Number 2
The Scripture Teaching on
CALAMITIES
and why God permits them
"EXCEPT YE REPENT,
YE SHALL ALL LIKEWISE PERISH"
"There were present at that season some who told
him of the Galileans, whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices. And Jesus
answering said unto them, Suppose ye that these Galileans were sinners above all the
Galileans, because they suffered such things? I tell you, Nay; but except ye repent, ye
shall all likewise perish.
"Or those eighteen, upon whom the tower of
Siloam fell, and slew them, think ye that they were sinners above all men that dwelt in
Jerusalem? I tell you, Nay; but, except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish."
Luke 13:1-5
Noble and good in the sight of both God and man
are the generous impulses of charity and sympathy, awakened by great calamities in recent
years. And when this is said, it leaves little more of good to be said favorable to
calamities or their influence.
While these charities should not be misconstrued to
signify that God's consecrated saints are rapidly multiplying--for many of the charitable
are not the consecrated, and some are even infidels--yet they are an evidence that at
least some of the original God-likeness of our race remains; that it has not been wholly
obliterated by the degradation of the fall, nor wholly poisoned by the bad theology of the
dark ages. While we live in a period, perhaps as selfish and money-loving as any known to
history, yet millions of dollars are generously poured forth to aid suffering humanity.
And yet many who in times of calamitous distress show that they have a tender spot
somewhere in their hearts, would and do at other times lend time and brain and skill to
the arts of war, and in designing the most horrible implements of warfare; and on
occasions when bitter passions are aroused would relentlessly and pitilessly slaughter a
thousand times as many as meet death by the accidents of nature. Yet, for all this showing
of the two elements in the same men, we rejoice that the God-like element of sympathy
exists, as a partial offset to the devilish qualities of selfishness and heartlessness,
which, under the degrading influence of man's fallen state, have grown strong during the
past six thousand years.
Preparatory to looking carefully, reasonably and
Scripturally at the question, Why does God permit calamities? let us note some of the
absurd views of some Christian people, who should know God's Word and character much
better than they seem to know them. Some, whose hearts in the presence of great calamities
overflow with sympathy and God-like love (which proves their hearts better and more sound
than their theology), declare that God is the director and cause of all disasters and
troubles. Hence, whatever men may do to alleviate such distresses would, according to this
false view, be so much done in opposition to God; and whatever love and sympathy they
feel, is so much sentiment opposed to God's sentiments--which are thus made to appear
malicious.
But it seems a very slight thing to charge the
Almighty with causing earth's
calamities--in comparison with the general thought of
Christendom, that God has premeditated, planned, from before the foundation of the world,
their everlasting torture; the direst calamity imaginable. A tornado, an earthquake, an
epidemic of disease, would be mercies and kindnesses in comparison to such diabolical
schemes and preparations as are accredited to the Lord by the vast majority of his
children, who suffer still from the superstition, ignorance and blindness of the
"dark ages," and its creeds. Alas, that such false conceptions of the justice
and love of our Creator should ever have gained a foothold in our minds--to distort our
every conception of every right and good quality. O Lord, grant thy people a great opening
of the eyes of their understanding, that we may be able to comprehend with all saints--the
lengths and the breadths, the heights and the depths of thy love and mercy toward thy
creatures--through Christ Jesus our Lord!
The difficulty is that men have been led to consider
the very Bible which declares God's true character of love and justice as authority for
these devilish doctrines; and these false interpretations were originated in the
"dark ages" by those who instigated or assisted in burning, and otherwise
tormenting, real Bible believers.
GOD'S SYMPATHY--HOW SHOWN
When we declare that whatever there is of love and
sympathy in man is only the remnant of the original divine likeness in which Adam was
created, not wholly effaced by six thousand years of degradation in sin, it at once raises
the question:
In what way does God manifest his sympathy and love
in such emergencies, when even the hearts of fallen human beings are touched, with
sympathy and love--to acts of kindness and succor?
