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STUDY III
THE CALL OF THE NEW CREATION
None but the "Called" Eligible--When This "Great Salvation"
Call Began
--A Call to Repentance not a Call to the Divine Nature--The Jewish
Call--The Gospel Call--Why not Many "Great," "Wise" or
"Mighty" are called--Exaltation the Premium upon True Humility--
Character a Condition of the Call--World During Millennium not to
be Called, but Commanded--Time of Gospel Call Limited--The New
Creation Called or Drawn by the Father--Christ Our Wisdom--Christ
Our Justification--Actual and Reckoned Justification Differentiated--
Does the "New Creation" Need Justification?--The Ground
of Justification--Justification of the Ancient Worthies Different
from Ours--Millennial Age Justification--Christ Made unto Us Sanctification--
Sanctification During Millennial Age--Two Distinct Consecrations
in Levitical Types--Neither had Inheritance in the Land--
The Great Company--Sanctification of Two Parts--Man's Part--God's
Part--Experiences Vary with Temperaments--Sanctification not Perfection
nor Emotion--"Who Healeth All Thy Diseases"--Necessity of
the Throne of Grace--How Justification Merges into Sanctification--
Consecration since Close of the "High Calling"--The Church's Salvation
or Deliverance.
OPPORTUNITY to become members of the New Creation
and to participate in its possibilities, privileges, blessings
and glories, was not thrown open to the world of
mankind in general, but merely to a "called" class. This is
most distinctly set forth in the Scriptures. Israel according
to the flesh was called of the Lord to be his peculiar people,
separate from the other peoples or nations of the earth: as it
is written, "You only have I known [recognized] of all the
families of the earth." (Amos 3:2) Israel's calling,
however,
was not the "high calling" or "heavenly calling," and
consequently
we find no mention of heavenly things in any of
the promises pertaining to that people. Their call was to a
preparatory condition, which eventually made ready a
remnant of that nation to receive and profit by the high
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calling to the "great salvation, which at the first began to be
spoken by the Lord, and was confirmed unto us by them that
heard him." (Heb. 2:3) The terms of the high calling or
heavenly calling are not, therefore, to be sought in the Old
Testament but in the New; although, as the eyes of our understanding
open to discern "the deep things of God," we
may see in his dealings and providences with fleshly Israel
certain typical lessons profitable to the spiritual seed who
have been called with a heavenly calling; because, as the
Apostle points out to us, fleshly Israel and its laws and
God's dealings with it were shadows or types of the better
things belonging to those who are called to membership in
the New Creation.
Since in all things Christ was to have the pre-eminence in
the divine plan, and it was thus necessary that he should be
the first, the chief, the High Priest, who should become the
leader of this New Creation of sons of God, the Captain of
their salvation and their exemplar, after whose course they
might pattern, in whose steps they might walk, we see a
most satisfactory reason why the ancient worthies could
have no part nor lot in this New Creation. Our Lord's
words respecting John the Baptist attest this: "Verily I say
unto you, among them that are born of women there hath
not arisen a greater than John the Baptist: notwithstanding
he that is least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he."
(Matt. 11:11) Thus also the Apostle declares, while speaking
in terms of highest praise of the faith and noble character
of those brethren of the past dispensation--"God having
provided some better thing for us, that they without us
should not be made perfect." Heb. 11:40
Besides, we are to remember that none can be called
while still under condemnation on account of Adam's sin.
In order to be called to this "high calling," it is necessary
that justification from the Adamic sentence must first be secured,
and this could not be granted even to fleshly Israel
through the blood of bulls and goats, because these can
never take away sin, and were merely types of the better
sacrifices which do actually meet the demands of Justice
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against our race. Hence, it was not possible that the call
should begin until after our Lord Jesus had given the price
of redemption--"bought us with his own precious blood."
Even the Apostles were called and accepted to the New Creation
only in a tentative manner until the Redeemer had
given the price and had ascended up on high and had presented
it on their behalf. Then, and not until then, did the
Father, on the day of Pentecost, directly recognize those
believers and beget them by his holy Spirit to be "New
Creatures."
True, our Lord said to the Pharisees during his ministry,
"I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners to
repentance." (Matt. 9:13) But we are to recognize a great
difference between calling men to repentance and calling
them to the high calling of the divine nature and joint-heirship
with Christ. No sinners are accepted to it; hence it is
that we, being "by nature children of wrath," all require
first to be justified freely from all things by the precious
blood of Christ.
It is in full accord with this that we read in the introduction
to the Epistle to the Romans (1:7)that the
epistle is addressed "to all that be in Rome, beloved of God,
called to be saints"--called to be holy ones, partakers of the
divine nature, etc. The introduction to the Epistle to the
Corinthians reads--"Unto the Church of God which is at
Corinth, to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus, called
to be saints, with all that in every place call upon the name
of Jesus Christ." (1 Cor. 1:2) The exclusiveness of this
call is
still further emphasized in a succeeding verse (9), which declares
the author of our calling; saying, "God is faithful, by
whom ye were called unto the fellowship of his Son, Jesus
Christ, our Lord." This implies an association, oneness;
and, hence, the thought is that the call is with a view to
finding from amongst men some who shall become one
with the Redeemer as New Creatures; joint-heirs with him
of the glory, honor, and immortality accorded him as a reward
of his faithfulness.
Here we are reminded of the Apostle's words to the effect
that we shall be made joint-heirs with Christ only upon certain
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conditions, namely, "If so be that we suffer with him
that we may be also glorified together." (Rom. 8:17) In the
same chapter to the Corinthians (verse 24)the Apostle
shows that the call he is discussing is not by any means the
same call that was for a time confined to the Jews; and his
words indicate, further, that not all are called. He says,
"Unto them which are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ
[is] the power of God and the wisdom of God"--though to
the uncalled Jews he was the stumbling block and to the
uncalled Greeks foolishness. In his letter to the Hebrews (9:14,15)the Apostle points out that the call of this Gospel
age could not be promulgated until first our Lord had by
his death become "surety" for the New Covenant. His
words are, "For this cause he is the mediator of the New
Testament [covenant], that by means of death, for the redemption
of the transgressions that were under the first testament
[Law Covenant], they which are called might
receive the promise of eternal inheritance." Heb. 7:22
Not Many Great, Wise or Learned Called
We might naturally suppose that this special call, if restricted
at all, would be restricted to the very finest specimens
of the fallen race--the most noble, the most virtuous,
the most talented; but the Apostle contradicts this thought,
saying, "Ye see your calling, brethren, how that not many
wise men after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble
are called: but God hath chosen the foolish things of the
world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak
things of the world to confound the things which are
mighty; and base things of the world, and things which are
despised, hath God chosen, yea, and things which are not,
to bring to naught things that are: that no flesh should
glory in his presence." (1 Cor. 1:26-29) The reason for this
condition of things the Apostle explains to be God's intention
that no man should be able to boast that he had in
any sense or degree merited the great blessings to be conferred.
The whole matter is intended to be both to angels
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and to man an illustration of the power of God to transform
characters from base and despised to noble and pure, not
by force, but by the transforming power of the truth--working,
in the called ones, through the promises and hopes set
before them, both to will and to do his good pleasure. This
divine arrangement will result not only in the Father's
glory, but also in the humility and everlasting good of those
whom he will bless. We find, reiterated throughout the New
Testament, various statements of the fact that this call and
the salvation under it are not of man, nor by his power, but
by the grace of God. Nor is it difficult to see why the call
is, as a rule, less attractive to the noble and more so to the
ignorant.
Pride is an important element in the fallen nature, and
must continually be reckoned with. Those who are less
fallen than the majority of their fellows and who are, therefore,
more noble by nature than the average of their fellow
creatures, are apt to realize this condition and to feel a certain
amount of superiority and to pride themselves on it.
Such, even if they are seeking the Lord and aspiring to his
blessing and favor, would be inclined to expect that they
would be received by the Lord upon some different basis
from their more fallen, less noble fellows. God's standard,
however, is perfection; and he declares that everything not up
to that standard is condemned; and every condemned one
is pointed to the same Redeemer and to the same sacrifice
for sins, whether he has suffered much or comparatively less
from the fall. These conditions of acceptance were sure to
be more attractive to the mean and more fallen members of
the human family than to the more noble ones--the weak,
the fallen ones, realizing the more keenly their need of a
Savior, because they appreciate much more their own imperfections;
while the less fallen, with a measure of self-satisfaction,
are not much inclined to bow low before the
cross of Christ, to accept justification as a free gift, and to
approach upon this basis, and this alone, to the throne of
heavenly grace to obtain mercy and find grace to help.
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They are more inclined to lean to their own understanding,
and to have that well-satisfied feeling which will hinder
them from coming in by the low gate and narrow way.
God is evidently putting a premium upon humility in
connection with all whom he invites to become members of
this New Creation. The Apostle points this out, saying,
"Humble yourselves, therefore, under the mighty hand of
God, that he may exalt you in due time." (1 Pet. 5:6) Paul
points them to the pattern, Christ Jesus--how he humbled
himself and made himself of no reputation, seeking a lower
nature and suffering death, even the death of the cross, etc.;
on account of which obedience and humility God highly
exalted him. Then Peter points the lesson, saying, "God resisteth
the proud and giveth grace to the humble." (1 Pet. 5:5)
Ye see your calling, brethren, how that not many great
or wise or learned are called, but chiefly the poor of this
world, rich in faith. With the premium which God sets
upon humility, there is also a premium which he sets upon
faith. He would have for New Creatures those who have
learned to trust him implicitly, who accept his grace as sufficient
for them, and in the strength which he supplies attain
--as incidental to their exaltation--the victory to which
he calls them.
Character, Nevertheless, a Condition of the Call
Although God does not call the wise or the great or the
learned, we are not to understand from this that his people
are base or ignorant, in the sense of being evil or corrupt or
debased. On the contrary, the Lord sets the highest possible
standard before those whom he calls; they are called to
holiness, to purity, to faithfulness and to principles of righteousness
--to an appreciation of these things in their own
hearts and the showing forth of them in their lives to the
glory of him who hath called them out of darkness into his
marvelous light. (2 Pet. 1:3; 1 Pet. 2:9) The world
may
know them according to the flesh only, and according to
the flesh they may not be more noble or refined than others
--frequently less so--but their acceptance with the Lord
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is not according to the flesh, but according to the spirit, according
to their minds, their intentions, their "hearts."
Consequently, from the moment they accept the grace of
God in Christ and the forgiveness of their sins, and make a
consecration of themselves to the Lord, they are counted as
freed from those blemishes which were theirs naturally as
children of Adam; they are counted as though their flesh
were robed in the merits of Christ, hiding all of its defects. It
is the new mind, the new will, that is the "New Creature"
accepted of God and called, and it alone is being dealt with.
True, the new mind as it develops will show itself to be
noble, honorable, upright, and gradually it will come more
and more to have power and control over the flesh, so that
those who recognize not the New Creatures, even as they
did not recognize the Lord, may ultimately come to marvel
at their good works and holy living and spirit of a sound
mind, though even these may at times be attributed by
them to some ignoble motives. And notwithstanding the
gradual growth of the new mind more and more into harmony
with the mind of the Lord, these may never get full
control over the mortal bodies with which they are connected,
although it will surely be their object and effort to
glorify God in their bodies as well as in their spirits, their
minds, which are his. 1 Cor. 6:20
Let us notice some of these specifications and limitations
as respects character in the "New Creation." The Apostle's
exhortation to one of these called ones--but applicable to
all of them--is, "Fight the good fight of faith, lay hold on
eternal life, whereunto thou art also called." (1 Tim. 6:12)
These New Creatures are not to expect to gain the victory
and the great reward without a battle with the adversary,
as well as with sin abounding in all their associations and
the weakness of their own flesh, though the latter is covered
by the merit of Christ's righteousness under the terms of the
Grace Covenant. The Apostle again exhorts this class to
"Walk worthy of God who hath called you unto his Kingdom
and glory." (1 Thess. 2:12) The New Creature is not only to
recognize his calling and its ultimate reward in the Kingdom
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and glory, but he is to remember that in the present
life he has become a representative of God and of his righteousness,
and he is to seek to walk in accord therewith. Thus
we read, "As he that hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in
all manner of conversation; because it is written, 'Be ye
holy; for I am holy.'" (1 Pet. 1:15,16) Again, in the same
epistle (2:9) we read, "Ye should show forth the praises of
him who hath called you out of darkness into his marvelous
light."
Spiritual Israelites of the New Creation were not put under
bondage to specific laws, as were the fleshly Israelites;
but were put under "the law of liberty," that their love for
the Lord might demonstrate itself, not only in respect to
voluntarily avoiding the things recognized as disapproved
of the Lord, but also in respect to voluntarily sacrificing human
rights and interests in the service of truth and righteousness,
for the Lord and for the brethren. It is in accord
with this that the Apostle declares "God hath not called us
unto uncleanness but unto holiness." (1 Thess. 4:7) He
declares
again, "Ye have been called unto liberty, only use not
liberty for an occasion to the flesh" (Gal. 5:13), an
occasion
to do evil: use your liberty rather in sacrificing present
rights for the sake of the truth and its service--that thus you
may be sacrificing priests of the royal priesthood who, by
and by, shall reign in God's Kingdom as joint-heirs with
Christ to dispense divine blessings to the world.
Many are the scriptures that point out that the call to be
"New Creatures" is a call to glory, honor and immortality
(Phil. 3:14; 2 Pet. 1:3, etc.), but everywhere the
Lord indicates
that the path to this glory is a narrow one of trial,
testing, sacrifice; so that only those who are begotten of his
spirit, yea, filled with it, will be able to come off conquerors
in the end and attain to the glorious things whereunto they
are called, the way to which has been made possible to the
called ones through him who has promised, "My grace is
sufficient for you; for my strength is made perfect in your
weakness."
Nor are we to think of different calls, but are to remember
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the declaration of the Apostle (Eph. 4:4), "Ye are called
in one hope of your calling." It is a mistake, therefore, for
any to think that they have any choice in this matter. Indeed,
so far as the world is concerned, in the next age there
will be no call: God will not, during that age, be seeking to
select a special class separate and distinct from others and
to a special position. Instead of calling the world during the
Millennial age, the Lord will command them--command
obedience to the laws and principles of righteousness; and
every creature will be required (not requested) to render obedience
to that Millennial government, otherwise he will receive
stripes for his disobedience, and ultimately will be
destroyed from amongst the people, as is written, "He that
will not hear [obey] that prophet shall be cut off from
amongst the people"--he shall die the Second Death, from
which there will be no hope of recovery.
Neither is there a second call during this Gospel age,
though, as we have previously seen, there is a second class of
saved ones selected during this age--the Great Company
(Rev. 7:9-14) "whose number no man knoweth, out of every
nation and kindred and tongue," who shall serve God in
his temple and before the throne in contradistinction to the
Bride, who will be in the throne and members, or living
stones, of the temple. But these of this second company have
no separate and distinct call. They might as easily, and
with much more satisfaction, have attained to the glories of
the divine nature had they rendered prompt and hearty
obedience. They do come off victors in the end, as is shown
by the fact that to them are granted the palm branches; but
their lack of zeal hindered them from being accepted as of
the overcoming class, thus preventing their eternal joint-heirship
and glory as participants in the New Creation, as
well as depriving them of much of the joy and peace and
satisfaction which belongs to the overcomers and is enjoyed
by them even in this present life. The place to which they
will attain, as we have previously seen, will apparently be
one similar in many respects to the estate or plane of the
angels.
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Another thought in connection with the call is that its
time is limited, as the Apostle declares, "Now is the acceptable
time; behold now is the day of salvation." "Today if ye
will hear his voice harden not your hearts." (2 Cor. 6:2;
Heb. 3:15) This acceptable day, or acceptable year or acceptable
period or epoch, began with our Lord Jesus and
his consecration. He was called. He took not the honor upon
himself, and it has continued ever since--"No man taketh
this honor unto himself." (Heb. 5:4) Bold indeed would be
the man who would assume the right to a change of nature
from human to divine, and from being a member of the
family of Adam and joint-heir in his lost and forfeited estate,
to being a joint-heir with Christ in all the riches and
glory and honor of which he, in response to his call, became
the rightful heir in perpetuity.
