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RAM--Slain in Isaac's Stead--Its Antitype. ::Q557:1:: QUESTION (1911)--l--If Abraham is a type of Jehovah, and if Isaac is a type of Christ, what does the ram slain in Isaac's stead typify?
ANSWER--I
think the ram slain in Isaac's stead typified Isaac--in his stead, his
representative, and in that sense, of course, it typified Christ. If
Isaac typifies Christ, then the ram typifies Christ.
RANSOM--Distinction Between it and Sin Offering. ::Q557:2:: QUESTION (1908)--2--What is the distinction between the ransom and the sin offering of the Atonement Day?
ANSWER--We
might answer that by saying, What is the distinction between the
parable of the ten virgins and the parable of the wheat and the tares?
There is a great deal of distinction. They are viewed entirely from
different standpoints, and each parable must be viewed from its own
standpoint. And so with the various statements respecting our Lord and
the work that he did. Some of them view Him from the one standpoint and
some from the other. From the standpoint of the ransom, our Lord is
viewed as being the one who corresponded to Father Adam. As by one
man's disobedience, sin entered the world, even so by the righteousness
of one, free grace has come. In other words, what Adam brought upon our
race of sin, degradation, and death penalty, our Lord Jesus has set
aside by reason of having paid the penalty on our behalf. This is the
concrete view of the subject, you might say a condensed view of it.
Now, the sin offering of the day of
Atonement is a different view altogether--not contradictory but
thoroughly in harmony, but a different view nevertheless. It pictures
how our Lord accepts the atonement of Christ on our behalf. Now the
fact that Christ meets the whole penalty is one thing, you see, and the
fact that God accepted it in certain ways is another thing. The sin
offering shows us how God appropriates this sacrifice of Christ. First
of all, the sacrifice
::Page Q558::
Christ is appropriated on behalf of the
household of faith including the members of the body of Christ. That is
shown in the type; the first sin offering of the Day of Atonement, the
bullock, representing our Lord Jesus, was appropriated to the household
of faith and the members of His body, and was not appropriated to
anything else. And this was done before any other work was done, and
this in the type is shown as a separate and distinct sacrifice and a
separate and distinct application of the sacrifice. Then came in the
second sin offering of the Day of Atonement, namely, the Lord's goat,
the Lord's goat representing, we understand, the Church, His Body--the
members of His Body. It shows a separate and distinct work done by the
Church--not by the Church as individuals, but by the Church as members
of His Body, no value attaching to the individual, for the individual
by that time is lost sight of. It is the member of Christ's Body that
is sacrificed.
You see the difference, dear friends. You
and I present our bodies living sacrifices. That is as far as we can
go. That sacrifice we present to the Lord is presented at the beginning
of our consecration, and when he accepts it, our part is done. Now,
when he accepted of our sacrifice, he counted us thenceforth as new
creatures, and as members of the Body of Christ, and it is as members
of the High Priest's Body that we have been putting to death the old
nature ever since. So you see the difference between our standing in
the matter as individuals and our standing as members of the Body of
Christ. Our standing as individuals ceases entirely when we have
presented our bodies; we are reckoned dead and, therefore, we who are
dead are not suffering anything. It is the new creature that is doing
the offering, and the new creature is a member of the Body of Christ,
and therefore, it is the Great Priest whose members we are that is
offering this secondary sin offering, represented in the type by the
goat. And this offering of the sin offering, of the goat, continues
throughout a period of time, and at its completion the work effected by
it is shown to be that a propitiation is made for the sin of all the
people. Now, all the people, you see, in the type, meant all the other
tribes outside of the tribe of Levi, and all the other people in the
world outside of the Levites. The believers represented by the tribe of
Levi, and the priests of that tribe, represent the Royal Priesthood.
All the other people are represented in the other eleven tribes--all
the other people who will ever come into harmony with God, either in
this age or in the next age. They are all represented by this other
type, and atonement is made for them all with a view to bringing them
all back into relationship with God. So that work will be finished by
the end of the Gospel Age, and you and I as members of the Body of
Christ are participating; He is putting us to death; He is putting our
flesh to death; He it is who is offering the sacrifice; He does the
whole thing, and all the merit is in Him, and none of the merit is in
you and I.
So, then, you see that this type is in
perfect accord with the doctrine of the ransom, because all of the
merit you have in your sacrifice and that I have in my sacrifice, came
to us through Christ and through our relationship to Him. Therefore it
is the Christ that is doing the whole work, though
::Page Q559::
he does it in this piece-meal manner. We
might just as well say that Jesus could not be the Redeemer and
ransomer of Adam, unless He would die in an instant, unless He had
given His life at the very moment, because, you remember, He
consecrated His life to death at Jordan, when He offered Himself, as
the Apostle tells us. That is where He gave up His life, that is where
He surrendered His life; but now it took three and a half years before
that life was fully given up. That is to say, the three and a half
years from His baptism at Jordan until the time on the cross He said,
"It is finished." Now likewise, we can just as well see a still larger
fulfillment, for while it began at His baptism, and while one feature
was completed at His cross, in another sense He has not yet completed
it, because He is still offering, the Great High Priest is still
carrying out this great work of sin atonement, and during all of this
age He is working in you and me, and in all who are accepted as members
of the body, that He may present us ultimately as members of His
glorious bride.
RANSOM--Re Sufferings of Jesus. ::Q559:1:: QUESTION (1910-Z)--1--Were the physical sufferings of our Lord Jesus requisite to the ransoming of humanity?
ANSWER--The
Ransom, or corresponding price which our Lord Jesus gave, consisted in
his being the Perfect Man with all the rights of Adam and in these
being surrendered or given up to death regardless of whether his death
would be an easy or a painful one. The Scriptures say that "it pleased
the Father to bruise him," not indicating by this, however, that our
Heavenly Father took pleasure in the sufferings of his Son, but that
this was his pleasure so far as his Plan of Salvation, etc., was
concerned. He put severe tests upon this One who would be the Redeemer
of mankind, not only to develop him as the beginning of a new creation
(`Heb. 2:10 `) and to prove his character, but also to manifest to us
and to angels and to all creatures the wonderful obedience of the Lord
Jesus and his worthiness of the high exaltation to the divine nature
and all the glorious offices to be accorded him. Hence the Father
provided that he must be "led as a lamb to the slaughter," and he also
provided, in the Jewish Law, that the extreme curse of that Law should
be a death penalty on the tree. "Cursed is every one that hangeth on a
tree."
These provisions, we understand, were not
of Divine necessity, but of Divine wisdom and expediency. It was
necessary that Christ should suffer that he might enter into his
glory--before he could be the qualified High Priest, and ultimately
accomplish the work of Mediator between God and the world of mankind;
hence his sufferings were permitted for the testing, the proving of
himself. And so with the sufferings that come to the Body of Christ,
the Church. They are for our own development. The Father deals with us
as with sons. He lovingly chastises and corrects us that he may thereby
fit and prepare us and demonstrate our worthiness of the glorious
reward which he has arranged for us with our Lord, and under him.
We get the right view of the entire matter, we believe, when we see that the death of Jesus was not the ransom;that it did not accomplish the ransom-work, but simply furnished the ransom-price; and that the ransoming with that
::Page Q560::
price is a matter that is done in the
"Most Holy"--in heaven. To explain: He ascended up on high, having to
his credit the price or value sufficient to ransom the whole world,
but none of it yet applied for any one. He has appropriated the merit
of that ransom-price to the Church, imputing this merit to them during
this Gospel Age, to cover their Adamic sins and to make good, to
compensate for, the imperfection of their mortal bodies, thus enabling
them to present sacrifices which God can and will accept through the
merit of their Advocate.
But that ransom-price, so far as the
world is concerned, is still in reservation and will be given on behalf
of them, as represented by the "sprinkling of the blood" at the end of
the Day of Atonement, shortly now, in the beginning of the Millennial
Age, to seal the New Covenant and to put into operation all the
glorious provisions which God has made for the world.
We believe it to be a very important
matter to keep distinctly separate the work which Jesus did and the
value of that in God's sight as an asset, something to his credit on
the heavenly account and something which he now applies to us, and by
and by will give in perpetuity to mankind as their ransom-price.
RANSOM--Man Christ Jesus. ::Q560:1:: QUESTION
(1911-Z)--1--Kindly explain the following text, especially the forepart
of it: "The Man Christ Jesus, who gave himself a ransom for all."--`1
Tim. 2:5,6`.
ANSWER--Our
Lord gave himself a corresponding price for all--a ransom. The
application of this price will be made in due time. It has been, at the
present time, appropriated to the Church, imputatively, on account of
their turning from sin and walking in the footsteps of Jesus. The next
step in its application will be, not the imputation, but the actual
giving of this to the world, bringing them up out of their
imperfection, during the thousand years of the Mediatorial reign;
bringing them back into that condition in which they shall be in
harmony with God, even as Adam was in harmony with him before the fall.
Regarding the expression, "The Man Christ Jesus," we would say that the Man who gave himself
seems to be the particular point. That Man who gave himself, the
anointed Jesus, who finished the giving of himself at Calvary, is the
"Mediator between God and men," between God and the world of mankind.
In harmony with the Divine Plan, during this Age, before his work of
uplifting mankind is due to begin, he is doing another work that the
Father has ordained; namely, the selection of brethren over whom he is
placed as the "Captain of their salvation." These are counted in as
members of the Body of the Messiah, he being Head over them--"the
Church which is his Body."
So, then, the Man Christ Jesus is the
Redeemer of the world. But in the interim--as noted above--before the
application of his merit shall be made for the world, the testimony is
given to a few--as many as have ears to hear and are joint-sacrificers
with him. These will be associated with him as Prophet, Priest,
Mediator, King and Judge between God and men during the Millennial
Kingdom.
RANSOM--How Merit of is Applied. ::Q560:2:: QUESTION (1911-Z)--2--Is there anything connected with
::Page Q561::
the Atonement Day sacrifices which corresponds to the Ransom? If so, what?
ANSWER--The word Ransom would more properly be rendered Ransom-Price,
corresponding price. On the Day of Atonement no type of the
ransom-price is given us, but rather a type of the Sin-Offering,
showing particularly how that ransom-price will be made applicable. If
we scrutinize this Atonement Day type, however, we shall find that
which points to the Ransom, in the killing of the bullock; for the
whole matter depended upon the killing of the bullock. The goat could
not be killed first. The bullock must first be killed and the blood
applied in the Most Holy before anything could be done with the goat.
Hence, all that was done, not only with the Lord's goat, but also with
the scapegoat, was based on the death of the bullock. So if we look for
anything that might correspond to the ransom-price in the Day of
Atonement sacrifices, we shall see that the death of the goat was not
necessary, but all depended on the bullock.
RANSOM--Emphasized by I.B.S.A. ::Q561:1:: QUESTION (1915)--1--"A Ransom for All." Why does the I.B.S.A. place such emphasis on this point?
ANSWER--We
understand, dear friends, that the Ransom is the very center, we might
say the hub, of the Divine Plan; that everything in God's Plan circles
around the Ransom. Every feature of His Plan is vitally connected with
it. Just as every spoke of a wheel is connected with the hub, so all
the various features of Divine Truth radiate from this doctrine. For
this reason we make it very prominent.
We believe that every one out of harmony
with the Ransom is out of harmony with the Plan of God, and that any
one truly in accord with the Ransom is necessarily in harmony with the
whole Plan of God. The Bible gives this doctrine great prominence. The
Bible declares that "by one man's disobedience sin entered into the
world," and that by the obedience of another man, Jesus Christ, the
ransoming of the race is achieved (`Rom. 5:12-21 `). The satisfaction of
Divine Justice is thus affected. Hence God can be just and yet be the
Justifier of all who believe in Jesus (`Rom. 3:26 `). This is our reason
for placing such emphasis on the Ransom, for making it so
prominent--because the Bible makes it prominent. Every doctrine must be
in accord with the Bible or be wrong. If you square your views with the
Bible, you can readily see that many doctrines accepted by people
generally are entirely erroneous.
RANSOM--Fully Paid. ::Q561:2:: QUESTION
(1916)--2--About April 1st the Tower said the ransom is not fully paid
till the Church is glorified. It is hard for me to understand this.
ANSWER--The
thought here seems to be--when it was finished--the ransom work
finished--the corresponding price paid. We cannot help what we thought
was wrong. We thought once that a great many things were not correct.
We are finding out more clearly day by day what the Bible does teach.
What difference whether we saw God's plan was finished 1,000 years ago,
or 1,000 years future? It is going to be finished and His plan is all
working out for good. If the ransom price had been paid then from that
moment Jesus would have had charge of the whole world of mankind, but
::Page Q562::
he did not take charge; he has not yet
taken charge, and God's time for him to take charge has not yet come.
Jesus came before the time to take charge of the world, in order that
the church might come in, and the great work of blessing the world
itself will not begin till the church is completed. Now it is merely a
difference in the form of expression. So far as the sacrifice of Jesus
is concerned, the ransom price was laid down at Calvary, or more
particularly, laid down at Jordan when Jesus gave himself to the
Father. That is the particular time which corresponds to the killing of
the bullock--the bullock representing the flesh of Jesus. The moment it
was killed, that moment the High Priest began as the New Creature--went
into the Holy; so Jesus, when be offered himself up at Jordan,
immediately, as the antitypical High Priest, enters the Holy, burns
incense at the golden altar and later enters beyond the second veil,
appearing there for us. After that we were privileged to come in, but
so far as the laying down of the price was concerned, it was laid down,
put in the bands of the Father when Jesus consecrated himself to do the
Father's will, put his life in the Father's hands. All his destiny was
in the Father's hands, and this destiny as the Father marked out for
him, was completed at Calvary. The work the Father gave him to do, he
did. One work, the work of sacrificing, and another, making application
of the sacrifice, first for the Church, when he ascended up on high. It
had not yet been applied to the Church; they had not received the holy
Spirit, not until Jesus appeared in the presence of God for us and made
imputation in a special way. Not till then did the Church get any
benefit. At the appropriate time the world will get its benefit.
RANSOM--Not Shown in Old Testament. ::Q562:1:: QUESTION (1916)--1--Was the ransom work shown as types or shadows in the O.T.?
ANSWER--I
do not think of any types or shadows representing the ransom, and for
the very reason I do not think it would be shown. A bullock would not
be found to represent the ransom price and there was no perfect man.
The only illustration which we have is this one which God has given
us--Jesus the ransomer of father Adam.
RANSOM--Illustrated in Work of Jesus. ::Q562:2:: QUESTION (1916)--2--Please explain the meaning and illustration of the word ransom, as to the work of Jesus.
ANSWER--We
have already done this. The work of Jesus was the giving of himself,
the corresponding price on behalf of Adam, and as all the race was
included in Adam so all the race of Adam was included in the ransoming
work; so we read "As by one man came death, by one man also comes the
resurrection of the dead, for as all in Adam die, even so all in Christ
shall be made alive, every man in his own order."
RANSOM--Bible Illustration. ::Q562:3:: QUESTION (1916)--3--Please give a good illustration, of the meaning of the word "ransom."
ANSWER--I
do not think we could have a better illustration than the Bible gives.
The perfect man Adam is the one who sinned and was sentenced to death
and in order to be his redeemer it was necessary that one should be
like him, a perfect man, and thus that he became man--not a
::Page Q563::
sinful man like the race, but holy,
harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners as Adam was at the time that
he sinned. This is the best illustration of the ransom that I know of;
the Bible's own illustration. Something we do not carry out in our
affairs of life--it was under the law; an eye for an eye, a tooth for a
tooth. If some one knocked out two teeth, you had a right to knock out
two teeth for him. That was Justice. No merit in it.
RANSOM--Meaning of. ::Q563:1:: QUESTION (l9l6)--l--Please define the meaning of the word "Ransom."
ANSWER--The
word ransom signifies a price that corresponds. The literal meaning of
the word as you find given in Young's Concordance, "A price
corresponding." Thus we see there was no price corresponding to Adam;
there was no perfect man that could give himself as ransom. No angel
could be a corresponding price. No perfect man anywhere in the Universe
of God. A spirit being could not be a ransom for they were on a higher
plane than Adam. Not a creature in all the universe of God could be a
ransom for Adam. Therefore God arranged that the Logos might become the
suitable one to be the ransom price for Adam and thus he became the
ransom.
RANSOM--Denying Re Second Death. ::Q563:2:: QUESTION (1916)--2--Will all the people who deny the ransom go into second death?
ANSWER--We
are not supposed to answer a question like that. The answer we have is
"The Lord will judge His people" and it is not for you or me to decide
whether that one will be of the little flock or the great company or
second death class. We are not here to judge one another. If you see
any one going blind, give them the eye salve. Do not tell them where
you think they are going to be. We had better not tell what we do not
know.
