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STUDY VI
OUR LORD'S RETURN--ITS OBJECT,
THE RESTITUTION OF ALL THINGS
Suppose we now look at these things just as God tells us of
them, and leave the clearing of his character to himself. Let
us inquire, What has become of the one hundred and forty-two
billions?
Whatever may have become of them, we may be sure
they are not now in a condition of suffering; because, not
only do the Scriptures teach that full and complete reward
is not given to the Church until Christ comes, when he shall
reward every man (Matt. 16:27), but that the unjust are to
receive their punishment then also. Whatever may be their
present condition, it cannot be their full reward; for Peter
says, "The Lord knoweth how to reserve the unjust unto the
day of judgment to be punished" (2 Peter 2:9); and he will
do so.
But the thought that so many of our fellow creatures
should at any time be lost from lack of having had the
knowledge which is necessary to salvation would be sad indeed
to all who have a spark of love or pity. Then, too, there
are numerous scriptures which it seems impossible to harmonize
with all this. Let us see: In the light of the past and
the present as the only opportunities, laying aside all hope
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through a restitution in the coming age, how shall we understand
the statements, "God is love," and "God so loved
the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever
believeth in him should not perish"? (1 John 4:8; John 3:16)
Would it not seem that if God loved the world so
much he might have made provision, not only that believers
might be saved, but also that all might hear in order
to believe?
Again, when we read, "That was the true light that lighteth
every man that cometh into the world" (John 1:9), our
observation says, Not so; every man has not been enlightened;
we cannot see that our Lord has lighted more than a
few of earth's billions. Even in this comparatively enlightened
day, millions of heathen give no evidence of such enlightenment;
neither did the Sodomites, nor multitudes of
others in past ages.
We read that Jesus Christ, by the grace of God, tasted
death "for every man." (Heb. 2:9) But if he
tasted death for
the one hundred and forty-three billions, and from any
cause that sacrifice becomes efficacious to only one billion,
was not the redemption comparatively a failure? And in
that case, is not the Apostle's statement too broad? When
again we read, "Behold, I bring you good tidings of great
joy, which shall be to ALL PEOPLE" (Luke 2:10), and, looking
about us, see that it is only to a "little flock" that it has
been good tidings, and not to all people, we would be compelled
to wonder whether the angels had not overstated the
goodness and breadth of their message, and overrated the
importance of the work to be accomplished by the Messiah
whom they announced.
Another statement is, "There is one God, and one Mediator
between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, who gave
himself a ransom for all." (1 Tim. 2:5,6) A ransom for all?
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Then why should not all involved have some benefit from
Christ's death? Why should not all come to a knowledge of
the truth, that they may believe?
Without the key, how dark, how inconsistent, these statements
appear; but when we find the key to God's plan,
these texts all declare with one voice, "God is love." This
key is found in the latter part of the text last quoted--"Who
gave himself a ransom for all, TO BE TESTIFIED IN DUE TIME."
God has a due time for everything. He could have testified
it to these in their past lifetime; but since he did not, it
proves that their due time must be future. For those who
will be of the Church, the bride of Christ, and share the
kingdom honors, the present is the "due time" to hear; and
whosoever now has an ear to hear, let him hear and heed,
and he will be blessed accordingly. Though Jesus paid our
ransom before we were born, it was not our "due time" to
hear of it for long years afterward, and only the appreciation
of it brought responsibility; and this, only to the extent
of our ability and appreciation. The same principle applies
to all: in God's due time it will be testified to all, and all will
then have opportunity to believe and to be blessed by it.
The prevailing opinion is that death ends all probation;
but there is no scripture which so teaches; and all the above,
and many more scriptures, would be meaningless, or worse,
if death ends all hope for the ignorant masses of the world.
The one scripture quoted to prove this generally entertained
view is, "Where the tree falleth, there it shall be."
(Eccl. 11:3) If this has any relation to man's future, it
indicates
that whatever his condition when he enters the
tomb, no change takes place until he is awakened out of it.
