THE BLOOD
OF THE
COVENANT
John James Andrew
PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION
Twenty years ago
the One Body passed through a controversial conflict concerning the nature of
Jesus Christ at his first appearing. It was then clearly demonstrated that
Christ was, by birth, related to condemnation in Adam to the same extent as the
rest of the race, and that He was made of the same fallen,
or sinful nature. It was also made clear that His death, as a sacrifice, was
necessary to cleanse himself as well as others. But the precise efficacy of His
shed blood at the different stages of the cleansing process was not fully
elucidated. It is-to supply this deficiency that the following pages have been
written. It fell to my lot to take a
prominent position the aforesaid conflict, and as the result of it I wrote the
pamphlet entitled "The Doctrine of the Atonement." The scriptural
principles embodied therein constitute the basis of what I have here written;
and they are consistently applied to the several steps by which men may pass
from condemnation in Adam to immortalization in Christ. The subject is
presented in various phases, because so dealt with in the Scriptures, and this
has necessitated some amount of repetition in order to show the bearing of the
several testimonies quoted. Where the wording of the scriptural quotations
varies from the Authorized Version, it will be found, unless otherwise stated,
in the Revised Version.
J.J. Andrew
26
Douglas Road
Canonbury, London,
N.
February, 1894
PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION
A second edition
of this work was published in 1913 in which the original preface appeared with
no additional prefatory remarks.
PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION
Twenty years ago
the One Body passed through a controversial conflict concerning the nature of
Jesus Christ at his first appearing. It was then clearly demonstrated that
Christ was, by birth, related to condemnation in Adam to the same extent as the
rest of the race, and that He was made of the same fallen,
or sinful nature. It was also made clear that His death, as a sacrifice, was
necessary to cleanse Himself as well as others. But the precise efficacy of His
shed blood at the different stages of the cleansing process was not fully
elucidated. It is to supply this deficiency that the following pages have been
written. We deem it our sacred duty to
continue the controversial conflict as stated by the late J. J. Andrew in 1894.
The nature of Christ, and the necessity for His sacrificial death is made
Scripturally clear in the pages of this book The true Christadelphians
of Arkansas heartily endorse and send it out with the sincere desire of serving
"the Truth as it is in Jesus" and that we all may be of one mind in
"things surely believed among us" (Luke 1:1). Blessed is he that readeth
("and understandeth"), yea rather, blessed
are they that hear the word of God, and keep it (Luke 11:28; Rev. 1:3).
Sincerely I am
yours in the gospel bond and its service.
John W. Teas
Conway,
Arkansas
December 29, 1927
PREFACE TO THE FOURTH
EDITION
This
reprinting is issued in the interest of presenting the truths to which the
original work was dedicated. Man’s relation to the dispensation of death is
just as needful of defining today as it was in 1894. And the prospective
relation to the dispensation of eternal life is just as needful of definition
today as it ever was, perhaps even
more so when we consider the signs in the ecclesiastical and the political
heavens. Unrestrained immorality and unprecedented preparation for war depict a
condition which coincides with what God’s holy prophets
foretold would precede the establishment of the Kingdom
of God in the earth. The importance
of the blood of the covenant and the blood-shedding principle decreed by the
Omniscient Creator of mankind is frequently misunderstood, and at times
dismissed as irrelevant. We commend to your study the pages of this book along
with a diligent comparison of Scriptural references given for a richer
appreciation of the Saviour’s accomplishments.
Whereas
some disagree with the author on some points such as Enoch not dying and the
last sin being committed on the eighth symbolic day, these are allegorical in
nature, and do not, in our opinion, detract from the sound exposition of
Christ’s sacrifice and its efficacy.
John
James Andrew (circa 1840-1907) was immersed in 1865. He contributed to the
Truth’s literature as early as June 1871 by articles in “The Christadelphian.” About 1872 he wrote “Jesus Christ and Him
Crucified,” an exposition of the Saviour’s life and
its meaning. This work has had several editions and is currently in print under
the title, “The Real Christ.” In the Renunciationist
conflict of 1873 mentioned in the first preface, J. J. Andrew, along with Robert
Roberts, editor of “The Christadelphian,” was a
leading figure in opposing the unscriptural views of “free-life” and “clean
flesh.” He wrote “The Doctrine of the Atonement” in 1882. “The Blood of the
Covenant” was published in 1894 although it had been prepared in 1893 as a
paper entitled “The Judgment-seat in Relation to Atonement.” In July of 1894,
J. J. Andrew began publication of “The Sanctuary-Keeper,” a quarterly
periodical that continued until December of 1902 when declining health forced
the editor to suspend publication. Until his death in June, 1907, a paralytic
condition prohibited any further contribution to the Truth’s writings. Thomas
Williams, editor of “The Christadelphian Advocate,”
in reporting the death of J. J. Andrew in the August, 1907 issue, commented:
“For nearly forty years Bro. J. J. Andrew has been a power for good in the work
of the Truth, both by pen and by tongue, and especially by example as seen in a
life that adorned the doctrines he was so well able to forcefully, yet calmly
and logically, set forth. In the battles which, “The Christadelphian”
fought for years for the purity of the Truth, who did more able and valiant
work than Bro. J. J. Andrew?”
The Dorchester Christadelphian
Ecclesia
1A
Melville Avenue
Dorchester,
Massachusetts 02125
April,
1967
PREFACE
TO THE FIFTH EDITION
This
fifth edition of THE BLOOD OF THE COVENANT is issued in the interest of making
available the truths presented herein. It is made possible by a publishing fund
of the Richmond, Virginia
Hall Ecclesia. We hope that Christadelphians who are
persuaded of the need for such exposition will recommend this work to others.
In
the 1967 publication it was erroneously stated to be the third edition. We were
not aware that a 1913 publication had been made. Also included in this edition
is an index of Scriptures quoted in the pamphlet arranged in sequence from
Genesis to Revelation. This should prove helpful in a study of the material.
CHRISTADELPHIAN PUBLICATIONS
2725
Kenmore Road
Richmond,
Virginia 23225
October,
1985
CONTENTS
1. The Blood of the Everlasting
Covenant
2. Edenic Law
3. Edenic Temptation
4. Edenic Disobedience
5. Edenic Nakedness
6. Edenic Judgment
7. Edenic Mercy
8. Edenic Clothing
9. Edenic Sacrifice
10. Edenic Justification
11. Edenic Allegory
12. Abel to
Abraham
13. The
Justification of Abraham
14. The Covenant of Circumcision
15. The
Covenant of Shadows
16. Shadow Offerings
17. The
Curse of the Law
18. Jews and the Abrahamic
Covenant
19. The
Justification of Jesus
20. The
Condemnation of Sin
21. The
Resurrection of Christ
22. Justification by Christ’s Blood
23. The Law of the Spirit of Life
24. Out
of Adam into Christ
25. Walking
in the Light
26. The
Lord of Dead and Living
27. “We
shall not All Sleep”
28. The
Judgment-seat Summons
29. The Second
Death
30. Immortalization
31. Recapitulation
32. Objections
A. Historical Raising
of the Dead.
B. Rejection of Christ.
C. Rejection of Apostolic Preaching.
D. The Justice of God.
E. The Power of God.
F. Dr. Thomas’ Teaching.
33. The
Unity of the Truth
The
Blood of the Covenant
1.--"THE BLOOD OF
THE EVERLASTING COVENANT."
This form
of words occurs only in Heb. 13:20;
but the truth which it embodies runs through the Scriptures from Genesis to
Revelation. "The everlasting covenant" is the covenant made with
Abraham; and the blood pertaining thereto is the blood of Christ. This blood is
an essential part of the covenant, because the promise thereof cannot be
fulfilled without it. The covenant, in promising everlasting possession of the land of
Canaan, in effect, promises everlasting life; and, as the
promise is made to sinful man, this involves deliverance from sin and death. It
is written concerning the Mosaic covenant--and it is of equal force in regard
to the Abrahamic covenant--that "without
shedding of blood is no remission" (Heb. ix. 22). "It is not possible
that the blood of bulls and of Goats should take away sins" (Heb. x. 4).
Therefore the blood of Christ is the only blood that can deliver from sin and
death and give everlasting life. But how, or on what principle is this effected? This is a
most important question and is deserving of the fullest consideration.
A covenant
in human affairs is another term for an agreement by which two or more persons
promise to do certain things. A Divine covenant, while embodying this feature,
occupies a much higher position. It is a law to those who enter it. The Mosaic
covenant is frequently referred to as "the law," and occasionally as
"the law of Moses;" and of the Abrahamic
covenant it is said, that God "confirmed the same unto Jacob for a
law" (Psa 105:9,10).
Hence the Divine utterance that "Abraham obeyed' my voice, and kept my
charge, my commandments, my statutes, and my laws" (Gen. 26:5). The
covenant made with Abraham was not the first Divine law; the first law given by
God was to Adam, in Eden, and it was to counteract the effects of its
violation that the covenant or law was given to Abraham. To understand,
therefore, the precise operation of the Abrahamic law
it is necessary to know what was the import of the Edenic
law and the breach thereof. The Edenic law is subsequently
termed "the law of sin and death," and the Abrahamic
is called "the law of the spirit of life" (Rom. viii 2). All men are
under the first law, but, a comparatively small portion are
under the second. In the revelation which elaborate
these two laws God has defined His own action and the respective positions of
those who are placed under them. Those positions have each their limitations.
Thus, he who is under the Edenic law cannot
participate in the provisions of the Abrahamic; and
he who comes under the second law must be freed from the power of the first. In
like manner the consummation of the Abrahamic law
cannot be bestowed upon one who never comes under its operation; and the
consummation of the Edenic law cannot be escaped by
any who continue under it. In giving laws which impose conditions and offer
alternative consequences, God, in effect, declares that He voluntarily limits
His own action to that which is specified therein. As the supreme lawmaker, He
is also the perfect law-keeper, however much His law may be broken by others
they cannot broken while in operation, by Himself. The
certainty of His action in their fulfillment is stamped in some form, on every
page of His inspired word. The second of his afore-mentioned laws was given to
Abraham, in the first instance, accompanied by a promise of blessing (Gen. 12:
1-3). Subsequently when Abraham asked how he was to know that he should inherit
the promised land. God performed a miracle by causing
"a smoking furnace and a burning lamp" to pass between the halves of
slain animals (Gen. 15: 7-l7). And when Abraham had demonstrated his faith by
offering up Isaac, God added an oath to his promise and miracle; "because
he could sware by no greater he sware
by himself"; "wherein God, willing more abundantly to shew unto the heir of promise the immutability of His
counsel, confirmed it by an oath; that by two immutable things in which it was
impossible for God to lie, we might have a strong consolation" (Heb. vi.
13, 17, 18). in giving the promise and taking the oath, God placed himself
under an obligation to His own attributes of truthfulness and faithfulness to
fulfill the purpose specified; not only in outline but also in detail--not in
the final purpose merely, but in all the preliminary steps which are necessary
to its completion. The laws by which God regulates His dealings with the
children of men embody principles which are necessarily righteous, but seldom
on the surface; investigation and reflection are
required to ascertain them. Some are by this process soon perceived, but others
with difficulty. It should be the aim of the Sons of God,
if possible, to understand the principles on which all Divine laws are based,
and the effort to attain to such an understanding cannot but be pleasing to
their Heavenly Father.
2.--EDENIC
LAW.
The terms of this law are brief but precise:--"Of
every tree of the garden thou mayest freely eat: but
of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil thou shalt
not eat of it; for in the day that thou eatest
thereof thou shalt surely die" (Gen. ii. 16, 17). Two consequences are here presented---one
expressed and the other implied; vis., die. and not die. For death being the result of disobedience, it
is inevitable that continuance of life would be the accompaniment of continued
obedience. How long such a conditional state of existence would have been
permitted it is impossible to say. The disobedience of Adam has rendered
unnecessary any revelation on this point. If such disobedience had not taken
place the life of Adam would have been maintained either in the same nature, or
by transformation into a higher nature, according to the will of the Creator.
No practical benefit could accrue from knowing which course would have been
adopted. Adam having failed to keep the law given to him, the important point
to consider is, what death did he thereby incur, and what are the consequences
to his descendants? In answering the
first part of this question two phrases have to be considered, viz: "in the day," and "thou shalt surely die." Various explanations have been
given to show in what way Adam died on the day of his disobedience. It has been
said, for instance, that it was fulfilled by Adam beginning to die on that day;
and, in support, attention is called to the marginal rendering, "dying
thou shalt die." But this is open to the reply
that the marginal rendering is a Hebrew idiom for death; just as the marginal
rendering for the last clause of the preceding verse "eating thou shalt eat," is synonymous with the English eat. The
reply is reasonable, and therefore the preceding explanation cannot be
accepted. Corruption doubtless began immediately after disobedience, but that
did not fulfill the threatened death. The word "day," it has been
suggested, is not confined to twenty-four hours, but represents a long and
indefinite period. This cannot be considered-wholly satisfactory; for the
"day" mentioned in the command must have represented a period of time
of which Adam had knowledge or experience. Adam and Eve were both created on
the sixth day (Gen.1:27, 31), and the command given to Adam preceded the
creation of Eve (Gen.2:15-18, 21 22). Therefor Adam's
experience of time was less than twenty-four hours. On the seventh day God
rested (Gen.2:2), and only one day is subsequently mentioned in connection with
the history of Eden. After transgressing, Adam and his wife "heard
the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day"
(Gen. 3:8). What day was this? It may have been the eighth day. Probably it
was; for the incidents recorded in Gen.3 do not require a longer period than
one day; and there is no evidence that the abode in Eden extended beyond the eighth day. If this view be in
accordance with facts, it is very suggestive in explaining the introduction of
the "eighth day" into certain commands of the Mosaic law.
3.--EDENIC TEMPTATION
The arrangement by which a subtle serpent was allowed
to entice the first human pair to partake of the forbidden fruit was not a
superfluity. Adam and his wife were a part of the creation which was "very
good" (Gen.1:31). They had no "knowledge of good and evil;" they
could not distinguish between the one and the other; and they had no desire to
do that which was evil. To impart such a desire it was necessary for the
serpent to influence by subtle reasoning the mind of "the weaker
vessel," and thereby to inflame her imagination with the prospect of their
eyes being opened and becoming "as gods, knowing good and evil"
(Gen.3:5). The device succeeded, and from this time forward the desire to do
evil became an integral element of the human mind. It has been transmitted by
Adam to all his posterity, in whom it is manifested from earliest life. Hence
an outside tempter is not necessary to lead astray any who have been born of
woman. "Every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his own lust, and
enticed; then when lust hath conceived it bringeth
forth sin" (Jas.1:14,I5). Lust which leads to sin
is necessarily evil, and this is the prevailing characteristic of the human
race; for "all that is in the world" consists of "the lust of
the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life" (1 Jno.2:16).
Lust, or the desire to do evil, is the offspring of the first sin and the cause
of all subsequent sin. On this account it is denominated "sin in the
flesh"(Rom.8:3), and, as a consequence, is the subject of divine
reprobation. Sin has thus two aspects, moral and physical, and "the blood
of the everlasting covenant" is required to take away the one as well as
the other.
4.--EDENIC DISOBEDIENCE
The command given to Adam was of the simplest kind; it
did not involve his doing anything; it simply imposed a restriction. But this
single interdict, in the face of temptation, he was unable to keep. He did not
pluck the forbidden fruit; this was the act of his wife, who, after eating
herself, "gave also unto her husband with her; and he did eat"
(Gen.3:6). Apparently no sophistical reasoning was used to persuade him; and he
needed none; he partook of that which was offered him, knowing what he was
doing "Adam was not beguiled, but the woman being beguiled hath fallen
into transgression" (1 Tim.2:14).
When Adam disobeyed, all his descendants were in his loins, and
therefore in a certain sense they "all have sinned" (Rom.5:12); they
sinned in him, even as "Levi paid tithes in Abraham" (Heb.7:9). In
submitting to be blessed by Melchizedec, Abraham
voluntarily acknowledged his inferiority; for "the less is blessed of the
better" (ver. 7). But the Levitical
priesthood, not being alive, was unable to exhibit any such acknowledgment;
nevertheless their inferiority was as real as if they had actually joined
Abraham in the payment of tithes. In like manner the descendants of Adam are
accounted as having "sinned" in him. They do not possess moral guilt,
as he did; for some have "not sinned after the similitude of Adam's
transgression" (Rom.5:14): nevertheless the result is the same. 'He became
a sinner, whereas they are "made sinners" (Rom. 5:19) without any exercise of will on their part. That is to say, God, by accounting them to be in Adam when he
sinned, and by defining their evil desire to be 'sin," has constituted
them "sinners;" the object being that none might be delivered from
the consequences of sin without the exercise of Divine mercy.
5.--EDENIC
NAKEDNESS
When Adam and his wife were created "they were
both naked and were not ashamed" (Gen.2:25). But immediately they had sinned "the eyes
of them both were opened, and they knew that they were naked" (Gen.3:7).
From that time shame for a naked condition has been a characteristic of human
nature--a proof that the evil desire which Adam imbibed by sinning has been
inherited by his posterity. Hence the word "naked" is a figurative
description for a state of sin. Aaron "made Israel naked unto their shame" by making a golden calf
for them to worship (Exod.32:24, 25). And Ahaz
"made Judah naked and transgressed sore against the Lord" (2
Chron.28:19). Adam and his wife endeavored to hide their nakedness by garments
of "fig leaves." Immediately afterwards "they heard the voice of
the Lord God," and they "hid themselves amongst the trees"
(Gen.3:8). When questioned as to where he was, Adam said, "I was afraid
because I was naked; and I hid myself" (ver.
10). Was this the sole cause of his fear? If the fig-leaf garments were
sufficient to hide their sense of shame, why should they "hide themselves
from the presence of the Lord God?" Was it not an attempt to escape the
execution of the Edenic law? Remembering the words,
"In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die," would they not expect to be visited
with death on that very day? If so, the hiding of their persons after covering
their nakedness possesses a significance of its own. Adam's statement about his
nakedness gave rise to two questions:-"Who told thee that thou wast naked? Hast thou eaten of the tree, whereof I
commanded thee that thou shouldst not eat?" (ver. 11). The import of these
questions is obvious. They imply that the eating of the tree of the knowledge
of good and evil would impart to Adam and his wife the knowledge that they were
"naked." Previously they were ignorant of the distinction between
nakedness and covering; now they both knew and felt it. ~
6.--EDENIC JUDGMENT
This process commenced with the questions quoted in
the last section. The answers of Adam
led to the woman being questioned. Then followed sentence on the deceiver, the
deceived, and the enticed, in the order in which they had acted. The serpent
was doomed to eat dust and go- on its belly; the woman to bring forth children
in greater number and with increased sorrow; and the man to obtain food out of
cursed ground by the sweat of his face until he returned to the dust
(Gen.3:14-19). A return to the dust was not a part of Adam's lot prior to his
disobeying the Edenic law. A change must, therefore,
have taken place in his physical constitution as the result of this decree;
"Corruption is in the world through lust" (2 Pet.1:4). How the change
was effected is not revealed, neither is it necessary. But it is all important
to recognize that there was such a change, and that the posterity of Adam has
inherited his nature after that change was effected. Just as Adam's descendants
were in his loins when he partook of the tree, so were they in his loins when
he was judged and condemned. Then it was that "many were made sinners by
one man's disobedience," and "judgment came upon all men to
condemnation (Rom. 7: 18,19). The
descendants of Adam were condemned to death before they were born. That the
sentence of condemnation does not specify the mode of death; it admits of death
by physical decay or death by violence. Men have returned to the dust in both
ways. Millions have died prematurely by accident, war, convulsions of nature,
and other Divine judgments. Some have thus suffered for their own sins; but
others before they have lived long enough to commit sin, or without being
related to a Divine moral law. The only explanation in the latter case is that
they had been "made," or constituted "sinners." Owing to
this fact, all men are liable as soon as they are born, to be cut off by death.
7.--EDENIC MERCY
After questioning Adam and his wife, and before
condemning them, the Lord God addressed the Serpent. Why was this? Was it
merely because the Serpent had, by beguiling the woman, taken the first step in
effecting Edenic disobedience? A consideration of the
words addressed to the Serpent suggests another and a higher reason. After
condemning the Serpent to go on its belly, the Lord God addressed to it, a
prediction concerning its own seed and the seed of the woman. These two seeds
were to be at enmity, and each was to be bruised in the conflict the seed of
the Serpent in the head and the seed of the woman in the heel (Gen.3:15). Why
was not this prediction spoken to Adam or his wife? Was it not because they had
produced a breach between themselves and their Creator? They had previously been in direct communion
with God, but sin deprived them of the privilege; they were in process of judgment
for their "offense," and until that process was completed they
deserved only to be addressed in words of condemnation. The Serpent had no
moral relationship to the Creator, and the words to it forshadowed
no favor for itself or its seed; but for the woman and her seed they did. They
contained an element of mercy of which there had been no previous intimation.
By disobeying the Edenic law they had incurred
immediate death, which would necessarily be death by slaying. If this had been
inflicted they would have had no seed. Therefore, the promise in which specific
mention was made of the woman's seed--addressed to the Serpent in their
hearing---was equivalent to informing them that they should not suffer
immediate death. By the condemnation immediately addressed to them they learned
that this did not mean exemption from all consequences of their disobedience;
for the ground was to be cursed for their sake, and, instead of eating freely
of fruits, made ready for their hands, they were to toil for their subsistence,
and then return to the dust. After listening to the Divine promise and sentence
the fear which led them to hide themselves amongst the trees would disappear:
and of this Adam gave evidence when he "called his wife's name Eve."
This name means living (see margin), and Adam gave it "because she was the
mother of all living" (Gen. iii. 20). By this act
Adam showed that he understood the promise to guarantee a
posterity and that he believed in its fulfillment. If death had been
inflicted on the day of eating the forbidden fruit Eve would never have been a
"mother," and there would have been no "living" humanity.
8.--EDENIC CLOTHING
Immediately after Adam had named his wife, "the
Lord God made coats of skins and clothed them" (ver.
