prophecy
Investigation Society to write a manual on the prophecy of "The Seventy
Weeks." But I soon found that such a book would be a mere abridgment of The
Coming Prince, or The Seventy Weeks of Daniel. And as the narrow limits of space
prescribed for me would preclude my citing authorities, or noticing any of the
numerous incidental questions involved in the inquiry, I felt that the result
would neither satisfy students of prophecy, nor appeal to Christians generally.
I sought permission, therefore, to vary the proposed scheme; and, instead of
making Daniel ix. the burden of these pages, to use it as the basis for a brief
treatise upon unfulfilled prophecy, giving prominence to the well-nigh forgotten
truth of that Coming of Christ which is the distinctive hope of the present
dispensation-" the Hope of the Church," Bengel calls it.
A "special subject" in a school curriculum is often ignored, as not
being essential to "a liberal education"; and prophecy is neglected by
many a Christian as being unnecessary to "assurance of salvation." But
such neglect is perilous in these days of subtle and sustained attacks upon the
Bible; when we are confronted both by the sceptical crusade of the Higher
Criticism, and the steadily increasing influence of Romanism. And the study of
prophecy will prove a safeguard against both these apostasies. For no Christian
who pursues it intelligently, and understands the Divine "plan of the
ages," which it unfolds, will be imposed upon by "the learned
ignorance" of the Critics. And the present-day decline of Protestantism in
England is due to no change in the historic apostasy of Christendom, but to a
weakening of faith in Holy Writ. For when the devout religionist begins to lose
confidence in the Bible, he is apt to fall back upon "the Church."
"All God-breathed Scripture is profitable." And prophecy fills a large
proportion of its pages. The study is a fascinating one; and it will save us
from being entrapped either by the Christianised Infidelity of Germany, or by
the Christianised Paganism of Rome. I may add that, although The Coming Prince
.has been under the search-light of criticism for so many years, not a single
point in my scheme of the Seventy Weeks has been refuted or disturbed. Professor
Driver's only disparaging criticism (in his "Daniel," Cambridge Bible,
page 149) is that my scheme is based on that of Julius Africanus (a fact of
which I boast!), and that it leaves the seventieth week unexplained (which
suggests that he mislaid his copy of my book when he had read only half of it
!). R.A.
CHAPTER ONE
Many years ago one of the leading Rabbis of the London Synagogue
published a volume of sermons to refute the Christian interpretation of certain
Messianic prophecies. The Seventy Weeks of Daniel received prominent notice; and
he accused Christian expositors of tampering, not only with chronology, but with
the language of Scripture, in their effort to make it apply to the Nazarene. My
indignation at such a charge led me to enter upon an extensive course of reading
to enable me to refute it. But to my great surprise and distress I found that it
was by no means a base-less libel. And this again led me to take up the study of
Daniel ix. with an open mind, and a settled determination to accept the words of
the prophecy at their face value, and to adopt the standard chronology of the
eras and events involved in the inquiry. The error of the received view, that
the Captivity era was the basis of the prophecy, was one of my earliest
discoveries. And this blunder, trifling though it may seem, has afforded both
Jews and Infidels a vantage ground in their attacks upon these Scriptures. There
was no "seventy years' Captivity." Because of national sin a judgment
of seventy years servitude to Babylon was Divinely imposed upon Judah. This
judgment fell in the third year of King Jehoiakim (B.C. 606), when
Nebuchadnezzar invaded Judea and captured Jerusalem. But his purpose was merely
to hold the land as a vassal State, and he left the Jews in undisturbed
possession of their City, Daniel and his companions being carried to Babylon to
adorn his court as vassal princes.
After three years Jeboiakim revolted; and five years later Nebuchadnezzar
returned to enforce his conquest (B.C. 598). And the youthful King Jehoiachin
surrendered almost without a struggle. On his first invasion the King of Babylon
had proved magnanimous and lenient. But now he had to punish rebellion; and he
"carried away all Jerusalem," leaving none behind "save the
poorest sort of the people of the land. This was what, in the opening words of
his book, Ezekiel terms " King Jehoiachin's captivity," the prophet
himself being numbered among the captives.
Jehoiachin's uncle, Zedekiah, was placed upon the throne as vassal king, having
sworn allegiance to his suzerain. In common with "the residue of Jerusalem
that remained in the land," he had ever before him Jeremiah's warnings that
a refusal to submit to the Divine decree which brought them under servitude to
Babylon would bring upon them a far more terrible judgment. Nebuchadnezzar would
again return to "destroy them utterly," and to make the land" a
desolation and an astonishment." But they gave heed to false prophets who
pandered to the national vanity by predicting a speedy restoration of their
independence; and having obtained a promise of armed support from Egypt, the
Jews again revolted. Nebuchadnezzar thereupon invaded Judtea for the third time;
and when, after a siege of eighteen months, he captured Jerusalem, the city was
given up to fire and sword. The last chapter of 2 Chronicles contains the sad
story of Judah's sin and of the Divine judgments it brought upon them.
Three several judgments, distinct, though in part concurrent, thus befell that
stiff-necked people. And it was this third judgment of the
"Desolations" that filled the thoughts and bowed the heart of Daniel,
as he prayed the prayer which brought him the great prophecy of the Seventy
Weeks. No words could be plainer or more definite. "I Daniel understood by
the books the number of the years whereof the word of the Lord came to Jeremiah
the prophet, for the accomplishing of the Desolations of Jerusalem, even seventy
years."
And by those same "books" he would have understood also that the
seventy years of the "Servitude" were on the point of expiring. And,
of course, the return of the exiles would bring to an end the judgment of
the" Captivity," which thus lasted sixty-two years. But as Daniel had
already passed his fourscore years of life he would scarcely hope to outlive the
Desolations, seventeen years of which had still to run. And I confidently offer
the suggestion that his prayer was an appeal that God would cancel those years,
and remit the still unexpired portion of the judgment. The circumstances of the
time, and the whole tenor of the prayer, seem to point to this. The closing
words are specially explicit: "0 Lord forgive; 0 Lord hearken and do; defer
not, for Thine own sake, 0 my God; for Thy city and Thy people are called by Thy
name."
What more there was in his heart to utter we know not; for "while he was
speaking in prayer" the angel Gabriel appeared to him - the same heavenly
messenger who heralded in later times the Saviour's birth in which should be
read as in Bethlehem, and from him the prophet received, in answer to his
supplication, the great prophecy of the Seventy Weeks. Here are the words:-
"Seventy weeks are decreed upon thy people and upon thy holy city, to
finish transgression, and to make an end of sins, and to make reconciliation for
iniquity, and to bring in everlasting righteousness, and to seal up vision and
prophecy, and to anoint the most holy. Know therefore and discern, that from the
going forth of the commandment to restore and to build Jerusalem, unto the
Messiah the Prince, shall be seven weeks, and threescore and two weeks: it shall
be built again, with street and moat, even in troublous times. And after the
threescore and two weeks shall Messiah be cut off, and shall have nothing: and
the people of the Prince that shall come shall destroy the city and the
sanctuary; and the end thereof shall be with a flood, and even unto the end
shall be war; desolations are determined. And he shall make a firm covenant with
many for one week; and for the half of the week he shall cause the sacrifice and
the oblation to cease, and upon the wing of abominations shall come one that
maketh desolate, even until the consummation, and that determined, shall wrath
be poured out upon the desolator."
CHAPTER II.
The Hebrew Scriptures contain no Messianic prophecy that is simpler and more
definite than this of the Seventy Weeks, and none better fitted to silence the
infidel and convince the Jew. But its meaning and evidential value are lost in a
bewildering maze of forced or fanciful interpretations. And this is the evil
work of Christian expositors! The meaning of the language of the prophecy may be
deemed matter for discussion; but no intelligent reader, whether he be Christian
or Jew or Infidel, who will study it with an unbiassed mind, can entertain an
honest doubt as to what it says. Echoing the words of Daniel's prayer, the
angel's message told him that not seventy years, but seventy weeks of years were
decreed upon his people and his holy city, before they would enter into full
Divine blessing.
This era is divided into three portions, of seven weeks, sixty-two weeks, and
one week, respectively. It dates from the issuing of a decree to build
Jerusalem. From that event "unto Messiah the prince" there were to be
7+ 62 weeks. And after "the sixty-two weeks" the Messiah would be
"cut off." The seventieth and last week of the era would be signalised
by the advent of another Prince, who would make a seven years' covenant (or
treaty) with the Jews; and iii the middle of the week (i.e., after three years
and a half), he would violate that treaty and suppress their Temple worship and
the ordinances of their religion.
All this is so plain that any intelligent child could understand it. We must
remember, however, that with the Jews in ancient times it was as natural to
speak of a week of years as of a week of days. And further, that their year was
one of three hundred and sixty days. Such was the year in use in Babylon, where
the prophecy was given. And, moreover, it was the year by which the judgment of
the "Desolations" to which the prophecy referred, was reckoned. That
era dated from the day on which the city was invested; namely, the 10th Tebeth
in the ninth year of Zedekiah -a day that for four and twenty centuries has been
observed as a fast by the Jews in every land. And, as the Prophecy of Haggai so
explicitly records, it ended on the twenty-fourth day of Chisleu in the second
year of Darius Hystaspes. Now from the 10th Tebeth B.C. 589 to the 24th Chisleu,
B.C. 520, was a period of 25,200 days, or seventy years of 360 days.
The first question then which claims attention relates to the "decree"
to rebuild the city. And at this point most expositors proceed to discuss
various recorded edicts for the return of the exiles, or for building or
adorning the Temple. But if we refuse to treat Divine prophecy in the loose and
careless way we read a newspaper or a novel, we shall seize upon the fact that
Jerusalem was rebuilt in pursuance of an edict issued by King Artaxerxes of
Persia in the twentieth year of his reign; and that history, sacred and profane,
knows nothing of any other "decree" for the rebuilding of the holy
city.
Nehemiah was cupbearer to the King-"an office of high honour in
Persia," and his Book opens by mentioning that certain Jews arrived at the
Persian capital bringing him grievous tidings of the condition of Jerusalem. The
second chapter narrates that, while discharging the duties of his office, the
King taxed him with showing signs of private grief in the royal presence.
"Why should not my countenance be sad?" he pleaded, "when the
city, the place of my fathers' sepulchres, lieth waste, and the gates thereof
are burned with fire?" "For what dost thou make request?" the
King demanded; and Nehemiah answered, "That thou wouldest send me to Judah,
unto the city of my father's sepulchres, that I may build it." The King
thereupon authorised Nehemiah to undertake the work of restoration; and before
the next Feast of Tabernacles Jerusalem was again a walled city, secured by
gates and ramparts.
Our next enquiry is whether sixty-nine weeks of years, measured from the date of
that edict, ended with any event to satisfy the words, "unto Messiah the
Prince." And here we must remember that the Cross, and not the Incarnation,
was the world's great "crisis." And while Scripture nowhere records
the Saviour's birth date, the epoch of His ministry is given, 'with absolute
definiteness, as occurring in the fifteenth year of Tiberius Caesar. Now (pace
the "reconcilers" and expositors) "the reign of Tiberius, as
beginning from the 19th Augustus A.D. 14, was as well-known a date in the time
of Luke as is the reign of Queen Victoria in our own day; and no single case has
ever been produced in which his regnal years were reckoned in any other manner.'