A correct answer is, that God is represented in every
act of kindness done, whether by his children or by the world; because their actions under
such circumstances are the result of their possession of some measure of his character and
disposition. This answer is not full enough to be satisfactory; but, thank God, a fuller
investigation, in the light of his Word, reveals a boundless sympathy on his
part--providing an abundant succor, which is shortly to be revealed.
But why does not God immediately succor his creatures
from calamities? Or, to go still further back, why does he, who has all wisdom to know and
all power to prevent, permit calamities--cyclones, earthquakes, tidal-waves, destructive
floods, pestilences, etc.? And while we are about it, we may as well include all the evils
which God could prevent, if he would--all the forms of sickness and pain and death; every
manner of destruction--wars, murders, etc.; every thing which causes pain or trouble to
those willing to do and to be in harmony with God? The answer to one of these questions
will be the answer to every question on the subject; for all human evils are related and
have a common source or cause.
To comprehend this cause fully, we must go far back,
to the very beginning of sickness, pain, death and sorrow--to the Garden of Eden, where
neither famine, pestilence, cyclone, earthquake, nor death in any form was permitted;
where man and his surroundings and conditions were pronounced "very good," even
by God himself, and must certainly have been greatly appreciated by man, who had to be driven
out and prevented from returning by the fiery sword which kept the way of access to
the life sustaining fruits of the trees of the garden.
And this Creator, who so graciously provided for the
life and comfort of his creatures, and who communed with them and gave them his blessing
and the promise of everlasting life upon the sole condition of continued obedience--how
came it that he should so change in his attitude toward his creatures as to drive them
from the enjoyments of those Eden comforts and blessings, out into the unprepared
earth--to toil and weariness and insufficient sustenance, and thus to death?
We must remember that the Creator specially or
miraculously "prepared" in
advance the Garden of Eden, only, for man's
comfortable enjoyment of the favors of life, and a fitting place for his trial. God
foresaw the fall of his creature, and provided that the penalty of sin, "dying thou
shalt die," instead of being suddenly inflicted, as by a lightning stroke or other
speedy method, should be served out gradually by conflict with the unfavorable conditions
(of climate, sterility of soil, storms, miasma, thorns, weeds, etc.) of the unprepared
earth; the preparation of which would require seven thousand years more to entirely fit it
for the habitation of perfect, obedient, human children of God.
MAN A CONVICT
Adam and Eve, therefore, went forth from Eden
convicts, under sentence of death; self-convicted under the most just of all judges, their
Creator and friend.
The convicts esteemed it a mercy to be let die
gradually rather than suddenly; while to the Creator and Judge this was expedient because
of his plan for their future, in which such experience with imperfect conditions would be
of great value; a plan for the increase of the race, and for its discipline and final
redemption and restoration.
The death penalty, inflicted in this manner, God
foresaw would, through experience, furnish man such a lesson on the exceeding sinfulness
of sin and its baneful results as would never need to be repeated; a lesson, therefore,
which would profit all who learn it to all eternity; especially when Christ's Millennial
reign of righteousness shall manifest in contrast the fruits of righteousness. God also
designed that the exercise of man's mental faculties in coping with the disturbances and
imperfections of his surroundings and in inventing reliefs, and the exercise of his moral
faculties in combating his own weaknesses, and the calls upon his sympathy, should prove
beneficial.
Had the sentence of God (in addition to a loss of
Eden's comforts and experience with sin and death) condemned his creatures to an eternity
of torment and anguish, as so many now believe and teach, who could defend such a
sentence, or call the Judge just, or loving, or in any sense good? Surely no one of a
sound mind!
But when it is seen that the Scriptures teach that death
(extinction), and not life in torment, was the penalty pronounced and inflicted, all
is reasonable. God has a right to demand perfect obedience from his perfect creature when
placed under perfect conditions, as in Adam's case. And the decree that none shall live
everlastingly except the perfect, is both a wise and a just provision for the
everlasting welfare of all God's creatures.
There is a depth of meaning in the Creator's words,
as he sent forth his fairly tried and justly condemned creatures, among the thorns and
briars, to labor and pain, and sorrow, and disease, and to be subject to the causalities
and calamities of nature's unfinished work.