RANSOM--Scriptures Teaching this Doctrine. ::Q563:3:: QUESTION (1916)--3--Please quote the Scriptures that clearly teach the doctrine of the ransom.
ANSWER--There
are a great many scriptures that might be seen to clearly teach the
doctrine of the ransom. "The man Christ Jesus who gave himself a ransom
for all to be testified in due time." That is a very distinct
statement. Another would be "As by a man came death by a man also comes
the resurrection of the dead." "As all in Adam die even so all in
Christ shall be made alive." Many of these texts show the
correspondency. So we read "Even the precious blood of Christ." "The
precious blood of Christ" would mean all that the word "ransom" means,
and the word blood, giving of life in exchange for life and the only
one person who had life in the full sense was father Adam, and the next
person to have full life on the human plane was Jesus. He has a
transferred life.
RANSOM--Re Adversary and Fallen Angels. ::Q563:4:: QUESTION (l9l6)--4--When the Logos left the heavenly glory and became flesh did he ransom the adversary and the fallen angels?
ANSWER--The
Scriptures tell that Jesus came to taste death for every man, not for
devils at all. Not a word. Besides we have no record that the devils
were ever
::Page Q564::
sentenced to death, and how could they be
ransomed from death. They were separated, alienated from God and
confined for a time in Tartarus in our earth's atmosphere. If this is
their condition, I think they had a pretty bad time--a very severe
punishment. Some one has told about infidels. He represented his
thoughts by saying he had a dream. I suppose a waking dream. There he
saw a town called Infidel and only infidels entered there and they
locked it up so no one could get out. He walked past there a year later
and heard the wails. "Let us out--let us out, we can't stand it here
any longer." I was not sure he had the right thought about the
infidels, but I thought the word picture represented the condition of
the fallen angels pretty well. I think they would like to get away from
each other--not very good company. From what we have illustrated in the
Bible, they have a great deal of wickedness and if they have wickedness
toward humanity, they may have evil tendencies toward each other and I
think they have been having a terrible time for 4,000 years. The Bible
does state that there will be something for those angels without
telling distinctly what it will be. The Apostle says, "know ye not we
shall judge angels?" Not the holy angels. It would only be those fallen
angels. We may not see clearly enough to say how we could judge the
angels, but that there is to be some kind of a judgment of angels is
plainly stated by the Apostle. They are confined in chains of darkness
until the judgment day, inferring there will be a judgment or trial
come to them. Testified to by three Apostles. What would that mean?
That there would be some opportunity for them to clear themselves.
Whoever is put on trial, means they are going to have a trial, an
opportunity, and the world's judgment day means the world will have an
opportunity, and our opportunity comes through the merit of Christ's
sacrifice releasing us from the sentence upon us as sinners, but the
judgment and trial of angels could not come from that, for they were
not sentenced to death but to this earth's atmosphere, this
confinement, shutting them up as the apostle puts it, setting them
aside from communication with the Lord. Angels shut up for a long time
would see no hope whatever. They have insulted the Almighty. They were
inexcusable knowing they were doing wrong, and they fell under the
Divine hand. The mercy of God was not manifested to anybody. The Holy
Angels will not need mercy--no one was needing mercy. They never had an
illustration of God's mercy, but they had of God's justice, in their
case of condemning in darkness. The first illustration they got was the
same that came to mankind--what the Bible tells about Jesus "Herein was
manifest (give the full weight to that word manifest) the love of God
in that He gave His only begotten son that whosoever believeth on him
should not perish but have everlasting life." Do you suppose they were
wondering what next He would do? I think they looked on in astonishment
when they saw Jesus consecrating his life; his temptation in the
wilderness; loyalty to the Father and full devotion in every way,
noting the three and one-half years in ministry in which he was
faithfully walking the narrow way, saw him crucified; then thought they
had finally done him up and that would be the end of the matter? They
thought he had come to an end. They had never known any one to be
resurrected from the dead.
::Page Q565::
But when on the third day Jesus rose from
the dead, a spirit being of the highest order, of the Divine nature,
don't you think those fallen angels were looking then? I think so. God
said He highly exalted him, that at the name of Jesus every knee should
bow. Don't you think those angels saw how glorious he was and how grand
his nature? Then those angels faithful to him learned a great lesson
there. How do you know? Peter says so. In his resurrection Jesus
preached to the spirits in prison--the imprisoned evil spirits--the
fallen angels. How do you know? Because Peter went on to say, those
evil spirits which were disobedient in the days of Noah, while the Ark
was preparing--he limited the matter, points out just which he meant.
They were the very ones. Did he go off alive and speak to them? No, he
was dead. He died on Calvary. By this whole procedure, his death and
resurrection, he preached the greatest sermon those fallen angels ever
heard. Obedience on the part of the Savior and pleasing in the sight of
the Father, and the great blessing coming on every one who would be
faithful to him and loyal to God. I am going to speak and give my guess
so you will not make any mistake and think I am inspired. I guess from
that time some of those fallen angels had a new thought on the subject
and said, now we see more than ever before how greatly we sinned and
how wrong was our course and one after another said, I am determined to
take a right stand hereafter, but I could not even give guess whether
it would be many or a few that would take that stand, that henceforth
they would be loyal to God and wait and hope God would give them some
blessing. I am going to suppose that some did that, and what do you
think would be the consequence? I think they have had a terrible
time--a devilish time. I think the fallen angels that did not turn to
God would give them plenty of persecution as they would try to be loyal
to God and His principles of righteousness and they would have to
suffer for righteousness sake. They perhaps have had to suffer a good
deal in all this time if they took a proper stand. My thought is we are
coming down to the close of the age, and that these that manifest their
repentance toward God, and have taken their stand on the side of God,
of righteousness and truth, and in opposition to the fallen ones and
the wrong course--my thought is they are about to be vindicated and get
a blessing and a release from their difficulties and they will be more
or less under judgment by the experience of the Church during this
Gospel Age, and in God's due time they are to have a release from the
fallen ones, and the fallen ones eventually will be destroyed in second
death with Satan. He has not repented. He is still the same
adversary--He is our great adversary. "Your adversary the devil." No
mistake about it, and if he has not had trial enough for 6,000 years to
demonstrate what his real character is, I wonder how long it would take
to find out? I wonder if God would want to test any one more than 6,000
years?
RANSOM--Definition of. ::Q565:1:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--1--Give a brief definition of the word Ransom.
ANSWER--A Ransom is the amount of consideration paid for the release of a person or property, captured or detained.
::Page Q566::
RANSOM--Definition of Merit. ::Q566:1:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--l--Give brief definition of the word Merit.
ANSWER--Merit
is (1) that which deserves consideration, reward, or esteem; (2) value,
reward or recompense deserved or received, as at school.
RANSOM--Definition of Legal Tender. ::Q566:2:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--2--Give brief definition of Legal Tender.
ANSWER--Legal Tender
is that currency or money which the law authorizes a debtor to offer in
payment of a debt and requires a creditor to receive. In other words,
that which the government or law approves as a medium of exchange.
RANSOM--Definition of Pay and Paid. ::Q566:3:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--3--What is the meaning of the words To Pay or Paid?
ANSWER--To Pay means to discharge a debt, to give an equivalent for, to fulfil. The word Paid would signify that such a debt had been discharged; was fulfilled; that the proper equivalent had been turned over.
RANSOM--Definition of Deposit. ::Q566:4:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--4--Give brief definition of the word Deposit?
ANSWER--A Deposit is anything deposited; something committed to the care of another.
RANSOM--Difference Between Paid, Applied and Deposit. ::Q566:5:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--5--What is the difference in the meaning of the terms Paid, Applied and Deposit.
ANSWER--There is quite a difference in the meaning of these words. When the word paid is used, it signifies that the thing applied to an obligation is sufficient; when the word applied is used, it signifies that a financial obligation has been met, directly or indirectly; when the word Deposit is used, it signifies that something has been left in the care of another which has not yet been appropriated, or applied.
RANSOM--Definition Sin Offering. ::Q566:6:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--6--Define briefly the term Sin-Offering.
ANSWER--The term Sin-Offering signifies an offering made on account of sin, as an offset to sin, as a satisfaction for the sin.
RANSOM--Re Merit of Christ. ::Q566:7:: QUESTION (l916-Z)--7--What is meant by the term Merit of Christ Jesus?
ANSWER--We
might speak of the Merit of Christ Jesus from various viewpoints; as,
for instance, the merit of His having become the Man Jesus, in the
sense of its indicating His loyalty to God and His obedience to the
Divine Program; or we might speak of His merit as a man--that He made a
meritorious delivery of that which He had, of that which was right,
just and
::Page Q567::
lawful. But when we speak of the Merit of
Christ Jesus with respect to His making atonement for the sin of the
world, we have in view another matter entirely; namely, that a contract
existed between the Heavenly Father and the Lord Jesus Christ, by which
the Lord was to become a human being and then to give up His human
nature, permitting His life to be taken from Him as a man, thus
signifying His loyalty and obedience to the Father's will, complete
obedience unto death even the death of the cross.
When we speak of the Merit of Jesus
Christ, we understand that, on account of that Merit which He had, and
which the Father recognized when He raised the Son from the dead, our
Lord was rewarded, not merely by being taken back to the spirit plane,
but by being "highly exalted" to the Divine nature. This Merit of
Jesus, then, which God rewarded, left Him a certain amount of substance
or blessing which He might bestow upon others; namely, His right
to human life, which He has not forfeited by sin, nor by any other
procedure. This right to human life, which we speak of as a merit to
the credit of Jesus, the Bible informs us is ultimately to be
appropriated by the Lord Jesus Christ, in full harmony with the
Father's Plan, for the cancellation of the "sins of the whole world"
(`1 John 2:2 `)--the sin of Adam and all of his race, who died in him.
That Merit is already our Lord's, and is subject to His disposal at the
proper time, set by the Father.
RANSOM--Definition of Atonement. ::Q567:1:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--l--Give a brief definition of the word Atonement.
ANSWER--The word Atonement signifies the making at one,
the bringing back into harmony persons or things not in full accord. As
applied to the human family, it would signify that, Adam and his race
having been disobedient to the Divine arrangement, and having come
under Divine displeasure and condemnation, this condemnation, by Divine
arrangement is to be done away with, and mankind are to be brought back
into harmony with God--to be at-one
with Him again--as many of them as are willing and will accept the
Divine terms. The arrangements by which this is to be accomplished is
what we term the work of the Atonement; and this work of Atonement was
the work begun by our Lord Jesus Christ at His First Advent, continued
since, and to be completed at and during His Second Advent. In a word,
then, the Atonement in the fullest sense of the word begins with the
Church and will not be completed until its provision shall have been
extended to all the members of the human family, bringing all the
willing and obedient back into full harmony with Jehovah.
RANSOM--Re Any Perfect Human Being. ::Q567:2:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--2--Could a perfect human being pay the Ransom-price?
ANSWER--No!
A perfect man could not pay the Ransom-price, unless by some Divine
arrangement, contract, agreement. If, for instance, there had been a
perfect human being in the world, he could not have become the Redeemer
of Father Adam, except as a privilege by Divine arrangement. It would
be for the Divine Court to determine whether or not one could be
accepted for another. In the case of the Lord Jesus Christ, by Divine
arrangement He became suitable to be the Ransom-price--a perfect
man--and then, in fulfilment of the Divine Program, He gave Himself;
and because of this arrangement He was acceptable.
::Page Q568::
RANSOM--How Provided? ::Q568:1:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--l--How was the Ransom-price provided?
ANSWER--God
Himself provided the Ransom; and it "taketh away the sin of the world."
Only by Divine provision would the ransoming of man have been possible.
RANSOM--Where Provided? ::Q568:2:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--2--Where was the Ransom-price provided?
ANSWER--In
the Divine Purpose, the Ransom-price was provided from the foundation
of the world; for the Scriptures assure us that our Lord Jesus Christ,
in the Divine Purpose, was the Lamb of God slain from the foundation of
the world. (`Rev. 13:8 `.) In a secondary sense, the Ransom-price was
provided when the contract was made between Jehovah God and His honored
Logos. In another sense of the word, the Ransom-price was not provided
until the Logos had been made flesh and had reached full human
perfection at 30 years of age.
It was then possible for our Lord to
serve, in harmony with God's arrangement, as a Ransom-price, and to
give Himself a Ransom-price. But He did not give Himself to be this
Ransom-price until He entered into the Covenant with God, symbolizing
by baptism the full consecration of His life even unto death. Yet it
was not a completed thing then, for there were conditions associated
with it. While His will was there given up, and was so recognized by
the Father, nevertheless it remained for Him, day by day and hour by
hour, to show His full surrender. His sacrifice was completed when He
died on Calvary, crying, "It is finished!" He had finished the laying
down of the Ransom-price; that is to say, He had fully provided the
Ransom-price. We are to recognize a difference, however, between providing the Ransom-price, and giving, or appropriating, or delivering
it. It was merely provided at the time when Jesus died; it was not yet
given, in the sense of being applied for man's delivery from death.
RANSOM--Who Provided? ::Q568:3:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--3--Who provided the Ransom-price?
ANSWER--Jehovah
God, primarily, in that He was the One who made the arrangement;
without His arrangement the Ransom would not have been possible. In a
secondary sense, Jesus Himself provided it, in that He gave Himself; He had full control of His own course at the time He made His consecration. His will was not coerced.
RANSOM--Re Paid at Calvary. ::Q568:4:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--4--Was the Ransom paid at Calvary?
ANSWER--We have already covered this point, showing that the Ransom was laid down at Calvary, and later placed in the hands of Justice, but not paid over in the sense of completing the contract--that being reserved for a future time. The Ransom was laid down
at the cross, when Jesus cried, "Father, into Thy hands I commit My
spirit"--My life! Thus Jesus, so to speak, made a deposit of the
Ransom-price without definitely applying it.
RANSOM--Re Paying in Heaven. ::Q568:5:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--5--Was the Ransom paid when Jesus ascended into Heaven?
::Page Q569::
ANSWER--No! The reasons for this already stated.
RANSOM--Past--Present--Future. ::Q569:1:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--1--Has the Ransom-price been paid yet?
ANSWER--No!
For reasons already given; and we will say additionally, that the
Ransom-price is not to be fully paid until after the Church has been
entirely glorified and with Her Lord. Then it will be paid on behalf of the whole world, securing the release of the whole world from death, and the cancellation of Adamic condemnation.
RANSOM--Disposed of By Jesus. ::Q569:2:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--2--What did Jesus do with the Ransom-price when He ascended into Heaven?
ANSWER--He
had already placed it in the hands of Justice as a deposit. The human
life-right, the price, still was at His command. His next step was to
embargo, or mortgage it, by imputing a share of it to His Church--yet
undeveloped.
RANSOM--vs. Sin Offering. ::Q569:3:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--3--Briefly define the difference between Ransom and Sin-offering.
ANSWER--The
term "sin-offering" specifically refers to the fact that the thing, or
life (or lives) is presented to God as an offering, and on account of sin. A sin-offering implies
a ransom, but not specifically, not positively. It is an offering for
sin, but might not necessary mean a full, satisfactory offering; and
yet the fact that a sin-offering is acceptable to God would imply that
such offering was a full, complete offset, or satisfaction. The word
Ransom as used in the New Testament, has in it not only the thought of
an offering on account of something that was wrong, but additionally it
specifies that the offering corresponds fully and exactly, for the
meaning of the word Ransom as applied to Jesus, is a corresponding price.
RANSOM--Church's Participation in. ::Q569:4:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--4--Does the Church participate in the Ransom and in the Sin-offering, and why?
ANSWER--In
considering this question we must view the Church from two sides. If we
think of the Church in connection with the presentation of their bodies
living sacrifices to God, we would say that they are not participators in the Ransom, for they have nothing that they could give as a share in the Ransom--they are imperfect.
If we view the question from the other standpoint--that the Church are
spirit beings and as spirit beings are members of the Body of Christ,
one with Him who is their Head--they would as members of The Christ
share with Him in everything He does, just as the hand shares the head; for the human body is the figure that the Bible gives us, in speaking of The Christ. The merit by which the Ransom-price is effective with God was in Jesus alone. It was that merit which we did not possess when we presented ourselves to God in consecration. But when we were accepted by Jesus as disciples, He imputed His own merit
to us, and made us part of His own sacrifice. He was at the same time
making us part of that which He is to give to God for the sins of the
::Page Q570::
whole world, at the close of this Age when the Church, His Body, is complete and glorified together with Him.
