Savior of the World
"Far
be it from me to glory, save in the Cross of our
Lord Jesus Christ."--Galatians 6:14. R.V.
TODAY'S
Bible Study reminds us afresh of the fact that
Jesus is not merely the Savior of the Church, but
that He is also the Savior of the world. In the
past, Bible students have overlooked this great
truth, to their confusion. Now we see that God
has provided two distinctly different salvations
--the one for the Church in the Gospel Age, and
the other for the world in the Age to follow
this--the period of Messiah's Kingdom.
Not only
do we see that there are two different
salvations, but also that they are wholly
different, totally different in kind. They are
alike in some things, however. Both are
salvations from sin and from its power and its
penalty, the curse--sorrow, pain, crying,
sighing, dying. Both are salvations to an
everlasting happiness. But there the similarity
ends; for the Church is to be saved by a change
of nature, while the world is to be saved without
a change of nature--by a resurrection to the
perfection of human nature.
The
Church's salvation, which is now in progress, has
its beginning in the "hearing" of
faith. The Message of God's grace is proclaimed
here and there by stammering lips, which do not
appeal to many of the great or wise or learned,
but chiefly to the poor of this world, rich in
faith. Such of these as are of humble mind, of
"broken and contrite heart," are
charmed with the Message of forgiveness of sins
and reconciliation to God through the Redeemer.
As they approach and seek to draw near to God, He
through His providences draws near to them. If
they continue to hunger and thirst after the Lord
and His Message, He will satisfy them. He will
show them His Covenant. He will enable them to
understand the terms and conditions upon which
they may be received back into fellowship with
God as dear children--no longer aliens,
strangers, foreigners--no longer condemned to
death, but on the contrary justified to life.
Here
comes to them another test of their love of
righteousness, their hunger for fellowship with
God; for the requirements made of them seem at
first to be exacting. These requirements, as
stated by the Master Himself, are: "If any
man will be My disciple, let him deny himself
[renounce his own self-will], take up his cross
[begin to live contrary to his own preferences in
that he will do according to the Divine will,
instead of according to his own will, where it
crosses the Divine], and follow Me." Then he
must continue to follow in the Master's
footsteps--faithful unto death.
Some,
upon learning of these stringent conditions of
discipleship, turn back and follow no longer in
pursuit of the Lord's favor, forgiveness,
reconciliation, blessing, begetting of the Holy
Spirit. It is their option; and their course will
decide their worthiness or unworthiness to be
counted in with the special class whom the Lord
is now selecting from the world to be the
Church--"the Bride, the Lamb's Wife."
THE BLESSINGS OF FAITH
We are
not to think of those who reject the Lord's cross
and refuse to make a full consecration of their
lives as being, therefore, condemned either to
eternal torment or to anything else. The call of
the Gospel Age is a favor and a privilege. Those
who respond get a special blessing; those who
reject miss that special blessing. They are not
condemned (damned) in any sense of the word
because of rejecting the privilege of walking in
the Master's steps. On the contrary, as the
Scriptures declare, they were already
condemned--condemned in Adam, because members of
his family, sharers of his weaknesses and
unworthiness of life--sharers of his death
sentence. They failed to escape from that
condemnation, and thus they continue under it.
It is of
the Church class only that St. Peter writes,
"Having escaped the corruption that is
[still] in the world." (2 Peter 1:4.) As the
Apostle Paul wrote, "We were children of
wrath, even as others [still are]."
(Ephesians 2:3.) By believing in Christ, by
accepting His terms, by becoming His disciples
through full consecration, we secure forgiveness
for the sins that are past, and additionally
secure relationship with the Heavenly Father
through our Redeemer, our Advocate. Now His
acceptance of us is by and through the begetting
of the Holy Spirit, and this is granted to none
others than those who come by His appointed way.
Those
begotten of the Holy Spirit are Scripturally
styled "New Creatures in Christ." To
them, "old things have passed away, and all
things have become new." They have new aims,
new objects, new hopes in life. To them, earthly
things have no value, except as they can be used
to glorify the Lord and to serve Him. Earthly
learning, reputation, honor, titles, are valuable
only as they can be used in some way to the glory
of God--in the service of His Cause or for the
benefit of fellowmen, especially those of the
Household of Faith. To these, earthly prospects,
political hopes and ambitions, etc., are nothing;
for they have before their mind's eye Heavenly
prospects, which include joint-heirship with
Christ in His Messianic Kingdom of a thousand
years and, after that, additional glory and honor
in the ages to follow.
But all
these blessings, you note, are heard with the ear
of faith, seen with the eye of faith. Thus the
Lord selects and draws only those who can and do
exercise faith; for "without faith it is
impossible to please God."
Those who
either never hear, or hearing fail to respond, or
responding go for a little way and then stop when
they come to the crucial test of self-denial,
self-renouncement --these lose all those
spiritual blessings which the others, if
faithful, will attain--Heavenly honor, Heavenly
glory and immortality through the change of
nature begun at the time of their begetting and
to be consummated in their complete change in the
First Resurrection. These the Apostle describes
as "sown in weakness, raised in power; sown
an animal body, raised a spiritual body; sown in
dishonor, raised in glory."
But even
those who lose God's highest blessings and
rewards will still have open before them great
and wonderful favors of God, all of which were
purchased by the Redeemer's precious blood--by
His sacrifice for our sins, by His submission of
His life for the forfeited life of Adam, for the
recovery of Adam and all his race from the
sentence, or the curse, of death. These blessings
for the world, however, are not to be clearly
seen or appreciated yet, except by those who are
especially taught of God--those who have been
begotten of the Holy Spirit and thus enabled to
understand "the deep things of God."
