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Overland Monthly / OV026 - The Divine Program (VI. Its Epochs and Dispensations)
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OV26 THE DIVINE PROGRAM VI—ITS EPOCHS AND DISPENSATIONS
BY C. T. RUSSELL
PASTOR BROOKLYN TABERNACLE ORDER IS
heavenÂ’s first law, and whoever would understand the divine program
must study it in an orderly manner. Irregular and disorderly minds are
at a disadvantage in Bible study. On the other hand, orderly minds are
disadvantaged by the misrepresentations of the Bible by many of its
friends of disorderly minds. As a consequence, those lacking mental
order are confused and misunderstand the Scriptures, while those of
orderly minds, disgusted with the misrepresentations and
inconsistencies, will not even examine the Bible Revelation. Whoever
opens his Bible expecting it to describe the ages and dispensations as
we shall here attempt to portray them will be disappointed. The Lord
declares His Plan to be shrouded in Mystery and understandable only
from the one standpoint of consecration and illumination by the holy
Spirit. This, of course, refers mainly to the "deep things of God."
There are also surface truths of great value connected with the Divine
Revelation. The extent of our ability to understand is dependent upon
faith, obedience and the observance of order. In proportion as we have
or have not this ability we may understand or misunderstand the Bible.
Three Worlds and Three Dispensations.
The English reader is somewhat
disadvantaged by the fact that in our common version the word "world"
does duty for three distinctly Greek words. Thus, for instance, when
our Lord mentions the end of the age or dispensation our common version
Bible renders it "the end of the world." This, to the average reader,
signifies a general collapse of the earth—its destruction, in fact, or,
as a habitation for man. No such thought attaches to the Greek word,
aeon, however. An aeon is an epoch or age.
The Lord declared that the present aeon
or age would end, ushering in a new age or "world to come." As a matter
of fact, three different worlds are brought to our attention in the
Bible—and the Millennium will be in the beginning of the third. The
Scriptural declaration is that "the earth abideth forever"—"seed time
and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, as long as the sun and
moon endure."—#Ec 1:4; #Ge 8:22.
These three "worlds" or three dispensations noted in the Bible are so
distinctly different and so accurately described that none need mistake
them. The first dispensation or world lasted from Eden to the flood. It
was marked as the period of the administration of the angels, and in
it, as we have already seen, some of them fell from their first estate
of loyalty and obedience, further corrupting the world of mankind.
Following the flood a new dispensation began, marked by the fact that
the fallen angels no longer were permitted of the Lord full liberty of
association with men. Man was permitted to have control of the earth,
and Divine providence worked little interference except to prevent sin
from going to such extremes as would have defeated the Divine plans to
be developed later. This period from the flood to the Second Coming of
Christ is Scripturally designated "this present evil world"—not because
there has been nothing meritorious during its forty-four hundred years,
but because God has permitted evil to dominate the earth during this
period. As we have already seen, God
OV27 is not the author of its confusion,
sin and disorder, but he has permitted mankind liberty within certain
bounds. He has permitted Satan to oppose righteousness and permitted
humanity to become the slaves of sin and of Satan. Satan is
Scripturally declared to be the "Prince of this world," who now
operates in the hearts of the children of disobedience. We are not to
understand, however, that Satan is exercising a Divinely delegated
authority to rule mankind, but rather that he has usurped his position
by taking advantage of humanityÂ’s ignorance, fallen tendencies and
superstitions. Neither are we to think that humanity knowingly and
intentionally serves "the Prince of this world." Rather, under his
delusions they are deceived.
While thinking to please themselves, to
serve their own best interests, to attain happiness, they are misled
into sin and sorrow and death by paths of ignorance and superstition.
What St. Paul calls "this present evil world," St. Peter denominates
"the world that now is," and points us forward to the New World, the
New Dispensation, in which righteousness will reign, and styles that
dispensation "the world to come."
All three of these "worlds" or dispensations are connected with our planet, the earth.