The close of this call, or "day of salvation," or "acceptable
time" will come no less certainly than it began. A definite,
positive number were ordained of God to constitute
the New Creation, and so soon as that number shall be
completed the work of this Gospel age will be finished. We
might observe also that as soon as the proper number shall
have been called, the call itself must cease; because it would
not be consistent for God to call even one individual more
than he had predestinated, even though he foreknew how
many of the called ones would fail of obedience, fail to
make their calling and election sure, and, therefore, need to
be replaced by others. Consistency seems to demand that
the Almighty shall not even seem to trifle with his creatures
by extending a single invitation which could not be made
good if accepted. The Scriptures hold out the thought that
for this limited, elect number of the Royal Priesthood a
crown apiece has been provided; and that as each accepts
the Lord's call and makes his consecration under it, one of
the crowns is set apart for him. It is not, therefore, proper to
suppose that the Lord would call any one who, on presenting
himself and accepting the call, would need to be informed
that no crown could be apportioned to him yet, but that
he must wait until someone who would prove unfaithful
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should forfeit his claim. Our Lord's exhortation, "Hold
fast,...that no man take thy crown," seems to imply not
only the limited number of crowns, but that ultimately, in
the end of this age, there would come a time when those
who had not faithfully lived up to their covenant would be
rejected, and that others at that time would be in waiting
for their crowns. Rev. 3:11
To our understanding the general call to this joint-heirship
with our Redeemer as members of the New Creation of
God, ceased in 1881. But we apprehend that a large number
(in all the various denominations of Christendom--
probably twenty or thirty thousand) who at that time had
made full consecration of themselves, have not proven
faithful to their covenant of self-sacrifice. These, one by
one, as their full measure of testing is reached, if found unfaithful,
are rejected from fellowship in the called company--
to the intent that others who meantime have
consecrated, though not under the call, may be admitted to
full relationship in this fellowship with Christ and his joint-heirs,
that they, in turn, may stand their testing and, if
found unworthy, be similarly rejected and their places be
filled by still others who will be waiting in an attitude of
consecration. Evidently, by such arrangement, no necessity
has existed for any general call since 1881. Those now admitted
can as well be granted their privileges and opportunities
without coming under the general call or invitation
which ceased in 1881--they are admitted on application, as
opportunity permits, to fill up the places of those who are
going out. It is our expectation that this work of going out
and coming in will continue until the last member of the
new order of creation shall have been found worthy, and all
the crowns everlastingly apportioned.
The Apostle declares, "Ye, brethren, are not in darkness,
that that day should overtake you as a thief." (1 Thess. 5:4)
In harmony with all the various precedents of Scripture, we
are inclined to believe that in this harvest time of the Gospel
age a knowledge of the truth respecting the divine plan
of the ages, and the presence of the Son of Man, and the
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harvest work will be brought to the attention of all the
Lord's consecrated ones. We apprehend that thus "present
truth," will be quite a testing or proof of proper heart conditions
amongst the consecrated here, even as the message
of our Lord's presence and the harvest of the Jewish age
served to test earthly Israel at the first advent. It is a part of
our expectation that those who in this time come to a clear
knowledge of the truth and give evidence of sincerity of
faith in the precious blood and the depth of their consecration
to the Lord's service, and who are granted a clear
insight into the divine plan, should be considered as having
this proof that they have been accepted with the Lord as
prospective heirs with Christ Jesus, even though they consecrated
since 1881. If their consecration was made long
ago, before the call ceased, we may understand that after so
long a time they are coming into the proper attitude of consecration,
and that, therefore, the knowledge of present
truth has been granted to them as a blessing and as an evidence
of their fellowship of spirit with the Lord. If they
were not amongst the consecrated in 1881, or before, the
inference would be that they had now been accepted to association
in the called class by being given the place of some
one previously called, but who had proved himself lacking
in zeal--neither cold nor hot--and therefore spewed out--to
have his portion properly in the time of trouble coming,
and there to learn valuable lessons under disciplines and
chastisements which he should have learned from the Word
of God, and to come up through a time of great tribulation
to a place in the "Great Company," whereas he should have
come willingly and joyfully through tribulation to a place
with Christ in the throne.
How God Calls
"Of him are ye in Christ Jesus, who of God is made unto us wisdom and
righteousness [justification] and sanctification and deliverance."
1 Cor. 1:30
Christ Our Wisdom
Wisdom is here given the first, and in that sense the most
important, place amongst the steps of salvation. The Wise
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Man's testimony agrees with this, saying, "Wisdom is the
principal thing...with all thy getting get understanding."
However well disposed we may be, however weak or strong,
wisdom is the prime essential to our taking the proper
course. And this is generally acknowledged amongst men.
All of any intelligence are seeking for further knowledge
and wisdom; even those who take the most foolish courses,
as a rule take them in following paths which do not appear
to them at the time to be unwise ones. It was thus with
mother Eve: she longed for knowledge, wisdom; and the
very fact that the forbidden tree seemed to be a gateway to
wisdom constituted her temptation to disobedience to her
Creator. How necessary then is a wise counselor to guide us
in wisdom's ways of pleasantness, and through her paths of
peace.
And if mother Eve, even in her perfection, needed a wise
guide, much more do we, her fallen, imperfect children,
need such a guide. Our Heavenly Father in calling us to
membership in the New Creation foresaw all our needs:
that our own wisdom would not be sufficient for us, and
that the wisdom of the Adversary and his deluded followers
would be exercised to our injury--to make light appear
darkness and darkness appear light; hence the provision of
our text that Christ should be our wisdom. Before ever we
come to God, before ever we receive the merit of the atonement
or through it reach the relationship of sons, we need
help, guidance, wisdom, the opening of the eyes of our understanding
that we may discern the supply which God has
provided in his Son.
In order to have a hearing ear for the wisdom that
cometh from above, an earnest condition of heart is necessary.
We must possess a measure of humility, else we will
think of ourselves more highly than we ought to think, and
will fail to discern our own weaknesses, blemishes, unworthiness,
from the divine standpoint. We need also to
have a certain amount of honesty or candor--to be willing
to admit, to acknowledge, the defects seen by the humble
mind. Looking from this standpoint, those who long for
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righteousness and harmony with God are pointed by the
Lord's providences to Jesus as the Savior. However imperfectly
at first any may understand the philosophy of the
atonement accomplished for us, they must at least grasp the
fact that they "were by nature children of wrath even as
others"--sinners; that Christ's sacrifice was a righteous one
and that God provided and accepted it on our behalf; that
through his stripes we may be healed, through his obedience
we may be accepted of the Father, our sins being
reckoned as laid upon him and borne by him, and his righteousness
and merit reckoned as applicable to us for a robe
of righteousness. We must see this--Christ must thus be
made unto us wisdom--before we can act upon the knowledge,
and by hearty acceptance of his merit be justified before
the Father and accepted and sanctified, and, by and
by, delivered and glorified. But Christ does not cease to be
our wisdom when the next step is taken, and he becomes
our justification. No: we still need him, as our Wisdom, our
wise Counselor. Under his guidance we need to see the wisdom
of making a full consecration and the wisdom of following
up that consecration in a life of sanctification, to the
doing of the Father's will. In every step that we take wisdom
is the principal thing; and all through the life of consecration,
or sanctification, at every step of the journey to
the Heavenly City, we need the wisdom which cometh from
above, which the Apostle describes--"first pure, then peaceable,
gentle, easy to be entreated, full of mercy and good
fruits, without partiality and without hypocrisy." (Jas. 3:17)
Earthly wisdom operates along the lines of selfishness,
self-will, self-esteem, self-righteousness, self-sufficiency;
and, as the Apostle points out, these things lead to bitter envying
and strife, because this wisdom, instead of being from
above, is "earthly, sensual, devilish." The heavenly wisdom,
on the contrary, is in harmony with the divine character
of love, which "vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up,
behaveth not itself unseemly, rejoiceth not in iniquity, but
rejoiceth in the truth."
There is order in the operation of this wisdom, too; for
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while it takes hold upon all the conditions mentioned by
the Apostle James above, there is a difference in the rank it
assigns to each. While the spirit of wisdom from above is
peaceable--desires peace, and seeks to promote it--nevertheless
it does not put peace first, but purity--"first pure,
then peaceable." It is earthly wisdom which suggests "peace
at any price," and commands the conscience to be still that
selfish peace may be promoted. The wisdom that is pure is
simple, is guileless, honorable, open: it loves the light; it is
not of darkness, of sin, nor favorable to anything that needs
to be hidden: it recognizes the hidden works as usually works
of darkness, the secret things as usually evil things. It is peaceable
so far as would be consistent with honesty and purity;
it desires peace, harmony, unity. But since peace is not first,
therefore it can only be morally at peace, and fully in harmony
with those things which are honest, pure and good.
This heavenly wisdom is gentle--not coarse, rough, either
in its plans or methods. Its gentleness, nevertheless, follows
its purity and peaceableness. Those who possess it are not
primarily gentle and then pure and peaceable, but first, or
primarily pure, sanctified with the truth. They are desirous
of peace and disposed to promote it; therefore they are
gentle and easy to be entreated. But they can only be easily
entreated in harmony with purity, peace and gentleness:
they can not be easily entreated to assist in any evil work,
for the spirit of heavenly wisdom forbids such a course.
Heavenly wisdom is full of mercy and good fruits: it rejoices
in mercy, which it sees to be an essential element of
the divine character it essays to copy. Mercy and all good
fruits of the holy Spirit of the Lord are sure to proceed from,
and be thoroughly ripened and developed in, the heart
which is illuminated with the wisdom from above; but this
mercy, while taking hold of the ignorant and unintentional
evildoers with sympathy and help, cannot have sympathy
or affiliation with wilful wrongdoers, because the spirit of
wisdom is not first mercy, but first purity. Hence the mercy
of this wisdom can only exercise itself fully toward unintentional
or ignorant wrongdoers.
[F100]
This heavenly wisdom is declared to be "without partiality."
Partiality would imply injustice; and the purity and
peace and gentleness and mercy and the good fruits of the
Spirit of wisdom from above lead us to be no longer respecters
of persons, except as character demonstrates their real
value. The outward features of the natural man, the color
of the skin, etc., are ignored by the Spirit of the Lord--
the Spirit of wisdom which cometh from above: it is impartial
and desires that which is pure, peaceable, gentle,
true, wherever found and under whatever circumstances
exhibited.
This wisdom from above is furthermore "without hypocrisy"
--it is so pure, so peaceable, so gentle, so merciful toward
all that there is no necessity for hypocrisy where it is in
control. But it is bound to be out of harmony, out of sympathy,
out of fellowship with all that is sinful, because it is in
fellowship, in sympathy with all that is pure or that is making
for purity, peace and gentleness; and under such conditions
there is no room for hypocrisy.
Heavenly wisdom in respect to all these matters God has
given us through his Son--not only in the message of his redemptive
work, but also in his exhibition of the graces of
the Spirit and of obedience to the Father, thus instructing
us both by word and example. Moreover, this wisdom from
above comes to us through the apostles, as Christ's representatives,
through their teachings--as well as through all
those who have received this Spirit of wisdom from above,
and who daily seek to let their light so shine as to glorify
their Father in Heaven.
Christ Our Justification
We have already, to some extent, discussed the atonement
between God and man, in which our Lord Jesus was
made unto all those who accept him Justification.* But
here we want to examine more particularly the meaning of
this common word, Justification, which seems to be but imperfectly
[F101]
understood by the majority of the Lord's people.
The primary thought in the word Justification is (1) justice,
or a standard of right; (2) that something is out of accord
with that standard--not up to its requirements; (3) the
bringing of the person or thing that is deficient up to the
proper or just standard. An illustration of this would be a
pair of balances or scales: on the one side a weight would
represent Justice; on the other side something representing
human obedience should be found of equal weight, to balance
Justice. This is more or less deficient in all, and the
deficiency requires to be compensated for by having something
added to it, in order to its justification or balancing.
Applying this illustration more particularly, we see Adam
as originally created, perfect; in harmony with God and
obedient to him. This was his right, proper, just condition,
in which he should have continued. But through sin he
came under divine sentence and was straightway rejected,
as being no longer up to the divine standard. Since then his
posterity, "born in sin and shapen in iniquity," have come
forth to life on a still lower plane than their father, Adam--
still further from the standard required by divine Justice.
This being conceded, it is useless for any of Adam's posterity
to ask the Creator for a fresh balancing, or trial, to see
whether or not he could come up to the standard of infinite
Justice. We concede that such a trial would be absolutely
useless; that if the perfect man by disobedience forfeited his
standing, we who are imperfect, fallen, depraved, could
have no hope of meeting the requirements of Justice, or of
balancing ourselves, justifying ourselves, before God--"We
have all sinned and come short of the glory of God"
wherein our race was originally created, representatively, in
father Adam.
*Vol. V, Chap. xv.
If, then, we see that as a race, we are all unjust, all unrighteous,
all imperfect, and if we see, too, that none can by
any works meet the requirements of Justice, we see assuredly
that "none could give to God a ransom for his
brother." (Psa. 49:7) None could make up the deficiency for
another, because not only has he no surplus of merit or
[F102]
weight or virtue to apply to another, but he has not even
enough for himself, "for all have sinned and come short."
We ask, therefore, Can God accept and deal with the unjust,
the fallen ones--he who already has condemned them
and declared them unworthy of his favor, and that they
shall die as unworthy of life? He shows us that he has a way
of doing this--a way by which he may still be just and yet be
the justifier of him that believeth in Jesus. He shows that he
has appointed Christ the Mediator of the New Covenant,
and that Christ has bought the world with his own precious
blood--sacrifice--and that in due time, during the Millennial
age, Christ will take to himself his great power, and
reign as the King of earth, and bless all the families of the
earth with a knowledge of the truth and with an opportunity
for restitution to the image of God as represented in father
Adam--and fortified by the experiences of the fall and
of the recovery. This work of bringing back mankind to
perfection will be the work of Justification--actually making
perfect, as distinguished from our justification, a "justification
by faith" imputed to the Church during the Gospel
age. Actual justification will start with the beginning of our
Lord's Millennial reign, and will progress step by step until
"every man" shall have had the fullest opportunity for return
to all that was lost through father Adam--with added
experiences that will be helpful. Thank God for that period
of actual justification--actual making right--actual bringing
of the willing and obedient of the race from imperfection
to perfection--physically, mentally, morally!
But now we are specially considering the New Creation
and what steps God has taken for the justification of this
little class of humanity whom he has called to the divine nature
and glory and immortality. These, as well as the world,
need justification, because by nature "children of wrath
even as others"; because as God could not deal with the
world while under sentence of death as sinners, neither
could he deal on that basis with those whom he calls to be of
the New Creation. If the world must be justified--brought
to perfection--before God can again be in harmony with
[F103]
them, how could he fellowship the Church, accept her to
joint-heirship with his Son, unless first justified? It must be
conceded that justification is a necessary prerequisite to our
becoming New Creatures, but how can justification be effected
for us? Must we be restored to absolute, actual perfection
--physically, mentally, morally? We answer, No;
God has not provided for us such an actual justification,
but he has provided a justification of another kind, which
in the Scriptures is designated, "justification by faith"--not
an
actual justification, but nevertheless vital. God agrees that
all those who during this period of the continuance of the
reign of sin and death shall hear the message of his grace
and mercy through Christ, and shall come so into accord
with the wisdom from above that they will confess their
wrong condition and, believing the Lord's message will surrender
themselves to him, repenting of sin and so far as possible
make restitution for their wrong--these, instead of
returning to actual human perfection, he will reckon as
having their blemishes covered with Christ's merit. In dealing
with them he will reckon them just or right, justifying
them through faith.
This reckoned justification, or justification by faith,
holds good so long as the faith continues and is backed by
endeavors to do the Lord's will. (If faith and obedience
cease, at once the justification ceases to be imputed.) But
faith-justification does not cease as the Sanctification work
progresses. It continues with us as New Creatures, not only
covering us from the Adamic condemnation, but from all
the weaknesses and imperfections of word, thought and
deed which are ours through the weaknesses of the flesh,
through heredity (not wilful). It continues thus to cover the
Lord's people as New Creatures even to the end of their
journey--through all the testings and trials necessary to
them as candidates for, and probationary members of, the
New Creation. It is in line with this that the Apostle declares,
"There is therefore now no condemnation to them which
are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh but after the
Spirit"--notwithstanding the fact that the treasure of the
[F104]
new nature is in an earthen vessel and that on this account
there are continually unwilling blemishes, the least of
which would condemn us as unworthy of the rewards of life
everlasting on any plane were they not covered by the merits
of our wedding garment, the robe of Christ's righteousness,
our imputed justification--justification by faith.
