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Overland Monthly / OV149 - "A Clean Thing Out of an Unclean"
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OV149 "A CLEAN THING OUT OF AN UNCLEAN"
BY C. T. RUSSELL
Pastor London* and Brooklyn Tabernacles
*Pastor Russell, on the occasion of a
recent visit to London, England, accepted the pastorate of the London
Tabernacle Congregation. The call was given with the full understanding
that Pastor Russell would not think of leaving his large work in
America, which centers at Brooklyn, N.Y. It was urged, however, that
his acceptance of the pastorate would insure his giving them a goodly
share of his time. He promised about four months in each year. He has
able assistants there as well as in Brooklyn. Really, London will have
about as much of the pastorÂ’s time as he gives to Brooklyn, because in
America his Sundays are scattered over a considerable area. Brooklyn
having the first Sunday of each month so far as possible. Pastor
Russell travels much in Great Britain also, but gives his Sundays to
London and his week days to the other large cities. Reports indicate
that he has large audiences at all his meetings—besides the still
vaster audience reached weekly through his sermons printed in more than
a thousand newspapers in the United States, Canada, Great Britain and
Australia.
PERHAPS the most difficult thing for
people in general to believe respecting Jesus is the claim of the Bible
and of all orthodox creeds that He was born of a virgin—that He was
born differently from the remainder of the race, and that, on account
of this miraculous birth, He was perfect physically, mentally,
morally—"holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners." Some can
exercise a simple, child-like faith and accept this proposition set
forth in the Scriptures, and progress in the building of a faith
structure thereupon. Others of different mental construction find faith
more difficult and inquire for the reason, the philosophy and, if
possible, to know the processes by which Divine power was thus
exercised, as well as the reason why such a stupendous miracle was
required to be wrought. The subject is not only a delicate one, but
very abstruse, and, as a matter of fact, the philosophy of it is rarely
if ever thought of or attempted. The point, however, is fundamental.
No one can Scripturally believe in the
Lord Jesus Christ without believing in His miraculous birth. No one,
therefore, can be a Christian, in the Scriptural sense, without this
belief. So long as we held that only true, saintly Christians would be
saved, and that all others were foreordained to eternal torture we
properly enough felt a delicacy in mentioning particularly the items of
faith necessary to the obtaining of a standing with God as a true
Christian. Now, however, since we see that only the saintly few will be
members of the elect Church, and that through these (in their glorified
condition) will come a great blessing of restitution opportunities to
human perfection and to an earthly Eden to all the non-elect, we may
feel free to treat all matters very candidly.
Belief in the Miraculous Birth Necessary.
By and by, when all the darkness and
clouds of ignorance, superstition, etc., shall have passed away, and
when clear knowledge of God and clear Revelation from Him will be
freely granted to mankind, all, of course, will understand the
philosophy of this great fact of our LordÂ’s immaculate birth. But in
the present time such knowledge is withheld, because God is seeking a
special class which will trust Him where they cannot trace Him—a class
which will be willing to walk by faith and not by sight. To such
faithful, trusting ones God will grant special privileges and blessings
as the Bride of the Redeemer and joint heir in His Kingdom and glory.
To these it is given to know something respecting the mysteries of the
Divine arrangement in connection with the Kingdom class, which are
still hidden from the world in general. These are guided by the Divine
Revelation of the Bible and aided by the illumination of the mind
through the Holy Spirit, which they receive at the time of their full
consecration. Only these may be expected to see very clearly on many of
the important subjects of Divine Revelation
OV150 in the present time—others must
wait until the night is passed and until the morning of the New
Dispensation shall have been ushered in with its rising of the Sun of
Righteousness. Meantime, as we near the glorious day, the illumination
of the early dawning gives clearness of vision on every subject and
enables honest minds, even amongst the worldly, to grasp certain great
doctrines and principles of Truth as never before. The importance of
the doctrine is acknowledged by all creeds, though many of those who
hold to the creed fail to see the connection—the reasons—the necessity.
The erroneous view held by some that Jesus was, at the same time, the
Heavenly Father in Heaven and the Heavenly Son on earth—equal in power
and glory and "one in substance"—has made confusion worse confounded in
many minds. We must leave all the unscriptural rubbish on the subject
and confine ourselves to the Bible teachings, directly and indirectly.
