Retributive
Discipline of the Millennium
SO FAR AS
Divine Justice is concerned, God's provision is
that all claims against mankind on the part of
Justice shall be settled and closed in the end of
this Gospel Age. This is represented in the
typical sin-atonement, the satisfaction for sins.
The antitypical Atonement Day witnesses the
sacrifices of The Christ and the preparation of
those worthy to become members of His Body. When
Justice shall have accepted that satisfaction, it
will clear the books and deliver Adam and all his
race from all responsibility accruing from the
violation of God's Law by the eating of the
forbidden fruit. The death of Jesus is the
satisfaction for the sins resulting from the
original Adamic sin.
But there
have been other sins, flagrant wrongs, for which
Justice would demand retribution, sins against
the Holy Spirit, against light. All of these are
sins against God, against righteousness. To
illustrate, consider the Lord's experience: It
may be that the rabble were not responsible for
the crucifixion of our Lord; but there were individuals
who had sufficiency of light to have done better.
So from the days of Abel to the present time some
have suffered gross injustice, and the cries of
these violations of Justice appeal to God, just
as the blood of Abel cried out. The Scriptures
show us how satisfaction will be made also for
these before the opening of the great Day of
blessing, before the world is turned over fully
into the hands of the Mediator of the Kingdom.
The
satisfaction for these willful sins is shown in
the picture of the scapegoat. There we see in
type how the "great company" will be
caused to pass through tribulation, which will
have a good effect upon themselves and which
will, at the same time, be the means of squaring
up accounts for gross violations of Justice
outside of Adamic sin. The putting of the hands
of the high priest upon the head of the scapegoat
pictures the placing of these sins upon the
"great company" class and the sending
of them into tribulation. These will pass through
an experience similar to that which our Lord
foretold would come upon the Jewish nation, and
which was literally fulfilled. Our Lord states
that those horrible sufferings at the end of the
Jewish Age were to be a squaring up for sins
against Divine Justice--for various misdeeds of
previous times. (Luke 11:49-51.) This will leave
the world at the opening of the Millennium
without anything against them on the books of
Justice.
THE DISCIPLINES ACCORDING
TO PREVIOUS
CHARACTER-DEVELOPMENT
Then
Justice will transfer the whole world of mankind
into the hands of Messiah, who will take them just
as they are. They will be in various
conditions. Some will be more depraved, others
less depraved; some will be more seared in their
consciences and some less; and these deficiencies
of character will depend upon the way in which
each one accepted or rejected light and
opportunity in the present time. Those who knew
not His will and did it not will
receive few stripes; those who knew His will
and did it not will receive many stripes,
because of previous hardening of character.
Everybody will be required, eventually, to come
up to the full standard of Divine requirements.
Those more depraved will have greater difficulty
and those less depraved will have less difficulty
and receive fewer stripes, in the coming up to
Divine requirements.
In other
words, every wrong deed, every wrong principle
acted upon, has an evil effect upon character, as
all right doing brings blessing. So mankind, in
proportion as they have in this life obeyed or
disobeyed privilege or knowledge, enjoyed and
understood, will be elevated or degraded in
character when they enter the next Age.
The
Apostle says that God is not slack (slow) as men
count slackness, but is long-suffering and
patient (2 Pet. 3:9); and "He knows how to
reserve the ungodly until the Day of Judgment to
be punished." (2 Pet. 2:9.) Again we read,
"Some men's sins are open, going beforehand
to judgment, and others they follow after. (I
Tim. 5:24.) That is to say, there are people who
do wrong and receive promptly the punishment for
their wrong course. Thus they have opportunity of
improving upon the past.
There are
others who seem to do well, seem to prosper in
earthly things; their eyes stand out with
fatness; they seem to go unheeded in their wrong
course, down to the very tomb. (Psa. 73:3-12.)
Will these escape? We answer, "No." In
the Day of Judgment they will get their lesson.
In that Day of trial they will have much more
difficulty than will those who have learned
lessons from the tribulations of the present
life. A man who has practised evil will require
severe discipline before he will learn that the
customs of the past will not be allowed. Since
this New Order will be such that nothing will be
allowed to hinder it, his course in this life,
therefore, will then receive retribution, in the
sense that it will be the result of his wrong
condition.
We all
have noticed that some children have been born
with a mark that is very humiliating to them; and
many of these, by reason of having the lip of
scorn turned toward them, have thereby been made
humble-minded and beautiful characters. On the
other hand, spoiled children who have had their
own way have constituted saws and files in the
world and have made trouble for others. These,
not having learned lessons of self-control in the
present life, will be proportionately
disadvantaged in the future, and must then learn
these lessons.
The
question has been asked, will the Decalogue be
revived in the Messianic Kingdom? We see no
reason why it should not be made the Law of the
Kingdom. There was no fault to be found with the Law,
but with the weakness, the inability of those
who were under the Law. The Ten
Commandments were not given to the Church,
but the spirit of them is comprehended in the
word Love, which is the Law of the New
Creation. (Rom. 13:8-10.) It would be rather
incongruous for the Lord to say to the Church,
Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not kill; for
they would have passed from every such condition
of mind before they could become His.
With the
world, at the beginning of the New Age, it would
be a Law quite over their heads to say, You shall
love everybody. They would need to have some
simple statements such as, Thou shalt have no
other gods but Me; thou shalt not steal; thou
shalt not murder; thou shalt not bear false
witness. The Decalogue is the very best Law for
the world of mankind. We cannot improve on the
wisdom of the Law-Giver who gave this Law to
Moses in the beginning. It will not surprise us,
therefore, if the Ten Commandments will be put
upon the whole world, just as they were upon the
Jews; and that mankind will be shown that the spirit
of the Law is Love; but that they will
come gradually to the understanding of
this principle; for at the beginning they would
not have the proper appreciation of the matter.
_______________________________________________________
HOME | FAQ'S
| RESOURCES |
BIBLE STUDIES | CHILDREN
ONLINE
LIBRARY | BROADCAST | FORUMS |
NEWS | CONTACT US
_______________________________________________________
Copyright © 1995-2004
Bible Student Ministries.
All rights reserved.
|