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STUDY XV
THE FOES AND BESETMENTS OF THE NEW
CREATION
"The Old Man"--The World as an Enemy of the New Creation--The
Great Adversary--He Was a Liar and a Murderer from the Beginning--
Satan's Associates in Evil--Legions of Demons--How Satan's First Lie
is Perpetuated--Christian Science and Theosophy--"We Wrestle not
[merely] with Flesh and Blood"--The Ministry of Evil--Besetments
of the Adversary--"The Prayer of Faith Shall Save the Sick"--"If
Satan Cast Out Satan" His Kingdom Wanes--Love Righteousness--
Hate Iniquity--Mark 16:9-20--The Nominal Church as an Adversary
to the New Creation--The Armor of God.
CHIEF amongst the foes of the New Creation is "the old
man"--the old will. Let us avoid the mistake so commonly
made respecting this subject. Let us not think of the New
Creature as having two minds, two wills. "A double-minded
man is unstable in all his ways," unsatisfactory to
himself and unacceptable to the Lord. The New Creature is
not double-minded. He has but the one mind, one spirit,
one intention, one will; and that is the new will, the Spirit
of Christ, the holy Spirit. Instead of partially accepting the
mind of Christ and partially maintaining his own will, he
made a full consecration of his old will to the Lord, and
that old will was thereafter dead, and set aside from having
control in his affairs. It was thus that he was accepted as
a member of the body of Christ--to have no will of his own,
but to permit the will of the Head to control him. It was
thus that he became a New Creature in Christ Jesus, and
found "old things passed away, all things become new."
Those who have not made such a surrender have not become
members of the Ecclesia, the body of Christ, though
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they may be members of "the household of faith," from
which come all the members of the "body," the "elect."
But although the old will was thus renounced thoroughly
and forever, and declared dead (by the Lord and by all who
view matters from his standpoint), and while the flesh was
reckoned dead, too, as respects sin, but alive toward God,
quickened by the promises, and brought under the control
of the new will (Rom. 6:11; 8:11), nevertheless this death of
the flesh and its will, and this resurrection of the flesh as the
servant of the new will, to serve the Lord, the Truth, under
the Golden Rule, are only reckoned matters. The "dead" and
"alive" conditions need continually to be maintained by
opposition of the new will to any life or activity of the old
will and its influence over the flesh. If the new will becomes
indifferent and fails to use the mortal flesh continuously as
its servant in higher and spiritual things, the flesh will very
shortly reassert itself and have motions and desires of its
own, antagonistic to the new mind, opposed to the interests
of the New Creature. The latter must, therefore, be constantly
on the alert for insurrections, and, as the Apostle expresses
it, must keep down, keep dead, the old will, with its
affections and its desires--must continually mortify, or put
to death, the ambitions and desires of the flesh. The Apostle
explains this, saying of himself, "I keep my body under
[dead, as respects all control from the old, selfish will of the
flesh], lest after having preached to others I myself should
become a castaway"--might fail to make my calling and
election sure. 1 Cor. 9:27
The inspired Word declares that "the [natural] heart is
deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked" (Jer. 17:9)
--not the organ called the heart, but that which the
heart represents in Scripture, viz., the natural affections.
The New Creature gets a new heart, a new will, a new
standard of affection, in which God and his righteousness
and truth and plan and will are first; and in which all other
things occupy a place of honor and love in proportion to
their harmony with the Lord and his righteousness. To
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those possessing this new heart all the members of the New
Creation are necessarily first and closest: hence, as the
Apostle says, love of the brethren is one of the best tests of
relationship to the Lord as New Creatures. But this, as already
shown, must not interfere with a just recognition of
obligations to others.
The New Creature, the new heart, with its new affections,
is continually assailed by its enemies, the old heart,
the old affections, the selfish disposition; and the latter,
finding that the New Creature is bound by divine command
to be considerate and generous toward others, frequently
practices deceptions upon the new heart, and says
in effect: Now you have reckoned me dead; you have put
me out, and I am dead, as respects what I was. I am not the
same old heart I was formerly; but you must give me some
consideration. You must not treat me too rudely; you must
concede that I have made considerable progress, and must
not put too heavy a burden upon me; it would not be just.
You ought to be selfish to a certain extent. You ought to
look out for number one, and for your family; not--merely
for their necessities, but much more--and should endeavor
to give them wealth and social advantages. You should sacrifice
yourself for them.
How deceitful is this old heart! How specious are its false
reasonings! How many have proven this to their sorrow!
How many have been inveigled and had the new mind captivated
by the old! How many have found themselves
brought into bondage by the deceitfulness of the old heart!
One of the favorite arguments is that the New Creation is
commanded, "So far as lieth in you, live peaceably with all
men." This general advice of the Apostle it seeks to exalt far
above his design, and to make it superior to the divine command
(1) that we shall love and serve, honor and obey, the
Lord with all our heart and all our mind, soul and strength;
and (2) that we shall love our neighbors as ourselves. This
does not permit of peace at any price. If the old heart, the
old mind, the old will, can get the new one to make a compromise
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of truth or duty for the sake of peace, there will be no
end to the demands it will make; and the result will be that
the New Creature would soon, in the interest of peace, be
violating the very essence of his covenant with the Lord,
and be fully submitting himself to the old will, although it
desires not to do so--indeed striving against the old will, but
led captive by it through its deceitfulness, and its skillful
misinterpretations of the divine Word.
When thus assailed, the new will should freely declare
that while peace is desirable in the home and everywhere,
yet peace is not the primary condition, according to the
Lord's promise. Indeed, the Lord has warned those of the
New Creation that so surely as they will live godly they
must suffer persecution--and persecution does not signify
peace with all, but the reverse. He has assured them that so
surely as they let the light shine out, the darkness will hate
the light and combat it, and, if possible, induce the owner
of the light to put it under a bushel, to hide it; and that in
order to induce this hiding of the light the darkness will
wage a warfare which will mean anything else than peace.
But the Lord assures us that these are tests for the New
Creature--that he must determine that the peace which is
of greatest importance to him is, not the peace of the flesh,
but the peace of heart, "the peace of God, which passeth all
understanding."
The New Creature must learn that he may have this
peace of God, which passeth all understanding, to rule in
his heart, even while outward conditions are the reverse of
peaceful; but that the condition of full harmony with the
Lord is a reward for faithfulness to him, whatever the cost,
whatever the sacrifice. Hence, when appealed to by the
cravings of the flesh, and the arguments of those who are
near and dear through earthly ties, the New Creature must
first of all consider his primary obligation, viz., that he shall
love and serve the Lord with all his heart, mind, being,
strength, and that all dealings with family or flesh or neighbors
must be subject to this primary law of obedience to God.
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On the other hand, the New Creature is to avoid fanaticism
--to avoid doing things merely because they are unpleasant
to himself or to others; to avoid judging the mind
of the Lord to be always the reverse of his own inclinations.
It requires earnest and patient study of the divine Word,
and the spirit and principles underlying the divine requirements,
to enable the New Creature properly to apply the
directions of the Word to all the daily affairs of life. But few
in comparison are tempted along these lines. The majority
are tempted more to gratification of the flesh, and have,
therefore, need of special care along that line--lest they
walk after the flesh, gratifying it, serving it, submitting to it,
and thus walk in the opposite direction to that in which
they consecrated to go. Or if they do not walk after the
flesh, in the sense of following it and its service, they have
need to be specially on guard lest the flesh shall keep them
from walking after the Spirit, from making progress in spiritual
things--shall endeavor to bring their spiritual progress
to a standstill, and thus hinder their fruitfulness, growth
and development in usefulness, and ultimately prevent
their overcoming and gaining the great prize of joint-heirship
with Christ in the Kingdom as members of the little
flock.
The thought that should always be borne in mind is that
the New Creatures have consecrated all of their earthly,
fleshly interests to sacrifice; and that nothing short of sacrifice
of these will permit them, as New Creatures, to have full
development and to be "made meet for the inheritance of
the saints in light"--for a share in the first resurrection to
glory, honor and immortality, as members of the body of
Christ. The only restriction we are to recognize in this direction
of full sacrifice, is where the interests of other lives are
interwoven with ours, and where the Golden Rule would
place its limitations upon the sacrificing, and insist that
reasonable allowance must be made for our dear ones according
to the flesh who have not joined with us in its
consecration to sacrifice.
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The World as an Enemy of the New Creation
Everything pertaining to this present evil world is more
or less out of alignment with righteousness, and hence,
more or less contrary to the New Creation and its righteous
standard. The law of the world might in a general way be
summed up as Selfishness; notwithstanding the world
makes claims, and with considerable propriety, to a grand
recognition of justice. We are not of those who believe that
all the laws and all the regulations of the civilized world are
evil; on the contrary, we have frequently been amazed to
note how grand are the laws of Christendom--how wise,
how just, how noble--many of them evidently enacted with
a view to protecting the interests of the weak against the
strong, and of doing justice to all. Nevertheless, with selfishness
interwoven with every thought and word and act of
the whole world, it is not surprising that its very highest
conceptions of justice are sometimes bent and twisted--
wrested.
Our surprise, on the contrary, may well be that poor
fallen humanity should ever have attained to so grand a
system of laws as are to be found on the statute books of
Great Britain, the United States and other countries. We
cannot doubt that the law given through Moses and exemplified,
multiplied and made honorable and expounded by
our Lord Jesus and his apostles has had much to do with--
has been the basis, indeed--of these human laws. Nevertheless,
as all will concede, the selfishness of man is continuously
battling with man's own definitions of justice, and
seeking to set them aside either in part or in whole; and this,
which is ceaselessly progressing on a large scale in the
world, is one of the chief difficulties and battles of the New
Creation.
The world and its spirit of pride, selfishness, etc., must be
recognized as one of the chief foes of the New Creation. The
whole world of mankind, operating under this general
"spirit of the world," is moving in one general direction, as a
great river, in some parts of which there is greater swiftness,
and in other parts greater sluggishness, but all, nevertheless,
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following in the same general selfish direction. The New
Creature, by his consecration, by the spirit of his new mind,
is obligated to an adverse course, and is, therefore, opposed
by all the current of popular sentiment, theory, tradition,
etc., and marked as peculiar. He has friction to contend
with. He necessarily is in antagonism to those who are going
in the opposite direction, and who come in touch with
him. This collision cannot be avoided. It means not outward
peace but outward conflict; this outward conflict,
however, may signify inward peace and joy because divine
approval is realized.