And this is the uniform teaching of all scriptures bearing on
the subject, as will be shown in succeeding chapters. Since
God does not propose to save men on account of ignorance,
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but "will have all men to come unto the knowledge of the
truth" (1 Tim. 2:4); and since the masses of mankind have
died in ignorance; and since "there is no work, nor device,
nor knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave" (Eccl. 9:10);
therefore God has prepared for the awakening of the dead,
in order to knowledge, faith and salvation. Hence his plan
is, that "as all in Adam die, even so all in Christ shall be
made alive, but each one in his own order"--the Gospel
Church, the Bride, the body of Christ, first; afterward, during
the Millennial age, all who shall become his during that
thousand years of his presence (mistranslated coming), the
Lord's due time for all to know him, from the least to the
greatest. 1 Cor. 15:22
As death came by the first Adam, so life comes by Christ,
the second Adam. Everything that mankind lost through
being in the first Adam is to be restored to those who believe
into the second Adam. When awakened, with the advantage
of experience with evil, which Adam lacked, those who
thankfully accept the redemption as God's gift may continue
to live everlastingly on the original condition of obedience.
Perfect obedience will be required, and perfect ability
to obey will be given, under the righteous reign of the
Prince of Peace. Here is the salvation offered to the world.
Let us now consider another text which is generally ignored
except by Universalists; for, although we are not
Universalists, we claim the right to use, and believe, and rejoice
in, every testimony of God's Word. It reads, "We trust
in the living God, who is the Savior of all men, specially of
those that believe." (1 Tim. 4:10) God will save all
men, but
will not specially ("to the uttermost") save any except those
who come unto him through Christ. God's arbitrary salvation
of all men is not such as will conflict with their freedom
of will, or their liberty of choice, to give them life against
their wills: "I have set before you, this day, life and death;
choose life, that ye may live."
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Simeon contrasted these two salvations, saying, "Mine
eyes have seen thy salvation,...a light to lighten the nations,
and the glory of thy people, Israel[ites indeed]." This is in
harmony
with the declaration of the Apostle, that the fact that
Jesus Christ, the Mediator, gave himself a ransom for all is
to be testified to all IN DUE TIME. This is that which shall come
to all men, regardless of faith or will on their part. This good
tidings of a Savior shall be to all people (Luke 2:10,11), but
the special salvation from sin and death will come only to
his people (Matt. 1:21)--those who believe into him--for we
read that the wrath of God continues to abide on the unbeliever.
John 3:36
We see, then, that the general salvation, which will come
to every individual, consists of light from the true light, and
an opportunity to choose life; and, as the great majority of
the race is in the tomb, it will be necessary to bring them
forth from the grave in order to testify to them the good tidings
of a Savior; also that the special salvation which believers
now enjoy in hope (Rom. 8:24), and the reality of
which will, in the Millennial age, be revealed, also, to those
who "believe in that day," is a full release from the thraldom
of sin, and the corruption of death, into the glorious
liberty of children of God. But attainment to all these blessings
will depend upon hearty compliance with the laws of
Christ's Kingdom--the rapidity of the attainment to perfection
indicating the degree of love for the King and for his
law of love. If any, enlightened by the Truth, and brought
to a knowledge of the love of God, and restored (either actually
or reckonedly) to human perfection, become "fearful,"
and "draw back" (Heb. 10:38,39), they, with the
unbelievers
(Rev. 21:8), will be destroyed from among the
people. (Acts 3:23) This is the second death.
Thus we see that all these hitherto difficult texts are explained
by the statement--"to be testified in due time." In
due time, that true light shall lighten every man that has
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come into the world. In due time, it shall be "good tidings of
great joy to all people." And in no other way can these
scriptures be used without wresting. Paul carries out this
line of argument with emphasis in Rom. 5:18,19. He reasons
that, as all men were condemned to death because of
Adam's transgression, so also, Christ's righteousness, and
obedience even unto death, have become a ground of justification;
and that, as all lost life in the first Adam, so all,
aside from personal demerit, may receive life by accepting
the second Adam.
