SCRIPTURE
STUDIES
VOLUME ONE - THE
DIVINE PLAN OF THE AGES
STUDY
V
“THE MYSTERY HID FROM AGES
AND FROM GENERATIONS, BUT NOW
MADE MANIFEST TO HIS SAINTS”—Col. 1:26
The
Glimmering Light of the First Promise — The Promise to Abraham — Hope
Deferred — The Mystery Begins to Unravel at Pentecost — What the Mystery Is
— Why So Long Kept a Mystery — Still a Mystery to
the World — In Due Time
to be Made Manifest to All — When the Mystery Will be Finished.
WHILE
mankind was under the discipline of evil, and unable to understand its
necessity, God repeatedly expressed his purpose to restore and bless them
through a coming deliverer. But
who that deliverer should be was a mystery for four thousand years, and it
only began to be clearly revealed after the resurrection of Christ, in the
beginning of the Christian or Gospel age.
Looking back to the time when life and Edenic
happiness were forfeited by our first parents, we see them under the just
penalty of sin filled with sorrow, and without a ray of hope, except that
drawn from the obscure statement that the seed of the woman should bruise
the serpent’s head. Though in the light of subsequent developments this
is full of significance to us, to them it was but a faint and glimmering
light. Nearly two thousand
years rolled by with no evidence of a fulfilment.
About two thousand years after, God called Abraham, and promised
that his seed should bless all the families of the earth.
This looked as though God still held to his previously expressed
purpose, and was now about to fulfil it. [page 78]
Time sped on: the promised land of Canaan was not yet
in his possession; they had yet no offspring, and Abraham and Sarah were
growing old. Abraham reasoned
that he must help God to fulfil his promise; so Ishmael was born.
But his assistance was not needed, for in due
time Isaac, the child of hope and promise, was born.
Then it seemed that the promised ruler and blesser of nations had
come. But no: years rolled
by, and seemingly God’s promise had failed; for Isaac died, and his
heir, Jacob, also. But the
faith of a few still held firmly to the promise, and was sustained by God;
for “the covenant which he made with Abraham” was assured by God’s
“oath unto Isaac, and confirmed to Jacob...and to Israel for an
everlasting covenant.” 1 Chron. 16:16,17
When at the time of Jacob’s death his descendants were first
called the TWELVE TRIBES OF ISRAEL, and recognized of God as a “chosen
nation” (Gen. 49:28; Deut. 26:5), the expectation that this nation as a
whole, as the promised seed of Abraham, should possess Canaan, and rule
and bless the world, seemed to be on the eve of realization; for already,
under the favor of Egypt, they were becoming a strong nation. But hope was
almost blasted and the promise almost forgotten when the Egyptians, having
gained control of them, held them as slaves for a long period.
Truly God’s promises were shrouded in mystery, and his ways
seemed past finding out. However,
in due time came Moses, a great deliverer, by whose hand God led them out
of bondage, working mighty miracles on their behalf.
Before entering Canaan this great deliverer died; but as the
Lord’s mouthpiece he declared, “A prophet shall the Lord your God
raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me.” (Deut. 18:15; Acts
3:22) This gave a further insight into God’s plan, showing that
not only would their nation, as a whole, be associated in some way with
the future work of [page 79]
ruling and blessing, but that one to be selected from
among them would lead to victory and to the fulfilment of the promise.
Then Joshua, whose name signifies deliverer, or savior, became
their leader, and under him they won great victories, and actually entered
the land promised in the covenant. Surely
then it seemed that the true leader had come, and that the promise was
about to have complete fulfilment.
But Joshua died, and they made no headway as a nation until David,
and then Solomon, were given them as kings. There they reached the very
zenith of their glory; but soon, instead of seeing the promise
accomplished, they were shorn of their power, and became tributary to
other nations. Some held fast the promise of God, however, and still
looked for the great deliverer of whom Moses, Joshua, David and Solomon
were only types.
About the time when Jesus was born, all men were in expectation of
the Messiah, the coming king of Israel and, through Israel, of the world.
But Israel’s hope of the glory and honor of their coming king,
inspired as it was by the types and prophecies of his greatness and power,
caused them to overlook another set of types and prophecies, which pointed
to a work of suffering and death, as a ransom for sinners, necessary
before the blessing could come. This was prefigured in the Passover before they were
delivered from Egypt, in the slaying of the animals at the giving of the
law covenant (Heb. 9:11-20; 10:8-18), and in the Atonement sacrifices
performed year by year continually by the priesthood.