We will need this justification, and it will continue to be our
robe so long as we abide in Christ and are still in the flesh;
but it will cease completely when our trial ends in our acceptance
as overcomers and we are granted a share in the
First Resurrection. As the Apostle explains--it is sown in
corruption, dishonor and weakness, but it will be raised in
incorruption, in power, in glory, in full likeness to our Lord,
the Quickening Spirit, who is the express image of the Father's
person. When that perfection shall have been attained
there will no longer be a necessity for an imputed
righteousness, because we will then be actually righteous,
actually perfect. It matters not that the perfection of the
New Creation will be on a higher plane than that of the
world; i.e., so far as the justification is concerned it matters
not; those who will receive God's grace in restitution to human
nature in perfection will be just or perfect when that
work is completed; but perfect or right on a lower than
spirit plane. Those now called to the divine nature and justified
by faith in advance, so as to permit their call and testing
as sons of God, will not be actually justified or perfected
until in the First Resurrection they attain that fulness of life
and perfection in which there will be nothing of the present
imperfection in any particular--the perfection now only
reckoned or imputed to them.
The Cause or Ground of Our Justification
Confusion has come to many minds on this subject by
reason of neglect to compare the declarations of God's
Word. Some, for instance, noting the Apostle's expression
that we are "justified by faith" (Rom. 5:1; 3:28;
Gal. 3:24),
hold that faith is so valuable in God's sight that it covers
our imperfections. Others, noting the Apostle's statement
[F105]
that we are "justified by God's grace" (Rom. 3:24; Titus 3:7),
hold that God justifies or clears whomsoever he wills
arbitrarily, irrespective of any quality or merit or faith or
works which may be in them. Still others note the Scriptural
declaration that we are "justified by his blood" (Rom. 5:9;
Heb. 9:14; 1 John 1:7), and reason from this that
the
death of Christ effected a justification for all men, irrespective
of their faith and obedience. And still others take the
Scripture statement that Christ was "raised again for our
justification" (Rom. 4:25), and, on the strength of this,
claim that justification comes to us through the resurrection
of Christ. Still others, taking the Scripture which says
"by works a man is justified" (Jas. 2:24), claim that
after all
is said and done our works decide the matter of favor or disfavor
with God.
The fact of the matter is that these expressions are all
true, and represent merely different sides of the one great
question, just as a great building may be viewed from front,
from rear, from the sides and from various angles. In giving
the above expressions, the apostles at different times were
treating different phases of the subject. It is for us to put all
of these together and see in that combination the whole
truth on the subject of justification.
First of all, we are justified by God's grace. There was no
obligation upon our Creator to do anything whatever for
our recovery from the just penalty which he had placed
upon us. It is of his own favor or grace that, foreseeing the
fall even before our creation, he had compassion upon us,
and in his plan provided for our redemption the Lamb
slain before the foundation of the world. Let us settle this
question of our reconciliation to the Father--that it is all of
his grace by whatever means he was pleased to bring it
about.
Secondly, we are justified by the blood of Christ--by his redemptive
work, his death: that is to say, the Creator's grace
toward us was manifested in making this provision for us--
that "Jesus Christ by the grace of God should taste death
for every man," and thus pay the penalty for Adam. And
[F106]
since the whole world came into condemnation through
Adam, the ultimate effect will be the cancellation of the sin
of the whole world. Let us make sure of this point also, as of
the first one, that God's grace operates only through this
one channel, so that "he that hath the Son hath life, and he
that hath not the Son hath not life," but continues under
the sentence of death. 1 John 5:12
Thirdly, that Christ Jesus was raised from death for our
justification is equally true; for it was a part of the divine
plan, not only that Messiah should be the redeemer of the
people, but that he should be the blesser or restorer of all
desiring to return to harmony with the Father. While,
therefore, Jesus' death was of primary importance as the
basis of our reconciliation, he could never have been the
channel for our blessing and restitution had he remained in
death. Hence the Father, who provided for his death as our
redemptive price, provided also for his resurrection from
the dead, that in due time he might be the agent for man's
justification--for humanity's return to a right or just condition,
in harmony with God.
Fourthly, we (the Church) are justified by faith in the
sense that the Lord's provision is not for an actual justification
or restitution of any during this age, but for merely a
reckoned, or faith restitution; and this, of course, can apply
only to those who will exercise the faith. Neither our faith
nor our unbelief can have anything whatever to do with the
divine arrangements which God purposed in himself and
has been carrying forward and will accomplish in due time;
but our participation in these favors proffered us in advance
of the world does depend upon our faith. During the
Millennial age the lengths and breadths of the divine plan
of salvation will be manifested to all--the Kingdom of God
will be established in the world, and he who redeemed
mankind, and who has been empowered to bless all with a
knowledge of the truth, will actually justify, or restore to perfection,
as many as desire and will accept the divine favor
on the divine terms.
True, faith may even then be said to be essential to restitution
[F107]
progress toward actual justification, for "without faith
it is impossible to please God," and because the restitution
blessings and rewards will be bestowed along lines that will
demand faith; but the faith that will then be required for
progress in restitution will differ very much from the faith
now required of those "called to be saints," "joint-heirs
with Jesus," "New Creatures." When the Kingdom of God
shall be in control and Satan bound and the knowledge of
the Lord caused to fill the earth, these fulfilments of divine
promises will be recognized by all, and thus sight or knowledge
will grasp actually much that is now recognizable only
by the eye of faith. But faith will be needed, nevertheless,
that they may go on unto perfection; and thus the actual
justification obtainable by the close of the Millennium will
be attained only by those who will persistently exercise
faith and works. Although of that time it is written, "The
dead shall be judged out of the books according to their
WORKS," as in contradistinction to the present judgment of
the Church "according to your FAITH," yet their works will not
be without faith, even as our faith must not be without
works to the extent of our ability.
The Apostle's declaration that God will justify the heathen
through faith (Gal. 3:8), is shown by the context to
signify
that the reconciliation by restitution will not come as a
result of the Law Covenant, but by grace under the terms of
the New Covenant, which must be believed in, accepted
and complied with by all who would benefit by it. A
difference between present and future justification, is that
the consecrated of the present time are, upon the exercise of
proper faith, granted instantly fellowship with the Father,
through reckoned justification, by faith; whereas the exercise
of obedient faith under the more favorable conditions of
the next age will not bring reckoned justification at all, and
will effect actual justification and fellowship with God only
at the close of the Millennium. The world in the interim
will be in the hands of the great Mediator, whose work it
will be to represent to them the divine will and to deal with
them, correcting and restoring such as obey, until he shall
[F108]
have actually justified them--at which time he will present
them faultless before the Father, when about to deliver up
his Kingdom to God, even the Father. 1 Cor. 15:24
Now the Lord is seeking for a special class to constitute
his New Creation, and none have been called to that heavenly
calling except such as have been brought to a knowledge
of God's grace in Christ, and been able to accept that
divine arrangement by faith--to so fully trust in the grand
outcome of God's plan that their faith therein will influence
and shape the course of their lives in the present time, and
cause them to esteem the life to come as of such paramount
value that, in comparison, the present life and its interests
would appear to be but as loss and dross. Exercising faith in
this dark time, when the prevalence of evil seems to impugn
the wisdom, love and power of the Creator, the Church are
reckoned of God as though they had lived during the Millennial
age and experienced its restitution to human perfection;
and this reckoned standing is granted to the intent
that they may present in sacrifice that human perfection to
which, under divine arrangements, they would by and by
attain--that they might thus present their bodies (reckonedly
perfect) and all their restitution privileges, earthly
hopes and aims and interests, a living sacrifice--exchanging
these for the heavenly hopes and promises of the divine nature
and joint-heirship with Christ, to which are attached,
as proofs of our sincerity, conditions of suffering and loss as
respects earthly interests and honors of man.
Fifthly, this class, now justified by its faith, must not expect
to deny its faith by wilfully contrary works. It must
know that while God is graciously dealing with them from
the standpoint of faith, not imputing their transgressions
unto them, but counting them all met by their Redeemer at
Calvary--not imputing their trespasses unto them, but
dealing with them according to their spirit or will or intention,
and not according to the flesh or actual performances
--nevertheless, he will expect that the flesh will be
brought into subjection to the new mind so far as possible,
"so far as lieth in us," and that it will cooperate in all good
[F109]
works to the extent of its opportunity and possibilities. In
this sense and in this degree our works have to do with our
justification--as corroborative testimony, proving the sincerity
of our devotion. Nevertheless, our judgment by the
Lord is not according to works but according to faith: if
judged according to our works we would all be found to
"come short of the glory of God"; but if judged according
to our hearts, our intentions, the New Creatures can be
approved by the divine standard under the terms of the
Grace Covenant, by which the merit of Christ's sacrifice
covers their unintentional blemishes. And surely none
could object to the Lord's expecting us to bring forth such
fruits of righteousness as may be possible for us under present
imperfect conditions. More than this he does not ask,
and less than this we should not expect him to accept and
reward.
As an illustration of this general operation of justification
by grace, by the blood and through our faith, and the
relationship of works to the same, consider the electric car
service. The one central powerhouse will to some extent illustrate
the source of our justification--the grace of God.
The wire which carries the current will imperfectly represent
our Lord Jesus, the Father's Agent in our justification;
the cars will represent believers and the trolleys represent
the faith which must be exercised and which must press
against the wire. (1) Everything is dependent upon the electric
current. (2) Next in importance is the wire which carries
that current to us. (3) Without the arm of faith to touch and
press upon the Lord Jesus, the channel of our justification,
we would receive no blessing. (4) The blessing received by
us from contact with the Lord Jesus would correspond to
the lighting of the car with the electric current, indicating
that the power is there and can be used; but (5) the motorman
and his lever represent the human will, while (6) the
motor itself represents our activities or energies under the
power which comes to us through faith. All of these powers
in combination are necessary to our progress--that we may
make the circuit and ultimately arrive at the car barns
[F110]
which, in this illustration, would correspond to our place as
the New Creation in our Father's house of many mansions,
or conditions for the many sons of many natures.
Justification and the Ancient Worthies
Looking back, we can see from the apostolic record that
in the remote past, before the precious blood had been
given for our justification, there were ancient worthies--
Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, David, and various
other holy prophets who were justified by faith. Since they
could not have had faith in the precious blood, what faith
was it in them that justified them? We answer as it is written:
"They believed God and it was counted unto them for
righteousness [justification]." True, God did not reveal to
them, as he has revealed to us, the philosophy of his plan,
that we may see how he could be just and yet the justifier of
him that believeth in Jesus; and, hence, they were not responsible
for not believing what had not been revealed. But
they did believe what God had revealed, and that revelation
contained all that we now have, only in a very condensed
form, as an acorn contains an oak. Enoch
prophesied of the coming of Messiah and the blessings to
result; Abraham believed God that his seed should be so
greatly favored of God that through it all nations should be
blessed. This implied a resurrection of the dead, because
many of the nations of the earth had already gone down
into death. Abraham believed that God was able to raise
the dead--so much so that when he was tested he was willing
even to part with Isaac, through whom the promise was
to be fulfilled, accounting that God was able to raise him
from death. How distinctly he and others discerned the
exact methods by which God would establish his Kingdom
in the world and bring in everlasting righteousness by justifying
as many as would obey the Messiah, we cannot definitely
know; but we have our Lord's own words for it, that
Abraham, at least, with considerable distinctness, grasped
the thought of the coming Millennial day, and, possibly,
[F111]
also to some extent grasped the thought of the sacrifice for
sins which our Lord was accomplishing when he said,
"Abraham rejoiced to see my day, and he saw it and was
glad." John 8:56
All do not see distinctly the difference there was between
the justification of Abraham and others of the past to fellowship
with God before God had completed the ground of that
fellowship in the sacrifice of Christ and the justification to
life during this Gospel age. There is quite a difference, however,
between these blessings, though faith is necessary to
both. All were under sentence of death justly, and, hence,
none could be counted free from that sentence, "justified to
life" (Rom. 5:18), until after the great sacrifice for sins
had
been made by our Redeemer; as the Apostle declares, that
sacrifice was necessary first in order "that God might be
just" in the matter. (Rom. 3:26) But Justice,
foreseeing the
execution of the redemptive plan, could make no objection
to its announcement in advance merely, as an evidence of
divine favor, to those possessing the requisite faith--justifying
such to this degree and evidence of fellowship with
God.
The Apostle refers to "justification to life" (Rom. 5:18) as
being the divine arrangement through Christ, which will be
opened eventually to all men; and it is this justification to
life that those who are called to the New Creation are reckoned
to attain now, in advance of the world, by the exercise
of faith--they realize a justification not only to terms of fellowship
with God as his friends, and not aliens, strangers,
foreigners, enemies, but additionally, it is possible for them
by the same faith to grasp the restitution rights to life secured
for them by the Redeemer's sacrifice, and then to sacrifice
those earth-life rights as joint-sacrificers and under-priests
in association with the High Priest of our profession,
Christ Jesus.
While the ancient worthies could come into harmony
with God through faith in the operation of a plan not fully
revealed to them and not even begun, it would appear that
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it would be impossible for divine justice to go further than
this with any until the atonement for sin had been actually
effected by the sacrifice of Christ. This is in full accord with
the Apostle's declaration that "God...provided some better
thing for us [the Gospel Church, the New Creation],
that they [the humble and faithful ancient worthies] without
us should not be made perfect." (Heb. 11:40) It is in
harmony also with our Lord's declaration respecting John
the Baptist that, although there had not arisen a greater
prophet than he, yet, dying before the sacrifice of atonement
had been actually completed, the least one in the
Kingdom of heaven class, the New Creation, justified to life
(after the sacrifice for sin had actually been made) and
called to suffer and to reign with Christ, would be greater
than he. Matt. 11:11
We have already noted the fact that Christ and the
Church in glory will perform a justifying (restoring) work
upon the world during the Millennial age, and that it will
not be justification by faith (or reckonedly), as ours now is,
but an actual justification--justification by works in the
sense that although mixed with faith the final testing will
be "according to their works." (Rev. 20:12) Now the New
Creation must walk by faith and not by sight; and their
faith is tested and required to "endure as seeing him who is
invisible," as believing things that, so far as outward evidences
go, are improbable to the natural mind, unreasonable.
And this faith, backed by our imperfect works, has the
backing also of the Lord's perfect works on our behalf, and is
acceptable to God, on the principle that if under such
imperfect conditions we strive, to the extent of our ability, to
please the Lord, and so partake of the Spirit of Christ that
we rejoice to suffer for righteousness' sake, it is proof that
under favorable conditions we would be surely no less loyal
to principle. When the knowledge of the Lord shall fill the
whole earth, and the darkness and mists which now surround
the Lord's faithful shall have disappeared, and the
great Sun of Righteousness be flooding the world with
truth, with absolute knowledge of God, of his character, of
[F113]
his plan--when men see the evidences of God's favor and
love and reconciliation through Christ in the gradual uplift
which will come to all those who then seek harmony with
him--when mental, physical and moral restitution will be
manifest--then faith will be to a considerable extent different
from the blind faith necessary now. They will not then "see
through a glass darkly [dimly]"; the eye of faith will not be
strained to see evidences of the glorious things now in reservation
for them that love God, for those glorious things will
be more or less distinctly manifested to men. While men
will then believe God and have faith in him, there will be
wide difference between thus believing the evidences of their
senses and the faith which the New Creation must exercise
now in respect to things which we see not. The faith which
God now seeks in his people is precious in his sight, and
marks a small, peculiar class; therefore, he has placed such
a premium, or reward, upon it. When the Millennial age
shall have been fully ushered in it will be impossible to doubt
the general facts, and hence it would be out of order to continue
to offer a special reward to those who will not doubt.
But although the knowledge of the Lord shall fill the
whole earth, and there shall be no need to say to one's
neighbor, Know thou the Lord! nevertheless, there will be
upon man a different test--not of faith but of works--of
obedience; for "it shall come to pass that the soul that will
not hear [obey] that prophet, shall be cut off from amongst
the people." (Acts 3:23) It is during the present time of
darkness as respects the fulfilment of the divine plan, when
sin abounds and Satan is the prince of this world, that our
Lord puts the premium upon faith; saying, "According to
thy faith be it unto thee" (Matt. 9:29); and again,
"This is
the victory which overcometh the world, even your faith."
