SCRIPTURE
STUDIES
VOLUME FOUR - THE
BATTLE OF ARMAGEDDON
STUDY
XI
THE BATTLE OF ARMAGEDDON
The
Approaching Trouble Variously Symbolized by the Prophets — Typified in Israel’s Fall, A.D. 70, and in the French Revolution
— Its
General Character and
Extent — The Lord’s Great Army — “The Worst of the Heathen”
— “The Time of Jacob’s Trouble” — His
Deliverance — The Discomfiture
of Gog and Magog.
“For lo, I begin to bring evil on the city which is called by my
name [“Christendom”—“Babylon”];...I will call for a sword upon
all the inhabitants of the earth, saith the Lord of hosts... The Lord will
call aloud from on high, and utter his voice from his holy habitation; he
shall cry out very loudly over his [nominal] habitation [Christendom]; he
shall give a shout, as they that tread the grapes, against all the
inhabitants of the earth.
“A tumultuous noise shall come even to the ends of the earth; for the Lord hath a controversy
with the nations, he holdeth judgment over all flesh: he will give
them that are wicked to the sword, saith the Lord.
“Thus saith the Lord of hosts, Behold, evil shall go forth from
nation to nation, and a great whirlwind shall be raised up from the
farthest ends of the earth. And
the slain of the Lord shall be at that day from one end of the earth even
unto the other end of the earth: they shall not be lamented, neither
gathered nor buried: they shall be dung upon the ground.” Jer. 25:29-38
SO COMPLEX and peculiar will be the conflict of this Day
of Vengeance that no one symbol could describe it.
In the Scriptures, accordingly, many forceful symbols are used,
such as battle, earthquake, fire, storm, tempest and flood. [page 528]
It is the “Battle
of that Great Day of God Almighty,” when he shall gather the
nations and assemble the kingdoms to pour upon them his indignation, even
all his fierce anger; for the Lord of hosts himself mustereth the hosts of
the battle. Rev. 16:14; Zeph. 3:8; Isa. 13:4
It is “a Great
Earthquake such as was not since men were upon the earth, so
mighty an earthquake and so great,” which shall “shake, not the earth
only, but also heaven.” Rev. 16:18; Heb. 12:26
It is “The
Fire of Jehovah’s Jealousy, which shall devour all the earth.”
Both the present heavens (the ecclesiastical powers of Christendom)
and the earth (the social organization under both church and state
influence) are reserved unto fire against this day of judgment.
“The heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements
[of present ecclesiasticism] shall melt with fervent heat; the earth
[society] also and the works that are therein shall be burned up...The
heavens, being on fire, shall be dissolved.” All the proud and all that do wickedly shall be stubble, and
this fire shall burn them up. It
shall leave them neither root nor branch. Zeph. 3:8; 2 Pet. 3:10,12; Mal.
4:1
“His
way is in the Whirlwind and in the Storm.” “Who can stand before his indignation? and who can abide in
the fierceness of his anger?” Nahum 1:3,6,7
“Behold, it cometh mighty and strong from the Lord, as a Tempest of Hail and a Destroying
Storm, as a Flood of Mighty Waters overflowing, and shall cast down to the
earth with power the crown of pride.”
“He rebuketh the sea and maketh it dry, and drieth up all the
rivers...The mountains quake at him, and the hills melt, and the earth
[symbols of the entire present order of things] is burned at his presence;
yea, the world and all that dwell therein...With an overrunning flood will
he make an utter end of the place [page 529] thereof, and darkness shall pursue his enemies.”
Isa. 28:2; Nahum 1:4,5,8
That these are not to be literal floods and fires, destructive of
our planet Earth, and its population, is evident from the statement
(symbolic) that the present order of things, when destroyed, will be
followed by a new order—“a new heavens [ecclesiasticism, God’s
glorified Church] and a new earth [human society reorganized under God’s
Kingdom on a basis of love instead of selfishness].”
Referring to that new order of things after the fire of God’s
retributive vengeance shall have burned up present evils, God, through the
Prophet, says: “Then will I turn to the people a
pure language [the truth], that they may all call upon the name of the
Lord, to serve him with one consent.” Zeph. 3:9
Two
Remarkable Types of the Impending Catastrophe
But let no one conclude because these various descriptions are not
literal, but symbolic, that they may therefore represent merely a battle
of words, a quaking of fear, or a trivial storm of human passion.
For though controversy, and words of passion and arguments will be
and are among the weapons used in this battle, especially in the beginning
of it, yet it will not end with these.
Every prophetic detail indicates that before it ends it will be a
most sanguinary conflict, a fierce and terrible storm.
We have already observed* the
typical character of the great tribulation which came upon fleshly Israel
in the end of the Jewish age; and now, having come to the parallel
period—the harvest of the Gospel age, we see all the indications of a
similar, though much greater trouble, upon “Christendom,” its
antitype. While the judgments visited upon Judea and Jerusalem [page
530] were terrible in the extreme, they were only on a
small scale as compared with the great tribulation, now fast approaching,
upon Christendom, and involving the whole world.
—————
*Chap. 3, and Vol. II, Chap. 7.
The Roman army and regular warfare caused but a small portion of
the trouble in the end of the Jewish age, noted as the most terrible on
the pages of history, and approached only by the French Revolution.
It sprang mainly from national disintegration, the overthrow of law
and order—anarchy. Selfishness
apparently took complete control and arrayed every man against his
neighbor—just as is predicted of the coming trouble upon Christendom (in
the midst of which the great spiritual temple, God’s elect Church, will
be completed and glorified). “Before
those days there was no hire for man, nor any hire for beast [see margin];
neither was there any peace to him that went out or came in, because of
the affliction: for I set all men every one against his neighbor.” Zech.
8:9-11
That times have not so changed as to make such a calamity either
impossible or improbable in our day is too manifest to require proof.
But if any should be inclined to doubt it, let them call to mind
the great Revolution that only a little over a century ago brought France
to the verge of social ruin and threatened the peace of the world.
Some have the erroneous idea that the world has outgrown the
barbarities of earlier days, and they rest in fancied security and assume
that such calamities as have occurred in the past could not befall the
world again; but the fact is that our twentieth century refinement is a
very thin veneer, easily peeled off: sound judgment and an acquaintance
with the facts of even recent history and with the present feverish pulse
of humanity are sufficient to guarantee the possibility of a duplication
of the past, even without the sure word of prophecy, which foretells a
time of trouble such as never was since there was a nation.
[page 531]
In the symbolic language of Revelation, the French Revolution was
indeed a “great earthquake”—a social shock so great that all
“Christendom” trembled until it was over; and that terrible and sudden
outburst of a single nation’s wrath, only a century ago, may give some
idea of the fury of the coming storm, when the wrath of all the angry
nations will burst the bands of law and order and cause a reign of
universal anarchy. It should
be remembered, too, that that calamity occurred in what was then the very
heart of Christendom, in the midst of what was regarded as one of the most
thoroughly Christian nations in the world, the nation which for a thousand
years had been the chief support of Papacy.
A nation intoxicated with Babylon’s wine of false doctrines in
church and state, and long bound by priestcraft and superstition, there
vomited forth its pollution and spent the force of its maddened rage.
In fact, the French Revolution seems referred to by our Lord in his
Revelation to John on Patmos as a prelude to, and an illustration of, the
great crisis now approaching.