21). This was obviously to supersede the fig-leaf garments which they had
devised. For what reason' The nature of the clothing
suggests an answer. Where would the "coats of
skins" be obtained? From animals. How? By slaying them.
And who would slay them? He who "made the coats."
The slaying of the animals would involve shedding of blood, and thus we arrive
at the fact that the clothing provided by the Lord God possessed a significance
of the greatest importance. As nakedness represents a sinful condition, so
clothing based upon blood shedding is used to signify a covering for sin. It is
the origin of the expression, "Covered in relation to sin: "Blessed
is he whose ... sin is covered" (Ps.32:1): "Thou hast covered all
their sin" (Ps. 85: 2). It is the foundation for the special garments for
priestly functions under the Mosaic Law:--"Thou shalt
put upon Aaron the holy garments ... and thou shalt
bring his sons and clothe them with coats" (Exod.
40:13, 14). And it explains why Christ is spoken of its
a garment of righteousness:--"As many of you as were baptized into Christ
have put on Christ" (Gal. 3:27).
"Christ Jesus who, of God, is made unto us wisdom and
righteousness" (1 Cor. 1:30).
9.--EDENIC
SACRIFICE
The process of slaying the animals and making the
coats of skins would probably be witnessed by Adam and Eve. If so, it is not
difficult to imagine the interest with which they would view the same. It would
be to them an object lesson in sacrifice for sin. To teach
them what? That as they had, by sin, incurred a violent death, a violent
death was necessary to take away sin. Whether or not they learned this truth,
certain it is that subsequent revelation contains it. And, as sacrifice out of Eden is but a continuation of extension of sacrifice in Eden, the principle on which the one is based is obviously
the same as that which underlies the other. When an Israelite under the Mosaic
law offered a burnt offering for oblation he was required to "lay his hand
upon the head of the burnt offering; and it shall be accepted for him to make
atonement for him" (Lev.1 :4). Why was his hand to be laid on the head of
the animal? To
transfer to it, by a figure, his sins. This is shown by the injunction
concerning the scape goat:-"Aaron shall lay both
his hands upon the head of the live goat, and confess over him all the iniquities
of the children of Israel, and all their transgressions, even all their sins;
and he shall put them upon the head of the goat, and shall send him away by the
hand of a man that is in readiness into the wilderness; and the goat shall bear
upon him all their iniquities unto a solitary land" (Lev. 16: 21, 22). The
animal devoted to sacrifice on whose head the hands of a sinner were placed,
became, by that act, a sin-hearer; and immediately afterwards it was slain.
What does that prove? That his was the death due for the sins transferred to
it. Hence the sinner, in effect, acknowledged that for his sins he had incurred
a death like that inflicted on the animal; in other words, that he deserved to
be slain. Christ is described as "the Lamb that hath been slain from the
foundation of the world" (Rev.13:8). How was He slain prior to the
Crucifixion? In type, by all the sacrifices prescribed by God from Eden to the abolition of the Mosaic covenant. Christ, like
the slain animals, was a sin-bearer:-He bare the sin
of many" (Isa. 53:12); but he was not made a
sin-bearer in the way they were. Animal sacrifice was "a shadow"
(Heb. 10:1) but Christ's sacrifice was the substance. Hence sin could not be
transferred to him figuratively; it must be imparted to him in reality.
Therefore, he was "made sin"(2 Cor. v. 21)
by being "made of a woman" (Gal. 4:4); he "took part of the same
flesh and blood" as his brethren, and "in
all things" was "made like unto" them (Heb.11:14, 17). What was
necessary to deliver him from the sin-nature of which he was "made?" To be slain; by that event God "condemned sin in the
flesh" of; His son Jesus (Rom. 8:3). Therefore, sacrifice is as essential to take away sin
in its physical, as in its moral, aspect; a violent death is the punishment due
to the one as well as to the other; and physical sin is as powerful to keep
closed the gates of the grave as is actual transgression. Christ only possessed
sin physically, not morally, but all who are sprinkled with his blood (1 Pet. i. 2) possess sin in both forms. Those who enter Christ in
the Apostolic way are able to say, "Our old man was crucified with
him" (Rom. vi. 6), or, "I have been crucified with Christ" (Gal.
ii.20). Having been baptized into His death (Rom. 6:4) they have thereby partaken of His crucifixion, their baptism being a
practical confession that they deserved for their "sin in the flesh and
for "wicked works" (Col. 1:21) a violent death similar to that which
was inflicted on Christ. They died symbolically, an event referred to in the following
passages "If ye died with Christ from the rudiments of the world"
(Col. 11. 20); "For ye are dead and your life is hid with Christ in
God" (Col. iii. 3); "We thus judge that one died for all, therefore
all died" (2 Cor.5:14) act of offering the animal sacrifices which
foreshadowed the sacrifice of Christ embodied the same feature as baptism into
Christ; the sinner died symbolically in the animal slain. It is on the
principle that the fulfillment of "the law of sin and death" in Eden is to be explained. Adam was threatened with death on
the day that he sinned, but God, by an exercise of mercy, provided an animal on
which was inflicted the literal death incurred by Adam. What effect did this
have upon Adam' He died symbolically in the: death of the animal, and the Edenic law was thereby fulfilled m its first stage. All
subsequent animal sacrifice was based on the same principle as Edenic sacrifice, but to be of any service in the abolition
of death, it required to be supplemented by sacrifice of a higher order.
10.--EDENIC
JUSTIFICATION.
Justification
is the reverse of condemnation. These two conditions cannot co-exist in the
same sense and for the same thing. the Greek word for
justify means "to make just or hold guiltless," and the meaning of
the English word is "to pardon, and clear from guilt, to absolve, to
acquit, to exculpate." Justification is equivalent to reconciliation
atonement, purging, cleansing, remission, redemption, purification, and
forgiveness. It is typical and anti-typical, and it has a legal, and a moral,
aspect. The legal aspects represented by the expression "made
righteous" (Rom. 5. 19); and the moral aspect, by the statement "that by works a
man is justified and not by faith only" (Jas. 11. 24). Neither legal, nor
moral, justification can exist without blood-shedding; the legal must precede
the moral; and both legal and moral must precede the bestowal of eternal life.
As soon as Adam was clothed with animal skins he was justified through the Edenic sacrifice and belief in the Edenic
promise. His justification was legal not moral; he was, by a typical sacrifice,
"made righteous," but he did not possess a righteous character. From
what was he thus justified? The "offense" he had committed and the
"sin-in-the-flesh" which it had produced. What was its effect? It
averted a violent death thereby prolonging his life, and giving him a second
probation. Did it alter the physical consequences of his offense? No; the
ground continued to be cursed, he had to toil for bread, evil desire still
dwelt in him, and when his vitality was exhausted he died. The legal
justification which God has provided by animal sacrifices and other ceremonies,
is not accompanied by the removal of the physical consequences of sin; this is
promised as the result of the legal justification being supplemented by moral
justification; or, in other words, by imputed righteousness being succeeded by
actual righteousness. Adam, after justification. was in the condition described by the Psalmist:
"Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered.
Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not
iniquity" (Ps.32: 1, 2). Whether he maintained
this blessedness is not recorded; the judgment-seat will reveal it. For this
purpose he will be raised from the dead. Would he have been amenable to
resurrection and future judgment if he had not entered upon this second
probation? No, he would have been slain
and the Edenic law would have forever held him in
death. What was an essential preliminary to his entrance on a, second
probation? Justification from his act, of disobedience.
Could the justification with which he was favoured in
Eden take away his sin and destroy its consequences? Not
of itself. What was further required? Ratification by the
death and resurrection of the seed of the woman. On what basis will he
be raised from the dead On the basis of Edemic
justification, a second probation, and the blood of Christ.
And if he receive immortality what will be the foundation for it? Edenic
justification, faithfulness during this second probation, and the blood of
Christ. Are Adam's descendants, by birth, in the position of their first
parents before or subsequent to justification? Before justification; for
although condemnation is racial, justification is individual. What follows from
this? That if they died without justification from his "offense,"
they die under the same conditions as he would have done if God had slain him
on the day he sinned. He would have returned to the dust never to resume life;
and so do they. It is true that the death specified in the Edenic
law is not eternal death; if it had been there would have been no scope for
Divine mercy. But in the absence of justification from the "offense"
which occasioned death there is no escape from the tomb.
11.--EDENIC
ALLEGORY
The events recorded in the first three chapters of
Genesis, though literal, contain also allegory. The creation pre-figures those
who are "created in Christ Jesus unto good works" (Eph.11. 10), of
which God's son is "the beginning" (Rev. iii.14).
The sun, moon and stars are signs of Royal power, Ecclesiastical organizations,
and Princes. Heaven and earth are used as symbols for governments and people,
grass for human nature, and trees for nations. Light is a figure of truth, and
darkness of ignorance. Eden is a type of the Kingdom of God,
Adam of Christ, and Eve of the Church. Adam's deep sleep finds a parallel in
Christ's death; the Serpent represents wicked men; nakedness, sin; and coats of
skins, the righteousness of Christ. The seventh day typifies the millennial
rest, and the previous six days the six thousand years of sin's reign. What
about the eighth day? Has that no
significance? Is it not analogous to the period immediately succeeding the
seven thousand years? What will then take place? "The dragon, that old
Serpent, which is the Devil and Satan" will "deceive the nations
which are in the four quarters of the earth," and they "compassed the
camp of the saint; about, end the beloved city: and fire came down from God out
of heaven and devoured them" (Rev. 20: 2, 8, 9). Thus on the eighth
literal day the first sin was committed and thereby a violent death incurred;
on the eighth symbolic day the last sin is committed, and all who share it
are subjected to a violent death. On the
eighth literal day judgment is administered with mercy; but on the eighth
symbolic day judgment is executed without mercy.
How does this allegorical aspect affect the case of
Adam? Did his symbolic death on the
eighth literal day keep him from literal death? No; for "all the days that
Adam lived were nine hundred and thirty years: and he died" (Gen. v. 5); he died literally on the first symbolic day of a
thousand years
12.-ABEL TO
ABRAHAM
Sacrifice in Eden was but the inauguration of sacrifice out of Eden. Its necessity was recognized by Abel but not by Cain
(Gen.4:4). That it formed an essential part of God's "way" (Gen. vl. 12) of righteousness from Abel to the Deluge is indicated by the
distinction in the Divine instructions about the ark, between the 'clean
beast" and "beasts that are not clean" (Gen. 7: 2), and also by
the fact that Noah, on leaving the ark, "builded
an altar unto the Lord; and took of every clean beast and of every clean fowl
and offered burnt offerings on the altar" (Gen. 8: 20). It is also
involved in the statement that "then began men to call upon the name of
the Lord (Gen. 4:28) when Abraham likewise called upon the name of the Lord, he
builded an altar unto the Lord" (Gen.12: 8). For what purpose?' The offering of
sacrifice; without which an altar is useless. When Peter, for the first
time preached, "remission of sins" in the name Jesus Christ (Acts 2: 38) he announced that "whosoever shall ca11 on the
name of the Lord shall be saved" (Acts 2: 21). In explaining how this was to be done, he informed
his hearers that they must "repent and be baptized in the name of
Jesus" (verse 38) · This was equivalent to saying
that they must by baptism recognize Christ's death to be a sacrifice for sin.
Hence this ceremony takes the place of animal sacrifice. Baptism has been a
necessity since the Crucifixion, just as animal sacrifice was indispensable
previously In other words, a recognition, in the way
appointed by God, of blood-shedding, is absolutely necessary for justification
from sin. To this, Enoch was no exception. He "walked with God and he was
not; for God took him" (Gen. 5:24). He was translated that he should not
see death" for "he pleased God" (Heb.11: 5). Like the other
righteous men of the antediluvian age he called on the name of the Lord in the
offering of sacrifice: and thereby was justified from sin. He subsequently
walked in harmony with his justified condition. And on this basis the sacrifice
of Christ was prospectively applied to him, just as that sacrifice is now
retrospectively applied to those who are baptized into the name of Jesus
Christ. The translation of Enoch, although an exception to the ordinary course
of things, did not violate any previous Divine decree. It would have been quite
consistent with Edenic law if God had likewise
translated all others who were justified by a sacrifice for sin and an approved
walk. But He did not so act; He allowed them to die. Does this constitute a
barrier to the realization of their hopes? No; because their justification
requires their restoration to life. Does their death contribute anything
towards taking away the condemnation they inherited from Adam? Not in the least; for their death was not
sacrificial, and they were not free from personal transgression. They went into
the grave as a result of Adam's "offense," but after being justified
from that "offense" by sacrifices which foreshadowed the sacrifice of
Christ; and therefore they died with the certainty-subject to Christ's death
and resurrection ~ being brought forth from the death-state at God's own
appointed time. Enoch, as the "seventh from Adam," (Jude ver. 14) foreshadows the brethren of Christ who "are
alive and remain until the coming of the Lord" and who will, without
entering the grave, be exalted to "ever be with the Lord" (1 Thess. 4: 15,
17). The principle, which explains Enoch’s exemption from death, is equally
applicable to them.
13.-THE JUSTIFICATION OF ABRAHAM.
"Abraham believed God and it was counted unto him
for righteousness" (Rom. 4: 3). How?
By belief only?
No; by belief and obedience. According to Divine command he left "Ur of the Chaldees to go into
the land of Canaan"
('Gen.11 31; 12: 1). Was this the only practical exhibition of his belief? No;
after arriving in the land of promise "he builded
an altar unto the Lord" (Gen. 12: 7, 8). Why? Because he was a sinner by
birth and by deed, and needed sacrifice to cover his sin. Hence the
Apostle, in showing that "faith was reckoned to Abraham for
righteousness," quotes from Ps. 32: 1;-"Blessed are they whose
iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins are covered" (Rom. 4: 7). Abraham recognized that he was a, sinner, and
that to inherit the land his sin must be covered. Therefore,
he "called upon the name of the Lord" (Gen. 12: 8) by the erection of
an altar and the offering of sacrifice. His recognition of sacrifice as
a Divine requirement was repeated after his return from Egypt by a visit to
"the altar which he had made at the first" and by again "calling
on the name of the Lord" (Gen. 13:4); also by acknowledging Melchizedeck to be "Priest of the Most High God"
(Gen. 14:1·8); and by slaying, as commanded, a heifer, a goat, a ram, a
turtle-dove, and a pigeon, to provide what God required for the purpose of
confirming his promise (Gen.15: 9-17). He believed not only the promise
concerning the land, but that its inheritance required the taking away of sin
by blood-shedding. Thus was Abraham justified by faith.
He was subsequently "justified by works, when he had offered Isaac, his son,
upon the altar" (Jas.2:21).
14.--THE COVENANT OF CIRCUMCISION.
"Faith was reckoned to Abraham for
righteousness..........when he was in uncircumcision
and he received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the
faith which he had, yet being uncircumcised" ('Rom. 4:9-11). Circumcision was a "seal" and a
"sign;" as a seal it constituted a Divine assurance of the existing
righteousness of Abraham. That "righteousness' included blood-shedding; so
did the "seal:" for when Zipprah was compelled
to circumcise her son, she said to Moses, "Surely a bloody husband art
thou to me" (Exod. 4: 25). Of what was circumcision a
"sign?" Of the Crucifixion, which is described as "the
circumcision of Christ" (Col. 2:11). To "cut off" a piece of
human flesh (Exod. 4: 25) signified the future cutting off of the Messiah by
death (Dan 9:
26); and as Christ died to
"put away sin" (Heb. 9: 26),
circumcision was necessarily related to that object. How? It showed that the
circumcised child was a sinner by birth, and that it needed blood-shedding to
cleanse it from that condition, independent of its subsequent course of life;
for at eight days of age it could not have committed transgression. If a child
of Abraham was not circumcised it was said, by Jehovah, to have "broken my
covenant," and as a consequence was doomed to be "cut off from his
people" ('Gen. 17: 14). The practical effect of this is seen in the case
of Moses, who while in Midian, neglected to
circumcise his son. Because of this omission "the Lord met him, and sought
to kill him" (Exod. iv. 24); and he was only
spared from being slain by the action of his wife in angrily complying with the
covenant of circumcision. From this incident we learn that every father,
descended from Abraham, who omitted to circumcise his son, was liable to lose
his life. To what was the uncircumcised son liable? The same; for through his
parents he had "broken" Jehovah's "covenant;" and he who
fails to comply with a Divine command, from whatever case, must die. There was
no injustice in this; for the child was born under condemnation to death for
Adam's offense and was therefore liable to that condemnation being put in force
any day. Its birth was due to the mercy of God as first expressed in the Edenic promise (Gen.3:15); without which there would have
been no sons of Adam; and although the promise involves the existence of the
Seed of the Serpent until completely defeated by the Seed of the Woman, it is a
part of the Divine prerogative to bring death on any who are still under Adamic condemnation, at any time. Hence the premature death
of many who have no moral guilt; death reigns "even over them that have
not sinned after the similitude of Adam's transgression" (Rom. v. 14). In circumcision God provided a ceremony which
warded off premature death, for in decreeing that the uncircumcised son of
Abraham should be "cut off from his people, He, in effect, promised that
the circumcised one should, not be so "cut off." The covenant of
circumcision was thus a, shadow of the Abrahamic covenant;
as the latter is intended to destroy death, so the former was designed to avert
premature death; in other words, the one gives eternal life, and the other
gives a lease of present life, the life in both cases to be enjoyed on the land
of Canaan. How long did the lease of life resulting from circumcision last?
Until the one on whom the ceremony was performed committed transgression. He
then became again liable to premature death, and needed animal bloodshedding to avert it. But does not the decree, "cut
off from his people," imply that the child was simply to be separated from
the fleshly seed of Abraham and yet continue to live the full term of his
physical vitality? It goes beyond this. The imputation attached to the child of
having "broken" God's covenant" involves death; and the fact
that Moses was in danger of losing his life for omitting to circumcise his son,
proves that death was the penalty for violation of the command. The mode and
time for its execution was not specified, thus leaving it uncertain as to how
and when God would "cut off" the lives of both parent and child. The
uncircumcised son of Abraham occupied a similar relationship to its disobedient
parent that the sons of men occupy towards Adam; both have sinned in their head,
and although to this there does not attach moral guilt, the penalty for it is
death. Abraham was circumcised many years after being justified by sacrifice.
But afterwards circumcision constituted the first stage of justification. The
ceremony was required to be performed when the "man child" was
"eight days old" (Gen. 17:12). What significance attaches to this? It
is suggestive of the day on which Adam sinned, the eighth day from the
beginning of the creation, and thereby brings to mind the fact that, as an
extension of Adam, the child did not deserve to live longer, and that, like
Adam, it was the recipient of Divine mercy expressed by a blood-shedding
ceremonial. It also points to the eighth day of a thousand; years, when
"evil doers shall be cut off" (Ps. 37:9) finally, by fire coming
"down from God out of Heaven" and devouring them (Rev.20:9) There is
a moral, as well as a physical, aspect to circumcision it is styled
circumcision of the heart (Deut.10: 16; 30:6). Circumcision of the flesh was
necessary to an entrance into the Abrahamic covenant,
but of itself it could not give the blessing of that covenant. It must be
followed by circumcision of the heart and ears (Acts 7:51), namely, the cutting
off from the conduct whatever was obnoxious to Jehovah, or a hindrance to
faithfulness in his service, even to the extent of a "hand,"
"foot," or "eye" (Mark ix. 43-47). To circumcise, in all
its aspects, is to cut off all round. Circumcision was incorporated in the
Mosaic law, and was as obligatory as it had previously
been to the descendants of Abraham; no Jewish or Gentile male if
"uncircumcised," being allowed to partake of the Passover
(Exod.12:48). It was on the basis of circumcision that "the oracles of God
were committed" to Jews (Rom. iii. 2). This privilege imposed upon them
the duty of preserving; and defending those oracles, and of accepting whatever
further revelation came from their Author. The brethren of Christ, now occupy
in relation to those oracles, the same position; they have been
"circumcised with the circumcision made without hands, in putting off the
body of the sins of the flesh by the circumcision of Christ, buried with Him in
baptism" (Col.11:12). And they are, as a consequence, required to
"keep the commandments of God, and have the testimony of Jesus
Christ" (Rev.12:17; 3:8).
15.--THE
COVENANT OF SHADOWS
The covenant given to Israel through Moses was "a shadow of good things to
come" (Heb. 10: 1). A shadow is an outline of something real; it is formed
by the contrast between light and darkness, and if anything occur
to interfere with that contrast the shadow disappears. The
"rudiments" (Gal: iv. 3) composing the Mosaic covenant are styled
"patterns" (Heb. ix. 23), and that covenant is described as
containing "the form of knowledge and of the truth" (Rom. 11:20). It embodies, therefore, a series of object lessons
concerning sin and its remedy, and constitutes an epitome of the plan of
salvation. It did not supersede the Edemic promise,
the sacrifice instituted in Eden,
the Abrahamic covenant or the covenant of
circumcision; "it was added:' to these things 'because of
transgression" (Gal.3:19). For what object?
"That sin by the commandment might become exceeding sinful"
(Rom.7:13);that is, to show in a multiplicity of ways
the heinousness and power of sin. The Mosaic Law was "holy, and just, and
good" (Rom. 7:12), but by its
numerous enactment’s it excited the "sin In the
flesh" inherited from Adam. "I had not known sin, but by the law; for
I had not known lust, except the law had said, Thou shalt
not covet" (Rom.7:7). So exacting were its requirements that no Jew
begotten by the flesh could keep it perfectly; it was a "yoke which
neither our fathers nor we," said the Apostles and elders, "were able
to bear" (Acts 15:6-10). All were guilty of its violation, and therefore
they were, "through fear of death all their lifetime subject to
bondage" (Heb. ii. 15). What purpose, then, was effected
by it? It demonstrated the inability of unaided flesh and blood to obey God
perfectly, and the consequent need for dependence on God's mercy (Rom.3:19).
