SCRIPTURE
STUDIES
VOLUME FOUR - THE
BATTLE OF ARMAGEDDON
STUDY
III
THE NECESSITY AND JUSTICE
OF THE DAY OF VENGEANCE
Upon this
Generation, Type and Antitype
—
The Great Tribulation a Legitimate Effect from Preceding Causes
—
The Responsibilities of “Christendom,” and Her Attitude Toward Them
—
Of Civil
Authorities, of Religious Leaders, of the Various Ranks of the
Masses of Men in
Civilized Lands
—
The Relationship of the Heathen Nations to Christendom and to the Trouble
—
The Judgment of God
—
“Vengeance
is Mine: I will Repay,
Saith the Lord.”
“Verily, I say unto you, All these things shall come upon this
generation.” Matt. 23:34-36; Luke 11:50,51
TO THOSE unaccustomed to weighing principles from the
standpoint of an exact moral philosophy it may seem strange that a
subsequent generation of humanity should suffer the penalty of the
accumulated crimes of several preceding generations; yet, since such is
the expressed judgment of God, who cannot err, we should expect mature
consideration to make manifest the justice of his decision. In the above
words, our Lord declared that thus it should be with the generation of
fleshly Israel whom he addressed in the end of the typical Jewish Age.
Upon them should come all the righteous blood shed upon the earth,
from the blood of righteous Abel unto the blood of Zacharias, who was
slain between the temple and the altar. Matt. 23:35
That was a terrible prophecy, but it fell upon heedless and
unbelieving ears; and, true to the letter, it had its fulfilment [page 48]
about thirty-seven years later, when civil strife and
hostile invaders accomplished the fearful recompense.
Of that time we read that the inhabitants of Judea were divided by
jealousies into many warring factions, and that mutual mistrust reached
its highest development. Friends
were alienated, families were broken up, and every man suspected his
brother. Theft, impostures
and assassinations were rife, and no man’s life was secure.
Even the temple was not a place of safety.
The chief priest was slain while performing public worship.
Then, driven to desperation by the massacre of their brethren in
Caesarea, and apparently appointed everywhere else for slaughter, the
whole nation united in revolt. Judea
was thus brought into open rebellion against Rome, and in defiance against
the whole civilized world.
Vespasian and Titus were sent to punish them, and terrible was
their overthrow. One after
another of their cities was swept away, until at last Titus laid siege to
Jerusalem. In the spring of A.D. 70, when the city was crowded with the
multitudes who came up to the feast of the Passover, he drew up his
legions before her walls, and the imprisoned inhabitants shortly became
the prey of famine and the sword of the invaders and civil strife.
When any managed to creep out of the city they were crucified by
the Romans; and so dreadful was the famine that parents killed and ate
their own children. The
number that perished is stated by Josephus to have been over a million,
and the city and temple were reduced to ashes.
Such were the facts in fulfilment of the above prophecy upon
rebellious fleshly Israel in the end of their age of special favor as
God’s chosen people. And
now, in the end of this Gospel age, according to the broader significance
of the prophecy, is to come the parallel of that trouble upon nominal [page 49]
spiritual Israel, which, in its widest sense, is
Christendom—“a time of trouble such as was not since there was a
nation,” and hence in some sense even more terrible than that upon Judea
and Jerusalem. We can
scarcely imagine a trouble more severe than that above described, except
in the sense of being more general and widespread, and more destructive,
as the machinery of modern warfare signally suggests.
Instead of being confined to one nation or province, its sweep will
be over the whole world, especially the civilized world, Christendom,
Babylon.
We may therefore regard that visitation of wrath upon fleshly
Israel as a foreshadowing of the greater indignation and wrath to be
poured upon Christendom in the end of this age.
Those who in their haste incline to view this course of the
Almighty toward this generation as unjust have only failed to comprehend
that perfect law of retribution, which surely, though often slowly, works
out its inevitable results. The justice, yea, the necessity and the
philosophy of it, are very manifest to the thoughtful and reverent, who,
instead of being inclined to accuse God of injustice, apply their hearts
to the instruction of his Word.
The
Great Tribulation a Legitimate Effect
from
Preceding Causes
We stand today in a period which is the culmination of ages of
experience which should be, and is, in some respects, greatly to the
world’s profit; especially to that part of the world which has been
favored, directly and indirectly, with the light of divine
truth—Christendom, Babylon—whose responsibility for this stewardship
of advantage is consequently very great. God holds men accountable, not only for what they know, but
for what they might know if they would apply their hearts unto
instruction—for the lessons [page 50] which experience (their own and others’) is
designed to teach; and if men fail to heed the lessons of experience, or
wilfully neglect or spurn its precepts, they must suffer the consequences.