It should be observed also that the same causes which operated to
bring about that great calamity, are now operating to produce a similar,
but far more extensive revolution, a revolution which will be world-wide. The causes of that terrible convulsion have been briefly
summed up by the historian as follows:*
—————
*Campaigns of Napoleon, p. 12.
“The immediate and most effective cause of the French Revolution
must be referred to the distresses of the people and the embarrassments of
the government occasioned by the enormous expenses of the war in which
France supported the independence of the American colonies.
The profligacy of the court, the dissensions of the clergy, the
gradual progress of general intelligence, the dissemination of
revolutionary principles occasioned by the American contest, and the long
established oppressions to which the [page
532] masses of the people were subjected, all contributed
to the same effect...Exhausted by oppression, irritated by the continual
presence of insulting tyranny, excited to resentment of their wrongs, and
instructed in the knowledge of their rights, the people of France awakened to one
universal spirit of complaint and resentment.
The cry of Liberty! resounded from the capital to the frontiers,
and was reverberated from the Alps to the Pyrenees, the shores of the
Mediterranean and the Atlantic. Like
all sudden and violent alterations in corrupt states, the explosion was
accompanied by evils and atrocities, before which the crimes and the
miseries of the ancient despotism faded into insignificance.”
Says another historian:*
“First among the causes of the revolution in France was the
hostility felt toward the privileged classes—the king, the nobles and
the clergy—on account of the disabilities and burdens which law and
custom imposed on the classes beneath them.
“The
Land—Nearly two-thirds of the land in France was in the hands of
the nobles and of the clergy. A
great part of it was illy cultivated by its indolent owners. The nobles preferred the gayeties of Paris to a residence on
their estates. There were many small land-owners, but they had
individually too little land to furnish them with subsistence.
The treatment of the peasant was often such that when he looked
upon the towers of his lord’s castle, the dearest wish of his heart was
to burn it down with all its registers of debts [mortgages]. The clergy
held an immense amount of land, seigniorial control over thousands of
peasants, and a vast income from tithes and other sources.
In some provinces there was a better state of things than in
others; but in general, the rich had the enjoyments, the poor carried the
burdens.
“Monopolies—Manufactures
and trades, although encouraged, were fettered by oppressive monopolies
and a strict organization of guilds.
“Corrupt
government—The administration of government was both arbitrary
and corrupt.
“Loss
of respect for royalty—Respect for the throne was lost.
—————
*Universal History (by Prof. Fisher, of Yale College), p. 497.
[page
533]
“Abortive
Essays at Reform—The efforts at political and social reform in
France and in other countries, emanating from sovereigns after the great
wars, produced a restless feeling without effecting their purpose of
social reorganization.
“Political
Speculation—The current of thought was in a revolutionary
direction. Traditional
beliefs in religion were boldly questioned.
Political speculation was rife.
Montesquieu had drawn attention to the liberty secured by the
English constitution. Voltaire
had dwelt on human rights. Rosseau had expatiated on the sovereign right
of the majority.
“Example
of America—Add to these agencies the influence of the American
Revolution, and of the American Declaration of Independence, with its
proclamation of human rights, and of the foundation of government in
contract and the consent of the people.”
In all those leading causes which culminated in the terrors of the
French Revolution we see a strong resemblance to similar conditions today
which are rapidly and surely leading to the foretold similar results on a
world-wide scale. Mark the growing animosity between the privileged
classes (royalty and aristocracy) and the working classes, the discussions
of the rights and wrongs of the people, and the decline of respect for
both civil and ecclesiastical authority. Note also the revolutionary
current of popular thought and expression—the increasing dissatisfaction
of the masses of the people with the ruling powers and the institutions of
government. And if the American Declaration of Independence with its
proclamation of human rights and of the foundation of government in
contract and the consent of the people, inspired the masses of the French
with a desire for liberty and independence, it is not surprising that the
successful experiment of this government of the people and by the people,
for a century past, and the measure of liberty and prosperity here
enjoyed, are having their effect upon the peoples of the old world.
The ever-continuous tide of [page 534] emigration from other countries to this country is
another evidence of the impression which this experiment has made upon the
peoples of other nations.
And yet, the liberty and prosperity here enjoyed are far from
satisfactory to the people here. They
crave a still better condition and are seeking measures to attain it. Nowhere throughout Christendom does this determination assert
itself more positively and boldly than here.
Every man is on the qui
vive to assert his real or fancied rights.
The trend of thought here, as elsewhere, is in the current of
revolution, and is daily becoming more so.
The French Revolution was a struggle of a measure of light against
gross darkness; of the awakening spirit of liberty against long
established oppression; and of a measure of truth against old errors and
superstitions, long encouraged and fostered by civil and ecclesiastical
powers for their own aggrandizement and the people’s oppression.
And yet, it exhibited the danger of liberty unguided by
righteousness and the spirit of a sound mind. (2 Tim. 1:7)
A little learning is indeed a dangerous thing.
One of Charles Dickens’ stories, the scene of which is laid in
the troublous times of the French Revolution, begins thus, and aptly fits
the present time, as he suggests:
“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times; it was the
age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness; it was the epoch of belief,
it was the epoch of incredulity; it was the season of light, it was the
season of darkness; it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of
despair; we had everything before us, we had nothing before us; we were
all going direct to heaven, we were all going direct the other way; in
short, the period was so far like the present period that some of its
noisiest authorities insisted on its being received for good or for evil,
in the superlative degree of comparison only.”
While we see the same causes operating throughout the world today,
to produce similar results on a more extended
[page 535] scale, we cannot console ourselves with ideas of
fancied security, and proclaim Peace! Peace! when there is no peace;
especially in view of the warnings of prophecy.
In the light of the foretold character of coming events of this
battle, we may regard the French Revolution as only the rumbling of
distant thunder, giving warning of an approaching storm; as a slight
tremor preceding the general earthquake shock; as the premonitory click of
the great clock of the ages, which gives notice to those already awake
that the wheels are in motion, and that shortly it will strike the
midnight hour which will end the present order of affairs and usher in a
new order—the Year of Jubilee, with its attendant commotion and changes
of possession. It did
arouse the whole world and set in operation the mighty forces which will
eventually utterly overthrow the old order of things.
When the conditions are fully ripe for the great Revolution a most
trivial circumstance may serve as a match to set on fire the present
social structure throughout the whole world; just, for instance, as in the
case of the French Revolution, the first overt act, it is said, was the
beating on a tin pan by a woman whose children were hungry.
Soon an army of mothers was marching to the royal palace to ask for
bread. Being refused, they
were joined by the men, and soon the wrath of the nation was kindled and
the flames of revolution swept the whole land.
And yet, so oblivious was royalty to the conditions of the people,
and so surrounded with plenty and luxury, that, even when these outbreaks
came, the queen could not comprehend the situation.
Hearing from her palace the commotion of the mob, she inquired what
it meant, and being told that the people were clamoring for bread, she
replied, “It is foolish for them to make such an ado about bread: if bread is scarce,
let them get cake,
it is cheap now.”
[page 536]
So striking is the similarity of the present to those times, that
the alarm is being sounded by many thoughtful discerners of the signs of
the times, while others cannot realize the situation.
The cries which preceded the French Revolution were as nothing in
comparison to the appeals now going up from the masses all over the world
to those in power and influence.