(1 John 5:4) But respecting the world's trial, or judgment in
the Millennial age, or Day of Judgment, we read that all
will be judged according to their works--backed by faith;
according to their works it will be unto them, and they shall
stand approved or disapproved at the close of the Millennial
age. Rev. 20:12
[F114]
Justification, as we have already seen, signifies the bringing
of the sinner into full accord with his Creator. We nowhere
read of the necessity for the sinner to be justified
before Christ, but that through the merit of Christ he is to
be justified before the Father, and it may help us to understand
this entire subject to examine why this is so. It is because
the Creator stands as the representative of his own
law, and because he placed father Adam and his race under
that law in the beginning, declaring that their enjoyment of
his favor and blessing and life everlasting was dependent
upon obedience, and that disobedience would forfeit all
these favors. That position cannot be set aside. Therefore,
before mankind can have fellowship with God, and his
blessing of life everlasting, they must in some manner get
back into full accord with their Creator, and, hence, back to
that perfection which will stand the full light of divine inspection
and full test of obedience. Thus the world, so to
speak, lay beyond the reach of the Almighty--who purposely
arranged his laws so they would be beyond the reach
of Justice and make necessary his present plan of redemption
and a restitution, or justification, or bringing back to
perfection of the willing and obedient, through the Redeemer,
who, meantime, would stand as their Mediator or
go-between.
The Mediator, although perfect, had no law to maintain
--had pronounced no sentence against Adam and his
race which would hinder him from recognizing them and
being merciful to their imperfections. On the contrary, he
bought the world in sin and imperfection, fully realizing its
undone condition. He takes mankind as he finds them, and
during the Millennial age will deal with each individual of
the world according to his own particular condition, having
mercy upon the weak and requiring more of the
stronger, thus adapting himself and the laws of his Kingdom
to all the various peculiarities, blemishes, weaknesses,
etc., as he finds them, for the "Father...hath committed
all judgment unto the Son." (John 5:22) The Son will
illustrate
to mankind the perfect standard of the divine law to
which they must eventually attain before they can be just
[F115]
and acceptable in the sight of God--at the close of the Millennial
age; but he will not insist upon that standard and
hold that any who do not come up to it are violators of it,
needing an appropriation of grace to cover every transgression,
however unwilful and unintentional. On the contrary,
all this atonement for violations of God's perfect and
immutable law will be finished before he takes the reigns of
government at all.
Christ has already given the price in his own sacrifice. He
already has graciously imputed that merit to the household
of faith, and by the close of this Gospel age he will make
definite application of the entire sin-offering on behalf of
"all the people"--the whole world of mankind. God has
shown through the Day of Atonement type that it will be
accepted, and that it will be as the result of that acceptance
that Christ and his Church will then take over the government
of the world under what might be termed martial
law, or a despotic rule, which sets aside the ordinary laws
and standards because of the exigencies of the case, and
ministers law in a manner suited, not to those who are in a
perfect, or right condition (as are the laws of Jehovah's empire),
but suited to the condition of rebellion and anarchy
which has been produced in the world as a result of sin.
This emergency dominion--in which the King will rule not
only as king but also as judge and priest supreme--is designed,
as we have just seen, to justify the world actually,
not reckonedly, by works as the standard or final test--
backed by faith. This actual justification will be effected,
not at the beginning of the Millennial reign, but as a result
of the reign--at its close.
The justification by faith of the present time is with a
view to permitting a few, whom God designed to call to his
special service, to participate in the Abrahamic Covenant
as the Seed of promise, as joint-sacrificers, and, hence, joint-heirs
with Jesus. Even with these God can make no direct
contract, but, so to speak, even after they are justified
through faith and by the merit of their Redeemer they are
treated as incompetents and are informed that they are accepted
only in the Beloved--in Christ--and all of their covenant
[F116]
contracts to sacrifice, unless indorsed by him, would
be of no validity.
How evident it is that the sole object of this Gospel age is
to call out a little flock from mankind to constitute members
of the New Creation, and that the arrangement to justify
believers unto life, by faith, is with a view to giving them
standing with God whereby they may enter into the covenant
obligations required of candidates for the New Creation.
As already noted, the condition upon which they will
be accepted to the New Creation is that of self-sacrifice; and
since God is unwilling to receive as a sacrifice anything that
is blemished, we, as members of the blemished and condemned
race, could not be acceptable until first we were
actually justified from all sin; that thus, as the Apostle expresses
it, we might "present our bodies living sacrifices,
holy, acceptable to God, our reasonable service." Rom. 12:1
The Tentatively Justified
In view of this, what shall we say of those who come to
the standpoint of faith in God and a measure of justification,
and who, seeing that further progress in the Lord's way
means self-sacrifice, self-denial, etc., nevertheless hold back,
declining to enter the strait gate and narrow way of so full a
consecration--even unto death? Shall we say that God is
angry with them? No: we must suppose that up to a certain
point, progressing in the ways of righteousness, they were
pleasing to God. And that they receive a blessing, the
Apostle seems to declare, saying:* "Being justified by faith,
we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ."
This peace implies some discernment of the divine plan in
respect to the future blotting out of the sins of the believer
(Acts 3:19); it implies also, a good degree of harmony with
the principles of righteousness, for faith in Christ is always
reformatory. We rejoice with all who come thus far; we are
glad that they have this advantage over the masses of mankind
whom the god of this world hath thoroughly blinded,
[F117]
and who, therefore, can not at the present time see and appreciate
the grace of God in Christ. We urge such to abide
in God's favor by going on to full obedience.
*The author's later thought is that this text may be considered as having
reference to the vitally justified.
"Receive Not the Grace of God in Vain"
But however much we may rejoice with such, and however
much peace and joy may come to such believers, seeking
to walk in the way of righteousness but avoiding the
narrow way of sacrifice, we must in candor point out that
such "receive the grace of God in vain" (2 Cor. 6:1)--because
the grace of God in the justification which they have
received, was intended to be the stepping-stone to the still
greater privileges and blessings of the high calling of the
New Creation. God's grace is received in vain by such, because
they do not use this grand opportunity, the like of
which was never before offered to any, and, so far as the
Scriptures indicate, will never again be offered. They receive
the grace of God in vain, because the opportunities of
restitution which will be accorded to them in the coming
age will be accorded to all of the redeemed race. God's
grace in this age consists merely in the fact that they were
made aware of his goodness in advance of the world, to the
intent that through justification they might go on to the
attainment of the call and to the sharing of the glorious
prize to be given to the elect body of Christ, the Royal
Priesthood.
Looking out over the nominal "Christian world," it
seems evident that the great mass even of the sincere believers
have never gone beyond this preliminary step of justification:
they have "tasted that the Lord is gracious," and
that has sufficed them. They should, instead, by this taste
have been fully awakened to a greater hungering and
thirsting after righteousness, after truth, after further
knowledge of the divine character and plan, after further
growth in grace and knowledge and love, and the attainment
of a further comprehension of the divine will concerning
them, which we will consider next, under the head
of Sanctification.
So far as we can discern, the advantage of the tentatively
[F118]
justified refers merely to this present life, and the relief
which they now feel in respect to God's gracious character
and his future dealings with them. And yet their knowledge
along these lines is so meager that they sometimes sing,
"Oft it causes anxious thought,
Am I his or am I not."
The fact is, that although Christ has been their wisdom
up to the point of showing them their need of a Savior, and,
further, of showing them something of the salvation provided
in himself, yet it is not the divine plan that he should
continue to be their wisdom and to guide them into "the
deep things of God" except as they shall by consecration
and devotion become followers in his footsteps. The unconsecrated
believer is in no sense whatever a New Creature,
even though, seeing something of the ways of God and his
requirements, he be seeking to live a moral, reasonable,
honest life in the world. He is still of the earth, earthy; he
has never gone forward to exchange his human, earthly
rights (secured through Jesus) for the heavenly things to
which the Lord through his Sacrifice opened the door. As in
the type the Levites were not permitted to go into the Holy
places of the Tabernacle or even to see the things therein, so
in the antitype, unconsecrated believers are not allowed to
enter the deep things of God or to see and appreciate their
grandeurs, unless first they become members of the Royal
Priesthood by a full consecration of themselves.
To expect special preference and favor at the Lord's
hand during the Millennial age because of having received
his favor in the present life in vain would seem a good deal
like expecting a special blessing because a previous blessing
had been misused or little valued. Would it not be in general
keeping with the divine dealings in the past if we
should find that some who have not been favored during
this Gospel age would be granted the chief favors during
the coming age? Would not this be considerably in line with
our Lord's words, "There are last which shall be first and
first which shall be last"? Indeed, the Apostle distinctly
points out that when the New Creation shall have been
[F119]
completed and the Millennial age ushered in, God's special
favor will pass again to natural Israel, from whom it was
taken at the beginning of this Gospel age. Rom. 11:25-32
Those justified to fellowship with God previous to this
age, who maintained their justification, and who, as a reward,
will be made "princes in all the earth" under the
heavenly Kingdom, maintained it at the cost of earthly self-denials.
(Heb. 11:35) Those of the present age, who will
rightly use and maintain their justification, must do so at
the cost of the flesh. The little flock, faithful to an exceptional
degree, will lay down their lives in the service of the
truth and of the brethren, and thus be copies of the Captain
of our Salvation. The second class, considered elsewhere as
the "Great Company," must attain to their reward at the
cost of the flesh also, though because of less zeal in sacrificing,
they lose the great reward of the New Creation and
its Kingdom privileges. These three classes seem to be the
only ones profited beyond the present life by the special opportunities
of this age of justification by faith.
The operations of the Kingdom, under the light of full
knowledge and along the line of works, will, for various reasons,
evidently appeal most strongly at first to Israel after
the flesh, who, when their blindness shall be turned away,
will become exceedingly zealous for the Lord's Anointed,
saying, as represented in the prophecy, "This is our God; we
have waited for him, and he will save us." (Isa. 25:9) But
while Israel will naturally be the first to fall in line under
the new order of things, the blessings and opportunities of
the Kingdom shall, thank God! be rapidly extended
throughout the world--to the intent that all nations may
become children of Abraham in the sense that they will
participate in the blessings promised to him--as it is written,
"I have made thee a father of many nations; in thy seed
shall all the families of the earth be blessed."
Christ Made unto Us Sanctification
As the wisdom or knowledge of God came to us as a result
of our Lord Jesus' sacrifice on our behalf, and as justification
[F120]
then came through his merit, when we accepted his
atonement and fully consecrated our all to God, so also
is our sanctification through him. No man can sanctify himself
in the sense of causing himself to be accepted and
adopted into God's family of the New Creation, begotten by
his Spirit. (John 1:13; Heb. 5:4) As the merit of
Christ was
necessary to our justification, so his acceptance of us as
members of his body, the under-royal priesthood, and his
continued aid, are indispensable to the making of our calling
and our election sure. The Apostle condemns some for
"not holding the Head" (Col. 2:19), and we perceive that
such a recognition of Christ Jesus, as not only the Redeemer
from sin but as the Head, representative, guide, instructor,
and preserver of the body (the Church) is essential to each
member of it. Our Lord points out this necessity of our continuance
under his care, saying repeatedly, "Abide in me;
...as the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide
in the vine; no more can ye, except ye abide in me." (John 15:4)
"If ye abide in me, and my words abide in you, ye
shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you." (John 15:7)
The Apostle points out this same necessity for abiding
in Christ; saying, "It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands
of the living God." (Heb. 10:31) He proceeds to point out
his meaning by quoting from the prophecy: "For our God
is a consuming fire." God's love no less than his justice
burns against all sin, and "all unrighteousness is sin"; "he
can not look upon [or recognize] sin"; hence, he has provided,
not for the preservation of sinners, but for their rescue
from sickness and from its penalty of destruction.
This assures us, in harmony with various declarations of
Scripture, that the time is coming when sin and sinners,
with the concomitants of sin and pain and sorrow and
dying, will be done away. Thank God! we can rejoice also
in this feature of the divine character, that God is a consuming
fire, when we know that he has provided for us a
refuge in Christ Jesus for the period of our unwilling imperfections,
and that he has provided in him also for our ultimate
[F121]
deliverance from sin and death and every weakness,
into his own perfect likeness; for the New Creation, the perfection
of the divine nature and its fulness; for the "Great
Company" the perfection on a plane somewhat corresponding
to that of angels; to be the ministers, companions
of the glorified Church--"the virgins, her companions,
which follow her." (Psa. 45:14) The ancient worthies, next,
will be perfected in the human nature, images of God in the
flesh and glorified representatives of the heavenly Kingdom,
and channels of divine blessing to all the families of
the earth. Ultimately, when the trials and opportunities
and testings of the Millennial age shall have brought all the
willing and obedient to perfection, and have demonstrated
their loyalty to God, these also shall have attained to the
human perfection, the image of God in the flesh; and
amongst all these God's will shall then be so perfectly understood
and obeyed--and that heartily--that he will no
longer be to them as a consuming fire, because all their
dross shall have been purged away under the discipline of
the great Mediator, to whose charge all were committed by
the Father's love and wisdom. Christ shall then "see of the
travail of his soul and be satisfied" with the results.
Sanctification signifies setting apart to holy service. Sinners
are not called to sanctification, but to repentance; and
repentant sinners are not enjoined to consecration, but to
believe on the Lord Jesus Christ unto justification. Sanctification
is only urged upon the justified class--upon believers
in God's promises centered in Christ and assured by
his ransom-sacrifice. This does not mean that sanctification
or holiness is not the proper thing for all mankind: it simply
means that God foresaw that so long as a man occupied the
position of an unrepentant sinner, it would be useless to invite
him to set himself apart to a life of holiness; he must
first realize his sinfulness and become penitent. It does not
mean that the penitent one should not become sanctified,
set apart to holiness of life, but it does mean that a sanctification
which left out justification would be utterly futile.
[F122]
In God's order, we must learn first of divine goodness in the
provision made for our sins, and we must accept his arrangement
as a free gift through Christ, before we would be
in a proper attitude to consecrate, or to sanctify ourselves to
his service. Besides, the object of all this arrangement of the
Gospel age--the call to repentance, the declaration of the
good tidings unto justification and the invitation to all
believers to sanctify or consecrate themselves to God, are all
elements or parts of the one great plan which God is now
working out--is the development of the New Creation. God
has predetermined that all who will be of the New Creation
must be sacrificers--of the "Royal Priesthood"; and they
each must have something to offer to God, even as our High
Priest who "offered up himself to God." (Heb. 7:27; 9:14)
The under-priesthood must all offer up themselves to God,
also; as the Apostle exhorts: "I beseech you, brethren
[brethren, because justified and thus brought into fellowship
with God], by the mercies of God [the forgiveness of
sins already experienced], that ye present your bodies a living
sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, and your reasonable
service." (Rom. 12:1) Now, then, notice that since our
bodies
are not actually "holy," they must be made so reckonedly
before they could be "acceptable unto God," could
be counted "holy"; that is to say, we must be justified by
faith in Christ before we would have anything holy and acceptable
to lay upon God's altar; and it must be laid upon
God's altar, sacrificed, and accepted of him at the hand of
our great High Priest, before we can be counted as of his
"Royal Priesthood."
Sanctification will be the requirement of the great King
during the Millennial age. The whole world will be called
upon to sanctify, to set themselves apart from uncleanness,
from sin of every sort, and to render obedience to the divine
will, as represented in the Kingdom and its princes. Some,
then, may conform to a sanctification or holiness of outward
life without being sanctified in heart: such may make
progress mentally and morally and physically--up to the
full limit of restitution--to full perfection, and so doing they
[F123]
will, meantime, enjoy the blessings and rewards of that
glorious period, up to its very close; but unless their sanctification
shall by that time extend to the very thoughts and
intents of their hearts they will not be fit for the everlasting
conditions beyond the Millennial age, into which nothing
shall enter that is not in absolute conformity to the divine
will in thought, word and deed.
But while thus tracing sanctification as a general principle
and its operations in the future upon the world, let us
not lose sight of the fact that the Scriptures were written
specially "for our admonition"--for the admonition of the
New Creation. When the world's time shall have come for
its instruction along the lines of sanctification, it will have
the Great Teacher: the Sun of Righteousness will then be
flooding all the earth with the knowledge of God. There
will no longer be a Babel of confusing theories and doctrines;
for the Lord has promised respecting that day,
saying, "I will turn unto the people a pure language [message],
that they may all call upon the name of the Lord, to
serve him with one consent." (Zeph. 3:9) The Apostle is
addressing
the New Creation only, when he declares that
Christ "of God is made unto us wisdom, justification, sanctification
and deliverance." Let us, therefore, give the more
earnest heed unto these things written for our instruction
and evidently necessary to us if we would make our calling
and election sure to participation in the New Creation.