They overlooked, too, the statement of the prophets, “who
testified beforehand the sufferings
of Christ, and the glory that should
follow.” (1 Peter 1:11) Hence,
when Jesus came as a sacrifice, they did not recognize him; they knew not
the time of their visitation. (Luke 19:44)
Even his immediate followers were sorely perplexed when Jesus [page 80] died; and sadly they said, “We trusted it had been
he which should have redeemed Israel.” (Luke 24:21) Apparently, their confidence in him had been misplaced.
They failed to see that the death of their leader was a surety for
the New Covenant under which the blessings were to come, a partial
fulfilment of the covenant of promise.
However, when they found that he had risen from the tomb, their
withered hopes again began to revive (1 Peter 1:3), and when he was about
to leave them, they asked concerning their long-cherished and oft-deferred
hope, saying, “Lord, wilt thou at this time restore again the kingdom to
Israel?” That their hopes
were in the main correct, though they might not know the time when they
would be fulfilled, is evident from our Lord’s reply: “It is not for
you to know the times and seasons which the Father hath put in his own
power.” Acts 1:6,7
What turn has God’s plan now taken? must have been the query of
his disciples when Jesus had ascended; for we must remember that our
Lord’s teachings concerning the Kingdom were principally in parables and
dark sayings. He had said to them, “I have yet many things to say unto
you, but ye cannot bear them now; howbeit, when he, the Spirit of truth,
is come, he will guide you into all truth.” “He shall teach you all
things, and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said
unto you.” (John 16:12,13; 14:26) So they could not understand before
the Pentecostal blessing came.
Even then, it was some time before they got a clear, full
understanding of the work being done, and its relation to the original
covenant. (Acts 11:9; Gal. 2:2,12,14)
However, it would seem that even before they fully and clearly
understood, they were used as the mouthpieces of God, and their inspired
words were probably clearer and deeper expressions of truth than they
themselves fully comprehended. [page 81] For instance, read James’ discourse in which he
says: “Simeon hath declared how God at the first did visit the Gentiles
to take out of them a people for his name [a bride].
And to this agree the words of the prophets, as it is written,
‘After this [after this people from the Gentiles has been taken out] I
will return, and will build again the tabernacle of David [the earthly
dominion] which is fallen down, and I will build again the ruins thereof,
and I will set it up.’” Acts 15:14-16
James began to read in God’s providence, in the sending of the
Gospel through Peter to the first Gentile convert and through Paul to
Gentiles in general, that during this age believing Jews and Gentiles were
to be alike favored. He then
looked up the prophecies and found it so written; and that after the work
of this Gospel age is completed, then the promises to fleshly Israel will
be fulfilled. Gradually the great mystery, so long hidden, began to be
understood by a few—the saints, the special “friends” of God.
Paul declares (Col. 1:27) that this mystery which hath been hid
from ages and from generations, now made manifest to his saints, is
“Christ
in You, the Hope of Glory.”
This is the great mystery of God which has been hidden from all
previous ages, and is still hidden from all except a special class—the
saints, or consecrated believers. But
what is meant by “Christ in you?”
We have learned that Jesus was anointed with the holy Spirit (Acts
10:38), and thus we recognize him to be the Christ—the anointed—for
the word Christ
signifies anointed.
And the Apostle John says that the
anointing
which we (consecrated believers) have received abideth in us. (1 John
2:27) Thus the saints of this
Gospel age are an anointed company—anointed to be kings and priests unto
God (2 Cor. 1:21; 1 Peter 2:9); and together with [page 82] Jesus, their chief and Lord, they constitute
Jehovah’s Anointed—the Christ.
In harmony with this teaching of John, that we also are anointed, Paul assures us
that this mystery which has been kept secret in ages past, but which is
now made known to the saints, is that the
Christ (the Anointed) is “not one member, but many,” just as
the human body is one, and has many members; but as all the members of the
body, being many, are one body, so also is the Anointed—the Christ. (1
Cor. 12:12-28) Jesus is
anointed to be the Head or Lord over the Church, which is his body (or his
bride, as expressed in another figure—Eph. 5:25-30), and unitedly they
constitute the promised “Seed”—the Great Deliverer: “If ye be
Christ’s, then are ye Abraham’s seed, and heirs
according to the promise.” Gal. 3:29
The Apostle carefully guards the Church against any presumptive
claims, saying of Jesus that “God hath put all things under his feet,
and gave him to be the head over all things to the Church, which is his
body,” “that in all things he might have the
pre-eminence.” (Eph. 1:22; Col. 1:18)
Yet, under the figure of the human body, he beautifully and
forcibly shows our intimate relationship.
This same oneness Jesus also taught, saying, “I am the vine, ye
are the branches.” John 15:5
Our oneness with the Lord Jesus, as members of the Christ, the
anointed company, is well illustrated by the figure of the pyramid.