"For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, God
sending His own son in the likeness of sinful flesh," accomplished (Rom. 8:3). That is, He provided one who, though "made
under the law" (Gal.3: 4) and "in all points tempted like as we
are" (Heb.4: 15) did "always those things that pleased" his
Father (Jno.8:29). In regard to his own conduct he was "without sin"
(Heb4: l5); an indispensable requisite for his position as "the Lamb of
God which taketh away the sin of the world"
(Jno.1: 29). Hence Christ is the "body" (Col.2:17) or "enduring
substance" (Heb.10:34) of which the Mosaic ceremonies were shadows or
"patterns." These shadows were designed for instruction, and
therefore some of their features must be analogous to those of the substance.
The first and most prominent feature of the Mosaic covenant related to life and
land; it was "ordained to life" (Rom. 7: 10). What life? The present life; "I have set
before thee this day life and good, and death and evil," that, by
obedience, "thou mayest live and multiply; and
the Lord thy God shall bless thee in the land whither thou goest
to possess it" (Deut 30:15-16);'It is your life, and through this thing ye
shall prolong your days in the land' (Deut. 32:47). This promise involved
immunity from the chief cause of death, namely, disease:--"If thou wilt
diligently hearken to the voice of the Lord thy God. I will put none of these
diseases upon thee, which I have brought upon the Egyptians" (Exod. 15: 26);
Deut. 28: 60). Hence, if Israel had been obedient there would have been no premature
deaths among them. The continuance of life conditional on obedience involves
the termination of life in the presence of disobedience. This is specifically
stated in the detailed enactments of the Mosaic Law. Israel was commanded to "put to death" a
blasphemer. (Lev. 24:16), a murderer (ver. 17), the
curser of father or mother (Lev. 20: 9), adulterer (ver.
10), the man or woman with a familiar spirit (ver.
27), a, witch (Exod. 22:18), a Sabbath-breaker (Num. 15:35). etc. It was enacted that
the death be inflicted by stoning, and that "all the congregation"
take part in its execution (Num. 15:35), in order that "all Israel"
might "hear and fear and do no more any such wickedness" (Deut.
13:11); "so thou shalt," saith the Lord, "put the evil away from among
you" (Deut.17:7). Israel was thus to cooperate with God in the extermination
of evil-doers, for the purpose of maintaining their holiness as a nation
(Exod.19:6). If this duty had been rigidly performed Israel would have consisted only of righteous persons; but
it was neglected, and as a consequence evil-doers increased. Therefore God
visited the nation with "pestilence" (Deut. 28:21),
"consumption," 'fever," "inflammation,' "the sword,
blasting, mildew, (ver. 22), drought (ver. 23), heavy rain (ver. 24),
defeat in war (ver. 25), "wonderful
plagues," "sore sickness" (ver. 59),
"the disease of Egypt" (ver. ·60), etc., in
order that they might be "destroyed" (ver.
61), and "left few in number" (ver. 62).
While in the wilderness God exhibited His anger against evil doers on several
occasions by the infliction of a violent death. For offering strange fire Nadab and Abihu were destroyed by
fire (Lev. 10:2);for rebelling against the authority of Moses, Korah, Dathan, and Abiram, with their families, were "swallowed up"
by the earth (Num. 16:32); for charging Moses and Aaron with having killed Korah and his companions "fourteen thousand and seven
hundred" died by plague (Num. 16:11-50); for complaining, at a place
subsequently called Tabersh, "the fire of the
Lord consumed them that were in the uttermost parts of the camp"
(Num.11:1.-3); for accusing Moses of bringing them "out of Egypt to die in
the wilderness" much people "of Israel died" from bites of
"fiery serpents" sent by the Lord (Num.21: 5-6); for "joining
himself unto Baal-peor" Israel lost by plague
"twenty and four thousand" (Num.25:1-9); and for listening to the
false report of the ten spies about the land and proposing to "return into
Egypt" (Num. 14: 1-4), God threatened to extinguish the whole nation by
"pestilence" (ver. 12); but at the
intercession of Moses (vers. 13-19), He
"pardoned" them (ver. 20),and instead of
inflicting immediate death he allowed all above twenty years to die by degrees
during their remaining thirty eight years of wilderness wanderings (vers. 23, 29-35). For some acts of disobedience the law
said that transgressors should be "cut off." If at the Passover feast
an Israelite ate "leavened bread from the first day until the seventh,
that soul shall be cut off from Israel" (Exod.12: 15); if anyone
compounded anything like the anointing oil or put any of it "upon a
stranger," he "shall be even cut off from his people" (Exod. 30:33); he who "doeth ought presumptuously shall
be cut off from among his people" (Num. 15:30) "that soul shall
utterly be cut off; his iniquity shall be upon him" (ver
31). In these passages what is the meaning of "cut off." Death. Does not the expression "from Israel'', or "from among his people" qualify it so
as to admit of life apart from the nation, a kind of excommunication? No; for
in prescribing what is to be done with one "that giveth
any of his seed unto Moloch" it is first said "he shall surely be put
to death" (Lev. 20:2) and then the Lord says, "I will set my face
against that man, and will cut him off
from among his people" (ver. 3). The one
phrase explains the other; to be "cut off" is to suffer premature
death. This is its invariable meaning when applied to sinners. The
antediluvians were "cut off" by water (Gen.9:11); the inhabitants of Canaan
were "cut off" by Jehovah through Israel (Deut.12: 29); the Anakims
were "cut off" by Joshua so that he "destroyed them
utterly" (Josh.11:21); and Jehu was
"anointed to cut off the house of Ahab" (2 Chron.
22:7) . This evidence, together with that already
adduced (Section 14), proves that to "cut off" was to inflict death
in a special manner. The Israelites were therefore required to circumcise their
sons to prevent such a death. This ceremony introduced them to a state of
justification from the condemnation under which they were born and if no sin
had been afterwards committed and Israel had kept God's "statutes"
and "judgments," they would have continued to live in the flesh as long
as Jehovah thought fit; "which if a man do, he shall live in them"
(Lev.18:5; Rom. 10:5). What was the
first obligation imposed upon Jewish children? Obedience to parents: Honour thy father and mother; which is the first
commandment with promise" (Eph. 6:2). What was the "promise'"
"That thy days may be long upon the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee" (Exod. 20:12). Continuance of Jewish child-life was thus
conditional; if not obedient to father and mother its "days" would
not be "long upon the land." When a son became "stubborn and
rebellious" and refused to "obey the voice of his father, or the
voice of his mother," his parents were instructed to "bring him out
unto the elders of his city" that he might be stoned to death
(Deut.21:18-21). Only faithful parents would carry out this injunction;
unfaithful parents would neglect it. And then would interpose in such ways as
he deemed best to prevent rebellious sons having "long days upon the
land." Did not Jewish children die in infancy to the same extent that
Gentile children do? There is no evidence that they did. And if they did so, it
was in consequence of unfaithfulness on the part of their parents. If the
parents disregarded God's law they would be liable to "disease" and
the other "curses" threatened against them (Deut 28:15-68); and the
children of such would necessarily share those curses. Of this an illustration
is given in the case of Achan. Because he
"sinned against the Lord," not only he, but "his sons and
daughters," and his cattle were "stoned" to death (Josh. 7: 20-25). Achan and his children having been justified in shadow, from Adamic condemnation; now suffered, for the iniquity of
their head, the Mosaic curse. When Jewish parents were obedient to the
law, and brought up their children in the right way, they ensured to themselves
and their familiar the continuance of life in the land. When the children
reached such an age that they could understand the requirements of the Mosaic law, they became individually responsible to its blessings
and curses. From birth to circumcision the sons were "dead" in Adam
(2 Cor. 5:14);
but when they were circumcised they became "alive" (Rom. 8:9), and so
continued until they rebelled against their parents, or disobeyed some other
command of the Mosaic Law. They then became dead in Moses; for the law given
through him was "the ministration of death" (2 Cor.3:7). This change
of condition is described by the Apostle Paul:--"I was without the law
once. But when the commandment came sin revived, and I died" ('Rom. 8:9).
If the sin came within the scope of sacrifice, they averted immediate death by
offering the prescribed atonement; in so doing they died symbolically in the
death of the animal, and were restored to the "alive"
condition into which they were introduced by circumcision. Bat, if the sin
committed was presumptuous--as in the case of Nadab, Abihu, Korah, Dathan
and Abriam--no sacrifice was available, Num. 15:30,
31). Obedience to the Mosaic
covenant gave no reward beyond this life, and the punishments for disobedience
were confined to this life, with death as the finality. Hence "every
transgression and disobedience received a just recompense of reward"
(Heb.2:2)· No provision was made in that covenant for
resurrection, but it shadowed the good things to come" after the
resurrection. The existence which it gave in the land of promise during this
life was a shadow of the endless life to be enjoyed in the same land through
the Abrahamic covenant (Gen.21: 3). The Mosaic
"commandment was ordained to life" (Rom. 7:10) in the flesh, but it pointed to life in the spirit.
The most holy place of the tabernacle represented that life; for it was the
dwelling place of God ( Exod.
25: 22). The ark and mercy-seat (Heb. 9: 4-5) symbolized Christ since his
glorification, and the Cherubim "the sons of God" in future spirit
"manifestation" (Rom. 8: 19);
"Aaron's rod that budded" (Heb. 9:4 )
prefigured the resurrection; and the manna, eternal life (Rev. 2: 17).
16.-SHADDOW-OFFERING.
The chief offerings under the Mosaic law were
"the burnt offerings" (Lev. 1: 4),the
"sin offering" (Lev. 4: 3). and the
"peace offering" (Lev. 3: 1). The burnt offering" was to he
completely burned (Lev.1: 9) with the exception of the skin, which was to be
given to the priest (Lev. 8:8). The first time the people were blessed after
the completion of the Tabernacle "there came a fire out from before the
Lord, and consumed upon the altar the burnt offering and the fat" (Lev.9:
20); a representation of "the offering of the body of Jesus Christ"
(Heb. 10: 10) and of that event which is described as "mortality"
being "swallowed up of life" (2 Cor.5:1). The swallowing up of
mortality is the consuming of the "sinful flesh" of the faithful and
is accompanied by "this mortal" putting on "immortality" (1
Cor.15:33); a consummation which takes place on the perfect "altar,"
Christ Jesus (Heb.13:10). From this it follows that the sons of Adam cannot be
cleansed from "sinful flesh" without blood-shedding, and that
"the burnt offering" comprised justification, in shadow, from the
offense in Eden which produced "sinful flesh." And the fact
that the "burnt offering" was prescribed for the dedication of the
altar (Num. 8:15), proves that he of whom the altar was a shadow, also
required cleansing by blood-shedding. Every "burnt offering" was to
be accompanied by a "meat offering" (Num. 15:3-12), which, if baked,
consisted of "unleavened cakes of fine flour mingled with oil"
(Lev.2:4) and seasoned with salt (ver. 13). The meat
offering foreshadowed the uncorrupt character of Christ an essential feature to
his being an acceptable "offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet
smelling savour" (Eph. 5:2). The "sin
offering" was for sins of ignorance (Lev. 4: 2); and, when for the priest
or for the congregation, it was to be burned "without the camp" (Lev.
4:12-21). "Wherefore. Jesus
also, that he might sanctify the people with his own blood, suffered without
the gate" (Heb. 13:12).
Hence justification from individual sins is necessary as well as justification
from the "offense" of Adam; this two-fold justification is provided
for in the sacrifice of Christ. "His own self bare our sins in his body on
the tree" (I Pet.2:14). Be "bare our sins" through being made of
"sinful flesh" (Rom. 8:3; Heb. 2-14) and as sin in both forms
physical and mora1, requires shedding of blood, Christ's sacrifice is equally
available, and equally needful, for purification from "sin in the
flesh" and from sin in word or deed. The "peace offering"
signified the removal of the alienation between God and man arising from sin.
This feature of the Mosaic law has its parallel in
Christ. Those who were once "far off are made nigh by the blood of Christ;
for he is our peace" (Eph. 2:18-14).
They who formerly "were enemies" are "reconciled to God by the
death of his son" (Rom. 5:10).the
consecration of priests "a burnt offering" (Exod.
24:18) , "a sin offering" (ver. 14), and a "peace offering" (ver. 28) were each necessary to enable Aaron and his sons
to officiate in the tabernacle. In this they present a shadow of the "holy
priesthood" in Christ. who are consecrated
"to offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus Christ"
(1 Pet.2:5). Reconciliation by the sacrifice of substance must not only be
higher in degree, but equally as comprehensive as
reconciliation by shadow-sacrifices. Aaron and his sons were by the above
offerings cleansed from both physical and moral defilement, and in like manner
believers are, at baptism into Christ, "justified by his blood"
('Rom. 5:9) from "sin in the flesh" as well as from their previous
"wicked works" (Col.1:21). This is necessary to make their
reconciliation "complete" After partaking of this favor they cannot
be alienated from God or suffer condemnation by His son except by their own
unfaithfulness. The need for blood-shedding to cleanse from physical, as well
as from moral, defilement is proved in a variety of ways. "An
atonement" was prescribed for the tabernacle and its contents (Lev.
16: 16, 20, 33), and at the dedication of the altar, burnt
offerings, their offerings, and peace offerings were required (Num.8:10, 15,
16, 17)
For this there is a reason; these things were made out
of "the ground," which on account of Adams
offense, was "cursed" (Gen. iii. 17). Moral
guilt could not possibly attach to the tabernacle and its contents;
nevertheless they must be purged by blood before they could be used as a means
of approach to God. Could they whose nature contained "sin" officiate
as priests in an atoned-for tabernacle without their defiled nature having
partaken of a similar purgation? Impossible. Hence
"the blood of bulls and of goats, and the ashes of an
heifer sprinkling the unclean, sanctifieth to the
purifying of the flesh" (Heb. ix. 13). What was it that required, and
partook of, this purifying? "Sin in-the-flesh;" for
sin is the only thing that defiles "the flesh," and blood-shedding is
only required to purify from the sin or its consequences. Was the
purification of such efficacy as to enable the "offerers"
to obtain by it a "perfect" nature? No; for then the sacrifices
"would have ceased to be offered" (Heb.10: 1-2). "The blood of
bulls and of goats" must be succeeded by the blood of Christ in order to
give enduring efficacy to the purification. What then was the immediate
benefit? It took away, for the time being, in respect to the purified ones, the
alienation between themselves and God arising from
"sin-in-the-flesh"; and this enabled them to do those things required
by God for attainment to eternal life. Without such a shadow-purification this
would have been impossible, "the blood of Christ" of less present
efficacy than was "the blood. of bulls and of
goats?" According to Apostolic reasoning, quite the reverse:--"If the
blood of" animals was effective for "the purifying of the flesh, how
much more shall the blood of Christ purge your conscience from dead works, to
serve the living God?" (Heb.9: 13-14). The purging of the conscience is,
since the crucifixion, an essential preliminary for "serving the living
God." Is not the purifying of the flesh also essential? If requisite under
the law of shadows, can it be dispensed with under the law of Christ? And does
not the expression, "how much more," prove that "the blood of
Christ" purifies the flesh of believers at the same time that it purges
their "conscience from dead works?" is the present effect of
purification of the flesh through the blood of Christ? Not a change of nature,
but a change in the relationship of the flesh. By birth it is related only to
Adam, sin and death. Of itself it contains "no good thing"
(Rom.2:18), and even without originating any evil deed it is fit only to be
consigned to corruption. But when figuratively sprinkled by the blood of Christ
it is the subject of a justification, and thereby becomes "holy"
"Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit" (1
Cor.6:19); "the temple of God is holy, which temple ye are" (ch. 3: 17).
Henceforth the fleshly body is a fit dwelling place for God by His Spirit,
either in the form of "Spiritual gifts" or in the form of the Truth, which is
likewise "Spirit" (1Jno.5:6).
Can a body
thus made holy, afterwards become unholy? Yes If any man defile the temple of God, him shall God destroy" (1 Cor.
3:17). How can it be defiled? Among
other things, by "adultery, fornication, uncleanness, drunkenness"
(Gal. 5: 19-21). A
"holy" body is not allowed to become "one flesh" (1 Cor. 6: 16)
with an unholy body. It is on this basis that the marriage of baptized
believers is permitted "only in the Lord" (1 Cor.7:39) to marry out
of the Lord is to "defile the temple of God." the effect of the body being now made holy?
Does it prevent its going to corruption? No; but it prevents corruption
retaining a permanent hold of it for its original uncleanness. With what result? That It must come forth from the grave. To
be made incorruptible Not necessarily It must undergo a scrutiny to decide
whether, after being made "holy," it has been so defiled as to
deserve destruction (1 Cor.3:15). In such a case a "man" is destroyed,
not for what he was, by nature, but for what he did after his "body"
was made "holy;" "if ye LIVE after the flesh ye shall die"
(Rom. 8:13). On what conditions can a "body" now made
"holy" ultimately; become incorruptible? BY compliance with that
which is expressed in the following injunction:-'Ye are bought with a price;
therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God's"
(1 Cor. 6:20).
This involves crucifying "the flesh with the affections and lusts"
(Gal. 5: 2~4). They who do this are described as sowing "to the
spirit", and the promise is, that they "shall of the spirit reap life
everlasting" (ch. 6:8).
17.--"THE
CURSE OF THE LAW"
What is that curse In its
finality, death. Hence the law is styled "the ministration of condemnation"
and the "ministration of death" (2 Cor.
3:7-9). No Jew (except Jesus) kept the law perfectly; therefore they all came
under its curse. What was necessary to deliver them therefrom? Sacrifice, not in shadow, but in substance.
This was provided in the death of Christ; "he is the mediator of a new
covenant, that a death having taken place for the redemption of the
transgressions that were under the first covenant, they that have been called
may receive the promise of the eternal inheritance" (Heb. 9: 1·5). How was
the death of Christ brought to bear on them so as to produce "the
redemption" of their "transgressions?" Through
the shadow sacrifices of the law. If offered in a right state of mind
they were accepted as atonement for sin in view of the perfect sacrifice then
to come; "Whoso offereth the sacrifice of
thanksgiving glorifieth me; and to him that ordereth his conversation aright will I shew
the salvation of God" (Pa 1. 23).
When Christ had did and risen again these shadow
sacrifices were ratified by his shed blood, and faithful Jews "sleeping in
the dust" (Dan. 12: 2) were thereby placed in the same position as
faithful baptized Gentiles who "sleep in Jesus" (1 Thess.4: 14).
Writing of Jews baptized into the death of Christ the Apostle says, "Christ
hath redeemed us from the curse of the law" (Gal.3: 13). With what result? That all such Jews did not die under
"the curse of the law": according to the Apostolic promise they had
received "remission of sins" (Acts 2:38), and, as a consequence, they were freed from the
"condemnation" of the Mosaic law. Were they
at the same time freed from the condemnation" arising out of "the
offense" of Adam (Rom. 5:18)?
Equally so they had been justified in shadow by circumcision and animal
sacrifice from inherited sin, and Christ's sacrifice was as efficacious for the
ratification thereof, as it was for ratifying sacrifices offered for
"transgressions" against the law. Therefore baptized Jews were
"redeemed" by the blood of Christ from Adamic
"condemnation" as well as from Mosaic "condemnation To free Jews
from "the curse of the law" it was necessary for Christ to be
"made a curse" (Gal.3:13), How was this effected? By his being nailed
to the cross; "for it is written, cursed is everyone that hangeth on a tree'" (Gal.3:13). He could not
"destroy him that had the power of death, that is the devil," or sin
(Heb 2:14), unless made of "the same flesh and blood"
as his brethren, which is "sinful flesh" (Rom. 8:3); and in like
manner he could not remove "the curse of the law" without himself
coming under that curse. How could this be effected
without moral guilt? By the mode of his death being constituted the basis for
Mosaic "condemnation." He was "made a curse" by God's
providential arrangement. as he had previously been
"made sin" (2 Cor. 5: 21) by being "made of a woman" (Gal. 4:4). On
the false charge of "blasphemy" Jesus Christ was condemned to a
violent "death" (Matt. 16:65 66), as prescribed in the law (Lev.
16:1·6). The Jewish mode of inflicting it was stoning; but before Christ's
first appearing the Jews had been deprived of the power of inflicting death
without the sanction of the Romans (Jno. 8:31); and
as the Roman method of putting criminals to death was by crucifixion, Christ,
when condemned was hung upon a tree. This brought him under "the curse of
the law;" and he could only be freed therefrom
by his own shed blood. He shed his blood, redeemed himself from the Mosaic
"curse," and thereby laid the foundation for the same
"curse" being taken from such Jews, whether dead or living, as have
complied with God's sin-cleansing requirements. Gentiles do not require
redeeming from "the curse of the law" because they were never under
it; "what things soever the law saith, it saith to them who are
under the law" (Rom. 3:19)· Nevertheless the mode
by which that redemption was effected is of interest to them, because it
illustrates the way in which they can be redeemed from Adamic
"'condemnation." Jews were freed from Mosaic "condemnation"
by baptism into Christ; therefore Gentiles can, by the same baptism, be freed
from Adamic "condemnation" But is not Adamic "condemnation" solely physical, inherent
in sinful flesh? No; it has physical results, but in the first instance it has
reference to the Divine attitude towards the breach of the Edemic
law; it is another term for Divine disfavor. Physica1 decay is the result of
Divine "condemnation," but not identical with it. The
"condemnation" which "came upon all men by one man's
offense" (Rom. 5: 17-18)
consists of the Divine decree, "Then shalt
surely die": "Unto dust shalt thou
return" (Gen.2:17; 3:19). To be redeemed from that
"condemnation" is to deprive the death, which it brought of its
permanent power; not by preventing a temporary abode in the grave, but by
providing a basis on which justice can give release. It does not however,
exempt them from a return to the grave for unfaithfulness after being redeemed
from Adamic or Mosiac
"condemnation," or both. In such cases endless abode in the grave
will be due to condemnation solely for their own misconduct.
18. JEWS AND THE ABRAHAMIC COVENANT
All Jews from Sinai to the Crucifixion were in the
Mosaic covenant, but they were not all in the Abrahamic.
Entrance into both covenants required justification by circumcision; but here the
parallel ends. Entrance into the Mosaic covenant arose out of fleshly descent.