We can thus definitely fix upon Nisan A.D. 29 as the date of the first Passover
of our Lord's ministry. And as His ministry ex-tended over four Passovers, it is
as certain as inspired Scripture and human language can make it that the date of
the Crucifixion was the Festival of Nisan, A.D. 32.
In accordance with Jewish custom, the Lord went up to Jerusalem "six days
before the Passover," i.e., on Friday, the 8th Nisan. Presumably He spent
the Sabbath in Bethany; and in the evening, when the Sabbath was ended, there
took place the supper in Martha's house. And upon the following day, the 10th
Nisan, He made His "triumphal entry" into Jerusalem. No careful
student of the narrative can fail to recognise that this was, both in intention
and in fact, a crisis in His ministry. After the great Council of the nation had
decreed His death He charged His Apostles not to make Him known; and from that
time He shunned all public recognition of His Messiahship. But now He welcomed
the acciamations of "the whole multitude of the disciples," and
silenced the remonstrances of the Pharisees by declaring that "if these
held their peace the stones would immediately cry out."
For on that day was fulfilled Zechariah's prophecy: "Rejoice greatly, 0
daughter of Zion! Shout, 0 daughter of Jerusalem! Behold thy King cometh unto
thee, lowly and riding upon an ass." And when the disciples raised the
triumphant shout, "Hosanna to the son of David! Blessed is the King of
Israel that cometh in the name of the Lord," the Saviour looked off toward
the Holy City, and exclaimed, "If thou also hadst known even on this day,
the things that belong to thy peace! but now they are hid from thine eyes!"
"Even on this day," for it was the fateful day on which the sixty-nine
weeks of the Daniel prophecy expired. And it was the only occasion in all His
earthly sojourn on which He was acclaimed as Messiah the Prince, the King of
Israel.
There is no vagueness in Divine reckoning. As the Jewish year was regulated by
the Paschal moon, we can calculate the Julian date of any Nisan. The 1st Nisan
in the twentieth year of Artaxerxes, when the decree to restore and build
Jerusalem was issued, was the 14th March, B.C. 445. And the era intervening
between that day and the 10th Nisan (or 6th April), A.D. 32, was 173,880 days,
or sixty-nine weeks of years, to the very day.(See Ch. x. of The Coming
Prince.)
The Artaxerxes date was calculated for me by the Astronomer Royal; and the dates
of the years of the Ministry will be found in various standard works upon the
subject.
The scheme here unfolded was foreshadowed by Julius Africanus in his
Chronography: the detailed elucidation of it is a part of my personal
contribution to the interpretation of Daniel. And the result may well give food
for thought both to the Christian and the Critic. The sceptical crusade of the
Higher Criticism claims to have discredited the Book of Daniel as being either a
pseud-epigraph or a romance. But how then can it account for the fulfilment of
this particular prophecy? If someone announced that the distance, say, from the
main door of St. Paul's Cathedral to some well-known rural landmark, was exactly
173,880 yards, and the statement was found to be absolutely accurate, what
estimate should we form of anyone who dismissed the result as being a mere
coincidence or a happy guess? Should we not brand him as either knave or fool?
And unless we are to allow our respect for Professors and pundits to outweigh
our reverence for God and His holy Word, this must be our estimate of those who
either champion or accept the "assured results of the Higher
Criticism" respecting the prophecy of Daniel.
CHAPTER III.
No Christian doubts the Messianic fulfilment of the 69 weeks of
this prophecy. And if we distinguish between what is doubted and what is
doubtful, no less certain is it that the 70th week awaits fulfilment in a future
age.
The suggestion that such an era should be thus interrupted in its course may
seem strange and untenable, but the intelligent student of Scripture will
recognise the principle which this involves. That principle is strikingly
exemplified in the era of four hundred and eighty years, reckoned from the
Exodus to the Temple (1 Kings vi.). According to the historical books, that
period was in fact five hundred and seventy-three years; and this is confirmed
by the Apostle's words at Pisidian Antioch (Acts xiii. 18-31). How then can this
difference of ninety-three years be explained?
Though this problem has perplexed chronologers the solution of it is plain and
simple. These ninety-three years are the sum of the servitudes recorded in the
book of Judge. During five several periods Israel's national existence as
Jehovah's people was in abeyance when, in punishment for their idolotry, He
"sold them into the hands of their enemies." They thus became enslaved
to the King of Mesopotamia for eight years, to the King of Moab for eighteen
years, to the King of Canaan for twenty years, to the Midianites for seven
years, and finally to the Philistines for forty years. (The sum of
8+18+20+7+40 is 93. The servitude of Judges x. 7, 9 affected only the tribes
beyond Jordan, and did not suspend Israel's national position.) When God
forgives our sins He blots out the record of them. And if this principle obtains
even in reckoning an historical era, how legitimate it seems in the case of a
prophetical era like that of the Seventy Weeks. By their rejection of Messiah,
Israel forfeited their normal position of privilege and special blessing. And
seeing that Messianic prophecy runs in the channel of Israel's national history
as the covenant people, its fulfilment is tided back until the Lo-ammi sentence
which now rests upon them is withdrawn.
The 24th chapter of Matthew, moreover, is an end of controversy on the question
here at issue. The first book of the New Testament, like the last, is prophetic.
And the 24th chapter is well described by Dean Alford as "the anchor of
Apocalyptic interpretations." To understand it aright we must shake free
from traditional exegesis, and read it with intelligent appreciation of the
position and attitude of those to whom it was addressed. They were men whose
thoughts were moulded and whose hopes were based upon the Hebrew Scriptures. And
when they put the question, "What shall be the sign of Thy Coming and of
the winding-up of the age?" they had in view the age of Israel's subjection
to Gentile supremacy and the Coming again of Christ "to restore the Kingdom
to Israel."
It is extraordinary that any intelligent reader should confound that event with
the Coming revealed in the Epistles. The one is the Coming foretold in Hebrew
prophecy, which will bring deliverance to the favoured nation in days to come.
The Lord here terms it "the coming of the Son of Man. "-a Messianic
title which never occurs in the Epistles, and is never used in Scripture save in
relation to His earthly people. But the Coming revealed in the Epistles is one
of the "mystery " truths of Christianity - a "Coming" to
call up to their heavenly home the redeemed of this Christian dispensation.
These "Comings" have nothing in common save that both refer to the
same Christ. With still greater force does this remark apply to "the Second
Advent" of theology, an event which will be not less than a thousand years
later than "the Coming of the Son of Man." For the Coming foretold in
Matthew xxiv., xxv. will inaugurate the kingdom of heaven upon earth-"the
millennial reign of Christ" (to use a theological phrase), whereas
"the Second Advent" of theology is His coming to judgment at the end
of that thousand years. There can be no intelligent study of unfulfilled
prophecy if we fail to distinguish between these several "Comings" of
Christ.
Certain it is that if the Coming of Christ of which the Epistles speak be the
same as "the Coming of the Son of Man" of Matthew xxiv., the Apostle's
words are in flat and flagrant opposition to the Lord's explicit teaching. For
His warning is clear and emphatic that His Coming as Son of Man must not be
looked for until after the coming of Antichrist, the horrors of the great
Tribulation," and the awful signs and portents foretold in Messianic
prophecy. Whereas the Epistles will be searched in vain for even a suggestion
that any event of prophecy bars the fulfilment of what Bengel calls " the
hope of the Church." If then these several Scriptures relate to the same
event, we must jettison either the First Gospel or the Pauline Epistles, for the
attempt to reconcile them is hopeless.
But, it may be asked, did not the Lord on that same occasion use the words,
"Watch. for ye know not what time your Lord doth come"? Yes, truly;
but those words have reference to the waiting time when the Tribulation is past.
and all the events foretold to precede His Coming have been fulfilled. For at
that juncture the attitude of the earthly people toward the Coming which is
their special hope, will be the same as that which is enjoined upon us in this
present age -constant expectation of the Lord's return." (Alford.)
For, as the Epistle to Titus tells us, the grace-taught Christian learns '' to
live looking for that blessed Hope." And "looking for" is but a
poor equivalent for the Greek word it represents. A still stronger word the
Apostle used when, in writing to the Philippians from his Roman prison, he said,
" We are looking for the Saviour." It is a word that. expresses
earnest expectation of something believed to be iminincnt. According to
Bloomfield, '' it. signifies properly to thrust forward the bead and neck, as in
anxious expectation of hearing or seeing something." Such was the attitude
of the mother of Sisera as she watched for her son's return: Through the window
she looked forth, and cried through the lattice, "Why is his chariot so
long in coming? And yet there are religious teachers who assert, and sometimes
with dogmatic vehemence, that the Lord cannot come until after the Tribulation,
thus relegating the "blessed hope" to the sphere of other Christian
hopes which, like that of the resurrection, for example, though divinely
"sure and certain," are indefinitely remote. Indeed. this teaching
absolutely kills the hope. For we recall the Saviour's words that "except
those days should be shortened" none of His people would survive them. And
this being so, it would surely be our longing wish and prayer that He would let
us pass to heaven by death before the advent of such evil times.
Nor is this all. For this question may be viewed from another standpoint. We are
Divinely exhorted to live in constant expecta tion of the Coming of the Lord; to
stand with our hand upon the latch, as it were, in readiness to obey His call.
And yet, we are assured of a long-drawn-out warning of His coming, not only by
the fiercest persecution earth has ever known, but also by a series of appalling
signs and portents in the sphere of nature!
Suppose that some chapter of a novel should contain the story of a man who
announces to his retinue of servants that he is going abroad, and may be absent
for a considerable time. The date of his return he cannot fix, but he assures
them that they shall have a very clear and ample warning notice of it. And yet,
at the same time, he goes on to impress upon them to live in constant
expectation of his coming back, for any day and any hour he may walk in upon
them. Should we not throw down the book with feelings either of amusement or
contempt for such utter nonsense? What, then, shall be our estimate of the
teaching above impugned, remembering that on a theme so sacred as that of our
Lord's return all folly is profane?"
( If the master told his servants that between the warning notice of his
coming and his actual arrival there would be an interval, and that during that
interval they might expect him any day and any hour, the story would exemplify
the difference between the words of verses 4-0 and of verses 33-44 of Matt. xxiv.)
CHAPTER IV.
The fulfilment of the Seventieth week of Daniel clearly pertains
to a time that is within the scope of other visions granted to the prophet, and
also of other Apocalyptic visions to which these are inseparably allied. At this
stage of our inquiry, therefore, we enter a field of heated controversy; and it
may be well, before proceeding, to consider the principles which should guide
our further progress. And this inquiry will be facilitated by a brief survey of
the scheme of Divine prophecy as a whole.
Until comparatively recent years the majority of prophetic students were ranged
in one or other of the rival camps of futurist or historicist interpretation.