He said: "Cursed is the ground FOR THY
SAKE:" i.e., The earth in general is in its present imperfect condition
for your profit and experience; even though you may not esteem it so. Adam would have
sought to retain continual access to the garden fruits, to avoid severe labor and to
enable him to fully sustain his vital powers and live forever; but in loving consideration
for man's ultimate good, no less than in justice, and in respect for his own sentence of
death, God prevented this and guarded the way back to the garden, in order that the death
sentence should not fait of execution, in order that sinners should not live forever and
thus perpetuate sin.
The children of the condemned pair inherited their
fall, imperfections and weaknesses, and also the penalties of these; for "who can
bring a clean thing out of an unclean?" The whole race, therefore, as convict
laborers, have not only been learning what sin and evil are, and their undesirable
results, but by their labor and skill they are serving to prepare the earth and bring it
as a whole to the full perfection designed for it, and illustrated in the condition of
Eden--ready for a further purpose of God of which none but his children (and not all of
them) are made aware through the Scriptures.
We can see, then, that labor and toil were prescribed
for man's good. They have kept him so employed that he could not plan and consummate evil
to the same extent that he otherwise would have done. And as the earth becomes more
fertile, approaching perfection, man's vitality becomes less; so that now, with greater
leisure to plot and scheme and grow wise in evil, the period of life in which to do so is
shorter. What a mercy in disguise is present shortness of life, under present
circumstances! Were some of our "shrewd business men" who accumulate millions of
money, and grasp great power in a few short years, to live 930 years, as Adam did, what
might we expect but that one man, or at most a syndicate or trust, would own every foot of
land, control every drop of water and every breath of air, and have the rest of the race
for their dupes and slaves?
God's action, then, in exposing his creatures to
death, pain and various calamities, it must be seen was, first of all, one which related
only to his present life on earth, and to no other; for of any continuance of life,
in any other locality, God did not give him the slightest intimation. On the contrary, the
words of the penalty were:
"Dust thou art and unto dust shalt thou
return,"--"dying thou shalt die." Gen. 3:9;2:7, margin.
True, God gave promise that, somehow and at some
time, a son of the woman should accomplish a deliverance. But it was then vague and
indefinite, merely a glimmer of hope, to show them that though God dealt severely with
them, and on lines of law and justice, yet he sympathized with them, and would,
ultimately, without violating justice or ignoring his own righteous sentence of
death, bring them succor.
GOD JUST, YET THE JUSTIFIER
OF SINNERS
Paul tells us that God adopted a method for the
recovery of man from that original sentence of death that came upon all as the result of
Adam's fall, which would show the justice of his sentence and the unchangeableness
of his decrees, and yet permit such as are sick of sin to use their experience wisely,
and to return to harmony and obedience to their Creator and his just and reasonable laws
and regulations.
This divine plan, by which God could remain just and
unchangeable in his attitude toward sin and sinners, and yet release the well-disposed
from the penalty of sin (death and disfavor), is stated by the Apostle in Rom. 3:24-26.
In brief, this plan provided that another man who, by
obedience to the law of God, should prove his worthiness of eternal life, might, by the
willing sacrifice of the life to which he was thus proved worthy, redeem the forfeited
life of Adam and of his posterity who lost life through him; for it is written, "In
Adam all die," and "By the offence of one, sentence of condemnation came on all
men." 1 Cor. 15:22; Rom. 5:12, 18
THE REDEEMER
Since the condemnation to death was thus upon all
men, and since another man newly created and inexperienced as Adam was, though just as
favorably situated, would have been similarly liable to fall, God devised the marvelous
plan of transferring his only begotten Son from the spiritual to the human nature, and
thus provided a man fit for sacrifice--"the man Christ Jesus who gave himself a
ransom for all;" "who, though he was rich [though he was possessed of glory and
honor and riches of wisdom and power above both angels and men], nevertheless for our
sakes became poor [humbling himself to a lower nature, even as a man, becoming obedient
even unto death] that we through his poverty might be made rich." 1 Tim. 2:5; 2 Cor.