But to enter the Abrahamic covenant a knowledge of its
purport, and faith in its fulfillment were necessary. These conditions were not
present in the minds of all Jews; "for they are not all Israel, which are of Israel" (Rom. 9: 6). They who were merely "of Israel" constituted "Israel after the flesh" (1 Cor.
10:. 18); but they who were Jews "inwardly"
(Rom. 2:29) are described as "the Israel of God" (Gal.
6: 16). Fleshly Israel "attained not to the law of righteousness
................. because they sought it not by faith,
but as it were by the works of the law" (Rom. 9: 31-321); they made the mistake of thinking that shadow
sacrifices could take away sin without ratification by a perfect sacrifice. But
godly Israel believed in the bruising of the seed of the Serpent
on the basis of the woman's seed being bruised. Of this class was Simeon, who
"waited for the consolation of Israel" (Luke 2:'25), and who after being permitted to
see "the Lord's Christ" (ver. 26), said,
"Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace . for mine eyes have seen thy
salvcation" (ver.
29-30). All Israel were invited in a variety of ways, of which the
following is an illustration, to enter into the Abrahamic
covenant:-"Incline your ear and come unto me: hear and your soul shall
live; and I will make an everlasting covenant with you, even the sure mercies
of David" (Isa. 55. 3). How did Jews enter? They
"made a covenant with God by .sacrifice" (Ps. 50: 5). Did all who
made this covenant fulfil its terms to the end of
their life? Far from it; sometimes "the righteous turneth
away from his righteousness and committeth
iniquity" (Ezek. 18:24).
In such cases was their retribution confined to "the curse of the
law?" No; they must suffer the retribution due for unfaithfulness to the Abrahamic covenant. When will that be? When "the
Mediator" of that covenant (Heb. 9: 15-28)
returns to bring it into operation. He wilt then
·declare who have paid their covenant "vows unto the Most High" (Ps.
1. 14) and who have not. The former he "will deliver" from "the
day of trouble" (ver. 15); but the latter
"shall be destroyed together" (Ps. 37:38). Thus will "God bring
every work" connected with the Abrahamic
covenant "into judgment, with every secret thing whether it be good, or
whether it be evil" (Eccles. 12: 14);
as He has already done in regard to the Mosaic covenant (Heb. ii. 2).
The Jews in the Mosaic covenant who were also in the Abrahamic
now "sleep in the dust of the earth;" but they "shall awake,
some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt"
(Dan. 12: 2). They will be raised, not because they were in the Mosaic
covenant, but because they were in the Abrahamic. The
Mosaic covenant could not give eternal life (Gal. 3:21) and all its transgressions have already
"received a just recompense" (Heb. 2: 2). Consequently resurrection
for its retributions is unnecessary. Not so with the Abrahamic
covenant; its rewards and retributions have yet to be bestowed. Hence the need of resurrection.
19.--THE
JUSTIFICATIION OF JESUS
Every Jewish child, by its birth, defiled its mother.
It could not have produced this result if it had not itself been unclean (Lev.
12). From this defilement, the mother could not be cleansed without
"blood" (verse 4-5); and as blood is the antidote to sin. the uncleanness must have been caused by sin. Whose sin?
First, the "offence" of Adam; and second, its consequence: vis., "sin in the flesh" of the child. The
uncleanness was inherited and therefore the blood of the lamb,"
"pigeon," or "turtledove," denominated "a
sin-offering" (Lev. 12: 6), was a justification from inherited sin. The
mother was, by "a man child," made "unclean seven days"
(verse 2); and on the "eighth day" it was "circumcised"
(verse 3). The mother was then to "continue in the blood of her purifying
three and thirty days" (verse 4). But for " a maid child" she
was "unclean two weeks," and was required to "continue in
the-blood of her purifying three score and six days" (verse 5). Thus
circumcision in the case of "the man child" diminished the
uncleanness of the mother by one-half, and was consequently a justification
ceremony of the same efficacy as that of a sin offering.
To this Mosaic enactment, the Son of Mary, "made
under the law" (Gal. 4: 4), was no exception. The expression "that
holy thing" (Luke 1: 35)
applied to him before birth, is used in the same sense as the word,
"holy," in 1 Cor. 7: 14, to describe legitimacy of origin and also to
indicate that he was a "first born son" (Luke 2:7), all of whom were
"called holy to the Lord" (Luke 2.: 23).
.The holiness of first-born sons did not exempt them from circumcision, nor
prevent their mother from being defiled by them. Hence at "eight
days" of age the child Jesus was circumcised (Luke 2.:
21), and subsequently his mother continued in "the days of her
purification according to the Law of Moses" (ver.
22). This was the first act of justification of which Jesus partook. Its effect
was to transfer him from the state of "condemnation" to death, under
which he was born, into the condition described as being "alive"
(Rom. 7:. 9). In that "alive" condition he
continued until the close of his career; for when, on arriving at years of
discretion, the commandment came," his "sin in the flesh" did
not "revive," and as a consequence he did not "die." That
is, he did not by his own act incur death, and therefore he did not require to die symbolically in the death of a sacrificial animal. As
the true tabernacle, which the Lord pitched, and not man (Heb. 8: 2), Jesus,
like the Mosaic tabernacle, required "atonement" (Lev. 16: 33); for a like reason and for the same object. The
reason was physical defilement, and the object to provide a fit dwelling place
for Jehovah. As "the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle" (Exod. 40: 35), so "the spirit" abode in Jesus
Christ without "measure" (Jno. 3: 34). This was no doubt, one of the, perhaps the chief
one for which circumcision was instituted; that he who was made to
"hope" from his "mother's breasts," and was "cast
upon" God "from the womb" (Ps. 22: 9, 10), should have the
benefit of a justification from inherited sin from his earliest days.
"Circumcision verily profiteth if thou keep the
law" (Rom. 2:.25). In what way did it profit? It could not give
eternal life; "for if there had been a law which could have given life,
verily righteousness should have been by the law" (Gal. 3:. 21). What then was the profit? It spared from premature
death, and maintained uninterrupted reconciliation with God. Jesus Christ was
the only Jew who thus profited through keeping the law. Did he not die a
premature death? Yes; but how? In regard to the Mosaic law,
by a voluntary surrender of his life. Although he prayed to God, "take me
not away in the midst of my days" (Ps. 102:24), yet he made the
announcement, "I lay down my life for the sheep" (Jno.
10. 15). Up to the time immediately proceeding his
being nailed to the cross the Mosaic "ministration of condemnation"
(2 Cor. 3. 9) had no hold upon him. But as soon as he
was hung upon a tree he came: under that "condemnation;" that is, he
was "cursed" by the law (Gal. 3: 13),
and from that "curse" he could only be cleansed by the shedding of
his blood. At the same time and for the- same reason "the true
tabernacle" (Heb. 8:. 2) became unfit for the
indwelling of Jehovah; hence, the spirit left Jesus, and he cried out. "My
God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me?" (Matt. 28: 46). By "the
curse of the law" his circumcision was "made uncirrumcision"
(Rom. 2:
25); but by his death he
underwent a higher form of circumcision; "he was cut off out of the land
of the living (Isa 53:8)
Although nailed to the tree by "wicked
hands" (Acts 2: 23)
it was the result of providential arrangement; "thou couldest
have no power at all against me, except it were given thee from above" (Jno. 19: 11).
Jesus Christ died "the death of the cross" (Phil. 2: 8) but not in
the same way as others; he did not die simply through physical exhaustion.
There was an element in his case, which was, absent from that of the two
thieves, viz., grief for sin. This explains why he
died before them (Jno. 19: 31-33). He died of a "broken heart" (Ps. 69:
20); and hence when the soldier "pierced his side, forthwith came there
out blood and water" (Jno. 19: 34). His heart had literally ruptured, and, the red and
white portions of the blood had become separated. The grief which produced this
result is evidence of the completeness with which Christ had, during his
probation, practiced "circumcision of the heart" (Rom. ii. 29),
described as "circumcision made without hands" (Col. ii. 11), which,
if absent, would have rendered the "circumcision" which ended his
life of no avail (Rom. ii. 25) He had "cut off" everything from his
affections pertaining to "sinful flesh," and this was consummated by
a voluntary cutting off of his life for justification from sin. The baptism of
John was, like the Mosaic Law, an addition to the Abrahamic
covenant. It was instituted "for the remission of sins" (Mark 1:. 4). To the surprise of John, Jesus applied "to be
baptized of him;" and, in answer to John's objection, said, "Suffer
it to be so now: for thus it becometh us to fulfill
all righteousness" (Matt.3:13-15). Submission to this ceremony, was
therefore a necessary part of the "righteousness" of; Christ. For what reason? as it a test of obedience without doctrinal significance? If
it was in his case, it was in the case of others. But it was not in their case;
for they "were baptized confessing their sins" (Matt. 3: 6), and as a
consequence they received "remission of sins." Had
Christ any sins requiring "remission?" He had no personal
transgressions, but He possessed "sin in the flesh" inherited from
.Adam; his submission to the baptism of John was a practical confession of this
fact, and a recognition of the necessity of his death in order to be cleansed.
Being a symbol of his death, it was a justification, by shadow from the sin
which required that death. Had he not been thus justified by circumcision? He
had; but inasmuch as a shadow justification is not perfect it will bear
repetition to any extent. Previous to baptism by John, Jesus had been hidden
from Israel; he was now about to be revealed as the "beloved
Son" with whom the Father was "well pleased" (Matt. 3: 17). It was fitting, that before being "manifested
to take away our sins" (1 Jno. 3: 5), he should
publicly acknowledge his own relationship to sin, and also illustrate,
symbolically, the impossibility of escaping therefrom
without his own death. The ceremony which cleansed the Jews, who were
"baptized of John in Jordan" (Matt. 3: 6) from moral defilement, was equally
efficacious in cleansing Jesus from his physical defilement. In both cases it
was temporary, until ratified by the death of Christ as a sacrifice. The
necessity for the justification of Jesus Christ was foretold by the Psalmist
when representing him as saying to Jehovah, "in thy sight shall no man
living be justified" (Ps. 143:2). To be justified in God's sight is
impossible for anyone inheriting the sin nature; that nature must be covered by
blood-shedding before a man can do anything relating to a future life,
acceptable to God. There is no disadvantage in this, because God has made ample
provision for inherited sin to be covered. In instituting circumcision God
placed the Jew in a position whereby, as soon as he knew the Divine
requirements, he could perform them. And in the analogous ceremony of baptism
He has given the Gentile the opportunity, as soon as he knows what he has
received from Adam and what he may obtain through Christ, of becoming justified
from inherited and committed sin.
20.--THE
CONDEMNATION OF SIN
"It is not possible that the blood of bulls and
of goats should take away sin" (Heb. 10: 4). Why not? Because the animals
sacrificed for sin were under no moral law, and contained no "sin in the
flesh." The absence of sin rendered its condemnation impossible; it was
placed on the heads of the animals representatively, and therefore was only
condemned representatively. How was it thus condemned?
Not by Divine word only; this was insufficient; it must also, be condemned by
deed. Sin was condemned representatively when the animal was slain. Why was it
slain? Because the man
who offered it deserved, on account of sin, to be slain. What does this
indicate? That when the shadow gave place to the substance the one in whom sin was condemned must also be slain. Even though he possess "sin in the flesh" only, and have no
personal transgression? Yes. Why? Because his "sin-in-the-flesh" was
the result of the "offense" of Adam, who deserved to be slain on
"the day" he disobeyed. Does not this put Christ in the position of a
substitute? No; because Christ was a continuation, as regards nature, of Adam;
and "sin-in-the-flesh'' deserves the same penalty as personal
transgression. Adam did not suffer the violent death which he incurred; but it
was inflicted on the animals slain in Eden. 'Their death was the result of the promise
concerning the seed of the woman, and it foreshadowed the bruising of that
seed. Between the death of the substance and the death of the shadow, there
must be a parallel. Death by physical decay would not have sufficed for the
shadow; and therefore it would not have been effective in the substance. Why
not Because the condemnation of sin, whether by
representation or in reality, is the execution of the penalty threatened for,
and incurred by disobedience. If. therefore,
the penalty embodied in the Edenic law was death by
physical decay, such a death would have sufficed both for the shadow and the
substance. But it did not; consequently the penalty due to Adam was death by
slaying. And as all his descendants "sinned" in him (Rom. v 12), they
deserve, whether actual transgressors or not, a violent death in the execution
of the Edenic law. The reason why such a death is not
universal is due to the mercy of God, expressed in the Edenic
promise. That promise involves the existence of the seed of the Serpent until
the time arrives for the conflict between the seed of the Woman and the seed of
the Serpent to come to an end. But although the bulk of the human race are allowed to pass away through death by physical
decay, such a mode of death will not suffice for the taking away of Edenic, and other sin. God gave to Adam a law, and that law
must be carried out in one of two ways. If Adam had obeyed, he would have
fulfilled the righteousness of God, and would have experienced the blessing
implied in the law by not dying; but having disobeyed, the penalty of the law
must be inflicted. If it had been carried out on Adam there would have been no
human race, and, as a consequence no sinners to save. But God, in His mercy,
"that he might make known the riches of his glory" (Rom. 9: 23)
provided a descendant of Adam on whom to execute the penalty; and, in "the
depth of" his "wisdom" (Rom. 11: 33),he devised a plan whereby
submission to the penalty should constitute a part of "his
righteousness," and thus enable Him to "be just, and the justifier of
him which believeth in Jesus" (Rom. 3:2-6). Without setting aside the Edenic law God has carried His decree into execution in
such a way as to ensure for a great multitude the endless life which Adam lost
by violating that law. He has provided one who combined in his own person Adam
after condemnation and the substance of the Edenic
shadow-sacrifice, and who yet was morally "innocent from the great
transgression" (Ps. 19: 13) committed by the first man. According to
custom, Jesus Christ was crucified naked, as indicated by the fact that
"many women were there beholding afar off" (Matt. 28:55). This
feature possesses a doctrinal significance, which is referred to in the
statement that "for the joy that was set before him" he "endured
the cross, despising the shame" (Heb. 12: 2). He was then in the condition
of Adam and his wife after partaking of the forbidden tree and before being
"clothed" with "coats of skins" (Gen. 3: 21); they realized
through sin "that they were naked" (Gen. 3: 7), and as a consequence
experienced "shame." The "sin-in-the-flesh" transmitted by
them has the same effect, and hence Christ partook of it. Having
lost through "the curse of the law" the covering for sin provided by
circumcision and baptism. he was now, in
relation to the Edenic and Mosaic laws, in an
unjustified condition; he was physically as unclean as he was between birth and
circumcision; and the nakedness apparent to the human eye was a counterpart of
his nakedness in the sight of God. Although he possessed a record of a
blameless life, he could derive no benefit therefrom
until his naked condition had been covered by the shedding of his blood.
Knowing the painful and shameful death he had to
endure-for Jesus predicted that "the chief priests" would
"deliver him to the Gentiles to mock, and to scourge, and to crucify"
(Matt. 20: 19)--is it a matter for surprise that as it drew near, he should in
his "agony" "sweat as it were great drops of blood" (Luke
22: 44), and pray, "O my Father, If it "be possible, let this cup
pass from me: nevertheless not as I will, but as thou wilt" (Matt. 26:
39)? His exquisitely formed constitution caused him to shrink from the ordeal
by which sin was to be "condemned;" but his perfect understanding of
his Father's revealed will led him to suppress or crucify his natural dislike
and to submit to the execution of a
Divine law which, as proved by events, it was not "possible"
to set aside.
Was this because God required to be appeased? Not in the sense in which the term is
ordinarily used; no amount of zeal. effort or
self-sacrifice will take away His anger against sin apart from compliance with
God's "way" of righteousness. That "way" originated in the
declaration that the seed of the woman should be bruised in the heel by the
seed of the Serpent (Gen.3: l5) and it took: practical shape when the Lord God
provided sacrifice in Eden to effect reconciliation with the first sinners. This
is the only principle on which man can "make peace with God” (Rom. V5: 1) As it was God's prerogative to provide the
first shadow-sacrifice, so does it
belong to Him alone to give the sacrifice of substance. Hence He "hath set forth" Christ
Jesus "to be a propitiation"
(Rom. 3: 25). In that
capacity Jesus "abolished in his flesh the enmity" caused by sin
"that he might reconcile both" Jew and Gentile "unto God in one
body by the cross having slain the enmity thereby" (Eph. 2: 15-16). God "loved" sinners (Eph. 2: 4),
and in a higher sense
He "loved" his righteous son (Jno. 25: 9);
likewise the son "loved" sinners (Gal. 2: 20),and manifested perfect "love" for "the
Father" (Jno. 15: 31,. Notwithstanding this comprehensive love, it could not
produce any practical benefit without the physical condemnation of sin. The
exercise of God's love is regulated and limited by His other attributes. His
law having been violated His justice and righteousness required the vindication
of that law to enable Him to give effect to His mercy and love. Hence the need
for Christ to suffer the full penalty of the Edenic
law before he could reap the reward of an obedient life. Though free from
personal transgression, he submitted to that which was the inevitable result of
the Father's anger against sin, physically and morally; thereby exhibiting the
perfection of righteousness. After passing through the ordeal he was able to
say from experience, the Lord's "anger endureth
but a moment; in his favour is life; weeping may
endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning" (Ps. 30:5). The death of Christ was the combined
expression of Divine wrath, Divine justice, and Divine love; wrath against sin,
justice in the execution of the Edenic and Mosaic
laws, and love in opening up a way to immortality. The Divine wrath was buried
in the grave with Christ and as regards his own relationship to the Edenic and Mosaic condemnations, it remained there. This
enabled Divine justice to raise Christ
from the dead and give him immortality--the conditions imposed upon him having
been fulfilled On this basis Divine love
has offered the same blessing to others who by reason of their own wicked
deeds, are incapacitated from filling
the position which Christ occupied.
21.--THE
RESURRECTION OF CHRIST
In the conflict between opponents and defenders of
Christianity Christ's resurrection has been discussed solely as a miracle. From a, physical point of view, it was a
miracle; but from a moral standpoint it was more than a miracle. It was the
fulfillment of a promise--the carrying into effect of a righteous law. God had,
in effect, said to His Son "If thou wilt walk in my ways, and if thou wilt
keep my charge, then thou shalt" (Zech. 3: 7) be
delivered from death and be satisfied with "my salvation" (Ps.
91:14-16). His Son fulfilled these
conditions; therefore it was a manifestation of Divine faithfulness to raise
Jesus Christ from the dead, and give him" length of days forever and
forever" (Ps. 21:. 1). He was "obedient unto
death, even the death of the Cross; wherefore (God also hath highly exalted
him" (Phil. 2: 8-9). By obedience to "the death of the Cross,"he had atoned for Adamic
and Mosaic "condemnation," and having done nothing by his own action
to bring himself under the power of death "it was not possible that he
should be holden of it" (Acts 2: 24)~ He died
according to law, and he was released from death according" to law. It was
not possible, according to the "law of sin and death," for Christ to
be freed from Adamic "condemnation" without
shedding his blood; and after this event "it was not possible",
according to "the law of the Spirit of life," for the grave to retain
him. He had, by his shed blood, nullified that which causes death; therefore he
was "brought again from the dead through the blood of the everlasting
covenant" (Heb. 13:20)
i· e., the covenant made with Abraham. But was he not raised
in order that he might receive eternal life? This was the object; but there was
also a cause; and between cause and object there is a distinction. He would
have had no title to eternal life if he had not "put away sin by the
sacrifice of himself" (Heb. 9:. 26); and without
a title to eternal life he could not have been "brought again from the
dead." Between his corruptible body in the grave and the enjoyment of
incorruptibility, there were two physical processes to pass through; 1st
restoration to a flesh and blood nature; second transformation into spirit
nature. The former would not have taken place without the latter; and the
latter could not be realized without the former. Between the two processes,
Christ was free from condemnation for sin as Adam was before eating the
forbidden fruit. "He that hath died is justified from sin" (Rom. 6:. 7); consequently death could exercise "no more
dominion over him" (ver 9)· He could, at this
stage, say, "I restored that which I took not away" (Ps. 69: 4). But
he differed from Adam, in that he had been tested by most severe temptation
"in all points" (Heb. 4: 15,),
and had resisted. He had "loved righteousness and hated iniquity;
therefore God anointed him with the oil of gladness" (Heb. 1: 9). Having
been "brought again from the dead through the blood of the everlasting
covenant." he now by own blood, entered into the holy place (Heb. 9:. 12). These two Processes though attributable to the same
cause are quite distinct, when he came out of the grave he was "justified
from sin" though still flesh and blood; and he was immortalized as the
result of that justification.
22.
JUSTIFICATION BY CHRIST'S BLOOD
Believing Gentiles, like Abraham, cannot be justified
without sacrifice. Hence the Apostolic argument on Abraham's faith concludes'
with the declaration that Christ "was delivered for our offenses and was
raised again for our justification" (Rom. 4: 25). From this fact the Apostle draws a conclusion:
-'Therefore being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord
Jesus Christ" (ch. 5: I). And subsequently he
uses the expression, "Being now justified by his blood" (ver. 9). The reference to Christ's "blood" shows
that the justification took place at a specific time. When was that? When the
Roman believers were brought into contact with Christ's blood by baptism into
his death (Rom.6: 4). From what did they need
justification? From the "condemnation" arising out of "the
offense of one" (Rom. 5: 18),
and from "those things" they had committed as "servants of
sin" (Rom. 6:. 20-21). Justification and
condemnation are related to each other in the same way as light and darkness;
they cannot exist, in the same sense, and in respect to the same persons, at
the same time. Neither can a man be justified from his own "wicked
works" (Co. 1: 21) without being at the same time justified from the
wicked action of Adam: for if he were, his justification would be vitally
defective; and inasmuch as he is never by any other ceremony brought into
contact with Christ's blood, he would always remain unjustified from Adams
''offense," and as a consequence, would be forever "reigned"
over by the "death" which is brought (Rom. 5:. 17).. Christ having
been "raised again for our justification it necessarily follows that a
believer when raised out of the baptismal water symbolizing Christ's death,
partakes of his justification. Christ was, by his shed blood, justified from
the condemnation under which he was born: therefore those who are sprinkled
with his blood (I. Pet. 1: 2) at baptism, are then justified from the
same condemnation. That is, the Divine disfavour
under which were born and which continued until the time of entering the water,
is then taken away. Hence all the passages in the New Testament which refer to
the state of "grace" or favour into which
brethren of Christ have been introduced, imply that they are no longer under
the Divine disfavour arising out of Adam's offense.