The top-stone is a perfect pyramid of itself.
Other stones may be built up under it, and, if in harmony with all
the characteristic lines of the top-stone, the whole mass will be a
perfect pyramid. How
beautifully this illustrates our position as members of “the
Seed”—“the Christ.” Joined
to and perfectly in harmony with our Head, we, as living stones, are
perfect; separated from him, we are nothing.
[page 83]
Jesus, the perfect one, has been highly exalted, and now we present
ourselves to him that we may be formed and shaped according to his
example, and that we may be built up as a building of God.
In an ordinary building there is no chief
corner-stone; but in our building there is one chief corner-stone, the
“top-stone,” as it is written: “Behold, I lay in Zion a chief
corner-stone, elect, precious”—“to whom coming as unto a living
stone...ye also as lively [living] stones are built up a spiritual house,
a holy priesthood, to offer up *sacrifices
acceptable to God by Jesus Christ.” (1 Pet. 2:4-6) And very soon, we
trust, the union between Jesus, the “Head,” and “the Church, which
is his body,” will be complete.
And, dearly beloved, many blows and much polishing must we
endure—much transforming must we undergo, and much conforming to his
example, under the direction of the great Master-builder; and in order to
have the ability and ideality of the builder displayed in us, we will need
to see that we have no cross-grained will of our own to oppose or thwart
the accomplishment of His will in us; we must be very childlike and
humble—“clothed with humility; for God resisteth the proud, and giveth
grace to the humble.”
—————*Sinaitic MS. omits spiritual before
sacrifices.
[page 84] Let us humble ourselves, therefore, under the mighty
hand of God, that he may exalt us in due time (1 Peter 5:5,6), as he has
exalted our Head and Forerunner. Phil. 2:8,9
This is indeed a wonderful message, and, as we come to the Word of
God to inquire concerning our great high calling, we find the prophets all
eloquent in proclaiming the grace [favor or blessing] that is come unto us
(1 Peter 1:10); while types, and parables, and hitherto dark sayings, now
become luminous, shedding their light on the “narrow way” in which the
anointed [Christ] company is called to run for the prize now disclosed to
view. This was truly a mystery never before thought of—that God
intends to raise up not only a deliverer, but a deliverer composed of many
members. This is the “high calling” to
which the consecrated believers of the Gospel age are privileged to
attain. Jesus did not attempt
to unfold it to the disciples while natural men, but waited until at
Pentecost they were anointed—begotten to the new nature.
From Paul’s explanation we know that none but “new creatures”
can now appreciate or understand this high calling.
He says: “We speak the wisdom of God in a mystery, even the hidden
wisdom [plan] which God ordained before the world unto our glory; which
none of the princes [chief ones] of this world knew; ...as it is written,
‘Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart
of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him’; but
God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit.” 1 Cor. 2:6-14
In his letter to the Galatians, Paul opens up the entire mystery,
and shows how the Abrahamic covenant is to be fulfilled.
He shows that the Law given to Israel did not interfere with the
original covenant (Gal. 3:15-18), and that the seed of Abraham which is to
bless all nations is Christ. (Verse 16)
Then, carrying out the idea already alluded to, [page 85] that the Christ includes all anointed of the Spirit,
he says: “For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on
Christ;...and if ye be Christ’s then are YE [together with Jesus] Abraham’s
seed, and heirs, according to the promise” made to Abraham.
(Verses 27,29) Following up
the same line of reasoning, he shows (Gal. 4) that Abraham was a type of
Jehovah, Sarah a type of the covenant or promise, and Isaac a type of
Christ (head and body); and then adds, “We, brethren, as Isaac was, are
the children of promise.” (Verse 28)
Thus the plan of God was hidden in types until the Gospel age began
the development of the Christ.
There has existed a necessity for keeping this mystery hidden, else
it would not have been so kept. It
was necessary, because to have revealed the plan in full to mankind would
have been to frustrate it. Had
men known, they would not have crucified either the Lord of glory or the
Church which is his body. (1 Cor. 2:8)
Not only would the death of Christ, as the price of man’s
redemption, have been interfered with, had not the plan been kept a
mystery from the world, but the trial of the faith of the Church, as
sharers in the sufferings of Christ, would thereby have been prevented
also; for “The world knoweth us not [as his joint-heirs] because [for
the same reason that] it knew him not.” 1 John 3:1
Not only is the plan of God, and the Christ which is the very
embodiment of that plan, a great mystery to the world, but the peculiar
course in which this little flock is called to walk marks its members as
“peculiar people.” It was
a mystery to the world that a person of so much ability as Jesus of
Nazareth should spend his time and talent as he did, whereas, if he had
turned his attention to politics, law, merchandise or popular religion, he
might have become great and respected.
