SCRIPTURE
STUDIES
VOLUME ONE - THE
DIVINE PLAN OF THE AGES
STUDY
XVI
CONCLUDING THOUGHTS
Our Duty Toward the Truth
—
Its Cost, Its Value,
Its Profit.
IN THE preceding chapters we have seen that both the
light of nature and that of revelation clearly demonstrate the fact that
an intelligent, wise, almighty and righteous God is the Creator of all
things, and that he is the supreme and rightful Lord of all; that all
things animate and inanimate are subject to his control; and that the
Bible is the revelation of his character and plans so far as he is
pleased to disclose them to men. From
it we have learned that though evil now predominates among some of his
creatures, it exists for only a limited time and to a limited extent,
and by his permission, for wise ends which he has in view.
We have also learned that though darkness now covers the earth,
and gross darkness the people, yet God’s light will in due time dispel
all the darkness, and the whole earth will be filled with his glory.
We have seen that his great plan is one that has required ages
for its accomplishment thus far, and that yet another age will be
required to complete it; and that during all the dark ages of the past,
when God seemed to have almost forgotten his creatures, his plan for
their future blessing has been silently but grandly working out, though
during all those ages the mysteries of his plan have been wisely hidden
from men. We have also seen
that the day or age which is now about to dawn upon the world is to be
the day of the world’s judgment or trial, and that all previous
preparation [page 344] has been for the purpose of giving mankind in general
as favorable an opportunity as possible, when, as individuals, they will
be placed on trial for eternal life.
The long period of six thousand years has greatly multiplied the
race, and their buffetings and sufferings under the dominion of evil
have given them an experience which will be greatly to their advantage
when they are brought to judgment.
And though the race as a whole has been permitted thus to suffer
for six thousand years, yet as individuals they have run their course in
a few brief years.
We have seen that while the race was undergoing this necessary
discipline, in due time God sent his Son to redeem them; and that while
the mass of mankind did not recognize the Redeemer in his humiliation,
and would not believe that the Lord’s Anointed would thus
come to their rescue, yet from among those whose hearts were toward God,
and who believed his promises, God has been, during these ages past,
selecting two companies to receive the honors of his kingdom—the
honors of sharing in the execution of the divine plan.
These two select companies, we have seen, are to constitute the
two phases of the Kingdom of God. And
from the prophets we learn that this kingdom is soon to be established
in the earth; that under its wise and just administration all the
families of the earth will be blessed with a most favorable opportunity
to prove themselves worthy of everlasting life; that as the result of
their redemption by the precious blood of Christ, a grand highway of
holiness will be cast up; that the ransomed of the Lord (all
mankind—Heb. 2:9) may walk in it; that it will be a public
thoroughfare made comparatively easy for all who earnestly desire to
become pure, holy; and that all the stumbling-stones will be gathered
out, and all the snares, allurements and pitfalls removed, and blessed
will all those be who go up thereon to perfection and everlasting life. [page 345]
It is manifest that this judgment, or rulership, cannot begin
until Christ, whom Jehovah hath appointed to be the Judge or Ruler of
the world, has come again—not again in humiliation, but in power and
great glory: not again to redeem the world, but to judge [rule] the
world in righteousness. A trial can in no case proceed until the judge
is on the bench and the court is in session at the appointed time,
though before that time there may be a great preparatory work.
Then shall the King sit upon the throne of his glory, and before
him shall be gathered all nations, and he shall judge them during that
age by their works, opening to them the books of the Scriptures and
filling the earth with the knowledge of the Lord.