In writing to the first century ecclesias the
Apostles reminded believers of the favour which had
been bestowed upon them in respect to physical as well as actual sin:-'Our old
man was crucified with him" (Rom. 6: 6); "his own self bare our sins
in his own body on the tree" (I Pet. 2:. 24); "you, being dead in
your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh, hath
he quickened" (Col. 2:13:). ? Moses "sprinkled with blood both the
tabernacle, and all the vessels of the ministry," and it was
"necessary that the patterns of things in the heavens should be purified
with these, but the heavenly things themselves with better sacrifices than
these" (Heb. 9:21-.23). "Our
old man" is sinful flesh, and as Christ by his death was justified therefrom it necessarily follows that those who are
crucified with him" participate in justification from the same When Christ
"bare our sins in his own body" he did not bare actual transgressions,
but through the possession of "sin-in-the-flesh" he bare the
"offense" of Adam, and by justification from "one man's
offense" the foundation was laid for justification from many
offenses" (Rom. 5:. 16). Those "offenses" and "sin-in-the
flesh" are both the result of "the offense of one'" therefore
when Justification from the "one offense" takes place it is
necessarily accompanied by justification from the inherited and individual sin
of which it is the origin. The "dead" condition which precedes the
quickening at baptism, arises from personal "sins and the uncircumcision of our flesh" (Col. 2: 13 ); if either of these causes of death remain unjustified,
there can be no quickening; therefore the ceremony which justifies from the one
justifies from the other. To all in
Christ it is said, "ye are washed, ye are sanctified, ye are
justified" (I Cor. 6: 11). From what are they washed? Like Saul, from their
previous misdeeds :--"Arise and be baptized, and
wash away thy sins (Acts 22: 16)· From whom are they sanctified or separated? From
all who, are still "sinners" in Adam (Rom. 5. 19). And from what are they justified? From the "offense" of Adam (Rom. 5: 18). The "offense" of Adam is no longer, as it
once was, imputed to them; the possession of ' 'sinful flesh" is not any
more a cause of Divine disfavour; and if they walk
after the spirit" (Rom. 8:4) they cannot be condemned by Christ (ver. 34).
Justification from "sinful flesh" is not accompanied by its
destruction; if it were, there could not be a probation;
but its destruction is ensured if the justification be maintained. By what can
it be suspended or terminated? Not by the sins committed before baptism; nor by
the "offense" of Adam; but solely by sins committed after baptism.
When once sins are forgiven through the blood of Christ, they are never again
the subject of condemnation; and when once the blood of Christ has given
justification from the "offense" of Adam, it cannot be re-imposed.
"Who shall lay anything to the charge of God's elect? It is God that justifieth.
Who Is he that condemneth?
Is it Christ that died, yea rather, that is risen again'" (Rom. 8:35-34). Neither; but a like condemnation will result
from the commission of similar sins if not forgiven. "Sin is the
transgression of the law" (I Jno. 3: 4), and by
that law it is condemned. This is legal condemnation; physical condemnation is
the execution of the law. The "transgression" of Adam was, in Eden, the subject of legal condemnation; and it was the
subject of physical condemnation when "sin-in-the-flesh" was
"condemned" on the cross (Rom. 8:. 3), but
in circumstances which ensured its removal .
When believers are baptized into the death of Christ they partake, by a
symbol of the condemnation inflicted on him, and of the justification which
immediately followed. What is the effect of this? That they are freed from
"condemnation" for the "offense" of Adam, in its legal
aspect. This is the meaning of the Apostolic statement that' "there
is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus" (Rom.
8: 1). The remaining clause of this verse, "who walk not after the flesh,
but after the spirit" is omitted from the ·Revised Version, because not
found in the Sinaitic and Alexandrian manuscripts.
This omission is in harmony with the Apostolic argument; for after making the
statement Paul gives his reason, and the essence of that reason is, that God
"condemned sin-in-the-flesh" of his own Son. The nature of the
condemnation which Christ underwent defines the condemnation from which his
brethren are now free; it is the condemnation existing prior to baptism, viz.,
"condemnation" for "the offense" of Adam (Rom. 5.: 18).
They who were "made sinners by one man's disobedience" are then
"made righteous by the obedience of one" (ver.
19). . Previously the offense of Adam was imputed to them. but
now through their faith, Christ's shed blood, and the water of baptism, the
righteousness of Christ is imputed to them.
23.--THE LAW OF THE SPIRIT OF LIFE.
This law is founded upon, and, indeed, embodied in,
the Edenic promise; it is the antithesis of "the
law of sin and death," embodied in the Edenic
commandment. These two laws operate at the same time, but not over the same
area. All the
human race are under "the law of sin and death," but only a limited
portion come under "the law of the Spirit of life." "The
end" of those who remain under the first law is to "perish" (Jno. 3:. 16); but "the
end" or those who come under the second law, and depart not from its
requirements, is "everlasting life" (Rom. 6: 22). For four thousand years "the law of the Spirit
of life" was identical with the Name of Salvation, (Prov. 18: 10), but when that "name" was
"given" to God's beloved Son (Phil. 2: 9), it was embodied in him and
became "the law of the Spirit of life-in Christ Jesus." Hence each
one who is "baptized in the name of Jesus Christ" (Acts 2: 38) can say with the Apostle "The law of the Spirit
of life, in Christ Jesus, hath made me free from the law of sin and death"
(Rom. 8: 2). With what effect? That all such cannot,
either for the "one offense"" of Adam, or for the "many
offenses" (Rom. 5:. 16) committed under "the
law of sin and death," perish. Does this ensure their entrance into
"everlasting life"? Only by continued conformity with the requirements
of "the law of the Spirit of life." If in this they fail, they will
"perish;" not through the operation of the law under which they were
born--from which they were once "made free" but for violating the law
under which they were placed by Divine favour.
"The law of sin and death" contains no provision for justification
from sin, and consequently no element, which counteracts the reign of death.
All under it, are by birth, "children of wrath" (Eph. 2:3);as long as they continue under it they are "dead in
trespasses and sins" (ver. I); everything they
do is the offspring of sin, and is itself sin, for "the plowing of the
wicked is sin" (Prov. 21: ·I); God is angry with
them "every day" (Ps. 7: 11);
and if they died while under "the law of sin and death." they die
under the wrath of God, from which there is no escape. "The law of the
Spirit of life" is the only law which provides for justification from sin
and consequently the only law which counteracts the reign of death. Only those
therefore, who come under the operation of this law can escape the permanent
reign of death. Does it prevent them from going into the death-state? No; but
it provides for their resuscitation, and this places them in precisely the same
position as they were before dying. Why do they die? As a consequence of
"the law of sin and death," but not under its unrestricted operation;
having been "made free" from that law it cannot retain its hold upon
them; they must rise. Is their death a necessity? No; otherwise the last
generation of those under "the law of the Spirit of life" could not
escape going into the grave. If, as taught by the Apostacy,
the place of reward had always been ready, and there had been a continuous
judgment-seat, the faithful would never enter the grave, and the unfaithful
would not die until condemned by the Judge. But inasmuch as the place of reward
is net fully prepared, as the time of the judgment has not arrived, and as the
faithful are to be all "glorified together" (Rom. 8: 17), they who
come under "the law of the Spirit of life" and live not till its
administrator arrives, simply "fall asleep in Christ" (1 Cor. 15:. 18), to await the day of adjudication. The
justification from sin provided for by "the law of the Spirit of
life" is due to the fact that God "condemned sin in the flesh"
of "his own son" (Rom. 8: 3). The sacrificial death of a righteous one is
the basis on which "the law of the Spirit of life" frees men from
"the law of sin and death" and brings out of the grave those who pass
from the operation of the one law to the operation of the other law. It is
owing to "the grace of God" (Rom. 5:. 15)
that such a sacrifice was provided, and therefore it is through "the grace
of God" that any are allowed to come under the operation of "the law
of the Spirit of life." But having once partaken of the "grace"
they are under an obligation to which they were formerly strangers; they are
henceforth required to "continue in the grace of God" (Acts. 13: 43) and to "grow in grace" (2 Pet 3: 18). If this be not done they "receive the grace of
God in vain" (2 Cor. 6: 12,and incur the retribution arising, not out of "the
law of sin and death," but out of "the law of the Spirit of
life." When God makes a law, whether as the result of His wisdom (Rev. 8:
29-31), His grace (Rom. 5: 17),
or "because of transgressions" (Gal. 3: 19), its enactment’s must be carried out; but only on
those who are related to it. "What things soever
the (Mosaic) law saith, it saith
to them who are under the law" (Rom.3: 19). No Gentile unincorporated into
Israel by circumcision could approach God by shadow,
sacrifices and the Aaronic priesthood; the privileges
and retribution of the Mosaic law were confined to the
nation which, by blood-shedding, was just in shadow from the
"offense" of Adam. In like manner the privileges and retribution of
"the law of the Spirit of life" are confined to those who, by
sacrifice, come under its operation. Consequently the tribunal which dispenses
the reward and punishment pertaining to that law has no jurisdiction over those
who have never been freed from "the law of sin and death." "The
law of sin and death" admits only of a life under condemnation, liable to
be cut short at any moment. But the Mosaic law offered
long life free from disease, after a shadow-justification from Adamic condemnation; and yet its retributions were confined
to this life and were consummated in the grave. What does this teach? That as
the punishments due to those under the Mosaic Law are past, not future, so the
punishments doe to any under "the law of sin and death" are concluded
when that law consigns them to the grave. Is there any
obstacle to their being brought forth for future punishment" 'Yes.
What is it? Precisely the same obstacle which precludes any
others from, being brought forth to a future probation. What is that?
The fact that while living they were not justified from the "offense"
of Adam and their own "wicked works," and that consequently when they
died they were consigned by "the law of sin and death" to the endless
"power of the grave" (. Psa 49, 15-16).
Cannot the anger of God against unjustified sinners set aside "the law of
sin and death"? This question may be answered by asking another. Can the
love of God set aside that law? This may be tested by the ordeal which Christ had to pass through.
Speaking of the Mosaic law, he said, "Till heaven
and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no
wise pass from the law till all be fulfilled" (Matt. 5: 18). Having been "made under the law" (Gal. 4:. 4), and having been also "made a curse" under
that law (Gal. 3: 13), he could not
be redeemed therefrom without a violent death. And:
on the same principle, having been "made of a woman" (Gal. 4: 4)
descended from Adam, he could not be freed from the Edenic
law without a violent death. He shrank from such a cup of bitterness, and
prayed "earnestly" (Luke 22: 41)
no less than three times (Matt. 26:. 44) that "if
it be possible" God would spare him from it (ver.
39). But God's fidelity to "the law of sin and death" and to
"the law of the Spirit of life" prevented compliance with the
request. His love for Jesus Christ was greater than that which He has had for
any member of the race, and yet He could not, even on this ground, be
unfaithful to His own word by setting aside His own laws. Therefore He
"spared not His own Son. but delivered him up for
us all" (Rom. 8: 32).
Divine anger is not more powerful than Divine love; that which the latter was
unable to accomplish, the former is powerless to effect. God having decreed
that all who remain under "the law of sin and death" shall, for the
sin pertaining to that law, "perish," it necessarily follows that
when they pass into the grave that law has taken effect on them, and that not
having been freed from that law, they must, in the grave, remain forever.
24.--OUT OF
ADAM INTO CHRIST
When does this take place? At
baptism. In what sense do believers then pass out of Adam? In the same sense that they pass into Christ. Is it
accompanied by any physical change No; the change is one of relationship; Adam
ceases to be the ;federal head of baptized believers,
and Christ takes his place. What is the immediate effect of this? That the
righteousness of Christ is imputed to them instead of the
"disobedience" of Adam; whereby they cease to be accounted "dead"
(2 Cor. 5:. 14) and are made
"heirs according to the hope of eternal life" (Titus 3: 7). What is
the effect in relation to the future? That death, as the result of Adam's
"disobedience" cannot prevail over them. "By man came
death" (1 Cor. 15:21). How? "Through the offense of one" (Rom. 5.: 15). When, therefore,
the relationship of any toward that "offense" is altered their
relationship towards its consequence is altered. In what way?
By keeping them from entering the grave" Not
necessarily; but, should they enter, by bringing them out. "By man
came also resurrection of the dead" (1 Cor. 15: 21). How? By
"dying unto sin" (Rom. 6:. 10) at the close
of an obedient life To whom does "the resurrection" apply? To those
who have "made a covenant with God by sacrifice" (Ps. 50: 5), which
Includes all who have been "buried with Christ by baptism into death"
(Rom. 6:. 4). It is of such that Christ refers when he
says, "The gates of Hades shall not prevail against my church" (Matt.
16:. 18). The "church," ecclesia or called
out assembly, is composed, not only of the "few chosen," but of the
"many called" (Matt. 20: 16).
"Against" none of these will "the gates of hades
prevail;" for Christ will use "the keys of hades"
(Rev. 1:. 18) to release them from the grave, because,
as "the church of God
he hath purchased" them "with his own blood" (Acts 20: 28). But against those who, since the establishment of
his "church," have not entered therein "the gates of hades" will prevail. Christ's resurrection was the
result of justification from inherited sin, and the resurrection of his
"church" is the result of justification from inherited sin and
individual "wicked works" (Col. 1: 21), whether its members are
subsequently faithful or unfaithful. But, did not the resurrection of Christ
include immortalization? It was followed by the bestowal of immortality, but
the two events were quite distinct. The principle which precludes his being
clean when born of an unclean woman applies to his coming forth from the grave.
Corruption cannot beget incorruption. The immortal "house not made with
hands" comes, not from the earth, but "from heaven" (2 Cor.5:. 1-2). The faithful exist as "corruptible," not
corruption, when they "put on incorruption" (1 Cor.
15. 53): and therefore Christ as their "forerunner" must have
occupied an analogous position. The distinction between resurrection and
immortalization is shown by Christ's declaration, "I am the resurrection
and the life" (Jno. 11: 25). To make the word "resurrection" here to
mean immortalization, would reduce the passage to an absurdity; it would
represent Christ as saying, "I am the immortality and the
immortality." Christ is "the resurrection" to all who enter the
Name of Salvation, the "many called" who constitute his
"church," but he will be "the life" only to the "few
chosen" who keep God's word (Rev. 3: 10). "In Adam all die" (1 Cor. 15:. 22). Who are they? Those who have not been
transferred out of Adam into Christ. Does it not also apply to those in
Christ? No; because when they entered Christ, they passed out of Adam; that is
to say, they ceased to be "sinners" in Adam, and were "made
righteous" in Christ (Rom. 5:19). They were then "born from
above") (Jno. 3: 3), and became "Sons of
God" (1Jno. 3:1) Although, therefore they die as the result of Adam's sin
they do not die in .4dam; if they did, they would become dead in Adam; they
would, in that case have died "in their sins," and as a consequence
would have "perished" (1 Cor. 15:. 17 18).
But having been "washed" and "justified" (1 Cor. 6:. 11) from their sins in
Adam, they die in Christ, and hence, while in the grave are "dead in
Christ" (1 Thess. 4:.16); and because Christ
rose, they will rise. He rose "through the blood of the covenant,"
and they will rise through the same:--"By the blood of thy covenant I have
rent forth thy prisoners out of the pit wherein is no water" (Zech. 9: 11)."In Christ shall all be made alive" (1 Cor. 15: 22).
Is this "all" identical with the "all" who
die in Adam? No; it is a totally different class. The statement is a contrast,
in regard, not only to Adam and Christ, but also to those who are respectively
in these two federal heads. The one brings death, and the other brings from
death. Does not "made alive" mean immortalize? No; it is synonymous
with "resurrection from the dead" in the preceding verse. But is not
the word "resurrection" used for immortalize?
Not as a rule; only as an exception such as Phil.3:10.it not have the
exceptional meaning in the passage under consideration' No; because that meaning
is not the point in dispute. The Apostolic argument arises out of the denial by
some, of the "resurrection of the dead" (1 Cor.
15:. 12). What was denied? The restoration of the dead
to life; and it was to refute this, that Apostle wrote
what immediately follows. His argument on this point continues until the end of
verse 22, and then he passes from reasoning to affirmation. To say that the
term "resurrection" in verse 21 means immortalize is to represent the
Apostle as not dealing with the specific point in dispute viz., whether or not
the dead could and would be brought to life.
25. WALKING IN
THE LIGHT
Writing to "Sons of God" (1
,Jno.3: 1) in the first century, the Apostle says, "If we walk in
the light the blood of Jesus Christ, his son, cleanseth
from all sin" (1 Jno. 1`: 7). To "walk in
the light" is to conform to the Truth in its doctrinal and practical
aspects. On this depends cleansing from sin. What sin? Sin committed after
baptism. In what way? By confession there-of; "if
we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to
cleanse us from all unrighteousness." To whom must the confession be
made? To God . Through whom? Through Christ
in his capacity as a "high priest" (Heb. 4::15). On that basis
is the forgiveness granted? On the fact that Christ "put
away sin by the sacrifice of himself" (Heb. 9: 26); sins committed after baptism are
forgiven through his shed blood. .
Are they forgiven without such confession? No; the condition is "if we
confess our sins." To omit such confession is one way in which to
"walk in darkness," and they who do this are excluded from sincleansing. Confession of sins committed during probation
is equivalent to baptism for purification from the "wicked works"
(Col. 1: 21) preceding probation; it occupies the same position in the present
dispensation as the offering of an animal sacrifice, prior to the Crucifixion.
It is true that Jesus Christ "offered one sacrifice for sins forever"
(Heb. 10:. 12), but that sacrifice is of no avail
unless applied individually in the appointed way. It will not cleanse from
"wicked works," committed during a state of darkness, without
"baptism into" that sacrificial "death," (Rom. 6:. 4); and neither will it cleanse from sins committed after
baptism without being made use of by confession, through Christ. Would
confession cleanse from "wicked works" while in a state of darkness?
No; because in that
:condition there is no
high priest to present the confession; and furthermore, such confession would
be futile, because not preceded by justification from the "offense"
of Adam. A recognition of the "condemnation" Pronounced 'upon all
men" for "one man's disobedience" (Rom 5: 18-19),
and conformity to God's method of justification therefrom,
is an indispensable preliminary to "fellowship with him" (1 Jno. 1: 6). The "offense" of Adam, having
produced a breach between God and all men, that breach
must individually be healed before a probation for eternal life can commence.
By the healing of the breach they who "were far off are made nigh by the
blood of Christ;" they can say "he is our peace" (Eph. 2: 13-14), and "We have peace with God through our
Lord Jesus Christ" (Rom. 5:.1). Does walking in the light justify from the
"offense" of Adam? No justification from "one man’s
offense" is as much a "free gift" as is justification from the
"many offenses" of those who "put on Christ" by baptism
(Gal.3: 27). Is not this justification conditional- that is, dependent on
conformity with subsequent conditions? No; it is complete in its legal aspect
when a believer rises -out of the baptismal water; and if he maintain that
justified state by walking in the light to the end of his probation, bestowal
of immortality is a certainty. Is not; this equivalent to saying that the justification
at baptism is provisional? No; because probationary unfaithfulness cannot
re-impose the condemnation for "one man's offense" or for the
"many offenses" preceding baptism; but it can, and will, bring a new
and individual condemnation. The unfaithful will be condemned at the Day of
Judgment solely for their own conduct. The "peace with God" which
results from justification at baptism is provisional, because liable to be
interrupted or terminated by subsequent sins; but the justification which is
the foundation for that "peace" is not provisional; it is as regards
the offenses to which it applies, complete. "Ye are compete in Him" (i e. Christ, Col. 2: 10).
26.--THE LORD
OF DEAD AND LIVING
When Jesus Christ said, "I am the Resurrection
and the Life" (Jno.11:25), he announced in effect that resurrection and
immortality come only through him. He is the giver of eternal life as the
result of his own "obedience;" for thereby "he became the author
of eternal salvation unto all them that obey him" (Heb. 5:. 8-9). His "obedience" was completed by
"the death of the Cross" (Phil. 2:. 8);
therefore his position as a life-giver is based on his sacrificial death. But
he cannot give life to those who are dead unless they are previously raised
from the dead, Consequently it is necessary for him to
be "the Resurrection" in order to fulfill his position as "the
Life." On what basis has he been appointed "the Resurrection"?
Is it not the same as that on which he has been appointed "the Life,"
viz., "obedience unto death" (Phil. 2: 8)? This is obvious. On what
basis, then, does he exercise the power pertaining to this two-fold
appointment? He bestows "the Life" on those only who "have
washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb" (Rev. 7:
14). The greater portion of these are dead; on what
principle are they raised? Because of their relationship to Christ. How is that described' As
"Lord both of the dead and living." It was "to this
end," that is, to attain this position, that "Christ both died, and rose
and revived" (Rom. 15: 9). Who are "the dead and living" 0f
whom he is "Lord"? Those who are in the position to
"live unto the Lord," or to "die unto the Lord'' (ver. 8). How do they attain to that position? In the same way as the Roman believers, viz
"by being into his death" (Rom. 6: 3). Only such can say"
We are the Lord's" (Rom. 14:. 8); and therefore
only of such is Christ "the Lord." Does this apply to baptized
believers whether they prove faithful or unfaithful? Yes; for even if they go
to the length of "denying the Lord" it does not nullify the fact that
he had previously "bought them" (2 Pet. 2: 1). No amount of
unfaithfulness can set aside the fact that at baptism they were "bought
with a price" (1 Cor. 6: 20),even with "the
precious blood of Christ" (1 Pet. 1: 19).