We are to remember, however, that none of the human
remains; for at the time we were made members of the Body of Christ we
had become dead as human beings, by the surrender of our wills. Because
we are New Creatures, old things have passed away and all things have
become new. (`2 Cor. 5:17 `.) We are to remember, also, that it is not
the spiritual body of Christ that is sacrificed, even as it was not the spiritual Head that was sacrificed. The Sin-offering was the flesh. And it was Jesus' flesh that constituted the Ransom-- not our flesh. But now that this Ransom-price has been placed in the hands of Justice as a deposit,
whose title is possessed by Jesus, we are joint-sharers with Him in
this possession by reason of our relationship to Him and our interest
in everything that He possesses. Thus the Church becomes a sharer in
this Ransom-price, because as His bride we are His joint-heirs; and we
are to be associated with Him in giving to the world the benefits of
that Ransom-price.
We do not make the Sin-offering any more than we do the ransoming. We are merely accepted
by the High Priest. This acceptance is shown in His sacrificing of us
as human beings after He has imputed to us His merit. And in this
presentation at the end we shall share as New Creatures. It is not the
offering of anything the New Creature has in itself; but the New
Creature having participated with Jesus in the crucifying of the flesh,
each of these will be associated with Him also when the merit is
presented to the Father.
RANSOM--Basis for Advocate. ::Q570:1:: QUESTION
(1916-Z)--1--If Jesus paid the Ransom-price when He ascended into
Heaven, could He have become the Advocate of the Church? And if so, how?
ANSWER--If
Jesus had paid over and fully disposed of the Ransom-price when He
ascended up on High, it would immediately, if accepted, have taken
effect for Adam and his race; and such of the race as were living at
that time or have lived since, would have been on trial again,
individually, and would have been liable to death because of their
imperfection, not being able to cope with the situation unless Jesus
had established His Millennial Kingdom and had immediately begun to
provide all the necessary assistance through the New Covenant
arrangement. But as for the Church, there would have been no provision
for the Church, and no opportunity for giving the Church anything
special, since those who are of the Church were members of the human
family. The Ransom having been paid over, this would have settled all
the obligations against mankind, and would have left no room for the
Church class to be dealt with in any different manner from the rest of
the world. They would not have had any need of an Advocate, and, of
course, would not have had one.
RANSOM--Final Disposition of. ::Q570:2:: QUESTION (1916-Z)--2--When will the Ransom-price be fully paid and disposed of finally?
ANSWER--The
Ransom-price will be fully paid and fully disposed of after the Church
shall have passed beyond the vail, and when the great High Priest, Head
and Body (the
::Page Q571::
Church then being the glorified Body of
the great High Priest), shall seal the New Covenant and put it into
effective operation on behalf of Adam and all his race. The Ransoming will then be finished. The Atonement
work will not be finished at that time, however; it will include the
work of the Millennial Age, in bringing mankind (all who will) up out
of sin and degradation into full at-one-ment and harmony with God. But
the ransom-price must be fully paid over to Jehovah and accepted by Him
before this New Covenant can go into effect, and before human
Restitution can properly begin. Man's recovery from death is a part of
the Ransom work.--`Hosea 13:14 `.
RANSOM-PRICE--Furnished at Calvary. ::Q571:1:: QUESTION (1911-Z)--1--What did our Lord accomplish at Calvary?
ANSWER--The laying down of life on the part of our Lord did not ransom the race, as we have shown, but it furnished the ransom-price which is to effect the release of humanity, in God's due time and order; He gave Himself an antilutron (a corresponding price) "--`1 Tim. 2:5 ,6`.
RANSOM--Inspiration of Merit During Millennium. ::Q571:2:: QUESTION (1916)--2--Will the merit of Christ in any sense of the term be imputed to the world of mankind during the mediatorial reign?
ANSWER--There
will be no imputation of Christ's merit during the Millennial reign.
Not a bit. Because there will not be anything to impute. Why not?
Became it will all have been given at the beginning. When a thing is
given up you can't do any more with it. Suppose you had a million
dollars with which you intended to found or operate a great work and
you made ready everything in time, and that million dollars was in the
bank and all ready to apply for that purpose. And suppose then you
delivered it over to the committee that had to do with this great
enterprise. Now the moment you turned it over to the committee you have
nothing more to do with it, have you? And so Jesus with the
inauguration of the Millennium will turn over the full merit of His
sacrifice. It will all be given over to Justice. Justice will have
turned over mankind to Jesus. Jesus will have no more merit in the
hands of Justice after that to apply to anybody, impute or give to
anybody. It will all be given. It must be given at the very beginning
of the Millennial Age.
RANSOM--Depositing of Merit. ::Q571:3:: QUESTION
(1916)--3--What constitutes the depositing of the merit of the ransom
sacrifice of our Lord? When and where is the merit deposited?
ANSWER--Our
Lord deposited the merit of His sacrifice in the Father's hands on the
cross when He said, "Into Thy hands I commit my spirit." And it all
was--the spirit of life--He gave it all into the Father's hands. He
committed it to Him. He didn't say He applied it for sins at all. He
didn't say He applied it to the Church. But "into Thy hands I commit."
He left it in God's hands in the same sense you did that million
dollars I mentioned for the founding of a great work. You place the
money in the bank and take out a bank book in which you get credit. It
is still yours subject to your check. It would not belong to the bank
at all.
::Page Q572::
It is merely committed to the bank to take over. So Jesus committed all at His dying moment.
RANSOM--Was Deposit Made Once for All? ::Q572:1:: QUESTION (1916)--1--Was the deposit of the ransom price in the hands of Divine Justice made once for all?
ANSWER--I
do not know fully what the questioner means. But, of course, this
deposit was made once for all. That is, when you put the million
dollars in the bank, it was put there once for all, because you didn't
intend to check it out until you checked it out for the right thing. So
our Lord Jesus made deposit in the Father's hands with the intention
that at the end of this age He would make an application of that merit
on behalf of the sins of the whole world.
RANSOM--Was Imputation Once for All? ::Q572:2:: QUESTION (1916)--2--Was the imputation of Christ's merit to the Church made once for all?
ANSWER--The
imputation was made once for all when Jesus ascended up on high and
appeared in the presence of God for us. He doesn't need to appear each
day for us, my dear brethren, and He doesn't need to appear for you and
then appear for me and then somebody else, because the Father treats
the whole church as one, and it was all foreknown of God and was all
transferred to Jesus at the one time. The Father gave Him the church,
and so He imputed His merit on behalf of this church, all the members
of this Church, all who come under the conditions of the call of this
Church. It makes the door open for everybody to come in under these
conditions until the full number is complete. The imputation, you see,
attaches as much to us today as it could attach to them at that time
when Jesus appeared. And the Holy Spirit given then was not a Holy
Spirit given to us individually, but it was the Holy Spirit of God
given to the whole Church. That had already been given to Jesus as the
Head of the Body, but now He was authorized to communicate that spirit
to the Church which is His Body. And so that came when He ascended up
on high. And you remember Jesus said to them, "Unless I go to the
Father the Holy Spirit will not come." Now, He already had received the
Holy Spirit, but unless He ascended to the Father and appeared for us
the Holy Spirit would not come. "The Holy Spirit was not yet given
because Jesus was not yet glorified." But when He ascended in the
Father's presence He there made an imputation of that merit. "Into Thy
hands I commit my spirit." It was in the Father's hands as a deposit.
"Now, Father, you have in your hands sufficient for the sins of the
whole world. Now, I would impute, I would use the value of this in
respect to this Church. Not that they will get any of it. They will not
get any of it. This is to go to the world, but I wish to impute this to
cover their blemishes, because otherwise they would have to be of the
world and share in that. Now, I merely impute to them of this in your
hands, and intended eventually for the world." So the imputation was
all to come then and there for all of the Church.
RANSOM--Application of Merit. ::Q572:3:: QUESTION (1916)--3--Will the application of the ransom price for the world be made once for all?
ANSWER--The application of the ransom price is never to be made to the world. The world has nothing to do with
::Page Q573::
it. It is the Father that condemned. It
was the Father's law against man, condemning man to death, that needed
to be satisfied, and that will be done with the Father. Mankind will
have nothing to do with the ransom price. It is between Jesus and the
Father. And at the end of this age when the Church shall have been
dealt with and glorified, the imputation at an end, and all that full
amount of Christ's merit will be available for the world, then it will
all be presented to God to Justice, not to man at all. The privileges
of the ransom will immediately come to man, for the ransom is given to
God as the offset to man, that man may be set free, that the sentence
of death against the race may be set aside, and for all that thousand
years there will be no sentence of death against man. It will all be
wiped out. Christ will have wiped it out by the application of His
merit. They will all be dealt with by the Great Mediator as they will
be at that time, and they will all throughout the whole Millennial Age
be getting the benefits of the ransom, but the ransom price won't be
given to mankind at all, however.
RANSOM--Church's Part in Satisfying Justice. ::Q573:1:: QUESTION (1916)--1--Has the Church a part in the satisfying of Justice?
ANSWER--The
Church has no part in the ransom sacrifice, because the
ransom-sacrifice was the man Christ Jesus who gave himself as ransom
for all. He didn't need any more. But the Church will have to do with
it in the sense that before Jesus applies this for the world this
Church will be gathered out of the world and be the members of His
body, and when He appears at the end of this age to make application of
that merit, we will be in Him and sharers with Him; therefore we will
have to do with it in an indirect way.
RANSOM--Why Was Jesus Crucified? ::Q573:2:: QUESTION
(1916)--2--Was it necessary for Jesus to die on the cross for the sins
of the world? If not, why was He crucified on the cross? Was it to meet
the demands of the Mosaic law?
ANSWER--It
was not necessary for Jesus to die on the cross to meet the demands of
the law of God against Father Adam. Adam was not sentenced to die on
the cross. And therefore the redemption of Adam would not involve that
at all. But when God gathered the Jewish people apart from the world
and made a special covenant with them, He made a provision that the
criminals of that people might be crucified, cursed with a special
cursing. The extreme curse of the law was, "Cursed is everyone that
hangs on a tree." That will be the extreme curse. And so the Jews were
not to do anything more. But the law specified that as an extreme curse
so far as the Jewish nation was concerned. They needed something more
than the rest of mankind, and for them it was necessary that Jesus
should keep the whole law, because He was born under the law for that
very purpose. So the Jews were under the law. Not only under the
original law in which Father Adam was involved in the sentence of
death, but in addition they were under the Mosaic arrangement or
covenant. Now then, they will have to have a redemption that takes in
the violation of the Mosaic law, and the law prescribed that the worst
felons
::Page Q574::
should be hanged on a tree. Therefore, Jesus in order to meet the law's extreme limits must die on a tree.
RANSOM--Life Through Keeping the Law. ::Q574:1:: QUESTION (1916)--1--How could Jehovah offer life through keeping the law to a people already condemned under God's law?
ANSWER--God's
law is not merely acting along arbitrary lines. God's condition always
has been that a perfect man who could and would keep God's law might
have everlasting life. That has always been a condition of God's law.
And the reason Adam was condemned to death was that Adam failed to keep
God's law. And his race in him, sharing in his imperfection, being born
in sin, inheriting these weaknesses, were unable to keep God's law. And
now then, when God made the arrangement with the nation of Israel He
was only making an arrangement such as we would understand He would
make with any creature. Any creature who would keep God's law might
have everlasting life. And so He told the Jews--and He knew at the same
time they could not keep the law and how He would make provision for
them, but at the same time there is a principle right at the bottom,
that anyone who would do these things could live by them. God was not
going to condemn them because they were Adam's children, but because
they were sinners. As the Apostle says, "By one man sin entered into
the world, and death" by or as a result of what? Not death as a result
of being children of one man. No. Death as a result of being sinners.
And we are sinners because we are children of one man. But if any of
Adam's children could be born without sin and be without sin then they
might have life under the law.
RANSOM--Meaning of Life Rights. ::Q574:2:: QUESTION (1916)--2--What is the meaning of the term "life rights?" i.e., will mankind ever possess "life rights?"
ANSWER--Different
minds might attach different value to these words "life rights." We
will suggest a meaning, namely, Adam had life rights when he was
obedient to God, because God had ordained if he were perfect and
maintained his harmony with Him he might have everlasting life.
Therefore he had a right to life under God's arrangement and promise.
And Jesus had Adam's life rights because He was holy, harmless,
undefiled and separate from sinners and knew no sin. Therefore He had
the same life rights Father Adam had. And when Jesus voluntarily
consecrated His earthly life rights to do the Father's will at any cost
even unto death, he was voluntarily, so to speak, not giving up, or
giving over, but merely allowing His life rights to be trespassed upon.
It was not necessary for Him to have those life rights trespassed upon.
He says He could ask of the Father and have legions of angels to defend
Him. But He didn't wish to do that. But He knew God's will indicated by
the prophecies and types of the Old Testament, and delighted to do the
will of God, and that included the voluntary giving up and permitting
men to take His life. They could not take his life rights, and although
they put Him to death in the flesh, the Father raised Him up to the
spirit plane and He had life rights on that plane, and He still has the
life rights of the flesh. How? Because He did not give them up. He had
::Page Q575::
merely permitted men unlawfully to take
them from Him. He did not give them over to make an application of them
for Adam and his race. They were merely His life rights still, and when
He died He said, "I commit into Thy hands my spirit," my life rights.
Those were the earthly life rights He was giving over, and those are in
the hands of the Father yet, and they are to be the life rights to come
eventually to Father Adam and all the race of Adam during the thousand
years.
RANSOM--Re Life Rights on Human Plane. ::Q575:1:: QUESTION (1916)--1--Will anyone on the human plane ever have life rights?
ANSWER--At
the end of the thousand years the world of mankind according to the
Bible will be brought to a test. During the thousand years they will be
living under favorable and marvelous conditions, and at the end of the
thousand years the whole world will be turned over to the Father by the
Great King, by the Great Mediator. What will that mean? Why, the Father
stands for justice, and the same rigid laws that applied in Adam's case
and the same laws of God that applied to the angels, not too severe,
not unjust laws, just laws, reasonable requirements--and the whole
world will come under those conditions immediately as soon as the
thousand years of Christ's reign shall have ended and He shall have
delivered the kingdom over to God, even the Father. And the Bible tells
us what will happen then. Justice will take charge of the world and all
will be put under a special trial by Justice. And no mercy then. Why
not? Because all will be perfect men. The imperfect, fallen men, fallen
through weaknesses of Father Adam, will all under the mediatorial reign
of Christ have been brought up to perfection. Then they ought to be
able with all the experience behind them, they ought to be able to
maintain it. Because God would not ask any unreasonable or unjust
requirement of any creature. And so at the end of the thousand years
they will be tested, and it is pictured, you remember, in the Book of
Revelation, that the old Adversary, Satan, should be loosed at the end
of the thousand years, and there perform some kind of temptation for
mankind. Mankind will then be like Adam. When he was perfect God
permitted him to be tested. And so the world of mankind will be
permitted to be tempted by Satan. Now, if they are not able to stand
the test after all the experiences of the fall and redemption and
restitution processes, and with all that knowledge of God and the
principles of justice and good and evil, if not fully established in
character, then they are not fit for eternal life, and God's
arrangement is that if in that testing time they shall take their stand
for evil, they shall be considered as followers of Satan, and if in
that time they take their stand for righteousness, they shall be
considered children of God, and if children of God they will have
everlasting life, life rights, and if they take their stand with Satan
they will be destroyed from among the people, and have no life rights.
RANSOM--Re Satan's Power. ::Q575:2:: QUESTION (1916)--2--Why was Satan allowed so much power over the human race?
ANSWER--Because God saw wise to give it to him. I do not think anybody knows any more than that about it.
::Page Q576::
RANSOM--"Well Done," When Applicable? ::Q576:1:: QUESTION
(1916)--1--The Scriptures say, "Well done thou good and faithful
servant, come up higher." Does that apply to our present imputed
condition, or after the resurrection?
ANSWER--I
do not know what the questioner means about "our present imputed
condition." We have no imputed condition at all. Ours is a real
condition. We are really sons of God or not. This matter of imputation,
my dear friends, does not extend to everything. The imputation is done
between the Father and the Son. You and I have nothing to do with the
imputation at all, and we are not imputed anything. It is because that
imputation was made on our behalf that we are no longer treated as
sinners, but treated as though we were perfect, and permitted to
sacrifice our earthly life and become new creatures in Christ. There is
nothing imputed to the new creature at all. The new creature is a new
creature. The imputation was to the old creature to cover its
imperfections, and before God could accept us, all that imputation was
done, and between the Father and the Son.
RANSOM--Re Sacrifice of Goat for the People. ::Q576:2:: QUESTION
(1916)--2--Tabernacle Shadows, Page 67, Par. 2, 1st sentence: "When
presented it (the Lord's goat) will be accepted 'for the people' as
that of our glorious Leader was accepted for himself (his body) and his
house (the household of faith)." Please explain.
ANSWER--The
picture as given in the 16th chapter of Leviticus shows us two
different sacrifices here, and both of them treated as sin-offerings.