But in these more enlightened days most of us have come to recognise the truth
of Bacon's words, that "Divine prophecies, being of the nature of their
Author, with whom a thousand years are but as one day, and, therefore, are not
fulfilled punctually at once, but have springing and germinant accomplishment
throughout many ages though the height or fulness of them may refer to some one
age." We refuse to believe, therefore as the futurist system would imply,
that Messianic prophecy has no voice for this age of Israel's rejection. And no
one who understands aright what may be termed the ground plan of the Bible will
enlist in the camp of the historicists. For that system, as formulated by its
accredited exponents, displays utter ignorance respecting the place which Israel
holds in the Divinely-revealed purposes for earth, and also as to the peculiar
character of this Christian dispensation and the distinctive truths pertaining
to it.
In its spiritual aspect the Bible is the story of redemption; and we know from
the Lord's own teaching that it speaks of Him in every part of it. In the record
of His post-resurrection ministry we read that "the Lord expounded in all
the Scriptures the things concerning Himself." (This threefold division
of the sacred Canon was familiar to every Hebrew. The Psalms being the first
book of the third division, gave its name to it.)And more definite still are
His words to the disciples on the day of the Ascension, "that all things
must be fulfilled which were written in the law of Moses, and in the prophets
and in the Psalms concerning Me."
But the Bible has also an exoteric aspect. And when thus read, what do we find?
A brief preface tells of the Creation and the Fall; of the judgment of the
Flood; of the apostasy of the Noachian age; and of the building of Babel, and
its consequences. The events of more than twenty centuries are thus dismissed in
the eleven chapters that lead up to the call of Abraham. And the rest of the Old
Testament relates to the Abrahamic race; the great Gentile nations of antiquity
coming under notice only in connection with Israel. For Israel was chosen of God
to be His witnesses and agents upon earth. As the Apostle to the Gentiles wrote
to a Gentile church, "to them (Israel) were committed the oracles of
God;" and of them, "as concerning the flesh, Christ came." And
with emphasis he wrote also, "God hath not cast away His people whom He
foreknew"; and the receiving of them again to favour will be as life from
the dead '' in blessing to the world.
But ever since the days of the Latin Fathers Christendom religion has been
obsessed by the error of supposing that "the Church" has supplanted
Israel in the Divine scheme of prophecy; that God has jettisoned His revealed
purposes for earth in relation to the Covenant people; and that when "the
number of His elect" of this dispensation is complete, earth and its
inhabitants will be engulfed in a cataclysm of judgment fire. But human sin
cannot thwart the purposes of God, albeit the realisation of them may thus be
delayed. And no Divine word of prophecy or promise can ever fail. The prophecy
of Israel's sacred calendar, for example, shall be fulfilled in every part of
it. For even the festivals which marked the successive stages of the annual
harvest of the land are a veiled prophecy of the harvest of redemption.
The sheaf of the first fruits at Passover speaks of Christ and His resurrection
from the dead. The "two wave loaves" of Pentecost point forward to the
two houses of Israel in full acceptance with God in days to come. And when, at
the Feast of Tabernacles, the Israelites assembled in Jerusalem with palm
branches in their hands, the celebration typified the harvest-home of redemption
- earth's great "Feast of Ingathering," when the palm-bearing host of
the redeemed of an age still future, an innumerable multitude "out of all
nations and kindreds and peoples and tongues," shall raise their
loud-voiced cry of praise to God.
The popular conception of the Divine "plan of the ages" may be
epigrammatically described as a pandemonium ending with a conflagration. How
vastly different is it from the scheme revealed in Scripture? For all Hebrew
prophecy, from Moses to Malachi, speaks of "times of restitution of all
things, or, in other words, of a coming age when everything shall be put right
on earth by a reign of righteousness and peace.
And this was the burden of the Baptist's preaching, and of the early ministry of
the Lord and His Apostles. "The kingdom of heaven is at hand" was not
"the gospel" as we understand the word; it heralded the advent of the
promised " times of restitution," when the heavens shall rule upon the
earth. But though Israel's Messiah-King was in their midst "His own
received Him not," and His death on Calvary was the response the nation
made to that "gospel of the kingdom."
His intercessory prayer upon the cross obtained for them a respite from the
consequences of that awful sin; and at Pentecost the Apostle of the Circumcision
was inspired to proclaim that a national repentance would bring back "the
Christ who before was preached unto them," and usher in the promised age of
blessing. But Israel was obdurate, and the murder of Stephen was the answer made
to the Pentecostal amnesty. He was the messenger sent after the King to say they
would not have Him to reign over them. So "there was no remedy," and
instead of sending back the Christ, God sent them the awful judgment under which
the nation still lies prostrate. After the death of Stephen, the Apostle Paul
received his call. It is generally over-looked that, though his commission was
specially to the Gentiles, it included a definite mission to Israel And in
fulfilment of that mission he traversed all Jewry, from Jerusalem round to Rome.
And in every place his first appeal was to the Synagogue.
But though individual Jews responded to the Gospel, not a single synagogue
accepted the proffered mercy. That part of his commission, therefore, was
fulfilled, when "the chief of the Jews" in Rome rejected his
testimony; and the Book of the Acts closes by proclaiming that "the
salvation of God was sent unto the Gentiles." And surely the fact is
significant that it is in "the Captivity Epistles," written after that
crisis in his ministry, that we find the full revelation of the distinctive
truths of Christianity.
Then as to principles of interpretation; if at a meeting of the Great Sanhedrin
in Jerusalem, two thousand years ago, some learned Rabbi had ventured to offer a
strictly Scriptural forecast of the coming and career of Christ, he would
doubtless have been silenced by the indignant rebuke that such literalness of
exegesis was fitted to bring discredit upon Holy Scripture. And yet we now read
those very prophecies with knowledge of their fulfilment even in minute details.
Here are a few of them:
"A virgin shall conceive and bear a son ";
"thy King cometh unto thee . . . riding upon an ass ";
"they weighed for my price thirty pieces of silver ";
"and I took the thirty pieces of silver and cast them to the potter in the
house of the Lord ";
"they part my garments among them and cast lots upon my vesture ";
"they pierced my hands and my feet ";
"they gave me vinegar to drink."
To the prophets themselves such words were full of mystery; and no doubt they
were generally "explained away" as mere poetry. And yet in every jot
and tittle of them they found their counterpart in fact. Seeing then that the
Scriptural records of such fulfilments are our best, if not our only, guide in
dealing with prophecies that were still unfulfilled at the close of the sacred
Canon, we may unreservedly accept the principle of literal fulfilment in our
study of them.
We shall therefore take careful note of the prefatory words of Gabriel's
prophecy, echoing the concluding words of Daniel's prayer:
"Seventy weeks are decreed upon thy people and thy holy city." And we
shall reject any scheme of interpretation that finds the fulfilment of this
prophecy in the present dispensation when Jerusalem is a Gentile city, and
Israel is Lo-ammi.
But while insisting on the principle of literal fulfilment, we must not reject
the other principle of "germinant accomplishment." For Scripture
itself affords some striking illustrations of it; as, for example, the Lord's
reference to the Baptist as being the Elijah of Malachi's prophecy. "If ye
are willing to receive him (He said) this is Elijah." And yet at a later
date he said, "Elijah truly shall first come and restore all things. And
specially apt is the Apostle Peter's reference to the outpouring of the Spirit
at Pentecost as being within the scope of Joel's prophecy -the fulfilment of
which pertains to an age after Israel has been restored to national prosperity
and spiritual blessing. For this is the burden of Joel's prophecy. In the
present age of Israel's rejection, Jew and Gentile stand by nature upon the same
level of guilt and doom. "There is no difference, for all have
sinned." But neither is there any difference as regards salvation. Grace is
reigning, and therefore "there is no difference, for the same Lord is rich
unto all that call upon Him. The Jew call have blessing as freely as his
neighbour, if only he will give up his boasted vantage ground of covenant and
promise. Blessing on that ground is as inconsistent with grace, as is blessing
on the ground of works, or of personal merit of any kind. For iii the same sense
in which we say that "God cannot lie," we recognise that He cannot act
upon incompatible principles at the same time.
It is clear, therefore, that before this prophecy of the Seventy Weeks can be
fulfilled for Daniel's people, there must be a change of dispensation as
definite and vital as that which took place when Israel was rejected and set
aside. Israel's outcast condition is one of the "mystery" truths of
this Christian dispensation.(It was in grace that God gave the covenant; but
the covenant established a relationship; and, for those who were within it,
blessing was on that ground. But when the Cross put an end to every claim upon
God, the only alternatives were grace or judgment.) But this dispensation
will be brought to an end when the Lord rises up from the throne of grace and,
in fulfilment of that other "mystery," comes for His heavenly people,
including both Jews and Gentiles, who are one with himself as members of
"the Church which is his body." And then the earthly people will come
to their own again; and " the receiving of them will be fraught with
widespread blessing.
The prophecy of Zechariah points forward to "that day" when there will
be a great national and spiritual revival among them in their own city and land.
And the blessings promised to them in Daniel ix. 24 await "that day "
of Zechariah xiii. 1. In no part of them have these blessings yet been realised
for Israel.
CHAPTER V.
The Lord's reference to "the abomination of desolation
spoken of by Daniel the prophet," gives the clue to the right
interpretation of the unfulfilled portion of the prophecy of the Seventy Weeks.
If the Sermon on the Mount is commonly misread. no less so is this " Second
Sermon on the Mount," in which that reference occurs. (Matthew xxiv. 15.)
To understand it aright we must remember that it is a prophecy; and, as already
suggested, we must put ourselves in the place of those to whom it was addressed,
and study it as though the present "mystery" dispensation had never
intervened, and the predicted events had run their course during the lifetime of
the Apostles .
His words were in reply to their inquiry, of verse 3; "What shall be the
sign of Thy coming, and of the winding up of the age" And, of course,
the" Coming" to which they refer is that of Messianic prophecy, and
the "age" is that of Gentile supremacy, which is to last until that
Coming. In verse 3 He speaks of the sunteleia of the age; and in verse 14 of its
telos (or end). And then, as is so usual in the prophetic Scriptures, He goes
back upon the period already covered in brief outline; and in verse 15 He gives
them the sign by which they will know that the warned-against terrors of the
Great Tribulation are about to break upon them. (v. 21.)
Although the events of the siege and capture of Jerusalem by Titus may well be
within the scope of the Lord's words, surely no one who studies them in
connection with Daniel's prophecy, which the Lord expressly cites, and the other
Scriptures relating to the same era, can entertain a doubt that their fulfilment
awaits the future restoration of the Covenant People to their own land and to
Divine favour.
For the words which theLord spoke that day upon the Mount of Olives were not
"spent (to use a legal term) when the Jewish disciples to whom they were
addressed became, so to speak, "denationalised" by being raised to the
heavenly relationship of the Body of Christ, in which "there is neither Jew
nor Gentile." Like all the words He spoke on earth, they are eternal; and
in an age to come they will be read and pondered by an "elect remnant
"of Israel, gathered in their own land. We are always keen to mark how
clearly the Lord had us in view in much of His teaching; but Christians
seem never to realise that, in a passage such as this, He was thinking of His
saints in the coming days of the fiercest trial which His people have ever
known. If even in this time of their impenitence and rejection "they are
beloved for the fathers' sakes," how deep and solicitous must be that love,
in view of the coming age of their repentance and faith! Can we doubt that, when
the Lord gave utterance to this forecast, His Divine omniscience had in view His
Jerusalem saints of that future age in which it will be all fulfilled? Nor can
we doubt that, as they scan the newspapers, and watch the gathering clouds of
the storm that is about to break upon them, it will be with mind and heart
intent upon these sacred words of warning. And thus they will await the dreaded
signal for immediate flight- "the abomination of desolation, spoken of by
Daniel the prophet, standing in the holy place."