8:9
Thus the one first created, "the
first-born of all creation" (Col. 1:15) "the beginning of the creation of
God" (Rev. 3:14) the one who had known God's character longer, more fully and more
intimately than any other being, the one in fact who had been Jehovah's chief and honored,
intelligent and active agent in the creation of angels as well as of men, the one by whom
all things were made, and aside from whom not anything was made (John 1:3; Col. 1:16,
17)--this great being, Jehovah's Prime Minister, and next to himself in dignity, the
Almighty entrusted with the great work of redeeming and restoring mankind.
To redeem them would cost the sacrifice of the Son's
own life as their ransomprice, with all that that implied of suffering and self-denial. To
restore them (such of them as should prove worthy--whosoever wills) would require the
exercise of divine power to open the prison-house of death, and to break the fetters of
sin and prejudice and superstition, and give to all the redeemed the fullest opportunity
to decide whether they love good or evil, righteousness or sin, truth or error--to destroy
all who love and work iniquity, and to develop and perfect again all who love and choose
life upon its only condition--righteousness.
To know the Father's plan and his privilege of
cooperation in its execution, was to appreciate it and joyfully engage therein. Willingly
our Lord Jesus laid aside the glory of the higher nature which he had had with the Father
from before the creation of man. (John 17:5; 2 Cor. 8:9) He was "made flesh"
(John 1:14; Heb. 2:14), became a man at thirty years of age, and then began the great work
of sacrifice, the sacrifice of himself, for the cancelation of the sin of the first man,
to recover Adam and his race by dying on their behalf, as their Redeemer. By giving to
Justice the price of their liberty from divine condemnation, he secured the legal
right to cancel the sentence of condemnation to death against them, and hence the right to
resurrect or restore to life and to all, the lost estate and blessings, "whomsoever
he wills." (John 5:21) And he wills to restore all who shall prove worthy. And to
prove who are worthy of everlasting life will be the object of the Millennial reign. 1
Tim. 2:4; 2 Pet. 3:9
This fact that our Lord's mission to earth at the
first advent was to undo for the race, legally, the results of Adam's transgression, and
to secure the right to resurrect them and restore them, is clearly stated by
theApostle. See Rom. 5:6-12, 16-19, 21; 1 Cor. 21-24.
BY HIS KNOWLEDGE
Though tempted in all points like as we (his
"brethren") are, he ignored his own will (Luke 22:42; John 4:34; 5:30) and all
suggestions from others contrary to God's plan (Matt. 16:23; Luke 4:4, 8, 12) and obeyed
God implicitly. And therein lay the secret of his success. Temptations did not
overcome him, as they did even the perfect man Adam, because of the fullness of his
consecration to the divine will and plan; and this fullness of consecration and trust was
the result of his intimate knowledge of the Father and his unbounded confidence in
his wisdom, love and power. He had recollection of his previous existence as a spirit
being with the Father. (John 17:5; 3:12, 13) Our Lord's success, then, was the result of
being rightly exercised by his knowledge of God; as it is written: "By his knowledge
shall my righteous servant justify many, while bearing their iniquities." Isa.
53:11
The suggestive thoughts here are two: First, that
even a perfect man failed in trial because of the lack of full appreciation of God's
greatness, goodness and resources. Secondly, the knowledge (as in Satan's case)
would be valueless, if unaccompanied by sincere love and consecration to God's will. A
lesson further, to Christ's "brethren," is, that knowledge and consecration
are both essential to their following in the Master's footsteps.
Among men he and his mission were not really known;
even his most ardent followers and admirers at first supposed that his mission was merely
to healsome of the sick Jews, and to advance their nation to the rulership of a dying
world, and to be a teacher of morals; they saw not at first that his mission was to lay
the foundation of a world-wide empire, which should include not only the living, but also
the dead, of Adam's race, and which should insure everlastingly peace and joy to all the
worthy, by eradicating, forever, sin and all who love it after fully comprehending
its character in contrast with righteousness. Even his friends and disciples were slow to
realize these grand dimensions of his work, though he continually repeated them, and bore
witness, saying: "The Son of Man came to give his life a ransom for many;"
"Verily, verily, the hour is coming [1] when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son
of God, and they that hear [heed] shall live."