As the Lord said to the typical Israelites, "Sanctify yourselves"
and "I will sanctify you" (Lev. 20:7,8; Ex. 31:13), so
also he directs the spiritual Israelite to consecrate himself,
to present his body a living sacrifice, to offer up himself to
God in and through the merit of Christ's atonement; and
only those who do this during the "acceptable time" the
Lord accepts and sets apart as holy, writing their names in
the Lamb's book of life (Rev. 3:5), and apportions to them
the crowns of glory, honor and immortality which shall be
theirs if they prove faithful to all of their engagements,
which, we are assured, is only a "reasonable service." Rev. 3:11
[F124]
As the consecration of the Levites in the type was a
measurable consecration to follow righteousness, but not a
consecration to sacrifice, so this next step of sanctification
which belongs to those who accept God's call to the Royal
Priesthood was symbolized in the type by the consecration
of Aaron and his sons in the priestly office--a consecration
to sacrifice. It was symbolized by white linen robes representing
righteousness, justification, and by the anointing oil
and by the sacrificing, in which all the priests participated.
Heb. 8:3
In the Levitical types two consecrations are distinctly
shown: (1) the general consecration of all the Levites; (2) a
special consecration of the few Levites who were sacrificers or
priests. The first represents the general consecration to holy
living and obedience to God which all believers make, and
which by God's grace, through Christ, accomplishes for
them, tentatively, "justification of life" and peace with God.
This is what all true believers understand and experience in
this age. But, as the Apostle explains, "the end of the commandment
is love out of a pure heart" (1 Tim. 1:5); that is
to say, God foresees that our compliance with our first consecration,
our compliance with the terms of our justification
during the present age will, in its end, lead us up to the
second consecration as priests for sacrifice.
How so? Because holy living and obedience to God includes
"love out of a pure heart" for God and for our fellowmen.
Love for God means "with all our heart, mind, being
and strength"; and such love will not wait for commands
but will appeal for service, saying, "Lord, what wilt thou
have me to do?" Every faithful "Israelite indeed" at the first
advent had this primary consecration--typified in the Levites
--and to such the Lord gave the special Gospel call, to
consecrate to death, to sacrifice their earthly interests for
the heavenly, to fall in line as footstep followers of Jesus, the
Captain of our Salvation, in the narrow way to glory,
honor and immortality. Such as obeyed the invitation were
accepted as priests, members of the body of the High Priest
of our Profession, "sons of God." John 1:12
[F125]
Throughout the Gospel age the same plan of procedure
prevails: (1) the consecration to obedience and righteousness
--as antitypical Levites; then a finding that righteousness
means supreme love to God and a desire to know
and do his will; then, later, a realization that now all creation
is so warped and twisted and out of harmony with God
that harmony with him means inharmony with all unrighteousness
in our own flesh as well as in others; then a
looking and crying to the Lord to know why he called us
and accepted our consecration and yet seemingly has not
made this possible except by self-sacrifice. In answer to this
cry the Lord instructs that, "Ye were called in one hope of
your calling" (Eph. 4:4), and that the calling is to
joint-heirship
with our Lord in the glory, honor and immortality
of the Kingdom (Luke 12:32; Rom. 2:7), and that the
way
is narrow and difficult because the successful enduring of
these tests is indispensable to those whom he would thus
honor. (Matt. 7:14; Rom. 8:17) It was when we heard
God's call through the Apostle, "I beseech you, brethren,
...present your bodies living sacrifices, holy and acceptable
unto God, and your reasonable service," and accepted
the same and consecrated ourselves unto death, that we were
counted priests--of the "Royal Priesthood," members of the
Great High Priest of our profession (or order) Christ Jesus
--New Creatures.
Such believers as, after coming to a realization that "the
end of the commandment is love out of a pure heart," refuse
to go on to that end, refuse to accept the call to sacrifice,
and thus refuse to comply with the object of God in
their reckoned justification, come short of the covenant of
obedience to righteousness, because of the narrowness of
the way, and so refuse the "one hope of our calling." Do not
these "receive the grace of God [reckoned justification of
life] in vain"? Looking back to the ancient worthies, and noting
how it cost them much to obtain "a good report
through faith" and to "please God" and thus to maintain
their justification to fellowship (Heb. 11:5,32-39), can we
expect
that the justification to life, granted during this Gospel
[F126]
age to those who become antitypical Levites, can be maintained
by a less degree of loyalty of heart to the Lord and to
righteousness? Surely we must conclude that those tentatively
justified believers (antitypical Levites) who when
they "count the cost" (Luke 14:27,28) of discipleship to
which their consecration, already made, leads, and who
then decline to exercise faith in the Lord's promised aid,
and refuse or neglect to go on to perform their "reasonable
service," by making their consecration complete--even
unto death--such have been favored of the Lord in vain.
Surely they cannot be considered as really having justification
to life; or even justification to special fellowship with
God; thus they drop from the favored position of antitypical
Levites and are to be esteemed such no longer.
But amongst those who do appreciate God's favor, and
whose hearts do respond loyally to the privileges and "reasonable
service" of full consecration, and who undertake
the covenant of obedience to God and to righteousness even
unto death, are these two classes:
(1) Those antitypical Levites who gladly "lay down their
lives" voluntarily, seeking ways and means for serving the
Lord, the brethren and the Truth, and counting it a pleasure
and an honor thus to sacrifice earthly comforts, conveniences,
time, influence, means and all that compose present
life. These joyful, willing sacrificers, the antitypical priests
who ere long shall be glorified and, with their Lord, constitute
the "Royal Priesthood" who, their sacrificings then
completed, will be no longer typified by Aaron and his sons
performing sacrifices for the people, but by Melchizedek--a
priest upon his throne--distributing to the world, during
the Millennium, the blessings secured by the "better sacrifices"
during the antitypical Atonement Day--this Gospel
age.
(2) Another class of believers at heart loyally respond
and joyfully consecrate their all to the Lord and his "reasonable
service," and thus demonstrate their worthiness to
be of the antitypical Levites, because they receive not the
grace of God in vain. But, alas, although they respond to
[F127]
the call and thus come into the "one hope of our calling,"
and into all the privileges of the elect, yet their love and zeal
are not such as impel them to perform the sacrificing they
covenanted to do. These, because their love and faith are
not intense enough, fail to put, or to keep, their sacrifices on
the altar; hence, they cannot be counted full "copies" of our
great High Priest, who delighted to do the Father's will;
they fail to overcome and cannot therefore be reckoned
amongst the "overcomers" who shall share with their Lord
the heavenly Kingdom as members of the "Royal Priesthood";
they fail to make their calling and election sure by
full compliance with their covenant.
But what of these? Have they lost all by reason of running
for the prize and yet failing to reach the required test
of zeal and love to win it? No, thank God; even if under crucial
tests their faith and zeal were not found sufficient to
classify them among the priests, nevertheless their sufficiency
of faith and zeal to consecrate to death demonstrated
their sincerity of heart as Levites. However, it is not enough
that they consecrated fully; it must be demonstrated that they
at heart love the Lord and would not deny him at any cost,
even though not faithful enough to court sacrifice in his
service. What is this test which will confirm these as worthy
the Levites' portion under the Kingdom? and how will it
be applied?
We have already referred to this "great company" of the
Lord's truly consecrated people whose picture is outlined in
Revelation 7:13-15. "These are they which come out of the
great tribulation and they washed their robes and made
them white in the blood of the Lamb. Therefore are they
before [and not in] the throne of God, and they serve him
day and night [continually] in his temple [the Church]:
and he that sitteth in the throne shall spread his tabernacle
over them" [shall associate them with himself and his glorified
Bride in the spiritual condition and its services]. "Foolish
virgins!" They let slip their opportunity for becoming
members of the Bride; but they are, nevertheless, virgins,
pure in their heart-intentions. They miss the prize, but gain,
[F128]
later, through severe testings, a share at the nuptial feast
with the Bridegroom and Bride as "the virgins her companions
that follow her"; they also shall be brought near before
the King. "With gladness and rejoicing shall they be
brought; they shall enter into the King's palace." (Psa. 45:14,15)
As Levites they have failed to get the prize of
Royal Priesthood, but they are still Levites and may serve
God in his glorified temple, the Church, though they cannot
be either "pillars" or "living stones" in that temple.
(Rev. 3:12; 19:6,7; Psa. 45:14,15) The verse
following the
last citation calls to our attention the antitypical Levites of
the previous time, known to Israel after the flesh as "the fathers";
and assures us that they shall be rewarded by being
made "princes in all the earth."
Similarly, Levi's three sons (Kohath, Gershom and Merari)
seem to represent four classes. (1) Moses, Aaron and all
the priest-family of Amram (son of Kohath), whose tents
were in front [east] of the Tabernacle. These had full charge
of all things religious--their brethren--even all the Levites--
being their honored assistants or servants. (2) Camped on
the south side was the Kohath family, their closest of kin,
and these had charge of the most sacred articles--the Altars,
the Candlestick (lampstand), the Table and the Ark. (3)
Camped at the north side of the Tabernacle were the Levites
of the Merari family, next in honor of service, having
charge of the gold-covered boards and the posts, sockets,
etc. (4) Camped at the rear, was the Gershom family of
Levites, having charge of the least important services--the
porterage, etc., of the cords, outer curtains, gate, etc.
These distinct families of Levites may properly represent
four distinct classes of justified humanity when the reconciliation
is completed: the saints, or Royal Priesthood, the
ancient worthies, the "great company," and the rescued of
the world. As is not unusual in respect to types, the names
seem to be significant. (1) Amram's family chosen to be
priests: the name AMRAM signifies high people, or exalted
people. What a fitting name for the type of the "little flock"
whose head is Christ Jesus! "Highly exalted," "very high,"
are the Scriptural declarations of these priests. (2) KOHATH
[F129]
signifies ally, or comrade. It was from the Kohath family that
Amram's sons were chosen to be a new house of priests. The
Kohath family of Levites might, therefore, properly represent
the ancient worthies whose faith and obedience and
loyalty to God and willingness to suffer for righteousness
was so fully attested, and with whom we feel so close a kinship.
They were, indeed, the Lord's allies and ours; and in
some respects come nearer to the Christ every way than do
any others. (3) MERARI signifies bitterness; hence, the Merari
family of Levites would seem to represent the "great company"
of spirit-begotten ones who fail to win the prize of
Royal Priesthood, and are "saved so as by fire," coming up
through "great tribulation" and bitter experiences to the
position
of honor and service which they will occupy. (4) GERSHOM
signifies refugees, or rescued; hence, the Gershom family
of Levites would seem well to represent the saved world of
mankind, all of whom will be refugees succored and delivered,
rescued from the blindness and slavery of Satan.
So, then, first in order as well as in rank amongst these
antitypical Levites, or justified ones, will be the Royal
Priesthood, to whose care the Millennial Kingdom and every
interest will be committed. On their right hand will be
the closest of kin--the ancient worthies--whom they shall
"make princes in all the earth." Next on their left will be
their faithful brethren of the Great Company.* And last of
all will be those rescued from sin and death during the Millennium,
whose loyalty will have been fully attested in the
great trial with which the Millennial age will close.
Rev. 20:7-9
*The Author's later thought is that certain scriptures seem to teach that
the Ancient Worthies will not precede, but rank lower than the Great
Company during the Millennium, but that they will be received to spirit
nature and higher honors, at its close.
All of these classes of Levites will be such as have been
tested and have stood their tests of heart-loyalty. This does
not, however, imply that those now justified by faith, in the
tentative sense, and who neglect or refuse to go on and
accomplish the end of the commandment--love out of a
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pure heart--and who, therefore, receive this grace of God in
vain will have no further opportunity. If when they "count
the cost" of participation in the priestly service of sacrifice
they decline the offer, their estimate of a "reasonable service"
to God is surely not to be praised and rewarded, but
neither would their unwisdom justly merit punishment;
otherwise, the call to glory, honor and immortality is not of
grace, but of necessity--not an invitation, but a command--
not a sacrifice, but an obligation. The lapsing, or annulling
of their justification leaves them still a part of the redeemed
world, just as they were before they accepted Christ by
faith, except that their increase of knowledge increases their
responsibility for right doing. In other words, the trial for
life or death everlasting at the present time involves only
those who willingly make a full consecration of themselves
to the Lord "even unto death." The remainder of the race is
not yet on judgment for life or death everlasting, and will
not be until the Millennial Kingdom has been established.
Meantime, however, each member of the world is, in proportion
to his light, either building or destroying character,
and thus making his Millennial conditions and eternal-life
prospects either better or worse, according as he either
obeys or disregards his knowledge and conscience.
With the fully consecrated, however, the matter is different.
By their fuller consecration, unto death, they renounce
the earthly life in toto, exchanging it for the spiritual,
which is to be theirs if faithful unto death--but not otherwise.
Hence, to these, disloyalty will mean death--everlastingly;
as surely as to the unfaithful of the world in the
close of the Millennium.
The Levites had, none of them, any inheritance in the
land of Canaan. This is significant of the fact that having
consecrated their all to the Lord, and being at heart fully in
accord with his righteousness, the imperfect conditions of
the present time of sin are not their inheritance. Canaan represented
the conflict condition of the trial-state; the conquering
of enemies, overcoming of evils, etc., especially
during the Millennium; but God has provided a better, a
sinless and perfect inheritance for all whom he fully justifies
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as antitypical Levites. The first to enter this better inheritance
will be the Priests, who will constitute the First Resurrection
and be perfected to the divine nature; the "Ancient
Worthies" will come next, and enter perfect inheritance
by resurrection as perfect human beings;* the
"Great Company" will be next in order and will be perfected
on the spirit-plane; and last of all the Gershom class,
educated and uplifted and tested during the Millennium,
will enter its inheritance by that gradual resurrection, or
uplifting from death to life, to be fully attained at the close
of the Millennium.
*See footnote, page 129.
As only those believers who make consecration to the utmost
--"even unto death"--are begotten of the holy Spirit
and counted members of the Great High Priest, so the types
illustrated; for the Levites in general did not receive of
the holy anointing oil, typical of the holy Spirit, but only
the sacrificers, the priests. These were all sprinkled with the
oil mixed with blood, to show that the holy Spirit granted
to the members of Christ is theirs only by virtue of the
shedding of blood: (1) the sacrifice of Christ Jesus on their
behalf, justifying them; and (2) their pledge to joint-sacrifice
with Christ--laying down their lives in his service.
Exod. 29:21
The anointing of the High Priest was a still different matter,
and represented the oneness, the solidarity, of the elect
Church; for this anointing came only upon the one who
was to officiate as chief priest--upon Aaron only at first; but
upon each of his sons as they succeeded to the office of chief
priest "to minister unto me in the priest's office."
(Exod. 28:41; 40:13,15) Christ Jesus our Lord, as the Head of the
Church
which is his body, "was anointed with the oil of gladness
[the holy Spirit] above [head over] his fellows" or joint-heirs,
the under members of the "Royal Priesthood." It was all
poured upon him, and "of his fulness [abundance] have all
we received, and favor upon favor." It was an "unspeakable
gift" that we were pardoned and justified through the merit
of his sacrifice; yea, it is almost beyond belief that we
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should be called to be his joint-heirs in the Kingdom and
have our consecration "sealed" with the sprinkling of the
blood and oil and come under the anointing of our Head.
The prophet David was guided by the Lord to give us a
pen-picture of the Anointing, and how it was all poured
upon our Head and must run down to us from him. (Psa. 133:1-3; 45:7;
Luke 4:18) The members of the Church are
the "brethren" whose spirit impels them to "dwell together
in unity." All who are one with the Head must be in sympathy
with fellow-members of his Body the Church--and only
proportionately do they receive of the holy Spirit of Anointing.*
This holy anointing oil represented the holy Spirit
and the enlightenment which it gives to all those whom
God accepts as probationary members of this Royal Priesthood,
the New Creation, each of whom is "sealed," or
marked, or indicated by the holy Spirit given unto him, as
already shown.+
*Vol. V, Chap. ix.
+Ibid.
All thus marked by the holy Spirit as prospective members
of the New Creation are assured by the Lord, "They are not
of the world, even as I am not of the world." "I have chosen
you [out of the world], and ordained you, that ye should go
and bring forth fruit, and that your fruit should remain."
"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." (John 15:16,19; 17:16)
Although these marks of sanctification may, to
some extent, be discerned by the world, we are not, therefore,
to expect that they will bring the world's admiration
or approval; but, rather, that they will consider these evidences
of the holy Spirit upon the New Creatures as evidences
of weakness and effeminacy. The world appreciates
and approves what it would designate a robust and
strenuous life--not righteous over-much. Our Lord explains
to us why the world would not approve his followers;
namely, because the darkness hateth the light--because the
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standard of his Royal Priesthood for thought and word and
action would be higher than the standard of mankind in
general, and would, therefore, seem to more or less condemn
their course. The world desires rather to be approved,
to be flattered; and whatever in any degree casts reflection
upon it is to that extent avoided, if not opposed. This disapproval
of the worldly-wise of Christendom constitutes a
part of the testing of the Royal Priesthood; and if their consecration
be not a most hearty one they will so miss the fellowship
of the world and so crave its approval that they will
fail to carry out in the proper spirit the sacrificing of earthly
interests which they have undertaken--fail to be priests;
hence, fail to be of the New Creation. However, on account
of their good intentions, the Lord may bring them through
the fiery trials, for the destruction of the flesh which they had
not the zeal to sacrifice: thus they may be counted worthy of
a share in the blessings and rewards of the Great Company
that shall come up out of great tribulation to serve before
the throne, in which the little flock will sit with the Lord.