It is on this ground that he raises those who are his, in order that he may
test whether they have "lived unto themselves" or "unto him
which died for them and rose again''(2 Cor.
5:15). Do these testimonies imply that
Christ is not "the Lord" of any of the dead, who have not been
"bought" by his blood? Certainly; and, as a consequence, that he will
not raise any of them. Would not this exclude those who lived previous to the
Crucifixion? No; for those who had been introduced into "the Name"
(Phil. 2) of Salvation, were given to him when that "name" was
"given him." To these he refers when he says, "This is the
Father's will which hath sent me, that of all which he hath given me I should
lose nothing, but should raise it up again at the last day" (Jno.6: 39).
All of the dead have not been "given" to Christ; otherwise he would
"raise" them; and that would involve universal resurrection. But all
who have been "given" to him he will raise; and he will, raise them
on the same principle that he was raised, viz., "through the blood of the
everlasting covenant" (Heb.13:. 20).
27.-"WE
SHALL NOT ALL SLEEP"
The prediction that the faithfu1 who "are alive
and remain unto the coming of the Lord" (I Thess.
4:15) will never "sleep in the dust of the
earth" is something more than a matter of interest; it presents a problem,
the solution of which exhibits a doctrinal truth. The problem is this; how can
brethren of Christ pass from this life to the next wthout
entering the grave? Are they treated on a principle different from that which
is applied to their brethren who go into the grave? Is death necessary for
salvation in the one case and not in the other?
If it is, there are two ways of salvation, not one. The "dead in
Christ" and the "alive" in Christ were both born under
condemnation for Adam's "offense." How is it taken away in each case?
Do the "dead in Christ," by sleeping in the dust, purge themselves
from that "condemnation"? If so, the "alive" in Christ
require to be purged in the same way; but, inasmuch as they never "sleep
in Jesus," it is obvious that such a "sleep" is not for them a
necessity, and ii not necessary for them it cannot accomplish anything for the
"dead in Christ." The only death which can take away condemnation in
Adam is the death of Christ; every other death is powerless for this purpose.
And to represent an abode in the grave as contributing towards the removal of
Adam's condemnation, is to rob Christ of an important portion of the work He
has acomplished. The penalty due to sin is a violent
death, and therefore the taking away of sin requires a violent death. Moreover,
it must be a violent death inflicted by God on one who is himself perfectly
righteous; and these conditions can only be found in the person of Christ. Some
of the "dead in Christ" have died a violent death, but they were not
free from personal transgression, and therefore their death was of no avail as
a sacrifice for sin. The bulk of the "dead in Christ" have died by
physical decay; but such a death could avail them nothing, and in addition to
this, not one of them was perfectly righteous. There is no death since the
introduction of sin which can take sway "the offense of one" and the
"many offenses" of others (Rom. 5:. 15-16),
but "the death of the Cross ."the brethren
of Christ "alive" at His appearing are conveyed to the Judgment-seat
their probation is at an end; Christ has ceased to be their high-priest and
becomes their judge. It will then be said of them, "He that is unjust let
him be unjust still: and he which is filthy, let him be filthy still: and he
that is righteous, let him be righteous still: and he that is holy, let him be
holy still (Rev. 22: 11). At this stage there will be "no more sacrifice
for sins': (Heb. 10:. 26) for
either class. The righteous will not require it; for, having "walked in
the light" during probation they confessed their sins, and from these they
were cleansed by the intercession of Christ on the basis of His shed blood (1 Jno. 1: 7-9; 2: 1). Do they at this time require to be
"justified" from the "offense" of Adam, or to be
"washed" from their "wicked works" prior to probation? If
so, there are no means by which to be cleansed from these defilements, and as
"there shall in no wise enter into" the holy city "any thing
that defileth" (Rev 21:.
27), they could not, in that case, receive eternal life. Such a catastrophe is,
however, impossible; they who are pronounced "righteous" and
"holy" in character at the judgment-seat were "made righteous
(Rom. 5:. 19) when they rose
out of the baptismal water; and having, "by patient continuance in well
doing" (Rom. 2: 7) and forgiveness of probationary sin,
"washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb"
(Rev. 7: 14) they are free from any obstacle to the bestowal of eternal life.
On this basis the Judge decrees that "they have right to the tree of
life" and to "enter in through the gates into the city" (Rev.
22: 14). The principle on which the faithful who are "alive," escape
going into the grave, is identical with the principle on which 'the dead in
Christ" are brought out of it viz., justification, by the sacrifice of
Christ, from "offense" of Adam. This is equally true of faithful and
unfaithful; for until the judgment-seat, the "dead in Christ" are not
divided into these two classes: they are all raised, therefore, on the same
principle. Like Christ, they are "brought again from the dead through the
blood of the everlasting covenant" (Heb. 13:.
20). The relationship existing between resurrection and justification is parallel
to that between death and sin. As death results from sin, so resurrection is
the consequence of a justification for that sin. Hence those who have never,- been justified are retained in the bondage of death; but
those who die after justification are, by resurrection, replaced in the
position they occupied immediately before death; and thus they are put on
precisely the same level as the justified ones who "are alive and remain
unto the coming of the Lord" (1 Thess. 4:. 15).
28.--THE
JUDGMENT-SEAT SUMMONS
Writing of the time when God will "judge His
people" (Ps. 50: 4),the Spirit in the Psalmist
says: "Gather my saints together" unto me; those that have made a
covenant with me by sacrifice" (ver.5). For whom is this command intended?
For the "angels" who, says Christ, "shall gather together His
(the Son of Man's) elect from one end of heaven to the other" (Matt. 24:
31). Why is it recorded so long before it is required? Not merely to inform the
"angels." .It must be for the enlightenment of those who come within
the scope of its operation. Who are they? They are described by God as "My
saints." How are they constituted "saints"? By
sanctification, or separation from the world of sin. Can they be so
separated without justification from that sin? No; the Corinthians who
"believed on the Lord" (Acts 28:. 8) were
"sanctified" at the same time that they were "washed" and
"justified" (1 Cor. 6:. 11); they underwent
this three-fold change when they "were baptized" (Acts 18. 8). Being
then "sanctified in Christ Jesus," they were "called
saints" (1 Cor. 1:. 2).
From that time they were no longer their "own" but "God's"
(1 Cor. 6:. 19-20). Some of
them, it is true subsequently "defiled the temple of God" (1 Cor. 3:17; v. 1,2), and thereby interrupted or terminated
their reconciliation with God, as shown by the exhortation, "Be ye
reconciled to God" (2 Col. v. 20); but this defilement did not make void
the fact that they had been "washed" and "justified" from
the sins to which they were related prior to baptism; if it had, they would
again have had to go through this ceremony in order to be once more
"reconciled to God." All that was needed on their part was to forsake
their evil-doing and ask forgiveness through Christ. Having been
"purchased" by God "with the blood of His own (Son)" (Acts
20: 28), they had entered upon a relationship which cannot be finally severed
on the one hand, or consummated on the other, until God, by that same Son (Jno. v. 22). will "judge His
people." The "saints" whom the "angels" are instructed
to 'gather" are defined to be those who "make a covenant with God by
sacrifice," not those merely who have kept the covenant. Consequently the
gathering comprises both faithful and unfaithful. To represent the command to
"gather" as specifying only the faithful, is at variance with the
expression, "made a covenant;" and furthermore it attributes to the
"angels" that which "the Father" has expressly
"committed unto the Son" (Jno. 5:. 22),
viz., the work of discriminating between those who have, and those who have
not, kept the covenant. "this task is not
assigned to the angels by the Spirit; they are required to discriminate only
between those who have "made a covenant with God by sacrifice" and
those who have not. Do the terms
of the command admit of any being gathered to judgment who
have not "made a covenant with God by sacrifice"? No: the
"angels" perform God's will perfectly (Matt 6: 10); they neither add to, nor diminish, His mandates;
they will gather all who have "made a covenant with God by
sacrifice," but none others. None outside the covenant are required; for
the judgment-seat arises out of the covenant; it is for the purpose of
receiving ail "account" (Rom. 14:. 12) from
those who have made a vow to God and been constituted "stewards of the
manifold grace of God" (1 Pet. 4: 10).
At such a gathering as this, those outside the covenant have no place; they
have no stewardship of which to "give account;" whatever punishment
they are to receive will be inflicted without the ordeal of a judgment-seat.
Many have suffered retribution in time past, and many more will do so at the
epoch of the gathering of the saints; but in their case the retribution is
inflicted in this life; being related only to "the law of sin and
death" they do not come within the scope of resurrection which is related
to the administration of 'the law of the spirit of life."
29.--THE SECOND
DEATH
This expression is only to be found in the last book
of the Bible; but this is no proof that the death which it describes is not
previously mentioned. The phrase is first used in writing to the seven
churches:--"He that overcometh shall not be hurt
of the second death" (Rev. 2: 11), the converse of which is, that he who
does not "overcome" shall be so "hurt." What class is
represented by the "he"" Those only who have entered upon a
"race" (1 Cor. 9: 24) or warfare (2 Tim. 2: 3-5); only such, therefore, as
fail in this conflict can undergo "the second death;" it is not
threatened against those who never commence the race, and therefore is not
applicable to them. Why is the word "second" made use of? This is a
problem given to God's "servants" (Rev. 1: 1) to solve; and the only
way to obtain a solution is by "comparing spiritual things with
spiritual" (1 Cor. 2: 13). A second cannot exist without a first. Is there
such an expression as the first death to be found anywhere? No; But the thing
itself is frequently mentioned: "death by sin" (Rom. 5: 12) "By man came death" (I Cor.
15: 21). What man? "The first man
" who was "of the earth, earthy" (1 Cor.
15:. 47). "The second man is the Lord from heaven" (I Cor. 15:. 17). Is there a death to
which he is related? Yes; though in a different way from that of "the
first man." It is a death which "the second man" inflicts on
others for their own sins. Who are they? Some of those who
constituted "the second man" in his multitudinous aspect. Can they suffer "the second death"
without having previously passed through the first death? No; it would not, in
that case, be to them "the second death." Then how can the unfaithful
"alive" at Christ's coming suffer "the second death?" By reason of the fact that they died when they were "buried
with Christ by baptism into death" (Rom. vi. 4). The death incurred
by Adam and inflicted on Christ being a violent death, it necessarily follows
that Christ, when "sin in" his "flesh" was
"condemned" (Rom. 8:3), suffered the first death in its most acute
form. When, therefore, believers are baptized into that death they die in
symbol the first death and so fulfill, in conjunction with Christ, all that is
necessary to carry out on them the Edenic law. This
suffices to free them from the condemnation of that law, and hence "the
second death" is inflicted on the unfaithful solely for their conduct
since they were freed from the condemnation which brought the first death; as
Christ was condemned to a violent death for inherited sin, so they are
condemned to a violent death for personal sin. But here the parallel ends.
Christ's individual righteousness was the means of releasing him from the power
of the first death, but there is no provision for releasing the unfaithful from
the power of "the second death;" being devoid of personal
righteousness they are in the position of those who have "counted the
blood of the covenant wherewith" they were "sanctified"--and
also "washed" and "justified" (1 Cor.
6:. 11)'an unholy thing," and there is nothing left for them "but a
certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation which shall
devour" them (Heb. 10:. 26, 27). Hence the destruction resulting from
"the second death" is unending. It
places them in precisely the same position when devoured as the Edemic law places those who without justification, die
under it; both classes die in their sins and therefore "perish;"
there is no provision for the resurrection of either the one or the other;
death is in each case a finality.
Cannot those who remain in Adam suffer "the
second death"? No; because they have never been released from the power of
the first death. No one could die under the Mosaic curse unless justified by a
shadow ceremony from Adamic condemnation; and on the
same principle, no one can die "the second death" unless justified
from the "offense" which brought the first death. Then why is it said
that "the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and
whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their
part in the lake which burneth with fire and
brimstone; which is the second death" (Rev. 21: 8)' Does not this category
describe sinners in Adam? No, it describes unfaithful in Christ, as shown by
the contrast between this verse and the preceding one. "He that overcometh shall inherit all things.... But
the fearful and unbelieving, &c." One class overcomes; the
other class does not overcome. The former "inherit all things"; but
the latter "have their part in the lake" of fire: having brought
forth "the works of the flesh" (Gal.5: 19-21), after being justified
from "sin-in-the-flesh" as a matter of possession, they experience
what a "fearful thing" it is "to fall into the hands of the
living God" (Heb. 10: 31), and then "of the flesh" they
"reap corruption" (Gal. 6: 8). Are not the unfaithful consumed in the
"everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels" (Matt. 25:. 41)? Yes; does not this prove that the slanderer and his
messengers suffer "the second death" as well as the unfaithful? No; though they die at the same time and in
the same way it is not "the second death" to both classes. Why not?
Because the term "second death" implies a first death; from which
death "the devil and his angels" have not been freed. The consuming
of the slanderer and his messengers is, indeed, one form of inflicting the
first death; the same fire inflicts that death from which each class has not
been freed, viz., the first death on those in Adam and "the second
death" on those who were once transferred out of Adam into Christ. But is
not "the lake of fire" defined to be "the second death"
(Rev. 20: 14)? No; that expression is
elliptical; a fire cannot produce death unless something living be consigned to
it. It is in reference to the death of those whose names Christ will "blot
out of the book of life" (Rev.3: 5; 20:. 15) that
the statement in question is made; and it is equivalent to saying, "This
[death] is the second death. "The lake of fire" consists of the
nations in a state of warfare, and subject to other Divine judgments; into this
the unfaithful are cast to suffer their "stripes" and then die a
violent death. It is "their part," not the lake of fire, "which
is the second death" (Rev. 21:. 8). Are not the
sins' of the unfaithful in Christ as effective to lock the gates of the grave
as the sins of unjustified Gentiles? No; these two classes are in an entirely
different position. Unjustified gentiles were condemned in Eden, and when they die under that condemnation their
eternal doom is sealed. But the sins of the unfaithful in Christ have not yet
been the subject of condemnation; therefore they must rise. If they did not,
their judgment would be anticipated, and the judgment-seat of Christ would
thereby be made void. When they arrive at that judgment-seat they are free from
condemnation for Adam's "offense," and without any Divine verdict on
their probationary conduct. For the latter alone they will be condemned and
their sins will then be as effective to keep them in the grave as in
condemnation in Adam to prevent the resurrection of unjustified Gentiles. Cannot sinners in Adam still under condemnation
for the Edenic offense be brought from the dead to be
punished for their own misdeeds' No; such a proceeding would be equivalent to
slaying the slain; it would be condemning to death men already doomed to death.
Is a work of supererogation such as this compatible with the dignity and equity
of Divine Majesty? But will not condemnation at the judgment-seat produce
suffering in the flesh? It will; "weeping and gnashing of teeth"
(Matt. 8:
12). Is it not, then, solely
for such suffering that the unfaithful are brought before it? No; whatever suffering
may be inflicted on sinners, the climax is death-death on sinners in Adam now,
and '"the second death" on the unfaithful in Christ at the
judgment-seat. The misdeeds of all who die in Adam are known to God; and if He
think well to visit them with tribulation in this life He can and will do so.
But if He allow them to pass into the death to which
His own law has condemned them, without any tribulation, no one has a right to
demur.
30.
IMMORTALIZATION
Jesus Christ was changed to spirit-nature (Rom. 1:4) when, "by his own blood. he
entered in once into the holy place" (Heb. ix. 12) for the most holy which
was beyond "the veil, that is to say, his flesh" (Heb. 10: 20), represented spirit-life. He was, therefore,
immortalized as the result of justification "by his own blood" from
the Adamic condemnation and the Mosaic curse. His
brethren, if faithful, are to be made "like him" (1 Jno. 3:2) on the same basis. They are related to his blood
from the commencement to the close of their probation. When washed in the lever
of regeneration (Tit. 3: 5),they are sprinkled with that blood from the altar
of burnt offering (I Pet. i. 2; Exod.
29:. 21; Heb. 13: 10); st the same time some of that
blood is put upon their "right ear," the "thumb of their right
hand," and the "great toe of their right foot" (Exod. 29.: 20), to show that hence forth they must heed
only holy words, perform only holy acts, and walk only in holy ways; and they
are clothed with priestly garments (Exod 29:. 8-9) to
enable them to enter, and officiate in, the holy place. When
they sin. the horns of the altar of incense
have to be touched with the blood of the sin-offering (Lev. 4:. 7), and their
incense, when offered, must be consumed by fire taken from the altar of burnt
offering (Lev. 14: 12, 13). As
priests in the holy place, the brethren of Christ are on probation to test
their worthiness to be incorporated, by identity of nature, with their Great
high priest in the most holy place. When he reveals himself from behind the
veil, he will be the manifestation of God in spirit, and they will stand in the
Divine presence Whatever their character they will still be, in a legal sense,
within the confines of the holy place, and not until the record of their
priestly career has been made known, will the decree be given to expel the
unfaithful, and to authorize the faithful to pass beyond the veil into the most
holy. To enable the latter thus to ascend, they must be made
"incorruptible" by "the body of their humiliation" being
"conformed" to the body of Christ's glory" (Phil. iii. 21),
"in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye" (1 Cor.
15:. 52). This consummation is the result of
justification on entering the holy place, on the maintenance of that justified
condition during their sojourn therein,
and on the decree of justification pronounced by their judge. Without
justification from all sin to which they were previously related, they could
not enter the holy place, and without justification from all sin subsequently
committed they cannot enter the most holy. The foundation and object of the
foregoing mixed assembly define the position of those who will constitute it.
No provision is made for the inclusion of any who have not been the subjects of
a justification by sacrifice; they cannot enter the holy place even to receive
condemnation, and they who are already in it cannot come out to be associated
during judgment with those who have never been reconciled to God. The occupants
of the holy place having been forbidden during probation to ally themselves with
any who are without, it would be at variance with Divine principles for these
two classes to be brought before the same judicial tribunal. Does this imply
that there is no judgment for those outside the holy place? No; but it implies
that they are not related to the tribunal which arises out of "the law of
the spirit of life." Under the Mosiac law there
was "a remembrance again made of sins every year" (Heb. x. 3). Hence
the special ceremonies provided for the annual Day of Atonement. On this day
alone the Aaronic high priest went into the most holy
place and appeared before the Divine Presence. For this purpose he had to offer
"an atonement for himself and for his household, and for all the
congregation of Israel" (Lev. 16:. 17), and be clothed with
"holy garments" (ver. 4); he could not
appear there without a covering for sin for himself and for those whom he
represented. What did he take with him? A censer containing incense and some of the blood of the
slain animal (ver. 13-14); that is to say, he prayed
for forgiveness on the basis of sacrifice. On the answer given depended the
continuance or the termination of the life of those he represented; it was
therefore a verdict of acceptance or rejection for such only as had availed
themselves of blood-shedding for a justification from sin. This verdict was a
type of the decision to be given by Christ on his judgment seat. Hence the same
principles are applicable to the one as to the other, viz., the adoption of a.
covering for sin by these who appear before the Divine Presence. They who are
without such a covering have no place there; they are in a naked condition, and
under the condemnation pertaining to "the law of sin and death." They
have, therefore, no place at a tribunal specially constituted to administer
"the law of the spirit of life." They are in the same position in
relation to Israel after the spirit as that of the Gentile nations in
relation to fleshly Israel under the Mosiac law. No
Gentile, unless incorporated with Israel, was represented by Aaron when he appeared before the
Divine Presence, and therefore no Gentile was affected by the verdict brought
forth by the high priest.
31.--RECAPITULATION
The following- are the principal truths demonstrated
in the foregoing pages:--
First.-That through
the "offense" of Adam all men are born under "the law of sin and
death," by which they are condemned to death.
Second.--That
all men partake of that "offense" by inheriting its consequence,
"sin in the flesh"; and that therefore they need individual
justification therefrom.
Third.--That
in the absence of such justification they cannot be freed from condemnation for
Adam's 'offense," and that consequently when they die they
"perish."
Fourth.--That
the penalty due for sin under the Edenic, and subsequent,
dispensations is a violent death, and that for this reason Christ, who had to
undergo that penalty, suffered a violent death.
Fifth.--That
Christ's death and resurrection was the only effective justification from sin,
and that consequently none can be justified from Adamic
condemnation unless brought into association with Christ's death by a ceremony
related thereto.
Sixth.--That
animal sacrifice, circumcision and baptism, being representations of Christ's
death, have been appointed, in conjunction with that death, as a means of
justification from previous sin.
Seventh.--That
this principle of justification has been embodied in "the law of the
spirit of life."
Eighth.--That
as sin brings death, justification from that sin brings deliverance from death;
and that consequently death and resurrection take place through the operation
of their respective laws.
Ninth.--That
Christ, who is the embodiment of "the law of the spirit of life,"
experienced and brought resurrection through justification from sin and that
consequently those who partake of his justification.,
by dying in him, will be brought out of the grave.
Tenth.--That
those who do not partake of Christ's justification, never come under the
operation of "the law of the spirit of life'; and that, as a consequence, Adamic death in relation to them never comes to an
end. Eleventh.--That
the object of resurrection to the judgment seat of Christ is for the
administration of "the law of the spirit of life."
Twelfth.--That
although justification from the offense of Adam and from previous wicked works
gives resurrection to those who before death came under "the law of the
spirit of life" it does not ensure the bestowal of immortality.
Thirteenth. --That those only will be immortalized who have
maintained their. justification by walking in the
light and obtaining forgiveness through the blood of Christ.
Fourteenth.--That those who do not maintain
their justification will, for their subsequent sins, be condemned to a violent
death.
Fifteenth.--That
the faithful who are alive when Christ comes will escape entering the grave, by
virtue of justification at the commencement of their probation.
32. OBJECTIONS
In opposition to the conclusions which have been
recapitulated, a number of objections are adduced, of which the foremost
relates to.