--1 Corinthians 2:10.
"THE COMMON
SALVATION"
The point
we are here especially making is that God has
provided a salvation for the world, as well as a
salvation for the Church. The Bible tells us of
the general facts of these salvations. It assures
us that "God so loved the world [as well as
the Church] that He gave His Only Begotten Son,
that whosoever believeth in Him should not
perish, but have everlasting life." (John
3:16.) We noticed at first that the penalty that
is upon the world is not an eternal torment
penalty, but a penalty of destruction. Christ
died that the race might not perish, but in due
time recover from the death penalty through faith
in Christ and obedience to Him.
Only the
few can exercise the great faith that is
necessary to a place in the Heavenly reward as
members of His Bride class. By and by, when the
knowledge of God shall fill the whole earth as
the waters cover the great deep, all will
understand; all will hear and be able to believe
in God's goodness and in His wonderful
arrangement on man's behalf. Those who will then
believe, and who will then accept God's favor on
its terms of loyalty and obedience to the best of
their ability, will be blessed by Messiah's
Kingdom.
The
blessing, as the Bible describes it, will be the
rolling away of the curse and the rolling on,
instead of the curse, "the blessing of the
Lord, which maketh rich; and He addeth no sorrow
with it." This work of rolling away the
curse and rolling on the blessing is the
appointed work of Messiah's Kingdom for a
thousand years.
We may be
sure that by the time His Kingdom shall end, and
shall be delivered up to the Father, our Lord
will have fully accomplished all the great work
which was committed to Him of the Father and for
which He has shown His worthiness by His
co-operation in the Father's Plan, to the extent
of dying for the race. And this King of Glory,
Messiah, will have for associates those who, like
Himself, delight to do the Father's will-- those
who delight to walk in His steps. His perfection,
His sacrifice, making good for their defects
through the fall, enables them to become
joint-sacrificers with Him. Of these the Apostle
writes, "For if we suffer with Him, we shall
also reign with Him; and if we be dead with Him,
we shall also live with Him."
NEW CREATURES IN CHRIST
In
today's Study St. Paul deals especially with the
Church class. He explains to us that it is the
love of Christ that has exercised the
constraining, or drawing, power upon our hearts.
The love of Christ is merely the love of the
Father, but as men we would not be able to
understand the Father's love. We are enabled to
understand that love as it was manifested by our
Redeemer; and thus through Him we look upward to
the Father, and are able to appreciate something
of the love that is beyond all human
understanding. As St. Paul points out, Christ's
love was manifested in that He died for all. When
we say "for all," it means that the
whole race was dead, that none had a right to
everlasting life, and that none could commend
themselves to God so as to be worthy of
everlasting life.
The
Apostle explains that all who realize this matter
fully, clearly, should indicate the fact by
consecrating their lives to the Lord, to live
unto Him, to know His will, to lay down their
lives in the service of Him who died for them and
who rose again. These have a special love for the
Lord and they, properly, have a special love for
each other. They are seeking to live, not after
the flesh, but after the Spirit--in harmony with
the begetting of the Holy Spirit, which they have
received.
Hence
they more and more are thinking of Christ, not as
the Man Jesus, but as the glorified Lord. So also
they are learning to think of each other, not
according to the flesh, but according to the
heart; for "if any man be in Christ, he is a
New Creature." To such, earthly
things--earthly hopes, aims and prospects--have
gone, and all things have become new. They have
new hopes, new ambitions, new relationships. If
faithful, they will receive the glorious things
which God has in reservation for those who love
Him.
These
things are of God. They are not of the Apostle's
making up, nor of Jesus' origination. The Father
Himself originated the whole Plan and
arrangement. He has already reconciled us to
Himself by Jesus Christ. We are fully given over
to Him. We have no rebellion in our hearts. He
has reconciled us to Himself through His Son; and
God has nothing against us. "There is now no
condemnation to those who are in Christ
Jesus." Their sins are forgiven. Instead of
condemning them, God justifies them. As St. Paul
says, "It is God that justifies; who is he
that condemns? It was Christ that died,"
giving full satisfaction for our sins.
THE SERVICE OF
RECONCILIATION
These New
Creatures, begotten of the Holy Spirit, are given
a work to do. They are not only to have a work in
the future as kings and priests, joint-heirs with
Christ in the blessing of the world, but they
have a work to do at the present time, a work for
God. They are to be ambassadors for God. They are
to be His representatives amongst men. They are
to seek to tell the Message of God's Love to
those who do not understand it. They are to tell
the way of return to God to those who know not
the way and to those who give evidence of a
desire for reconciliation. They are thus
ministers, or servants, of the way of
reconciliation even in the present time. All
those reconciled in the present time by faith and
obedience are privileged thus to become members
of the Bride class--joint-heirs with Christ in
His Kingdom.
In the
20th verse it will be noticed that the word
"you" is in italics, indicating that it
is not in the original. The passage does not read
properly with the word "you." It should
be omitted. God is not beseeching the Church
through the Church, or through each other, to be
reconciled; for all of the Church are reconciled.
The
Apostle is telling us that God through us is
beseeching or urging mankind--all who have the
hearing ear--to be reconciled to Him, telling
them that He is willing to be reconciled to them,
and explaining the basis of this reconciliation;
namely, that Christ took the sinner's place, that
He personally knew no sin, but was holy,
harmless, separate from sinners, and that those
who receive this Message may have the privilege
of coming into the righteous condition acceptable
to God, and thus of being inducted into the Bride
class, who will complete the Royal Priesthood
beyond the Veil, and for a thousand years have
the glorious work of blessing all the families of
the earth
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