VICTORIOUS CHRIST HEADS
PROCESSION
"When He ascended
up on high He led a multitude of captives."
Eph. 4:8
THIS
GRAND EXPRESSION respecting the glorious outcome
of the Savior's work is quoted by the Apostle
Paul from the Psalms. (68:18.) The figure thus
thrust before our mental eye is that of a great
Conqueror whose victory is being heralded. With
the Romans we know that it was a custom that
generals returning from various wars were granted
what were termed "Triumphs"-- that is
to say, triumphal processions, that the people
might have tangible evidence of their victories.
Thus, for
instance, Titus, returning from the war upon the
Jews in A.D. 70, brought with him certain notable
persons and the Golden Candlestick from the
Temple, and these were displayed to the eyes of
the people following the conqueror. They were
subsequently sculptured on the Arch of Titus,
still standing in Rome. And evidently the custom
was still older than the days of the Romans,
since it was so prophetically set forth by the
Prophet David.
Let us
permit our mental eye to feast upon the scene
presented in our text. Jesus, in fulfilment of
the Divine Program, had left the heavenly
condition and descended to earth, taking a
bondman's form or nature in order "that He,
by the grace of God, might taste death for every
man" (Heb. 2:9); in order that He might
rescue Adam and his race from the dying and death
condition in which they were--under Divine
sentence and under the power of Satan.
Therefore
the Redeemer counted not His life precious to
Him, but freely delivered Himself up for our
offenses and died, "the Just for the
unjust," that He might bring mankind back
into harmony with God. His humiliation ended in
death, but His triumph began when, as is
recorded, God raised Him from the dead by His own
power, and set him at the right hand of His own
Majesty--"far above angels, principalities
and powers and every name that is named, that at
the name of Jesus every knee should bow."
HE THAT ASCENDED FIRST
DESCENDED
The
prophecy says nothing about our Lord's descending
from the heavenly glory to the earthly nature,
but St. Paul supplies this feature saying,
"He that ascended, what is it but that He
first descended, into the lower condition of the
earth?" (Verse 9.) Thus the Apostle asserts
that He that descended is He that ascended above
all heights, that all things may be fulfilled
through Him.
An
important thought here noted is that our Lord not
only left the heavenly glory, but that He
returned to a still more excellent glory--He did
not suffer the disastrous loss of the heavenly
nature as a result of His obedience in taking the
human nature. As He left the heavenly nature to
take the human, so in returning He left the human
nature to ascend again to that which He had
before, with the additional glory of the divine
nature.
LEADING FORTH THE CAPTIVES
With most
of the conquerors in olden times the captives
were made slaves. Not so, however, will be the
result of Jesus' victory. He leads forth to
liberty and eternal life those who have been
slaves of sin and death. His train of captives is
a long one indeed; the procession has already
occupied and is yet to be the great work of the of
the Messianic reign!
First of
all in the procession are the saints--"the
Church of the First-born, whose names are written
in Heaven." In the forefront of them we see
the twelve Apostles, St. Paul taking the place of
Judas. The Apostles are to be Kings who are to
reign with Christ in preeminent positions; but
following them are some others of the saintly
company of Kings--in all a "little
flock."
Then will
come a company, more numerous, but less
heroic--"a great multitude," uncrowned,
but with "palm branches," not
antitypical Priests, but antitypical Levites,
associates and servants of the Royal Priesthood,
the Bride. Then will follow (Heb. 11:38-40) other
faithful ones of the past, the Ancient Worthies.
The Prophet speaks also of the "rebellious
house." The classes previously specified
were not rebellious, but gladly and willingly
forsook all to do the will of the Father and to
attain the liberty of sons of God, as the
first-fruits of the triumph of the Lamb.
But
during the thousand years of Christ's reign He
will lead forth the "rebellious
house"--the world of mankind-- not all of
them, we may be sure, for some, the Scriptures
positively declare, will die the Second Death,
because, after realizing their deliverance, they
will love sin and will therefore be destroyed as
enemies of righteousness. But it is a blessed
thought that many of those who are now aliens,
strangers and foreigners from God through wicked
works, are in this condition of opposition, not
willingly, not intelligently, but by reason of
the ignorance and weaknesses which came to them
by heredity, under the reign of sin and death.