The world's aims and objects and methods are not always
ignoble and unjust; but even its noblest aims and objects
are generally contrary to those of the New Creation,
because the world is acting under the impulse of human
wisdom, while the New Creation is actuated by the wisdom
from above. Worldly wisdom has its own conceptions of religion
as a means for holding wicked people in check. It has
its own idea of morality, benevolence, faith, hope, love--
cannot comprehend the different standpoint of the New
Creation, and is apt to consider its views extreme, unreasonable,
etc., not comprehending the divine plan, not appreciating
from the divine standpoint the insignificance of
the present life, as compared to the future one. Nor does
worldly wisdom appreciate the impotence of all human effort
as respects real human uplift, when contrasted with the
great and grand arrangements which God has in reservation,
and which will be fully brought to light and put into
successful operation in the Kingdom, as soon as his work of
the present age has been completed--as soon as the elect
Church shall have been selected, polished, approved,
glorified.
The New Creation must not, therefore, be surprised if the
world hate it--even the morally and religiously well-disposed
of the world. And this hatred and opposition of
the world, at times so vexatious and trying to faithfulness
and patience, is to be received meekly; with the remembrance
that the world is still blinded by the "god of this
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world" and sees not the "exceeding great and precious
things," "the deep things of the Spirit," in the light of which
we, by the grace of God, are enabled to count all things--
losses, trials, etc.--as but "loss and dross," that we may win
the wonderful things promised us in the Word. To yield to
the spirit of the world, to allow its sentiments to dominate
us for the sake of its peace, would be giving evidence of an
inferior appreciation of the Lord, his Truth, and the privileges
of his service. The result would be that if we did not
lose everything by going completely over to worldliness we
might, at least, lose the prize, and have a portion with the
"great company," and come up through great tribulation
to an inferior place in connection with the glories to follow.
The Apostle's strict injunction is, "Love not the world,
neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the
world the love of the Father is not in him." (1 John 2:15)
We should be on guard, therefore, against every indication
of sympathy or affiliation with the spirit of the world. This
does not mean that we should be out of sympathy with our
friends, whom we term the worldly--that we should be
careless of their interests, etc.; but it does mean that while
careful to discharge our obligations toward the worldly,
and to render honor to whom honor is due, tribute to
whom tribute is due, support to whom support is due,
kindness to whom kindness is proper, sympathy to whom
sympathy is proper, we are, nevertheless, to distinguish between
our friends and neighbors, who are still under the influence
of the Adversary, and the spirit, or disposition,
which has actuated them and which is deluding them.
We are not to be in sympathy with any of the present institutions,
which are based upon selfishness, and, in greater
or less degree, are in opposition to the divine law, the
Golden Rule. It may be necessary for us to conduct our affairs
considerably along the lines of selfishness prevalent in
the world; but without stopping to dispute the question
continually, our hearts should be kept in that attitude in
which we would be out of sympathy with selfish principles
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and longing for the reign of the Golden Rule absolutely in
all the affairs of life, and, so far as possible, in our own intercourse
with the world.
It is not for us to attempt to transform the world and revolutionize
society and its methods. That herculean task the
Lord has left for himself, and it will be fully accomplished
in the "great day" fast approaching. Meantime the Lord's
people, under guidance of his Word--although in the
world, and necessarily having to do with its affairs and
customs--are not to be in love, in sympathy, with them.
They are to realize, on the contrary, that to keep in close
touch with the Lord, and in close sympathy with the principles
of his righteousness, will necessarily mean the same
kind of opposition that God has to every form and degree
of injustice, inequity, lawlessness--in church, in state, in
finance, in politics, and in social customs and usages.
Seeing this more or less clearly, some, we believe, have
gone to an extreme in denouncing present institutions in a
manner that the Lord and the apostles neither commanded
nor sanctioned, nor illustrated in their words and conduct.
We should remember that the world as a whole is living up
to as high a standard as it appreciates, and that simply to
find fault with matters which others are as powerless to correct
as ourselves is worse than useless, because it merely produces
unhappiness, vexation, etc., without accomplishing
desired results. John the Baptist gave wise advice along this
line when asked of some of the Roman soldiers respecting
their proper course, he answered, "Do violence to no man
[do not violate the laws and regulations under which you
are placed by your government] and be content with your
wages." Simply making people discontented with their
present conditions and surroundings is most unwise. On the
contrary, the influence, the spirit, the disposition, of the
New Creation should always be toward peace; and if we
cannot commend present institutions highly, neither need
we specially condemn them.
In such matters we may well follow the example of Michael
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the archangel, who did not even bring a railing accusation
against Satan, but said, "The Lord rebuke thee!"--in
his own time and manner. (Jude 9) So with us. Realizing
that the Lord will rebuke present institutions in his own
time and manner, we can say to ourselves, with the Apostle,
"Be patient, brethren; the coming of the Lord draweth
nigh"--the establishment of his Kingdom, near at hand,
will rectify all these difficulties. The agitation of these matters
in advance will be not only unavailing, but worse--
disadvantageous, injurious--both to the agitator and the
agitated, breeding discontent. Amongst the children of this
world there will be found plenty of agitators when the
Lord's time shall come for these questions to be agitated.
Meantime all the members of the New Creation will display
wisdom in avoiding such questions as tend to strife
and discontent, and in chiefly speaking amongst the Lord's
people and such as "have an ear to hear," concerning the
deeper things of the divine plan, of course including on
proper occasions the time of trouble by which the Kingdom
will be established.
The New Creation, the Royal Priesthood, has a special
work quite apart from the world and all agitation of its elements.
Their work at the present time, as already shown, is
to blow the silver trumpets--to sound forth the truth of the
divine plan for such as have an ear to hear, for such as are
not blinded and deafened by the deceptions of the Adversary.
Their mission is specially amongst the Lord's people,
finishing up the work of this Gospel age, garnering the
wheat. Matt. 13:37-43
Under another picture, the present work of the Church is
shown to be the Bride making herself ready for the marriage.
(2 Cor. 11:2; Rev. 19:7) With such pressing calls
upon them for every moment of their time, for every particle
of their influence, means, etc., the New Creatures have
neither love for the world, to seek to perpetuate its arrangements,
institutions, etc., nor have they the disposition to anticipate
the Lord's wise, beneficent arrangement for the
transformation of this present evil world into "the world
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to come," "wherein dwelleth righteousness." Heb. 2:5;
2 Pet. 3:13
The Great Adversary, Satan
The Apostle writes--"Your adversary, the devil," as
though he would have us understand that we have much
more to contend with than the weaknesses of our own flesh
and the imperfections of fellow men. He would have us realize
that we have a cunning "wily" foe in Satan, and that
we must keep close to our Shepherd if we would be delivered
out of temptation and from the power of the Evil One.
Let us note some of the many scriptures which refer to this
Adversary whose very existence is now being denied by
many:
"Your adversary, the devil, goeth about as a roaring lion, seeking whom
he
may devour." 1 Pet. 5:8
"Then was Jesus led up into the wilderness to be tempted of the
devil."
Matt. 4:1
"Then shall he say also unto them on the left hand, Depart from me, ye
cursed, into everlasting fire [Gehenna, destruction], prepared for the devil
and his angels." Matt. 25:41
"Those by the wayside are they that hear; then cometh the devil and
taketh
away the word out of their hearts." Luke 8:12
"Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will
do.
He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because
there is no truth in him. When he speaketh a lie he speaketh of his own; for
he is a liar, and the father of it." John 8:44
"Supper being ended, the devil having now put into the heart of Judas
Iscariot to betray him." John 13:2
"Neither give place to the devil." Eph. 4:27
"Put on the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to withstand the
wiles of the devil." Eph. 6:11
"Lest...he fall into the condemnation of the devil." 1 Tim. 3:6,7
"They may recover themselves out of the snare of the devil."
2 Tim. 2:26
"That through death he might destroy him that had the power of death,
that
is, the devil." Heb. 2:14
"Resist the devil, and he will flee from you." James 4:7
"He that committeth sin is of the devil; for the devil sinneth from the
beginning. For this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that he might
destroy the works of the devil...In this the children of God are manifest,
and the children of the devil; whosoever doeth not righteousness is not of
God, neither he that loveth not his brother." 1 John 3:8,10
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"Michael, the archangel, when contending with the devil he disputed
about
the body of Moses, durst not bring against him a railing accusation, but said,
The Lord rebuke thee." Jude 9
"The devil shall cast some of you into prison, that ye may be
tried."
Rev. 2:10
"The great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the devil, and
Satan; which deceiveth the whole world; he was cast out into the earth, and
his angels with him." Rev. 12:9,12
"He laid hold on the dragon, that old serpent, which is the devil, and
Satan, and bound him a thousand years,...that he should deceive the nations
no more till the thousand years should be fulfilled." Rev. 20:2,3
"The devil that deceived them was cast into the lake of fire and
brimstone.
...This is the second death." Rev. 20:10,14
"Now is the judgment of this world; now shall the prince of this world
be
cast out." John 12:31
"Hereafter I will not talk much with you; for the prince of this world
cometh and hath nothing in me." John 14:30
"When he is come he will reprove the world...of judgment, because the
prince of this world is judged." John 16:8,11
"Wherein in times past ye walked according to the course of this world,
according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now worketh
in the children of disobedience." Eph. 2:2
"If our Gospel be hid, it is hid to them that are lost; in whom the god
of
this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the light of
the glorious Gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine unto
them." 2 Cor. 4:3,4
"When the Pharisees heard it they said, This fellow doth not cast out
devils but by Beelzebub, the prince of the devils. And Jesus said,...If Satan
cast out Satan he is divided against himself; how shall then his Kingdom
stand?" Matt. 12:24-26
"How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the
morning!"
Isa. 14:12-14
"Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light." 2 Cor. 11:14
"Even him whose coming is after the working of Satan with all power and
signs and lying wonders, and with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in
them that perish." 2 Thess. 2:9,10
"Lest Satan get an advantage of us; for we are not ignorant of his
devices." 2 Cor. 2:11
"For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities,
against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against the
spiritual things of the Evil One in the heavenlies." (Eph. 6:12) See
Diaglott.
"He that is begotten of God keepeth himself, and that Wicked One
toucheth
him not. And we know that we are of God, and the whole world lies under the
Wicked One." (1 John 5:18,19) See Diaglott.