Peter tells us that this restitution is spoken of by the
mouth of all the holy prophets. (Acts 3:19-21) They do all
teach it. Ezekiel says of the valley of dry bones, "These
bones are the whole house of Israel." And God says to Israel,
"Behold, O my people, I will open your graves, and cause
you to come up out of your graves, and bring you into the
land of Israel. And ye shall know that I am the Lord, when I
...shall put my spirit in you, and I shall place you in your
own land; then shall ye know that I the Lord have spoken
it, and performed it, saith the Lord." Ezek. 37:11-14
To this Paul's words agree (Rom. 11:25,26)--"Blindness
in part is happened to Israel until the fulness of the Gentiles
[the elect company, the bride of Christ] be come in; and so
all Israel shall be saved," or brought back from their cast-off
condition; for "God hath not cast away his people which
he foreknew." (Verse 2) They were cast off from his favor
while the bride of Christ was being selected, but will be
reinstated when that work is accomplished. (Verses 28-33)
The prophets are full of statements of how God will plant
them again, and they shall be no more plucked up. "Thus
saith the Lord, the God of Israel,...I will set mine eyes
upon them for good, and I will bring them again to this
land; and I will build them and not pull them down, and I
will plant them and not pluck them up. And I will give
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them an heart to know me, that I am the Lord; and they
shall be my people, and I will be their God, for they shall
return unto me with their whole heart." (Jer. 24:5-7; 31:28;
Jer. 32:40-42; 33:6-16) These cannot merely refer to restorations
from former captivities in Babylon, Syria, etc., for
they have since been plucked up.
Furthermore, the Lord says, "In those days, they shall say
no more, The fathers have eaten a sour grape, and the children's
teeth are set on edge, but every one [who dies] shall
die for his own iniquity." (Jer. 31:29,30) This is not the
case
now. Each does not now die for his own sin, but for Adam's
sin--"In Adam all die." He ate the sour grape of sin, and
our fathers continued to eat them, entailing further sickness
and misery upon their children, thus hastening the penalty,
death. The day in which "every man [who dies] shall die for
his own sin," only, is the Millennial or Restitution day.
Though many of the prophecies and promises of future
blessing seem to apply to Israel only, it must be remembered
that they were a typical people, and hence the promises
made to them, while sometimes having a special application
to themselves, generally have also a wider
application to the whole world of mankind which that nation
typified. While Israel as a nation was typical of the
whole world, its priesthood was typical of the elect "little
flock," the head and body of Christ, the "Royal Priesthood";
and the sacrifices, cleansings and atonements made
for Israel typified the "better sacrifices," fuller cleansings
and real atonement "for the sins of the whole world," of
which they are a part.
And not only so, but God mentions by name other nations
and promises their restoration. As a forcible illustration
we mention the Sodomites. Surely, if we shall find the
restitution of the Sodomites clearly taught, we may feel satisfied
of the truth of this glorious doctrine of Restitution for
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all mankind, spoken by the mouth of all the holy prophets.
And why should not the Sodomites have an opportunity to
reach perfection and everlasting life as well as Israel, or as
any of us? True, they were not righteous, but neither was
Israel, nor were we who now hear the gospel. "There is none
righteous; no, not one," aside from the imputed righteousness
of Christ, who died for all. Our Lord's own words tell
us that although God rained down fire from heaven and
destroyed them all because of their wickedness, yet the
Sodomites were not so great sinners in his sight as were the
Jews, who had more knowledge. (Gen. 19:24; Luke 17:29)
Unto the Jews of Capernaum he said, "If the mighty works
which have been done in thee had been done in Sodom, it
would have remained until this day." Matt. 11:23
Thus our Lord teaches that the Sodomites did not have a
full opportunity; and he guarantees them such opportunity
when he adds (verse 24), "But I say unto you, that it shall
be
more tolerable for the land of Sodom, in the day of judgment,
than for thee." The character of the Day of Judgment
and its work will be shown in succeeding pages. Here
we merely call attention to the fact that it will be a tolerable
time for Capernaum, and yet more tolerable for Sodom; because,
though neither had yet had full knowledge, nor all
the blessings designed to come through the "Seed," yet Capernaum
had sinned against more light.
And if Capernaum and all Israel are to be remembered
and blessed under the "New Covenant," sealed by the
blood of Jesus, why should not the Sodomites also be
blessed among "all the families of the earth"? They assuredly
will be. And let it be remembered that since God
"rained down fire from heaven and destroyed them all" many
centuries before Jesus' day, when their restoration is spoken
of, it implies their awakening, their coming from the tomb.
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Let us now examine the prophecy of Ezekiel 16:48-63.
Read it carefully. God here speaks of Israel, and compares
her with her neighbor, Samaria, and also with the Sodomites,
of whom he says, "I took them away as I saw good." Neither
Jesus nor the Prophet offers any explanation of the
seeming inequality of God's dealings in destroying Sodom
and permitting others more guilty than Sodom to go unpunished.