It is to
be a distinct feature of the great Triumph of
Immanuel that every eye shall be opened and every
ear unstopped, that "the knowledge of the
glory of God shall fill the whole earth,"
during His glorious reign of righteousness. Are
we not distinctly told of the time that will
follow, in which all the willing and obedient
shall receive the Holy Spirit, which then will be
poured out "upon all flesh" even as
now, during this Gospel Age, it is poured out
upon God's "servants and handmaidens"
only?-- Joel 2:28.
Oh, that
will be a glorious Triumph for the great
Redeemer! In the language of the Bible, "He
shall see the fruitage of the travail of His
soul, and shall be satisfied." (Isa. 53:11.)
What a glorious fruitage!--not only His own
exaltation--not only the exaltation of His
faithful Bride class, and the additional
exaltation of "the virgins, her companions,
which follow her," and the exaltation of
Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and all the Prophets, but
finally the deliverance to human perfection of
all the groaning creation willing to accept the
same upon the Divine terms of loyalty to God and
to the principles of His Government, as these
shall be made known to them.
"HE GAVE GIFTS UNTO
MEN"
It was
the custom in olden times that a king coming into
authority and power should give gifts according
to His wealth. Governors and princes would be
needed and he would dispense the honors of these
offices to those found faithful in his service,
loyal in the defense of His cause. So, in this
prophetic reference to our Lord's ascension, it
is declared not only that He would lead forth a
multitude of captives, granting them freedom,
liberty, blessings, but also that He would confer
certain gifts.
We might
have spent valuable time guessing the nature of
these gifts which the great Redeemer would
dispense, but such a waste of time is
unnecessary, since the Apostle proceeds to
explain the matter and tells us what gifts are
meant. He says, "And He gave some Apostles,
and some Prophets, and some evangelists, and some
pastors and teachers."
There is
an astounding thought connected with this
statement--that the Apostles were not
self-appointed, and that they had no successors,
and that the work of evangelizing, or making
known the "good tidings," and the
pastoral work and the teaching work amongst
believers, are all under the supervision of the
Head of the Church, the great Victor, who
redeemed us with His blood, and who proposes,
first, to lead forth a Bride class, and
subsequently all the willing and obedient.
It
behooves us to notice that the Apostle does not
intimate that Jesus gave to some Methodism, to
others Presbyterianism, and others Roman
Catholicism, etc. No, when we held such thoughts
it was because of more or less misunderstanding
--because we failed to see first that there is
but the "one Church of the Living God, whose
names are written in heaven," and second,
that that one Church is not any of the various
sects and parties, but includes the saintly in
all of these; "the Lord knoweth them that
are His."
NOT GIVEN TO CONVERT THE
WORLD
Noting
carefully the Apostle's argument in connection
with our text, we perceive that the Master did
not give these gifts for the conversion of the
world. He does specify, however, what they were
for, namely, "for the perfecting of the
saints, for the work of the ministry, for the
edifying of the Body of Christ"--the Church,
the Bride class. Is it supposable that the
Apostle erred in this statement and that the fact
is the reverse--that these gifts were provided
for the conversion of the world, and that the
Apostle thoroughly misunderstood the matter and
supposed that they were given for the perfecting
of the saints, for the edifying of the Body of
Christ? No! We are to be taught by the Apostle
and may be sure that there is no mistake, no
error in his statement.
Notice
the force of the expression, "the perfecting
of the saints." It is not sufficient that
believers have a little knowledge, a little
faith, and a measure of sanctification or
devotion to the Lord, for after they have
received and attained all of these things they
still need the instruction of the Apostles and
ministers, pastors and teachers, provided by the
great Head of the Church for their perfecting.
Ah! there is a force and depth of meaning in that
word perfecting. We remember that of our
Head it is written, "Being made perfect
through suffering, He became the Author of
eternal salvation to all who obey Him." So
His followers are made perfect through suffering.
The
Master's perfecting, indeed, was a little
different from ours, and yet there is a
similarity between the two. He was perfect before
He humbled Himself; He was still perfect as the
Man Christ Jesus, who gave Himself; but as a
result of His consecration He received a
begetting of the Holy Spirit to the divine
nature, and His development as a New Creature
required that He faithfully carry out His vow, or
covenant of sacrifice, in the doing of the will
of the Heavenly Father. By such faithfulness He
perfected Himself on the divine plane--that is,
He proved Himself worthy according to the
covenant--"Worthy is the Lamb that was slain
to receive glory, honor, dominion and
power."--Rev. 5:12.