"History repeats itself." The first holder of the Imperial sceptre of
Gentile supremacy demanded divine worship for a statue of himself. And the last
great Kaiser of the evil line will set up his image, to be worshipped by all,
under penalty of death for refusing to render it divine homage. And the language
of Daniel ix. 27 is explicit that it will be "upon the Temple" not
inside the shrine where none but the priests would see it, but in some prominent
position, coram populo. And as Satan will be the instigator of this,
surely the suggestion is neither wild nor fanciful that the site on which the
statue of the Antichrist shall be erected may be "a pinnacle of the
Temple," corresponding to that on which the Lord Jesus stood when tempted
of the Devil."
The "text-card system" of prophetic study has tended to discredit the
Bible. And a knowledge of "dispensational truth" is a safeguard
against this influence. For it teaches us, as Bacon quaintly phrased it,
"to sort every prophecy of Scripture with the event fulfilling the
same." And thus it brings to light the hidden harmony of Holy Writ; and
prophetic study, instead of being a pastime for mystics, becomes a comfirmation
of our faith. As already noticed, "the doctrine of the second advent"
is a by-product of this text-card system of exegesis. Every passage that speaks
of the Lord's coming again is separated from its context; and all are thrown
together, as though they referred to the same event, and are to be fulfilled at
the same epoch.
What concerns us here, however, is the prophecy of the Seventy Weeks; and at the
cost of some repetition a restatement of the problem may be opportune. That era
has to do with Daniel's city and people. The 69th week ended with "the
cutting off " of Messiah. Israel was then set aside, and the course of the
era was interrupted. And the unfulfilled 70th week will not begin to run until
the covenant people are again Divinely recognised. And, as already noticed, that
recognition implies a. thorough "change of dispensation." The reign of
grace must end. and the members of the heavenly election of this age must be
called away from earth before the earthly people can be restored to their own
again. (See page 84 ante.)
The epoch of the whole era was "the issuing of a decree to restore and
build Jerusalem." And the epoch of the final week of the era will be the
signing of a treaty by the last great Kaiser- the coming Prince of Daniel ix.
27-guaranteeing to the Jews their national rights, with special reference,
apparently, to the observance of their national religion. And in the middle of
the week he will violate that treaty by the desecration of the Temple; an event
that will be followed immediately by "the Great Tribulation." The
duration of that persecution is definitely specified as three and a half years,
forty-two months, or twelve hundred and sixty days. And it will be brought to a
sudden end by the terrible convulsions in the sphere of nature which are to
herald the day of wrath.
The Lord's words recorded in Matthew xxiv. 6, ff., have their precise
counterpart in the Apocalyptic visions of the Seals (Rev. vi.). His first
warning note is of "wars and rumours of wars "; and when the first
seal is opened, a white-horsed rider goes forth "conquering and to
conquer."
The Lord next indicates wars of a more terrible character; and this has its
parallel in the appearance of the red-horsed rider of the second seal, to whom
is given "a great sword" and "power to take peace from the earth,
and that they should kill one another." The wars of the first seal are
apparently of the type to which we are accustomed; but those of the second seal
will be an orgy of ruthless slaughter. It is not a mere repetition of the
preceding vision.
The Lord's next word is "famines "; and when the third seal is broken,
the black-horsed rider appears with a pair of balances in his hand, to weigh out
the necessaries of life at famine prices. As famines are natural sequence to
wars of the type here indicated, no less certainly does pestilence follow
famine. And " pestilence" is the word the Lord next utters; so the
rider in the vision of the fourth seal is empowered to kill with " death
"-a word that needs no interpreting to any who realise the horrors of
epidemic plague. But the judgments of the seals are cumulative, and this rider,
whose name is Death, "kills with the sword and with hunger and with
pestilence."
No rider appears when the fifth seal is broken; but neither the meaning of the
vision, nor its place in the scheme of prophecy, is open to doubt. In Matt. xxiv.
8, the Lord describes the judgments of the first four seals as "time
beginning of sorrows "; and in verse 9 we read "then shall they
deliver you up unto tribulation, and shall kill you; and ye shall be hated of
all the nations for My name's sake." The Lord's words in verse 21 teach
explicitly that this is tile Tribulation, the "time of trouble "of
Daniel xii. 1; and in the vision of the fifth seal are seen under the altar the
souls of the martyred victims of that awful persecution. No less certain is the
identity of the events of the sixth seal with those portrayed by the Lord in
verse 29. All the events of the preceding seals are such as men can account for
on natural principles. But now, in view of the unparalleled sufferings of His
people in the great Tribulation, and in response to the prayers of the martyrs
of that awful time (Rev. vi. 9, 10), God at last puts forth His power; appalling
portents in the sphere of nature strike terror into the hearts of the impenitent
of every class, from kings to bond-men, and in a universal panic they seek to
hide from the coming wrath.
The Lord's words in verse 29 are explicit that the terrors of the sixth seal
follow immediately after tile Tribulation; and, as the period of the Tribulation
is the latter half of the 70th week of Daniel, the events of these seals fall
within the chronology of prophecy. But it is a common error to suppose that the
events foretold in verses 30 and 31 will immediately follow the close of the
70th week. The vision of the seventh seal is yet to be fulfilled. The theu
(toto) of verse 30 does not refer to the telos of the age, but to its
sunteleia- not to a definite point in time, but to the whole period here in
view-a sense which the word bears in three other verses in this same chapter.
And the Lord's teaching in the passage beginning with verse 32 deals with that
very period.
And here another parallelism with the vision o the seals suggests itself. In
Rom. viii. 1, we read: "When he had opened the seventh seal there was
silence in heaven about the space of half-an-hour." May not this mysterious
lull symbolise the very period here in view? What its duration will be we know
not, save that it will be within the life-time of that generation, and yet that
it will be sufficiently prolonged to make the world forget the preceding
terrors, and to make His people need exhortations to sustained watchfulness.
"As in tile days that were before the flood they were eating and drinking,
marrying and giving in marriage," so will it be then. Signs and portents in
abundance mark the sunteleta of that age, but its telos will be
unheralded and sudden. In answer to His disciples' question, I again repeat, He
warned them to watch, not for His coming, but for the events which must precede
it. But now that these events are all fulfilled, his word is "Watch, for ye
know not what hour your Lord doth come." For time day and hour of the
coming of the Son of Man is a secret unrevealed.
CHAPTER VI.
"The people of the Prince who is coming will destroy the
city and the sanctuary" (Daniel ix. 26). Who is this Prince? The manner in
which he is here mentioned enables us to answer this question with confidence.
For it is not by way of a new revelation, but of incidental reference to sonic
one of whose personality and coming Daniel was already aware. There can be no
doubt, therefore, that he is "the King of fierce countenance" of the
vision accorded to the prophet two years before.And it is universally recognised
that the Antichrist of Hebrew prophecy is identical with the Antichrist of the
New Testament.
The view that time Coming Prince is the Messiah might be ignored, were it, not
that some eminent names can be cited in support of it. Indeed, it is
sufficiently refuted by time fact that it is by the people of this Prince that
the city and sanctuary will be destroyed. To find the fulfilment of this in the
action of the Zealots during the Titus siege indicates to what lengths some
expositors will go in support of a false system of exegesis. For the suggestion
that Holy Scripture would describe religious apostates as the Lord's people
savours of profanity.
A like remark applies to that wild vagary of exegesis that the Lord made a seven
years' covenant with the Jewish people, and brought it to an end by His death
"in the midst of the week." And the figment that His death put an end
to "sacrifice and oblation" savours of the ignorance of apostate
Christendom. The Jew is more intelligent in this respect than the nominal
Christian; for he knows that, until this sin-defiled earth has been purified by
fire, there can be neither altar nor shrine without "sacrifice and
oblation." And when, in the future age of the kingdom, a regenerate Israel
will assemble in their divinely-ordered Temple at Jerusalem, the Book of Ezekiel
will give them in full detail the Divinely revised ritual to guide their worship
. *
(They will doubtless note what that ritual is and what it retains of the
Mosaic cult. They will read Ezekiel with the Epistle to the Hebrews in their
hands; and they will not fail to distinguish between sin-offerings in relation
to ceremonial uncleanness, and the great sin-offering which typified what the
death of Christ accomplished in putting away the sins of the people. In that
aspect of it the sin-offering can never be repeated. As the Epistle to the
Hebrews teaches, the Christian place of worship is the sanctuary above, with its
heavenly altar and Great High Priest. On this subject I would refer to Bishop
Lightfoot's Commentary on Philippians, pp. 181-185.)
The word "Antichrist" occurs nowhere in Scripture save in the Epistles
of John. But it is recognised that the title applies to the Kaiser of Daniel's
visions, to the Man of Sin of 2 Thessalonians, and to the "Beast" of
the Apocalypse.
Belief in a personal Antichrist was universal in the Early Church, and it held
undisputed sway for more than a thousand years. But when the apostasy of
Christendom was fully developed, it was only natural that Christians should
raise the question whether the prophecies of Antichrist might not fmd their
fulfilment in Rome. And this belief very generally prevailed until the
Evangelical revival of the nineteenth century. In these days of ours
Protestantism has no such champions as were the men of that revival. And what
led to their change of view was no weakening of their antipathy to Rome but a
more intelligent study of Holy Scripture. They awoke to the discovery that this
Christian dispensation" denotes neither the failure nor the abandonment of
the Divine "plan of the ages." They came to understand the place which
the earthly people of the covenant hold in that plan, and to realise that
although both the Abrahamic and the Davidic covenants are now in abeyance, they
have not been cancelled; and that when this dispensation is brought to an end by
the Lord's coming to call His heavenly people home, the main stream of Messianic
prophecy will resume its course as though this Christian age had never
intervened.
Holy Scripture had long been like an elaborate mosaic, of which the several
parts had been disturbed, and the main design for-gotten. But its hidden harmony
was brought to light by the study of "dispensational truth" (an apt
phrase that was much in use in those days). And that study included the
"mystery" truths of this distinctively Christian revelation, truths
which had been lost in the interval between the Apostolic age and the era of the
great Patristic theologians.
Although traces of these truths may be found in the writings of theFathers, they
have no place in their "systematic theology." They confounded the true
Church, the Body of Christ, with the Professing Church on earth - a departure
from the faith whioh is the root error of the Roman apostasy. And they
confounded the Lord's coming at the close of this Christian dispensation with
His coming for the deliverance of His earthly people in a future age. And they
also confounded grace with covenant, and thus let slip the basal truth of
Christianity.