"The Lord hath sent me to preach deliverance to
the captives [of death] and recovering of sight to the [mentally, morally and physically]
blind; to set at liberty them that are bruised" --injured by the Adamic fall. Matt.
20:28; John 5:25; Luke 4:18
The sacrifice of the Redeemer's all, as man's ransom
price, was offered at the time he was thirty years old--at his baptism. And there the
offering was accepted by Jehovah, as marked by his anointing with the spirit. Thenceforth,
he spent the three and a half years of his ministry in using up the consecrated life
already offered; and this he completed at Calvary. There the price of our liberty
was paid in full. "It is finished;" It holds good; it is acceptable by the grace
of God, as the offset and covering for every weakness and sin of the first man, and his
posterity, resulting either directly, or indirectly, from the first disobedience and its
fall. All that is necessary since, for a full return to divine favor and communion, and to
an inheritance in the Paradise of God, which the great Redeemer in due time has promised
to establish in the entire earth, as at first in the Garden of Eden, is, a recognition of
sin, full repentance, and a turning from sin to righteousness. Christ will establish
righteousness in the earth by the Kingdom of God, which he has promised shall be
established, and for which he has bidden us wait and hope, and for which he taught us to
pray, "Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth even as it is done in
heaven."
"YE SHALL ALL LIKEWISE
PERISH" UNLESS YE REPENT
Death, in whatever form it may come, is
perishing, ceasing to exist. All mankind, through Adam's transgression, came under
condemnation to loss of life, to "perish," "to be as though they had not
been." And only one way of escape from that condemnation has been provided. (Acts
4:12) Because of Christ's redemptive work all may escape perishing by accepting the
conditions of life. During Christ's Millennial reign those whom Pilate slew, and those
upon whom the tower of Siloam fell, and all others of the race, sharers in the death
penalty now upon all, will be released from the tomb, brought to a knowledge of Christ,
his ransom work, and their privilege of repentance and full restitution to divine
favor--life, etc. Thus seen, the Adamic death penalty was--to perish; but it has been
canceled by Christ's Ransom, so far as it relates to those who, when brought to know the
Redeemer, shall forsake sin. No longer should it be regarded as a perished condition, but
as a "sleep" John 11:11-14; Matt. 9:24; 1 Thess. 4:14; 5:10), from which the
Redeemer will awaken all, to give each who did not have it before being overtaken by
Adamic death, a full, individual opportunity to escape perishing and live forever. Yet,
finally, all who shall fail to repent and lay hold upon the gracious Life-giver shall perish;
they will fail to obtain the full restitution provided; they shall never see (perfect)
life (full restitution) for the wrath or condemnation of God will abide on them,
condemning them to death as unworthy of life. As this will be their second condemnation,
and an individual one, so the penalty will be the Second Death which will not be general
to the race, but only upon such individuals as refuse God's favor of reconciliation and
life.
Under that blessed and wise rule of Christ as King of
nations, [2] all the evil, depraved tendencies inherited from the fall and from the six
thousand years of degradation, will be restrained, held in check, by superhuman wisdom,
love and power; and all being brought to a clear knowledge of the truth in its every
phase, all will be fairly and fully tested.