Similarly
the followers of Jesus are to be sharers with Him
in the sufferings of this present time and in the
glories which shall follow, for "If we
suffer with Him we shall also reign with
Him." (2 Tim. 2:12.) Although we are
imperfect in the flesh, while He was perfect, yet
the robe of His righteousness, the merit of His
sacrifice, covers all of our blemishes and makes
us, as His footstep followers, holy and
acceptable before the Father, as
joint-sacrificers with Jesus.
The
begetting of the Holy Spirit starts us in the
life divine. We are not to be perfected in the
flesh, but in the spirit, and our perfection and
acceptance with the Father will be demonstrated
by our loyalty of heart and the fulness and
thoroughness with which we submit our all to the
Divine will and seek to glorify God in our bodies
and spirits which are His. (I Cor. 6:20.) Our
justification comes to us as a reward of faith,
regardless of works, but our glorification will
follow as a reward for faithfulness.
THESE GIFTS ARE LASTING
Not
merely for a few days or years were these gifts
to the Church provided; on the contrary, they
were to endure throughout this entire Age, until
the Church perfected shall pass beyond the veil
and be forever with her Redeemer, to share His
glory, honor and immortality. The Lord from time
to time has raised up evangelists, pastors and
teachers for this glorious service of preparing
the "chaste virgin," the Church, to be
the Bride in glory. But the Apostolic office, as
represented in The Twelve specially provided by
the Father, has continued and needs no
replenishment. We still have their instructions
as fully as the early Church, "that the man
of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto
every good work."-- 2 Tim. 3:16,17.
That the
Apostle did not understand the matter to be
merely for a day, but throughout this Age, until
the completion of the Church, is clearly
evidenced by his statement, namely, that all
these gifts were for the edification of the Body
of Christ and the perfecting of the saints to the
last--"until we all come to the unity of the
faith and to the knowledge of the Son of God,
unto a perfect Man, unto the measure of the
stature of the fulness of Christ."
This is a
wonderful statement, however we view it. Shall we
say that it applies to each individual member of
the Church of Christ, and that each individual
must come into that full unity of faith, and that
full knowledge of the Son of God, and the
perfection of manhood in Christ, and to a
developed stature of maturity in Christ? Or shall
we understand the meaning to be, until the entire
Church of Christ shall have reached a full
knowledge and shall, as a whole, have come to the
condition of a perfect Man, of which Christ is
the Head and we are the members --to the full
development or stature of the Anointed, the
Messiah, Head and members? We believe that the
latter is the Apostle's thought.
Nevertheless,
it cannot be disputed that the selection of these
members all the way down the Age must have been
along the lines here indicated. Individually, one
partially developed would not be fitted for the
Kingdom. One not in the unity of the faith would
not be suitable. One not developed to the proper
measure or stature as a Christian would not be
suitable. Nothing is more plain than that the
individual Christian needs a great deal of
instruction, edification, building up in the holy
faith, testing, proving, chiseling, polishing,
fitting, preparing before he shall be ready for a
place in the Kingdom.
GOD'S PEOPLE NO LONGER NEED
BE MISLED
This
thought is confirmed by the succeeding verses, in
which the Apostle tells us that by the assistance
of these, the Divinely provided gifts, teachers,
etc., God's people need no longer, like children,
to be tossed to and fro, and be misled by the
sleight of men and cunning craftiness of those
who would deceive. On the contrary, being
sincere, and speaking the truth in love, they are
to grow up into membership in the Anointed One in
all things--coming fully and completely into
fellowship and obedience, under the Head, even
Christ.--Verses 14,15.
Proceeding,
the Apostle tells us that all who are recognized
as members of the Body of Christ must be properly
joined to the Head--by a proper compact, or
covenant, intelligently made and fully intended.
This union must be compacted, and it requires the
entire Gospel Age to effect this development and
compacting as members, that the whole Body of the
Anointed may be one--symmetrical, beautiful,
co-operative--making increase in its members and
edifying itself in love--growing in grace and in
knowledge and in character-likeness to the
Head.--V. 16.
In
conclusion, then, the Captain of our Salvation
has gone before, He has accepted us as His
joint-heirs, and we are following on, blest by
the gifts which He dispensed when He ascended up
on high; and we, in turn, will be His gifts to
the world of mankind. When as Priests and Kings
we shall be associated with our Lord, we shall
bless all the families of the earth with a
glorious opportunity of knowledge and obedience,
that they may, if they will, attain life
everlasting, "the gift of God, through Jesus
Christ our Lord."--Rom. 6:23.
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