Following this figure, the Apostle
divides these "worlds" or dispensations into heaven and earth, by the
heavens referring to the spirit beings and influences, and by the earth
referring to humanity subjected to those spiritual influences. Thus in
the "world" or dispensation which ended at the flood, the angels,
fallen and unfallen, constituted the heavens and mankind the earth of
that dispensation. During "this present evil world" from the flood to
the Second Coming of Christ the heavens represent Satan, the "Prince of
the power of the air," and religious systems amongst men, more or less
corrupt and more or less representative of Satan and of his
organization—or rather of human organization more or less under Satanic
direction.
"The world to come" is likewise
represented as having a heaven and earth classification. The heavens of
that new dispensation will be the glorified Jesus and his Church, in
the Millennial Kingdom. In the first "world" or dispensation the
corruption of its heavens or angelic class brought degradation and
disaster to the earth class, humanity. During this "present evil world"
the power of Satan and the corrupting spiritual influences which he has
been able to manipulate have hindered the blessing of mankind,
notwithstanding GodÂ’s favor given to Israel under the Law Covenant and
his still greater blessings to Jew and Gentile through Christ. The next
"world" or dispensation, to be ushered in at the Second Coming of
Christ, is Scripturally styled "a new heavens and a new earth, wherein
dwelleth righteousness." (#2Pe 3:13.)
That new heavens will be perfect, and consist of Christ and his "Elect"
Church or "Bride" glorified—"called, chosen, faithful." (#Re 17:14.)
That new earth will represent mankind under the new conditions of the
New Covenant, sealed with the precious blood. Not only in the new
heaven, but also in the new earth righteousness will prevail, even
though in the latter it will require the thousand years of ChristÂ’s
reign to fully conquer sin and death and to uplift humanity in general
back into harmony with God.
In the Ages to Come.
St. Paul mentions "ages to come," though
only one of these is specifically noted in the Scriptures—the
Millennial age. The other ages beyond the Millennium will be beyond all
the defilements and ensnarements and tribulations connected with sin;
and are properly, therefore, styled by the poet, "Ages of glory."
Looking back, however, we may discern clearly-marked ages or epochs,
subdividing "this present evil world." First came the Patriarchal Age,
in which God dealt with Noah, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. Then came
another distinctly different epoch in which He no longer dealt with
individual patriarchs, but adopted the entire nation of Israel as his
peculiar people and dealt with them accordingly. He entered into the
Law Covenant with them and provided them a typical mediator, typical
underpriests and judges and prophets, so that, as the Apostle Paul
declares, the nation of Israel had "much advantage every way, chiefly
because to them
OV28 were committed the oracles of God."
That Jewish Age had a distinct beginning in the death of Jacob, whose
twelve sons were designated the heads of the twelve tribes constituting
the one nation of Israel. That age had an ending just as distinctly
marked by the death of Christ, as shown by JesusÂ’ words, "Verily I say
unto you, your house is left unto you desolate." (#Mt 23:38.)
A third age followed, namely, the Gospel Age, which began at Pentecost
and is to terminate at the second coming of Christ and to gather to
himself the completed church, the Bride of the Lamb and joint-heir in
the Millennial Kingdom. The present Gospel Age, which is to end with
the establishment of the Kingdom, the Church in glory, is the
particular and all-important age of "this present evil world." Neither
of those preceding it brought any fruitage to full perfection. The
patriarchs received a blessing, but could not enter into the Kingdom
privileges. The nation of Israel had a blessing through the Law
Covenant, yet its highest service was the making of types of glorious
conditions to follow it, some of the antitypes belonging to this Gospel
Age and some to the Millennium. It is the Apostle who declares of that
Age that its Law Covenant "made nothing perfect." Nevertheless, the
same Apostle points out in Hebrews 11 that all who were faithful to God
from Enoch down to the close of the Jewish Age will receive a special
blessing, in accord with their faith and zeal—even though they lived
before the time of the calling and proving of the spiritual Seed of
Abraham—the Gospel Church, of which Christ is the Head. ("And if ye be
ChristÂ’s, then are ye AbrahamÂ’s Seed, and heirs according to the
promise." (#Ga 3:29.)