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"There was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before
the Lord, and Satan also came amongst them." Job 1:6-12; 2:1-7
"And he showed me Joshua the high priest standing before the angel of
the
Lord, and Satan standing at his right hand to resist him. And the Lord said
unto Satan, The Lord rebuke thee, O Satan; even the Lord that hath chosen
Jerusalem rebuke thee." Zech. 3:1,2
"I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven." Luke 10:18
"I have appeared unto thee for this purpose,...I send thee to open their
eyes, and to turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan
unto God." Acts 26:16,18
"The God of peace shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly."
Rom. 16:20
"To deliver such an one unto Satan for the destruction of the
flesh."
1 Cor. 5:5; 1 Tim. 1:20
"Give none occasion to the Adversary to speak reproachfully; for some
are
already turned aside after Satan." 1 Tim. 5:14,15
When our Lord said, "Get thee hence, Satan" [adversary,
opposing spirit--Young], and again when he said to Peter,
"Get thee behind me, Satan [adversary, etc.]; thou art an
offense unto me, for thou savorest not the things that be of
God" (Matt. 4:10; 16:23), it was saying in effect that being
in opposition to God, the same position was also held toward
all in harmony with God. And Peter's declaration
that he goes about like a "roaring lion, seeking whom he
may devour" seems to teach that he is not "your [the
Church's] adversary" alone, but that of all mankind. Our
Lord makes a direct assertion to that effect. John 12:31; 14:30; 16:11
Our Lord's declaration, that Satan is the great Adversary,
not only of God, but of humanity, is by no means a
fancy sketch, but the plain truth. He is our Adversary in a
sense that the world and our own flesh are not our adversaries.
Our own flesh opposes the New Creature, not from
any bitterness or hatred, nor with any scheming for its temporal
or eternal disadvantage; but merely in the sense that
the cravings of the fallen flesh are in a direction which is at
variance to the best interests of the New Creature and the
hopes with which he has been begotten. The opposition of
the world is likewise not a malicious one, but merely a selfish
one, because of seeing things in different lights and because
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of selfish differences of interest. Satan alone is the
wilful, intelligent plotter and schemer who uses a superhuman
intelligence and, so far as permitted, superhuman
powers, to inveigle our fallen flesh, through depraved appetites,
etc., and who frequently uses the worldly as his tools
and unconscious instruments in opposing righteousness
and truth and those who are of the Truth.
He Was a Liar and a Murderer
from the Beginning
--John 8:44--
The inspired record asserts, persistently and consistently,
that Satan began the rebellion against the divine law, and
seduced our first parents into disobedience, through his
own ambition for power; and that since man's fall this same
Adversary has been the implacable opponent of God, of
righteousness and of truth; and not only the ensnarer of
mankind, but the opposer of the great plan of Atonement
which God devised and is prosecuting through Christ.
From the Scriptural account it does not appear that Satan
had any sympathizers or associate conspirators amongst
the angels at the time of his secession and attempt to establish
a lordship or dominion of his own in the earth, taking
as his subjects God's latest creation--mankind. As surely as
Satan himself was a part of the general creation of God, so
surely we may know that he was created perfect and upright,
in the image of God; because all of God's work is perfect.
(Eph. 3:9; Deut. 32:4) He has but the one standard
of
righteousness, justice, perfection, and he himself is that
standard.
But to be created perfect, and to remain perfect, are two
entirely different propositions. God has not been pleased to
create any of his intelligent creatures mere machines, incapable
of change of motive and conduct. On the contrary,
he has been pleased to create all the morally intelligent of
his creatures after his own likeness or image, with perfect
liberty to follow the right, the true, the pure, the good, according
to his own example and precept; but with power
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also to alter or reverse their course in these respects, and to
become rebels against his law of righteousness. God, however,
has guarded this matter, by keeping in his own hands
the power of everlasting life; so that he has full control of
the situation, and can destroy any of his creatures, if they
refuse to acknowledge and obey his righteous requirements.
He proposes to blot them out of existence, as though they
had never been, and to permit only such as are in heart
harmony with his requirements to continue to live
everlastingly.
Amongst the angels of high rank (of whom Satan was
originally one), there were, apparently from the beginning,
and still are, different orders or grades, yet all under the rule
of love, and who, in obedience to the will of the Creator,
operated in unison and harmony probably for ages. Goodness,
love, kindness, obedience to the heavenly Father's requirements,
and happiness resulting from these, were for a
long while their only experiences. But in due time another
feature of the divine plan was developed. Man was created,
of a different nature from angels, a little lower nature--
human, not angelic--earthly, not heavenly--flesh, not
spirit. Additionally, mankind had a separate home--
earth--with a family organization, and were paired, male
and female, and had powers of procreation--ability to
propagate their own species. In all these particulars they
differed from the angels, who are not sexually different, and
who have not the family arrangement, and who do not
propagate their own kind. God's latest creation was, no
doubt, a marvel in the eyes of all the angelic hosts--in connection
with which their reasoning faculties found abundant
opportunity for exercise.
Then it was that one of those of high rank, reasoning out
the possibilities of the matter and harboring selfish and ambitious
thoughts, concluded that if he could in some manner
but capture the newly created human pair, and alienate
them from God, then he could through them set up a special
kingdom or dominion of his own, of which he would be
the god or lord, usurping the place and honor of Jehovah
[F614]
respecting mankind and the earth. It was his prosecution of
this criminal ambition that gave to him his present name,
Satan--adversary of God. He did not meditate nor attempt
to usurp God's dominion over the angels. Such an attempt
would have been absurd, since all of the angels were intimately
acquainted with God, and knew Satan as one of
themselves. Hence, they would not have thought of consenting
to become his servants and followers, very much
preferring, and being thoroughly satisfied with, and in no
sense rebellious toward, the just, loving and wise administration
of Jehovah Almighty.
No sooner did such selfish and ambitious designs find a
lodgment in Satan's heart, than he began to measure the
Lord by his own false standard, and to suppose that the
Lord Jehovah was in all of his work merely carrying out
ambitious and selfish designs. Thus it is that the wicked
heart is always ready to impute evil to others, be they ever
so pure, honorable and benevolent. No doubt Satan justified
his own course in the beginning, at least, by false reasoning,
to the effect that in creating mankind on a lower
plane than the spirit beings, the angels, God was influenced
by sinister and selfish motives; and that the limitation to
earth as their habitat was with a view to having them the
more fully enslaved. Having once permitted this envious,
rebellious, unsanctified thought to enter his heart, it was
only a question of time when the evil would develop further,
in the suggestion and manifestation of open sin and
opposition to the divine arrangements.
Perhaps, indeed, it was with the false idea that he was
doing justice to the oppressed that Satan approached
mother Eve in Eden, and suggested to her that the strict
regulations by which Adam and herself had been hedged
about by the divine decree respecting one of the trees of the
garden, was the exercise on God's part of unwarranted,
autocratic powers--to restrain them from liberties which
should properly be theirs and the exercise of which would
be clearly to their advantage. He even suggested to mother
Eve, and possibly he expressed truly the opinion of his, by
[F615]
this time perverted, judgment that God falsified to them
when he stated that the eating of the fruit of the forbidden
tree would result in their destruction--their death. Satan
had never seen death amongst any of God's creatures made
in his own likeness, endowed with reason; and hence, in his
perverse attitude of mind, he not only attributed to God
sinister motives in connection with the creation, but now
assumed that he had deliberately lied to his creatures, in order
to further his own plans of keeping them in a measure of
ignorance, and under what Satan, by this time no doubt,
concluded was despotic authority.
The evil suggestion took effect. The mind of mother
Eve--which up to this moment had been thankful to God
and appreciative of all his mercies and blessings, and which
had recognized him as the fountain of grace and truth, benevolence
and love--was poisoned with the thought that
she was being made a dupe; was being deprived of proper
liberties to the intent that she might be hindered from acquiring
larger measures of knowledge, which were properly
her right, and which God, in his determination to keep them
in the slavery of ignorance, was misrepresenting to them--
threatening them that it would result in their death--
whereas this newly found friend, Satan, who loved them
better, and who was jealous for their welfare and their liberty,
assured them that the eating of the forbidden fruit
would not only not bring disaster and death, but would
bring increase of knowledge, liberty, and exercise for all
their powers. The poison acted quickly; selfishness and acquisitiveness
were aroused in the heart of mother Eve,
which had never before had such sentiments, because nothing
in her previous experience had ever suggested such
thoughts or sentiments.
Satan's position on this matter, of course, separated him
from Jehovah. He staked his all upon his ability to capture
the new human race as his servants, his kingdom; or, as perhaps
he would have expressed it, he had staked all in his
effort to liberate the new human family from divine despotism.
When he saw the effect of the transgression--that the
[F616]
human pair were cast out of Eden, and shut off from its life-sustaining
trees, that they gradually began to wither and to
perish, no doubt he was disappointed, as well as was mother
Eve. Adam, we are informed, was not deceived: he knew
what to expect as the result of disobedience. His share in the
transaction was a voluntary one, a suicide we might term it.
Inspired by the thought that his wife must die, because she
had partaken of the forbidden fruit, and feeling that all of
his own joy would thus perish, he resolved to die with her.
Had he understood better the divine character, as it has
since been manifested though God's dealings in connection
with the Atonement, he would doubtless have trusted God
for help out of the difficulty, and would have been obedient
to the divine decree at any cost.
But to return to Satan: Having chosen an evil course,
each step of his journey since seems to be taking him only
further and further away from every principle of righteousness;
so that while his first lie, "Ye shall not surely
die," may have been uttered with considerable candor, yet
ever since, and today, he endeavors by every conceivable
means to perpetuate his false statement, and to deceive
mankind into believing that there is no such thing as death--
that when they die they are more alive than ever before. It is
the old lie, "Ye shall not surely die," readjusted to present
conditions. None now know better than Satan the reality of
death, as it passed upon the whole human family; and none
know better than he that if the human family clearly and
distinctly understood the matter of sin, its penalty, the ransom,
and the resultant restitution, the influence of the
Truth would be to draw mankind toward their just, yet
merciful Creator.