Sanctification has not only two parts, namely, man's part
of entire consecration, and God's part of entire acceptance,
but it has additionally an element of progression. Our consecration
to the Lord, while it must be sincere and entire, in
order to be accepted of him at all, is nevertheless accompanied
by a comparatively small amount of knowledge and
experience; we are, therefore, to grow in sanctification
daily, as we grow in knowledge. Our hearts were filled at
the beginning, casting out all self-will, but the capacity of
our hearts was small: as they grow, as they enlarge, the
sanctification must keep pace, filling every part: thus the
Apostle exhorts, "Be ye filled with the Spirit"; and again,
"Let the love of God be shed abroad in your hearts and
abound more and more." The provision made for this enlargement
of our hearts is expressed in the words of our
Redeemer's prayer for us, "Sanctify them through thy
truth; thy Word is truth." John 17:17
It was the Word, or message of God, the "wisdom" of God
through Christ, which began to manifest toward us divine
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favor and which led us step by step up to the point of consecration;
and now it is the same Word, or message of God
through Christ, that is to enlarge our hearts as well as to fill
them. But while it is for God to supply the truth that is to
fill and sanctify us, it is for us to manifest that consecrated
condition of heart in which we will hunger and thirst after
that sanctifying truth--will feed upon it daily, and thus be
enabled to grow strong in the Lord and in the power of his
might. It is not sufficient that we make a consecration to the
Lord; he desires not mere candidates for the New Creation.
These must be drilled, disciplined and tried in order to the
bringing forward and developing of the various features of
character, and each feature submitted to a thorough proof
of loyalty to God, thus to insure that, being tested and tried
in all points, these New Creatures should be found faithful
to him who "called" them, and so be accounted worthy to
enter into the glorious joys of their Lord by participation in
the First Resurrection.
As this justification to fellowship brought peace with
God, so this next step of a full consecration to the Lord of
every interest and affair of life, every hope and ambition,
exchanging earthly hopes and ambitions and blessings for
the heavenly ones proffered to the New Creation, brings a
great and grand relief, a great rest of heart, as we realize
more and more, and appropriate to ourselves, the exceeding
great and precious promises which God has made to the
New Creation. These promises are briefly comprehended in
the one that, "All things shall work together for good to
them that love God, to the called [ones] according to his
purpose." (Rom. 8:28) This is the Second Blessing in the
true sense of that expression. Not, however, that it is accompanied
by outward manifestations of the flesh, but that it
ushers our hearts into a profound rest, into a full confidence
in God, and permits a hearty application to ourselves of the
exceeding great and precious promises of the Scriptures.
On account of differences of temperament, there will,
necessarily, be differences of experience in connection with
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this full consecration. To some a full surrender to the Lord,
and a realization of his special care for them as members of
the prospective elect Church, will bring merely a satisfying
peace, a rest of heart; while to others of a more exuberant
nature it will bring an effervescence of joy and praise and
jubilation. We are to remember these differences of natural
temperament, and to sympathize with those whose experiences
are different from our own, remembering that similar
differences were exhibited amongst the twelve apostles;
that some--especially Peter, James and John--were more
demonstrative than the others in respect to all of their experiences
--including those of Pentecost. Let the brethren of
exuberant and effervescent disposition learn the moderation
which the Apostle commanded; and let the brethren
who by nature are rather too cold and prosaic, pray and
seek for a greater appreciation of, and greater liberty in
showing forth, the praises of him who hath called us out of
darkness into his marvelous light. Let us remember that
James and John, two of the specially beloved of the Lord,
called the "sons of thunder" because of their zeal and impetuosity,
needed, on one occasion at least, admonition and
correction along this line--to remember of what spirit they
were. (Luke 9:54,55) The Apostle Peter, another of the beloved
and zealous, on the one hand was blessed for his
prompt acknowledgment of the Messiah; yet on another
occasion was reproved as an adversary, because of misdirected
zeal. Nevertheless, the Lord showed distinctly his
appreciation of the warm, ardent temperament of these
three, in the fact that they were his close companions, the
only ones taken with him into the Mount of Transfiguration,
and into the room where lay the maid, Jairus'
daughter, whom our Lord awakened from the sleep of
death; and they were, also his special companions, a little
nearer than the others, in Gethsemane's garden. The lesson
of this to us is, that zeal is pleasing to the Lord, and means
closeness to him; but that it must always reverence the
Head and be guided by his Word and Spirit.
[F136]
Sanctification does not mean human perfection, as some
have misinterpreted it: it does not change the quality or order
of our brains, nor remove the blemishes of our bodies
miraculously. It is a consecration or devotion of the will,
which through Christ is accepted of the Lord as perfect: it is
a consecration of the body to sacrifice--"even unto death"--
and that body, as we have seen, is not made actually perfect
through justification by faith, but merely reckonedly perfect
according to our will, our heart, our intention. The new
will, as the Apostle exhorts, should seek to bring every
power, every talent, every opportunity of its body into full
accord with the Lord, and should seek to exercise an influence
in the same direction upon all men with whom it
comes in contact. This will not mean that in the few short
years--five, ten, twenty, fifty--of the present life, it will be
able to bring its own poor, imperfect body (or the imperfect
bodies of others, of which it is a specimen) to perfection. On
the contrary, the Apostle assures us in connection with the
Church, that in death it is "sown in corruption, sown in
weakness, sown in dishonor, sown an [imperfect] natural
body"; and that not until in the Resurrection we are given
new bodies, strong, perfect, glorious, immortal, honorable,
will we have attained the perfection which we seek, and
which the Lord promises shall be ours eventually, if in the
present time of weakness and imperfection we manifest to
him the loyalty of our hearts.
However, heart-loyalty to the Lord will mean continual
effort to bring all the conduct of our lives, yea, the very
thoughts and intents of our hearts, into subjection to the divine
will. (Heb. 4:12) This is our first duty, our continual
duty, and will be the end of our duty because, "This is the
will of God, even your sanctification." "Be ye holy; for I
[the Lord] am holy." (1 Thess. 4:3; 1 Pet. 1:16) Absolute
holiness is to be the standard which our minds can gladly
and fully endorse and live up to but to which we will never
attain actually and physically so long as we are subject to
the frailties of our fallen natures and the besetments of the
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world and the Adversary. But day by day as we are "taught
of God," as we come to a fuller knowledge of his glorious
character, and as the appreciation of it more and more fills
our hearts, the New Mind will more and more gain influence,
strength, power, over the weaknesses of the flesh,
whatever they may be--and these weaknesses vary with the
different members of the body.
True sanctification of the heart to the Lord will mean
diligence in his service; it will mean a declaration of the
good tidings to others; it will mean the building up of one
another in the most holy faith; it will mean that we should
do good unto all men as we have opportunity, especially to
the household of faith; it will mean that in these various
ways our lives, consecrated to the Lord, shall be laid down
for the brethren (1 John 3:16) day by day, opportunity by
opportunity, as they shall come to us; it will mean that our
love for the Lord, for the brethren, for our families and,
sympathetically, for the world of mankind, will increasingly
fill our hearts as we grow in grace, knowledge and
obedience to the Divine Word and example. Nevertheless,
all these exercisings of our energies for others are merely so
many ways in which, by the Lord's providences, our own
sanctification may be accomplished. As iron sharpeneth iron, so
our energies on behalf of others bring blessings to ourselves.
Additionally, while we should more and more come to that
grand condition of loving our neighbors as ourselves--especially
the household of faith--yet the mainspring back of all
this should be our supreme love for our Creator and Redeemer,
and our desire to be and to do what would please
him. Our sanctification, therefore, must be primarily toward
God and first affect our own hearts and wills, and, as
a result of such devotion to God, find its exercise in the
interest of the brethren and of all men.
Sanctified through the Truth
From the foregoing it is manifest that the sanctification
which God desires--the sanctification essential to attainment
[F138]
of a place in the New Creation--will not be possible to
any except those who are in the school of Christ, and who
learn of him--are "sanctified through the truth." Error will
not sanctify, neither will ignorance. Moreover, we are not
to make the mistake of supposing that all truth tends to
sanctification: on the contrary, although truth in general is
admirable to all those who love truth and who correspondingly
hate error, our Lord's word for it is that it is only "Thy
truth" which sanctifies. We see the whole civil world ostensibly
racing, chasing each other and contending for
truth. Geologists have one part of the field, Astronomers
another, Chemists another, Physicians another, Statesmen
another, etc.; but we do not find that these various
branches of truth-searching lead to sanctification. On the
contrary, we find that, as a rule, they lead in the reverse direction;
and in accord with this is the declaration of the
Apostle that "the world by wisdom knows not God." (1 Cor. 1:21)
The fact is that in the few short years of the present
life, and in our present fallen, imperfect and depraved
condition, our capacity is entirely too small to make worth
our while the attempt to take in the entire realm of truth on
every subject; hence, we see that the successful people of the
world are specialists. The man who devotes his attention to
astronomy will have more than he can do to keep up with
his position--little time for geology or chemistry or botany
or medicine or the highest of all sciences "Thy truth"--the
divine
plan of the ages. It is in view of this that the Apostle,
who himself was a well-educated man in his time, advises
Timothy to "beware of human philosophies" (theories and
sciences) falsely so-called. The word science signifies truth,
and the Apostle, we may be sure, did not mean to impugn
the sincerity of the scientists of his day, nor to imply that
they were intentional falsifiers; but his words do give us the
thought, which the course of science fully attests, that, although
there is some truth connected with all these sciences,
yet the human theories called sciences are not truth--not
absolutely correct. They are merely the best guesses that the
most attentive students in these departments of study have
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been able to set forth; and these--as history clearly shows--
from time to time contradict each other. As the scientists of
fifty years ago repudiated the science of previous times, so
are the deductions and methods of reasoning of these in
turn repudiated by the scientists of today.
The Apostle Paul was not only a wise man and a fully
consecrated one, and a member of the Royal Priesthood,
better qualified naturally than many of his fellows to run
well in the footsteps of the great High Priest, but, additionally,
as one of the chosen "twelve apostles of the Lamb,"
taking the place of Judas, he was a subject of divine guidance
--especially in respect to his teachings--designed of the
Lord to be an instructor to the household of faith throughout
the entire Gospel age. The words of such a noble exemplar
of the faith, no less than the example of his
consecration, should be weighty with us as we study the
course upon which we, as consecrated and accepted members
of the Royal Priesthood, have entered. He exhorts us
that we lay aside every weight and every close-girding sin,
and run with patience the race set before us, looking unto
Jesus, the author of our faith, until he shall become the finisher
of it. (Heb. 12:2) And as an admonition, he holds up
his own experiences to us, saying, "This one thing I do." I
have found that my full consecration to the Lord will not
permit the diffusion of my talents in every direction, nor
even for the study of every truth. The truth of God's revelation,
as it has come into my heart and increasingly directs
its already sanctified and consecrated talents, has shown me
clearly that if I want to win the great prize I must give my
whole attention to it, even as those who seek for earthly
prizes give their whole attention accordingly. "This one
thing I do--forgetting the things that are behind [forgetting
my former ambitions as a student, my former hopes as a
Roman citizen and a man of more than average education;
forgetting the allurements of the various sciences and the
laurels which they hold forth to those who run in their
ways] and reaching forward to the things which are before
[keeping the eye of my faith and hope and love and devotion
[F140]
fixed upon the grand offer of joint-heirship with my
Lord in the divine nature, and in the great work of the
Kingdom for the blessing of the world], I press down upon
the mark for the prize of the high calling." Phil. 3:13,14
Emotion Not Sanctification
There is much confusion of thought amongst Christian
people respecting the evidences or proofs of the Lord's acceptance
granted to the faithful sacrificers of this age. Some
mistakenly expect an outward manifestation, such as was
granted to the Church at the beginning in the Pentecostal
blessing.* Others expect some inward, joyous sensations,
which expectation, if not realized, causes disappointment
and lifelong doubt respecting their acceptance with the
Lord. Their expectations are built largely upon the testimonies
of brethren who have experienced such exuberance.
It is important, therefore, that all should learn that the
Scriptures nowhere warrant us in such expectations: that
we "are all called in the one hope of our calling," and that
the same promises of forgiveness of past sins, of the smile of
the Father's countenance, of his favor assisting us to run
and to attain the prize he offers us--grace sufficient for every
time of need--belong alike to all coming under the conditions
of the call. The Lord's people differ widely,
however, in the manner in which they receive any and every
promise, temporal or spiritual, from man or from God.
Some are more volatile and emotional than others, and,
hence, more demonstrative both in manner and word if describing
the very same experiences. Besides, the Lord's dealings
with his children evidently vary to some extent. The
great Head of the Church, our Lord Jesus, when at thirty
years of age he made a full consecration of his all, even unto
death, to do the Father's will, and when he was anointed
with the holy Spirit without measure, was not, so far as we
are informed, granted any exuberant experiences. Doubtless,
however, he was filled with a realization that his course
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was the right and proper one; that the Father approved it,
and that it would have the divine blessing, whatever experiences
that might mean. Nevertheless, instead of being
taken to the mountain top of joy, our Lord was led by the
Spirit into the wilderness; and his first experiences as a New
Creature, begotten of the Spirit, were those of severe temptation.
The Adversary was permitted to assail him, and
sought to move him from his devotion to the Father's will
by suggesting to him other plans and experiences for accomplishing
the work which he had come to do--plans
which would not involve him in a sacrificial death. And so
we believe it is with some of the Lord's followers at the moment
of, and for a time after, their consecration. They are
assailed with doubts and fears, suggestions of the Adversary,
impugning divine wisdom or divine love for the necessity
of our sacrificing earthly things. Let us not judge one
another in such matters, but if one can rejoice in an ecstasy
of feeling, let all the others who have similarly consecrated
rejoice with him in his experience. If another, having consecrated,
finds himself in trial and sorely beset, let the others
sympathize with him and let them rejoice, too, as they realize
how much his experience is like that of our Leader.
*See Vol. V, Chap. ix.
Those dear men of God, John and Charles Wesley, undoubtedly
were consecrated men themselves; and yet their
conceptions of the results of consecration not only did good
to some, but, in a measure, did injury to others, by creating
an unscriptural expectation which could not be realized by
all and, therefore, through discouragement worked evil to
such. It was a great mistake on their part to suppose and
teach that consecration to the Lord meant in every case the
same degree of exuberant experience. Those born of Christian
parents and reared under the hallowed influences of a
Christian home, instructed in respect to all the affairs of life
in accord with the faith of their parents and the instruction
of the Word of God, and who, under these circumstances
had ever sought to know and to do the divine will, should
not expect that upon reaching years of discretion and making
a consecration of themselves individually to the Lord,
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they would have the same overflowing joy that might be experienced
by another who had up to that time been a prodigal,
an alien, a stranger, and a foreigner to holy things.
The conversion of the latter would mean a radical
change, and turning toward God of all of life's currents and
forces previously running away from God and into sin and
selfishness; but the former, whose sentiments and reverence
and devotion had, from earliest infancy, been properly directed
by godly parents toward the Lord and his righteousness,
could feel no such abrupt change or revolution of
sentiment, and should expect nothing of the kind. Such
should realize that, as the children of believing parents,
they had been under divine favor up to the time of their
personal responsibility, and that their acceptance at this
time meant a full endorsement of their past allegiance to
God and a full consecration of all their talents, powers and
influences for the Lord and his truth and his people. These
should realize that their consecration was only their "reasonable
service"; and should be instructed from the Word
that, having thus fully presented their already justified humanity
to God, they may now appropriate to themselves in
a fuller degree than before the exceeding great and precious
promises of the Scriptures--which belong only to the consecrated
and their children. If, additionally, they are then
granted a clearer insight into the divine plan, or even into
the beginning of it, they should consider this an evidence of
divine favor toward them in connection with the high calling
of this Gospel age, and they should rejoice therein.
The Apostle's expression, "We walk by faith and not by
sight," is applicable to the entire Church of this Gospel age.