It was necessary that Jesus should be perfect—"holy, harmless,
undefiled, separate from sinners"—because the first man Adam had been
all that. Jesus left His heavenly glory with the Father, as the Logos,
and took the human nature for the very purpose of redeeming the first
man Adam, and thus AdamÂ’s family and his estate. Since sin and
hereditary imperfection have tainted and blemished every member of
AdamÂ’s race, "There is none perfect, no, not one," and "hence none is
able to give a ransom for his brother"—neither for Father Adam nor for
any man.—Psalm 49:7 . If there had been a perfect son of Adam, God could
have made to such a one the very offer that He made to the Logos, "the
Only-Begotten of the Father." He could have offered him glory, honor
and immortality as a reward for the sacrificing of His perfect earthly
life to be a price for Father AdamÂ’s life, and thus a ransom price for
his race, etc. But no perfect man could be found. God could have made
the proposition to Gabriel or one of the inferior angels—to become a
perfect man and to redeem Adam and his race. But instead of so doing,
Divine Wisdom chose to make the proposition to the Only-Begotten Son of
God, the Logos. He gladly accepted the undertaking to be transferred
from the spirit plane to the human plane and to carry out to the full
the Divine will, as step by step it would be revealed to Him.
Our Catholic friends go a step beyond the
Scriptures and claim that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was miraculously
born; that she was perfect, and that this had to do with the perfection
of Jesus. We cannot accept this, because there is no Scripture for it.
Besides, if Mary could be thus miraculously conceived and born free
from the taint of heredity, why would it be necessary, since Jesus
could be born in like manner of an imperfect mother? And this is the
Scriptural proposition—the one we are discussing—the one that is so
difficult for some well-meaning people to grasp and believe. Its
importance lies in the fact that a sinner could not redeem himself, and
that, unless Jesus were miraculously born, He would have been partaker
of the blemishes of Father Adam. The secret of the matter lies in the
fact (which is daily coming to be more fully recognized by science)
that all life comes from the father, and that the mother merely
furnishes the nourishment for that living organism which comes from the
father, by which it is developed and becomes a creature of the same
nature as the mother, although its life is wholly from its father. Thus
the word father is synonymous with the word life-giver.
Divine Life Transferred.
We must not be wise above what is
written. God has not revealed to us the particular process by which
life originally given to the Only-Begotten, the Logos, was transferred
without cessation to the womb of Mary, the mother of Jesus, for her to
nourish and develop it to birth on the human plane.
OV151 of existence. This great fact we accept for two reasons:
(1) Because it is the statement of the only Book which bears the stamp of Divine Revelation.
(2) Because we perceive that just such a
condition of things is necessary to the working out of the Divine
Program as originally intended—a Program which the Almighty Father
could have arranged otherwise had He desired. The point of special
interest to us is: How could this clean thing, this life of the Logos,
be nourished in the womb of an unclean, imperfect, mother not separate
from sinners? The Prophet inquires, "Who can bring a clean thing out of
an unclean?" and replies: Not one.
No man would have such power. But this is
the very power which God possesses, and claims to have exercised in the
miraculous birth of Jesus. Science for some time has been closely
approaching the solution of this question. Science is finding that a
perfect creature can appropriate to its own use such elements of
nutrition as are necessary, advantageous and healthful, and can reject
and pass by the unhealthful nutriments. More and more this principle is
recognized, not only in laboratories, but also in daily life. A healthy
man may eat almost anything with impunity. His system will reject and
purge of unhealthful, poisonous elements and retain, absorb,
appropriate the healthful. This is in harmony with the old proverb,
"One manÂ’s meat is another manÂ’s poison." And in proportion as one is
bodily weak and degenerate, he is susceptible to diseases of every
kind. In proportion as he is strong, full of vitality, vigor, the
various microbes and bacteria are repelled by his system. Applying this
principle in the case of Jesus, it solves the riddle; it shows us how
the perfect germ of life from the spirit plane could appropriate to
itself the necessary nourishments for its own perfect development. Thus
we are better enabled to-day to see the philosophy of the immaculate
conception of our Lord than were any of our forefathers. And to-day
also we understand the philosophy of the Atonement better than they: we
may the better see why Jesus must needs have been perfect—why no
imperfect one could have been the Redeemer.
Not a God, But a Man.
Thus seen, the Redeemer was not a mere
man in the sense of being on a common plane with the remainder of
mankind, imperfect, fallen. He was a man, nevertheless—a perfect man,
an image of God in the flesh, as was Father Adam before he sinned. The
Divine Law stipulates "an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, a manÂ’s
life for a manÂ’s life." And it was the requirement of this Law that
Jesus came to meet on manÂ’s behalf. He became a man. He became flesh
and dwelt among us, because this was necessary. It was not necessary
for Him to become a man to utter the words which He uttered during His
earthly ministry. True, indeed, "Never man spake like this Man," yet He
spoke to the people in parables and dark sayings—"without a parable
spake He not unto them." Our LordÂ’s words could have been otherwise
conveyed. The explanations of His words are given by the Apostles.