But this is what Satan desires to prevent. He therefore attempts
to blind the minds of mankind respecting the true
character and plan of God, and to fill them, on the contrary,
with false and blasphemous thoughts respecting the
divine character and plan. Instead of having men see that
death, and all the sufferings incident to death, viz., mental,
[F617]
moral and physical decay and disease, are the results of disobedience
to God, the results of following his falsehood, he,
on the contrary, would have them think, and has succeeded
in convincing many, that the great Jehovah, who declares
himself to be the very embodiment of justice and of love, in
creating the human family most unjustly and unlovingly
did so with malevolent intentions towards the vast majority
--that he purposed and predestinated in his heart, before
beginning man's creation, that thousands of millions of
them should be eternally tormented, and that a "little
flock" should be carried to glory, as a sample of what he
had power to do for all if he had been kindly disposed.
Thus, and with many other somewhat similar delusions
and snares, has the Adversary for six thousand years perverted
human judgment, and turned the hearts of men
away from God and from the message of his Truth. The
Apostle confirms this, and explains it, saying: "The god of
this world hath blinded the minds of them that believe not,
lest the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ, who is the image
of God, should shine unto them"--should enlighten
them, and drive out the darkness of ignorance and misconception,
and let them see the real character and
gracious plan of the heavenly Father. 2 Cor. 4:4
Wherever the light of divine revelation (not merely the
Bible, but also "the spirit of Truth") goes, it more or less
means danger to the darkness of Satan's misrepresentations.
The Truth is a thousand-fold more reasonable than Satan's
error, and would rapidly prevail against him, were it not for
his cunning, "wily" tactics, by which he is continually shifting
the scenes, and bringing forward new deceptions to uphold
his old lie, and "to deceive, if it were possible, the very
elect." One of the first and one of the most gigantic and
most successful of his efforts to controvert the Truth, and to
make the error appear feasible and plausible, was the development
of the great Antichrist system, the Papacy. By it he
exercised a most wonderful influence throughout the world,
so that, in the light of today, and with a measure of freedom
[F618]
from that monstrous institution, mankind looks back to the
period of its dominion and describes it as "the Dark Ages"--
dark with injustice, dark with error and superstition, dark
with persecution, relentless and terrible, against those who
sought to worship God according to the dictates of their conscience
--ferocious against them in proportion as they obtained
the true light and were faithful in holding it up
before the people. So diabolical was this great institution,
in its methods and influence, and so thoroughly did it represent
Satan's cunning and ambition and craftiness, that it
is symbolically described by the Lord as though it were Satan
himself. It was, in the largest sense of the word, his representative,
while claiming to be God's representative.*
*See Vol. II, Chap. ix.
Throughout the prophecies we find this blending of description
and denunciation between Satan and his chiefest
representative amongst the enlightened. For instance, after
describing the breaking of the power of Babylon--a description
which is applicable in part to literal Babylon, and the
bondage of natural Israel, and more particularly applicable
to the bondage of mystic Babylon over spiritual
Israel--the Prophet proceeds with a description which
primarily fits to Satan's own course, and in a secondary
sense is applicable to the rise and fall of natural Babylon,
and in a yet further sense to the rise and fall of mystic Babylon,
saying:
"How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning!
How art thou cut down to the ground, which didst weaken the nations!
For thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I
will exalt my throne above the stars of God: I will sit also upon the
mount of the congregation [the Kingdom of God's people] to the
northward [Pleiades, in the north, has long been esteemed the center
of the universe, the throne of Jehovah]: I will ascend up to the heights
of the clouds; I will be like the Most High. Yet thou shalt be brought
down to hell--sheol, oblivion--to the sides of the pit. They that see
thee shall narrowly look upon thee, and consider thee, saying, Is this
the one that made the earth to tremble, that did shake kingdoms;
that made the world as a wilderness, and destroyed the cities thereof;
that opened not the house of his prisoners?" Isa. 14:12-17
[F619]
As it was true that Babylon highly exalted itself over the
other kingdoms of the world, it was also true that Papacy,
the Antichrist, exalted itself as a kingdom over the nations
of earth, and attempted to rule them with a rod of iron,
claiming authority so to do in the name of the true Christ.
And as the one was brought down to destruction, much
more so there waiteth yet the final fall of Babylon the
Great, the Mother of Harlots, as a great millstone cast into
the sea, to rise no more. But if the ambition of these to have
dominion above others was great, still greater was the ambition
of Satan to be higher than the others of God's creation,
to have a kingdom of his own, and subjects of his
own--a rival kingdom to that of Jehovah--over earth, as
Jehovah's dominion is in heaven. However, this also shall
fail, and Satan himself shall first be bound during the thousand
years of the reign of the Redeemer and the lifting of
the curse, and the blessing of the world, but subsequently,
as the Scriptures clearly show, he is to be destroyed, together
with all his angels--his messengers, all who follow his
leading and his course. Matt. 25:41; Heb. 2:14;
Rev. 20:10
Satan's Associates in Evil--Legions of Demons
As already seen, according to the Scriptural account, Satan
had no angelic associates in his conspiracy and rebellion
at its beginning. On the contrary, we may understand
that all the holy angels were in fullest sympathy with the
divine government, and that some of them were commissioned
to rule over fallen man, and to help mankind, if possible,
back to harmony with God, and to restrain them from
further depravity. This was prior to the flood of Noah's day.
It was the first experience of angels with sin, disloyalty to
God, moral obliquity. It became to them a test, because it
suggested possibilities of an evil course, contrary to the divine
will. It suggested pleasures and advantages as the result
of such a course, and thus became a test of their loyalty
and obedience to Jehovah. The Scriptures clearly inform us
that under this test some of the angels, who previously had
been holy and obedient, became transgressors, fell into and
[F620]
were contaminated by sin. Both Jude and Peter speak of
"those angels which kept not their first estate," and whom,
in consequence, God restrained of their liberties, reserving
them in chains, under darkness, until a great judgment day,
still future, when their cases will be heard. 2 Pet. 2:4;
Jude 6
Isolated from the holy angels, these fallen angels are since
known as demons, or devils, and Satan is recognized as the
"prince of devils"--their leader, with whom they cooperate
as mischief workers amongst men. Having no employment
in good works, and left to themselves in evil, it need not surprise
us that in them evil attains large proportions, and that
they are faithful allies of Satan in the inculcation of his
original lie--"Thou shalt not surely die." Apparently, very
soon after the flood these fallen angels, demons, began to
debauch humanity, under the guise of religion. While
chained, or imprisoned, in the sense of being unable longer
to appear amongst men in fleshly bodies, they soon found
in the depraved race those who were willing to submit
themselves as their agents, or mediums, and they operated
through the bodies of these, instead of bodies of their own.
Such "mediums," or human channels of communication between
the demons and mankind were, in olden times,
known as "fetishes," "wizards," "witches,"
"necromancers,"
"medicine men," and "priests" of false religions.
Their various efforts to gain control of the people of Israel,
whom God had selected to be his representatives in the
world for a time, are distinctly noted in the Scriptures, and
the people are strictly warned against them. Laws were
enacted and, to a considerable extent enforced, against
those who became the agents of communication between
the demons and Israel--the penalty being death.
Man, constitutionally, is an image of God, and as such is
a free, independent being. This freedom extends to his
moral agency; hence the expression that man is a "free
moral agent." However much he may lose his personal liberty,
or become enslaved either to persons or to his own appetites,
nevertheless his moral agency is free--he is free to
[F621]
will, to use his mind in what way he may please. If he wills
to submit his mind to the Lord's will, he may do so; if he
wills to submit to an evil influence, he may do so; and if he
wills to stand independent of both God and evil influences
he may do so, to the extent that his physical powers and
mental judgment will permit--but impaired by the fall,
and its inherited weaknesses, his judgment as well as his
knowledge and ability to reason, are greatly diminished,
and, hence, his moral independence is proportionately in
danger, when assaulted by "seducing spirits and doctrines
of devils," as the Scriptures declare the evil influence at
work throughout the world to be. (1 Tim. 4:1) It is not
surprising,
therefore, that these fallen angels, demons, have in
every country and in every time, found it possible to obtain
possession of numerous mediums. And they are choice as to
who their mediums shall be, seeking, so far as possible,
those possessed of mental capacity, that through these natural
qualities and abilities they may the more thoroughly
operate in the control of the masses in general. Consequently
we find that in heathen lands and amongst the
Indians these mediums, priests, wizards, witches, necromancers,
astrologers, and soothsayers, were amongst the
wisest and ablest. In modern times, in Christendom, these
mediums of demons are often known by this particular
name, medium, as amongst the Spiritualists. It is one of the
most correct names ever applied, for, simply and strictly,
those who submit themselves to these evil influences, to be
the channels of communication to men, are merely mediums
through which the evil spirits communicate, either
by words or raps, or writings, or otherwise.
The general methods and general teaching of these demons,
through such mediums, in all times and in all countries,
have been practically the same. They misrepresent
themselves, and personate the dead, except very occasionally,
when they have made themselves so bold as to admit
that they are demons--as, for instance, amongst the Chinese.
See also 1 Cor. 10:20. By palming themselves off as
[F622]
dead human beings they accomplish a manifold work most
successfully:
(1) They support the original lie promulgated by Satan
in Eden, "Thou shalt not surely die."
(2) Through this falsehood they prejudice the minds of
mankind against the Gospel and all its provisions.
(3) The divine provisions for man's redemption and recovery
out of sin, and its penalty, death, they thus make to
appear inconsistent, unreasonable, nonsensical. Denying
that the wages of sin is death, and claiming that the wages
of sin is eternal torment, their theory not only blasphemes
the divine character, by representing it as the personification
of injustice and cruelty, but it makes ridiculous the
Scriptural doctrine of a ransom; for even fallen reason is
able to discern that our Lord's death at Calvary could not
redeem the race from eternal torture; and that there would
be no correspondence whatever between the penalty and
the ransom price.
(4) It makes the doctrine of the resurrection seem useless
and unreasonable, because if there are none dead, how
could there be a resurrection of the dead? If all, in dying,
become more alive than they ever were before, and are in
much better condition than previously, what good purpose
could be served by a resurrection? or why should it be held
out as the hope, and the only hope, set before us in the
Gospel?
(5) It prepares the way for enslaving errors. Amongst the
heathen, this, to a considerable extent, takes the form of the
worship of parents, and the belief in transmigration of
souls--that those who die as men, after remaining for a
while in a disembodied condition, will be born into the
world again as dogs or cats, horses or cows, rats or mice, and
pass through the various experiences of these dumb animals;
or, if worthy, pass to nobler conditions.