In the opinion of men he foolishly [page 86] wasted his life, and they said, “He hath a devil
and is mad.” His life and teachings were mysteries to them.
They could not understand him.
The apostles and their companions were likewise mysteries in the
world, in leaving their business prospects, etc., to preach forgiveness of
sins through the death of the despised and crucified Jesus.
Paul forsook a high station and social influence to labor with his
hands, and to preach Christ, and the invisible crown for all believers who
should walk in his footsteps. This
was so mysterious that some said, “Paul, thou art beside thyself: much
learning doth make thee mad.” And
all who so follow in the Master’s footsteps are, like Paul, counted
fools for Christ’s sake.
But God’s plan will not always be shrouded in mystery: the dawn
of the Millennial Day brings the fuller light of God to men, and “the
knowledge of the Lord shall fill the whole earth.”
The Sun of Righteousness, which shall arise with healing in his
wings, dispelling the darkness of ignorance, is the Christ in Millennial
glory—not the Head alone, but also the members of his body; for it is
written: If we suffer with him, we shall also be glorified together.
“When Christ, who is our life, shall appear, then shall we also appear with
him in glory”; and “Then shall the righteous shine forth as
the sun in the kingdom of their Father.” Rom. 8:17; 2 Tim.
2:11,12; Col. 3:4; Matt. 13:43
Now, to all except those begotten to a new mind, by receiving
“the mind of Christ,” the promises which we believe, and the hopes
which we cherish, seem visionary, and too improbable to be received or
acted upon. In the age to come, when God shall “pour out his spirit
upon all flesh,” as during the present age he pours it upon his
“servants and handmaids,” then indeed all will understand and
appreciate the promises now being grasped by the “little flock”; [page 87] and they will rejoice in the obedience and exaltation
of the Church, saying, “Let us be glad, and rejoice, and give honor to
God, for the marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife hath made herself
ready.” (Rev. 19:7) They
will rejoice in the glorification of the Church, through which blessings
will then be flowing to them; and while they will realize that the
“exceeding great and precious promises” inherited by the Anointed
(head and body) are not for them, but are fulfilled upon us, they will be
blessed by the lesson illustrated in the Church; and while they run for
the blessings then held out to them,
they will profit by the example of the Church, and glorify God on her
behalf. But this knowledge
will not bring covetousness; for under the new order of things their
calling to perfect human nature will fully satisfy them, and will seem
more desirable to them than a change of nature.
Then the “mystery” will have ended; for the world will have
come to see that it was the spirit of God in Christ, and the spirit of
Christ in us—God manifested in the flesh—which they had hitherto
misunderstood. Then they will see that we were not mad, nor fools; but that
we chose the better part when we ran for the riches, honors and crown,
unseen by them, but eternal.
In point of time, the mystery of God will be finished during the
period of the sounding of the seventh [symbolic] trumpet. (Rev. 10:7)
This applies to the mystery in both senses in which it is used: the
mystery or secret features of God’s plan
will then be made known and will be clearly seen; and also the “mystery
of God,” the Church, the embodiment of that plan.
Both will then be finished. The
secret, hidden plan will have sought out the full, complete number of the
members of the body of Christ, and hence it, the BODY OF CHRIST, will be
finished. The plan will cease
to [page 88] be a mystery, because there will be no further object
in perpetuating its secrecy. The
greatness of the mystery, so long kept secret, and hidden in promises,
types and figures, and the wonderful grace bestowed on those called to
fellowship in this mystery (Eph. 3:9), suggest to us that the work to
follow its completion, for which for six thousand years Jehovah has kept
mankind in expectation and hope, must be an immense work, a grand work,
worthy of such great preparations. What may we not expect in blessings
upon the world, when the veil of mystery is withdrawn and the showers of
blessing descend! It is this
for which the whole creation groans and travails in pain together until
now, waiting for the completion of this mystery—for the
manifestation of the Sons of God, the promised “Seed,” in whom they
shall all be blessed. Rom. 8:19,21,22
A Lord’s Day Offering
“I offer
Thee:
Every heart’s
throb, they are Thine;
Every human tie
of mine;
Every joy and
every pain;
Every act of
mind or brain—
My blessed God!
Every hope and
every fear;
Every smile and
every tear;
Every song and
hymn,
‘Laudamus
Te.’
“Take them
all, my blessed Lord,
Bind them with
thy secret cord;
Glorify thyself
in me,
Adored One!
Multiply them
by thy Word;
Strengthen,
bless, increase, my Lord
Of perfect
love!
Thou First and
Last!”
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