Said Prof. G. D. Herron, of Iowa College, some years ago:
“Everywhere are the signs of universal change.
The race is in attitude of expectancy, straitened until its new
baptism is accomplished. Every
nerve of society is feeling the first agonies of a great trial that is to
try all that dwell upon the earth, and that is to issue in a divine
deliverance [though he fails to see what
the deliverance will be, and how
it will be brought about]. We
are in the beginning of a revolution that will strain all existing
religious and political institutions, and test the wisdom and heroism of
earth’s purest and bravest souls...The social revolution, making the
closing years of our century and the dawning years of the next the
most crucial and formative since the crucifixion of the Son of Man,
is the call and opportunity of Christendom to become Christian.”
But, alas! the call is not heeded; indeed is not really heard by any but a
helpless minority in power, so great is the din of selfishness and so
strong are the bonds of custom. Only
the agonies of the coming great social earthquake—revolution—will
effect the change; and in its dread course nothing will be more manifest
than the signs of the just retribution which will reveal to all men the
fact that the just Judge of all the earth is laying “judgment to the
line and righteousness to the plummet.” Isa. 28:17
The retributive character of the great tribulation upon fleshly
Israel in the harvest of the Jewish age was very marked; so also was that
of the French Revolution; and so it will be manifest in the present
distress when the climax is reached.
The remarks of Mr. Thomas H. Gill, in his work, [page 537]
The Papal Drama,
referring to the retributive character of the French Revolution, suggest
also the retributive character of the coming trouble upon Christendom as a
whole. He says:
“The more deeply the French Revolution is considered, the more
manifest is its pre-eminence above all the strange and terrible things
that have come to pass on this earth... Never has the world witnessed so
exact and sublime a piece of retribution...If
it inflicted enormous evil, it presupposed and overthrew enormous
evil...In a country where every ancient institution and every time-honored
custom disappeared in a moment; where the whole social and political
system went down before the first stroke; where monarchy, nobility and
church were swept away almost without resistance, the whole framework of
the state must have been rotten: royalty, aristocracy and priesthood must
have grievously sinned. Where
the good things of this world—birth, rank, wealth, fine clothes and
elegant manners—became worldly perils, and worldly disadvantages for a
time, rank, birth and riches must have been frightfully abused.
“The nation which abolished and proscribed Christianity, which
dethroned religion in favor of reason, and enthroned the new goddess at
Notre Dame in the person of a harlot, must needs have been afflicted by a
very unreasonable and very corrupt form of Christianity.
The people that waged a war of such utter extermination with
everything established, as to abolish the common forms of address and
salutation, and the common mode of reckoning time, that abhorred ‘you’
as a sin, and shrank from ‘monsieur’ as an abomination, that turned
the weeks into decades, and would know the old months no more, must surely
have had good reason to hate those old ways from which it pushed its
departure into such minute and absurd extravagance.
“The demolished halls of the aristocracy, the rifled sepulchres
of royalty, the decapitated king and queen, the little dauphin so sadly
done to death, the beggared princes, the slaughtered priests and nobles,
the sovereign guillotine, the republican marriages, the Meudon tannery,
the couples tied together and thrown into the Loire, and the gloves made
of [page 538] men’s and women’s skins: these things are most
horrible; but they are withal eloquent of retribution:
they bespeak the solemn presence of Nemesis, the awful hand of an avenging
power. They bring to mind the
horrible sins of that old France; the wretched peasants ground beneath the
weight of imposts from which the rich and noble were free; visited ever
and anon by cruel famines by reason of crushing taxes, unjust wars, and
monstrous misgovernment, and then hung up or shot down by twenties or
fifties for just complaining of starvation: and all this for centuries!
They call to remembrance the Protestants murdered by millions in
the streets of Paris, tormented for years by military dragoons in Poitou
and Bearn, and hunted like wild beasts in the Cevennes; slaughtered and
done to death by thousands and tens of thousands in many painful ways and
through many painful years...
“In no work of the French Revolution is this, its retributive
character, more strikingly or solemnly apparent than in its dealings with
the Roman Church and Papal power. It
especially became France, which after so fierce a struggle had rejected
the Reformation, and perpetuated such enormous crimes in the process of
rejection, to turn its fury against that very Roman Church on whose behalf
it had been so wrathful,...to abolish Roman Catholic worship, to massacre
multitudes of priests in the streets of her great towns, to hunt them down
through her length and breadth, and to cast them by thousands upon a
foreign shore, just as she had slaughtered, hunted down and driven into
exile hundreds of thousands of Protestants;...to carry the war into the
Papal territories, and to heap all sorts of woes and shames upon the
defenseless Popedom...The excesses of revolutionary France were not more
the punishment than the direct result of the excesses of feudal, regal,
and Papal France...
“In one of its aspects the Revolution may be described as a
reaction against the excesses, spiritual and religious, of the Roman
Catholic persecution of Protestantism. No sooner had the torrent burst forth than it dashed right
against the Roman Church and Popedom...The property of the Church was made
over to the state; the French clergy sank
[page 539] from a proprietary to a salaried body; monks and nuns
were restored to the world, the property of their orders being
confiscated; Protestants were raised to full religious freedom and
political equality...The Roman Catholic religion was soon afterwards
formally abolished.
“Bonaparte unsheathed the sword of France against the helpless
Pius VI...The Pontiff sank into a dependent... Berthier marched upon Rome,
set up a Roman Republic, and laid hands upon the Pope.
The sovereign pontiff was borne away to the camp of infidels...from
prison to prison, and was finally carried captive into France.
Here... he breathed his last, at Valence, where his priests had
been slain, where his power was broken, and his name and office were a
mockery and a byword, and in the keeping of the rude soldiers of the
commonwealth, which had for ten years held to his lips a cup of such
manifest and exceeding bitterness ....It was a sublime and perfect piece
of retribution,
which so amazed the world at the end of the eighteenth century; this
proscription of the Romish Church by that very French nation that
slaughtered myriads of Protestants at her bidding; this mournful end of
the sovereign pontiff, in that very Dauphine so consecrated by the
struggles of the Protestants, and near those Alpine valleys where the
Waldenses had been so ruthlessly hunted down by French soldiers; this
transformation of the ‘States of the Church’ into the ‘Roman
Republic’; and this overthrow of territorial Popedom by that very French
nation, which, just one thousand years ago, had, under Pepin and
Charlemagne, conferred these territories.
“Multitudes imagined that the Papacy was at the point of death,
and asked, would Pius VI be the last pontiff, and if the close of the
eighteenth century would be signalized by the fall of the Papal dynasty.
But the French Revolution was the beginning, and not the end of the
judgment; France had but begun
to execute the doom, a doom sure and inevitable, but long and lingering,
to be diversified by many strange incidents, and now and then by a
semblance of escape, a doom to be protracted through much pain and much
ignominy.”
We must expect that the approaching trouble will be no [page 540]
less bitter and severe than these two illustrations,
but rather more terrible as well as more general; because (1) present day
conditions render each member of the social structure more dependent than
ever before, not only for new and increased comforts and luxuries, but
also for the very necessities of life.
The stoppage of the railroad traffic alone would mean starvation
within a week in our large cities; and general anarchy would mean the
paralysis of every industry dependent on commerce and confidence.