The first sacrifice, the bullock, represented clearly enough and
distinctly enough the sacrifice of Jesus, holy, harmless, undefiled.
And the application that was made of that sacrifice, according to this
picture given us, was to cover the sins of the Church, all those who
desire to come now into harmony with God. They are all covered with the
merit of this sacrifice of Christ. And then the goat represents the
Church, all the class that are to be the Church, and is a secondary
offering by the Priest. It is not our sacrifice. You do not sacrifice
yourself. I do not sacrifice myself. When the Apostle says, "I beseech
you, therefore, brethren, that ye present your bodies a living
sacrifice," he is not meaning we should sacrifice, because only the
High Priest had the authority to sacrifice, you see, on this day of
atonement, and you are not a High Priest and I am not a High Priest.
What did the Apostle mean by saying present your bodies a living
sacrifice? Why, this thought: that we should deliver up ourselves to
the Lord, just as that goat was tied to the door of the Tabernacle, and
thus presented to be sacrificed. And when the High Priest came out and
found that goat there tied up and offered for sacrifice, then he
accepted it as a part of his own sacrifice and he killed the goat. But
the point to be remembered, dear friends, is that it is not your
sacrifice of yourself or my sacrifice of myself, but you offer yourself
to the Lord for sacrifice and I offer myself for sacrifice, and so with
the offering of all God's people. We present our bodies to Him, and
when the full numbers are received He accepts them as represented in
the Lord's goat. It is not therefore the Church's sacrifice, but the
Lord's sacrifice. We are accepted as His members and
::Page Q577::
He accepts us as a part of His own
sacrifice. And the picture shows that the merit that came following His
sacrifice was the door for you and me to come in. And the secondary
offering will be followed by the Priest coming out and blessing all the
world of mankind.
RANSOM--Waiting for Spirit and Gentile Times. ::Q577:1:: QUESTION
(1916)--1--Would it seem unreasonable to look upon the correspondency
of the waiting time before the spirit was poured out, a period of ten
days after the ransom price was presented, with the present waiting
time for the manifestation of the sons of God, the ten days
representing ten years after the close of Gentile times? * * *
ANSWER--
(Interpreting Chairman who read question.) Cut this out. When anybody
makes a question involving the writing of a book, please do not receive
it. In the first place, it would not be ten days after the offering of
the ransom, because the offering or presenting or application of the
ransom is yet to come. It was merely put into the hands of Justice when
the Lord was upon the cross, and His imputation of the merit of it was
what occurred on the fiftieth day afterward. But the question is too
long, you see, and if I try to answer this, we would get different
things mixed up in different people's minds. Better have the questions
simple and clear cut and then we will not have to undo what otherwise
had been done.
RANSOM--Imputation Re Increase of Jesus' Merit. ::Q577:2:: QUESTION (1916)--2--If 144,000 are made perfect by imputation, does this multiply or increase Jesus' merit?
ANSWER--Not
at all. Because the merit could not be increased. It is sufficient now.
It was one man that sinned, and it was one man that died. It doesn't
need to be increased, could not be increased. It was a corresponding
price, a man's life for a man's life. And the imputation of it to us in
the meantime does not impoverish it at all or increase it at all. He
merely gives us a credit, a standing. He imputes it to us to enable us
to perform our part.
RANSOM--Sins Christ Takes Away. ::Q577:3:: QUESTION (1916)--3--Which sins does Christ take away? Adam's damnation or the wilful, or both together?
ANSWER--The
only sins that Christ atones for are the sins that come to us by
heredity as the result of Father Adam's disobedience. All those
weaknesses that come through him and his fallen condition, those Jesus
died for. Any sins or trespasses that you and I might commit of our own
wilfulness after we become new creatures in Christ are not any part of
Adam's sin and he was not responsible for them, and Christ did not die
for those sins. But in the meantime the Bible does intimate that you
and I as new creatures did not love sin, and in all probability if we
entered into sin at all it would be at least partially if not entirely
the result of these inherited weakness existing in the flesh. Therefore
very few sins are to be considered as in any way separate or distinct
from the Adamic sin. But to whatever extent we as new creatures might
consent to sin, there would be in a measure a responsibility, and such
a trespass as new creatures would be forgivable to such an extent that
it would be
::Page Q578::
the result of Adamic weaknesses or from
the temptation coming from others under this Adamic sin, and anything
more than that would be punishable with stripes individually. And so
the Lord's people sometimes have to be dealt with along this line. One
might have to have a certain amount of chastisement which would be for
their good and correction in righteousness.
RACE COURSE--Beginning of. ::Q578:1:: QUESTION (1913)--1--Do we start to run for the prize at consecration or at the mark of perfect love?
ANSWER--Well,
the thought might vary. I would understand that we start at the point
of consecration. Our consecration point where we make our start in the
matter is where we first give our hearts to the Lord. There we are
reckoned as perfect in Christ, and that is the beginning of our race;
though there is perhaps a step that might be recognized as a little
further in advance of that, when, after having given ourselves to the
Lord, we are quickened, or made active, and begin to run, begin to
exercise ourselves. The picture is drawn, you see, from the natural
birth. In the natural birth there is the period of begetting in which
there is apparently no motion, no activity; then comes the period of
activity and development. And so with the Christian. When first we
receive the Truth and make our consecration, it takes the Truth a
little while to soak in, as it were, and for us to really get our
bearings and get our information before we could properly begin to be
active and serve the Truth and make any progress in teaching or helping
others. Then comes the time when we are said to be quickened, made
active, made alive, and make progress. From that time on the progress
would be a growing one--growing in grace, knowledge and love.
READING--Convention Reports, Discourses of Elders, Etc. ::Q578:2:: QUESTION
(1909)--2--Have appreciated very much the discourses of this Convention
in which the speakers have shown the impropriety of looking for
spiritual food from any other source except that which the Lord has
been using during this harvest period, to set before us the meat in due
season, but do not see just where to draw the line. Would it be wrong
to read Convention Reports, and reports of discourses by Pilgrims and
Elders? How would we treat those who hand us tracts misrepresenting the
truth? Should we tear up the tracts in front of them, or should we
accept them with thanks and destroy them privately?
ANSWER--I am afraid you have given me too hard a question. I rather think I can't answer that question.
RECONCILIATION--Class Referred to. ::Q578:3:: QUESTION
(1911)--3--"Now, then we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God did
beseech you by us; we pray you, in Christ's stead, be ye reconciled to
God." To what class does the apostle refer, urging reconciliation to
God?
ANSWER--The
difficulty in this question is found in the fact that translators have
supplied certain words which they should not have supplied. The text
would read, without the words that are in italics, thus: "Now, then, we
are ambassadors for Christ, as though God did beseech by us; we pray in
Christ's stead, be ye reconciled to God." We urge this
::Page Q579::
upon all who have an ear to hear. We do
not urge it upon each other, because each one who has come into Christ
has already been reconciled to God through the death of His Son, and is
a joint-heir with us, and a fellow-servant with us in this grace of God
which we minister. All the church of Christ are God's ambassadors, and
Christ's representatives in saying to all of those who have the hearing
ear, "Be ye reconciled to God." And so, the Lord again says, "He that
hath an ear to hear, let him bear."
REFORMS--God is Making the Wrath of Man to Praise Him. ::Q579:1:: QUESTION
(1912-Z)--1--If the Kingdom of Christ is not yet set up on earth, how
may we explain the various reforms, charities, etc., of our time?
ANSWER--Apparently,
the Adversary is trying to run things in his own direction, but the
light itself which we are enjoying today is the promised light of
Divine Providence. We read that "many shall run to and fro, and
knowledge shall be increased," and that "there shall be a time of
trouble such as never was..."--`Dan. 12:1 ,4`.
But God has supervised the matter of
inventions, such as the printing press, the power of steam, and the
effects and influences of these in the world. It seems, too, that the
movements in the way of better government, etc., are influences based
upon the general enlightenment and the efforts of mankind to do as well
as they can by each other--especially in ways that selfishness does not
hinder. But selfishness has, no doubt much to do with all manner of
reform.
In speaking of the present time, our Lord
said that the secrets should be proclaimed on the housetops. Today we
see that many real exhibitions of vice, immorality and wrong-doing are
brought to light--proclaimed from the housetops. While we do not say
that the Adversary brings these things to light, yet we can see how the
Adversary may have had to do with the movement toward communism that
once had sway, as well as the movement toward socialism and toward
anarchism. These are the things which will tend to bring on the time of
trouble. So the wrath of man is made to turn to the praise of God. He
is able to make the wrath of man praise Him. "Surely the wrath of man
shall praise thee; the remainder of wrath shalt Thou restrain."--`Psa.
76:10`.
REJOICING--Basis for Always. ::Q579:2:: QUESTION
(1913)--2--How does "Rejoice in the Lord alway" (`Phil. 4:4 `) manifest
itself? Are we to expect a condition where we will not have times of
sadness and sorrow?
ANSWER--When
we think of any matters like this, we properly look back to the case of
our Lord. We see that during three and a half years of His ministry He
did indeed delight to do the Father's will, and yet we find that in the
very close of His earthly career He had the dark Gethsemane hour. And
if the Master might have such a dark hour of sorrow and uncertainty for
a moment until He had some assurance from the Father, so you and I
might surely have. Therefore it would not be safe to say our rejoicing
in the Lord could be such a rejoicing as would never know a tear, or
sigh, or sorrow, or a fear. But we are to rejoice more and more as we
experience the evidences that God is for
::Page Q580::
us and all things are working for our
good. "Rejoice in the Lord always, and again I say rejoice." If you
have some hour of sorrow come in, and then have the victory over it,
rejoice again.
REMEMBRANCE--Re Former Things. ::Q580:1:: QUESTION
(1911)--1--`Isa. 65:17 `. "For behold I create a new heaven and new
earth, and the former things shall not be remembered nor come into
mind." Please give the meaning of this verse, especially the last part.
ANSWER--The
Scriptures frequently use such expressions as this. The Lord uses the
words heavens and earth in a symbolical manner, as we have pointed out
in the Scripture Studies; we have the symbolic heavens representing the
ecclesiastical powers, and we have the symbolic earth representing
earthly society, organization; we have the symbolical mountains
representing kingdoms; we have the symbolical rivers representing the
streams of truth; we have the symbolical seas, representing the
restless masses of mankind and the Lord declares this present order of
things is not in harmony with the divine law, that it is now under
disorder through sin and disobedience. Another Scripture says that the
whole course of nature is wrong at the present time everything is
disorder under the prince of this age, this dispensation. The Lord
Jesus is to be the new prince, the new king, the new one to take charge
or rule over mankind, and he declares, "Behold, I create a new heavens
and a new earth." This is in harmony exactly with the statement here of
Isaiah. So we read in Revelation, He that sat on the throne said,
"Behold, I make all things new"--a complete change from all this
disorder, and sin, and present arrangement--a new order of things
entirely. The symbolism will be carried out, and the heavens of the new
order of things will not be the earthly nominal church systems of the
present time, but the church of glory will be the new heavens--Christ
and the church with him on the spirit plane, invisible to men, will be
the new heavens, the new ruling power, and the new earth will be with
righteousness controlling, the prince of this world will be cast out,
and the Prince of Life, the Lord of Glory, will be the king over all
the earth, and instead of the darkness will be light and blessing.
But the brother's question especially
relates to the meaning of this last part, that the former should not
come into mind nor be remembered. Does this signify that we are to
forget all of these things? No, the thought would be that whatever we
might have thought worthy of recording, and worthy of remembering,
wishing to treasure up as things that were worthy of note, we will not
think of them as worthy of mention at all. We will try to forget all of
those things of death and imperfection; they will be so overwhelmed by
the new order of things in the new dispensation that they will not be
worthy of being mentioned, or being especially recorded. We will still
be able to remember them, in fact we may say that we will even remember
the imperfections of this present time. Some of us will sometimes say,
thinking of something unpleasant in the past, "I will try to forget
that." A sister remarked to me the other day, when some question came
up, "Oh, that is among the things I am trying to forget." Not that she
did really forget them, but she was putting them away, they were not
worthy to be
::Page Q581::
remembered in comparison with the better
things. So all the most precious and grand things of earthly
arrangements today--for instance we speak of the coronation of King
George of Great Britain, or the inauguration of a president, and that
we had been there on such an occasion, and remembered the honor of
sitting on the platform with the President at the time, or something
like that, or you were a member of congress or something--these things
would seem so trivial and unworthy you would want to forget all about
them, the things we will have in the future, being so far superior to
these.
RESURRECTION--Condition of Unbelievers in the Resurrection. ::Q581:1:: QUESTION
(1906)--1--I understand the Scriptures to teach that those who fall
into the grave in unbelief, under condemnation, come forth from the
tomb without any change of condition, to be lifted up during the
Millennial Age? Have I the correct view?
ANSWER--We
answer practically yes. All who go into the tomb in a state of death
because of Adam's condemnation, without having had their trial in the
present time, without having come to a knowledge of the truth to that
degree which made them responsible for life or death eternally, go into
the tomb as the great prison house, and there is no change while in the
prison; no alteration takes place there. There is no wisdom, knowledge
or device in sheol, hades, in the tomb, in the grave, whither the whole
world of mankind goes. Consequently when they are awakened and brought
forth from the tomb by the power of the great Redeemer in due time, it
will be coming forth in practically the same condition they went into
it--practically I say--because we have to consider there are certain
limitations. It would be reasonable to suppose for instance, that
Lazarus died of some kind of disease which meant a wasting of his
organs. Suppose he died of consumption, and that both lungs were gone
at the time he died: Of course he could not breathe again without
lungs. In bringing him forth you can see that Lazarus might come forth
in the same condition mentally and morally, and practically the same
condition physically, but with the addition necessary that he would
have lungs enough to breathe. And so if a man were blown up in an
explosion, we would have to suppose he would be put together again.
That is to say, he would come forth not in pieces but a whole man,
though not necessarily a perfect man. I am merely offering these
suggestions in a general way. The thought would be that God is dealing
with us as moral creatures, but if you have a bad natural disposition
it shows in your face, and those who are well versed in phrenology
could tell it by the shape of your head and facial expression, or
others might be able to tell a good deal about the natural disposition
by looking at the palm of the hand and reading it there. God seems to
have so built our system that mental and moral degradation makes its
mark upon the face, upon the head, and upon the whole system,
especially as it comes down from generation to generation. As the sins
of the past come down they have made their marks more or less, and
those not of our own doing we need not be especially ashamed of, as we
are not to blame.
::Page Q582::
The Lord is not blaming us for them especially. If we were all perfect we would all be good-looking.
RESURRECTION--Thy Dead Men and My Dead Body. ::Q582:1:: QUESTION
(1907)--1--`Isaiah 26:19 `: "Thy dead men shall live, together with my
dead body shall they arise. Awake and sing, ye that dwell in the dust:
for thy dew is as the dew of herbs and the earth shall cast out the
dead." Does this imply that someone will be raised when the Lord's body
was raised, or does it refer to the Lord at all?
ANSWER--I
understand it refers to the Lord, and the translation is nearly right,
but there is just a little bit of difference, as you will notice in the
Common Version, some of the words are supplied in italics. When it is
properly translated, it would read: "Thy dead men shall live, my dead
body shall come forth." We are the Lord's body, and as His body, we
shall come forth; "The dead men shall live, my body shall come forth
from the dead as the Body of Christ," as He did.
RESURRECTION--Conscious Immediately. ::Q582:2:: QUESTION
(1909)--2--Are those who deny everything for Christ's sake and thereby
become one of the Church, to enter into eternal life in a conscious
state immediately after death?
ANSWER--We
answer that it was necessary for the Apostles and Stephen to fall
asleep. It was necessary for them and all others to wait until the
second coming of Christ and the establishment of His Kingdom. So Paul
says we shall not all sleep, but we shall be changed in the twinkling of an eye in the resurrection.
RESURRECTION--Re Room for All. ::Q582:3:: QUESTION (1909)--3--If raised a human body how are you going to put twenty billions of people on this earth?
ANSWER--I
heard one man say that if all the people of the world were brought back
they would stand eight deep all over the face of the earth. If that
wise man will take his pencil he will find that there is room enough
for them all in the State of Texas and not stand them on end either.
These wild statements are made because they do not think. I am not
blaming the person who asked this question, for he evidently received
the suggestion from some able man. Because some wise man says such wild
things it is not necessary to believe it. You can tell by figuring it
out yourself.
Some people, when thinking of the Second
Coming of Christ, put it a great way off, and mention as proof, the
coal fields, and think they will last fifty thousand years. On the
contrary, the people dealing in coal state that there is not enough
coal to last one hundred and fifty years. In fifty thousand years you
could not stand the people up on this earth.