That will all be made clear when, in "due time,"
his great designs are made manifest. The Prophet simply
states that God "saw good" to do so, and Jesus adds that it
will be more tolerable for them in the day of judgment than
for others more guilty. But upon the supposition that death
ends all probation, and that thereafter none may have opportunity
to come to a knowledge of the truth and to obey
it, we may well inquire, Why did God see good to take away
these people without giving them a chance of salvation
through the knowledge of the only name whereby they can
be saved? The answer is, because it was not yet their due time.
In "due time" they will be awakened from death and
brought to a knowledge of the truth, and thus blessed together
with all the families of the earth, by the promised
"Seed." They will then be on trial for everlasting life.
With this thought, and with no other, can we understand
the dealings of the God of love with those Amalekites and
other nations whom he not only permitted but commanded
Israel to destroy, saying, "Go, smite Amalek and utterly destroy
all that they have, and spare them not; but slay both
man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel
and ass." (1 Sam. 15:3) This apparently reckless destruction
of life seems irreconcilable with the character of love attributed
to God, and with the teaching of Jesus, "Love your
enemies," etc., until we come to recognize the systematic order
of God's plan, the "due time" for the accomplishment
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of every feature of it, and the fact that every member of the
human race has a place in it.
We can now see that those Amalekites, Sodomites and
others were set forth as examples of God's just indignation,
and of his determination to destroy finally and utterly evildoers:
examples which will be of service not only to others,
but also to themselves, when their day of judgment or trial
comes. Those people might just as well die in that way as
from disease and plague. It mattered little to them, as they
were merely learning to know evil, that when on trial, in
due time, they might learn righteousness, and be able to
discriminate and choose the good and have life.
But let us examine the prophecy further. After comparing
Israel with Sodom and Samaria, and pronouncing
Israel the most blameworthy (Ezek. 16:48-54), the Lord
says, "When I shall bring again their captivity, the captivity
of Sodom and her daughters, and the captivity of Samaria
and her daughters, then will I bring again the captivity
of thy captives in the midst of them." The captivity referred
to can be no other than their captivity in death; for
those mentioned were then dead. In death all are captives;
and Christ comes to open the doors of the grave, and to set
at liberty the captives. (Isa. 61:1; Zech. 9:11) In
verse 55
this is called a "return to their former estate"--a restitution.
Some, who are willing enough to accept of God's mercy
through Christ in the forgiveness of their own trespasses
and weaknesses under greater light and knowledge, cannot
conceive of the same favor being applicable under the New
Covenant to others; though they seem to admit the
Apostle's statement that Jesus Christ, by the favor of God,
tasted death for every man. Some of these suggest that the
Lord must, in this prophecy, be speaking ironically to the
Jews, implying that he would just as willingly bring back
the Sodomites as them, but had no intention of restoring
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either. But let us see how the succeeding verses agree with
this idea. The Lord says, "Nevertheless, I will remember my
covenant with thee in the days of thy youth, and I will establish
unto thee an everlasting covenant. Then, thou shalt
remember thy ways and be ashamed, when thou shalt receive
thy sisters....And I will establish my covenant with thee,
and thou shalt know that I am the Lord; that thou mayest
remember and be confounded, and never open thy mouth
any more because of thy shame, when I am pacified toward
thee for all that thou hast done, SAITH THE LORD GOD."
When a promise is thus signed by the Great Jehovah, all
who have set to their seal that God is true may rejoice in its
certainty with confidence; especially those who realize that
these New Covenant blessings have been confirmed of God
in Christ, whose precious blood is to seal the covenant.
To this Paul adds his testimony, saying, "And so all Israel
[living and dead] shall be saved [recovered from blindness],
as it is written, 'There shall come out of Zion the Deliverer,
and shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob. For this is my
covenant unto them when I shall take away their sins.'...
They are beloved for the fathers' sakes; because the
gracious gifts and callings of God are not things to be repented
of." Rom. 11:26-29
We need not wonder that Jews, Sodomites, Samaritans,
and all mankind, will be ashamed and confounded when in
his own "due time" God shows forth the riches of his favor.
Yea, many of those who are now God's children will be confounded
and amazed when they see how God so loved THE
WORLD, and how much his thoughts and plans were above
their own.
Christian people generally believe that God's blessings
are all and only for the selected Church, but now we begin
to see that God's plan is wider than we had supposed, and
that though he has given the Church "exceeding great and
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precious promises," he has also made bountiful provision
for the world which he so loved as to redeem. The Jews
made a very similar mistake in supposing that all the promises
of God were to and for them alone; but when the "due
time" came and the Gentiles were favored, the remnant of
Israel, whose hearts were large enough to rejoice in this
wider evidence of God's grace, shared that increased favor,
while the rest were blinded by prejudice and human tradition.