(2) The Lord specially declares that the coming trouble will be “such
as was not since there was a nation”—nor ever shall be hereafter. Dan.
12:1; Joel 2:2; Matt. 24:21
But while there is no hope held out that this trouble can be
averted, there are instructions given in the Scriptures to such
individuals as would hide from the coming storm.
(1) The faithful of the Church are promised deliverance before the
full force of the storm breaks. (2)
All who love justice and pursue peace should diligently set their house in
order, as directed by the Word of the Lord, which says—“Before the
decree is brought forth, before the day pass as the chaff, before yet
there be come over you the day of the anger of the Lord, seek ye the Lord,
all ye meek of the earth who have fulfilled his ordinances: seek righteousness,
seek meekness;
it may be ye shall be hid in the day of the Lord’s anger.” Zeph. 2:2,3
That all such may be awakened to the situation the Prophet Joel
calls upon those who see these things to sound an alarm, saying, “Blow
ye the trumpet, sound an alarm in my holy mountain
[Christendom—professedly the holy mountain or kingdom of the Lord], let
all the inhabitants of the land tremble; for the day of the Lord cometh,
for it is nigh at hand.” (Joel 2:1) “Upon the wicked,” says the Psalmist, God “shall rain
snares, fire and brimstone [symbols of trouble and destruction] and a
horrible tempest: this [page 541] shall be the portion of their cup; for the righteous
Lord loveth righteousness.” Psa. 11:3-7
The battle of this great day of God Almighty will be the greatest
revolution the world has ever seen because it will be one in which every
principle of unrighteousness will be involved; for as truly in this
judgment of the nations, as in the judgment of individuals, “there is
nothing covered that shall not be revealed, and hid that shall not be
known.” (Matt. 10:26) Behold, how, even now, the searchlight of general
intelligence is discovering the secret springs of political intrigue,
financial policies, religious claims, etc., and how all are brought to the
bar of judgment, and by men, as well as by God, declared right or wrong as
judged by the teachings of the Word of God—by the golden rule, the law
of love, the examples of Christ, etc., all of which are coming into such
remarkable prominence in the discussions of these times.
The battle of the great day, like every other revolutionary war,
has its stages of gradual development.
Back of every indication of strife are the inspiring causes, the
real or fancied national and individual wrongs; next comes a keen
appreciation of those wrongs by those who suffer from them; then generally
follow various attempts at reform, which, proving abortive, lead to great
controversies, wars of words, divisions, strife of opinions, and finally
to revenge and strife of arms. Such
is the order of the Battle of the Great Day of God Almighty.
Its general character is that of a struggle of light against
darkness, of liberty against oppression, of truth against error.
Its extent will be worldwide—peasant against prince, pew against
pulpit, labor against capital: the oppressed in arms against injustice and
tyranny of every kind; and the oppressors in arms for the defense of what
they have long considered to be their rights, even when seen to be
encroachments upon the rights of others. [page 542]
The
Lord's Great Army
In previous chapters we have noted the work of preparation for the
conflict of this evil day—the organizing, equipping and drilling of
immense armies, the building of great navies, the invention of new and
wonderful engines of war, the making of new and powerful explosives, and
the draining of the national resources in every land for purposes of
military equipment; and we have noted the mutterings of the angry nations
as they all stand armed to the teeth, scowling upon one another.
As we view these millions of armed and disciplined warriors we
inquire, Which of all these mighty hosts is that army to which the
prophets point as the Lord’s great army? Can the prophetic references be
to any of these? And if so,
in what sense could they be considered the Lord’s army, since none of
them are actuated by his spirit? Or
can this reference be to the people of God, the soldiers of the cross,
whose weapons are described by the Apostle Paul as not carnal, but mighty,
through the pulling down of strongholds? (2 Cor. 10:3-5)
Can it be that “the sword of the spirit, which is the Word of
God” (Eph. 6:17), in the hands of the people of God, who are filled with
his spirit, shall accomplish the great work of overthrowing all the
kingdoms of this world and giving them to Christ for an everlasting
possession?
Would that it might be so! but that such will not be the case we
have already seen, both from the prophetic foreview and from the signs of
the times. On the contrary,
the protests and the warnings of the righteous are steadily ignored by the
world, and the nations walk on in darkness, and in consequence all the
foundations of the earth (of the present social structure) are out of
course (Psa. 82:5), so endangering [page 543] the whole social superstructure which is now being
terribly shaken. “We would
have healed Babylon,” says the prophet, “but she is not healed;
forsake her [‘Come out of her my people’—Rev. 18:4]; for her
judgment reacheth unto heaven, and is lifted up even to the skies.” Jer.
51:9
It is evidently not the saints who are to constitute the Lord’s
great army, referred to by the prophets, for the overthrow of the kingdoms
of this world: nor are the weapons of their warfare sufficient to this
end. Their weapons are indeed mighty, as the Apostle says, among
those who are influenced by them. Among
the true people of God, who diligently apply their hearts unto
instruction, his Word is sharper than any two-edged sword, truly
“casting down imaginations [human reasonings] and every high thing that
exalteth itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into capitivity
every thought to the obedience of Christ” (2 Cor. 10:4,5); but not so do
the weapons of this warfare operate upon the world.
The army of the saints is, moreover, not a “great army,” but a
“little flock,” as our Lord himself designated it.
Compare Luke 12:32; Joel 2:11.
Hear the prophetic description of this army:
“A great people and a strong; there hath not been ever the like;
neither shall be any more after it, even to the years of many generations.
A fire devoureth before them, and behind them a flame burneth: the
land is as the garden of Eden before them, and behind them a desolate
wilderness, yea, and nothing shall escape them.
The appearance of them is as the appearance of horses; and as
horsemen, so shall they run. Like
the noise of chariots, on the tops of mountains [kingdoms] shall they
leap; like the noise of a flame of fire that devoureth the stubble, as a
strong people set in battle array.
“Before their face the people shall be much pained; all faces
shall gather blackness. They
shall run like mighty [page 544]
men;
they shall climb the wall like men of war; and they shall march every one
on his ways, and they shall not break their ranks. And they do not press one another; every one on his beaten
track do they go forward: and they pass through between warlike weapons,
and change not their purpose. Into
the city they hasten forward; they shall run upon the wall; they shall
climb into the houses; through the windows they make their entrance like a
thief. The earth [the present
social order] shall quake before them: the heavens [the ecclesiastical
powers] shall tremble: the sun and the moon [the illuminating influences
of the gospel and of the Mosaic law] shall be dark [general infidelity
having become widely prevalent], and the stars [the apostolic lights (Rev.
12:1) shall be obscured] shall withdraw their shining [the dark night will
have come wherein no man can labor—John 9:4; Isa. 21:9,11,12].
And the Lord shall utter his voice before his army; for his camp is
very great; for he is strong that executeth his word; for the day of the
Lord is great and very terrible, and who can abide it?” Joel 2:2-11
This army of the Lord must face the terrible conditions of the evil
day, when the dread elements now preparing for the conflict, the fire,
shall have reached the climax of readiness. This army it is that under the
Lord’s overruling providence will overthrow the throne of kingdoms and
destroy the strength of the kingdoms of the nations. (Hag. 2:22)
But where is there such an army?