Of those faithful ones St. Paul declares,
"And these all, having obtained a good report through faith, received
not the promise; God having provided some better things for us, that
they without us should not be made perfect."—#Heb 11:39 ,40.
In a word, the Divine Program arranged that the world should be blessed
by Messiah—through his death and subsequently through his Millennial
Kingdom reign. But instead of counting the work finished when the
Redeemer died, the Divine Program set apart the entire Gospel Age for
the selection of the Bride of Christ, under another figure spoken of as
the "members in particular of the Body of Christ." (#1Co 12:27.)
These are said to fill up the afflictions of Christ, to suffer with
him, to be dead with him, and are correspondingly promised a share with
him in his glory, honor and immortality.
This Age Parenthetic.
It may help some to grasp the situation
if they will consider the Gospel Age from Pentecost to the Second
Coming of Christ as parenthetic, and in their minds link together the
Jewish and the Millennial Ages. The Jews, properly enough, were
expecting Messiah to come to their nation, to establish them as his
"peculiar people," to sanctify them and to use them in the spread of
his dominion world-wide, according to the promise made to Abraham that
in "his Seed all the families of the earth should be blessed." They
were right in that expectation, and it will be fulfilled at the Second
Coming of Christ. What they did not see and what God did not wish them
to see, but kept a "mystery," is the fact that the Divine Program
included a Christ of many members, Jesus the Redeemer being the head
over all, "God blessed forever." (#Ro 9:5.) "This is a great mystery; but I speak concerning Christ and the Church." (#Eph 5:32 .)
"Even the mystery which hath been hid from ages and from generations,
but now is made manifest to his saints; to whom God would make known
what is the riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles;
which is Christ in you, the hope of glory." (#Col 1:26 ,27.)
God will do no less for natural Israel than his original promise, for,
as St. Paul declares, "The gifts and calling of God he will not repent
of"—nor change from. The bringing in of the Bible hope of this Gospel
Age, the selecting of a "little flock" for joint-heirship with the
Redeemer on the spirit plane, was that much more than God had revealed
to Israel through the Law and the prophets. Some of natural Israel
profited by this—all those who, at the beginning of the Gospel Age,
were in the right attitude of heart, "Israelites indeed in whom was no
guile." Such were received to membership in spiritual
OV29 Israel at Pentecost.
And then to filling up of the remainder
of the predestinated number of the "elect," from among the Gentiles
began; and this age has been devoted to the gathering of these
"members" of the Christ, the Messiah, out of every land, people,
kindred and tongue.
The Law Covenant—Old and New.
Continue the thought of this Gospel Age
being parenthetic as respects the outward features of the Divine
Program. Note the fact that the Law Covenant given to the Jews failed
to secure for them eternal life—because they could not keep so high a
Law, a Law which commanded love for God with all the heart, mind, soul
and strength and love for oneÂ’s neighbor as for himself. Moses, the
Mediator of that Law Covenant, was unable to make up for the
deficiencies of the people and hence eternal life was not secured under
the Law Covenant. However, through the Prophet Jeremiah (#Jer 31:31 )
God sent to Israel a message of his love and assured them of a future
relief under a New Covenant which, in some respects, would be better
than the one they had. He said, "The days come, saith the Lord, that I
will make a New Covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of
Judah; not according to the Covenant that I made with their fathers in
the day that I took them by the hand, to bring them out of the land of
Egypt (the Law Covenant); which my Covenant they brake, although I was
an husband unto them, saith the Lord."—#Jer 31:31 ,32.