Let those of the Church who now see the dawning
light of the Millennial age, with its gracious advantages for
all the world, take heed lest they be found in opposition to
the advancing light, and so for a time be blinded to its glory
and blessings.
How different is this glorious plan of God for the selection
of a few now, in order to the blessing of the many hereafter,
from the distortions of these truths, as represented by
the two opposing views--Calvinism and Arminianism. The
former both denies the Bible doctrine of Free Grace and
miserably distorts the glorious doctrine of Election; the latter
denies the doctrine of Election and fails to comprehend
the blessed fulness of God's Free Grace.
Calvinism says: God is all-wise; he knew the end from the
beginning; and as all his purposes shall be accomplished, he
never could have intended to save any but a few, the
Church. These he elected and foreordained to be eternally
saved; all others were equally foreordained and elected to
go to eternal torment; for "Known unto God are all his
works from the beginning of the world."
This view has its good features. It recognizes God's omniscience.
This would be our ideal of a great God, were it not
that two essential qualities of greatness are lacking, namely,
love and justice, neither of which is exemplified in bringing
into the world one hundred and forty-two billions of creatures
doomed to eternal torture before they were born, and
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mocked with protestations of his love. Since God is love,
and justice is the foundation of his throne, such cannot be
his character.
Arminianism says: Yes, God is love; and in bringing humanity
into the world he meant them no harm--only good.
But Satan succeeded in tempting the first pair, and thus sin
entered into the world, and death by sin. And ever since,
God has been doing all he can to deliver man from his enemy,
even to the giving of his Son. And though now, six
thousand years after, the gospel has reached only a very
small proportion of mankind, yet we do hope and trust that
within six thousand years more, through the energy and
liberality of the church, God will so far have remedied the
evil introduced by Satan that all then living may at least
know of his love, and have an opportunity to believe and
be saved.
While this view presents God as a being full of loving and
benevolent designs for his creatures, it implies that he lacks
ability and foreknowledge adequate to the accomplishment
of his benevolent designs: that he is deficient in
wisdom and power. From this view it would appear that
while God was engaged in arranging and devising for the
good of his newly-created children, Satan slipped in and by
one master-stroke upset all God's plans to such an extent
that, even by exhausting all his power, God must spend
twelve thousand years to reinstate righteousness, even to
such a degree that the remainder of the race who still live
will have an opportunity to choose good as readily as evil.
But the one hundred and forty-two billions of the past six
thousand years, and as many more of the next, are, according
to this view, lost to all eternity, in spite of God's love for
them, because Satan interfered with his plans. Thus Satan
would get thousands into eternal torment to one that God
saves to glory.
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This view must exalt men's ideas of the wisdom and
power of Satan, and lower their estimation of these attributes
in God, of whom the Psalmist to the contrary declares
that, "He spake and it was done; he commanded and it
stood fast." But no: God was not surprised nor overtaken by
the adversary; neither has Satan in any measure thwarted
his plans. God is, and always has been, perfect master of the
situation, and in the end it will be seen that all has been
working together to the accomplishment of his purposes.
While the doctrines of election and free grace, as taught
by Calvinism and Arminianism, could never be harmonized
with each other, with reason, or with the Bible,
yet these two glorious Bible doctrines are perfectly harmonious
and beautiful, seen from the standpoint of the
plan of the ages.
Seeing, then, that so many of the great and glorious features
of God's plan for human salvation from sin and death
lie in the future, and that the second advent of our Lord
Jesus is the designed first step in the accomplishment of
those long promised and long expected blessings, shall we
not even more earnestly long for the time of his second advent
than the less informed Jew looked and longed for his
first advent? Seeing that the time of evil, injustice and
death is to be brought to an end by the dominion of power
which he will then exercise, and that righteousness, truth
and peace are to be universal, who should not rejoice to see
his day? And who that is now suffering with Christ, inspired
by the precious promise that "if we suffer with him we shall
also reign with him," will not lift up his head and rejoice at
any evidence of the approach of the Master, knowing
thereby that our deliverance and our glorification with him
draw nigh? Surely all in sympathy with his mission of blessing
and his spirit of love will hail every evidence of his coming
as the approach of the "great joy which shall be to all
people."
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