The World Called to
Repentance
God now
commandeth men everywhere to repent: because He
hath appointed a day, in the which He will judge
the world in righteousness by that Man whom He
hath ordained."--Acts 17:30, 31.
WHEN GOD
sentenced Father Adam to death He very properly
said nothing about repentance, for He offered
Adam no hope of a future life. If, then, no hope
of a future life was known to Adam or revealed to
him, why should God deal with him at all? Adam
was sentenced to death, to destruction. There is
no basis upon which to command a man to repent
unless something is offered him as a reward for
repentance.
God had
put upon Adam the sentence of death, which could
be removed only by the payment of a ransom-price.
God fully intended that some day all mankind
should have an opportunity of coming into harmony
with Him and of having another trial, or
judgment, for life; but it was not His due time
to explain His program. Therefore, Adam lived and
died without any command whatever to repent. And
so did his children.
The first
intimation of what God might do was given by the
Prophet Enoch. But the revelation made by Enoch
was not a sufficient basis for offering hope to
mankind nor for telling them to repent.--Jude
14,15.
A SUGGESTION OF HOPE FOR
THE WORLD
So years
passed by until the time of Abraham. Then God
told Abraham that He would reveal a secret to
him, because Abraham was His friend. That secret
was not a message to be preached, but to be
believed by himself and by those who would be
heirs of that promise, which was not yet
applicable to any outside of Abraham's
descendants. The secret was, "In thee and in
thy Seed shall all the families of the earth be
blessed." (Gen. 28:14.) I intend to bless
the world, Abraham. If you are obedient to My
instructions, your Seed will get the blessing and
transmit it to the world in general. It was only
by implication, therefore, that Abraham had any
suggestion that a life of repentance would be
rewarded.
In due
time God called the children of Israel and dealt
with them through Moses. Practically He said,
"Do you wish to be My people? If so, come
now, enter into a covenant with Me; I will be
your God and you shall be My people."--Lev.
26:12.
Israel
was not commanded to repent, nor were any of the
rest of the world. It was an invitation,
not a command. God was ready to make a covenant
with them. That covenant was that they were to
obey the Law, and that by their obedience to the
Ten Commandments and the spirit of their covenant
they would become God's people. But when they
tried to keep the Law they found that they could
not do so, because of inherited weakness. Hence
there was nothing more to be said to them along
that line. They had had their opportunity and
they had failed.
THE CALL TO REPENTANCE
When
Jesus came He kept the Law, and inherited all the
promises of the Law Covenant. Then He offered a
share of the Kingdom which God had promised to
set up (Dan. 2:44), and blessing, honor and glory
to as many of the Jews as would come into harmony
with Him, as many as would walk in His steps of
self-sacrifice and thus have God's favor. (John
1:12.) In substance He said, "This is the
way. Trust in Me and walk in My steps. Thus you
shall be My disciples. You shall share in My
sufferings now, and by and by in My glory and
Kingdom."
In due
time, after a certain number had been gathered
from the Jews, this message was extended to all
the Gentiles who were in the right condition of
heart. The Gentiles not having indicated their
desire to come back into harmony with God as the
Jewish nation had done, God then commanded them
everywhere to repent. (Acts 17:30.) This He did
through those who were the representatives of His
teaching, the Apostles and the Church. In
proportion as they understood the Plan of God and
were in harmony with it, they could tell their
neighbors that a new condition had been
established and that God would deal henceforth
with the Gentiles.
THE RANSOM THE BASIS OF
HOPE FOR THE WORLD
Why
should God deal with the Gentiles now, when He
had refused to deal with them before? The
explanation of this new condition is that Christ
had died, and God's great Plan had now matured
enough to be made applicable to all men
everywhere. God had appointed a day in which to
judge the world in righteousness. (Acts
17:30,31.) That great Day is the next Age, the
Day of Christ, the Day of Messiah's Kingdom. God
has made this provision for the redemption of all
through the death of Christ. Mankind were all
under the death sentence, and God could not deal
with them until that sentence was lifted, or
until provision was made for lifting it. He has
not annulled the death sentence, but He has
provided a Ransom for all.--I Tim. 2:6.
Whoever
knows of this Plan of redemption knows that God
intends to give every individual of Adam's race
an individual trial for life. That trial
will not be merely to determine whether mankind
will try to do right and battle against all the
evil influences of the world, but God will subdue
sin and uplift all of Adam's race who are
desirous of being uplifted.
God has
declared that no member of Adam's race need die.
Everyone who will may return to God through the
great Atonement to be effected by the Redeemer.
He has not completed this work yet, but to those
who have an ear to hear, the word has gone out
that there is to be a future trial, and that the
manner of one's life will have a bearing upon
that trial. It is proper to tell this now,
because the provision has been made through
Christ's death.
THE PRESENT MESSAGE TO THE
WORLD
Prior to
the Gospel Age it was of no use to tell the
people to come into harmony with God. But now the
whole world is to be brought into a trial to help
them and not to condemn them--a trial to see
whether they are worthy to have the everlasting
life that God will provide for them and assist
the willing to attain. Wherever people are
willing to hear, the message is, Repent! repent!
Cease from sin, and this reformation of character
will have an influence upon your everlasting
life.
If one is
not of the Church class he is not on trial for
life or death. But it will be to his advantage to
live uprightly, for there is a time of reckoning
coming. God has provided for this day of trial in
the death of Christ. Beforehand, however, the
Lord is selecting a Church class. The Lord is
thus preparing a great class of missionaries who
will do everything possible to assist men out of
sin and degradation back to harmony with God.
In times
past God acted as though He did not notice when
sin was committed--unless it was a grievous sin.