Christ and his Bride, his members,
Spiritual Israel, surrender their earthly life rights and earthly
inheritance in favor of Natural Israel, and thus are said to mediate
and ultimately to seal for Israel a New Law Covenant, which will be far
better than the old one. Not, however, that the Law of God will change
in any respect; for God could not give an easier Law than the one given
to Israel; he could not give an imperfect Law; he could not properly
require less than love and obedience with all the heart. Wherein, then,
will a New Law Covenant be better for Israel than the old one? We
answer, It will be better in that it will have a "better mediator"—a
more capable one. Jesus is the Mediator of the New Covenant; and all
those called of God and accepted as his "members" during this Gospel
Age will be members of the Mediator. To this Mediator, by reason of the
merit of the Head and his sacrifice, God has granted "all power," so
that he is able from the plenitude of his grace to make up for the
unwilling, the unintentional, blemishes of the nation for which he will
serve as Mediator during the thousand years of his Millennial reign. It
is on the strength of this merit of the Mediator that all of IsraelÂ’s
sins and iniquities of the past will be forgotten and remembered no
more. Moreover that Great Mediator will have full responsibility in the
premises in dealing with all who shall accept that Covenant, because
the virtue, the merit of ChristÂ’s sacrifice, is sufficient to meet, to
cover, to cancel the sins of the whole world—all that are not willful
and deliberate sins. Israel will thus become GodÂ’s people, and all
gentiles will be privileged to join them by "circumcision of the
heart." Thus, ultimately, besides spiritual Israel there will be
Natural Israel, which will include the willing and obedient of every
nation and tongue as it is written, "I have constituted thee a father
of many nations." During the Millennium, therefore, Jesus the Mediator
of the New Covenant, and "the church his Body," will not only apply the
merits of his sacrifice in offset of Adamic sin and weaknesses, but
will also have the right, power and authority to chastise for every
misconduct and to reward every good endeavor, to the intent that under
that New Covenant all Israel may have the opportunity of rising from
the dead—rising from the condition of sin and death up to the full
perfection of human nature and a perfect environment. As for the others
not rightly exercised by these favorable providences St. Peter declares
that they "Shall be utterly destroyed from among the people."—#Ac 3:23.
From Amongst Your Brethren.
St. Peter explains the nature of the
selection of the members of the Mediator, saying, "A prophet shall the
Lord your God raise up unto you from amongst your brethren, like unto
me; him shall ye hear (obey) in all things, whatsoever he shall say
unto you. (To that Prophet every
OV30 knee must bow and every tongue
confess.) And it shall come to pass, that every soul, which will not
hear that Prophet, shall be destroyed from among the people"—in the
Second Death.—#Ac 3:22,23.
Notice that the Prophet was to be raised up from amongst the brethren.
In fulfillment of this our Lord Jesus was called and accepted and
begotten of the holy Spirit, and finally, in his resurrection, became
the Firstborn from the dead, the Firstborn of many brethren. Meantime,
since Pentecost the other members under that glorious Head have been in
process of raising up—out of sin, out of death, out of the world, out
of human nature, to glory, honor, and immortality.
And these have the promise that in the
First Resurrection their raising up will be completed—they shall be
changed in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye. The raising up and the
changing begin with the present life. As the Apostle declares, "We are
risen with him." And again, We are being changed from glory to glory as
by the Spirit of the Lord. But still we wait for the grand climacteric
change to Resurrection glory, honor and immortality. In view of the
foregoing all will readily discern the value of order in the study of
the Bible—the value of noting its dispensational features, the object
served by the various "worlds" or dispensations and their various ages
or epochs. The Bible, studied in the light of the Plan of the Ages,
becomes a new Book. Its various statements, prophetic and otherwise,
quietly drop into their proper places, so that the study of the Word
becomes both interesting and profitable, as thousands are continually
testifying—many of them rescued from agnosticism.
THE COMING STORM
O SAD is my heart for the storm that
is coming; Like eagles the scud sweepeth in from the sea; The gull
seeketh shelter, the pine trees are sighing, And all giveth note of the
tempest to be.
A spell hath been whispered from cave
and from ocean, The shepherds are sleeping, the sentinels dumb, The
flocks are all scattered on moorland and mountain, And no one believes
that the Master is come.
HeÂ’s come, but whom doth He find their watch keeping?
O where—in His presence—is faith the world o’er?
The rich, every sense in soft luxury steeping; The poor, scarce repelling the wolf from the door.
O man, and O maiden, drop trifling and
pleasure, O! hark, while I tell of the sorrows to be, —As well might I
plead in the path of yon glacier, Or cry out a warning to wave of the
sea!
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