A.-- Historical
raising of the dead --Because Elijah and Elisha,
raised men who had not been justified from sin, it is contended that any number
who have died without such justification can likewise be raised. Yes, for the
same object, but not for one totally different. What was that object? To attest the word of God spoken by the prophets, and to strengthen
the faith of some. It was therefore, for an object outside themselves,
not one to which they alone were related; they died again under precisely the
same conditions as those under which they first died; that is, they were
re-consigned to the grave, not because of a condemnation pronounced after
coming out but because of the condemnation under which they were born. Their
restoration to life did not terminate tne death
imposed for Adam's "offense"; it merely suspended the operation of
that death. Moreover, they were not raised as the result of a promise, or on
the basis of a Divine law; their restoration to life was a special exercise of
Divine power, unconnected with any preceding conditions imposed upon them.
These features are sufficient to show that their case furnishes no illustration
of the principle on which "the just and unjust" in Christ will be
raised, and that consequently it does not prove the resurrection to punishment
of any who have died in Adam. When a
convict is brought; into a British court of law as a witness, the process by
which he temporarily comes out of prison is very different from that required
to release him before his term of imprisonment expires. In the latter case,
there must be a remission of the sentence, but not in the former. Thus is it
with the raising of the dead; an unjustified Gentile may be restored to life to
testify to the power of God, but this is no proof that he could, on the same
principle, be raised from death in Adam to undergo "the second
death", neither is it an illustration of the principle on which justified
Gentiles will be raised to a judgment-seat based upon "the law of the
spirit of life." The dead in Christ
are raised for the administration of "the law of the spirit of life,"
which gives a blessing to the faithful and retribution to the unfaithful.
Before coming under that law, they were freed from the power of "the law
of sin and death" by justification from that which brought it into
operation. The dead in Adam have not been brought under "the law of the
spirit of life" and therefore they are not amenable to its retribution. They
have never been freed from "the law of sin and death," and therefore
the death on which they have entered is endless. To bring them out of the grave
for further punishment would be to terminate one endless death for the purpose
of inflicting upon them another--an anomaly not to be found in prospective
Divine procedure. Cannot God raise
anyone, and for any purpose? No; because to do so would stultify His own word.
God has chosen to regulate His action in regard to death and resurrection by
law. He has decreed that death must follow sin, and that such death can only be
terminated or averted by justification from the sin which caused it. The endless subjection to death of
unjustified sinners is essential to the fulfillment of "the law of sin and death";
and, on the other hand, the deliverance from the grave of those who have died
after being justified--whether faithful or unfaithful--is equally necessary to
the fulfillment of "the law of the spirit of life.". To stop the operation of "the law of
sin and death" without justification from sin for the purpose of applying
a feature confined to the law of the spirit of life, " would introduce
confusion, and be a violation of justice; it would also destroy the
distinction; between two laws of an antagonistic character. God has shown, both
by word and deed, that strict adherence to His own laws is a supreme feature of
His character. The need for this is obvious in view of the first requisite for
His approval: "Without faith it is impossible to please God" (Heb.
11: 6). To produce and strengthen faith God has appealed to His past actions;
the precision with which He has, already fulfilled promises and executed laws
is referred to as the basis for confidence in that portion of His word
pertaining to the future. Having promised a blessing on specified conditions
under "the law of the spirit of life," He cannot, consistently with
His own character, withhold such blessing: where the conditions are fulfilled;
neither can He consistently glive the blessing to any
who never come under the law. And in like manner, having decreed that men who
live and die under "the law of sin and death" are
"perished," He cannot consistently with that decree terminate the
reign of "the law of sin and death" without justification from the
sin which incurred the condemnation of that law. Faithfulness to His word is
equally at stake in the one case as in the other. Only those who were under the
Mosiac law suffered the Mosaic curse, and, in like
manner, only those who have come under "the law of the spirit of life"
can suffer its condemnation. If
the condemnation relating to the judgment-seat of Christ hnd
a different ending from that of condemnation in Adam, the impossibility of
inflicting both on unjustified sinners would be apparent. That is, supposing
condemnation by Christ were to result In endless life in misery, no argument
would be needed to show that this was incompatible with endless death in Adam.
But the fact that it is endless death in both cases does not destroy the
distinction If a man who has died in Adam were to be
raised and condemned to an endless death for his own offenses, it is obvious
that the death imposed on him for Adams'
"offense" would have come to an end. In other words, he would be
redeemed from death in Adam without the blood of Christ; justification in that
case would be set on one side. If this can be done for
punishment, why not for probation? And if for punishment and probation,
why not for reward? .And if the first death can come to an end without justification., why not "the second death?" These
questions are but the logical outcome of a position, which, under a mistaken
impression, sets aside the only means, provided for release from condemnation
in Adam. The men brought to life by Elijah and Elisha
were not thereby released from that condemnation; Adamic
death in their case did not come to an end; the principle of justification was
not violated; and therefore such instances do not constitute a precedent for
raising to an individual condemnation such as have not been freed from condemnation
in Adam.
B.--Rejection of Christ.--The words of Jesus Christ in
Jno. 3:18
19 and 12:
47, 48, teach, it is said,
that those who have rejected him will be condemned at his judgment-seat. Within
the limits of their application this is true. What are those limits? The
generation of Jews then living. "This is the
condemnation," said Christ, "that light is come into the world, and
men loved darkness rather than light." What "world?" The Jewish
"world" to which Jesus 'came," in which he lived, and which
"knew him not" (Jno. 1: 10, 11); this was a world of "darkness" and
Christ was the "light" which shone in it, but "the darkness
comprehended it not" (ver. 5). Why did not the
inhabitants of this world "comprehend" the light? "Because their
deeds were evil" (Jno. 3: 19); and "their deeds were evil" because they
believed and obeyed" “'not Moses and the Prophets" (Luke 16: 31). "Had ye believed Moses, Ye would have believed
me," said Christ; "if ye believe not his writings how shall ye believe my words?" (Jno.
5:. 46 47). What was their relationship to the
writings of Moses? That of custodians; a chief "profit" of
"circumcision" was, that "unto them were committed the oracles
of God" (Rom. 3:. 1); they had to be justified,
in shadow, from inherited condemnation, and thereby constituted "the holy
seed" (Ezra 9. 2) in order to become the depositories of "the holy
scriptures" (2Tim 3:. 13). This privileged position imposed upon them a
corresponding obligation; they required to believe and defend all that was contained
in those "scriptures." If this position of privilege and
responsibility had been fully realized in the Jewish "world" to which
Christ "came," it would have contained no darkness," and would
gladly have accepted the further "light" which he brought. But not
having understood all that Moses wrote it could not comprehend what Christ
spoke; hence it charged him with
"blasphemy" and denied that he was "the Son of God"
(Jno. 10:. 33, 36). It rejected Christ and His words;
and of each member of it who so acted Christ said, "the
word that I have spoken, the same shall judge him in the last day" (Jno. 12: 48).
The generation of Jews contemporary with Jesus Christ
was more highly privileged than any previous one. John the Baptist was sent to
it to herald the advent of the Messiah; "to revive the fathers'
dispositions in their descendants, and to bring back the disobedient to the
wisdom of just persons" (Luke 1:. 17, Dr. Thomas'
translation). In this he succeeded; for there "went out to him Jerusalem and all Judea, and all the region round about Jordan, and were baptized of him in the Jordan confessing their sins" (Matt. 3: 5, 6). They
already recognized circumcision as a justification in shadow from Adamic condemnation, and the offering of sacrifice as a
similar purification from Mosaic defilement; but in conforming to the preaching
of John they submitted to a further sin-cleansing ceremony which represented
resurrection as well as death. They would: not have done this
if they had not believed already in a future life. Whence came
the knowledge on which that belief was based? Not; from the Mosaic Law; for it
did not offer to them a life beyond the present. That knowledge came from the
promise to the fathers. Whatever, therefore, their previous position, their baptism
by John was either on entrance into the Abrahamic
covenant, or a confirmation of their having already entered it. If not
previously under the operation of "the law of the spirit of life"
they thereby came under it; and, as a consequence, became amenable to its
future administration. The transformation effected in the condition of that
"generation" by the preaching of John the Baptist is parabolically described by Jesus as that of a man exercised
of an "unclean spirit," with the result that he became "empty,
swept and garnished" (Matt. 12: 43, 44). This language, although
figurative, is sufficiently plain to involve justification from the greatest
demoniac sin. It shows that that "generation" even if not before, was
then brought within the scope of redemption from death by Christ's sacrifice.
All who were immersed by John the Baptist thereby "made a covenant with
God" by that which symbolized the "one sacrifice for sins" (Heb.
10:. 12); they entered the Name of Salvation, and when that "name"
was "given" to Christ (Phil. 2: 9) they, with all others in the name,
were "given" to him; a gift bringing them within the exercise of his
resurrection power (Jno. 6:: 39). Like those baptized
into Christ since the Crucifixion, they have been "purchased" (Acts
20:. 28) or "bought" (2 Pet. 2: 1) from the
power of "the law of sin and death" by Christ's blood, and therefore
form part of "the dead" in Christ (Rom. 14:9-12).
The
effect of John the Baptist's mission was very widespread; for even the
Pharisees said "All hold John as a prophet" (Matt. 21:. 26). Consequently all men believed his message concerning
the appearance of the Messiah. Their demonised
attitude towards Christ is no evidence that they had not a
"garnished" state of mind during John's ministry. The explanation of
their changed: attitude is to be found in the fact that Jesus Christ did not,
in his person or his surroundings, realize their expectation. Then the demoniac
condition of mind which
John had exorcised them, took to "himself seven other
spirits more wicked than himself," and returned to his former abode.
Though willing for a season to rejoice in John's 'light" (Jno. 5:. 35) they refused Christ's
"light." This was a special "sin" (Jno.
15:. 22) for which they incurred a special
condemnation; "he that be!ieveth not is
condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only
begotten Son of God" (Jno, 3:18).
Gentiles,
it is obvious, do not occupy the same position as that of the Jews contemporary
with Jesus Christ and his prophetic forerunner. They are not the custodians of
"the oracles of God;" they have not been justified from inherited
condemnation; they are 'children of wrath" (Eph. 2:.2); they are still
under "the law of sin and death," and therefore outside the scope of
the resurrection and judgment relating to "the law of the spirit of
life." Does this mean that they are outside the scope of the resurrection
and judgment? No; they are liable to whatever judgments God may impose in this
life, national and individual. The evil works for which they deserve such
judgments are innumerable; and if dealt with according to their deserts they
would, by some such calamity as the Deluge, be swept off the earth. The
rejection of "the truth (as it) is in Jesus" (Eph. 4: 21) by such as hear it is an aggravation of their
previous evil course of life. All this is known to God, and He will, if in
accordance with His wisdom, visit such with retribution He reduced
Nebuchadnezzar to the level of the beast for oppressing the poor (Dan. 4:. 27);
and He smote Herod with a fatal disease because he accepted unlawful homage and
"gave not God the glory" (Acts 12:. 23). He can similarly afflict
those who reject the light of His truth; but if He does, it will be while they
are living under "the law of sin and death." He will not raise them
from the dead to be condemned to the punishment pertaining to "the law of
the spirit of life."
C.--Rejection of Apostoic Preaching.--Christ
preached only to Jews, but the Apostles preached to both Jews and gentiles. On
the principle that to receive or reject the Apostles was to receive or reject
Christ (Matt. 10: 40; 2 Cor. 5:.
20), apostolic preaching would bring the same condemnation upon believing Jews
as the preaching of Christ had done. Hence the commission which Christ gave after his resurrection.
"Go ye into all the world and preach the gospel
to every creature. He that beliveth and is baptized
shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned" (Mark 16: 15, 16). Into what "world" were
they then authorized to go? The "world" into which he
"came" ('Jno. 9: 39), which' for a time
went "after him" (Jno. 12: 19), but
"hated" him (Jno. 7:. 7); the
"world" in which he "spake
openly" (Jno. 18:. 20),which saw him for a time
and then saw him "no more" (Jno. 15:.
19);the "world" which he "overcame" (Jno.
16:. 33), and before whose foundation he had glory in the mind of the Father (Jno. 17: 5); and, the "world" in which there were
some who "believed on" him (1 Tim. 3: 16). The "world" was
of clearly defined limits; it consisted of the Jewish nation only. The Apostles
so understood the terms of their commission, for not until a, special
revelation was given to Peter (Acts 10: 34,
35) did they understand that their preaching was to be extended outside the Jewish
"world." When preaching to the Jews, they failed not to proclaim that
whosoever would not "hear" Christ through them should be destroyed
from among the people" (Acts 3: 23), a punishment involving the infliction
of a violent death. The Jews who heard them had, by animal sacrifices,
practically admitted that for their sins they deserved such a death, and that a
violent death was necessary for their justification, in shadow; but in
rejecting apostolic preaching they refused to recognize that the death of Jesus
of Nazareth was the only means of giving substantial efficacy to that
justification. By this sin they incurred the destruction foretold by Moses, and
the damnation threatened by Christ. When
the Apostles preached to the Gentiles they adopted a different course; they did
not threaten a violent death for disbelieving.
The reason is obvious; the Gentiles were not the custodians of God's
oracles; they had not had the privilege of a long course of tuition in Divine
things; they were ignorant of God and His purpose; and they had not been
justified from the "offense" of Adam or from their own "wicked
works." The object of the Apostolic preaching to Gentiles was "to
take out of them a people for God's name" (Acts xv. 14), "to turn
them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan unto God, that they
might receive forgiveness of sins, and inheritance among them which are
sanctified" (Acts 26: 18). There is no record of the Apostles announcing
to Gentiles that if they did not believe the gospel they would be raised to future
punishment. Did not Paul announce to the Athenians that "the times of this
ignorance God winked at," but "now commandeth
all men everywhere to repent" (Acts 17: 30)' He did; but this does not
involve resurrection to punishment. Does not a command from God render those
who disobey liable to punishment'! Yes, but not necessarily beyond the grave.
God sent a message to Nineveh which was equivalent to a command to turn from their
evil ways (Jonah 3:. ch.);
and in the event of refusal he threatened them with punishment, but it was to
be inflicted in this life; in "forty days" the city was to be
"destroyed." The Ninevites repented, and
their destruction was postponed. God gave numerous commands to the nation of
Israel, but the retribution specified for disobed.ience
related to this life (Deut. 27: 15-68). It is therefore an unsound argument to
affirm that disobedience to a Divine command involves a share in the
"resurrection of damnation" (Jno. 5:. 29). For those who are probationers for eternal life it
does; but not for unjustified Gentiles. To what punishment are they liable? To such as God. may inflict before
they die under the "condemnation" of "the law of sin and
death." But does not Paul's statement imply that God would deal with
mankind in the future in a different way from that which He had done in the
past? Yes, but this does not necessarily mean that Gentiles were to be raised
to future punishment. God has dealt with Gentiles since the Apostles preached
to them very differently from the way in which He previously treated them. He
has poured upon them a series of judgments for rejecting and perverting His
word, persecuting His saints, and ill treating the Jews. What mean the
exhibitions of His anger portrayed in the seven seals, the seven trumpets and the
seven vials? Why was Pagan Rome afflicted with the sword, famine and
pestilence, etc., during the first three centuries (Rev. 6: 4-8): Was it not
for refusing to "turn to God from idols" and "to wait for His son from
heaven" (I Thess. I1: 9-10)? Why did the Empire
undergo such a convulsion in the fourth century as to cause high and low to
call to "the mountains and rocks, Fall on us, and hide us from the face of
him that sitteth on the throne and from the wrath of
the Lamb" (Rev. 6: 16)' Was it not to avenge the blood of those who had
been "slain for the word of God" (ver. 9)?
Why were there in the same century symbolic "thunderings,
and lightnings, and an earthquake" (Rev. 8:. 5)? Was it not in answer to "the prayers of
saints" (ver. 3)" Why in the fourth and
fifth centuries was the western "third" of the Roman Empire decimated
by the Goths, the Vandals, and the Huns (Rev. 8:. 7-12)? Was it not a judgment
on the Apostacy which had taken the place of Paganism
as the state religion? Why were the Saracens sent as a plague of locusts from
the seventh to the tenth centuries, against the eastern section of the Apostacy (Rev. 9. Ch)? Was it not because they "worshipped demons, and
idols of gold and silver, and brass, and stone, and of wood" (ver. 20)? Why have "the vials of the wrath of God?'
(Rev. 16: 1) been poured upon Christendom during the past century? Is it not
for "speaking great words against the Most High," "wearing out
the saints of the Most High" (Dan. vii. 25), and corrupting the earth
(Rev. 11: 18)? These judgments all
resulted from neglecting or perverting the word of God. On the assumption
that any of those out of Christ on whom they were poured will be raised to a
future punishment a difficulty is introduced. Why punish men in this life and
then punish them again for the same sins at the day of
judgment? This is not in harmony with Divine procedure in the past. But withdraw the assumption and the
difficulty disappears. And does not the Bible teach that resurrection to
judgment relates only to justified sons of Adam explain why Divine judgments
are poured upon the unjustified in this life? If there be no barrier to the
resurrection of any who have died without justification, why should Divine
wrath be inflicted on them in this life? Is it not because they are, by the
operation of "the law of sin and death," excluded from resurrection?
Does not the infliction of Divine wrath prove that they deserve it? If then
they are within the scope of the law which has brought resurrection, why should
their retribution be inflicted on this side of the grave instead of being
reserved for the other side? The only satisfactory answer to these questions is
to be found in the Bible truth that the resurrection results from a probation under "the law of the spirit of life." When Paul preached to the Athenians
"some mocked" at what he had said concerning "the resurrection
of the dead" (Acts 17: 3:2); but he did not announce that they would be
included in the resurrection; neither did he threaten them with destruction for
their unbelief, as when he and Peter preached to the Jews (Acts 3:. 23; 13:. 41). Did he not state that "God commanded
all men everywhere to repent, because he hath appointed a day, in which he will
judge the world in righteousness by that man whom he hath ordained" (Acts 17: 30, 31)? Yes.
Does not this prove that those who refuse to "repent" will be raised
to be "judged" in that "day"? No; if it proves their
resurrection to judgment it proves the resurrection, not only of those who
refuse to "repent," but of all the "world.') The proclamation that God "will judge
the world in righteousness by that man whom he hath ordained" is intended
as the object of faith and hope; hence the subsequent statement "whereof
he hath given assurance unto all men, in that he hath raised him from the
dead" The main purport of the judging is rulership
of the world for a thousand years, during which period Christ and his immortal
brethren will occupy the "set thrones of judgment" in Jerusalem (Ps.
72: 5). Men are commanded to "repent" that they may partake of this
great honour; and in order that they may have
"full assurance of faith." (Heb. 10:. 22)
and "full assurance of hope" (Heb. 6:. 11) they are referred to the
fact that God "hath raised Christ from the dead." The pouring out of
judgments on the nations at Christ's appearing, and the infliction of
punishment on the unfaithful at the judgment-seat, are but preliminaries to
this great work. Did not the Apostles in
their epistles announce that God would punish "Jew" and "Gentile"
(Rom.2: 9); that He "judgeth them that are
without" (1 Cor. 5:. 13); that Christ would
"in flaming fire take vengeance on them that know not God" (2 Thess. 1;8); and that he would
come "with ten thousands of his saints to execute judgment upon all"
(Jude vers. 14, 16)? Yes; but none of these
statements involve the resurrection of unjustified sinners. Such as refer to
them relate to judgments in this life; and such as refer to probationers for
eternal life are applicable to none others. The Apostolic epistles were written
only to "saints in Christ Jesus," the unsanctified inhabitants of Rome, Corinth,
Ephesus, Thessaloniea, etc., knew
nothing of their contents. In every case where "the judgment-seat of
Christ" is introduced it is connected with those only in his name;
"every one of us shall give account" (Rom. 14: 12); "we must all appear before the
judgment-seat" (·2 Cor. 5:.
10), "you who shall give account' (1 Pet. 4: 5). To extend such passages
as these to unbelievers is a violation of the basis on which the epistles were
written; it opens the way to extending other passages, relating to the promised
reward to those who have never been justified. The passages referring to those
out of Christ
are very few, and there is no difficulty in perceiving that when speaking of
Divine wrath against them it is applicable to judgments in this life. Were not the Apostles "commanded to
preach unto the people, and to testify that it is he which was ordained of God
to be the Judge of quick and dead" (Acts 10: 42)' And was not the truth
that "God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ" a part of
Paul's "gospel" (Rom. 2:18)? Certainly; and to preach the
"gospel" without reference to this momentous appointment would be
defective work. Its proclamation is a necessity, because the promised reward
cannot be obtained without a probation; and a
probation involves a scrutiny. It is God's prerogative to carry out this
scrutiny; but, as He has delegated the work to His Son, it is of great
importance that this fact should be made known to all who are called upon to
"wait for God's Son from heaven." It is also a part of ''the truth as
it is in Jesus" to announce that, after judging his brethren, Christ will
pour out Divine judgments on the nations, and then erect "thrones of
judgment" (Psa.72: 5), to which all the inhabitants of the earth will be
amenable. What made "Felix tremble" when Paul "reasoned of
righteousness, temperance. and judgment to come" (Acts 24: 25)' Was it not the prospect of being brought before "the
judgment-seat of Christ"? There is no evidence that it was. There was a
judgment then impending, and it is quite reasonable to conclude that Paul's
reasoning related to it. What was it? The destruction of Jerusalem and the scattering of the Jewish nation, styled by
Peter, "the day of judgment and perdition of ungodly men" (2 Pet. 2:
7). Though Felix was a Roman, his wife Drudlla
"was a Jewess" (Acts 24: 24); and this would be quite sufficient to
give Felix an interest in Jewish retribution. Moreover, Felix was a very wicked
man. "In the exercise of all kinds of lust and cruelty,'' says Taritus, "he exercised the power of a king with the
temper of a slave"; and, according to Josephus, he effected the
assassination of Jonathan, the high priest because Jonathan "
frequently gave him admonitions about governing the Jewish affairs
better than he did. "It was doubtless on thee grounds that Paul
"reasoned of righteousness" and ''temperance" or self-control.