The Lord's desire is to develop our faith--that we should
learn to trust him where we cannot trace him. With a view
to this, he leaves many things partially obscure, so far as human
sight or judgment is concerned, to the intent that faith
may be developed in a manner and to a degree that would
be impossible if signs and wonders were granted to our
earthly senses. The eyes of our understanding are to be
opened toward God through the promises of his Word--
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through a discernment and understanding of the truth--to
bring us joy of faith in the things not seen as yet, and not
recognized by us naturally.
Even this opening of the eyes of our understanding is a
gradual matter, as the Apostle explains. He prays for those
who are already in the Church of God, addressed as the
"saints" or consecrated, that the eyes of their understanding
might be opened, that they might be able to comprehend
with all saints (as none others can comprehend)
more and more the lengths and breadths and heights and
depths of the knowledge and love of God. This thought,
that the spiritual blessings of the New Creature, which follow
his consecration, are not tangible to his earthly senses,
but merely to his faith, is illustrated in the Tabernacle pictures
--the outer veil of the first "Holy" hiding its sacred
contents, typical of deeper truths, even from the Levites
(types of the justified). Those might be known, or appreciated,
only by such as entered the Holy, as members of the
Royal Priesthood.*
*See Tabernacle Shadows of the Better Sacrifices, p. 117.
The exuberance of feeling which comes to some because
of temperament, is not infrequently lost by them for the
same reason; but the experience and blessing and joy which
they may have perpetually, if they continue to abide in the
Lord, seeking to walk in his footsteps, are the joys of faith
which earthly clouds and troubles cannot dim, and which it
is the divine will shall never be obscured in matters spiritual,
except, perhaps, for a moment, as in the case of our
Lord when on the cross he cried, "My God, my God, why
hast thou forsaken me!" As it was needful that our Master,
in taking the place of condemned Adam, should taste all of
Adam's experiences as a sinner, hence he must pass through
these experiences even though but for a moment. And who
will say that such a dark moment might not be permitted
even to the most worthy of the followers of the Lamb? Such
experiences, however, surely would not be long permitted,
and the soul which trusted the Lord in the dark moment
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would be abundantly repaid for the exercise of faith and
trust when the cloud had passed and the sunshine of the
Lord's presence again shone in.
A different cause of measurable darkness is suggested by
the poet in the lines:
"O! may no earth-born cloud arise
To hide thee from thy servant's eyes!"
The clouds which come between the fully consecrated
children of God and their Heavenly Father and their elder
Brother are usually earth-born--the result of allowing the
affections to gravitate to earthly things instead of setting
them upon the things above; the result of neglecting the
consecration vow; neglecting to spend and be spent in the
Lord's service; laying down our lives for the brethren, or
doing good unto all men as we have opportunity. At such
times, our eyes being attracted away from the Lord and his
guidance, the clouds speedily begin to gather, and ere long
the sunshine of communion and faith and trust and hope is
measurably obscured. This is a time of soul disease, unrest.
The Lord graciously permits such an affliction, but does
not cut us off from his favor. The hiding of his face from us
is but to permit us to realize how lonely and unsatisfactory
our condition would be if it were not for the sunshine of his
presence, which illumines our way and makes all of life's
burdens seem light; as the poet again has expressed the
matter:
"Content with beholding his face,
My all to his pleasure resigned,
No changes of season or place
Can make any change in my mind;
While blest with a sense of his love,
A palace a toy would appear;
And prisons would palaces prove,
If Jesus still dwelt with me there."
"Who Healeth All Thy Diseases"
"Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits; who
forgiveth
all thine iniquities; who healeth all thy diseases; who redeemeth thy life
from destruction; who crowneth thee with loving-kindness and tender mercies;
who satisfieth thy mouth with good things; so that thy youth is renewed like
the eagle's." Psalm 103:2-5
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While the Lord permits such diseases as we have just referred
to to come to the New Creatures, he stands prepared
to heal them when they come into the proper attitude of
heart. The throne of the heavenly grace is to be approached
for such soul disease--such leanness of the New Creature--
that spiritual life and vitality and health may return in the
light of divine favor. The Apostle's exhortation is that we
"come boldly [courageously, confidently] unto the throne
of grace that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help
in time of need." (Heb. 4:16) All of the New Creatures have
experiences along this line; and those who are rightly exercised
by them grow stronger and stronger in the Lord and
in the power of his might, so that even their stumblings and
weaknesses--their necessity of calling for help and laying
hold by faith upon the arm of the Lord--are means of spiritual
blessing to them by which they grow in a manner that
they could not do were they freed from trials and difficulties,
and if the Lord did not withdraw his shining countenance
from their hearts when they become cold or
overcharged or neglectful of their spiritual privileges. Every
time the New Creature finds it necessary to seek mercy and
help, he has a fresh reminder of the necessity of the Redeemer's
atoning work--realizing that Christ's sacrifice not only
sufficed for the sins that are past--for Adam's sin and for
our personal blemishes up to the time that we first came to
the Father through the merit of the Son--but that, in addition,
his righteousness by his one sacrifice for all, covers all
our blemishes, mental, moral and physical, that are not
willingly, wilfully ours. Thus the New Creature has a continual
reminder throughout his sojourn in the narrow way
that he was bought with a price, even the precious blood of
Christ; and his experiences, even in his failures, are continually
drawing him nearer to the Lord in appreciation both
of his past work as Redeemer and his present work as
Helper and Deliverer.
Many New Creatures, however, have not learned how to
deal with these soul sicknesses or diseases and are rather inclined
to say to themselves--"I have failed again. I can not
approach the throne of heavenly grace until I have demonstrated
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to the Lord my good intentions by gaining a victory."
Thus they defer what should be their very first
procedure. Seeking in their own strength to gain the victory,
and with their minds harassed by their previous weakness,
they are in no proper condition to "fight a good fight
of faith" with either their own flesh or the Adversary, and
defeat is tolerably sure to come; and with it will come a
gradual cessation of appealing to the Lord, and a growing
submission to the intervening clouds which hide from them
the sunshine of divine favor. These clouds they gradually
come to esteem as in their case unavoidable.
The very opposite course should be pursued: As soon as
the error of word or act or deed has been recognized and the
injury to another made good as far as possible, the throne of
grace should be promptly sought--sought in faith, nothing
doubting. We are not to think of our Lord as wishing to find
occasion against us, and as inclined to judge us harshly; but
are, on the other hand, to remember that his goodness and
mercy are such that he was prompted to provide for redemption
while we were yet sinners. Surely, after we have become
his children and have been begotten of the spirit, and
are seeking, however stumbling may be our best efforts, to
walk in his ways--after the spirit, not after the flesh--under
such circumstances his love must abound to us yet more
than when we were "children of wrath even as others." We
are to remember that like as a proper earthly father pitieth
his children, so the Lord pitieth those that reverence him.
We are to consider our best earthly friends and their sympathy
and love and compassion, and are to draw an analogy,
and to consider that God would be much more kind and
faithful than the very best of his creatures. He invites such
faith, such confidence--and he rewards it. All who had faith
enough to come to the Lord originally, have faith enough
to come to him day by day with their trials, difficulties and
shortcomings, if they will. If they suffer the clouds to come
between, and decline the invitation of the Word to come to
the throne of grace for peace and restored harmony, they
will ultimately be counted unworthy a place amongst the
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special class whom the Lord is selecting: "The Father seeketh
such to worship him"--such as both love and trust him.
"Without faith it is impossible to please him." "This is the
victory that overcometh the world, even our faith." John 4:23;
Heb. 11:6; 1 John 5:4
There are, of course, difficulties in the way, but the helps
and counsels necessary the Lord provides, both in his Word
and in those brethren whom he "sets" in the body for this
very purpose. (1 Cor. 12:18) It is a help, for instance, to see
just wherein lies the error of the course alluded to--to see
that in putting off our visit to the throne of grace to obtain
mercy, until we can bring something in our hands to justify
ourselves, is to show that we do not fully appreciate the
great lesson which for centuries God has been teaching;
namely, that we are all imperfect, and that we cannot do
the things we would; therefore, it was necessary that the
Redeemer should come for the purpose of lifting us up. He
who goes about to justify himself attempts the impossible,
and the sooner he learns it the better. Our reckonings with
the Lord should be day by day; and if the difficulty be considerable
or only a light one, and the heart of the consecrated
one is very tender and accustomed to continual
communion and fellowship with the Lord, he will find a
blessing in retiring to the throne of grace promptly as soon as
any difficulty arises, waiting not even for the close of the
day. But certainly nothing should be carried over night,
when the throne of grace is open to us at all times; to neglect
it would be to show a disposition contrary to that which the
Lord's Word inculcates.
The difficulty which some experience is, that after they
do come to the throne of grace they do not realize the blessing
that they seek--the forgiveness of sins and reconciliation
with the Father. Their difficulty may be one of three: (1)
They may lack the faith; and since the Lord's dealing in the
present time is according to faith, nothing can be obtained
without the faith. "According to thy faith be it unto thee."
(2) Their difficulty may be that they have not undone the
wrong which they did and are confessing; that they have
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not made amends for injury done to another; or that, if the
transgression has been against the Lord, they are seeking
peace without making confession to him and asking for his
forgiveness. (3) In not a few cases of this kind under our observation,
the difficulty has been that the suppliants never
had made a proper consecration to the Lord; they were seeking
divine peace and joy and the sunshine of favor--seeking
the blessings represented in the light of the Golden Candlestick
and in the Shewbread of the Tabernacle, while they
were still in reality outside of these things, outside of consecration
--outside, therefore, of the Royal Priesthood--
merely Levites who thus far have received the special grace
or privilege of the present time in vain.
The proper remedy for the lack of faith would be its cultivation
through study of God's Word, thinking upon his
goodness past and present, and striving to realize that he is
gracious, "exceeding abundantly" more than we could
have asked or thought. The remedy for the second difficulty
would be a prompt, full, thorough apology, and, so
far as possible, undoing of the wrong or compensation for
the damages, and then a return to the throne of grace in full
assurance of faith. The remedy for the third difficulty
would be to make the full consecration which the Lord demands
on the part of all who will enjoy the special privileges
and arrangements of this Gospel age.
Another class of the consecrated, but spiritually diseased,
needs consideration. These, apparently justified by faith
and sincere in their consecration, seem to make little or no
progress in controlling their flesh. Indeed, in some instances,
it would appear that their faith in God's goodness
and mercy, removing the brakes of fear, have left them
rather more exposed to temptation through weaknesses of
the flesh than they were at first--when they had less knowledge
of the Lord. These have experiences which are very
trying, not to themselves only, but to the entire household
of faith with whom they come in contact; their lives seem
to be a succession of failures and repentances, some along
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the lines of financial inconsistencies, others along the lines
of moral and social delinquencies.
What is the remedy for this condition of things? We answer
that they should be distinctly informed that the New
Creation will not be composed of those who merely covenant
self-denials and self-sacrifices in earthly things and to walk
not after the flesh but after the Spirit; but of those who, because
of faithfulness in the willing endeavor to keep this covenant,
will be counted overcomers by him who readeth the
heart. They should be instructed that the proper method of
procedure for all the consecrated is that, being made free by
the Son, they should be so anxious to attain all blessings incident
to divine favor, that they would voluntarily become
bond-servants--putting themselves under certain restrictions,
limitations, bondage, as respects their words, their
conduct, their thoughts--earnestly desiring of the Lord in
prayer the aid he has promised them, expressed in his words
to the Apostle, "My grace is sufficient for thee; my strength
is made perfect in weakness." Each time they find that they
have transgressed they should not only make amends to
those injured, but also make confession to the Lord, and by
faith obtain his forgiveness--they should promise greater
diligence for the future, and should increase the limitations of
their own liberties along the lines of weakness ascertained by
their latest failure.
Thus watching and praying, and setting guards upon the
actions and words of life, and bringing "every thought into
captivity" to the will of God in Christ (2 Cor. 10:5), it
will
surely not be long until they can assure themselves and the
brethren also respecting the sincerity of their hearts, and
walk in life so circumspectly that all may be able to discern,
not only that they have been with Jesus, but also that they
have learned of him, and have sought and used his assistance
in gaining victories over their weaknesses. The cases
of such brethren or sisters would come under the head of
what the Apostle terms "walking disorderly"--not after the
example of the Lord and the apostles. In another chapter
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we will see the Lord's direction respecting the manner in
which those weak in the flesh and who bring dishonor and
discredit upon the Lord's cause should be treated by the
brethren.
Here we remark, however, that so long as they give evidence
of repentance for their wrong course and a desire of
heart to go in the right way and of continued faith and trust
in the Lord, they must be esteemed as brethren--however
necessary it may be to restrict fellowship with them until
they have given some outward, tangible demonstration of
the power of grace in their hearts in the restraint of their
fleshly weaknesses. Nevertheless, they are still to be encouraged
to believe that the Lord is very merciful to those who
trust him and who at heart desire his ways, although they
cannot be encouraged to expect that they could ever be
counted worthy of the overcoming class unless they become
so earnest in their zeal for righteousness that their flesh will
show some considerable evidence of its subjection to the
New Mind.
We have seen some of the Lord's consecrated people in a
lean and starved condition--earnestly desiring a fulness of
fellowship with him, yet lacking the necessary instruction
as to how it should be attained and maintained. True, they
had the Bible; but their attention was called away from
that and they learned to look more to teachers and catechisms,
etc., running after the traditions of men and not after
the Mind or Spirit of God, and have, therefore, lacked
the proper spiritual nourishment. The result has been that
they have felt dissatisfied with formalism, and yet knew not
how to draw nigh unto the Lord with their whole heart, because
they knew not of his goodness and the riches of his
grace in Christ Jesus, and of the grand plan of salvation for
the world by and by, nor of the call of the Church to the
New Nature. This starved condition needs, first of all, the
pure, "sincere milk of the Word," and afterward the "strong
meat" of the divine revelation. Such dear ones are not to be
despised nor neglected even though, after realizing the
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emptiness of churchianity in general, they have been inclined
to seek for something else to satisfy their heart-hunger
--something of worldly entertainments, etc. We
have known some of this class who had settled down to
seeming indifference to spiritual things after having vainly
tried in various directions to find some soul-satisfaction;
but receiving "Present Truth" they blossomed forth in the
spiritual graces and knowledge in a most remarkable manner.
We believe there are many more of such in the various
denominations, and that it is the privilege of those who
have received the light of Present Truth to lend them a
helping hand out of darkness into the marvelous light; out
of spiritual starvation into a superabundance of grace and
truth. But to be used of the Lord in blessing such, it is necessary
that both wisdom and grace from on high be sought in
the Word, and that these should be exercised kindly, faithfully
and persistently.
Tentative Justification Precedes Sanctification
We have observed that tentative justification is not
merely a mental assent to the fact that Christ died as man's
Redeemer and that certain blessings of reconciliation to
God were thus secured for the race, but that, additionally,
in order to become a justified believer a certain amount of
consecration is implied. Such justification implies a recognition
that sin is exceedingly sinful (Rom. 7:13), and a desire
to cease from it--to be free from its power as well as free
from its penalties--a desire, therefore, to be righteous in
harmony with the righteous Creator and in accord with all
of the laws of righteousness. It implies, moreover, that the
believer has set his mind, his will, to follow righteousness in all
of life's affairs. Faith in Jesus, accompanied by such consecration,
gives tentative justification, but does not imply
sacrifice. God has a right to demand that all of his creatures
shall approve righteousness and hate iniquity, or else
consider themselves aliens from him--his enemies. But God
does not demand that we shall sacrifice our lives in his service,
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nor for any other cause. Sacrifice, therefore, is set forth
in the Scriptures as a voluntary act--not demanded by the
law, even though it be, as the Apostle declares, a "reasonable
service," and he urges us--"I beseech you therefore,
brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies
a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, your reasonable
service." Rom. 12:1
With some, a consecration to sacrifice may follow very
soon after faith in the Lord and the desire to walk in his
ways of righteousness have been reached; but it must follow,
it cannot precede, because, as we have already seen, we
must be at least tentatively justified by faith before we
could have any dealings with God whatever, or enjoy fellowship
in any sense with him. With others, this justified
condition is attained and followed some time before any
thought of a complete consecration, or sacrifice of earthly interests
to the Lord and to his cause is even contemplated.
But, under present conditions, those who start to walk the
path of justification, the path of righteousness, the path of
harmony with God, will not go very far along this path before
they encounter opposition, either from within or from
the world or from the Adversary.