Without His enlightenment through the Apostles His words would to-day
be dark and not understood. Jesus came into the world, not to be a
Teacher, but to be a Savior—a Redeemer. Thus it is written, "A body
hast Thou prepared Me" "for the suffering of death." (#Heb 10:5 ; 2:9.)
Had it not been necessary for Jesus to suffer death, "the Just for the
unjust," He would not have come into the world. His death as a spirit
being would not have redeemed mankind, for the same reason that the
death of bulls and goats, under the Law Covenant, could not take away
sin. It was necessary that He should give Himself a ransom-price for
all. The word ransom, as used in #1Ti 2:6, signifies in Greek a price to correspond. And the only price that would correspond
OV152 to the life of the perfect man who
sinned in Eden was the life of a perfect man who had not sinned. It was
this ransom-price that Jesus gave and on account of which it is written
that He bought us and bought the world. Strictly speaking, the
purchasing is not yet accomplished. The price is ready in the hands of
Justice, but not appropriated to the world. It is to be appropriated or
given to Adam and his race under the New Covenant arrangements of
MessiahÂ’s Kingdom. Meantime, the merit of JesusÂ’ sacrifice, which is in
the hands of Justice, is imputed to His disciples, to all who turn from
sin and accept Him as their Savior. After making full consecration of
their all they are begotten of the Holy Spirit. The imputation of the
merit of JesusÂ’ sacrifice to His followers continues all through this
Gospel Age.
And not until the last member shall have
passed beyond the veil victorious will he be ready to appropriate His
ransom sacrifice fully for the cancellation of the worldÂ’s sins. In
harmony with this the Scriptures tell us that "the whole world lieth in
the Wicked One"—only the Church is now being delivered. The Apostle
says, "We (the Church) were children of wrath even as others (still
are.)—#Eph 2:3 .
In a word, two salvations will result
from the faithfulness of the Logos in doing the FatherÂ’s will. The
Undefiled OneÂ’s sacrifice is sufficient for the sins of the whole
world. The Church class, through the imputation of His righteousness,
obtains now their share of the merit of that sacrifice and are thereby
enabled to be justified freely from all sin and to join with the
Redeemer in His sufferings, in His sacrifice, and thus be prepared to
share in His coming glory. The reward to this class is glory, honor and
immortality, the Divine nature—"far above angels, principalities and
powers and every name that is named."
The WorldÂ’s Salvation.
The human nature which Jesus laid down
sacrificially He did not forfeit. The Divine nature to which He was
raised on the third day was not in exchange for His human nature, but
as a reward for His sacrifice. He, therefore, still has that right to
human nature, and it, in harmony with the Divine Plan, He purposes to
give to the world of mankind. This will constitute the worldÂ’s
salvation. It will be given, however, only to such of mankind—after
being brought to a knowledge of the Truth—as during Messiah’s reign,
will gladly and heartily accept the Divine terms.
The uplift of humanity from sin,
degradation, meanness, death, to perfection and all that was lost in
Adam, will be conditioned upon obedience to the Divine requirements.
Assistance out of sin and death conditions will be supplied by the
great Redeemer and His glorified Church, His Bride. Thus seen, the
ChurchÂ’s salvation will soon be completed in the First Resurrection and
the worldÂ’s salvation will then be ready to begin. It will be
participated in by all to a certain extent, but all who eventually
reject Divine favor will be destroyed from amongst the people in the
Second Death. (#Ac 3:23;
Jude 12 .) We note another difference between these two salvations. The
first, as we have seen, is a salvation to heavenly or spirit nature by
a process of "change," "begetting of the Holy Spirit," and the
sacrifice and death of the fleshly nature. The other, the worldÂ’s
salvation, will not be by sacrifice, will not be by change of nature,
but by obedience and resurrection—the human nature retained will be
gradually restored and brought to perfection in all the willing and
obedient. They will get to the full the earthly life rights,
privileges, etc., of Jesus, which the Church gets only in a reckoned or
imputed sense, not to keep, but to assist them by making their
sacrifices holy and acceptable in GodÂ’s sight. In view of these things,
we see the importance of this great fact of the immaculate conception
of Jesus—"holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners."
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