RESURRECTION--Human vs. Spiritual Bodies. ::Q582:4:: QUESTION (1909)--4--What kind of body in the resurrection?
ANSWER--There
is a natural and a spiritual body; the world will be raised on the
natural plane, as human beings in fleshly bodies. They will awakened in
that condition. But the Church, begotten of the Holy Spirit, will be
born of the Spirit in the resurrection and be spirit beings. It is sown
::Page Q583::
a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body; it is a different resurrection than that which comes to the world.
RESURRECTION--Re Pane L on Chart. ::Q583:1:: QUESTION
(1909)--1--To which plane was Jesus resurrected, spirit or divine, as
illustrated on the Chart of the Ages? Please explain the statement in
Vol. 1, page 231, (A231) that He was resurrected to the spirit plane
"L," and after forty days He ascended to the Majesty on High, to the
plane of divine glory.
ANSWER--It
is difficult to fully explain such spiritual truths on any kind of a
map or chart, and in my opinion, dear friends, the Chart of the Ages
which appears in the First Vol. of Dawn, must have had the Lord's
supervision in some respects, or else it could not have represented so
clearly and fully as it does the various steps of justification,
sanctification, etc., as it does, and yet it would seem to be next to
impossible to do any more than was represented on that Chart. I would
not know how to make a better one today to represent the thoughts.
Since there is a Great Company to be
raised to the spirit plane, and since it will not reach the plane of
glory in the kingdom, therefore we represented on the Chart the spirit
plane to be one thing and the glory plane to be another thing. And they
are different, for the Great Company will reach the plane of spirit
beings as well as the Little Flock, but the Little Flock will reach the
plane of glory, and power, and dominion which the Great Company will
not have, therefore the distinction between plane "L" and "K" on the
Chart. We did not attempt to show on the Chart that Christ and the
Little Flock will reach a different plane from that of the Great
Company, but we left that to be stated in words elsewhere. The Great
Company will reach the plane of the angels, so far as we know, while
the Little Flock will reach the divine plane as spirit beings, but of a
higher degree.
RESURRECTION--Church First. ::Q583:2:: QUESTION (1909)--2--Please explain `Isa. 26:19 `: "Together with my dead body shall they arise."
ANSWER--That
is the passage which speaks about the earth casting forth her dead.
This Scripture, as I understand it, should read: "Thy dead men shall
live, my dead body they shall arise." Leaving out the words in italics,
and the word "together" which are not in the original. He is speaking
of the Church of Christ, in the first resurrection, the specially dead.
RESURRECTION--Re Children. ::Q583:3:: QUESTION (1909)--3--Will my little girl, who died in infancy, come forth to a resurrection of life or to a resurrection by judgment?
ANSWER--According to law, the word "infant" means a person until he has come to age.
In answer to this question, I would say
that a child who had not come to years could not be a Saint; the Saints
are all overcomers. All others will have the resurrection by judgment.
God will take care of the children, and if you are on the spiritual
plane, you will yourself be far better able to care for them. We are
dealing with one who is full of love and has all power to deal with
every phase of the question.
::Page Q584::
RESURRECTION--All Not Sleeping. ::Q584:1:: QUESTION
(l909)--1--(`2 Cor. 15:51 ,52`), "We shall not all sleep, but we shall
all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last
trumpet: for the trumpet shall sound and the dead shall be raised
incorruptible, and we shall be changed." Some think this includes the
world.
ANSWER--It
does not; it has nothing to do with the world at all. It is merely
speaking about the resurrection of the Church. In the `22nd verse` the
Apostle speaks of all having lost life through Adam and getting it back
through Christ, and then he proceeds to discuss the resurrection of the
Church, and this is the part specially interesting to us. The world are
to be dealt with in due time.
RESURRECTION--Meaning of Dry Bones. ::Q584:2:: QUESTION (1910)--2--Does the vision of dry bones of `Ezekiel 37 ` refer to the resurrection of the dead, or what?
ANSWER--We
answer that, to our understanding, this vision of dry bones does not
refer to the resurrection of the dead in the ordinary sense of the
word, but that it does refer to the resurrection of the dead Jewish
nation, who say, mark you, "Our hopes are dried." Their hopes are all
dead, and this awakening, this coming together of bone to bone,
represents the gradual way in which the Jewish hopes will come together
and gradually reanimate them as a people.
RESURRECTION--Order of Re Great Company and Ancient Worthies. ::Q584:3:: QUESTION (1910)--3--Will you give us some proof that the Great Company will be awakened before the Ancient Worthies?
ANSWER--Well,
what would be considered proof would depend upon the mind. Now my
thought is this: that the Great Company is identified with the Church
in the work of this present Gospel Age, and is pictured in so many ways
as associated with the Church--as, for instance, the priests connected
with the Levites in the work of this Atonement Day and the sacrificing,
etc. Then, secondly, as pictured by the Bride, representing the Little
Flock, and the others her companions, which follow her and seem to be
included with the Church. Then I remind you again of the picture of
Rebekah. I was noticing the other day that when Abraham sent to call
Rebekah to be the bride of Isaac, he did not call for any bridesmaids
to come along, but some did come along with her. That would represent,
you see, the Great Company class who come along and are the servants of
the Bride class. Now it would seem to me proper to consider that when
Isaac received the bride he also received the bridesmaids; that they
went in with the bride, accompanying her, and associated with her. And
so, with Christ and the Little Flock and the Great Company--I would
understand that they would probably all go in together. Besides,
remember there is a certain portion of the merit of Christ that is
imputed to each one who offers himself as a sacrifice. We saw that last
night, you remember, in considering the matter of baptism; that when
you present your offering, our Lord Jesus, as our Advocate, our High
Priest, appears and accepts the offering as his own, and imputes to the
offering some of his own merit to make it sufficient for divine
acceptance, and then counts it all. So then the Great Company class,
you see, make their consecration, and receive
::Page Q585::
this imputation of Christ's merit, just
the same as the Little flock--all of them receive this before they are
begotten of the holy Spirit. Now my thought is, that all of this will
be finished in the fullest sense of the word,--all of this imputation
of the merit of Christ's sacrifice to all of the household of faith
during this Gospel Age will be at an end, and all the merit of Christ
will be back again in the full sense of the word in the hands of
justice, before any one of the world will receive any of the blessings
of the New Covenant arrangement, and that the Ancient Worthies will
belong to the earthly class that get these restitution blessings, but
they will not get their share of the restitution blessings until both
the Little Flock and the Great Company are entirely through with the
imputation of Jesus's merit for their covering. You see the one who
stands as an advocate for every member of the Little Flock, stands as
advocate also for every member of the Great Company. He undertook to be
the guarantor for every one of us when we came to the Father. He made
our sacrifices acceptable, every one, and every one needs him as our
advocate down to the very close. As the Apostle says, "If any man sin,
we have an advocate with the Father." So the Great Company class will
need to have an interest in Jesus as their advocate down to the time
when they shall have passed beyond the vail. To my understanding, he
will have to cease to be the Advocate of the Church entirely before he
becomes the Mediator between God and the world.
RESURRECTION--Re Thread of Existence Broken During Change. ::Q585:1:: QUESTION
(1910)--1--When we pass our trials successfully and experience our
change to the divine nature, will the thread of existence be broken, or
will it be the same as the natural birth?
ANSWER--That
is too much for me. I do not see anything in a natural birth that is at
all pictorial of the change of the Church. The only picture in
connection with the matter I think of is this: That in the case of a
natural birth, there is first a begetting, then a development and
finally a birth of a new creature; and so with a spiritual: First, a
begetting, then a development and quickening, and finally the birth of
the New Creature. I do not see anything respecting the method by which
a child is born to in any sense give any suggestion as to the change of
the saints. The Scriptures give none that I know of. I see no
parallelism at all. Our change will be in a moment, in the twinkling of
an eye, and that is not according to any natural birth I have any
knowledge of.
RESURRECTION--Some Types of the ::Q585:2:: QUESTION
(1910-Z)--2--Since the Lord arranged very many types during the Jewish
Age respecting the Gospel Age and the future, what would you consider
the most important type of the resurrection?
ANSWER--If
we consider this question as relating especially to our Lord we see a
number of types that very forcefully illustrate his resurrection. The
one our Lord mentioned should be classed as amongst the most important,
for two reasons: First, because he mentioned it and thus gave it
prominence, and second, because it and it alone of all the
::Page Q586::
types gives the exact length of time of
his entombment. Our Lord's words were, "As Jonah was three days and
three nights in the belly of the fish, so shall the Son of man be three
days and nights in the heart of the earth," thus indicating that his
resurrection would be on the third day and that he would be brought
forth from the grave as Jonah was brought forth from the belly of the
fish, which he styled "the belly of hell," the grave, sheol, the hades
condition.
It would appear, too from the Apostle's
words, that we should give prominence to the picture of our Lord's
resurrection as shown by Abraham's receiving Isaac as from the dead,
when he had already consecrated him to death and was about to slay him,
the Lord staying his hand and giving him instead another sacrifice.
We are justified also in supposing that
the "wavesheaf" offering was a very prominent illustration or type of
the resurrection of our Lord, particularly because it occurred just at
the time which marked the day of his resurrection, the morrow after the
Sabbath, the fiftieth day before Pentecost. This was apparently given
to illustrate the raising up of our Lord Jesus as "the first-fruits
unto God," "the first-fruits of them that slept," "the first that
should rise from the dead." It, therefore, is a very beautiful picture.
See `Lev. 23:10 ,11,15,16`.
If we think of the types of the world's
resurrection we see a variety. As has been suggested, the crossing of
Jordan might be considered a type of the passing out of death condition
into Canaan beyond. The Jubilee, the restoration of every man to his
former estate, is certainly a wonderful picture of the "times of
restitution of all things," of the lifting of humanity up out of sin,
degradation and death, out of their lost condition, and bringing them
back to the former estate, full perfection of the human nature.
We would be fully justified, we think, in
considering as types the miracles of our Lord in awakening some of the
sleepers--Lazarus, Jairus' daughter and the son of the widow of Nain.
These were given to us as foreshadowing, and therefore in a sense as
typifying or illustrating the resurrection.
Another picture of the resurrection, not
only the awakening, but also the raising up of mankind, is shown in the
end of the Day of Atonement. When Moses had received the blessing for
the people as a result of the second sprinkling of the blood, he came
forth, and, lifting up his hands, blessed the people. The people were
waiting in dust and sackcloth and sorrow because of sin, and now the
blessing of Moses and Aaron, the Lord's blessing through them,
signified the removal of that curse and the uplifting of the
people--their raising up from sorrow to rejoicing in the Lord.
RESURRECTION--"Thy Dead Men--My Dead Body." ::Q586:1:: QUESTION (1910-Z)--l--What is meant by "Thy dead men shall live; together with my dead body shall they arise."--`Isa. 26:19 `.
ANSWER--Seemingly
the addition of a few words by the translators has caused difficulty in
connection with this text. They inserted the words to make the passage
clear, as they thought, but instead they obscured it, through failure to
::Page Q587::
see that God's dead men are those who are members of the Body of Christ.
Omitting the words together with and "men,"
the passage reads properly enough. "Thy dead shall live; my dead Body,
they shall arise," thus referring, we believe, to the resurrection of
the Church, the Body of Christ, the Lord's peculiar people. And this is
a general signal, as it were, for the blessing of all mankind. In due
time all the dead shall be awakened. Moreover, they awaken not to
suffering and to torment, but to sing. They shall come forth to learn
of the goodness of God, his merciful provisions, and shall avail
themselves of these provisions, in the "Times of Restitution of all
things." "Awake and sing, ye that dwell in the dust" of the earth.
RESURRECTION--Application of. ::Q587:1:: QUESTION (1910-Z)--l--Will the Ancient Worthies or Great Company class be resurrected first?
ANSWER--In
the light of what we have been discussing of late in the Watch Tower,
it is evident that the merit of Christ is imputed, on behalf of the
Church during this Gospel Age--on behalf of all who essay to be of the
Church; it is used to impute to those who desire to become sacrificers
and who consecrate themselves to God that they may present an
acceptable sacrifice and thus become members of the spiritual class and
joint-heirs with Christ. This applies to the "great company" as well as
to the "little flock." It applies to all who are begotten of the holy
Spirit because they could not be begotten of the Spirit except by the
imputation of Christ's merit to their earthly sacrifice.
It follows, then, as a matter of
necessity that before the merit of Christ's death could be applied on
behalf of the Ancient Worthies or Israel, under the New Covenant
arrangement for Israel and the world, it must be released as respects
all those to whom it is now imputed for the purpose of giving them the
opportunity of attaining the spiritual station. This would prove
conclusively, we think, that the "great company" class will be
resurrected before the Ancient Worthies will be brought forth.
RESURRECTION--Does Character Determine the Kind of Resurrection? ::Q587:2:: QUESTION
(1910-Z)--2--From the Scriptural standpoint, does the character of the
individual's death indicate the kind of his resurrection?
ANSWER--The
Apostle's argument (`1 Cor. 15 `) respecting the resurrection is that
God will give to every seed its own kind of body. "There is a natural
body and there is a spiritual body." Mankind in general, therefore, in
the resurrection, will come forth with natural bodies--"that which is
born of the flesh is flesh" and that which is born of the flesh dies or
"sleeps" for a time, and will be awakened "flesh." That which is born
of the flesh and subsequently begotten of the holy Spirit is reckoned
as a New Creature, and when the New Creature falls asleep it is asleep
as a spirit being--is asleep waiting for the resurrection change. In
this case the resurrection change is thus expressed by the Apostle:
"Sown in dishonor, raised in glory; sown in weakness, raised in power;
sown an animal body, raised a spirit body"; but anyone not begotten of
the holy Spirit will, of course, not
::Page Q588::
change his nature in the grave. There is
no change in the grave either for good or evil. "As the tree falleth so
shall it lie"; the awakening will be according to the character of the
individual. If he has become a New Creature in Christ he will be raised
or perfected as a New Creature, in the resurrection. If he is a good
natural man he will be awakened a good natural man; if he is a bad
natural man he will be awakened a bad natural man; if he is one of the
Ancient Worthies, we understand he will be awakened a perfect man.
RESURRECTION--Trying to Trap Jesus. ::Q588:1:: QUESTION (1910-Z)--1--Whose wife shall she be?
ANSWER--The
Sadducees, the agnostics, tried to entrap the Great Teacher by asking
one of their stock questions. Seven different brothers in turn married
the same woman and all died before she did. To which of them will she
be wife in the resurrection? They did not ask, To which will she be
wife in heaven or purgatory or eternal torture, for neither Jesus nor
the Jews held any such teaching. The Pharisees and Jesus taught the
resurrection of the dead, and it was against this teaching that the
Sadducees aimed their sarcastic question.
Note the majesty of the Master's answer:
"Ye do err, not knowing the Scriptures, neither the power of God!" You
do not understand the Scripture teaching respecting such questions, and
you are ignoring in your question the great Divine power which, at that
resurrection time, will be exercised and will straighten out all the
difficulties of the situation. Then the Great Teacher proceeded to
inform them that such as would (gradually) attain to the resurrection,
such as would get a complete raising up out of sin and death
conditions, would "neither marry nor be given in marriage," but would
be sexless, as are the angels. Thus the supposed great and unanswerable
question of the Sadducees fell flat and their ignorance was exposed.
RESURRECTION--Is Our Reckoned a Gradual One? ::Q588:2:: QUESTION (1911)--2--Is our reckoned resurrection from consecration until death a gradual or an instantaneous one? ANSWER--It
is both. The apostle says, "Ye are risen with him," "If then ye be
risen with him," etc. We are counted as new creatures the moment of our
consecration and the new creature arises from the old dead creature, so
that the resurrection or raising up of that new creature begins; and it
progresses in proportion as the new creature grows. There are different
figures used. One would be a gradual raising up --an attainment of the
stature--and the other would be represented by the begetting of the
spirit, the embryonic condition, getting ready for the birth. These are
figures of speech, and we must try and not confuse the different
figures, but get the benefit of each one. So we are risen with him.
That is instantaneous. The new creature began the moment of your
consecration and begetting of the Holy Spirit. There it began to rise
out of the old nature and it will continue as you get more and more
victory over the old nature; the old nature is dying, and the new
nature is being renewed, revived, strengthened, or upbuilt, whatever
word you use--it is rising up more and more, obtaining more and more
character-likeness of the Lord Jesus Christ, and thus you are risen
with him, and risen in him, and rising as a member of his body. And if
you reach a sufficient
::Page Q589::
development in this resurrection process, you will be one of the little flock.
RESURRECTION--Re Perfect Body Coming Forth. ::Q589:1:: QUESTION (1911)--1--Do the Scriptures teach that in the resurrection, a lost eye, or the hearing will be restored at the awakening?