For the doctrines which generally pass for Christian truths are older even than
the Divinely-ordered religion of Judaism. The truth of the first coming of
Christ is as old as the Eden promise of "the woman's seed." And
atonement by His death is as old as Abel's sacrifice. His coming again to
judgment dates back to the prophecy of "Enoch the seventh from Adam ";
and justification by faith was revealed to Abraham. But not until we reach the
Epistles of the New Testament do we find the "mystery" truths of
Christianity - truths, that is, which had not been revealed in the earlier
Scriptures. As, for example, "the mystery of the Gospel "- the great
basal truth of the reign of grace; the "mystery" of the Church, the
Body of Christ, with its heavenly calling and hope; and the "mystery"
of that coming of the Lord which will bring the present dispensation to a close.
The study of "dispensational truth" in no way undermines the principle
of "germinant accomplishment" of the prophecies, which is the element
of truth in the "historicist" scheme of interpretation; but it exposes
and refutes the pretensions of that scheme to finality of fulfilment. The evil
of that system is not merely that it limits and perverts the scope and meaning
of special chapters and isolated texts, but that, in doing this, it tends to
discredit the Bible altogether. And as Adolf Saphir wrote, it thus prepared the
way for the attacks of Rationalism and Neology.
Moreover, this "Protestant interpretation" became an anachronism when
the Pope lost his" temporal power," and Rome became the capital of the
Italian kingdom. This event led the" historicists "to adopt the view
that the Antichrist was not the Pope, but the Church of which he is the head.
But Revelation xvii. is explicit that "the Harlot" is distinct from
"the Beast "; and therefore every proof that the scarlet woman is the
Apostate Church is a further proof that she cannot be the Antichrist.
The pretensions of Rome reach their climax in claiming that the Pope is the
vicar of Christ, whereas the Kaiser of prophecy will demand universal worship as
being himself the Messiah. He is not a Vice-Christ, but Antichrist. As the Lord
expressly declared, "he will come in his own name." He will be the
impersonation of" the mystery of lawlessness," whereas the Pope and
the Church of Rome are merely its most advanced exponents and representatives.
Every sacerdotalist, every one who believes in "the Holy Catholic
Church," save in the sense in which the Reformers defined it - in a word,
everyone who puts "religion" in the place of Christ, and in any way
denies that He is the only Mediator between God and man - is an Antichrist in
the same sense in which the Pope is Antichrist. The difference is one merely of
degree.
A single instance must here suffice to justify my charge against "the
continuous historical interpretation " scheme. Elliott's Horae Apocalyptica.
is the standard text-book of the cult. Its first five chapters may well impress
us with a sense of the value of the writer's scheme. But when he passes from the
first five seals to explain that the vision of the sixth seal was fulfilled by
the downfall of Paganism in the fourth century, we suffer a revulsion of feeling
proportionate to our sense of the "trueness" and solemnity of Holy
Writ.
For the closing verses of Revelation vi. are a passage the awful solemnity of
which has no parallel in Scripture, save in the kindred prophecies of Isaiah and
Joel, and of the Lord Himself in Matthew xxiv. They speak of the dread dies
ire, ending with the words, "the great day of His wrath is come, and
who shall be able to stand?" If it be urged that the events of fifteen
centuries ago were within the scope of the prophecy we can consider the matter
on its merits; but when we are told that the prophecy was thus fulfilled. we can
hold no parley with the teaching. It is the merest trifling with Scripture.
"Moreover, it clashes with the charter truth of Christianity. For if the
day of wrath has come, the day of grace is past, and the gospel of grace is no
longer a Divine message to mankind. To suppose that the day of wrath can be an
episode in this dispensation of grace betrays ignorance of grace and brings
Divine wrath into contempt. The grace of God in this day of grace surpasses
human thought, and His wrath in the day of wrath will be no less Divine. The
opening of the sixth seal heralds the dawning of that awful day; the visions of
the seventh seal unfold its unutterable terrors. But, we are told, the pouring
out of the vials, 'the seven plagues which are the last, or in them is finished
the wrath of God' (Rev. xv. 1, R.V.), is being now accomplished. The sinner,
therefore, may comfort himself with the knowledge that divine wrath is but stage
thunder which, in a practical and busy world, may safely be ignored!
Even in Apostolic times there were many Antichrists: in these days of ours they
are innumerable. During the last half-century their influence has undermined the
Protestantism of our National Church. The Evangelicals have become a dwindling
minority, and the "Evangelical Party" is but a memory of the past.
During the same period a crusade of systematised infidelity has corrupted all
the Churches of the Reformation. And side by side with these phases of the
apostasy is the rise and spread of demon cults, some of which overawe their
votaries by a display of genuine miraculous power.
The times are full of peril, and we need to realise that all these antichristian
movements are preparing the way for Antichrist himself.
It is of practical importance, therefore, to note what Scripture teaches
respecting his character and career. And this will appear in a further study of
the prophecy of the Seventy Weeks.
CHAPTER VII.
The belief of early times, that the Antichrist will be
personally energised by Satan, was based on Scripture. For his coming, we are
told, will be "after the working of Satan, with all power and signs and
lying wonders." Still more explicit is the language of the Apocalyptic
vision, that "the Dragon gave him his power and his throne and great
authority." And we recall the words of the Lord Himself that, in that awful
time, false Christs and false prophets "will show great signs and wonders,
insomuch that, if it were possible, they will deceive the very elect."
To fritter away the meaning of these statements by referring them to the errors
and follies of priestoraft is a profane trifling with the Word of God. Indeed,
to put it on a lower ground, it is an insult to the intelligence of every
Protestant. For no one whose mind has not been "doped " by
"Christendom religion" could be duped by its "blasphemous fables
and dangerous deceits."
Even among spiritual Christians there are but few who attempt to realise what
the condition of the Professing Christian Church will be during the age of which
these Scriptures speak. In his Commentary on Matthew xii. 44, Dean Alford
describes in a few pregnant sentences its sad history and present condition. And
he adds:- 'What the effect of the Captivity was to the Jews, that of the
Reformation has been to Christendom. The first evil spirit has been cast out.
But by the growth of hypocrisy, secularity, and rationalism the house has become
empty, swept and garnished by the decencies of civilisation and discoveries of
secular knowledge, but empty of living and earnest faith. And he must read
prophecy but ill, who does not see under all these seeming improvements the
preparation for the final development of the Man of Sin, the great re-possession
when idolatry and the seven more wicked spirits shall bring the outward frame of
so-called Christendom to a fearful end."
If the present condition of the Church is a cause of distress and grief to all
true Christians, what will it be when they are called home to heaven at the
coming of the Lord, and the restraining influence of the Holy Spirit is no
longer felt, as it is felt even in these evil days! It will not be the
superstitious only who will be deceived by "the signs and wonders of
falsehood." Even the infidel will accept their testimony. His unbelief
today is not so unintelligent as is the quasi faith of many who pose as
Christians and Ministers of Christ. Like them, he accounts for the miracles of
Scripture by the fact "that the Bible was written by orientals for
orientals, and that miracle and myth are congenial to the oriental mind."
And he appeals to the absence of miracles during the history of Christendom.
"If (he says) I witnessed miracles such as are alleged to have occurred in
Bible times, I would renounce my infidelity." This is the mental attitude
of multitudes of fair-minded men. And thus they spread a net in which they will
become entangled in the coming Antichristian age. And if open infidelity
capitulates before its "signs and lying wonders," surely the nominal
Christians will flock to its shrines and join in its cult.
But, it will be asked, if the Lord's own people are "caught up" at His
coming, and nominal Christians accept the Antichrist, who will be the victims of
the persecution? Now, first, it is noteworthy that the Antichrist is primarily
the persecutor of the "Covenant people." And though, in the
Apocalypse, the Great Tribulation embraces Christendom, in Messianic prophecy it
is spoken of only in relation to Israel. And while, in ancient times, idolatry
was their national sin, the judgments which that sin brought upon them seem to
have made them intolerant of idol worship. Indeed, the idolatry of
"Christendom religion "is one element that prejudices the Jew against
Christianity. No display of miraculous power would lead him to prostrate himself
before an image.
And secondly, the difficulty above stated is one of many that are due to our
inveterate habit of confounding plausible inferences from Scripture with what
Scripture explicitly teaches. It is commonly assumed, and often asserted with
emphasis, that in that coming age there will be no salvation for the sinners of
Christendom. For is it not written that "God shall send them strong
delusion, that they should believe a lie; that they all might be condemned who
believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness " But this is
merely a special application of the great principle that the acceptance or
rejection of Christ fixes the destiny of men. And we may not dare to assert that
a just and loving God will hold that every unbeliever is a Christ-rejecter. Even
in our own favoured land there are very many "church members" who have
never heard "the gospel of the grace of God," but have it dinned into
their ears continually that "the sacraments," plus a moral and
religious life, will win heaven for them. And what of the multitudes who are
never "evangelised" in any way?
And is there any Scriptural warrant for asserting that some, even in truly
Christian circles, who are now "halting between two opinions," may not
find mercy when brought to decision by being left behind at the coming of the
Lord? All such will have forfeited the heavenly home and the heavenly glory that
are the portion of the redeemed of this present dispensation. But we dare not
assert that they can never find salvation, and be enrolled in the book of life;
albeit they must needs "enter the kingdom" through torture and death,
in a persecution more awful than any recorded in the past.
But a difficulty of another kind claims notice, It is argued that, if the
Antichrist be energised by Satan, he must be a monster of wickedness. How then
can he command the worship of "all that dwell upon the earth? This
difficulty springs from the prevalent belief in the mythical devil of
Christendom. Had such a monster appeared in Eden, Eve would have fled from him
in terror. But she was "thoroughly deceived " by the real Satan when
he posed as the great philanthropists and proclaimed "the gospel of
humanity."
The characteristics of that Eden gospel are both simple and charming. "Hath
God said!" "Ye shall not surely die." "Ye shall be as
gods." First, it casts a doubt upon the plain words of the Divine
revelation; secondly, it denies the eternal consequences of sin; and thirdly, it
proclaims the elevation of humanity. In this gospel there is everything to
attract the "natural" man, and nothing to repel him. And oven here and
now, in Christian Britain, it is preached from numberless quasi Christian
pulpits; and thousands, even of real Christians, are in some measure deceived
and corrupted by it. Who then can doubt that, when it is accredited by a great
display of miraculous power, it will gain universal acceptance
We cannot understand aright the prophecies relating to Antichrist unless we
realise that, so far from being a monster of hideous mien and loathsome
character, Satan is a being whom man, in his estrangement from God, would admire
and emulate.
But did not the Lord Jesus brand him as a liar and a murderer? The words here
referred to claim the closest scrutiny. They were addressed to the religious
leaders of the Jews, devoutly zealous men who, having witnessed His miracles and
weighed us teaching, were now plotting His destruction. To them it was He
said,."Ye are of your father the Devil, and the desires of your father it
is your will to do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the
truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaketh the lie he speaketh of
his own; for he is a liar and the father of it. And because I tell you the truth
ye believe me not."