Before so-called Christendom lies the open history of all past
time, as well as the divinely inspired revelation.
And what lessons they contain!—lessons of experience, of wisdom,
of knowledge, of grace, and of warning.
By giving heed to the experiences of preceding generations along
the various lines of human industry, political economy, etc., the world
has made very commendable progress in material things.
Many of the comforts and conveniences of our present civilization
have come to us largely from applying the lessons observed in the
experiences of past generations. The art of printing has brought these
lessons within the range of every man.
The present generation in this one point alone has much advantage
every way: all the accumulated wisdom and experience of the past are added
to its own. But the great
moral lessons which men ought also to have been studying and learning have
been very generally disregarded, even when they have been emphatically
forced upon public attention. History
is full of such lessons to thoughtful minds inclined to righteousness; and
men of the present day have more such lessons than those of any previous
generation. Thoughtful minds
have, from time to time, noted and called attention to this fact.
Thus, Professor Fisher, in prefacing his account of the rise,
progress and fall of empires, truly says:
“That
there is a reign of law in the succession of human events, is a conviction
warranted by observed facts. Events
do not spring into being disjoined from antecedents leading to them.
They are perceived to be the natural issues of the times that have
gone before. Preceding events
have foreshadowed them.”
[page 51]
This is indeed true: the law of cause and effect is nowhere more
prominently marked than on the pages of history.
According to this law, which is God’s law, the seeds of past
sowing must of necessity germinate, develop and bring forth fruitage; and
a harvest at some time is therefore inevitable. In Vol. II, we have shown
that the harvest time of the Gospel age is already come; that it began in
1874, when the presence of the Lord of the harvest was due; and that,
while a great harvest work has been in progress ever since that date, we
are now fast nearing the latter end of the harvest period, when the
burning of the tares and the gathering and treading of the fully ripe
clusters of the “vine
of the earth” (the matured fruits of the false
vine—“Babylon”) are due. Rev. 14:18-20
The
Responsibilities of Christendom and Her
Attitude
Toward Them
Babylon, Christendom, has had a long probation of power, and has
had many opportunities both to learn and to practice righteousness, as
well as many warnings of a coming judgment.
All through this Gospel age she has had in her midst the saints of
God—devoted, self-sacrificing, Christlike men and women—“The salt of
the earth.” She has heard
the message of salvation from their lips, seen the principles of truth and
righteousness exemplified in their lives, and heard them reason of
righteousness and of judgment to come.
But she has disregarded these living epistles of God; and not only
so, but her so-called Christian nations, in their greed for gain, have
brought reproach upon the name of Christ among the heathen, following the
Christian missionary with the accursed rum traffic and other
“civilized” evils; and in her midst and by her authority the true
embryo kingdom of heaven (composed only of the saints, [page 52]
whose names are written in heaven) has suffered
violence. She has hated them and persecuted them even unto death, so that
thousands of them all along the centuries have, by her decrees, sealed
their testimony with their blood. Like
their Master, they were hated without a cause; they were rejected as the
offscouring of the earth for righteousness’ sake; and their light was
again and again quenched that the preferred darkness might reign with its
opportunities to work iniquity. Oh
how dark is this record of Christendom! The mother system is “drunk with
the blood of the saints and martyrs of Jesus”; and she and her
daughters, still blind, are ready still to persecute and behead (Rev.
20:4), though in a more refined manner, all who are loyal to God and his
truth, and who venture, however kindly, to point out to them plainly the
Word of the Lord which reproves them.
The civil powers of Christendom have been warned frequently when
again and again empires and kingdoms have fallen with the weight of their
own corruption. And even
today, if the powers that be would harken, they might hear a last warning
of God’s inspired prophet, saying, “Be wise now, therefore, O ye
kings: be instructed ye judges of the earth.
Serve the Lord with fear, and rejoice with trembling. Kiss the Son
lest he be angry, and ye perish from the way, when his wrath is kindled
but a little...Why do the nations rage, and the people imagine a vain
thing? The kings of the earth
set themselves [in opposition], and the rulers take counsel together,
against the Lord, and against his anointed, saying, Let us break their
bands asunder and cast away their cords from us.”
But their resistance shall avail nothing; for, “He that sitteth
in the heavens shall laugh: the Lord shall have them in derision. Then [since they persistently neglect to heed his warnings]
shall he speak unto them in his wrath, and vex them in his sore
displeasure.” Psalm 2:10-12,1-5 [page 53]
Again, as represented by the simple and now widely known principles
of his holy law, “God standeth in the congregation of the mighty [of
those in authority]; he judgeth among the gods [the rulers, saying], How
long will ye judge unjustly, and accept the persons of the wicked?