ANSWER--There
is nothing in the Scriptures to indicate on this particular point, but
we think it reasonable to suppose that those who come forth from the
tomb during the reign of Messiah would not come forth maimed in any
particular sense; as, for instance, lacking an eye, or lacking a hand;
but they would come forth with their hands, though their hands might
not be in the same condition they were originally; as, for instance,
when our Lord healed the man who had the withered hand. If there was a
wart on that hand before it was withered, it might be there afterwards;
it was merely recovered to its normal condition. So, I understand it is
not the teaching of the Scriptures that man will come forth in the
resurrection perfect, because then all traces of their imperfection
would be gone; none would be able to recognize them either by their
faces or by their minds. Every trace, and every line upon your face,
and upon my face, and upon your hands and upon my hands, indicate
certain qualities of mind, and if you make all of these qualities of
hand and face perfect, you would of necessity also be making the mind
perfect, and by the time you did that no man would know himself,
because all are imperfect now, and we know ourselves and each other by
our imperfections. My thought, then, would be that when the world is
awakened, they will come forth with practically perfect bodies but not
actually perfect bodies--with bodies such, for instance, as yours and
mine would be in their normal condition, in average health and under
average conditions; not in the condition they would be if they had met
with an accident and lost their limbs, and then come back without those
limbs, but rather that they would come back with a reasonable degree of
human perfection. But this also is conjectured, because the Scriptures
do not enter into the matter and give us the particulars.
RESURRECTION--Re Jews and Gentiles. ::Q589:2:: QUESTION (1911)--2--Do the Scriptures teach that in the world's resurrection, the Jews will come forth first, before the Gentiles?
ANSWER--They
do teach that some Jews will come forth first. Those Jews will be
Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and the prophets. We do not understand that any
other Jews would have any preference or precedence, but that the whole
work of resurrection would probably be a gradual one, beginning with
the last even to the first; but here again it is largely a matter of
conjecture. Where the Scriptures do not clearly state the matter, we do
well to hold it very tentatively.
RESURRECTION--How Long After Gentile Times? ::Q589:3:: QUESTION
(1911)--3--How long after the end of the time of the Gentiles will it
be before the first of the dead are awakened from the tomb.?
ANSWER--I
don't know. I might do a little guessing. Guessing would not be very
satisfactory, but our guess would be that after the times of the
Gentiles come to a conclusion there will be a great time of trouble as
the Scriptures
::Page Q590::
clearly point out--trouble as never was
since there was a nation. Then, following that trouble would come the
reign of righteousness, blessings, increase of knowledge, God's favor
among men, and the living nations would all be more or less brought to
a knowledge of the Lord. How long that would require I do not know. I
should think that taking in all of the hundreds of millions of the
heathen, there would be a good deal of work to do for fifty or a
hundred years, at least. As soon as the living nations are all brought
to a degree of development and uplifting, I would expect then to come a
time when the earth would yield her increase, would be able to sustain
the larger population, and that awakening of every man in his own order
would proceed until all mankind would be recovered from the tomb.
RESURRECTION--Vs. Second Chance. ::Q590:1:: QUESTION (1911)--l--Are the dead to be raised to judgment, or are they to be given another chance?
ANSWER--As
we showed last evening, the whole race got one chance in Adam, and when
Adam sinned he was condemned, and all the race, who were in his loins,
shared his condemnation and death. And God provides through Jesus one
redemption for all--for Adam and his children. To what end? That they
may all have a second chance; every one of them. They had one chance in
Adam and lost it through Adam's disobedience, and God provides another
chance for every man to obtain eternal life through his Son Jesus. Some
of us are having our chance now. To those who have received the message
of God, those who have heard the voice, Jesus says, "Blessed are your
ears for they hear, blessed are your eyes for they see." The intimation
is that many of those that surrounded him did not have a hearing ear,
and did not have the seeing eye, but those who did see and those who
did hear were blessed. God has promised that you and I have an
opportunity now, because we hear, and if we respond we are on trial,
and the word trial has the thought in it of judgment; you are on
judgment, or on trial, the two words having the same thought.
There will be a decision rendered at the
end of this age. Some of those who have the pounds and the talents
Jesus describes, saying that at his second coming he will reckon with
his own servants--not with the world, but with his own servants to whom
be gave the pounds and talents, and he will inquire of them how they
used the pounds and the talents, and the one who will come forward and
say that he had a pound or a talent and had not used it but had buried
it in the earth--in business or in some other way--will be counted an
unfaithful servant, and will not get the blessings that will come at
that time, and the other servants, whoever they may be, who have
received the pounds and talents of opportunity and privileges in
connection with the high calling of this age, if they have used these
faithfully will be granted a blessing as the Lord there represents.
Thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over
many things. All the church are to be rulers over the world of mankind.
When? When mankind will be on trial, when mankind's judgment day will
have come. Has the world a different judgment day from the church? Oh,
yes, entirely different. This is now the judgment day of the church; it
has lasted ever since the day of Pentecost, and will end when
::Page Q591::
the last member of the church, the elect
shall be completed. Then the world's judgment day will begin and the
world's judgment day is to last for a thousand years. All through the
thousand years of Messiah's reign the world will be on trial, judgment,
to see whether or not they shall be worthy of everlasting life as human
beings, or whether they shall not be worthy. This judgment day of the
world is spoken of you remember by the apostle. He says, "God hath
appointed a day (future) in the which he will (future) judge the world
in righteousness by that man whom he hath ordained. Who is that man?
The same great man he also speaks of--the Messiah, Jesus the head and
the church his body.
RESURRECTION--Is First Spiritual ::Q591:1:: QUESTION
(1911)--1--Is not the first resurrection spiritual? `Gal. 3:1 `, "If ye
then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above." `Eph.
2:8`, "And you hath he quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins."
`Eph. 5:4 `, "Awake, thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead, and
Christ shall give thee light." `Rom. 6:4 `, "But like as Christ was
raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, we also should walk
in newness of life."
ANSWER--We
described last night how the world of mankind would have a resurrection
by judgment, and that the resurrection for the world would be a gradual
one all through the thousand years--not merely the moment in which they
are awakened and come from the tomb--that would only be the start. They
will come forth unto a resurrection, in order that they may have a
resurrection, is the thought. Now, as the world will be rising
gradually out of sin and death conditions for a thousand years, and
gradually attain to full human perfection, and attain that in the end
as a result, so to some extent God gives the same picture in respect to
the church. That is to say, from the time of your full consecration to
the Lord, from the time of your begetting of the Holy Spirit, you are
represented as a new creature, as rising from the old dead nature, as
becoming alive unto God as a new creature, and the new creature is said
to grow, first a babe, afterwards a young man, and then a fully
developed man. And this thought of character development is otherwise
represented as part of our resurrection--"Ye are risen with Christ,
walk in him." And so these various texts quoted all apply to this part
of the resurrection which we are now to experience in the present life.
And let me suggest that unless a man has this part of the resurrection,
in the sense of rising up out of his weaknesses, and attaining more and
more to a character development, he will not be fit for the glorious
instantaneous resurrection, which God has for the church at the end of
this age at the second coming of our Lord.
RESURRECTION--Belief of Dead. ::Q591:2:: QUESTION
(1911)--2--Please explain `John 11:25 `, "Jesus said unto her, I am the
resurrection and the life. He that believeth in me, though he were dead
yet shall he live: and whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never
die."
ANSWER--All
mankind, through Jesus, will be made alive. No one will come up to full
perfection of life without faith and obedience. But this provision has
been made broad enough in our heavenly Father's plan that every member
of Adam's race may return to everlasting life by faith and
::Page Q592::
obedience. Now then, when they have once
come back to perfection of life, if they continue to be obedient they
will never die. For instance, the world all through the thousand years
will, by belief and obedience, be returning to full perfection, full
harmony with the Lord, and if by the end of the thousand years they are
in full obedience in heart and mind there is no reason why they should
ever die. God wills that all the obedient have life eternal through
Christ.
RESURRECTION--Knowing Each Other. ::Q592:1:: QUESTION (1911)--1--Shall we know each other at the day of resurrection? In what form will we appear?
ANSWER--The
apostle, speaking of the church, said, "Now we know in part, then we
shall know as we are known." He was speaking of the church only, which
will be perfected on the spiritual plane, and of course all spirit
beings will see each other. We do not see the Lord now, and we do not
see the angels now, because we are on the human plane, and they are on
the spirit plane; but the apostle says that all of those who will
constitute the church will experience a change in a moment, in the
twinkling of an eye, at or during the last trumpet--symbolic trumpet.
When that change shall come, we shall be like him. Our Lord is a spirit
being; he is not a man. Those who think of Jesus as being a man in
heaven, entirely out of harmony with all the surroundings of heaven,
have a very wrong conception of the matter. Jesus was quickened in the
spirit, says the apostle, "Now the Lord is that spirit." "Him hath God
highly exalted, far above angels, principalities, and powers, and every
name that is named." As a man he was not higher than the angels, but a
little lower, because man is a being on a lower plane than an angel; at
his resurrection he was raised to a higher plane. So we, in the
resurrection, shall see him as he is, and know as we are known--
thoroughly. As for the world, they will know each other because they
will come back practically in the condition in which they will go down.
Let me ask, "How would anyone know another when they come back?" We
answer, that to our understanding the Bible teaches the resurrection
will take place in the reverse order to that in which men died. That is
to say, the first to be awakened from the tomb will not be Adam and his
children, but those who have died most recently, so that the
resurrection work will proceed backward, and possibly Adam, and those
of his day, will be the very last to be awakened; and each generation,
as it will be awakened, will be acquainted with all the others all the
way back, and the identity will be fully established when they get back
to Adam. Seth will know Adam; Adam will know Seth.
RESURRECTION--Benefits to All. ::Q592:2:: QUESTION (1911)--2--Are the resurrection class to be resurrected as Abraham's seed, or shall blessings come to the then mortal nations?
ANSWER--Both.
The blessing is for those redeemed. How many did Jesus redeem? "Jesus
Christ by the grace of God tasted death for every man." It does not
leave out any, not one. "As by man came death, by man also came the
resurrection of the dead." "As all in Adam die, even so all in Christ
shall be made alive." But, "Every man his own order." This blessing is
to come through Messiah.
::Page Q593::
Now take another Scripture which
differentiates, and shows the church separate from the world. We read
of Christ that he is the propitiation--that is, satisfaction--for our
sins --for the church's sins--and not for ours only, but also for the
sins of the whole world. He is the Redeemer of both the church and the
world. God grants one blessing to those who now have the hearing ear
and respond to this high invitation, and who walk in the narrow way,
but to the world of mankind who will be brought to know then, he has
another blessing, if they have good and honest hearts and make use of
the opportunity.
RESURRECTION--Is it Universal. ::Q593:1:: QUESTION
(1911)--1--If the resurrection is to be universal, what do the
Scriptures mean when they say, "He that wandereth out of the way of
understanding shall remain in the congregation of the dead?"
ANSWER--I
would understand it means that those who wandered out of the way of
understanding had the understanding first. How could he wander out of
the way of understanding if he had been a heathen man? Can you tell me
how a heathen can wander out of the way of understanding? The one that
can wander out of understanding is the one that has been in the way of
understanding, and they are comparatively few. Only the church at the
present time has the right understanding. This is life eternal, that
they might know thee, the only true God. That is the real
understanding. How few people there are today who know the living and
true God, and Jesus Christ whom he has sent! There are very few in
Winnipeg, and very few in my own city of Brooklyn, and in London, and
the heathen have no knowledge of him at all. The only ones who have any
understanding are those like you and myself, who have made a
consecration to the Lord, and whose eyes of understanding have been
opened, and who have started to walk in the narrow way, to walk in his
footsteps. Now, God says, "If any man draw back, my soul shall have no
pleasure in him." What will happen to him? The second death. That is
exactly what is meant here. He that wandereth out of the way of
understanding shall remain in the congregation of the dead. His will be
the second death from which there will be no recovery of any kind. God
does not want people that wilfully reject him; he does not want them to
have any everlasting life on any plane, either spiritual or human.
RESURRECTION--Power Now at Work. ::Q593:2:: QUESTION (1912-Z)--2--Does the resurrection power now work in the lives of the saints?
ANSWER--The
resurrection power is now working in the lives of the saints. In `Rom.
8:11` the Apostle says, "If the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from
the dead dwell in you, He that raised up Christ from the dead shall
also quicken your mortal bodies by His Spirit indwelling." This does
not refer to future resurrections. It refers to the energizing of your
mortal body. The Apostle argues that we were alive unto sin once, but
that when we made our full surrender to the Lord we became dead to sin
that when we were begotten of the Holy Spirit we became New Creatures,
in this earthen vessel; and that the body is reckoned dead to sin and
the New Creature alive to God. Now, the Apostle says, the Spirit of God
is able to so quicken
::Page Q594::
our mortal body that instead of being a servant of sin as, it once was, it will be a servant of righteousness.
There is a great difference between the
immortal body which we shall have by and by, and the quickening of the
mortal body. The new body will not be a flesh body at all. "It is sown
in corruption, it is raised in incorruption; it is sown in dishonor, it
is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in power; it
is sown a natural body, it is raised a spirit body." (`1 Cor.
15:42-44`.) This animal body is to be quickened by the Spirit of God
that dwells in us; and by degrees this resurrection process in which
the New Creature is engaged becomes stronger and stronger. If this
continues, our resurrection progresses; and the time will come, at the
end of our course, when the Lord will count us worthy of the glorious
change, to be like Him and share His glory on the high, spirit plane.
RESURRECTION--The Great Teacher Exposed Sadducees' Ignorance. ::Q594:1:: QUESTION (1912-Z)--1--"Whose wife shall she be in the resurrection," who had several husbands?
ANSWER--The
Sadducees, the agnostics who did not believe in the resurrection, tried
to entrap the great Teacher by asking one of their stock questions.
Seven different brothers in turn married the same woman and all died
before she did. "To which of them shall she be wife in the
resurrection?" They did not ask, "To which of these will she be wife in
heaven or purgatory or eternal torture?" for neither Jesus nor the Jews
held any such teachings. The Pharisees and Jesus taught the
resurrection of the dead; and it was against this teaching that the
Sadducees aimed their sarcastic question.
Note the majesty of the Master's answer:
"Ye do err, not knowing the Scriptures, neither the power of God!"
(`Matt. 22:23-33 `.) You do not understand the Scripture teaching
respecting such suggestions, and you ignore in your question the great
Divine power which, at the resurrection time, will be exercised to
straighten out all the difficulties of the situation. Then the great
Teacher proceeds to inform them that such as would (gradually) attain
to the resurrection--such as would get a complete raising up out of sin
and death, would "neither marry nor be given in marriage," but would be
sexless, as are the angels. Thus the supposedly unanswerable question
of the Sadducees fell flat, and their ignorance was exposed.
RESURRECTION--An Interpolated Text. ::Q594:2:: QUESTION (1912-Z)--2--Kindly explain `Rev. 20:5 `: "But the rest of the dead lived not again until the thousand years were finished."
ANSWER--Scholars are agreed that this text is an interpolation. We must remember, however, that it is one thing to be legally, or officially dead, and another thing
to be actually dead. But as Jesus said to some, He recognized as alive
only those who accepted Him. Those who had not the Son had not life in
any sense or degree; those who have the Son, have the beginning of life
reckoned to them. The world, however, during the thousand years will
have the opportunity, not only of being awakened, but of having fulness
of life. If, therefore, after they are awakened, they will go on and
render obedience to the laws of the Kingdom, they will
::Page Q595::
be lifted up, up, up out of death to perfection and life.
RESURRECTION--Knowledge of Former Life. ::Q595:1:: QUESTION (1913)--1--When a man is resurrected will he have knowledge of his former life?
ANSWER--We
would make a distinction, first of all, between being resurrected and
being awakened. To be awakened is one thing, and to be resurrected is
quite another. Mankind in general will be awakened in order to have a
resurrection, but the raising up, or resurrecting, will be after the
awakening. They will not be raised up while asleep in death, but after
the awakening.
In answer to the question, then I would
say, yes. Those who are awakened will have the same qualities of mind
as in their former life. They will remember their experiences in the
former body because their brains will have the same convolutions and
impressions which they had in it. The same thoughts will be produced,
as is illustrated by a talking machine record. You have the record and
can make duplicates, and when you put them on the machine they produce
the same sounds as the original record. The new body will have the same
thoughts as the former body had, and in that sense their identity will
be preserved. I suppose the physical form will be preserved, that
people may know themselves by personal blemishes and peculiarities. I
think they may get rid of their imperfections. The time for getting rid
of these is the whole thousand years of Christ's reign. During that
thousand years they will be raised up out of their imperfections, and
not until the close will they be wholly free.