The gloss that the Lord's sayings were always true, and that the Devil told
lies, is deplorably trivial. The lie is here the antithesis to the truth; and
the Devil's being a liar is connected with his being "a murderer from the
beginning." The beginning of what? We are here vouchsafed a glimpse into a
past eternity, when, to the heavenly host was first made known "the mystery
of God, even Christ," namely, that a Firstborn was to be revealed, who was
"in all things to have the pre-eminence." The wonderful being whom we
know as Satan, and whom the Lord saw "fall from heaven as lightning,"
aspired to that position; and he rebelled against the Divine purpose, and from
that hour he has sought to thwart it. This is fully disclosed in the
"Temptation" of our Lord. Who of us makes any serious effort to
realise the meaning of that narrative? Having "led Him up," and given
Him that mysterious vision of earthly sovereignty, "the Devil said unto
Him, 'To thee will I give all this authority and the glory of them, for it hath
been delivered unto me, and to whomsoever I will I give it. If thou,
therefore,wilt worship before me it shall all be thine."
This was no mere outburst of profane folly. It was a bold assertion of a
disputed right. Satan claims to be the true Messiah, the true Firstborn and heir
of creation; and as. such he claims the worship of mankind. These apocalyptic
visions foretell his greatest, as it will be his final, effort to supplant the
Christ of God. And to that end he will give to the Antichrist "his power
and his throne and his great authority."
Can we then be surprised at the sequel, that "all the world wondered after
the Beast? And they worshipped the Dragon (Satan, the old Serpent of Eden) which
gave power unto the Beast; and they worshipped the Beast, saying, 'Who is like
unto the Beast?'" But even this is not all. For the Seer "beheld
another Beast . . . who exerciseth all the power of the first Beast before him,
and causeth the earth and them that dwell therein to worship the first
Beast." Thus the mystery of the Godhead will be travestied by this trinity
of evil - Satan, the Antichrist, and the "False Prophet." And as
already noticed, they will be accredited by signs and wonders that would
deceive, if that were possible, the very elect. If we appreciate in any measure
the awful significance and solemnity of what these Scriptures teach, we shall no
longer be deluded by the almost unbelievable folly of seeking their fulfilment
in the history of Christendom. It is not unnatural that an unbeliever should
regard these visions as the brilliant day-dreams of a pious mystic. But that any
spiritual Christian should treat them with such utter levity is no less strange
than it is deplorable.
CHAPTER VIII.
No intelligent student of these Scriptures can fail to recognise
that, in the age to which they point, there will be spiritual forces in
operation such as earth has never experienced in the past, and from which the
present age has been singularly free. For, as compared with both past and
future, this Christian age is marked by altogether peculiar characteristics.
First, "the grace of God, salvation-bringing to all men, has been
manifested," and the Lord Jesus is exalted, not only as Prince, but as
Saviour. Therefore is it that the Divine throne is now a throne, not of
judgment, but of grace. And this again explains the mystery of a silent heaven.
For "the kindness and love-toward-man of our Saviour God has been
manifested." He has spoken His last word of mercy, and when again He breaks
the silence it will be in wrath. But until the Lord Jesus passes from the throne
of grace to the throne of judgment all direct punitive action against human sin
is deferred. Before the dawning of the "day of vengeance" "the
acceptable year of the Lord" must run its predestined course.
And secondly, the Holy Spirit is now dwelling upon earth. " The promise of
the Father" was not merely that believers in Christ should have the
Spirit's guidance and help, for that was the portion of the people of God in
every age, but that, when the Lord Jesus returned to heaven, He would send the
Holy Spirit to take His place on earth, a promise that was fulfilled at
Pentecost. So really is He present with us that the greeting from heaven, with
which certain of the Epistles open, is only from "the Father and the Lord
Jesus Christ." And during His presence with His people upon earth the
powers of hell are definitely restrained. But, when the people of the heavenly
election are called from earth to their heavenly home, at the Coming of the
Lord, that restraint will cease, "the Man of Sin" will be revealed,
and the powers of hell will be permitted to operate in ways and to an extent
unprecedented in the past. Another element which tends to a misreading of these
prophecies is a want not only of sympathy, but of acquaintance, with the
promises and hopes of Israel. As believers of this dispensation "our
citizenship is in heaven," whereas Israel's citizenship is earthly. The
true Israelite, therefore, in the coming age will not be looking for the Lord to
call him away to heaven, but for "the coming of the Son of Man" to
"restore again the kingdom to Israel, " and inaugurate the promised
rule of the heavens upon earth. The Lord Jesus was "born King of the
Jews." And when He began His Ministry by proclaiming that "the kingdom
of Heaven is at hand," that "gospel of the kingdom" did not mean
that God was about to rule in heaven, but that, in fulfilment of Messianic
prophecy, Divine government was about to be established upon earth.
And this explains the attitude and conduct of the Jewish leaders toward the Lord
Jesus. They argued that, if He was indeed the Messiah, He was the promised
"Son of David," who would put an end to Gentile supremacy and restore
the Davidic covenant, which had been in abeyance ever since the imperial sceptre
was entrusted to the King of Babylon.
(So deep and widespread is ignorance of all this that those of us who are
advanced in years remember when the belief prevailed, even among spiritual men
"of light and leading," that the Kingdom of Heaven would be
established, as of course, by the preaching of the Gospel. If such a belief has
survived the apoatasy of the last half-century, surely this hideous world war
will avail to quench it. Human nature being what it is, there can be no reign of
peace on earth without stern and righteous government.)
The Messiah they were looking for would be a conquering hero, who would deliver
them from their enemies and revive the glories of the greatest of their kings.
And such the future Antichrist will be; not merely a false Messiah in the
religious sense, but a mighty Kaiser. The Apocalyptic visions already quoted
clearly indicate that he will be a man of transcendent natural qualities.
"All the world wondered after the Beast . . . and they worshipped the
Beast, saying, Who is like unto the Beast? Who is able to make war with him?
" The mingling of Kaisership with Deity is as old as classic Paganism; and
it is not altogether unknown in later times. But it will be no mere theory in
the case of the Man of prophecy. A great statesman, an orator (v. 5), and a
brilliant general - here is the "superman "whom nations will honour,
and armies will follow with enthusiasm. And when we take account of the fact
that, added to this, he will be endowed with the superhuman powers of Satan, we
can understand the words of Christ, that none but the elect of God will refuse
to render him Divine homage. In these visions the word "beast"
signifies primarily an empire or kingdom, and then it is used to symbolise an
individual. The Beast of Rev. xiii. is clearly identical with the fourth Beast
of Daniel vii.- the last great Gentile world-power. But in the Apocalypse it
appears at a later stage of its development. Three periods of its history are
marked in Daniel. In the first it has ten horns. In the second it has eleven,
for a little horn comes up among the ten. In the third it has but eight, for
three of the ten have been torn away by the eleventh. Up to this point Daniel's
vision represents the beast merely as the fourth kingdom upon earth," but
here it turns away to describe the action of "the little horn."
And at this epoch it is that Revelation xiii. opens. The first three stages of
the history of "the fourth kingdom" are past, and another has been
developed. It is no longer a confederacy of nations bound together by treaty,
but of kings subordinate to a Kaiser whose greatness has won for him the
supremacy. And this is the Prince of the prophecy of the Seventy Weeks; the
Antichrist of the New Testament; the man whom Satan will single out to
administer his awful power on earth in days to come, the man to whom he will
give his throne, his power and great authority - all that the Lord Jesus refused
in the days of His humiliation. If Expositors are right in assuming that he is
the prominent figure in the several visions of the prophet Daniel there seems to
be no doubt that he will come to notice first as the ruler of some petty State
within the territorial limits of the ancient Grecian Empire. He is called
"a little horn, a symbol that well suits one who should arise from one of
those petty principalities which once abounded in Greece. For "a little
horn" indicates what he is, not as a man, but as a monarch. In his origin
he will, of course, be merely human; and for a time he will be a patron of
religion. But after the terrible crisis in his career, at which he sells himself
to Satan, he becomes a relentless persecutor, and he ends by claiming divine
honour.
This amazing change takes place at an epoch of supreme import in the course of
the future age, namely, the middle of the seventieth week of Daniel. For it is
an epoch signalised by the war in heaven between the Archangel and the Dragon;
when Satan and his angels will be "cast out into the earth," and the
Seer bewails mankind because the Devil is come down into their midst,
"having great wrath because he knoweth that he hath but a short time. As
the Coming Prince of the prophecy of the Seventy Weeks is identical with the Man
of Sin of 2 Thessalonians, that Epistle claims notice here. Both the Epistles to
that church indicate that a grievous persecution was then raging in
Thessalonica, and the Christians had come to believe that the Tribulation of
prophecy had begun, and "the day of the Lord was at hand "-" the
great and terrible day of Jehovah." Having regard to the teaching of the
First Epistle it may seem strange that such an error could prevail. But, owing
to the persecution, the Christians, no doubt, could only meet furtively and in
scattered groups; and their leaders being possibly in hiding, their knowledge of
that Epistle depended probably on what they remembered of it from hearing it
"read in church." Moreover, it would appear from chapter ii. 2 and
iii. 17 that they had received a forged letter, as from the Apostle, cancelling
or modifying the teaching of the First Epistle. And the Hebrew converts among
them would have knowledge of such Scriptures as, e.g., Isaiah xiii., Joel ii.,
and Malachi iv. 5. And, with these in view, they inigbt easily glide into the
error which the Second Epistle was designed to correct.
The Apostle's words, "I beseech you on behalf of the Coming of our Lord
Jesus Christ" (R.V. margin), show clearly that the error against which he
was warning them was destructive of the truth he had taught them. They could not
live looking for "that blessed hope" (Titus ii. 13) if they were
living in view of the awful terrors of the Tribulation and the day of the Lord.
For these lines of truth are wholly separate. The one is the line of Messianic
prophecy, leading up to the coming of Christ as Son of Man, in a future age, for
the deliverance of His earthly people, and for the establishment of His earthly
Kingdom. The other is not within the range of Messianic prophecy at all, but
points to the fuiluiment of the hope of His heavenly people of this Christian
dispensation. Following the words above quoted, the Apostle proceeds: "For
it (the day of the Lord) will not come except the falling away (the apostasy)
come first, and the Man of Sin be revealed, the son of perdition, he that
opposeth and exalteth himself against all that is called God or that is
worshipped. So that he sitteth in the temple of God, setting himself forth as
God."
These words claim careful attention. The so-called Protestant interpretation of
them finds their fulfilment in the Pope's being carried into St. Peter's at
Rome, and seated there somewhat higher than the "tabernacle of the
host." If St. Peter's were thus divinely recognised as "the templeof
God," those of us who reverence, and seek to obey, His Holy Word would
promptly make a qualified submission to Rome, and repair at times to the
appointed shrine! This Protestant interpretation thus undermines Protestantism
altogether! And this is only a very low ground for rejecting it, for such
trilling with and perverting of Scripture is deplorable and evil in the extreme.