(6) In Christendom this evil took on its most Satanic
form, and the false doctrine became the foundation of all
the gross errors and superstitions with which Christianity
has contended. There could have been no theory of eternal
[F623]
torture except as built upon this doctrine of demons, that
the dead are alive--capable of suffering. There could have
been no theory and doctrine of purgatory, except for the
same teaching; consequently, there could have been no
praying for the dead, no paying for masses for the dead.
Consequently, also, the great priestly institutions which
have fattened on these falsehoods could not have developed,
to enslave mankind with their fallacies and misrepresentations
of the divine character and plan.
(7) Although the power of Papacy was broken in the
great Reformation movement of the sixteenth century, this
foundation fallacy, taught by the demons, and supported
by them amongst all nations with various proofs, demonstrations,
and manifestations, was carefully guarded; and
the Reformers stepped forth, still bound by this original lie,
taught by the father of lies, and supported by his legions of
evil spirits. Thus it became also in Protestantism the basis of
all the difficulties and errors with which the various denominations
have since struggled. It has blinded them to
a large extent to the light of the divine Word, hindering
them from "comprehending with all saints the length and
the breadth, the height and the depth of the love of God."
Eph. 3:18
(8) Adapting itself to the new condition, it has, within the
last fifty years, assumed the role of light-bearer to the
Church, and affected to lead all desiring the truth. In this it
is true to the character marked out for it in the inspired
Word, for the Apostle declares, "Satan himself is transformed
into an angel of light." 2 Cor. 11:14
(9) Spiritism has been unsuccessful in capturing the majority
of Christian people. Although handicapped by the
false theory that their dead friends are alive, Christians in
general have somehow instinctively realized that the mediums
(the best which Satan could obtain) were not such
mediums as God would appoint to communicate information,
and to be channels of fellowship between himself and
their friends, whom they erroneously believe to be alive,
and frequently near them, though unseen; consequently,
[F624]
the great Adversary, while permitting Spiritualism to
gather and to hold and to seduce to evil as many as possible,
has found it necessary to introduce still more subtle temptations,
still more close imitations of true Christianity, under
the names of
Christian Science and Theosophy
These systems, pretending a reverence for the divine
Word, and taking the name of Christ in vain, without having
faith in him as the Redeemer, are used as decoys for
Christians who are getting awake in the present time--to
satisfy their cravings for something new and better than the
husks of human tradition, upon which they have fed so
long. These profess to feed their followers upon scientific
truth, while ignoring truth, science, in every sense of the
word.
(10) Seeing that restitution is the divine plan in the near
future, the Adversary is attempting to distract human attention
from the divine plan by mind cures, through Christian
Scientists, Theosophists, and clairvoyants. These
deceptive counterfeits of the truth, while denying the very
foundation of the Scripture truth (the Ransom), are evidences
to us that Satan's power to delude Christendom is
waning, that his house is tottering to its fall, so far as intelligent
people are concerned. The light of the Millennial
dawn is breaking upon the world of mankind, and the great
defender of error is at his extremity. God be praised that he
will soon be bound, and hindered from deceiving the world
for the thousand years of Christ's Millennial reign, in which
the light of knowledge shall fill the whole earth, as the
waters cover the great deep!
As we look into heathendom, we see clearly the terrible
and degrading work of these demons, how they have riveted
their fetters upon the people by the exercise of miraculous
powers, through their human agents--as, for
instance, the fakirs of India today, and the "Black Art" generally
practiced throughout the world in the darker days of
the past. The Scriptures show us the effect of the Gospel
[F625]
upon these works of the devil, and indicate that the light of
divine truth is "the light of the world," which alone will be
capable of dispelling the darkness of the Adversary. Notice
the conflict between the light and darkness, as recorded in
the Apostle Paul's experiences, when he traveled through
Asia and into Europe, holding up the true light, when
"Many that believed came and confessed, and showed their
deeds. Many of them also which used curious arts brought
their books together and burned them before all men; and
they counted the price of them, and found it fifty thousand
pieces of silver: so mightily grew the word of God and
prevailed." Acts 19:18-20
The apostles were continually in conflict with these evil
spirits, which sometimes sought to oppose the Gospel, but
in general realized that they were wholly unable to cope
with the higher spiritual powers operating through the
apostles. On one occasion, we read that the evil spirit
sought affiliation with the Gospel, and prompted the medium
to follow the Apostle and those with him, calling out,
"These be the servants of the Most High God, which show
unto us the way of eternal life." But whether this was an
attempt to associate the Gospel with demonism and mediumship,
or whether it was a shrewd trick by which the demons
expected to accomplish the very result which
followed, viz., a disturbance amongst the people, and an
opposition to the apostles, we cannot judge. But at all
events, one point clearly brought forward is, that the
Apostle recognized these mediums, not as the mediums of
the dead, but as the mediums of the demons, the fallen angels.
And in conference with the apostles these demons
never denied their own identity. See Acts 16:16-19; 19:15;
Jas. 2:19.
Likewise in our Lord's ministry, these evil spirits had
found many amongst the Jews willing to receive them--
known as "possessed of devils." When possessed of many of
these demons, as was frequently the case, the victim had almost
no control of himself. His thoughts, words and acts
were controlled by numerous of these evil spirits, and his
[F626]
conduct was that of insanity. Many possessed of devils were
healed in our Lord's time, both by himself and by those
whom he sent forth, armed with his spirit, power, influence.
An interesting account of one of these instances of the casting
out of evil spirits is found in Luke 4:34-37, Matt. 8:28-33,
where the demons not only did not attempt to deny
their own identity, when holding converse with the Lord,
but admitted his lordship and power over them, and their
expectation of some future termination of their present restraint
or imprisonment--a culmination or judgment in
their case.*
*For further discussion of Spiritism--Demonism, see "What Say the
Scriptures
about Spiritism?" Address the publishers.
"We Wrestle not [Merely] with
Flesh and Blood"
From the foregoing we see that Satan himself, and the
demons, his associates in evil, are really the great power
working in and upon and through mankind, in opposition
to God, and in opposition to the plan of atonement which
he has designed and which began to be put into operation
at the first advent and death of our Lord, as the ransom
price for sinners. From this standpoint only can we comprehend
clearly the significance of the words of the Apostle,
"We wrestle not with flesh and blood, but against principalities
and powers, and spiritual wickedness in high [exalted]
positions." (Eph. 6:12) And seeing that fallen man is so
incompetent
to defend himself against this wily Adversary,
and that the people of the Lord can escape from his machinations
only in proportion as their hearts are thoroughly
loyal to the Lord and attentive to his Word--and then because
to such he will grant special assistance and deliverance
from evil, which, if it were not for this assistance,
would deceive the very elect--we are led to inquire, Why
does God permit this great Adversary thus to compass man
about with delusive errors, false doctrines, and, to some extent,
with miracles in support of these?
[F627]
The answer to this question, and the only satisfactory answer
that can be found, is that God, in the present time, is
not seeking the reconciliation of the whole world, not attempting
to bring all mankind into harmony with himself,
but, on the contrary, is merely selecting out from amongst
the redeemed race the predestinated little flock, the New
Creation, who will make their calling and election sure, under
divine providence, by becoming, in heart, copies of
God's dear Son, their Redeemer, their Lord, their Bridegroom.
The world's experience, under these delusions of the
Adversary will, during the Millennial age, be thoroughly
exposed. All shall then see and fully appreciate the delusive
and ensnaring and degrading influences of every other
course than the course of righteousness, and of every other
spirit and influence than the Spirit of God, the spirit of
Truth. All will thus find how thoroughly they have been
ensnared, and "led captive by Satan at his will" (2 Tim. 2:26);
how thoroughly they have been blinded by the god
of this world against the true light of God's character, shining
through Christ (2 Cor. 4:4), and will have learned a lesson
of several parts: (1) That God is the true friend of all his
creatures, and that his laws are in their interest and for their
well-being. (2) They will have learned of the insidious character
of evil, as exemplified in Satan, in the fallen angels,
and in their own personal experiences. (3) They will have
learned that they cannot trust to their own judgment implicitly;
and that with man's limited knowledge, under such
conditions, it is possible for light to appear darkness, and
for darkness to be made to appear as light--for good to appear
as evil, and for evil to appear as good. This lesson will
be of everlasting value, so that all mankind will learn to
trust more implicitly in the divine wisdom, as well as in
divine goodness and power.
The Ministry of Evil
Meantime these errors and superstitions amongst men
are serving, nevertheless, to hold them in a bondage of slavery,
at a time when they would be incapable of using liberty
[F628]
aright; because only perfect men, only those who have the
full "image of God," and who are guided by him, are properly
prepared for a self-control that would be to their own
profit. Meantime, also, these oppositions of Satan and his
associates in evil, and the opposition of the world, wrought
upon through their errors and delusions, are directed
against the Truth, against those who become its servants, in
proportion as they are loyal to the Truth, and energetic in
that service. It was our royal Master, the most faithful servant
of the living God, who declared to those who would
follow in his footsteps, "If the world hate you, ye know that
it hated me before it hated you. If ye were of the world, the
world would love his own: but because ye are not of the
world, but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the
world hateth you." (Jno. 15:18,19) Consequently, by the
operation of a natural law, we might say, it follows that
"All that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution."
(2 Tim. 3:12) And these persecutions and oppositions
from the world, the flesh and the devil are the hammer
and chisel and polishing implements of the Lord,
which he is using in the development of the New Creation.
God is making use of these implements of opposition
which the Adversary is himself furnishing, and is causing
the wrath and opposition (both of men and of devils), to
praise him, in that these very experiences and tribulations
of his elect Church are working out for us "a far more exceeding
and eternal weight of glory." (2 Cor. 4:17) These are the
implements by which the living stones of the great Temple
of God are being shaped and fashioned, polished and prepared,
in harmony with the great Architect's design--to the
intent that shortly, in and through this living Temple, all
the families of the earth may be blessed and so many as will
be brought into at-one-ment, reconciliation, with the Lord.
When they realize thus that the oppositions of men are
largely the result of their fallen condition, and of the errors
and blindness which come upon them through the machinations
of the great opponent of God and of righteousness,
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the Lord's people may have large sympathies, not only for
the world in general, but also for those, even, who are their
opponents and persecutors. So far from desiring to take
vengeance on them, they may very properly love their
enemies, and do good to those who persecute them, realizing
the meanwhile that, in the fullest and truest sense of the
word, "they know not what they do."