Will it be the German army? the French, the English, the Russian or
the United States army? So
great an army as is here described by the Prophet, and one which is to
accomplish such marvelous things, and that, as indicated, within the few
years that yet remain of this notable harvest period, is probably in
existence at the present time, and under some course of preparation for
the coming work of carnage. The
description of the Prophet is not of an undisciplined mob, which might be
easily dealt with by those educated in the arts of war; but it is of a
mighty host under a high degree of discipline. [page
545]
Where, then, we inquire, is there such an army, under present
instruction and training? an army before which the earth [society] shall
quake and the heavens [ecclesiasticism] shall tremble (Joel 2:10); which
shall boldly array itself against the conservative forces of Christendom,
both civil and ecclesiastical, and hope even to cope with its present
strength? Where is the army that in the near future will dare deny
Christendom’s time-honored doctrines, its statecraft and priestcraft?
that will sullenly ignore all its anathemas, spurn its orders, and hurl
back its thunderbolts of authority and organized power? that will face the
roar of its Vesuvian artillery, defy its missiles of shot and shell, plow
through its fleets of naval armaments, and, snatching the diadems from
crowned heads, topple the kingdoms into the midst of the sea? that will
set the heavens on fire, and melt the earth with fervent heat, thus making
one vast universal wreck of the old order of things as predicted by the
prophets?
That such an army is coming into existence and preparing for the
desperate conflict we are none the less forcibly assured by the signs of
the times than by “the sure word of prophecy.”
And it is the recognition of this fact (without any reference to or
knowledge of the word of prophecy that is now filling the heart of
Christendom with fearful foreboding, and impelling statesmen everywhere to
take extraordinary measures for protection and defense.
But in these very measures for self-defense devised by “the
powers that be,” there is probably a snare which they do not realize.
The armies upon which they depend for defense, be it remembered,
are the armies of the common people: these millions of disciplined
warriors have wives and sons and daughters and brothers and sisters and
cousins and friends in the ranks of the common people, with whose
interests their own are linked by nature’s strong ties; [page 546]
and their service of thrones and kingdoms is only
secured by imperative orders, and made endurable by a remuneration which
they are fast coming to consider as no satisfactory compensation for the
hardships and privations which they and their families must undergo, not
to mention perils to life and limb and health and fortune. Year by year these armed hosts are less and less infatuated
with the “glory” of war, more keenly alive to its sufferings and
privations, and less and less devoted to the sovereign powers that command
their services, while the armies of toilers, of the common people at home,
are becoming more and more irritated and dissatisfied with their lot, and
more and more apprehensive of the future.
All of these things are indications of at least a possibility that
in the crisis approaching the mighty armed and disciplined hosts of
Christendom may turn their power against the authorities that called them
into being, instead of to uphold and preserve them.
That such a possibility has not been entirely unthought of by the
rulers is witnessed by the fact that in Russia, when the famine prevailed,
and led to riots among the common people, the facts concerning it were
diligently kept from their friends and brothers in the Russian army, and
the soldiers detailed for the suppression of the riots were from remote
districts.
Just what conditions and circumstances will be used of the Lord as
his “voice” of command to marshal this mighty army we may not now be
able to clearly surmise; but we live in a day which makes history rapidly;
and on general principles it would not be unreasonable to expect movements
in this direction at any time. But
in our previous studies (Vols. II and III) we have seen that God has a set
time for every feature of his plan, and that we are even now in this
“Day of Vengeance,” which is a period of forty years; that it began in
October, 1874, and will end very shortly. The ominous years already past
of this “day” have certainly [page 547] laid a broad and deep foundation in church, in state,
in finances and in social conditions and sentiments for the great events
predicted in the Scriptures. These
are already overshadowing the world, and are as sure to come as that they
are foretold. A very few
years would seem to be abundant space for their full accomplishment. Already “men’s hearts are failing them for fear and for
looking after [forward to] those things coming upon the world.”
The prophecies brought to our attention and publicly proclaimed
since the beginning of this “Day of Vengeance” are rapidly
culminating; and, as shown in the preceding chapters, all men are able to
see something of the dark outlines of the trouble coming closer and closer
until now, apparently, society is like a tinderbox all ready for the
match—like a powder magazine, ready for explosion any moment—like an
organized army, ready for the assault at the word of command.
But Shakespeare truly wrote:
“There
is a divinity that shapes our ends,
Rough
hew them how we will.”
Mankind in general is unconscious of the Lord’s interest in this
battle: and almost all the contestants gird on the armor for personal and
selfish interests in which they rightly realize the Lord could not share;
and hence, while all on every side are ready to invoke the Lord’s
blessings, few count on it—all seem to rely upon themselves—their
organization, numbers, etc. None will be more surprised than the “powers of the
heavens,” the great ones of present ecclesiastical control, who, going
about to establish a plan of their own for the Lord, have neglected his
plan as revealed in his Word. To these the Lord’s work of the next few
years will indeed be a “strange
work.” Hear the Lord’s
Word on this subject:
“The Lord shall rise up as in mount Perazim, he shall be [page 548]
wroth as in the valley of Gibeon; that he may do his
work, his strange work; and bring to pass his act, his strange act... For I
have heard from the Lord God of hosts a consumption [an expiration, a
consummation] even determined upon the whole earth.” Isa. 28:21,22
The social system, “the earth,” “the elements,” “the
course of nature,” cannot be set on fire until the Lord permits the
match to be struck: the great decisive battle cannot begin until the great
“Michael,” “the Captain of our salvation,” stands forth and gives
the word of command (Dan. 12:1), even though there will previously be
frequent skirmishes all along the lines.
And the great Captain informs his royal legion, the Church, that
the catastrophe, though imminent, cannot occur until “the King’s
Own,” the “Little flock,” “the Elect,” have all been
“sealed” and “gathered.”
Meantime let us remember the Apostle’s inspired description of
this trouble—that it will be as travail upon a woman with child, in
spasms or throes of trouble, with shortening intervals between.
It has been just so thus far; and each future spasm will be more
severe, until the final ordeal in which the new order will be born in the
death-agonies of present institutions.
In asmuch as the Lord has generally let the world take its own
course in the past six thousand years—except in the case of Israel—his
interference now will seem all the more peculiar and “strange” to
those who do not understand the dispensational changes due at the
introduction of the seventh millennium.
But in this “battle” he will cause the wrath of men (and their
ambition and selfishness) to praise and serve him, and the remainder he
will restrain. With much
long-suffering he has permitted the long reign of sin, selfishness and
death because it could be overruled for the trial of his elect Church, and
in teaching all men “the exceeding [page 549] sinfulness of sin.”
But seeing that the world in general despises his law of love and
truth and righteousness, he purposes a general discipline before giving
the next lesson, which will be a practical illustration of the benefits of
righteousness, under the Millennial Kingdom of his dear Son.
While the Lord forbids his people to fight with carnal weapons, and
while he declares himself to be a God of peace, a God of order and of
love, he also declares himself to be a God of justice, and shows that sin
shall not forever triumph in the world, but that it shall be punished.
“Vengeance is mine, I will repay, saith the Lord.” (Rom. 12:19;
Deut. 32:35) And when he
rises up to judgment against the nations, taking vengeance upon all the
wicked, he declares himself “a man of war” and “mighty in battle,”
and having a “great army” at his command.