The Apostle's language points to the same crisis as the Lord's words respecting
"the abomination of desolation, spoken of by Daniel the prophet." And
it will be fulfilled when the Prince of Daniel ix. violates his treaty with the
Jewish people, and desecrates the Holy Temple in Jerusalem.The Antichrist will
set up his image upon the Temple, to be worshipped by all (see p. 89 ante.) And
(on certain "high days," no doubt) he will personally sit enthroned
within the Sanctuary, "setting himself forth as God." This twofold
desecration is generally overlooked.
But is it credible that any Jew would acknowledge a Gentile as Messiah? Now
first, we have no definite ground for assuming that the Man of prophecy may not
be an Israelite. And secondly, are we to assume that "all power and signs
and wonders of falsehood" would prove unequal to the task of forging a
pedigree, and obtaining the acceptance of it by an apostate people? For the
"elect" among them will repudiate him. And the language of Daniel ix.
27 is noteworthy; it is with the many that he will make the treaty, implying
that a minority of the nation will stand aloof and refuse to be a party to it.
And lastly, if to the apostates of Christendom "God will send strong
delusion that they should believe the lie," is it strange that the
apostates of Judaism should also be thus divinely given over to delusion? And,
moreover, we are not dealing here with a human forecast, but with a Divine
prophecy.
CHAPTER IX.
"Prophecy is not given to enable us to prophesy, but as a
witness to God when the time (of fulfilment) comes." Even if limits of
space allowed of it, my appreciation of these words of Pusey's would prevent my
indulging here in any forecasts of the future, beyond what Scripture expressly
warrants. Certain extra-Scriptural forecasts have been discredited by the
present war. For example, the language of the opening verses of Zechariah xiv.
were taken to indicate that the future siege and capture of Jerusalem will be
the work of half-savage Oriental troops. For, it was argued, Western
civilisation would not tolerate the excesses hers described. How foolish this
appears in view of the atrocities perpetrated by the Germans in this war!
But while avoiding flights of fancy as to the means by which, and the manner in
which, the events foretold in prophecy will come about, we may well take note of
present-day movements and occurrences, which seem to be preparing the way for
their fulfilment. For example, appeal may be made to the probable effect of the
war on the future of Palestine. If the Turk be driven out, the attempt of any
one of the Entente Powers to seize possession of that land would be the signal
for another war! And this consideration will, in all probability, lead to its
being constituted a protected Jewish State. And thus the present generation may
possibly witness the building of the very temple upon which the Prince of
Daniels prophecy will yet sot up his image. But this is merely a probable
surmise, and the introduction of it here is possibly an indiscretion.
If Pusey's axiom were construed strictly the study of prophecy would be
valueless until the time of its fulfilment. But this was far from his intention.
For not only is it of fascinating interest to the thoughtful, but of great
practical importance to every Christian. It serves to put us on our guard
against evil influences and movements, of which the ultimate development and
full fruition are described in the prophetic Word. Spiritualism, Christian
Science, and other cults of a similar character, may be mentioned in this
connection. These cults are daily winning over not a few, even among those whose
Christian profession seemed to be above reproach. And the experience of many
gives proof that those who yield to these demon influences soon reach a stage
where recovery seems impossible, even if they wish to escape from them.
In view of the genuine miracles by which they are accredited, to denounce them
as mere charlatanism is idle. And as their miracles are of a beneficent
character their votaries regard them as Divine. In dark days of persecution
Satan was as "a roaring lion, seeking whom he might devour." And in
that character he will be known in the darker period of the coming age. But now
"he fashions himself as an angel of light," even as he did in Eden,
and in the Temptation of the Lord.
But, it may be asked, how can this be reconciled with what was stated on a
preceding page as to the contrast between the present age and that which is to
follow it? Here we must be guided by what Scripture records of former
"changes of dispensation." These changes find an illustration in the
sphere of nature. For while Science can mark with accuracy the changes of the
seasons, the actual transition is unnoticed by the observer. And this has its
parallel in the spiritual sphere. The law and the prophets were until John, and
then the Kingdom of God was preached. But yet the Lord reproached the Jews that
though they could discern the face of the sky they could not discern the signs
of the tunes. And so was it again when Israel was set aside, and the present
Christian dispensation was inaugurated. The change was a crisis of extreme
significance, but yet it passed unnoticed; and many characteristics of the new
dispensation had marked the later stages of that which it superseded. And as we
observe the present-day manifestations of the sinister spiritualist influences
and movements which will be fully developed in the coming age, may we not hail
it as giving hope that the present dispensation is nearing its end, and that
"the coming of the Lord is drawing nigh?" And that hope will be
intensified if we are given to see "the land of the promise" restored
to the people of the Covenant.
On yet another ground the practical importance of prophetic study is
incalculable. To all who pursue it intelligently it affords full and irrefutable
proofs of the Divine authorship of the Bible, and it thus provides an antidote
to the poison of the "Higher Criticism." The writings of the eminent
scholars who have led or championed that sceptical crusade will be searched in
vain for proof of acquaintance with the scheme of Divine prophecy, a scheme that
can be traced, like a silver thread, through all the Scriptures. And still more
remarkable is their neglect of the typology of scripture. which is so closely
allied with prophecy. Indeed, their "learned" writings are notable
examples of exegesis on the text-card system. These Critics are like men who
empty the works of a watch into a bowl, and then, after examining them in
detail, arrive at the sapient conclusion that they present no proof of unity or
design!
The aphorism that "truth is one" applies unreservedly to Holy Writ.
But if we read it on the text-card system we lose all sense of its "hidden
harmony." We cannot intelligently apprehend what God has revealed about the
future if we are ignorant or unmindful of His revelation respecting the past and
the present. We need, for example, to recognise the dual character of this
"Christian Age." For, as already noticed, the root error of the
Apostasy of Christendom is the failure to distinguish between the Professing
Church, the administration of which is committed to man, and the true Church
which Christ is building. The Professing Church is for earth and time, whereas
the spiritual Church stands related to eternity and heaven. The truth respecting
it is a "mystery" of the Christian revelation. And its temporary
connection with earth will cease at that Coming of the Lord, which is another of
the "mystery" truths revealed in the Epistles of the New Testament.
In this, its higher aspect, the present dispensation is not within the purview
of the earlier Scriptures. And, viewed in relation to earth and time, it is an
interlude in the great drama of prophecy as unfolded in those Scriptures. To
rule out in this way some two thousand years of human history will seem neither
startling nor strange, if we remember that, with God, a thousand years are
"as yesterday when it is past, or as a watch in the night."
And as regards the past we must keep in view the Divine plan of the ages. The
Adamic dispensation was brought to an end by the judgment of the Flood; and the
Noachic was marked by the Babylonian apostasy, in which the primeval revelation
was utterly corrupted. An apostasy so subtilly adapted to our fallen nature that
even Evangelical Christianity is leavened by it. God thereupon took up Abraham
and his race to be His agents and witnesses upon earth, and "unto them were
committed the oracles of God." But the nation of Israel proved false to
that trust; and instead of being light-bearers to the world, they proudly
claimed a monopoly of Divine favour. The Holy Temple, designed to be "a
house of prayer for all nations," they regarded as their own house, and
ended by making it "a den of thieves." Here, then, we have the clue to
a right reading of the 11th chapter of Romans. It is a chapter of cardinal
importance to the student of prophecy, but it is much neglected. And the
Apostle's warning to us Gentiles not to be "wise in our own conceits"
is practically ignored, as witness the figment that "the Christian
Church" has ousted Israel from the olive tree position. The teaching of the
chapter is explicit, that Gentiles are wild olive branches, " grafted,
contrary to nature, into a good olive tree," the natural branches being
Israelite. But they are only branches. For the allegory of the olive tree points
back to the Abrahamic covenant and promise. And it is not as "members of
the Church" that we are grafted into it, but as Gentiles, who, in virtue of
faith, are become "children of Abraham." In the true Church there is
neither Jew nor Gentile. Neither is there in the Vine, which represents a vital
relationship with Christ, to be manifested by fruit-bearing.
And this chapter teaches emphatically that the present age is not only
parenthetical but, in its earthly aspect, abnormal. And further, that as Israel
was cut off because of unbelief, so the Professing Church of this age will be
cut off. And then "There shall come out of Zion the Deliverer, and He shall
turn away ungodliness from Jacob. And so all Israel shall be saved" (v. 26)
Not "every Israelite," but Israel as a nation. For this chapter does
not deal with the position and destiny of individuals, but with national and
dispensational distinctions and changes.
Neither does it deal with Churches in the sense of our English word
"denominations," but with the Professing Church on earth as a whole.
For Scripture recognises only two Churches, namely, the Church the Body of
Christ, which, when complete, will be manifested in heavenly glory; and the
Professing Church, "the outward frame of so-called Christendom," now
drifting to its "fearful end." Even with knowledge of its evil history
and present condition, we can form no adequate conception of what it will become
when all true Christians are called away to heaven, and the influence of the
Holy Spirit is no longer felt. But with awe we ponder the words of the
Apocalyptic vision, that when the day of its judgment comes all heaven will ring
with Hallelujahs, and the wonderful Beings who sit around the throne will fall
upon their faces in adoring worship as they join in the refrain,
"Hallelujah, Amen" "All Israel shall be saved." "And if
the casting away of them was the reconciling of the world, what shall the
receiving of them be but life from the dead!" The cemetery condition in
which Christendom will leave the world shall give place to the life and gladness
of a summer garden! For when the People of the Covenant have been regenerated in
the great revival foretold in prophecy, "the gospel of the Kingdom will be
preached in all the world." And the result of their testimony will be the
in-numerable multitude of earth's great Feast of Ingathering "out of all
nations and kindreds and peoples and tongues." Let us then shake free not
only from the errors, but from the mean pettiness of Latin theology on this
great subject. One of the most popular of its accredited exponents in our own
day describes the present age as "the last great eon of God's dealings with
mankind," Could we but realise aright the significance of the Ministry and
Death of Christ in God's purposes for earth, we might be tempted to declare that
this age of ours is the first great eon of the unfolding of those purposes. And
the statement, though unwarranted, would not be so flagrantly false as is the
"pandemonium and conflagration" theory of this theology.
If only we knew more of God, and if we realised that earth's history runs its
course in open view of all the great intelligences of heaven, the mysteries of
both the past and the present might perchance seem less perplexing. And we
should be led with eagerness to scan the prophecies still unfulfilled, to find
there that this sin-cursed earth is yet tc be a scene of blessedness and peace -
all that we should expect a God of infinite goodness and power to make it:
"When a King, in kingly glory,
Such as Earth has never known,
Shall assume the righteous sceptre,
Claim and wear the holy crown."
Let us then, with the intelligent enthusiasm of faith, take our
stand by the side of the inspired Apostle as, surveying this glorious vista of
the Divine "plan of the ages," be exclaims, "0 the depth of the
riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are His
judgments. and His ways past finding out!"
But no intelligent student of these prophecies, and very specially of this
eleventh chapter of Romans, can fail to recognise that before they can be
realised there must be "a change of dispensation" as definite and
drastic as that which was signalised by the call of Abraham, and again by the
"casting away" of Israel, and the welcoming of Gentile slum-dwellers,
and tramps of the highways, to partake of God's great supper of salvation. The
reader of these pages, therefore, will appreciate their second title, and the
prominence here given to the Coming of the Lord. It is not intended to suggest
that "the hope of the Church" is within the scope of the Hebrew
Scriptures. But the realisation of that hope will usher in the age to which the
great field of unfulfilled prophecy pertains. And therefore it provides the only
standpoint from which that field can be surveyed in a true perspective.