Amongst men who are opponents of the Atonement we
recognize many who, in various ways and from various motives,
are all cooperating with the great Adversary in opposition
to God and the work of the Atonement. If we were to
mention, as first amongst these, the brothel keeper, the saloon
keeper, the gambling-house keeper, and the fetishes
and mediums and wizards and priests, we would be stating
the matter as it would appeal, probably, to the majority.
But from the divine standpoint, which we endeavor to take,
it would appear the contrary of this--that those who are
leaders of thought in civilized lands, and who are opposing
the light of Truth, while nominally its servants, occupy a
place of greatest responsibility in the sight of God, and are
most thoroughly Satan's earthly tools--often unwittingly.
Acts 3:17
Our hope for many of those who have come in contact
with the light of Truth throughout the Gospel age, and now
in the end of the age, is that their opposition to it has been
at least partially one of blindness, as the Apostle declares
with reference to those who crucified our Lord: "I wot that
ye did it ignorantly, as did also your rulers." (Acts 3:17)
From this standpoint we may entertain a measure of hope
for some of the most violent opposers of the Truth--Evolutionists,
Theosophists, Spiritualists, Christian Scientists,
Romanists and Protestants. Our hopes for the future are
necessarily less in the case of those who have been enlightened
on these subjects by the Present Truth, but who, for
the sake of ambition or jealousy or pride in their desire to be
somebodies, have become opponents of the Lord's work.
Such fall generally into the errors of Universalism, having
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become blinded as respects the Lord's presence, and even as
respects the ransom. It is not for us to pass judgment upon
these yet it is for us to fear on their behalf, and to note, in
their case, the application of the Scripture which declares,
"It is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and
have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers
of the holy Spirit, and have tasted of the good Word of God,
and of the powers of the age to come, if they shall fall away,
to renew them again unto repentance; seeing they crucify
to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to an
open shame." (Heb. 6:4-6) It is for us to know the
fulfilment
of these scriptures, and to have no fellowship with such unfruitful
works of darkness, but rather to reprove them and
to withdraw ourselves from the company of those who walk
not after the teachings of the Apostle, and who hold not the
faith once delivered to the saints, nor its spirit; for all such
are on Satan's side, opponents of the Lord and his plan, of
which the Atonement, the Ransom, is the center or hub. 2 Pet. 2:21;
2 Thess. 3:6; Jude 3
In considering this subject of besetments it is well to remember
that our Lord's temptations in the wilderness* illustrated
most clearly all the temptations to which the New
Creation are subject.
*Vol. V, p. 110.
Besetments of the Adversary
One besetment of the Adversary which seems to chime in
well with the yearnings of the flesh, is the argument that the
New Creation should be so under divine protection that
their temporal interests would all be prospered. This, however,
is the reasoning of the natural man and finds no support
in the Word of God, which must guide the judgment of
the New Creature. The old mind insists that surely the close
relationship of the "adoption" and its promise of future
joint-heirship in the Kingdom, must carry with it blessings
and protections and favors in respect to all temporal affairs.
The chief argument is in respect to health: Why should our
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consecrated mortal bodies be sick or pained? Surely God
would not send the aches and pains; and hence, they must
be of the devil. These are the arguments, and if they are of
our Adversary, should we not consider it an evidence of divine
disfavor to give heed to them and pray for deliverance
from them?
The Adversary, through various channels, is suggesting
these questions today with great persistency; and is suggesting
an affirmative answer that many would not suspect to
be of his instigation--that sickness in the bodies of God's
people is a mark of God's disfavor; that to use remedies
would evidence lack of faith in God; that, instead, the
prayer of faith should be relied on; that even natural Israelites
had such privileges and exercised them, and much
more should Spiritual Israelites rely upon God as their
healer. Mormons, Christian Scientists, Christian Alliancists,
and Dowieites all use these arguments in a most telling
manner, to mislead and captivate--"if it were possible the
very elect," to turn their attention away from the truth.
The fact is that the real interests of the New Creation and
their physical conditions and interests are often opposites.
The Prophet David, speaking for these, declares, "Before I
was afflicted I went astray." The New Creatures--not their
mortal bodies--are the actual sons of God; indeed, as we
have already seen, God made the sacrifice of the flesh (even
after it was justified) a condition precedent to our begetting,
or acceptance. This was not the case with fleshly Israel,
whose physical favors and temporal blessings, etc., typified
the terms and conditions which will prevail during the Millennial
age, when the antitypical King and Kingdom shall
be in control. Exod. 15:26; Lev. 26:3-15;
Deut. 28:1-14
On the contrary, it is to constitute an important part of
the New Creatures' testing that as respects earthly things
they must "walk by faith and not by sight." Yea, more than
this--must suffer persecution, must practice self-denial,
must be as deceivers, and yet true; as having nothing,
though really (by faith) possessing all things; as unwise,
though really wise toward God. So much so that the prophetic
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description of the Master must be in large measure
applicable to all who follow closely in his steps, viz., "We
did esteem him stricken, smitten of God and afflicted." The
Prophet declares, "The chastisement of our peace was upon
him, and by his stripes we [as sinners] were healed." Let us
not forget that our healing, or justification, preceded our
acceptance as members of the body of Christ--members of
the New Creation; and that our acceptance to this higher
plane of sonship and joint-heirship was upon the special
condition that "we suffer with him"; or as again expressed,
that "we fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of
Christ." Isa. 53:4,5; Rom. 8:17; Col. 1:24
True, our Lord had no sicknesses of his own, because he
was perfect; but it is written, nevertheless, that "he was
touched with a feeling of our [man's] infirmities" and "himself
took our infirmities"--the weaknesses going to him as
"there went virtue out of him and healed" the multitude.
Heb. 4:15; Matt. 8:17; Luke 6:19
We, as the under-priests, must also be "touched" and
brought into sympathy with the world to whom we shall
shortly be kings, priests and judges. But it is not necessary
or possible for us to give largely of our physical strength, or
to take the weaknesses and sicknesses of others--we each
have some experiences of this kind anyway, by reason of
our participation in the fall; for according to the flesh we
were "children of wrath even as others," and sharers with
the groaning creation in its afflictions. Our Lord's expenditure
of vitality was not on behalf of the Church; for it (the
Church) could not be recognized until his sacrifice had been
completed and been presented to the Father and accepted
by him on our behalf--not until Pentecost. Until the Spirit
had come upon his followers, it was useless to try to tell
them of heavenly things. (John 3:12, 16:13; 1 Cor. 2:10-12)
Hence our Lord's energy was largely expended in uttering
parables and dark sayings to be understood later by the aid
of the Spirit; but chiefly in healing physical infirmities and
showing forth thus, in a figure, the greater works and
grander healings in which we may participate, now and in
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the Kingdom--the opening of the eyes of understanding,
the causing of the morally dead to hear the voice of the
Lord and even now to begin the new life. Thus, the Apostle
declares, we are privileged to "lay down our lives for the
brethren"--to fill up "the afflictions of Christ for his body's
sake, which is the church." 1 John 3:16; Col. 1:24
It will not do to deprive these words of their true meaning
and claim that laying down our lives for the brethren will
cost us no sacrifice of physical vigor; and that the "afflictions
of Christ" cost no physical pain. Our Lord's weariness
and loss of "virtue" (vitality) and being "touched with a
feeling of our infirmities" contradict any such thought. It
should not, therefore, be our expectation to fare better than
the world in our earthly interests, but to experience loss, to
"suffer with him." Such losses are freely admitted as respects
honor amongst men, and financial prosperity--that our
Master was made of "no reputation," and "became poor"
in his willingness to make others rich--and that the apostles
had similar experiences and set us an example. Why then
cannot all see that Timothy's "often infirmities," and Paul's
"thorn in the flesh," and Epaphroditus' "sickness," were
physical ailments similar to those permitted now to the
Lord's faithful? True, they were all of the devil, in the sense
that sin was started by Satan and that these ailments are
some of the results; but they were no more of the devil than
were their imprisonments and stripes and shipwreck and
death.
Satan probably was indirectly if not directly the instigator
of all those physical disasters--all common to men.
Yet the Apostle did not esteem himself disowned of God under
such experiences, but gloried in them as parts of the sacrifice
he was permitted to make, part of the sufferings he was
permitted to endure for the Lord's sake, for the truth's
sake--and the more these exceeded those of other men the
more he rejoiced and counted that his future glory would
thereby be enhanced.
However, we are to distinguish between suffering for
righteousness' sake and suffering for wrong doing. The
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Apostle points out that much suffering comes to people on
account of busybodying in other people's affairs and other
evil doings; and we might specify gluttony (Phil. 3:19) and
lack of self-control as among these evils which bring sufferings
which cannot be reckoned as sufferings for righteousness'
sake. Let none rejoice in such sufferings; but
rather mourn and pray and fast--practice self-control. But
when, in his best judgment, the New Creature sees the door
of opportunity opened to him by Providence and enters it
zealously and self-sacrificingly, and it results in physical ailments,
which the worldly might consider marks of indiscretion,
let him not be ashamed, but glorify God on
behalf of such afflictions--rejoicing to be accounted "worthy
to suffer" for Christ's sake.
Indeed if ailments come on from any cause not sinful or
selfish, they can be received with patience and thanksgiving,
and lessons learned of sympathy for the groaning creation
and of hope and trust for the promised lifting of the
curse in the Millennial morning. Grace in the heart does
surely exercise a very favorable influence over every function
of life; but it could not (without miraculous interposition)
recreate or repair our mortal bodies; and God
proposes no such miracles, which would be injurious in
leading us to walk by sight and not by faith, and would attract
into the Church a class God does not now seek. As we
have seen, he justifies us by faith, instead--reckons us as whole
while leaving us actually imperfect as ever. Grace in the
heart does not render us insensible to the influences of heat
and cold, or hunger and thirst, though it does give us patience
to endure these when unavoidable, with trust in our
heavenly Father's care, and in his promise that all things
shall eventually work out good for us if rightly received
with patience and faith.