The lovers of righteousness will be perfected and
given control of the perfected earth, while those loving unrighteousness under the clear
light of knowledge and experience will, as followers of Satan's example, be utterly
destroyed in the Second Death. The first death is the destruction to which all were
subjected by Adam's sin, but from which all were redeemed by the Lord Jesus' sacrifice;
and the Second Death is that destruction which will overtake those who, though redeemed by
Christ from the first death, shall, by their own willful conduct, merit and receive
death again. This Second Death means utter destruction, without hope of another redemption
or resurrection; for Christ dieth no more. Nor could any good reason for their further
trial be assigned; for the trial granted during the Millennial age under Christ, as Judge,
will be a thorough and fair and individual and final trial. 1 Cor. 15:25
As our Lord Jesus used the calamities of his time as illustrating
the just penalty against all who do not flee sin and lay hold upon the Redeemer and
Life-giver, so we use them. We declare that destruction, perishing, is the just penalty of
sin taught in the Scriptures. We denounce as unscriptural the eternal torment theory, so
generally believed by God's children, as one of Satan's blasphemous slanders against God's
character. And we proclaim that only by faith in the Redeemer, repentance and reformation,
can the gift of God, eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord, be obtained. Whoever
hears the offer of life is responsible to the extent that he understands it; and
according to God's promise and plan all mankind shall, at some time, either during the
Gospel age, or during the coming Millennial age, be brought to a full, clear
appreciation of these conditions and opportunities, with fullest opportunities for
repentance and life.
Calamities, then, are to be regarded, generally, as
accidents, attributable to human imperfection and lack of experience, or to disturbances
incidental to the preparation of the earth for its more quiet and perfect condition during
the Sabbath, or Seventh Thousand years (the Millennium), and for its state of absolute
perfection forever after the Millennium, during which under Christ's direction, it shall
be given its finishing touches and be made fully ready for the redeemed race, which his
reign shall prepare also to rightly use and enjoy and rule the perfected earth. And man is
exposed to these calamities and accidents, and not defended from them by his Almighty
Creator, because, first, man is a sinner condemned to death anyway, and is not to be
spared from it, but must be allowed to pass through it; and secondly, by the present
experiences with trouble and sorrow and pain, all of which are but elements of death,
mankind is learning a lesson and laying up in store an experience with sin and its awful
concomitants, sorrow, pain and death, which will be valuable in that Millennial age, when
each shall be required to choose between good and evil. The evil they now learn first, the
good and its blessed results and rewards, but dimly seen now, will be fully displayed
then-- during the Millennium.
SPECIAL PROVIDENCES FOR THE
SAINTS
But some one inquires, If this be God's plan for
redeeming the world by the death of his Son, and justifying and restoring all who believe
in and accept of him, and obey and love righteousness, why did not the Millennial reign of
Christ, with its favorable conditions and powerful restraints, begin at once, as soon as
Christ had given the ransom price at Calvary; instead of compelling those who would
follow righteousness to sail through bloody seas and suffer for righteousness' sake? Or
else, why not have postponed the giving of the ransom until the close of the six
thousand years of evil and the inauguration of the Millennial reign? Or at least, if the
present order of events is best in the divine wisdom, why does not God specially protect
from calamities, accidents, sorrow, pain, death, etc., those who have fully accepted of
Christ and who have sacrificed and are using their all in the service of righteousness?
Ah, yes! The subject would be incomplete were this
point left untouched. The consecrated saints, the Church of the Gospel age, are a
"peculiar people," different from the rest of the redeemed race; and God's
dealings with them are peculiar and different also. Calamities, great and small,
continually involve God's saints as well as the worldly, and seemingly as much by
accident. But herein the Lord provides a test for our faith; intended either to turn us
back, if we have not sufficient faith to permit further progress, or to develop and
strengthen and increase our faith if we have it, and will exercise it under divine
direction.
The Lord's assurance to his truly consecrated spirit
begotten children is, that all things shall work together for good to them. (Rom. 8:28)
God assures them that having entered into a new relationship with him, all of their
affairs are henceforth his affairs and concern. Consequently, they may realize, fully,
that however the world may be subject to accidents, incidental to present imperfect
conditions under the curse, God's "little ones" are his peculiar care. Not a
hair of their heads may suffer injury without his knowledge and consent. (Matt. 10;30;
Luke 12:7) How wonderful!
And yet how reasonable when we recall the assurance
that, "Like as a father [earthly] pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that
reverence him." Psa. 103:13
WHY SHOULD NOT GOD'S
FAITHFUL BE ENTIRELY EXEMPT FROM SUFFERING AND DEATH, AND ALL THE EVIL RESULTS OF SIN AND
ITS PENALTY?