CHAPTER X.
As noticed in preceding pages, there will be not less than three
future Comings of Christ.
(1) That Coming by which this Christian dispensation of the reign of grace and
the heavenly Church will be brought to an end;
(2) "the Coming of the Son of Man," in fulfilment of Messianic
prophecy, to bring deliverance and blessing to His earthly people; and
(3) His Coming to judgment in a far distant future, at the close of the kingdom
dispensation. But though the Coming of Christ is the hope of His people in every
age, Theology gives us nothing but the "Second Advent" of His coming
to judgment; and thus disposes, not only of the Christian's hope in the present
dispensation, but of Israel's hope in the dispensation which is to follow it.
For while Christianity is based upon the teaching of Holy Scripture, "the
Christian religion" depends largely upon the teaching of the Latin Fathers.
And before the era of the great Patristic theologians "the hope of the
Church" had already been forgotten; and Messianic prophecy had been so
perverted or "spiritualised" as to shut out Israel's hope altogether.
But here a question of extreme importance claims attention. The saints of the
Apostolic age were taught to live "in constant expectation of the Lord's
return." How then is the delay of nineteen centuries to be accounted for?
The Infidel's answer is that the Apostolic teaching was false. And some
Christians would have us believe that, although the saints were divinely taught
"to live looking for that blessed hope," it was settled by a Divine
decree that the Lord would not come until long centuries had run their course.
If these be the alternative solutions of the problem, most of us will take sides
with the Infidel. For though the loss of the Epistles would be a disaster, it
would be infinitely worse to charge the God of truth with flagrant
untruthfulness of a kind that would not be tolerated in our fellow-men. But we
reject both alternatives with scorn. Some, again, would tell us that owing to
the evil history of the Church on earth, even from the earliest times, the
promise is cancelled, and the hope it engendered is lost. But though God is
often said to have "repented" in regard to threatened judgments,
Scripture records no instance of His failing to fulfil a promise of blessing.
Many a case, however, can be cited where the fulfilment was delayed because of
unfaithfulness or sin on the part of His people. And does not this suggest the
right solution of our difficulty?
But if the Lord delays His Coming until "the Church" is what it ought
to be, is not the promise practically cancelled? Yes; but it was not to the
Church that He gave the promise, but to His elect people scattered throughout
the Church. And nowhere is it given more explicitly than in the very Scriptures
which foretell the Church's apostasy and doom. Plain words are needed here. For
in these days, when the Protestant spirit is waning in our land, there is no
influence, perhaps, more harmful to Christian life than the prevalent
superstitious and errors respecting "the outward frame of
Christendom," "the Christian Church," as it is called. Our
position in it and our attitude toward it ought to be akin to that which the
Lord taught His disciples to maintain toward "the Jewish Church." They
were in it, and yet, in a real sense, not of it. For though Divine in its origin
and as to its responsibilities, it had apostatised. It was, in fact, "the
world" of His prayer on their behalf (John xvii. 16). And as Bishop
Westcott wrote of "the Christian Church," the world got into it in the
fourth century, and has never since been got out of it. The crisis to which he
referred was, presumably, the Conversion of Constantine. When wolves are about,
the sheep keep near to the shepherd. And so, till then, the danger of
persecution kept the Christians near to the Lord. But the century which followed
was marked by such apostasy that, even in the sphere of morals, "the
Christian Church" sank to the level of the heathen world.
The account given of it in Salvian's celebrated treatise on
"Providence," written in the middle of the fifth century, is
appalling. Here are two typical sentences from it:- "A very few excepted
who flee from evil, what else is almost every assembly of Christians but a sink
of vices. . . . I put it now to the conscience of all Christians whether it be
not so, that you will hardly find one who is not addicted to some of the vices
and crimes which I have mentioned; or rather, who is it that is not guilty of
all ?
(Footnote - full extracts in "The Bible or the Church")
The first Divine warning which Scripture gives of the apostasy of the Church is
the Apostle's Paul's address to the Elders of Ephesus (Acts xx. 29, 30). And it
is an extremely significant fact that while his Epistles written prior to that
epoch were addressed to Churches, his "Captivity" Epistles were
addressed to "the Saints at Ephesus "; "the Saints at Phiippi
"; "the Saints at Colosse."
In these evil days we need to hold fast the great truth which Bishop John Ryle,
of Liverpool, championed so fearlessly, that "there is only one true
Church," the spiritual fold which includes only those who are Christians in
the deeper sense. His Christian Leaders of the Last Century is, incidentally, a
grave indictment of "the Christian Churches" in our land. He shows,
indeed, that at that epoch they were the enemies of Christ and of His people.
When toward the end of the eighteenth century William Carey sought to excite
interest in missions to the heathen, among his brethren in the Baptist Ministry,
he was put down as a troublesome faddist. For "if the heathen were elect,
they would be saved without their help; and if God wished them to send out
missionaries He would renew the gift of tongues." And when Carey and Thomas
sailed for India in June, 1793, they went out as emissaries, not of "the
Christian Church," but of a dozen Baptist Ministers- "troublesome
faddists "-assembled in the low-roofed back parlour of Widow Wallis, at
Kettering, in October, 1792. Thus was launched, to quote Sydney Smith's sneer,
by a few 'consecrated cobblers,' the first English mission to the heathen in
India.'
If the men who took the initiative in work of this kind had waited for "the
Christian Church " to promote missions to the heathen, the heathen would
possibly be still unevangelised. For even the Church Missionary Society was the
offspring of the despised "Clapham Sect." The meeting at which it was
founded was held in neither Westminster Abbey nor St. Paul's, but in a hired
room in a poor sort of City inn. And it was not till forty years afterwards that
Ecclesiastical dignitaries accorded it their patronage. For by that time all the
Churches had begun to feel the influence of the Evangelical revival of the early
decades of last century.
Still deeper and far more widespread was the influence of the revival which
marked the middle of the century. But no sooner did the spiritual power of that
revival begin to wane than a new apostasy set in. And as the result our National
Church has been so thoroughly corrupted by Romanising influences that it is no
longer Protestant, and the great Evangelical Party is but a memory of the past.
And all our British Churches have been leavened with the Kultur of that German
infidelity which has reduced that nation morally to the level of savages.
But what bearing has all this upon the truth of the Lord's Coming? It is owing
to a false estimate of "the Church" that so many devout Christians
neglect that truth, seeing that it is ignored in all our doctrinal standards. It
will be said, perhaps, that it has no place in the "dogmatic theology"
of the Epistles. True, for it is a fact of great significance that the Coming of
the Lord is never mentioned as a doctrine that needed to be expounded, but only
as a truth with which every Christian was supposed to be familiar.
And the reason of this is clear. For the very first day on which a convert was
privileged to enter a Christian assembly he heard the words, "As often as
ye eat this bread, and drink the cup, ye proclaim the Lord's death till He
come." And if "unlearned in doctrine," he might well ask,
"But has He not come? ", and then all would be explained to him; and
ever afterwards, as week by week he heard those charter words, the hope of the
Coming would be inseparably linked with the atoning death of Christ.
But with Christians generally all this is now forgotten, and the Lord's Supper
points only back to Calvary. And it is too commonly associated with "the
cult of the Crucifix," which reaches the Pagan level in "the
reservation of the Sacrament" and "the Mass." Indeed, there are
many, even among spiritual Christians, who habitually speak of the Supper as
"remembering the Lord's death." We do thus "proclaim the Lord's
death "; but the vital and essential element in the sacred rite is that to
which the Lord's own words give emphasis: "This do in remembrance of ME
"-not a dead Christ, but an absent Saviour and Lord.
If then, shaking free from every false or superstitious estimate of "the
Church" and its theology, the Lord's Supper regained its right place in
Christian thought and Christian experience, the truth of the Coming would be
restored to the place it held in Apostolic days; and a vague sort of
intellectual faith in a "Second Advent" in a vastly distant future,
would give place to a real heart-belief in the Lord's return, as a present hope,
to cheer and oomfort us in sorrow, and to influence character and conduct in our
daily life.
Of days in Israel when their religious leaders failed them it was written,
"Then they that feared the Lord spake often one to another; and the Lord
listened, and He heard it; and a book of remembrance was written before
Him." And in these days of ours let us remember that it was not "the
Church" or its leaders that promoted missions to the heathen, but a few
lightly-esteemed Christians who were fired with the enthusiasm of faith in God.
And if even a very few spiritual Christians in every place would begin to
"speak often one to another" about the Coming of the Lord they would
soon come together to pray for His return. And from such small beginnings, it
may be that, for the first time in the history of Christendom, companies of His
people shall be found meeting together to claim 'the fulfilment of His promise,
"Surely I am coming quickly," and to pray the prayer which He Himself
has given us, "Even so, come Lord Jesus."
THE END
APPENDIX NOTE.
It is due to the "text-card" system of Bible study, and the resulting ignorance of "dispensational truth" (see page 40 ante), that so many Ohristians ignore, and some vehemently reject, "that blessed hope" of the Lord's Coming. For they are thus betrayed into confounding His Coming as Son of Man for the deliverance of His earthly people, after "the great tribulation," in a future age, with His Coming to call home His heavenly people, and to bring this Christian dispensation to an end. And this "text-card" system is harmful in a wholly different sphere. No pulpit utterance of recent years obtained a wider publicity than the "Love your enemies" sermon preached in St. Margaret's, Westminster, on the 25th March two years ago. The Lord's teaching for the guidance of His disciples in their "Gospel of the Kingdom" ministry was used to indicate what our attitude ought to be toward our enemies in this war, entirely ignoring His words to those same disciples on the eve of His leaving them (Luke xxii. 35, 36). And yet even a village Sunday school might be expected to notice that He then bade them to provide themselves with swords! Neither did the preacher notice the Lord's emphatic statement that His teaching was not to be taken as cancelling one jot or tittle of the law, i.e., the Mosaic Scriptures. And by those very Scriptures it is that our public affairs, whether national or international, should be regulated. This question, moreover, may become a burning one if, as we hope, our armies invade Germany and seize Berlin. Are our troops to fraternize with the Germans, and declare their love for them? Or is their bearing toward them to be akin to that of our police and magistrates toward our criminals at home? We may rest assured that there will be no reprisals in kind for the hideous atrocities inflicted by the enemy upon peaceful citizens in the lands they have invaded. But if the Governments of the Allies should see fit to inflict exemplary punishment upon Germany as a nation, by rifling and destroying all national property, let no British Christians bring discredit upon Holy Scripture by raising a protest based upon perversion of the teaching of our Divine Lord. And what is to be our attitude as Christians toward our German brethren after this war? If by condemning and deploring the crimes committed by their nation against humanity and law they give proof that they are indeed followers of Christ, our course is clear. But otherwise we may fitly act toward them in the spirit of the Lord's explicit words recorded in Matthew xviii. 15-17, and refuse definitely to acknowledge them as Christians.