They find the path of righteousness a gradually ascending
one, becoming more steep, more difficult. To continue
along this path of righteousness, in the midst of present sinful
conditions, will ultimately cost the sacrifice of earthly interests,
earthly ambitions, earthly friendships, etc. Here the
parting of the ways is reached: the one, the upward path
leading to glory, honor, immortality, can be entered only
by a low gate of humility, self-denial and self-sacrifice. Entered,
it will be found to be a rugged way, in which, however,
the unseen ministering spirits help the pilgrims; and
in which the gracious promises of Christ, the Leader, shine
forth here and there for their encouragement, assuring of
grace sufficient, and help to the end of the journey; and perseverance
will show all things conspiring for their highest
good, their ultimate membership in the New Creation and
participation in the glorious work of the Millennial Kingdom.
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At this gateway, which signifies full consecration even to
sacrifice, many tentatively justified believers stand for quite
a little while counting the cost before they enter, listening
to the voice of invitation from the Word, and strengthening
their hearts to undertake the journey under its good
assurances.
Outside this gateway are numerous by-paths, by which
many who have come thus far have sought an easier road to
glory, honor, immortality--but all in vain. There are hundreds
of these by-ways, some creeping upward a little and
implying a certain amount of self-denial; others yielding
and going downward more and more toward the blessings
and prospects of the world. In none of these by-paths, however,
are the inspiring promises to be found which belong
only to those who enter the low gateway of sacrifice--to the
"narrow way" of fellowship with their Lord in the renouncement
of earthly ambitions for the attainment of intimate
association with Christ Jesus in the glory that shall
follow.
Joy and peace come from the moment of faith in the
Lord, the acceptance of his atonement, and the resolve to
follow righteousness and shun sin. This joy and peace are
complete until the low gateway to the narrow way is
reached; but when the pursuit of righteousness involves
self-denial and self-sacrifice, and this sacrifice is not made,
and the low gateway is not entered, the joy and peace of
divine favor are dimmed. They will not be entirely withdrawn,
however, for a time, while the sincere believer seeks
for other ways of serving righteousness, still loving it, and
still valuing divine favor, but holding back and refusing by
neglecting to enter it. Fulness of joy and peace cannot be
the portion of such, for all the while they realize that a full
consecration of their every power to the Lord would be but
a "reasonable service," a rational acknowledgment and return
for the divine favors already received in the forgiveness
of sins.
Many continue for long years in this attitude, while others
wander off in the ways of the world. None even become
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candidates for the New Creation unless they enter the low
gate of self-sacrifice. The Lord does not, for a considerable
time, cut these off from special privileges, granted them
merely with a view to leading them to the low gate; nevertheless,
in neglecting to enter it they virtually confess that
they have "received the grace of God [the forgiveness of sins
and leading up to this gate] in vain"; because, having come
to this condition, they refuse or neglect to avail themselves
of the "one hope of our calling." The Lord might properly
say to such--I withdraw from you at once all special privileges
of every kind. You were not more worthy of my favor
than the remainder of the world, and you shall have the
same privileges and opportunities that I intend to extend to
all humanity during the Millennial age; but no further special
privileges, mercies, care, attention, etc., from me in the
present life, nor preference in the life to come--but he does
not do this at once and has long patience with many.
The exceeding great and precious promises of the Lord's
Word--such, for instance, as those which assure us that "all
things work together for good to them that love God"--will
apply only to those who have been favored of God and led
to the low gate of self-sacrifice, and have gladly entered it,
for only such love God in the supreme degree--more than self.
"All things are theirs, for they are Christ's and Christ is
God's." They have entered the school of Christ, and all of
the instructions and encouragements and disciplines of life
with them shall be overruled accordingly, for their ultimate
preparation for the Kingdom. But such lessons and instructions
and blessings are not for those who refuse to enter the
school--who refuse to submit their wills to that of the great
Teacher.
Strictly speaking, those who receive the grace of God in
vain have no proper ground on which to approach the Lord
even in prayer; for why should any expect special care and
special privileges with the Lord while neglecting to make a
proper return for the blessings already received? Should he
reason that, because he has already received a blessing from
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the Lord unto wisdom and tentative justification, the Lord
would be bound to give him more mercies? Should he not
rather reason that, having received these blessings of the
Lord above and beyond the general favor thus far bestowed
upon the redeemed race, he already has had more than his
share?--that failing to follow on in harmony with the
Lord's will he should, rather, expect that further divine
mercies and favors would go beyond him to those who had
not thus far been so greatly privileged, and who, therefore,
had not to the same extent disdained the Lord's gracious
offer? But the Lord is very pitiful and of great mercy, and,
hence, we may expect that so long as any shall abide in the
attitude of faith the Lord will not wholly reject them.
What would be the remedy for those who find themselves
in this attitude, and desire to be fully the Lord's and fully to
claim his favors? We answer that their course should be to
make a full consecration of themselves to the Lord, surrendering
to him their wills in respect to all things--their aims,
their hopes, their prospects, their means, and even their
earthly loves should all be surrendered to the Lord; and in
exchange they should accept, as the law of their being and
the rule for future conduct, the guidance of his Word and
Spirit and Providences; assured that these will work out for
them, not only more glorious results as respects the life to
come, but also greater blessings of heart in the present life.
How shall they do this? We answer that it should be done
heartily, reverently, in prayer--the contract should be definitely
made with the Lord and, if possible, in an audible
voice; and divine grace, mercy and blessing should be
requested, as needful assistance in the carrying out of this
sacrifice.
And what should be done if any are "feeling after God,"
yet do not feel fully ready to make this complete surrender
to his will? We answer that they should go to the Lord in
prayer about the matter, and ask his blessing upon the
study of the Truth, that they might be enabled more and
more to realize, first, the reasonableness of the service; secondly,
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the sureness of the blessing to result; and, thirdly, his
faithfulness in keeping all the gracious promises of help and
strength made to the self-sacrificing class. They should ask
also that the Lord would enable them rightly to weigh and
value earthly things--that they might be enabled to realize
and, if necessary, to experience, how transitory and unsatisfactory
are all things connected with the selfishness of this
present time, and those things after which the natural mind
craves--that they might thus be able to make a consecration
and to appreciate the privilege of setting their affections
upon things above and not on things beneath, and
of sacrificing the latter for the former.
Another point arises here: In view of the fact that the
"high calling" is closed, and that, therefore, the consecrating
one could not be fully assured of an opportunity
to attain to the prize of the new nature and its glory, honor
and immortality--what difference would this make in respect
to the consecration? We answer that it should make
no difference: consecration is the only reasonable, proper
course for the Lord's people anyway--full consecration will
be required of those who would live and enjoy the blessings
of the Millennial age--nothing short of it. As for the opportunities
and rewards to accrue: we have already pointed
out that, to our understanding, many will yet be admitted
to the privileges of the "high calling," to take the places of
some who have already consecrated but will not "so run as
to obtain" the prize, and will, therefore, be counted out of
the race. But none, we may be sure, will be admitted to
those privileges unless first they have entered this low gate
of consecration and sacrifice.
It has probably been true of all who have entered the low
gate, that they did not see clearly and understand fully the
great and rich blessings which God has in store for his faithful
New Creation; they merely saw, at first, the reasonable
service, and afterwards learned more concerning the
lengths and breadths and heights and depths of God's
goodness and their high-calling privileges. So with those
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now entering: they cannot fully appreciate the heavenly,
spiritual things until first they have reached the point of
performing their reasonable service in a full consecration.
And we may be sure that any consecrating and performing
a full sacrifice of themselves in the interest of the Lord's
cause after the heavenly class is complete, will find that the
Lord has plenty of blessings of some other kind still to give;
and that all of his blessings are for such consecrators, self-sacrificers.
Possibly they may be counted in with the ancient
worthies who had the sacrificing disposition that
is pleasing to God, prior to the beginning of the "high
calling."
Erroneous Views of Sanctification
Considering the general confusion of thought prevalent
amongst Christians in respect to the divine plan, and the
justification and sanctification called for in the Scriptures,
it is not to be wondered at that considerable confusion prevails.
One erroneous view--held, however, by a comparatively
small proportion of the Lord's people, but by
them much to their own injury--is the claim of actual holiness
and perfection, represented sometimes in the statement
of its votaries that they "have not sinned for years," etc.
These find their parallels in the Pharisees of our Lord's day,
who "trusted in themselves that they were righteous, and
despised others," and who, feeling this self-righteousness,
neglected the privileges and mercies provided for them by
the Lord in his redemptive work.
These so-called "Holiness People" and "Sinless People,"
nevertheless, have their minds turned by this error to a considerable
degree away from faith in the Lord--faith in his
redemptive work--trust in the merit of his sacrifice, etc.; for
why should they rely upon his merit or grace if they can
and do keep the divine law perfectly? One difficulty leading
to their position is a lack of reverence for the Lord, and another
is a too high appreciation of themselves. A proper reverence
for the Lord would see his greatness, his majesty and,
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as his standard of holiness, the perfection of his own character;
and a proper estimate of themselves would speedily
convince them (as it does convince others) that they come
far short of the divine standard in word, in act and in
thought.
Another class of so-called "Holiness People" do not go to
the same extreme in this matter of claiming sinlessness, but,
acknowledging imperfection, claim holiness, entire sanctification,
etc., on the ground of seeking to avoid sin--to live
without sin, etc. As already shown, we fully concur in the
thought that all the truly consecrated must seek to avoid sin
to the extent of their ability. The mistake of those whom we
are criticizing is, that they consider that this avoidance of
sin is the sole object and purpose of their consecration.
They have misunderstood the matter entirely: no creature
of God ever had a right to sin; and, hence, abstaining from
sin--from that which he had no right to do--could not in
any proper sense be called or be considered a "sacrifice."
God's Word does not anywhere call upon us to sacrifice sins.
These dear friends, who go no further than such a consecration
to avoid sin, have gone only so far as all the justified
should go; and have not yet entered the low gate of self-sacrifice,
which means the giving up of those things which
are right, lawful and proper--the voluntary surrender of
them
that we may the better serve the Lord and his cause.
Christ Made Unto Us Redemption
The word redemption here is used in the sense of deliverance,
salvation, as the outcome of the redemptive work--
the result of a ransom, or a corresponding price given. The
thought contained in the word carries us down to the full
end of the Church's victory, the full-birth condition of the
New Creation--although in our text it may very properly
be applied also to the intermediate and incidental deliverances
of the faithful all along the narrow way, culminating
in salvation "to the uttermost" in the glory, honor and
immortality of the First Resurrection.
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The Apostle assures us that our Lord's sacrifice has obtained
for us "eternal redemption," completed an everlasting
deliverance from bondage to sin, and from its
penalty--death. (Heb. 7:25; 9:12) True, this redemption is
for the whole world; and our Lord will ultimately secure to
all who will come into harmony with the divine requirements
an everlasting redemption from both sin and its penalty
--death; but, as we have already seen,* this everlasting
deliverance, which will in the next age be made applicable
to the whole world, by bringing all to a knowledge of the
truth and under the domination of the Kingdom of God, is
in the present time applicable only to the household of
faith--and of these, only completely to those who now walk
self-sacrificingly in the footsteps of the High Priest as members
of the "Royal Priesthood." Their "eternal redemption"
from sin and death will be as members of the New
Creation, crowned with glory, honor, immortality.
*Tabernacle Shadows of the Better Sacrifices, p. 90.
Let us examine some other texts in which the same Greek
word Apolutrosis (deliverance, salvation) is rendered redemption.
Our Lord, pointing us forward to the salvation
then to be brought unto us through the First Resurrection,
says to some living at the end of the age, who discern certain
signs of the times, "Lift up your heads: for your redemption
draweth nigh." (Luke 21:28) The Apostle, speaking to the
same class of New Creatures, exhorts them, saying, "Grieve
not the holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the
day of redemption." (Eph. 4:30) In these texts, also,
we are referred
not to the work of redemption accomplished in the
sacrifice of our Lord, but to the results of that work as they
shall be accomplished in the perfecting of the Church,
which is his body, in the First Resurrection. In the same
epistle (1:7) the Apostle declares, "We have redemption
through his blood." He here refers evidently to the blessings
we enjoy in the present time through the merits of our
Lord's sacrifice, covering our blemishes and working out for
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us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory by
working in us to will and to do God's good pleasure. The
thought we would impress is that Christ is made unto us deliverance
in the present time--giving us the victory in present
conflicts, as he shall ultimately give us the complete victory
by making us perfect in his own likeness.
This thought is still further brought out by the same
writer, who assures us (Rom. 3:24) that God's grace has justified
us freely (and continues to maintain our justification
while we abide in Christ) "through the redemption which is
in Christ Jesus," and which will reach its completion, so far
as we are concerned, when we shall be made like him, and
shall see him as he is, and share his glory in the day of redemption
(deliverance). In the same epistle (8:23) the
Apostle speaks again of the completion of our redemption
or deliverance, and of how we must wait for it until God's
appointed time. After pointing us to the fact that "The
whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together...
waiting for the manifestation of the sons of God [the glorified
New Creation]," he adds, "and not only they, but we
ourselves also [called and begotten to the New Creation]
which have the first fruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves
groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the
redemption [deliverance] of our body"--the body of Christ,
the Church, of which Jesus is the Head and we prospective
members. This will be the end of the redemptive work with
us; for although we share many blessings and advantages
through the redemption in the meantime, we will not attain
our redemption in full until then. Rom. 8:20-23
Concerning our present condition--the share in the redemption
which already is ours--our Lord declares, "He
that believeth on me hath everlasting life" (John 6:47), and
the Apostle also, "He that hath the Son hath life." (1 John 5:12)
We are not to understand this believing to be merely a
mental assent to some facts connected with the divine plan
of salvation, but a faith in the atonement sacrifice and conduct
in accord with its opposition to sin--a living faith
which manifests itself in obedience of heart. Likewise we are
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not to understand the meaning to be that believers have
everlasting life in the full sense of the word--in the sense
that it shall be theirs eventually, through a share in the
First Resurrection. Rather we are to understand that consecrated
believers are begotten to newness of life, have the
new life begun in them, in the sense that their wills are accepted
of God as beginnings of the New Creatures which
they shall be in the First Resurrection.
We are to understand these statements in full harmony
with the Apostle's declaration that "we are saved by
hope"--by faith--reckonedly saved, not completely saved.
Hence it is that we are to wait with patience for the completion
of the good work which God has begun in us--to
wait for "the grace [salvation] that is to be brought unto
you at the revelation of Jesus Christ,"--"when he shall
come to be glorified in his saints." 2 Thess. 1:10; 1 Pet. 1:13
The redemption (deliverance) which is in Christ Jesus--
that which we enjoy now, as well as that which shall by and
by be completed in us--is everywhere in Scripture identified
with the sacrifice which our Lord made on our behalf.
While his death constituted the price of our penalty, his resurrection
was essential; for a dead Savior could not aid the
redeemed to get back to that which was lost. And our
Lord's own experiences in connection with the sacrifice, we
are assured, qualify him all the more for the great work of
delivering the groaning creation purchased by his blood.
The Apostle declares, "In that he himself hath suffered
being tempted, he is able to succor them that are
tempted"--able to deliver them from temptations which otherwise
might overpower them. "He will not suffer us to be
tempted above that we are able, but will with the temptation
provide a way of escape." He may suffer us to stumble,
but so long as we trust in him he will not suffer us to be
utterly cast down--to fall in the Second Death. Heb. 2:18;
1 Cor. 10:13
Permitting us to stumble may be his means at times for
teaching us valuable lessons respecting our own weaknesses
and our need to look unto him as our Shepherd as well as
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our Redeemer, and to feel our own weaknesses, that
thereby we may become strong in the Lord and in the
power of his might. He is held out before us as our High
Priest, capable of being touched with a feeling of our infirmities,
while possessing full power to succor us in the
hour of temptation. He is specifically mentioned as having
"compassion on the ignorant and on them that are out of
the way," and as being able to save "to the uttermost" those
who approach the Father through his advocacy and who
continue to abide in him in living faith, which implies obedience
to the extent of ability. Thus we are to rejoice in our
Redeemer as a present Savior, Deliverer, as well as the by-and-by
Deliverer from the tomb, by a resurrection--the
Finisher of our faith. Heb. 2:17,18; 4:15,16; 5:2; 7:25,26
"O thou God of our salvation,
Our Redeemer from all sin,
Thou hast called us to a station
We could ne'er by merit win.
O! we praise thee,
While we strive to enter in.
"In the footprints of our Savior,
We will daily strive to walk;
And the alien world's disfavor
Shall but send us to our Rock.
How its waters
Do refresh thy weary flock!
"We, with him, shall bear the message
Of our Heavenly Father's grace;
Show how he redeemed from bondage
All our lost and ruined race.
O! what mercy
Beams in his all-glorious face!"
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