And who can give assurance that the multitudes who now compose the
marshalled hosts of Christendom will not then constitute the great army
that will throw its mighty force against the bulwarks of the present
social order. Exod. 15:3; Psa. 24:8; 45:3; Rev. 19:11; Isa. 11:4; Joel
2:11
“The Lord shall go forth as a mighty man, he shall stir up
jealousy like a man of war: he shall cry, yea roar: he shall prevail
against his enemies.” The
cry and roar of his great army, and their success in accomplishing his
purpose of revolution, he thus attributes to himself; because they are
accomplishing, though ignorantly, his work of destruction. He says: “I
have long time holden my peace; I have been still and refrained myself:
now will I cry like a travailing woman: I will destroy and devour at
once.” Isa. 42:13,14
But in the Scriptures there are also intimations that there may be
others beyond the revolting hosts of Christendom who will also form a part
of the Lord’s great army. And
the Lord, through the Prophet Ezekiel, referring to this same time, and to
the approaching calamities of Christendom, says:
[page 550]
“And I will give it into the hands of
the strangers for a prey, and to the
wicked of the earth for a spoil: and they shall pollute it...Make
a chain [bind, unite them together; let them make a common cause], for the
land is full of bloody crimes, and the city [Babylon, Christendom] is full
of violence. Wherefore I will bring the
worst of the heathen, and they shall possess their houses: I will
also make the pomp of the great to cease, and their honored places [their
sacred places, their religious institutions, etc.] shall be defiled.”
Ezek. 7:13-24
This may be understood to signify that the uprising of the masses
of Christendom in anarchy will, during the prevalence of lawlessness, be
so extremely brutal and savage as to outrival the barbarities of all
heathen invasions—as was the case in the French Revolution.
Or it may signify an uprising of the peoples of India, China and
Africa against Christendom—a suggestion already made by the public press
anent the revival of Turkey and the uprising of the millions of Mahometans.
Our opinion, however, is that “the worst of the heathen” are
those in Christendom who are “without God” and without Christian
sentiments or hopes; who hitherto have been restrained and held in check
by ignorance, superstition and fear, but who in the dawn of the twentieth
century are rapidly losing these restraining influences.
The Lord, by his overruling providence, will take a general charge
of this great army of discontents—patriots, reformers, socialists,
moralists, anarchists, ignorants and hopeless—and use their hopes,
fears, follies and selfishness, according to his divine wisdom, to work
out his own grand purposes in the overthrow of present institutions, and
for the preparation of man for the Kingdom of Righteousness. For this
reason only it is termed “The Lord’s
great army.” None of his saints—none who are led by the spirit of God
as sons of God are to have anything to do with that part of the
“battle.”
[page 551]
The
Conditions of This Battle Unprecedented
According to the predictions of the prophets the conditions of this
battle will be without historic precedent.
As already suggested, this final struggle is graphically portrayed
in symbols in the forty-sixth Psalm.
(Compare also Psa. 97:2-6; Isa. 24:19-21; 2 Pet. 3:10.)
The hills (the less high, less autocratic governments) are already
melting like wax; they still retain their form, but as the earth (society)
gets hot they yield to its requirements, little by little coming down to
the level of popular demand. Great
Britain is a good illustration of this class.
High mountains (representing autocratic governments) will be
“shaken” by revolutions, and ultimately “carried into the midst of
the sea”—lost utterly in anarchy.
Already “the sea and the waves roar” against the bulwarks of
the present social system: ere long the earth (the present social
structure) will reel and totter as a drunken man, vainly endeavoring to
right itself, maintain a footing and re-establish itself: by and by it
will be utterly “removed,” to give place to the “new earth” (the
new social order) wherein righteousness, justice, will prevail.
It will be impossible to re-establish the present order, (1)
because it has evidently outlived its usefulness, and is inequitable under
present conditions; (2) because of the general diffusion of secular
knowledge; (3) because the discovery that priestcraft has long blinded and
fettered the masses with error and fear will lead to a general disrespect
for all religious claims and teachings as of a piece with the discovered
frauds; (4) because religious people in general, not discerning that
God’s time has come for a change of dispensation, will ignore reason,
logic, justice and Scripture in defending the present order of things.
It will be of little consequence then that the ecclesiastical
heavens (the religious powers, Papal and Protestant) will [page 552]
have rolled together as a scroll. (Isa. 34:4; Rev.
6:14) The combined religious
power of Christendom will be utterly futile against the rising tide of
anarchy when the dread crisis is reached.
Before that great army “all the host of heaven [the church
nominal] shall be dissolved, and the heavens shall be rolled together as a
scroll [the two great bodies which constitute the ecclesiastical heavens;
viz., Papacy and Protestantism, as the two distinct ends of the scroll are
even now rapidly approaching each other, rolling together, as we have
shown]; and all their host shall fall down [fall off, drop out; not all at
once, but gradually, yet rapidly] as the leaf falleth off from the vine,
and as a falling fig from the fig tree” (Isa. 34:4); and finally these
“heavens, being on fire, shall be dissolved, and the elements [of which
they are composed] shall melt with fervent heat.” 2 Pet. 3:12
“While they be folden together as thorns [for Protestantism and
the Papacy can never perfectly assimilate; each will be a thorn in the
other’s side], and while they are drunken as drunkards [intoxicated with
the spirit of the world], they shall be devoured [they shall be
overwhelmed in the great tribulation, and, as religious systems, be
utterly destroyed] as stubble fully dry”; for the Lord “will make an
utter end: affliction shall not rise up the second time.” Blessed
promise! “For behold, the
day cometh that shall burn as an oven: and all the proud, yea, and all
that do wickedly, shall be stubble; and the day that cometh shall burn
them up, saith the Lord of hosts, that it shall leave them neither root
nor branch [for further development].” Nahum 1:9,10; Mal. 4:1
"The
Time of Jacob's Trouble"
While the trouble and distress of this day of the Lord will be
first and specially upon Christendom, and eventually upon all nations, the
final blast, we are informed by the [page 553] Prophet Ezekiel (38:8-12), will be upon the people of
Israel regathered in Palestine. The
prophet seems to indicate a much larger gathering of Israel to Palestine
within this harvest period than has yet taken place.
He represents them as gathered there out of the nations in great
numbers, and, with considerable wealth, inhabiting the formerly desolate
places; and all of them dwelling safely at the time when the rest of the
world is in its wildest commotion. Ezek. 38:11,12
All men are witnesses to the fact that such a gathering of Israel
to Palestine is begun, but it is quite manifest that their exodus from
other lands will have to receive some great and sudden impulse in order to
accomplish this prophecy within the appointed time.
Just what that impulse will be remains yet to be seen; but, that it
will surely come is further indicated by the words of the Prophet
Jeremiah—16:14-17,21.
“Behold the days come, saith the Lord, that it shall no more be
said, The Lord liveth that brought up the children of Israel out of the
land of Egypt; but the Lord liveth that brought up the children of Israel
from the land of the north [Russia?], and from all the lands whither he
had driven them: and I will bring them again into their land that I gave
unto their fathers. Behold I
will send for many fishers, and they shall fish them; and after will I
send for many hunters, and they shall hunt them from every mountain and
from every hill, and out of the holes of the rocks.
For mine eyes are upon all their ways; they are not hid from my
face, neither is their iniquity hid from mine eyes...I will cause them to
know my hand and might; and they shall know that my name is Jehovah.”