And by their conduct under all that favor and assistance, he
shall decide who of them are worthy of life everlasting in the ages of
glory and joy to follow. Matt. 25:31; Rev. 20:11-13
Thus we have seen that the second advent of Messiah, to set up
his kingdom in the earth, is an event in which all classes of men may
have hope, an event which, when fully understood, will bring joy and
gladness to all hearts. It
is the day when the Lord’s “little flock” of consecrated saints
has the greatest cause for rejoicing. It
is the glad day when the espoused virgin Church with joy becomes the
Bride, the Lamb’s wife; when she comes up out of the wilderness
leaning upon the arm of her Beloved, and enters into his glorious
inheritance. It is the day
when the true Church, glorified with its Head, will be endued with
divine authority and power, and will begin the great work for the world,
the result of which will be the complete restitution of all things. And it will be a glad day for the world when the great
adversary is bound, when the fetters that have held the race for six
thousand years are broken, and when the knowledge of the Lord fills the
whole earth as the waters cover the sea. [page 346]
A knowledge of these things, and the evidences that they are
nigh, even at the door, should have a powerful influence upon all, but
especially upon the consecrated children of God, who are seeking the
prize of the divine nature. We
urge such, while they lift up their heads and rejoice, knowing that
their redemption draweth nigh, to lay aside every weight and hindrance,
and to run patiently the race in which they have started.
Look away from self and its unavoidable weaknesses and
imperfections, knowing that all such weaknesses are covered fully by the
merits of the ransom given by Christ Jesus our Lord, and that your
sacrifices and self-denials are acceptable to God through our Redeemer
and Lord—and thus only. Let
us remember that the strength sufficient which God has promised us, and
by use of which we can be “overcomers,” is provided in his Word. It
is a strength derived from a knowledge of his character and plans, and of the conditions upon
which we may share in them. Thus
Peter expresses it, saying, “Grace and peace be multiplied unto you through
the knowledge of God, and of Jesus Christ our Lord, according as
his divine power hath given unto us all things that pertain unto life
and godliness, through the knowledge of him who hath called us to glory and
virtue; whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises,
that BY THESE ye might be partakers of the divine nature.” 2 Pet.
1:2-4
But to obtain this knowledge and this strength, which God thus
proposes to supply to each runner for the heavenly prize, will surely
test the sincerity of your consecration vows.
You have consecrated all your time, all your talents, to the
Lord; now the question is, How much of it are you giving?
Are you still willing, according to your covenant of
consecration, to give up all?—to give up your own plans and methods,
and the theories of yourselves and others, to accept of God’s plan and
way and time of doing his great [page 347] work? Are
you willing to do this at the cost of earthly friendships and social
ties? And are you willing
to give up time from other things for the investigation of these
glorious themes so heart-cheering to the truly consecrated, with the
certain knowledge that it will cost you this self-denial? If all is not
consecrated, or if you only half meant it when you gave all to the Lord,
then you will begrudge the time and effort needful to search his Word as
for hid treasure, to obtain thus the strength needful for all the trials
of faith incident to the present (the dawn of the Millennium) above
other times.
But think not that the giving will end with the giving of the
needful time and energy to this study: it will not.
The sincerity of your sacrifice of self will be tested in full,
and will prove you either worthy or unworthy of membership in that
“little flock,” the overcoming Church, which will receive the honors
of the kingdom. If you give diligence to the Word of God, and receive its
truths into a good, honest, consecrated heart, it will beget in you such
a love for God and his plan, and such a desire to tell the good tidings,
to preach the gospel, that it will become the all-absorbing theme of
life thereafter; and this will not only separate you from the world and
from many nominal Christians, in spirit, but it will lead to separation from such entirely.
They will think you peculiar and separate you from their company,
and you will be despised and counted a fool for Christ’s sake; because
they know us not, even as they knew not the Lord. 2 Cor. 4:8-10; Luke
6:22; 1 John 3:1; 1 Cor. 3:18
Are you willing to follow on to know the Lord through evil and
through good report? Are
you willing to forsake all, to follow as he may lead you by his
Word?—to ignore the wishes of friends, as well as your own desires?
It is hoped that many of the consecrated who read this volume may
by [page 348] it be so quickened to fresh zeal and fervency of
spirit, through a clearer apprehension of the divine plan, that they
will be able to say, “By the grace of God, I will follow on to know
and to serve the Lord, whatever may be the sacrifice involved.”
Like the noble Bereans (Acts 17:11), let such studiously set
themselves to prove what has been presented in the foregoing pages.
Prove it, not by the conflicting traditions and creeds of men,
but by the only correct and divinely authorized standard—God’s own
Word. It is to facilitate
such investigation that we have cited so many scriptures.