In the case of the church it is
different. Their trial takes place at the present time, and these
trials are for the purpose of testing the saints of God to find out
whether they are loyal to the core. To such as are proven loyal will be
granted the glorious change in the first resurrection. They will be
given spirit bodies; a perfect organism with the spiritual mind which
they now have, and that will be their resurrection. Theirs will be
different from the world's resurrection, and they will know each other,
not by knowing the spirit bodies, because these bodies will be entirely
new. I cannot tell how they will know each other, for as the Lord says,
now we know in part, but then we shall see face to face.
RESURRECTION--Re Spirit, Flesh and Bone. ::Q595:2:: QUESTION (1913)--2--What did Jesus mean, when after His resurrection He said, "A spirit hath not flesh and bone as ye see Me have?"
ANSWER--He
meant that a spirit being did not have flesh and bone. The disciples
were frightened. They had certain indefinite ideas respecting spirit as
people have today. I do not know to what extent the spirits of that
time might make certain commotion, as they do today, but the disciples
did not know whether the object before them had tangible flesh and bone
like their own. You know the doors were closed and they could not
believe one could come in and have a flesh and bone body. They thought
they saw a phantom, and Jesus, to inspire their confidence, said, "Do
not be afraid. A spirit hath not flesh and bone as ye see Me have. Come
and handle Me. I will eat some fish." He said to Thomas on another
occasion, "Thrust your hand in My side; put your
::Page Q596::
finger in the print of the nails. It is
not spirit you are seeing." He had materialized. He was made alive as a
spirit being. He had the power of a spirit being, to materialize and
dematerialize. He did not have these powers when a man, during the 33
years of His earthly life. It was after His change, and becoming a
spirit being again, that He had the same power as other spirit beings.
RESURRECTION--Re Order of the. ::Q596:1:: QUESTION (1915)--1--Will the Ancient Worthies have their resurrection before the Great Company?
ANSWER--We
do not surely know, but we are inclined to think they will not. We
think that the Great Company class will pass beyond the veil before the
Ancient Worthies will receive their awakening. The matter could be
reasoned one way or another; but the way we are most inclined to reason
on it now is this--to say that the Great Company comes in as a
secondary part of the Church, a part of the general class represented
in the Church of the First-born. You remember that this was shown in
the type; for all the Levites--not merely the priests--belonged to the
class who were accepted by the Lord in exchange for the first-born of
Israel.
So we understand in a general way the
Great Company belong to the same class as the Church the Body of
Christ. They are the ones for whom there has been a special application
of the merit of Christ during this Gospel Age, made at the beginning;
and Christ's merit, thus obligated, might be said not to be fully released
until all these shall have been completely dealt with. This would
imply, we understand, that the merit of Jesus could not be applicable
to any outside, not even the Ancient Worthies, until after all the
Church class have died and the merit is thus set free. We think,
therefore, that the Ancient Worthies will not be resurrected until the
Great Company shall have passed within the veil.
RESURRECTION--Why Jews Embalm Bodies? ::Q596:2:: QUESTION
(l9l6)--2--Since the Jews believed in a resurrection of the dead, why
did they embalm the bodies of their dead, as in the case of Joseph? Did
they believe they would come forth in the same bodies?
ANSWER--We
may not say what they believed. But when today we embalm our dead it
does not signify that we believe they will come forth in those bodies.
They did not know the simple way of embalming that we practice today.
They were expressing some faith in respect to the dead, but not
necessarily a Jewish hope; for the Egyptians, not the Jews, practiced
embalming. The Bible gives us to understand that Joseph requested to be
embalmed as an expression of his faith in God's promise to Abraham that
Palestine would be given to the Israelites. He wished to be buried with
his people, just as we today ship a corpse a long distance at times
that it may be buried in the family burying place.
RESURRECTION--Re Still-born. ::Q596:3:: QUESTION (1916)--3--Will there be a resurrection of dead-born children?
ANSWER--No
child is a soul previous to birth. The Scriptures speak of "Every soul
of man in whom is the breath of life," and it is all these souls of
Adam that are redeemed
::Page Q597::
by the soul of Jesus, and therefore these
are the only souls to be brought forth from the tomb. Whoever has not
been born has not been redeemed. If not born, then not redeemed; and if
not redeemed, then not raised. Such children as those referred to in
the question have not been born, have not been redeemed, and will
therefore have no part in the resurrection.
REVELATION--Answering Questions on. ::Q597:1:: QUESTION (1906)--1--Please explain `Rev. 14:9-11 `.
ANSWER--We
prefer, dear friends, not to answer questions on Revelation yet,
because it is a book of symbols so interwoven one with the other that
we would have to here begin and prove what was the "beast" and what was
its "image," and what was the "mark," etc., and it would really take us
all evening to give a full explanation of that verse. So our thought is
until in the Lord's providence the book of Revelation shall be treated
as a whole, and connectedly, it will serve your interests and the
Lord's interests best for me not to answer questions on it.
RICH MAN AND LAZARUS--Parable of. ::Q597:2:: QUESTION (1911)--2--Explain the parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus.
ANSWER--First
of all we must prove that it is a parable, because so many dear friends
believe that it is not a parable, but the statement of a literal
occurrence. They say, "It reads that there was a certain rich man, and
it does not say, 'this is a parable.' " We agree to all of that; we
must therefore prove it is a parable. And in order to prove it is a
parable, it is necessary to show that if interpreted as a literal
statement, it would be an absurdity and anything that would be an
absurdity to interpret literally, we would be bound to look upon as a
parable and seek to find some parabolical interpretation. That this
would be an absurdity if taken literally, note this. It is not said
that the rich man was a bad man; it is not said that the poor man was a
good man; there was a certain rich man. To be rich is not necessarily
an evil. There have been good rich men. Abraham was very rich. Our
heavenly Father is very rich. It is not poverty, merely that makes
goodness, is it? And our Lord is rich and for our sakes became poor. So
we are not to think that riches merely, mean wickedness. We do not read
that this rich man was a bad man, or profane, or anything of the kind,
but merely he was rich and fared sumptuously every day--ate three or
four good square meals each day, and wore purple and fine linen; that
was his crime; whatever it was, it was connected with that matter
somehow. Now to say that any man would have to be roasted to all
eternity because he wore purple or because he wore fine linen, and had
plenty to eat, and because he was very rich, would not be rational.
Then take the poor man. There is nothing
said about his being a particularly good poor man, nor that he prayed a
great deal--not a suggestion about his ever praying; he was simply a
poor man and he lay at the rich man's gate, and he was full of sores,
and the dogs came along and licked his sores, and he ate of the crumbs
that fell from the rich man's table, and he was carried by the
messengers to Abraham's bosom. Now to take that literally would be also
absurd. It would mean, in the first place, that the only persons that
would go to Abraham's bosom would be some who had laid
::Page Q598::
at some rich man's gate. That would not
take you and me in--at least would not take me in, for I never had any
dogs lick my sores, and I never ate crumbs, etc. So you see it would be
an absurdity. Besides, if Abraham's bosom only had two or three lusty
looking Lazaruses, he would have his arms out like that, trying to get
them into his bosom. If it is literal at all, the whole thing is
literal, and if it is symbolic at all, the whole thing is symbolic.
Therefore we say without any question, this is a parable, because to
take it literally would be to involve ourselves in statements of
absurdity.
When we take it as a parable it is a very beautiful one, very consistent with all the Word of God, from first to last.
That rich man who fared sumptuously was
the Jewish nation; he fared sumptuously upon the gracious promises of
God's Word. All of those precious promises of God's Word, for the time
being, belonged to the Jews--not one of them extended beyond his
boundary to the Gentiles, except all the families of the earth were to
be blessed through the Jews. All the precious promises belonged to
Israel. Then he had a purple robe. Purple has always been a symbol of
royalty. In what way did they have royalty? Why they had the divine
kingdom or Theocracy established in their nation, and although the
crown had been taken off in Zedekiah's day, God had promised that he
would give it in due time to him whose right it is, and that Messiah
should be of the stock of David. So they still had the purple. They
still claimed to be God's kingdom. And they had fine linen. What does
fine linen symbolize? It symbolizes righteousness, purity. Fine linen
in the Scriptures represents righteousness. Where did they get
righteousness? Where did they get more righteousness than the Gentiles
had? We answer that in God's covenant with them, the covenant of the
law, he made a special arrangement by which upon the offering of
certain sacrifices year by year, each year, the nation was clothed with
righteousness for a year. At the end of the year they had a new
Atonement day, and made fresh sacrifices for sin, and then their
righteousness was renewed for another year, in this national manner. So
that this rich man, this Jewish nation, at the time our Lord uttered
these words, had all of these conditions fulfilled. He had more than he
could appropriate of God's promises in the Scripture, and all the holy
prophets and the types and shadows of the law--all of those things. A
change came--he died; he died to all those blessings. Did he? Does
everybody agree to that? Yes. Do the Jews also agree? They do. They
know they are not enjoying the blessings they formerly had. They know
that since the year 70 when their nation perished they have not been in
the condition of divine favor in which they were previously. Where are
they now? As a nation they are still dead. As a nation they are still
in hades--oblivion.
You cannot find any Jewish nation, in the proper sense of that term.
The Jewish nation, or government, has gone to hades,
to the tomb. Will it be resurrected? Oh, yes, the Jewish nation will be
resurrected, as we tried to show last night. Zionism is the forerunner
of the resurrection of this Jewish nation. Whatever goes into hades must come out. That is the very thought of hades.
It means a temporary stopping place from which the person or thing will
come out. So when the Jewish nation is said to have gone to hades, it
::Page Q599::
implies that that nation will have a resurrection, or come out as a nation from that hades, or hadean
condition. But while the nation is unconscious, the people of that
nation have been very much alive all of these hundreds of years. They
are very much alive people today. There is no more alive people in the
whole world than the Jews are, and they have some of that very
suffering that is pictured there in that parable at the hands of the
Christians--or those said to be Christians. Those who were deluded into
thinking they were Christians have persecuted the Jews, and they have
had the tribulation that is there symbolically pictured. And they have
desired that the Gentiles might cool their tongues. Was that fulfilled?
Yes. When and how? Many times. I will give you one illustration in your
day and mine. Not long ago when President Roosevelt was in office, the
Jews of the United States got up a monster petition asking President
Roosevelt, after he had had some good interchange with the Russian
nation, if he would not use the kind offices of the United States and
his own personal influence with the government of Russia to bring about
some cessation of the severe persecutions against the Jews in
Russia--"Do something to cool our parched tongues" is the very thought.
"Give us at least a drop of cold water." President Roosevelt could not
do it. Just so in the parable. We read that the drop of water was
denied. President Roosevelt said that he would like very much to do
something in response to this invitation. He was in individual sympathy
with the Jewish race, but he said it would be out of the way entirely
for the United States government to attempt to criticise a foreign
nation with which we are at peace, and to dictate to them any policy
they must pursue in their own government. So the poor Jew could not
even get that little bit of help. That is exactly true of the parable.
The parable does not go on to show that the time will come when the
Jews will come out of that time of trouble. It merely leaves it there
in the trouble.
The parable speaks about five brethren.
Who would they be? We answer that while all twelve of the tribes were
represented in Palestine at that time, yet the major portion belonged
to the tribes of Judah and Benjamin. These two mainly constituted the
rich man. The other tribes were mainly scattered around in Greece,
Rome, Asia Minor, etc., and the question here is raised to show that
God's dealing with the Jews that were scattered abroad amongst the
Gentiles would be exactly the same as his dealing with the people in
Palestine. For the answer is, "They have Moses and the prophets, let
them hear them. If they do not hear them, then they must take the
consequences." Who have Moses and the prophets? The heathen? No, the
heathen never had Moses and the prophets. Whoever did have Moses and
the prophets that they could hear them? Only this Jewish nation, only
this rich man and, his brethren--two tribes, and the other ten tribes.
Two tribes represented in the one rich man and the other ten tribes
represented in the five brethren. You see two make the one, so the ten
would make the five proportionately.
We have seen the rich man, now how about
Lazarus? Let us see where he comes in. Lazarus was that poor man in the
parable who lay at the rich man's gate, desiring to be fed with some of
the crumbs that fell from the rich man's
::Page Q600::
table. What class was that? That was some
outsiders? Yes. Who were they? They were some godly Gentiles. I remind
you of some of them in the Scriptures. You remember in the New
Testament there is mentioned a centurion, and they besought Jesus that
he would heal the centurion's servant; they said, "He is a godly man,
and he has built us a synagogue and has done much good to our people;"
and so Jesus healed the servant. He desired to have some of God's
favors. Yet he knew they belonged to the Jewish nation, they were not
his; he was an outsider. I remind you of Cornelius, of whom we read
that he served God daily, prayed always, gave much alms to the people,
and reverenced God. A pretty good man, wasn't he? Yes. Yet none of his
praying and none of his alms-giving came up to God. God did not accept
any of that. It is, so to speak, like the incense that rose so high and
could not go any higher. Why not? Because he was a Gentile. What
difference did that make? Because all of God's blessings belonged to
the one nation of Israel. When God said, "Ye only have I known
(recognized) of all the families of the earth," he was speaking there
of Israel and the special privileges and blessings belonging to Israel,
but just as soon as the middle wall of partition, or separation,
between the Jew and the Gentile was blotted out, just three and
one-half years after the cross, just as soon as that particular period
of speciall favor to the Jew was over, the Gentile came in to have just
the same favor as the Jews--no more, no less. And at that time God
blessed Cornelius, and he sent a messenger to Cornelius and said, "Now
Cornelius, your prayers and your alms are come up before me." Why not
before? They could not raise any higher, but now the special favor for
Israel having passed, your alms and your prayers are come up before me
as a memorial. Send now therefore to Joppa to one called Peter and when
he comes he will tell you words which shall be to the saving of thyself
and thy house; and you will come into fellowship with me then; when
Peter came he preached Christ to Cornelius. And Cornelius received the
message and was blessed with the Holy Spirit and had all the privileges
and favors thenceforth that any of the Jews who had heard and had
accepted the Gospel received--the Penticostal blessings came on him
also.
Now go back to the poor man lying at the
rich man's gate. This is, before the change; this is before the house
of Israel was left desolate, before the Gentiles were blessed. The
Gentiles were in that poor condition represented by that poor
individual, with the sores on his body, representing sin and sickness.
I presume, as Bible students, all here grasp the thought that sores
would represent sin, and the dogs licking the sores would represent the
Gentiles, because this was a prominent expression among the Jews, that
all others than Jews were mere Gentile dogs. They did not count them on
a parity with the Jews at all. But he desired to be fed with the crumbs
falling from the rich man's table. That is to say, I would like to have
some of the blessings God gave. You remember the Syro-Phoenician woman
of whom we read that she came to Jesus saying, Lord, my daughter is
sick of a fever; I entreat you to heal her. Jesus for the time paid no
attention, and she entreated and entreated;
::Page Q601::
finally Jesus said to her, "Never mind,
go away; it is not proper to take the children's bread and give it to
the dogs." Don't you know you are a Gentile dog? Have you not had that
idea right along? She answered, "Yea, Lord, yet the dogs eat of the
crumbs that fall from the children's table." She was willing to confess
herself one of the Gentile dogs, she was willing to confess she had no
right to claim any of those blessings of healing for her daughter,
because she was not of the Jewish nation--but Lord, do not the dogs get
a crumb occasionally from the table? "Let me have this crumb, heal my
daughter." Jesus admired her faith, and said, "Go thy way, your
daughter is healed." So she went her way. The daughter was healed. She
was a type of this Lazarus, you see, getting a crumb from the rich
man's table.
Now then, Lazarus died, that is to say,
this Lazarus class died to their unfavorable conditions, and the angels
carried them to Abraham's bosom. What does that mean? They were not
buried. When the Gentiles died to their unfavorable condition, the
angels that carried them to Abraham's bosom were the Apostles. See how
Saint Peter carried Cornelius right off to Abraham's bosom. Why, he
explained to him he should be one of the children of Abraham, didn't
he? And that is what is meant by the figure of getting into Abraham's
bosom. If you are a father and have any love for your family, and have
some children come to you, you take them into your bosom; they are your
children; you are their father. And that is the picture. That is the
whole thing--Abraham and his children. Now the Jews were the natural
children of Abraham, but they failed to get into Abraham's bosom, and
the Gentiles who were outcasts, who in their humble condition were more
ready to receive God's grace in the way God was pleased to give it,
became children of Abraham through faith. And that is exactly what the
Apostle says, "If ye be Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, Abraham's
children." You are in Abraham's bosom now. I am glad to be in Abraham's
bosom, glad to have some blessings there also. I am glad that God's
favor to natural Israel is soon to come. They will all be coming into
Abraham's bosom, not on the spiritual plane, but the natural seed will
be coming back into the obedience and faith of Abraham, and I rejoice
in that glorious prospect.