Then He merely took the lives of the sinners
under unpleasant conditions--they went to sleep.
The Prophet Ezekiel says that God took all of the
Sodomites away as He saw good. (Ezek. 16:50.)
After the Church's trial, or judgment, shall have
been finished and the overcomers shall have been
found worthy, then, in that time of the world's
judgment, the Sodomites will have an opportunity
as had the Jews who heard Jesus at the first
advent. And it will be much more tolerable then
for the people of Tyre and Sidon and Sodom and
Gomorrah than it will be for the people of
Chorazin, Bethsaida, Capernaum, etc.; for the
latter had had opportunities of knowledge,
against which they had sinned; they therefore had
more wilfulness in the matter than did the
Sodomites.--See Matt. 11:21-24.
At that
time God had sent no command to the Sodomites to
repent. So God merely "winked at"
(overlooked) the ignorance and sin of that time.
(Acts 17:30.) He neither threatened nor did
anything else in the matter. He merely blotted
the Sodomites out of existence. Their fate served
as a foreshadowing, as the Apostle says, that God
will not forever permit mankind to remain in sin,
but that He will destroy the sinner. None shall
be destroyed, however, until first he shall have
had the opportunity for everlasting life, secured
for every member of Adam's race, through our Lord
Jesus Christ.
JESUS' RESURRECTION THE
ASSURANCE OF GOD'S FAVOR
The
Apostle recognizes the fact that the judgment had
not begun in his day. He points forward to the
Day of Christ and declares that God's assurance
now set before the world of mankind is that there
will be a future time of judgment. Through
Christ's sacrificial death the opportunity for
everlasting life will come to all. Mankind have
already been condemned in Adam. They could not
have another trial until the condemnation of the
first trial was lifted. Therefore, not until God
had provided a Redeemer would He command any to
repent. The Apostle says that God's assurance to
mankind in this matter is based upon the fact
that He had raised Christ from the dead.--Acts
17:31.
When God
had raised Jesus from the dead it became a
testimony that His was a sacrificial death, an
acceptable offering. And Jesus' ascension was a
still further demonstration that this One whom
the Father had raised from the dead by His own
power, was to be the great King to rule, the
great Priest to succor, assist and instruct, and
the great Judge to direct and order the affairs
of the world and to give proper rewards in the
great Day of God.
Whoever
therefore hears about Jesus' death and
resurrection should understand that this was
God's redemption arrangement. They should also be
informed that mankind are all sinners and that
death is the penalty of sin. If any should ask,
How does Jesus' death affect humanity? we show
that God has highly exalted Him to be a Savior.
In God's due time, as soon as the elect class
shall have been completed and the reign of six
thousand years of sin and evil shall have ended,
then He will grant redemption from sin to all--to
the Jew first and afterwards to the Gentile.
As many
as hear now should repent; but as
many as do not hear in the present time are not
commanded by God to repent. St. Paul's thought
seems to be, Repent now and thus influence your
future conditions, even if you do not wish to
become a member of the Body of Christ. Thousands
of millions of mankind have gone down into death.
When they are awakened during the period of
Messiah's reign, this will be the great message
--"God has opened up a fountain for
cleansing from sin and uncleanness. Whosoever
will may partake of the blessing and
reconciliation with God and thereby attain
everlasting life."--See Zech. 13:1; Rev.
22:17.
At
present the god of this world hath blinded the
world's eyes of understanding (2 Cor. 4:4), but
soon their eyes will be opened. The time is
coming when all shall see and hear, and when
none, from the least to the greatest, will need
to say, Know ye the Lord, for all shall know Him.
Then when they know, each will be responsible. At
the end of the Millennial Age when they shall
have received their full blessing through the
Mediator they will be required to do God's will
on earth even as it is done in Heaven.--Jer.
31:33,34.
FUTURE LIFE INFLUENCED BY
PRESENT CONDUCT
It is a
very important feature of our work to let our
light so shine that men may see our good works
and glorify our Father which is in heaven--not their
Father, but our Father. (I Pet. 2:12.) The
present time is not the world's, but the Church's
visitation. God is seeking the people who are in
a voluntary condition of righteousness. This is
not the time for dealing with the world, but for
God's people, as burning and shining lights, to
reprove all sin. In proportion as the light
shines out it will reprove darkness.
If we
speak at all about a future Age it is a special
part of our duty to make clear to our hearers
that the conduct of life at the present time will
have a bearing on the future life. To say that
there are two chances-- a chance now and a
chance by and by--is wholly wrong. We say
to them that during this Gospel Age there is only
one chance, and the only way to get that chance
is to walk in the footsteps of Jesus.
But for
those who are by and by to be under the
Mediatorial Kingdom it is proper to tell them
that a life of obedience to God in harmony with
the principles of righteousness will be a
blessing to themselves in the present, and also
in the future. There are a great many people who
are living upright and honorable lives and who
are doing a great deal of good in this present
time. If they thought they were not doing good,
they would be discouraged. An incentive to a high
standard of life would be taken from them; for
they believe that righteous living now has a
bearing on the future. In this they are right.
But their standard is not so high as that set
forth in the Scriptures for the Church. That
standard is necessarily high; for saints, and
saints alone, are to be joint-heirs with Christ
and members of the Bride class.
A great
mistake was made in the past when Brother Calvin
declared that the non-elect were to be roasted to
all eternity. On the contrary, we find the
teaching of God's Word to be that the non-elect
are to be blessed by the Elect with an
opportunity for life on the earthly plane. God
will use the elect class for the purpose of
blessing the world of mankind. God has a loving,
sympathetic Plan for all of His creatures, which
will be revealed to them in His own due time.
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