Volume 6, Number 6
END OF THE AGE A PERILOUS TIME
In the last days perilous times shall
come; men shall be traitors, heady,...
lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God. 2 Tim. 3:4
The expression, the last days,
refers, not to the end of the world as many expect this event, but is a Scriptural
designation of the present time, the end of this Age, when the Reign of Righteousness is
about to begin. The Harvest is the end of the Age. (Matt. 13:39 Diaglott.) The
warning given by the Apostle is that instead of the worlds being converted to God at
this time, the reverse condition will prevail. It will be a time of great peril for those
who have started out to follow Christ. It will not be so perilous a time for the world.
The only ones who are on trial for life or death are
those who have been released from the Adamic condemnation. To these the time described by
St. Paul will be one of severe testing. The whole course of the world will be turned aside
from the high standard that might have been expected. Men will be traitors.
Only as long as it will be of advantage to them to
perform a contract will they do so. It will be a time when every mans hand will be
lifted against his neighbor. Selfishness will be rampant.
There will be manifest headiness and self-conceit.
Men will be lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God. This condition is to
be a sign of the end of the Age.
PREVALENCE OF THESE
CONDITIONS
Every thoughtful person must perceive that this
condition of things is prevailing now. Whenever a contract is found to be unsatisfactory
whether it be a marriage contract or a business contract the dissatisfied contractor is
liable to break the agreement. This party to the contract then assumes the attitude of one
who declares, Force me to keep it if you can. The Lords people will be firm for
principle and true to their contracts, even when these prove disadvantageous. This
attitude is pleasing to the Lord.
We find headiness of spirit in the world everywhere a
loss of respect for authority. No doubt there has been too much respect for
authority in the past. Now there is none. This condition has been brought about by a lack
of reverence for God the inevitable result of loss of faith in the Bible as the Word of
God. As people lose faith in the Bible, they lose faith in God, and become more selfish
and more self-willed. This condition of affairs has been brought about by false doctrine.
People think that God is purposing to do them harm.
The Higher Critics have been seeking to put away what
they consider the absurdities of religious thought, and to this end have done away with
the Bible. Bible students see that the absurdities have been brought about by the creeds
and not by the Bible. But the world, losing confidence in God, are becoming more heady
than ever before. Even the reverential fear which once held them is departing, and there
is a disposition to doubt everything.
People are in the condition of mind where they say,
Let us eat, drink and be merry; nobody knows about the future; the preachers
are all confused. Everything has come about by evolutionary processes. Let us enjoy the
present. Let pleasure be our aim in life. This would seem to be the attitude of the world.
They are lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God.
These conditions of our day make it a perilous time for the Church. Do you ask, Would not
the Church, on the contrary, be more than ever led to love God? And would this not guard
them and keep them from danger? We Answer--that some of Gods people are becoming
more and more immersed in the world. The spirit of the world surges all around them. With
great difficulty could these come to realize that the whole world is astray in their ideas
and ways. The tendency of all such is to have the mind of the world, even though they be
spirit-begotten.
This worldly spirit, the Apostle suggests, will
affect the Church to some extent. Consequently some of the Lords people will thus
come into special peril at this time, because of neglecting their Covenant with the Lord.
Others will watch and pray, and, for this reason, develop in mind and heart. But these are
few.
The Great Company class, while still loving the Lord,
are becoming immersed in the spirit of the world. Even those who are living nearest to the
Divine standard will be more or less imperiled through this spirit, unless they continue
diligent in prayer and the study of Gods Word. What we see going on about us seems
natural to our minds. The way in which other people spend time and money is a temptation
to the Lords people which must be steadfastly resisted.
THE SUBTLE TEST
The Lords people spend and are being spent in
His service, according to opportunity. They are living lives of consecration. The world
now has an eight-hour day. The Lords faithful people would, on the contrary, make
theirs a sixteen-hour day. But all these present-day conditions constitute perils. For us
to devote to the Lords service only what the world considers a reasonable days
work, would not be fulfilling our Covenant. Those who seek merely to do right will obtain
a place in the Great Company.
But the Little Flock will serve the Lord with such
delight that they will scarcely know how to cease their efforts. They recognize that their
bodies are fully consecrated to the Lord, and they are daily putting them to death. In
view of these perilous times, let each ask himself, To which class do I belong ?