It will be useless to attempt to harmonize the divine plan herein
set forth with many of the ideas previously held and supposed to be
Scriptural, yet not proved so. It
will be observed that the divine plan is complete and harmonious with
itself in every part, and that it is in perfect harmony with the
character which the Scriptures ascribe to its great Author.
It is a marvelous display of wisdom, justice, love and power.
It carries with it its own evidence of superhuman design, being
beyond the power of human invention, and almost beyond the power of
human comprehension.
Doubtless questions will arise on various points inquiring for
solution according to the plan herein presented.
Careful, thoughtful Bible study will settle many of these at
once; and to all we can confidently say, No question which you can raise
need go without a sufficient answer, fully in harmony with the views
herein presented. Succeeding
volumes elaborate the various branches of this one plan, disclosing at
every step that matchless harmony of which the truth alone can boast. And
be it known that no other system of theology even claims, or has ever
attempted, to harmonize in itself every
statement of the Bible; yet nothing short of this we can claim for these
views. This harmony not only with the Bible, but with the divine
character and with sanctified [page 349] common sense, must have arrested the attention of the
conscientious reader already, and filled him with awe, as well as with
hope and confidence. It is
marvelous indeed, yet just what we should expect of the TRUTH, and of
God’s infinitely wise and beneficent plan.
And while the Bible is thus opening up from this standpoint, and
disclosing wondrous things (Psa. 119:18), the light of the present day
upon the various creeds and traditions of men is affecting them in an
opposite manner. They are
being recognized even by their worshipers as imperfect and deformed, and
hence they are being measurably ignored; and though still subscribed to,
they are seldom elaborated, for very shame.
And the shame attaching to these human creeds and traditions is
spreading to the Bible, which is supposed to uphold these deformities of
thought as of divine origin. Hence
the freedom with which the various advanced thinkers, so-called, are
beginning to deny various parts of the Bible not congenial to their
views. How striking, then,
the providence of God, which at this very time opens before his children
this truly glorious and harmonious plan—a plan that rejects not one,
but harmonizes every part and item of his Word. Truth, when due, becomes meat
for the household of faith, that they may grow thereby. (Matt. 24:45)
Whoever comes in contact with truth, realizing its character, has
thereby a responsibility with reference to it.
It must be either received and acted upon, or rejected and
despised. To ignore it does
not release from responsibility. If we accept it ourselves, we have a
responsibility TOWARD IT also, because it is for ALL the household of
faith; and each one receiving it becomes its debtor, and, if a faithful
steward, must dispense it to the other members of the family of God.
Let your light shine! If
it again becomes darkness, how great will be the darkness.
Lift up the light! Lift up a standard for the people!
[page 350]
The Divine Weaving
“See the
mystic Weaver sitting
High in
heaven—His loom below.
Up and down the
treadles go.
Takes, for web,
the world’s dark ages,
Takes, for
woof, the kings and sages.
Takes the
nobles and their pages,
Takes all
stations and all stages.
Thrones are
bobbins in His shuttle.
Armies make
them scud and scuttle—
Web into the
woof must flow:
Up and down the
nations go!
At the
Weaver’s will they go!
“Calmly see
the mystic Weaver
Throw His
shuttle to and fro;
‘Mid the
noise and wild confusion,
Well the Weaver
seems to know
What each
motion, and commotion,
What each
fusion, and confusion,
In the grand
result will show!
“Glorious
wonder! What a weaving!
To the dull,
beyond believing.
Such no fabled
ages know.
Only faith can
see the mystery,
How, along the
aisles of history,
Where the feet
of sages go,
Loveliest to
the fairest eyes,
Grand the
mystic tapet lies!
Soft and
smooth, and ever spreading,
As if made for
angels’ treading—
Tufted circles
touching ever:
Every figure
has its plaidings,
Brighter forms
and softer shadings,
Each
illumined—what a riddle!
From a cross
that gems the middle.
“‘Tis a
saying—some reject it—
That its light
is all reflected;
That the
tapet’s lines are given
By a Sun that
shines in heaven!
‘Tis
believed—by all believing—
That great God,
Himself, is weaving,
Bringing out
the world’s dark mystery,
In the light of
faith and history;
And, as web and
woof diminish,
Comes the grand
and glorious finish,
When begin the
Golden Ages,
Long foretold by seers and sages.”
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