Surely! That is the query that naturally
arises and that is answerable only from one standpoint:and its answer can be appreciated
only by the saints; and by them in proportion to their faith, and their knowledge of God
and his Word. The answer is twofold; that is to say, there are two reasons why God's
people are not exempted from the ills of life common to the world.
(1) Such exemption would attract all kinds of
characters into the Church, for selfish motives. And, although God purposes offering his
blessings freely to all in due time, he is working according to a plan, in which the
present age is intended for the selection of a special class, for a special
purpose--to be used as divine agents, as joint-heirs with the Lord and Savior in blessing
and enlightening the whole world in the coming age. Contrary to the general understanding,
therefore, God is as careful to exclude some from his Church as to draw others. His
preferences are not according to color or sex or learning or nationality, however, but
according to faith and obedience and Christ-likeness of heart, or will. "Whom he did
foreknow he also did predestinate [all who shall be accepted as members of the glorified
Church, the Royal Priesthood] to be conformed to the image [Character-likeness] of his
Son." Rom. 8:29
(2) It is a part of the necessary schooling of the
Church, that they shall learn to trust the Lord implicitly; not merely in matters which
they can see clearly and understand fully, but in everything. Those who cannot learn this
as one of their lessons (and it is one of the most important of all) cannot pass the
examination; but will be deemed "unfit for the Kingdom," whatever else they may
be fitted for.
True, faith is not the only qualification for
a share in the Kingdom; but it is the most important of all, because without it we cannot
so well cultivate the other elements of character; and because without faith the other
elements of character would not be acceptable to God, even if we had them in perfection.
Only from the instructions of God's Word can we see
matters from this standpoint; and only when viewed from this standpoint can the trials,
difficulties, perplexities, persecutions, etc., which come to God's people, be appreciated
so that they can "rejoice in tribulation and in everything give thanks." They
rejoice by faith, even as they see by faith, and walk by faith. Such only can realize that
present trials are designed by the Lord, and intended to work out for those properly
exercised thereby a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory; for they look not at
the things that are seen and temporal; but, with the eye of faith, at the things
promised--unseen and eternal. 2 Cor. 4:18
While we trust that this and others of our
publications may be helpful to many-- enlightening and encouraging, it is not improper for
us to say that their special mission is not to the worldly and the satisfied; but to the
meek and humble who hunger and thirst--for righteousness, for God, for his truth, desiring
to know and to love and to serve him--and to the saints--those who already know the Lord
to a considerable extent, for now, in this time of growing skepticism, along lines of
"higher criticism" and "evolution," such need the "meat in due
season" which the Lord has prepared for them, realizing their needs long in advance.
We specially inform all such that our Society is devoted to the Lord and his Word and his
people. We publish a twice-a-month journal (16 pages), and various Bible-study helps--not
for gain, not for profit, but for the edification of the Lord's people and the upbuilding
in the knowledge of the Lord, and as assistances to the Bride class in making ready for
union with the Bridegroom--that each may make his calling and his election sure. We urge
you to join with us in the study of the Father's Word, in the light now shining upon it;
whether you can contribute toward the expense of the publications or not. The majority of
God's saints are as poor in this world's goods as they are rich in faith. We gladly offer
all such hungry ones any and all of our publications free. Write to us fully at
once. "Come with us, and we will do you good; for the Lord hath spoken good
concerning Israel."
"THE Lord be with you!" steals the
benediction
With solemn splendor like a falling star;
In morns of joy and midnights of affliction,
It breathes its echoed sweetness near and far.
"The Lord be with you!" when the shadows
hold you;
And prove His loving power to soothe and bless;
When dangers darken and when fears enfold you,
"The Lord be with you!" in His tenderness.
______________________
[1] Sinaitic MS. omits the words "and now
is."
[2] Not visible in flesh, however, for he is no
longer flesh, having been highlyexalted again after he had finished the flesh-life by
giving it as our ransom price. See, "The Time is at Hand," Chap. V.