Does this imply that, while the world may seek for roots
and herbs and balms for its ills, the New Creation shall seek
for and use none of these, that they must endure pain to
show their faith? By no means. Let us remember, and impress
it upon our minds deeply that God's dealings with his
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people during this Gospel age are not according to the flesh,
but as New Creatures. "The flesh profiteth nothing"--we
have consecrated it to death, to destruction, anyway, and
our interests as New Creatures are our chief concern. We
have a privilege, nevertheless, respecting our mortal bodies,
to do what we reasonably can to keep them in order, free from
the distractions of dis-ease (lack of ease), but always as our
servants, to enable us to perform our covenant of service
unto sacrifice. Do they hunger and demand food and
drink?--we may gratify their demands, within reasonable
bounds, supplying such viands as we believe our Lord
would approve, such as would best enable us to do his work
faithfully. Do they feel cold and uncomfortable?--it is our
privilege to supply clothing of the kind we believe our Lord
would approve. Do they burn with fever? or are they racked
with pain?--it is our privilege to reduce the fever and relieve
the pain by the use of any remedies we may believe
beneficial, but not to submit ourselves to clairvoyants,
Christian Scientists, hypnotists, or others who use enchantments
to charm away the trouble by the aid of our Adversary,
who would thus ensnare our minds. The New
Creation have every privilege that the natural man enjoys in
respect to the care of their poor, frail, dying bodies. Nay,
more, it is the duty of every creature to take reasonable care
of his body; and this duty is intensified in the case of the New
Creation, by reason of the fact that their bodies have been
devoted to the Lord's service as sacrifices--even unto
death--and they should make as great a service of sacrifice
as possible out of them.
Some will be ready to say, "Yes, I would quickly apply
cream or other simple ointment of my own make for a burn,
or regulate my system by discriminating in my use of different
foods; but I would think it totally different to purchase
medicines and ointments, or to call in a physician." But
such discriminations are senseless. We might as well say
when cold, "I will put on clothing and get warm, if I can
own the sheep and clip the wool and card and weave it, and
cut and fit and make the garments necessary to protect me
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from the cold; but I will not use clothing prepared by others,
no matter how superior or more convenient it might
be." Or when hungry, do we delude ourselves that we must
sow and reap and thresh and grind and bake our bread before
it would be proper to use it? And may we avail ourselves
of the labor and skill of farmers and butchers and
bakers and tailors in caring for our bodily ease, and feel it a
sin to make use of the skill of a brother or a neighbor or a
stranger in relieving bodily pain? Surely not. We are not to
be understood to advocate the use of drugs, but the use of
common sense. Drugging can undoubtedly be carried to
the extent of folly or even crime. Regulation of the system
by care in dieting is much to be preferred whenever possible.
The instructions to the New Creation read, "Let your
moderation be known unto all," and this applies to medicine
as well as to food, etc., etc.
How did Jesus do? and what course did his apostles pursue
following in his footsteps? We answer that there is no
record that Jesus or the apostles ever healed any of the
Church. Is it urged that the Lord's healing of the sick indicated
the divine will on the subject? We answer that not
the healed ones, but the healer is our pattern. Our Lord miraculously
fed the multitude; should we therefore expect to
be miraculously fed? No--on the contrary. As the Chief of
the New Creation refused to use divine power for his personal
comfort, so should we. (Matt. 4:2-4; 26:53) If when he hungered
he sent his disciples to buy bread, and when weary he
rested on the well or elsewhere--and if while the loss or sacrifice
of his vitality "touched" him, yet he never prayed for
deliverance from these natural troubles, but cheerfully endured
them as a part of his sacrifice--so should we.
More than this: our Lord intimates that it would have
been a sinful misuse of power for him to have used the aid
of the holy Spirit in the relief of such temporal needs, because
it was at his disposal for another purpose. To have
called on divine power for his relief or protection from any
part of the dying processes would have been sin; because he
had made a covenant of sacrifice, and any appeal from its
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effects would have been "drawing back." "If any man draw
back, my soul shall have no pleasure in him." Heb. 10:38;
Matt. 26:53
Matters stand the same, exactly, with the Church, for we
are following our Captain. For us to appeal for divine aid for
our mortal bodies, which we have consecrated to death,
would be in derogation of our covenant, by which we gave
all our earthly advantages and rights as men (in the restitution
privileges purchased by the precious blood) in exchange
for the privilege of running as New Creatures the
race for the great prize of "glory, honor and immortality."
To ask back what we surrendered implies a desire to withdraw
the sacrifice, to cancel the covenant and to give up
our inheritance as New Creatures. This view of prayer for
earthly things will be new to some, and to some it will
doubtless bring a shock as they reflect that unwittingly they
have done this very thing, and that God answered the
prayer. Can it mean that they were thus rejected from the
race for the prize? We think not. We believe that as an
earthly parent would be long-suffering with his ignorant
little child, so the Lord is patient toward his people, excusing
their unintentional errors, and taking the intention instead
of merely the words. And like as a parent might grant
the improper request of his little one, so we believe the Lord
has frequently honored the faith of his people even when
improperly exercised. But the case is different as we grow in
grace and knowledge; then it would be sin and might mean
a turning back of divine favor--a rejection of the covenant.
The Prayer of Faith Shall Save the Sick
--James 5:14-16--
This passage, and one found in Mark 16:17,18, are relied
upon as proof texts to show that it is the divine intention
that the New Creation should rely upon divine power for
healing of sicknesses. The passage in Mark is easily disposed
of: it is not to be found in the oldest Greek MSS, hence must
be regarded as an interpolation, made somewhere about
the fifth century.
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As for the statement of James: It is evident from the sixteenth
verse, that the sickness referred to is recognized as
being a chastisement for sins--not a slight sickness, but a
serious one, making it worthwhile to call together the elders
of the Ecclesia. The implication seems to be that sin lay so
close to the door that the sick sinner felt practically cut off
from fellowship with God. And under such circumstances
we should expect that the sins would be confessed and their
forgiveness prayed for; and just so the record reads: "The
prayer of faith shall save the sick [from the condemnation
in which he was] and the Lord shall raise him up [to
health--the restoration being a sign of the forgiveness of the
sin]--though he have committed sins they shall be forgiven
him. See verse 15.
If Satan Cast Out Satan His Kingdom Wanes
--Matthew 12:26--
When at the first advent the Pharisees charged our Lord
with casting out devils by Satanic power, his answer clearly
implied that such action on Satan's part was possible, but
not to be considered probably; and that, should it occur, it
would be a proof that his power was on the wane; that he
was hard pressed, and that he had resorted to this as a last
resort, rather than lose his hold upon his dupes. We advocate
no general rejection of healings and miracles as being
Satanic; but a careful scrutiny of every person or system
seeking to establish itself by miracles. The New Creation
should remember the inspired direction, "Try the spirits
whether they be of God"--or of Satan. Test them and deal
with them accordingly. 1 John 4:1
It is pertinent to this inquiry that we call to remembrance
that miracles were used at the beginning of this age to establish
the Church, but that no such object can be urged
now--after the Church has been established for nearly nineteen
centuries and is about completed. It is well, too, that
we bear in mind that the inspired Apostle pointed down to
our end of the age when indicating that Satan would transform
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himself into an angel of light (a messenger of peace
and health and science, falsely so-called) with every deceivableness
of error. The Apostle even implies that God wills to
permit this course to have measurable success, so as to deceive
all that dwell upon the earth whose names are not
written in the Lamb's book of life. He says: "For this cause
he shall send them strong delusion [a working of error] that
they should believe a lie: that they might all be condemned
who believed not the truth but had pleasure in error."
"Power and signs and lying [deceiving] wonders" are to be
expected at this time, as tests in this "harvest" time of the
age. (2 Thess. 2:9-12) Let us also not forget our Lord's
words: "Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have
we not prophesied [preached] in thy name? and in thy name
cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful works
[cures]? And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you:
depart from me, ye that work iniquity." Matt. 7:22,23
It is surely time that all--the eyes of whose understanding
have been opened to a realization that we are now living in
the end of the age, where all these predictions should be expected
to reach fulfilment--should be on the lookout for
them, and be able to identify them with the seductive
teachings and miracle-workings prevalent on every hand
throughout Christendom.
But how may we be sure that all of these are Satan's delusions?
--that none of them are of God? We answer in the inspired
language: "If they speak not according to this Word,
it is because there is no light in them." (Isa. 8:20) Their
digressions from the Word are various--some in one direction,
some in another. The great mass of them may speedily
be seen to be spurious by noting that they are out of accord
with the fundamental doctrine of the Gospel, viz., the ransom.
They may not claim to deny the ransom; they may
even claim to believe in the necessity and efficacy of the
great sin-offering finished at Calvary, as the ransom for all
and the basis of all forgiveness of sins and reconciliation to
the Father. However, the effort to deceive will not long confuse
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those who remember that the Greek word rendered
ransom is anti-lutron, and signifies "a corresponding
price." This
touchstone of divine truth will quickly show that evolution
is the opposite of the truth, because evolution denies the fall
and all need for redemption from it. It promptly condemns
Christian Science as wholly unchristian, in that it denies sin
and death and all evil, claiming that they are mental delusions.
It condemns the theory that God was the instigator,
the author, of sin and wickedness, by showing that he has
always opposed sin, and has in process a plan for releasing
man from its bondage through the redemption, whose fruitage
will come by and by in the "times of restitution."
But what shall we say of those who blaspheme God's holy
name by teaching doctrines of devils--to the effect that an
eternity of torment awaits the great mass of the living of
mankind, and already has control of the vast majority of
the 50,000,000,000 whom the Scriptures, on the contrary,
declare are "in their graves," awaiting the promised blessing
of all the families of the earth? If such people shall do
cures "in my name," shall we consider that the Lord is now
indorsing their false doctrines? We must not so suppose,
now that the Millennial dawn is appearing and with it all
excuse for such gross darkness is disappearing. We cannot
reckon such as amongst those to whom the Apostle wrote:
"Ye brethren are not in darkness that that day should overtake
you as a thief." It matters not that with their "wonderful
works" they proclaim faith in Christ as their coming King,
near at hand. With such doctrines of devils in their mouths
and hearts we must conclude that their faith-cures and wonderful
works are as much works of the devil as are similar
cures by Spiritism, Christian Science, Mormonism, etc.
Suppose, however, says one, that they display great zeal
in sending out missionaries to the heathen? We reply that
this must not alter our general view of the movement as a
whole (we gladly admit, yea, earnestly hope, that some
"caught," "ensnared," by this movement are true children
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of God, whom we trust he will deliver out of this district of
mystic Babylon). Let us call to mind our Lord's estimate of
the zealous missionary efforts of his day. He said to the Pharisees
(the "holiness people" of that time and nation), "Ye
compass sea and land to make one proselyte, and when he is
made, ye make him twofold more the child of Gehenna [the
Second Death] than yourselves." (Matt. 23:15) What advantage
can accrue to the heathen from giving them the
false doctrines of the Adversary? The few who may be
reached will have the more to unlearn when the times of
restitution begin. It is as true today as it was at the first advent
that--"His servants ye are to whom ye render service."