RIGHTEOUSNESS OF THE LAW--Paul Blameless. ::Q601:1:: QUESTION
(1916)--1--What did Paul mean when he said, "Concerning the
righteousness of the law, I am blameless?" Had he not had part in
Israel's national sin of crucifying the Lord would it have been
necessary for him to have been immersed for the remission of sins? Were
there any of the Jews who were so in harmony with their covenant that
they needed no immersion?
ANSWER.--I
think that the Apostle meant, personally he was blameless. As a member
of the nation he was not blameless because the whole nation was
involved in the sin their leaders had committed. The nation was
responsible for the blood of Jesus, but the Apostle as a Jew had not
been living as a sinner. He had been trying to keep the law, and in
that sense was not a sinner. He would not therefore need to be
baptized. This baptism was not common with the Jew. What John the
Baptist did was something new to them. They were all baptized in the
Red Sea and in the cloud when
::Page Q602::
God brought them out of the land of
Egypt. In leading them out of that land into the land of Canaan He
brought them through this baptism of water--water on either side of
them and the cloud above them. They were baptized unto Moses and were
all represented in Moses as the mediator of the law covenant. Whoever
was faithful to that covenant was doing all that he could do. Anyone so
doing was not willingly doing wrong. Some of them were indeed publicans
and sinners, were not leading righteous lives, and some were exacting
taxes from their brethren in serving the Gentiles. Some were sinners in
that they lived in open sin. Any one of these sinners who would come to
make a reformation of his life, turn over a new leaf, get into harmony
with God, could symbolize the washing away of his sins by water
baptism. That would mean that they had come back into harmony with
Moses and the law-covenant, and would to the best of their ability keep
the law. So John, when he saw Jesus coming- -John knew that Jesus was
not a sinner and therefore did not need to be baptized by him, but
rather that he needed to be baptized by Jesus. Jesus was living in
harmony with Moses' law, John was trying to live in harmony with it,
and Paul reckoned himself in with this class. He would not need to be
baptized because baptism was the needful thing for an outward sinner
who wanted to come back into harmony with God. John said, Messiah is
about ready to set up the Kingdom, and if you do not get right you will
not be transferred from Moses to Christ and become members of the new
nation.
RIGHTEOUSNESS--Of Law Fulfilled In Us. ::Q602:1:: QUESTION (1916) --l--How is the righteousness of the law fulfilled in us?--`Rom. 8:4 `.
ANSWER.--The
righteousness of the law is fulfilled in us as New Creatures. It is not
fulfilled in our flesh because in our flesh dwelleth no perfection. You
cannot bring perfection out of an imperfect body. The New Creature
desires to do perfectly. We desire that every act and thought might be
pleasing and acceptable to God, but we cannot do all that we would. We
can do a great deal towards it and we can gain many victories along
this line, and although we may continue to make progress in this
direction, yet we cannot hope to reach the point where we shall be able
to do perfectly. We can only do with the imperfect body which we have.
We cannot do with the body which we have not yet got. We can only use
the old body with the new mind. It is the New Creature in whom the
righteousness of the law will be fulfilled. First of all, God counted
our flesh as dead before He received us. It would not be the flesh,
therefore, that would keep God's law. It is the New Creature in us, the
new creature in which the righteousness of the law is fulfilled, and if
we are doing this to the extent of our ability the spirit of the law is
fulfilled in us as new creatures--in our hearts, our minds, our
intentions, our endeavors--and that is what God is judging who knows us
not after the flesh, but after the spirit- -according to this spirit He
judges us. In the mind we keep this law, loving God with all our minds
and strength, and our neighbors as ourselves. But more than this, we
seek to follow in the foot-steps of Jesus and to lay down our earthly
privileges as He did in order that we might exercise the spirit that
was in Him in the service
::Page Q603::
of the Father and become more and more like Him, and ultimately share His glory.
ROBE--Vs. Garments of Salvation. ::Q603:1:: QUESTION
(1911)--l--"I will greatly rejoice in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful
in my God, for he hath clothed me with garments of salvation, he has
covered me with the robe of righteousness, as a bridegroom decketh
himself with raiment and as a bride adorneth herself with her jewels."
Is there any essential difference between the garments of salvation and
the robe of righteousness?
ANSWER.--I
think it would be quite reasonable to suppose here that these two
expressions were used interchangeably. Our robe of Christ's
righteousness granted to us when we become his betrothed, our wedding
garment, is a covering of our blemishes. Therefore, it is a robe of
righteousness, a robe of imputation, under which we are counted to be
right with God. And we properly enough speak of ourselves as in the
same condition. As the apostle again says, "Ye are saved by hope." Our
salvation is not complete, of course, but our salvation is begun in the
sense that we are already counted as on the Lord's side, and we are
already assured that if we maintain this standing, if we keep our
garments unspotted from the world, we shall be of that same class whose
salvation may be accomplished fully at the second coming of our Lord.
ROBE--The New Creature Given the Robe. ::Q603:2:: QUESTION (1911-Z)--2--Can the New Creature's body sin?
ANSWER.--The
New Creature's proper body is the Spirit body of the First
Resurrection. But before getting it he is placed on probation and given
his old human body to practice with. The New Creature cannot make the
old body obey him perfectly.
But he can develop strength in his endeavors to bring words, actions
and thoughts into perfect accord with the perfect Law of God--Love.
Unable to conquer, he must show the Captain of his salvation his loyalty to the core by "fighting a good fight."
The imperfections of the flesh to which
the new mind does not consent are all of heredity--all from Adamic
weakness- -all, therefore, forgivable
by the Redeemer who merely needs to be appealed to as the great
Advocate. But every transgression of the flesh is charged to the New
Creature, who owns the flesh and is using it. This obligates
repentance, prayer, etc., and means the greater blessing to the New
Creature. To whatever extent the New Creature gives consent or sympathy
to the sin of his flesh he is worthy of "stripes," which correctively
will assist in his character development. "What son is he whom his
Father chasteneth not?"
The New Creature only
is given the wedding robe, the robe of Christ's righteousness, as a
covering for his imperfect flesh. It represents his justification as a
New Creature. It shows him as in Divine sight, holy, harmless,
undefiled, through the merit of Jesus his Advocate and Redeemer.
ROBE--Does All of Bride Class Wear It. ::Q603:3:: QUESTION (1912-Z)--3--Will any of those found worthy of a place in the Bride company wear Christ's robe of righteousness?
ANSWER.--We understand that all who make the
::Page Q604::
consecration do so and are accepted, in
one hope of their calling, and that that one hope is the hope of being
a member of the Bride class and joint-heir with Christ. The fact that
there will be a "great company" is a special favor ordained of the Lord
in the interest of those who do not prove sufficiently zealous to be
counted in with Jesus as "more than conquerors."
The "great company" of `Rev. 7:9 ` is
composed of such as fail to come up to the highest standard of
sacrifice required of the Lord, but who, nevertheless, will prove not
unfaithful in their final test. These are said to have not kept their
garments unspotted from the world; hence the requirement that they
shall wash them in the blood of the Lamb--prove their loyalty under
discipline and stress, having failed to prove it by voluntary obedience
unto sacrifice. Thus both the Bride and her virgins who follow her all
wear the Bridegroom's robe (justification) in the present life. And all
in the future life will attain perfection on their own account.
This imputed robe will not be needed by
the "great company" after they shall have experienced their "change" to
the spirit condition: for they, too, will be changed, in a moment and
thereafter possess an individual perfection of their own.
ROBE--What Have We Since Our Begetting? ::Q604:1:: QUESTION (1913)--l--Are we covered by the Robe of Christ's Righteousness, or since our begetting has God given us a robe of our own?
ANSWER.--This
Robe of Christ's Righteousness does not appertain to us at all until we
become New Creatures. It was not intended to cover the flesh of those
who have not become consecrated people of God. The world are not
identified in the sense of being New Creatures with old bodies; they
are all old creatures, both mind and body. It is only the Church who
have had a change and whose minds or hearts God accepts as being in
relationship to Him in Christ and whose bodies are imperfect, and,
therefore, need a covering, that the Lord regards in this figure of
speech, "Robe," and shows how He provides the covering of Christ to
cover our mortal bodies. It is His Robe and not ours, and it is a very
precious use of His Robe. We need His Robe, His Righteousness, to cover
our blemishes. Our own righteousness, as the Apostle expresses it,
would be only filthy rags, and so it is a beautiful picture of how God
uses His righteousness for us, the wedding garment of all His people,
and we are to continue to wear it without spot or wrinkle, and if any
comes on it we have to get it off again, and thus keep ourselves in the
love of God and in readiness for the marriage supper when we are beyond
the vail. We are to be made perfect in our resurrection. We will not
then need the imputed Robe to give us access to the wedding. By the
time the wedding will be over we will have that robe of our own through
the merit of Christ.
ROBE-For Old or New Creature? ::Q604:2:: QUESTION (1913)--2--Is the Robe of Christ's righteousness for the covering of the old man or the new creature?
ANSWER.--The old man we are to put off. Put off, therefore, the old man with his works, the Apostle says. The
::Page Q605::
old man was the old will, and he is not
to be covered at all; he is to be dead; do not even need to bury him,
let him go. And the new man does not need any covering, for the new man
is perfect, the new creature never had any sin, has no sympathy with
sin. What is it, then, that needs covering with the robe of Christ's
righteousness? It is the flesh that once belonged to the old man, the
old will, this flesh that has now been turned over as the body or flesh
of the new creature and that the new creature must act through. This
flesh is imperfect and needs the covering of Christ's imputed
righteousness to keep all the blemishes out of sight, so they will not
appear to the brethren any more than necessary, and will not appear to
the Father any more than necessary.
ROBES--Re Our Lord's Glory Robes. ::Q605:1:: QUESTION (1911)--1--Has our Lord his robes of glory and beauty on at the present time?
ANSWER.--The
thought in the questioner's mind, I presume, is drawn from the type of
the High Priest. You will remember that the High Priest when he made
atonement on the Day of Atonement had on white linen garments, and in
those white linen garments he did the sacrificing and the offering of
the blood, and then having offered the blood and having made atonement
for sin, he came and washed his flesh and put on his glorious
garments--garments of glory and beauty. In other words, all through the
year the High Priest wore his garments of glory and beauty, but on the
Day of Atonement he took off these and wore the plain linen garments.
Our answer to the question, then, is, that the High Priest has not yet
put on the garments of glory and beauty. Of course it is all a figure
of speech, but the thought is, these garments of beauty represent our
Lord's manifestations--the High Priest manifested as the one who is
qualified and authorized of God to bless the people. This has not yet
taken place. Why not? Because the antitypical Day of Atonement is not
yet finished. How do we know it is not finished? Because some of the
church, the body of Christ, are still to fill up that which is behind
of the afflictions of Christ. And this filling up of the afflictions of
Christ is still going on. Some of the work of the High Priest,
therefore, as sacrificer is still in progress, and he does not put on
the glory and beauty of his high office until he shall have fully
finished the sacrificing work; and until the last member of the body of
Christ has suffered with him, the sacrificing will not be at an end.
Just as soon as the sacrificing is finished, the glory will begin; as
the Scriptures say, "If we suffer with him, we shall reign with him."
And then, you remember, we read also that the prophets of old and the
angels desired to look into these things and to know respecting the
times and the seasons, respecting the sufferings of Messiah and the
glory that would follow. While the suffering of this Messiah class is
not yet at an end, the offering of the Day of Atonement is not yet
finished, therefore the High Priest has not put on his garments of
glory and beauty, representing the dignity of his office when he shall
rule and bless and begin the Messianic reign.
RULERS--Number of Earthly in Millennial Age. ::Q605:2:: QUESTION
(1908)--2--While speaking with a brother, the thought was expressed
that the House of Servants will be the earthly rulers in the next age,
and they number a hundred
::Page Q606::
and forty-four thousand, the same number
as the Church, the heavenly rulers, but being a new thought to me, and
not wishing to accept same without more light on it, I ask, Is it
correct? Are the ones to be made princes in all the earth to number one
hundred and forty-four thousand? Or, is it only the Church, "Israelites
indeed," number thus? I think the chapter used is `Rev. 7:4-8 `, which I
have always thought referred to Spiritual Israel.
ANSWER.--I
do not know anything about that. I have never seen any Scripture to
that effect, but if anybody knows of such I will be very glad to hear
it. I do not know any Scripture which says that the Ancient Worthies
will number one hundred and forty-four thousand. We are not competent
to judge, but if the Apostle's statement in the book of Hebrews be a
correct one, I have serious doubt if we could find anything like one
hundred and forty-four thousand such in all the history of Israel, so
far as the Scriptures inform us. You know the Apostle only gives us a
dozen or so by name, and says that time would fail us to mention the
number of others. He certainly would not think of mentioning one
hundred and forty-four thousand. It would have taken a great deal of
time to mention all of their names. I doubt if there were that many
Israelites of this high order. Amongst those he names it takes in
Rahab, and Samson also. I am not inclined to think that there would be
that many, but if anybody finds any Scripture which says there are one
hundred and forty-four thousand I would like to have it.
A Brother.--I have heard this same thing
talked about. Some take the seventh chapter of Revelation because it
states there will be one hundred and forty-four thousand sealed, twelve
thousand out of each tribe.
ANSWER.--I
understand that chapter refers to Spiritual Israel and not Natural
Israel. It speaks of those being twelve tribes in this way just as, for
instance, we would speak of the soldiers in the Philippine Islands and
say, There was the Ninth Tennessee Regiment, and there was the Eleventh
Ohio Regiment, and the Fourteenth Pennsylvania, etc. We could speak of
those different regiments from the different states as being in the
Philippine Islands doing duty there; and suppose now something occurred
which decimated their ranks by reason of death, or whatever might be
the thing which would sever their relationship to the regiment, and
that would leave a vacancy. Now, suppose the vacancy in the Ohio
Regiment was 400, a deficiency in the Tennessee Regiment of 600, and a
deficiency in the Pennsylvania Regiment of 200. Now suppose there were
men being enlisted by the Government for the places that would be
assigned to fill up these regiments; whether they came from New York,
New Jersey, Michigan or where, they would fill up the Eleventh Ohio, or
the Fourteenth Pennsylvania, and they would come in under that head. So
God arranged different tribes of Israel, and in His arrangement be
determined upon one hundred and forty-four thousand, which would be as
if were twelve thousand from each tribe. Now when he came to Israel to
select there were not enough, and they were mostly out of one tribe.
They nearly all came out of Judah. Our Lord sprang from Judah, and most
of the others also, so far as we know. Paul was of the tribe of
Benjamin, and we do not know what the others were of; there were a
certain number there received,
::Page Q607::
but not enough to fill up the one hundred
and forty-four thousand. We might suppose there were not more than ten
or twelve thousand of those Israelites who ever became members of the
Body of Christ. Would the Lord break up that arrangement? No; the Lord
says, These are the spiritual Israelites I had in mind; these natural
tribes were merely the outward shell, as it were, and the real kernel
of the matter from my standpoint was spiritual Israel. I will still
preserve this method of speaking of them as the twelve tribes. Now we
have some from each of these tribes, and I will fill them up from all
nations, kindreds, and peoples, and tongues; and it has taken all of
this Gospel Age to do this. I do not know to which tribe I am assigned,
and I do not care; it is merely an outward figure, and what difference
does it make? It is all one company. The same thought is also called to
our attention in `Romans 11 ` where the Apostle speaks of the covenant
made with Abraham, and how many branches were broken off because of
unbelief, and then he says we were grafted in and took the places of
those branches. Those branches represented the one hundred and
forty-four thousand, but they were broken off and their places made
vacant, and you and I were grafted in. In this sense you and I belong
to the original olive tree, and those that were natural branches are
not in it at all. The only way they can come in is by being grafted in
again.
RUSSELL, PASTOR--Re Membership in Nominal Churches. ::Q607:1:: QUESTION
(1911)--l--Did you ever belong to the Adventist church? Some say you
did, and some say you left for a reason. If so, please say what.
ANSWER.--I
never belonged to any church except the Lord's and the
Congregationalists. I was a Congregationalist, and in my endeavor to be
faithful I was trying to convert an infidel, and I did not convert him,
but while trying to do so, I got enough new thoughts into my head to
give me a lot of trouble; and finally, I became an infidel, and was
about a year in that condition. I still worshiped God, but not
recognizing the Bible, and not knowing if Christ were my redeemer. I
still, nevertheless, continually went to God in prayer and asked for
guidance and finally, in God's providence I came to see clearer light
on the divine Word. I never was an Adventist--excepting that I believe
in the advent of our Lord- -very glad to believe our Lord is to come
again to receive the church to himself. But I never believed that about
the world being burned up, nor any other things of that kind that
constitute special features of the Adventist belief.
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