That the Lord is abundantly able to accomplish this we have no
doubt. In every nation the
question, “What shall be done with the Jew?” is a perplexing one,
which, in some crisis of the near future brought about suddenly by the
Lord’s overruling providence, will doubtless lead, as indicated by the
prophet, to some concerted action on the [page 554]
part of the nations for promptly conveying them to
the land of promise. And, as
they went out of Egypt in haste, with their cattle and goods, and aided by
the Egyptians who said, “Rise up and get you forth from among my
people,...also take your flocks and your herds, as ye have said, and be
gone”; and as the Lord gave the people favor in the sight of the
Egyptians, so that they gave them whatsoever they required, of silver and
gold and raiment (Exod. 12:31-36), so in the next exodus, foretold by the
prophets, they will not be sent away empty, but apparently some pressure
will suddenly be brought to bear upon the nations which will result thus
favorably to Israel, so fulfilling the above prophecy of Ezekiel.
This enterprising race, once re-established in the land of promise,
and thus separated, for a time at least, from the distress of nations so
prevalent everywhere else, will quickly adapt itself to the new situation,
and the hitherto desolate places will again be inhabited.
But yet one more wave of anguish must pass over that chastened
people; for, according to the prophet, the final conflict of the battle of
the great day will be in the land of Palestine.
The comparative quiet and prosperity of regathered Israel near the
end of this day of trouble, as well as their apparent defenseless
condition, will by and by stimulate the jealousies of and invite their
plunder by other peoples. And when law and order are swept away Israel
will finally be besieged by hosts of merciless plunderers, designated by
the prophet as the hosts of God and Magog (Ezek. 38), and great will be
the distress of defenseless Israel. “Alas!” says the prophet Jeremiah,
“for that day is great, so that none is like it: it is even the time of
Jacob’s trouble, but he shall be saved out of it.” Jer. 30:7
As one man the hosts of God and Magog are represented as saying,
“I will go up to the land of unwalled villages, I will go to them that
are at rest, that dwell safely, all of them [page 555]
dwelling without walls, and having neither bars nor
gates.” “Thou wilt go,” says the prophet, “to take a spoil and to
take a prey; to turn thine hand upon the desolate places that are now
inhabited, and upon the people that are gathered out of the nations, which
have gotten cattle and goods and that dwell in the midst of the land.”
(Ezek. 38:11-13) The prophet foretelling these events as though addressing
these hosts, says, “Thou shalt come from thy place out of the north
parts [Europe and Asia are north of Palestine], thou and many people with
thee, all of them riding upon horses, a great company and a mighty army:
And thou shalt come up against my people of Israel as a cloud to cover the
land; it
shall be in the latter days [apparently the closing scene of the
day of trouble], and I will bring thee against
my land, that the nations may know me, when I shall be sanctified in thee
[set apart, distinguished as thy conqueror], O Gog, before their eyes.”
Ezek. 38:15,16
In the midst of the trouble God will reveal himself as Israel’s
defender as in ancient times, when his favor was with them nationally.
Their extremity will be his opportunity; and there their blindness
will be removed. We read,
“For I will gather all nations [as represented in the hosts of Gog and
Magog] against Jerusalem to battle; and the city shall be taken, and the
houses rifled, and the women ravished; and half the city shall go forth
into captivity, and the residue of the people shall not be cut off from
the city. Then shall the Lord
go forth and fight against those nations as when he fought in the day of
battle.” (Zech. 14:2,3) Isaiah
(28:21), referring to the same thing, instances the Lord’s deliverance
of Israel from the Philistines at Perazim, and from the Amorites at Gibeon,
saying, “For the Lord shall rise up as
in mount Perazim, he shall be wroth as
in the valley of Gibeon.” See
2 Sam. 5:19-25; 1 Chron. 14:10-17; Josh. 10:10-15—how God was not
dependent upon human skill or generalship, but fought his battles in his
own way. So in [page 556]
this great battle God will bring deliverance in his
own time and way.
In Ezekiel’s prophecy (38:1-13) the Lord names the chief actors
in the struggle in Palestine; but we may not be too positive in our
identifications. Magog,
Meshech, Tubal, Gomar, Togomar, Javan and Tarshish were names of children
of Noah’s son Japheth—supposed to be
the original settlers of Europe. Sheba
and Dedan were descendants of Noah’s son Ham—supposed
to be the original settlers of northern Africa.
Abraham and his posterity (Israel) were descendants of Noah’s son
Shem, and are supposed to
have settled Armenia—Western Asia. (See Gen. 10:2-7.) This would seem to indicate in a general way that the attack
will come from Europe—the “north quarters”—with allied mixed
peoples.
The overwhelming destruction of these enemies of Israel (bringing
the end of the time of trouble and the time for the establishment of
God’s Kingdom) is graphically described by the Prophet Ezekiel. (38:18
to 39:20) It can be compared
only to the terrible overthrow of Pharaoh and his hosts, when essaying to
repossess themselves of Israel, whom God was delivering.
In this particular also Israel’s deliverance is to be
“according to [like] the days of thy coming out of the land of
Egypt”—“marvelous things.” Micah 7:15
After describing that the coming of this army from the north
quarters against Israel (regathered to Palestine “in the latter day,”
“having much goods” and “dwelling peaceably”) will be suddenly,
and “as a cloud to cover the land” (Ezek. 38:1-17), the message is,
“Thus saith the Lord God, Art thou he of whom I have spoken in olden
time by my servants, the prophets of Israel, which prophesied in those
days many years, that I would bring thee against them?” The Lord then
declares his purposed destruction of the wicked host; and the description
seems to indicate that it will be accomplished by an outbreak of jealousy,
revolution [page 557] and anarchy amongst the various elements composing
the great mixed army: a revolution and strife which will involve whatever
may still remain of the home governments of the various peoples, and
complete the universal insurrection and anarchy—the great earthquake of
Revelation 16:18-21
The testimony of all the prophets is to the effect that the power
of God will be so marvelously manifested in Israel’s deliverance, by his
fighting for them (incidentally for all), with weapons which no human
power can control—including pestilence and various calamities—poured
upon the wicked (Israel’s enemies and God’s opponents) until speedily
all the world will know that the Lord has accepted Israel again to his
favor, and become their King, as in olden times; and soon they as well as
Israel will learn to appreciate God’s Kingdom, which shall speedily
become the desire of all nations.
The Prophet Ezekiel (39:21-29), as the Lord’s mouthpiece tells of
the glorious outcome of this victory, and the results to Israel and to all
the world, saying:
“And I will display my glory among the nations, and all the
nations shall see my judgments that I have executed, and my hand that I
have laid upon them. And the
house of Israel shall acknowledge that I am the Lord their God from that
day and forward. And the
nations shall know that for their iniquity did the house of Israel go into
exile: because they trespassed against me [in rejecting Christ—Rom.
9:29-33]: therefore hid I my face from them, and gave them into the hand
of their enemies [for all the centuries of the Christian dispensation;
and] so fell they all by the sword. According
to their uncleanness, and according to their transgressions, have I done
unto them, and hid my face from them.