Surely, then, Satan is doing a great business in the nominal
churches of Christendom, and especially in their pulpits.
No wonder the chief priests, scribes and doctors of divinity
today hate the Truth--hate the light and combat it in every
possible manner. "Come out of her [Babylon], my people,
that ye be not partakers of her sins and receive not of her
plagues." Rev. 18:4
Satan is in just the extremity indicated by our Lord's
words above quoted. (Matt. 12:26) The lifting of the veil of
ignorance--the general increase of knowledge on every subject
--makes it impossible to use the old superstitions as formerly.
New delusions must be introduced, else the people
would get the Truth and escape from him. He is very busy
"as an angel of light"--as a preacher of Evolution to some;
as a missionary of eternal torment, bad-tidings, to the heathen;
as an Elijah heralding himself as the Restorer of mankind;
as a Scientist (?) persuading people to deny their
aches and pains, and rewarding their lying by curing them
of a physical ailment while the perversion of the truth
makes them thereafter unable to discern truth from falsehood.
Satan may believe that he is succeeding, but our
Lord's word for it, his house will soon fall--and this necessity
for his playing reformer and good physician is an evidence
that the fall is near. Thank God it will not be long
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until he shall be thoroughly "bound," restrained, that he
may "deceive the nations no more"! Rev. 20:3
Love Righteousness--Hate Iniquity
If we would understand the philosophy of God's dealings
with the New Creation in this present time, we must not
forget that it is his intention that all who would be perfected
on this divine plane of being shall be not only well-intentioned,
in the sense that they will prefer right to
wrong, but that additionally, through a large experience,
they shall clearly comprehend and thoroughly appreciate
the comforts and advantages of right--righteousness--and
the confusion and disadvantage of wrongdoing. It is for this
reason that this New Creation is being subjected to peculiar
trials and testings, more pronounced every way than those
which have come upon the angels, more pronounced also
than will come upon the world of mankind during its judgment
day, the Millennial age. So far as we know, no particular
test ever came to the holy angels until after Satan's
deflection in his ambitious attempt to grasp the rule of
earth; but we have every reason to suppose that his fall into
sin and the resulting fall of mankind became the occasion
for testing, not only to those angels who kept not their first
estate, and became demons, but that it was a test also to all
the holy angels. It must have been a test of their faith in the
power of Jehovah to witness the course of evil and God's apparent
lack of power to restrain it and destroy it. Seeing
this, each and all must have been tempted, or tried, with
the thought that they also might commit sin with impunity;
and the fact that they remained loyal to the Lord evidences
the fact that their hearts were in a right condition of
humility and obedience to the principles of righteousness.
They already see the grand outworking of the divine plan
through Christ, and shortly will find their confidence in the
wisdom, love, justice and power of Jehovah more than justified
in the grand consummation of his plan through
Christ Jesus and the glorified Church.
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This testing of the holy angels, however, was not so crucial
in some respects as the testing which comes to the New
Creatures in Christ Jesus, in continual contact with human
imperfection, trials of faith and patience and love and
zeal--even unto death. Similarly the trial of the world during
the Millennial age, while it will be crucial and complete,
and will demonstrate absolutely who are and who are
not thoroughly loyal at heart to the Lord and the principles
of righteousness, will, nevertheless, be different from the
testings of the Church in this present age, because with
them everything will be favorable to a full and proper appreciation
of righteousness and obedience thereto. On the
contrary, the New Creature in the present time finds, as the
Apostle declared, that "All that will live godly" will suffer.
This willingness to suffer for loyalty to the Lord and the
principles of his government and the faith that it implies
are acceptable to God as evidences of special character. His
dealings with the New Creatures during this present age are
with a view to perfecting these characters in holiness--up to
the very highest mark, to the point of joyfully suffering disadvantage
for the Lord's and for the Truth's sake; yea, of
seeking to serve the Truth at the cost of earthly comforts,
honors, emoluments and even life itself.
It is because this philosophy of the divine plan is not
clearly seen that so many are confused in respect to God's
providential dealings with the little flock. They see not that,
as special fiery and chilling processes are necessary to the
tempering of the fine steel implement, so special fiery trials
and chilling experiences are necessary to the preparation of
those whom the Lord designs shortly to use as his special
representatives and instruments in the great work of human
restitution, etc. Evil is never good, and God is never
the author of moral evil, sin, in any sense or degree. Nevertheless,
his wisdom and power are such that he is able to
overrule its effects for good. For instance, as we have seen,
God did not cause Satan to sin. He created him perfect, upright,
pure, and it was one of the very blessings he bestowed
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upon him, the blessing of freedom of will, which--being
exercised contrary to the divine order--constituted the once
holy angel an adversary, Satan. It was in the power of the
Almighty to have destroyed his adversary instantly; but he
foresaw the larger lessons of experience which might come,
not only to the angels, but to mankind, respecting good and
evil, through the contamination of the latter and the bitterness
of its fruit. Likewise with sin amongst mankind: God
was thoroughly able to eradicate it at any time, as he will
do eventually; but for the time being his wisdom foresaw
how the wrath of man could be made to glorify him. God's
children then need have no fear respecting the ultimate
triumph of the Lord over sinners and sin in every sense of
the word. They may have confidence that neither the arch
conspirator nor any of his more or less wilful or more or less
deluded followers in the evil way will gain an ultimate mastery.
The plan of God already is so far advanced as to disclose
the end of the great mystery of permitting for a time
the flourishing of sin and sinners, and their prosperity in
opposition to the Lord and his faithful.
Let us not forget to note that while all sickness and death
in the world may, with more or less directness, be traceable
and chargeable to the great Adversary, through whom sin
entered into the mind of man to his defilement and undoing,
yet in the case of the world, as well as with the New
Creation, God is overruling for man's instruction and education
the various elements of the curse that came upon the
race because of sin. As for the world, in a general sense at
least, the entire groaning creation is learning something respecting
the exceeding sinfulness and undesirability of sin;
and as for the Church, the New Creation, her permission to
share in the sufferings of Christ includes and implies a share
in those sufferings which are common to the remainder of
mankind. In the case of our Lord, we are particularly informed
that it was expedient that he, to be the great High-Priest
for humanity, should be touched with a feeling of our
infirmities, and this must be true as respects each member
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of the body of that Priest, as well as of the Head, the Lord.
There will surely not be an unsympathetic member of the
entire body of Christ. All will have been touched with experiences,
and know fully how to sympathize with the poor
world when the time shall come for their restitution by
judgments, by obedience under the trials and testings and
corrections of the future age. Our Lord, who was perfect in
the flesh, and who, therefore, could not have thus been
touched had he not expended his vitality in healing the
sick, experienced instead of vitality a sense of the weakness
and suffering of those whom he relieved, as it is declared,
"Himself took our infirmities and bare our sicknesses."
(Matt. 8:17) Those who are called to membership in the
body of Christ have generally little vitality to give off in a
miraculous manner; but in sharing the common experiences
of the world, in connection with their own imperfect
human organisms, these also are touched with a feeling of
the infirmities of the race, which enables them to sympathize
fully in the general distress.
It will be seen from this that we have no sympathy with
the thought advanced by some that the body of Christ
should expect to be exempted from the trials and difficulties
of the world, physical, social and financial. True,
such was the case with the typical Israelites. Their rewards
for faithfulness to the Lord and his Law were to be along
these lines of immunity from suffering, trials, etc.; but with
the New Creation the matter is entirely the reverse, because
they are not Israelites according to the flesh, but according
to the spirit--they are of the spiritual seed of Abraham. The
antitypes of Israel's blessings in the New Creation are spiritual.
All things work together for their good spiritually.
God's blessings are guaranteed to them so long as they
abide in faith and obedience to Christ, so that nothing evil
can come nigh their dwelling-place, where they are kept secret,
shielded from all that could do injury. Yet their appreciation
of this spiritual relationship is continually tested, to
prove whether or not they appreciate the spiritual above
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the natural, that they may enjoy more abundantly the spiritual
and ultimately be perfected as New Creatures when
the earthly sacrifices shall have been fully completed.
When, therefore, the New Creatures in Christ Jesus find
that they have numerous fiery trials, no matter along what
lines these may come to them, they are to recognize them as
evidences of their faithfulness--as evidences that God regards
them as sons, and that they are being tested according
to their covenant relationship, that they may be fitted
and prepared for perfecting in spirit and the glories to follow.
If, therefore, the Lord permits calamities to come upon
such, let them not be regarded in the same light as if they
befell the world. The world, under the divine sentence of
death, is subject to various accidents and mutations, with
which the Lord has nothing whatever to do, as explained
by our Lord when he referred to the eighteen upon whom
the tower of Siloam fell, and the others whose blood Pilate
mingled with the sacrifices, and who our Lord declared
were not, on account of these things, to be considered sinners
above others and under divine reprobation. (Luke 13:1-5)
God permits the wrath of men and of Satan, within
certain limits, in connection with the world of mankind;
but in respect to his elect Church it is different. Nothing
that befalls them is of accident. "Precious in the sight of the
Lord is the death of his saints." Not even a hair of their
heads can fall without his notice. (Psa. 116:15; Matt. 10:30)
As our Lord declared to Pilate, when he asked, "Knowest
thou not that I have power?"--"Thou couldst have no
power at all, except it were given thee of my Father." (John 19:10,11)
And this is equally true of every member of the
body of Christ, from the moment of his begetting as a New
Creature. Yea, we have every reason to believe that in some
measure divine providence extends even beyond the New
Creation to those whose lives and interests are closely linked
to theirs. If, then, the New Creatures experience fiery trials
they are not to think these peculiar, as though some strange
thing happened unto them, but are to know that corresponding
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trials have happened to all the members of the
body of Christ, from the Head downward, and will happen
to all until the last members of the feet class have been
tested, polished, accepted, glorified. If these, then, come in
the nature of oppositions and persecutions in the home, or
from former friends or neighbors, or from nominal church
people, or if they come in the form of financial disaster and
poverty, or if they come in the nature of sickness, pain,
physical accident, etc., no matter how, the Lord's people
are to be content, conscious of the Father's love and providential
care in respect to their every interest. To have full
confidence in this is a part of the test of faith. To be assured
of the Lord that we are chil |