Was it not possible for Paul to so describe the Divine judgments about to come
on the Jewish nation for their wickedness as to prick the conscience of such a
man and cause him to "tremble"? The description given of these events
by the inspired Moses (Deut. 28: 19-57), and, subsequently, by Josephus and
other historians, produces even now a shudder in sensitive minds. How much more
effect would be a prophetic picture by the voice of the Spirit on the verge of
its realization. "The wicked flee when no man pursueth"
(Prov. 28. 1) Unless, therefore this feature can be
eliminated from Paul's address there is no ground for affirming that the
Apostle threatened Felix with resurrection to judgment; such a threat would
have been out of harmony with the Apostolic reasoning on resurrection
elsewhere. The leading feature required
in the proclamation of the truth is expressed in the concluding chapter of the
Bible: "The Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And
whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely" (Rev. 22:. 17). Attention should be called to God's judgment in the past, and to those
which are impending at Christ's coming, and an effort should be made to arouse
the conscience to the heinousness of sin; but the bride has no authority to
declare that any out of Christ will be brought before a tribunal specially
designed for its own adjudication. To do so is to add to the Word of God.
D.--The justice of God.-Does not the justice of God
require that those
who hear the truth and refuse to obey it shall be raised for judgment by Christ? To arrive at a conclusion
on this basis is to deal with the subject from a narrow point of view; there
are other aspects of
Divine prerogative and action which must be taken into
consideration: and they who ignore them will, if logically consistent, be
compelled to take up a position beyond that intended. Thus if some who sin
under "the law of sin and death" are dealt with on the basis of
justice, why not others? If those who knowingly disregarded one thing required
by God are to be raised to punishment, those who knowingly disregard other
things required by God must be raised for the same object. What things', Such
as lying, coveting, stealing, drunkenness and adultery. There are thousands
throughout Christendom who, while recognizing the Bible to be the Word of God. and knowing that these things are forbidden therein,
nevertheless practice them. They have light on these matters, though not
understanding the truth. and yet they ignore what God
has commanded, if justice require resurrection to punishment for one knowingly
violated command, it requires the same of all.
The generation of unjustified sinners living at Christ's appearing is to be
subject to judgments unequaled in the world since the deluge (Dan. 12:1; Rev.
16:. 18). Many who suffer those judgments will be no worse than some in past
generations who have been similarly visited. If justice be the sole principle
on which God meets out His judgments, they must be raised to share the vials of
His wrath on the generation then living.
During the past eighteen hundred years the number who have had presented
to them the truth in its purity is extremely small. For want
of this all others have been practically deprived of the opportunity of
obtaining eternal life. If justice be the sole principle on which God
deals with the world of sinners, those who so contend must, if consistent,
likewise teach that "children of wrath" who have not heard the pure
truth must have it presented to them, and that consequently they must be raised
from the dead to have an opportunity of obtaining eternal life.
Divine
justice, when misapplied, thus leads, on the one hand, to extensive
resurrection for punishment, and on the other hand, to universal resurrection
for the offer of eternal life. The fact that these conclusions are incompatible
with each other proves that there is a vital flaw in the "justice"
argument concerning the Divine treatment of certain unjustified sinners. Divine action towards the condemned sons of
Adam cannot be understood without recognizing that their existence is due to
God's forbearance. If God had dealt with the parents of the race on the
principle of justice alone they would never have had any descendants. And if
justice were now meted out to all who are still under Adamic
condemnation, they would be cut off from life expeditiously and without
ceremony. But God showed mercy to Adam and Eve, after they had incurred a
violent death by promising a descendant who should neutralize the evil of the
serpent, and this promise required the existence for a certain time of those
who would perpetuate the mind of the serpent. Without this there could not be
continued conflict between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent
(Gen. 3: 15). When, however, the time arrives for that conflict to cease, what
will take place? The seed of the serpent will be "cut off" from life
(Ps. 38: 9) by fire from heaven (Rev. 20: 9).
Divine justice is regulated by Divine law, and God does not violate His
laws by love on the one hand, or by wrath on the other. His love, in the case
of Christ, could not set aside the combined force of "the law of sin and
death" and "the law of the Spirit of life" His Son had to drink
the cup of a sacrificial death to its dregs. On the same principle the wrath of
God cannot set aside "the law of sin and death." That law is founded
on justice. God gave a command and it was disobeyed. Therefore death must
ensue; and, in the absence of an antidote, that death must be endless. The
antidote now resides in Christ; but before it was embodied in him justice
required him to undergo the kind of death--that is, to be slain--incurred by Adam. God must be
"just" in the execution of the penalty pertaining to "the law of
sin and death" before he can be "the justifier of him which believeth
in Jesus" (Rom. 3:.26). Is His justice in administering "the law of
sin and death" one sided? Not at all. It cannot
be exercised in the act of providing the antidote and be withdrawn where the
antidote has no efficacy. It must act with equal impartiality in the process of
justification, and in the execution of the law on those who are devoid of such
justification. When Christ had, by his sacrificial death, fulfilled -the claim
of justice in relation to "the law of sin and death," after compliance
with the requirements of "the law of the Spirit of life," "it
was not possible" for the grave to hold him (Acts 2: 24). Justice required
his release. In like manner justice requires the release of all who partake of
his justification; and on the same principle justice requires that those who
are devoid of Christ's justification shall not be released from the death
arising out of Edenic Law. Is not the "command" to
"repent" of sufficient force to release from Adamic
death such as disregard it for the purpose of punishment? No; because the mere
listening to that command does not Justify them from
that which brought Adamic death; such justification
can only be realized by the blood-shedding pertaining to "the law of the
Spirit of life." Does, then, the "command" to "repent"
bring no responsibility to those who hear and understand it? Yes, it does; but
the responsibility is confined to this life. It renders them liable to any
special judgment God may inflict before they die under "the law of sin and
death." The writer once witnessed the death-bed of one who had listened to
the proclamation of the Truth, and who understood some of its elementary
principles, but who, for love of the world, abstained from embracing it. The
opportunity was, after some years, cut short by a terrible "accident"
which for a few days produced great physical pain. Added to this there was
great mental anguish arising from a vivid realization of a neglected privilege.
The unfortunate victim viewed the event as a Divine judgment for knowingly disregarding
God's command Who
can say that it was not? They who witnessed Herod's death by worms (Acts 12: 23) would not know that it was Divinely
inflicted for accepting unlawful homage, unless so informed by Divine
authority. Neither should we know unless
an inspired writer had so explained it. That which was possible then is
possible now. God can inflict a dire punishment in this life as that which the
unfaithful will suffer at Christ's judgment-seat. As shown by that numerous
cases of Divine judgments in the past, "it is a fearful thing" either
on this side the grave or on the other, "to fall into tile hands of the
living God" (Heb. 10:. 31). The "justice" argument is
misapplied; it does not begin at the proper time. It ignores the requirement of
the Edenic law, and deals only with a, subsequent
"command." It introduces conflict in Divine action where there should
be none. It represents God as terminating in some cases the death decreed by Edenic law without justification" from the sin which
occasioned it, in order to inflict a punishment for disregarding the
"command" to "repent." This discord is no part of the
Divine plan. Retribution in regard to both edicts can be carried out with
perfect harmony. Punishment can be inflicted in this life for defying God, and
then in due course the Edenic law can exercise its
full sway. This has been done in the
past, and it can be now. Justice so far from requiring the resurrection of any who have died in Adam, requires that they shall be held
fast. in the grip of Adamic
death.
E.--The Power of God.--Is it not limiting the power of
God to say that the dead in Adam cannot be raised to judgment? No; it is only
recognizing the limitation which God has placed on His own action in the
execution of His own law. "All things are possible with God" (Matt19
26) provided they are compatible with His own attributes and His own laws. Such
things as are at variance therewith art impossible. "God cannot lie"
(Tit. 1:2); "He cannot be tempted with evil" (Jas. 1:. 13); and "He cannot deny himself" (2 Tim. 2: 13). Some of the things which He has done He defines as
necessities. "The priesthood being changed there is made of necessity a
change also of the law" (Heb. 7 12);' 'Where a testament is, there must
also of necessity be the death of the testator" (Heb9:. 16); "It was
therefore necessary that the patterns of the things in the heavens should be
purified with these; but the heavenly things themselves (must be purified) with
better sacrifices than these" (ver. 23). What is
meant by these things being "necessary"? That God could not fulfill
His purpose without them. Why not? Because of His previously ordained laws. He
could not recognize the purification of the Mosiac
"patterns" without the blood of animal sacrifices; neither can He purify
the things which they symbolized without the blood of Christ. That is to say,
God cannot purge men from Adamic condemnation, or
remit their individual "offenses" and so free them from the operation
of the Edenic "law of sin and death"
without "the blood of the everlasting covenant." Therefore He cannot,
without the application of that blood, terminate Adamic
death for the purpose of inflicting "the second death." But does it
not say "the son quickeneth whom he will" (Jno. 5:. 21)? Yes; he will raise and immortalize whom he
will, but only in harmony with the laws of his Father. Has he not "all
power in heaven and in earth" (Matt. 28: 18)' Yes, in the execution of his
Father's unfulfilled purpose; as the personal "Word of God." (Rev. 19-13). Has he not "power over all flesh" (Jno. 17”. 2·)? Yes, in prospect, when he re-appears he will
have "power over all flesh" appearing at the judgment-seat to
"give eternal life to as many as" are then approved, and to punish
the rejected. But the expression "all flesh" does not specify who
they are; the word "all," as in many other passages is of limited
application; and its limitation must be ascertained from other testimonies.
Dead men are not "flesh"; and therefore this delegated "power"
does not apply to them. The dead to be raised are those who have been
"bought" (2 9et. ii. 1) by Christ's "blood" (Acts 20: 28), of whom, as a consequence, he is "Lord" (Rom. 1 4: 9). The "all flesh" on the earth at
Christ's appearing will then become subject to his "power" because he
comes to take "possession" of his "inheritance" (Ps. 2: 8);
"all flesh" will then be required to "come' unto him in
Zion" (Ps65:. 1-2).
F.--Dr. Thomas' teaching.--The introduction of this
element is superfluous. If the inspired Word clearly foretells the resurrection
of any unjustified dead ones, the teaching of Dr. Thomas is not required to
support it; and if it cannot be proved from the Inspired Word, his teaching is
of no authority. His writings, being the best exposition of the Scriptures in
print, are of inestimable value; but he did not claim infallibility for them,
and it is superfluous to remark that they do not possess it. He would have been
the first to say, “If there be anything in them which cannot be substantiated
from the word of God, do not accept it." It is solely for this reason that
his teaching on resurrection out of Christ cannot be endorsed. It is first
propounded in Elpis Israel, where men who have not been justified from the
condemnation which has brought the first death are described as undergoing
"the second death" (p. 117). But this is at variance with the
Scriptural principles which Dr. Thomas enunciates in the same book. All men, he
says, are by birth constituted sinners, and therefore under condemnation to
death. Adam and Christ he treats as two federal heads, the former bringing
death and the latter life; but to be transferred out of Adam into Christ it is
necessary to undergo baptismal burial and resurrection:-- "As the constitution of sin hath its
root in the disobedience of the First Adam, so also hath the constitution of
righteousness root in the obedience of the Second Adam. Hence the .Apostle says,'.As through one offense (sentence was pronounced)
upon all men unto condemnation; so also through one righteousness(
sentence was pronounced) upon all men (that is, Jews and Gentiles) unto a
pardon of life. For as through the disobedience of the one man the many were,
constituted sinners, so through the obedience of the one the many were constituted righteous (Rom. v. 18, 19) The two Adams
are two federal chiefs: the first being figurative of the in these relations.
All sinners are in the first Adam, and all the righteous in the second, only on
a different principle. Sinners were in the loins of the former when he
transgressed; but not in the loins of the latter when he was obedient unto
death" (p. 118). "While a
believer is out of Christ he is in his sins and while he is in his sins he is
under sentence of death, for 'the wages of sin Is
death.' As soon, however, as his sins are forgiven through Christ's name, in
the act of forgiveness he passes from under the sentence of death; and as there
is no middle or neutral position, he comes under the sentence of life, and
rejoices in hope of the kingdom of God" (pp. 283-4). What is the conclusion deducible from the
premises set forth in these extracts: That when a man passes out of Adam into
Christ he is no longer under sentence of death for Adam's disobedience or for
his own sins; that, as a consequence, death cannot for these things prevail
over him; and that, in the event of dying, he must be restored to life. Dr.
Thomas did not carry his premises to their logical conclusion, and hence the
discord between his statements concerning the taking: away of Adamic condemnation and those relating to resurrection. It is permissible,
however, for others to see that which he did not. The contention presented in
the foregoing pages though at variance with his illogical conclusion, is in
harmony with his premises in the extracts quoted concerning the taking away of Adamic condemnation. His teaching on resurrection out cf Christ is not a part of revived Apostolic truth; it is a
remnant of the belief of the Apostacy in universal
resurrection to judgment In the administration of British justice, when the
occupant of one of Her Majesty's prisons receives a pardon, the sentence passed
upon him in a court of law is made void, and his liberation follows as a matter
of course. When God pardons or justifies a man in respect to his own and Adam's
sin, does not a similar result follow? Is not the sentence previously decreed
for such sin made void? It must be so;
the abrogated sentence cannot run its course-in God's mind it is at an end. How
can this be, seeing that the physical consequences are not immediately removed?
Because the abrogation of the Adamic sentence is
accompanied by a feature for which there is no parallel in
connection with pardon by an earthly monarch. What is that? A covenant between God and the pardoned sinner to give to the
latter, on specified conditions, a nature superior to that which Adam had
before he sinned. Those conditions preclude the immediate removal of the
physical consequences of Adam's sin; for the reward is promised as the result
of overcoming the sin nature within and without. The death which takes place
during Christ's absence is no evidence that the inherited sentence is still in
full force, because resurrection rectifies the temporary operation of death, by
restoring the pardoned one to the same life that he had during probation. This
restoration to life is the combined result of the pardon, the covenant, and the
necessity for fulfilling God's part of the covenant--eternal life for
overcoming, or "the second-death" for being overcome. From this it
follows that where there is no pardon there is no covenant, and, as a
consequence, no release from Adamic death. Supposing an earthly
monarch were to do as God has done, he would, when granting pardon to an
imprisoned subject. say to him, "In addition to pardoning you for your previous
crimes by which you are released from your prison tasks, I will enter into a
covenant with you, by which you may attain to a joint rulership
with my son and heir; the terms of the covenant require that between the time
of pardon and the time for release from the prison you shall comply with a
series of commands designed to test your love for me; if you succeed you shall,
at the time appointed, be transferred from your prison to my throne; but if you
fail, you shall for the misdeeds committed subsequent to the time of pardon be
punished by imprisonment for life."
In such circumstances as these, there would be no difficulty in
understanding the abode in prison during probation; and it would constitute no
evidence that the pardon which had been granted was not absolute. It would also
be perfectly clear that imprisonment for life would be entirely the result of
misconduct after such pardon.
33.--THE UNITY
OF THE TRUTH.
"The Truth" is so perfect, and each part is
so interwoven with the rest that it is impossible for error to be affiliated to
one item without others being affected. The subject under consideration is an
illustration of this. If it be said that justification from the
"offense" of Adam is not necessary, it logically follows that Christ
died only for the individual "offenses" of Adam's descendants: and in
that case, seeing that Christ had no "offenses" of his own, his death
was solely for others, not for himself and others. On this hypothesis he would
be a substitute; a principle at variance with. Scriptural
teaching on the Divine method for taking away sin. If, while admitting
the necessity for justification from the "offense" of Adam, it be
affirmed that such justification does not take place at baptism, the only
permissible conclusion is, that it takes place subsequently. If so how? By a faithful probation? In that case the unfaithful would
never be justified from Adam's "offense," and as a consequence, when
their probation was over, they would die under Adamic
condemnation and so "perish"; thereby being excluded from
resurrection to judgment. A faithful probation involves "patient
continuance in well-doing" (Rom. 2:.7); to say that this is necessary to
justification from the "offense" of Adam is to attribute to
"well-doing" a power it does not possess, viz., the power to justify
from sin. And it represents God as requiring from his sons and daughters
probationary good works in order to remove a condemnation which came upon then
through no fault of their own. This is a violation of the, foundation principle
of the plan of salvation. As all in Adam have been "made
sinners," so all who enter Christ are "made righteous" (Rom. 5: 19). This would be impossible without justification from
the "offense" of Adam. Believers are "justified freely by God's
grace," at baptism, "through the redemption that is in Christ
Jesus" (Rom. 3:. 24). They are "justified by
faith" (Rom. 5:1) truly but in conjunction with Christ's "blood"
(ver. 9), Their probationary
good works are as useless to justify from the "offense" of Adam as
from their own "offenses"; before or after baptism. Of what value,
then, is "well-doing"? In conjunction with forgiveness of sins during
probation (1 Jno. 1: 9) it ensures immunity from
"the second death" (Rev. 2: 11) and gives eternal life (ver. 7). The "faith" with which probation
commences is by subsequent "well-doing," "made perfect"
(Jas. 2:. 22), and thereby "a man" who has
walked in the footsteps of Abraham "is justified by works" (ver. 24). Christ's probation is the mast faithful on
record, and yet his faithfulness could not cleanse him from sin without
blood-shedding. That which was not possible for him is certainly impossible for
those dependent on him. If it be said that baptized believers by an abode in
the grave pay the penalty for Adam's offense, and are thereby justified from
it, much greater anomalies are produced. If such be the case, what becomes of
the generation of believers who "are alive and remain" at Christ's
appearing? If these fail to pay the penalty they fail to be justified from
Adam's "offense," and, as a consequence, cannot enter the kingdom.
If, however. they enter the kingdom without paying the
penalty, like their brethren who came out of the grave are said to do, there
are two ways of salvation fundamentally different; which is an absolute
impossibility. If the death of baptized
believers be of any value in purging them from Adam's offense, it must be
equally effective for the unfaithful as for the faithful. Would God allow men who deserved condemnation
for their own conduct during the probation, to free themselves subsequently, by
an event which they could not help, from the condemnation arising out of the
conduct of another? Impossible. Does he even allow men
who have been faithful during probation to purge themselves
by literal death from Adamic condemnation? No; their
death is no justification whatever, mid contributes not an iota towards their
attainment to eternal life. To say that it does is to give to those who have
been actual transgressors the power to take away Adamic
sin; and to do this is to rob Christ of a part of his redemptive work. Nay
more; if carried to its logical conclusion it will rob Christ of the whole of
his redemptive work for others. 1He died to cleanse himself from Adamic sin; and this is accepted by God as the means of
cleansing others from Adamic sin and also from their
own sins. Thus the same death takes away personal sin and inherited sin. If the
literal death of faithful believers can purge them from Adamic
sin it is equally effective in purging them from their own sins; and in that
case they do not require purging by the death of Christ. If, while admitting
that justification from the offense of Adam takes place at baptism and that
resurrection takes place as a consequence, it is also contended that
resurrection will embrace others devoid of such justification, what is the
consequence? A self-contradictory position, which ignores an axiom of sound
reasoning, viz. that every conditional affirmative involves its corresponding:
negative. Thus when God said to Adam, "If thou eat, thou shalt die" (Gen. 2: 17), He meant, If thou dost not
eat, thou shalt not die; and when He said through
Peter, "Be baptized for the remission of sins" (Acts 2: 38) He meant,
If you are not baptized, will not have remission of sins. Likewise when it is
said to the brethren of Christ, "To him that overcometh
will I give to eat of the tree of life' (Rev. 2:.7), it means that he who does
not overcome shall not so eat. The Scriptures teem with conditional statements
such as these, and, as a rule. their negative aspect
is as fully recognized as their affirmative. What reason is there for making
the statement about resurrection an exception? None whatever, except the
exigencies of a false position. When it is said that Christ was "brought
again from the dead through the blood of the everlasting covenant" (Heb.
13: 20), it means that without that blood he would not have been brought from
the dead; and when it is said that baptized believers are by "the law of
the spirit of life"' made "free from the law of sin and death (Rom.
8: 2), it means that those who have not been brought into the same position are
not free from the Edenic law. To say that
resurrection at Christ's coming will, in some cases, be through justification,
and in others without justification, is analogous to saying that remission of
sins is obtainable, in this dispensation, through baptism; or, that the
partaking of the Tree of Life will be through overcoming and also without
overcoming. The contradictory nature of that relating to resurrection should be
equally so. If resurrection at Christ's appearing will, in
come cases, take place without justification from Adamic
sin, it could do so in all. If it could, that part of Christ's justifying work
is a superfluity; in other words, Christ's sacrificial death was required, not
to remove a barrier to resurrection, but only to remove a barrier to eternal
life. If this be true, he made a false claim when he said, "I am the
Resurrection and the Life;" he should only have said, "I am the
Life." In claiming to be "the Resurrection and the Life,"
Christ, in effect, attributes this two-fold position to one source, viz., his
own sacrificial death. Without that death he would not have been endowed with
power to raise the dead or to give eternal life. The source of his power
regulates its exercise. He will bestow eternal life only on those who have been
"washed" from all sin by "the blood of the covenant"; and
he will, in like manner raise only those who have been justified by the same
blood from inherited and committed sin prior to probation. To extend his
resurrection power outside the scope of his shed blood is to open the door for
his lifegiving power to be also applied where his
blood has had no efficacy. Serious errors
such as these can only be avoided by adhering to those Divine principles which
are in harmony with all parts of the Truth. The first requisite for this is a recognition of the full force of "the law of sin and
death," and the second, the precise scope of "the law of the spirit
of life." The combined operation of these two laws that the condemnation
inherited from Adam is a barrier to probation, a barrier to resurrection, and a
barrier to eternal life; that "the blood of the everlasting covenant"
is necessary for the removal of this three-fold barrier; that resurrection to
judgment is the result of probation, and therefore takes place by virtue of
"the blood of the covenant;" that condemnation at the judgment seat
is solely for an unfaithful probation, and therefore quite distinct from
condemnation in Adam; that approval, resulting in eternal life, is for
probationary faithfulness; that sin during probation as well as previously,
requires the application of "the blood of the covenant," and that consequently
immortality is only obtainable through the blood of Christ.
____________________________