“Therefore [now that this punishment is completed], thus saith
the Lord God, Now will I bring again the captivity of Jacob, and have
mercy upon the whole house of Israel [living and dead, the “times of
restitution” having [page 558] come—Acts 3:19-21], and will be jealous for my holy
name; after that they have [thus] borne their shame, and all their
trespasses whereby they have trespassed against me, when they dwelt safely
in their land and none made them afraid. When I have brought them again
from the Gentiles, and gathered them out of their enemies’ lands, and am
sanctified in them in the sight of many nations.
Then shall they know that I am the Lord their God, which caused
them to be exiled among the nations, but gather them now unto their own
land, and leave none of them any more there. Neither will I hide my face
any more from them; for I have poured out my spirit upon the house of
Israel, saith the Lord God.” “So
shall they fear the name of the Lord from the west, and his glory from the
sunrising. When the enemy shall come in like a flood, the spirit of the
Lord [throughout the Gospel age—at the hands of Spiritual Israel] shall
lift up a standard against him. And
the Deliverer shall come to Zion [the Church, “the body of Christ”]
and unto them that turn from transgression in Jacob,
saith the Lord.” Isa. 59:19,20. Compare Rom. 11:25-32.
“The Lord is good, a stronghold in the day of trouble; and he
knoweth them that trust in him.” But
“who can stand before his indignation, and who can abide in the
fierceness of his anger?...He will make an utter end [of iniquity]:
oppression shall not rise up the second time.” Nahum 1:7,6,9
Thus by the battle of the great day of God Almighty the whole world
will be prepared for the new day and its great work of restitution. Though the waking hour be one of clouds and thick darkness,
thanks be to God for his blessed assurance that the work of destruction
will be “a short work,” (Matt. 24:22), and that immediately after it
the glorious Sun of Righteousness will begin to shine forth. “The earth
[the present old social structure] shall [thus]... be removed like a
cottage” (Isa. 24:19,20), to clear the way for the new building of God,
the new heavens and new earth wherein dwelleth righteousness. 2 Pet. 3:13;
Isa. 65:17 [page 559]
Since the foregoing is in type, an article in an old N. Y. Tribune (June 26,
1897), quite to the point, has come to our notice. It is so fully in accord with our suggestions respecting
“the Lord’s great army” now in preparation, that we make room for an
extract, as follows:
“Crown
or People?
What
Some Armies of Europe May Be Asked to
Choose
Between in the Near Future
“Less than forty years ago troops, in obedience to the commands
of their sovereigns, turned their guns upon the people, and shot and
bayoneted men, women and even children until blood flowed like water in
the streets of Berlin, Vienna, and many other of the capitals of the Old
World. It was not a mere mob
of tramps and toughs with whom the military was called upon to deal, but
well-to-do and highly educated citizens—professional men, merchants,
manufacturers, politicians and legislators—in fact, all that element
which goes to make up what is known in the Old World as the
‘Bourgeoisie’ and middle classes, who were endeavoring to secure the
political rights solemnly promised to them by the terms of the
constitutions decreed by their respective rulers, but which the latter
declined to put into force until compelled by the people.
"Brought
to the Front in Italy"
“Would the troops, if called upon today to fire upon their
fellow-countrymen, manifest similar obedience to the behest of the
‘Anointed of the Lord?’ That
is a question which at the present moment is occupying to a far greater
degree than people in this country might be inclined to believe the
attention of the crowned heads of Europe, and it has within the last few
days been brought before the public through a resolution submitted to the
Italian Parliament providing for the substitution of the word
‘national’ for that of ‘royal’ in the official description of the
army. The arguments put forward by the supporters of the motion,
which was eventually defeated by the Ministerial party, which possesses a
[page 560] majority
in the Legislature, were not only logical, but also powerful, and cannot
fail to appeal strongly to the people of Italy, as well as every other
civilized nation, and must assuredly have afforded very serious grounds
for reflection to King Humbert and to his brother and sister monarchs.”
[The article points out that, without special commotion, the
command of the English army had within the preceding three years been
given to Parliament, as represented in the Minister of War, whereas
previously the army had been directly attached to the crown by reason of
its commander being a prince of the royal blood, who held his office as
the Queen’s representative. The
Queen, it appears, and not unnaturally, sought for a considerable time to
retain this remaining prop of sovereignty, but without avail.
In France, also, the jealousy of the people for the control of the
army is shown by the fact that the appointment of a general as
commander-in-chief was refused, and the control held in the hands of a
changeable Secretary of War, who represents the party put in power by the
ballots of the people. The
article proceeds:]
"A
Conflict Imminent in Germany"
“A conflict of this kind is no longer regarded as imminent in
Italy. But it cannot be
denied that something of this nature is apprehended in Germany, and more
especially in Prussia, where monarch and people are daily drifting further
apart. That Emperor William anticipates some such struggle is
apparent from all his recent utterances whenever he has occasion to
address his troops, notably at Bielefeld last week, his favorite theme
being the duty of the soldiers to hold themselves ready to defend with
their life’s blood their sovereign and his throne, not so much against
the foreign foe as against the enemies within the frontiers of the empire,
and of the kingdom. In
presiding at the ceremony of the swearing in of the recruits, he never
fails to remind them that their first duty is toward himself, rather than
to the people who pay them, and he is never tired of expatiating [page 561]
on what he describes as the ‘King’s cloth’;
that is to say, the uniform, which he, like many other sovereigns, chooses
to regard as the livery, not of the State nor of the Nation, but of the
monarch, to whom the wearer is bound by special ties of allegiance,
loyalty and blind, unquestioning obedience.
Nor must it be forgotten that in all instances of dispute and
strife between civilians and military men the Emperor always upholds the
latter, even when they are shown to be the aggressors, and actually to the
extent of either pardoning or commuting the always lenient sentences that
have been inflicted upon officers who, while drunk, have seriously
wounded, and in some cases killed, unarmed and inoffensive civilians.
"Attitude
of the German Army"
“What will be the attitude of the army should the anticipated
struggle between Crown and people take place?
In court and official circles at Berlin it is believed that the
Emperor will be able to rely upon his troops.
But this opinion is in no way shared by the people themselves, nor
yet by the leading German politicians of the day.
The rank and file of the army is no longer composed, as in former
days, of ignorant boors, unable either to read, write or even think for
themselves, but of thoughtful, well-educated men, who have been taught at
school what are the rights and constitutional prerogatives for which their
grandfathers and fathers fought in vain.
They know, too, enough of history to appreciate the fact that in
every struggle between the Crown and the people it is always the latter
that has ended by carrying the day.”
[page 562]
The
Wrath of God
“The wrath of God is Love’s severity
In curing sin—the zeal of righteousness
In overcoming wrong—the remedy
Of Justice for the world’s redress.
“The wrath of God is punishment for sin,
In measure unto all transgression due,
Discriminating well and just between
Presumptuous sins and sins of lighter hue.
“The wrath of God inflicts no needless pain
Merely vindictive, or himself to please;
But aims the ends of mercy to attain,
Uproot the evil and the good increase.
“The wrath of God is a consuming fire,
That burns while there is evil to destroy
Or good to purify; nor can expire
Till all things are relieved from sin’s alloy.
“The wrath of God is Love’s parental rod,
The disobedient to chastise, subdue,
And bend submissive to the will of God,
That Love may reign when all things are
made new.
“The wrath of God shall never strike in vain,
Nor cease to strike till sin shall be no more;
Till God his gracious purpose shall attain,
And earth to righteousness and peace restore.”
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