Defend the poor and fatherless; do justice to the afflicted and
needy; deliver the poor and needy: rid them out of the hand of the
wicked.” (Psa. 82:1-4) That
the import and expediency of this counsel are, by the exigencies of the
present times, being forced upon the attention of those in authority, the
daily press is a constant witness; and numerous are the warning voices of
thoughtful men who see the danger of the general neglect of this advice.
Even men of the world, who scan the future only from the standpoint
of expediency, perceive the necessity for the pursuance of the course
advised by the prophets.
The late Emperor William of Germany saw this, as is indicated by
the following from the Berlin correspondent of the Observatore
Romano (1880):
“When the Emperor William received the news of the last horrible
attempt upon the life of the Czar he became very serious, and after
remaining silent for some minutes he said, with melancholy accent, but
with a certain energy, ‘If we do not change the direction of our policy,
if we do not think seriously of giving sound instruction to youth, if we
do not give the first place to religion, if we only pretend to govern by
expedients from day to day, our thrones will be overturned and society
will become a prey to the most terrible events.
We have no more time to lose, and it will be a great misfortune if
all the governments do not come to an accord in this salutary work of
repression.’”
In a book widely circulated in Germany, entitled Reform or Revolution, its
author, Herr von Massow, who is neither a Socialist nor a Radical, but a
Conservative, and President of the Central Committee for Labor Colonies,
accuses his countrymen [page 54] of “ostrich politics,” of imitating that bird’s
proverbial habit of hiding its head in the sand in the belief that it
becomes invisible when it cannot see.
Von Massow writes:
“We may ignore facts, but we cannot alter them.
There is no doubt that we are on the eve of a revolution.
All who have eyes to see and ears to hear must admit this.
Only a society submerged in egoism, self-satisfaction and the hunt
for pleasure can deny it; only such a society will continue to dance on
the volcano, will refuse to see the Mene-Tekel,
and continue to believe in the power of bayonets.
“The great majority of the educated have no idea of the magnitude
of the hatred which is brewing among the lower orders.
The Social-Democratic Party is regarded as any other political
party; yet this party does not care about political rights, does not care
for administrative reform or new laws.
This party is based upon the wish of the lower classes to enjoy
life, a wish to taste pleasures of which those who never owned a
hundred-mark bill have an altogether distorted conception...Order will, of
course, soon be restored [after the Socialist regime]; but what a state
the country will be in! There
will be countless cripples, widows and orphans; public and private banks
will have been robbed; railroads, telegraphs, roads, bridges, residences,
factories, monuments—everything will be demolished, and neither the
Union, nor the States, nor the towns and parishes will be able to find the
millions which it would cost to repair even a fraction of what is
destroyed. It is almost
incredible that nothing is done to ward off the danger.
Charity is not what is needed but warm hearts, willing to show some
regard for the lower classes. Love,
all-embracing love, will overcome much of the hatred that is brewing.
Many may be lost to such an extent that nothing will bring them
back; but there are also millions who may still be won for law and order,
if proof is given that it is possible for them to obtain a livelihood
worthy of a human being; that they need not, as is the case just now, be
worse off than the animals which are, at least, stabled and fed.”
The writer proceeds at length to open the eyes of the people of
Berlin to
the danger in which they live. “The
Berliners,” [page 55] he says, “imagine themselves secure in the
protection of the Guards, some 60,000 strong.
A vain hope! During the Autumn, when the time-expired men leave
their regiments, and before the new recruits have come, the garrison is
scarcely 7,000 strong. An
insurrection led by some dissatisfied former officer could soon find
100,000 and even 160,000 workmen to take part.
All these men have served in the army, and are as well trained as
their opponents, and understand the necessity of discipline.
Telegraph and telephone wires would be cut; railroads damaged to
prevent the arrival of re-enforcements; officers hurrying to their posts
would be intercepted. The
revolutionists could blow up the barracks and shoot down the Emperor, the
Ministers, generals, officials—every one wearing a uniform—ere a
single troop of cavalry or a battery of artillery could come to their
assistance.”
But do those in authority heed the warnings and the solemn lessons
of this hour? No: as the
Prophet foretold of them—“They know not, neither will they understand:
they walk on in darkness [until] all the foundations of the earth [the
foundations of society—the hitherto established principles of law and
order] are moved”—terribly shaken—shaken that they may be removed.
Heb. 12:27; Psa. 82:5; Isa. 2:19
The late Emperor of Germany was quite heedless of the expressed
fears of his grandfather, just quoted.
Years ago, in presenting Prince Bismarck with a magnificent sword
sheathed in a golden scabbard, the Emperor said:
“Before the eyes of these troops I come to present your Serene
Highness with my gift. I could find no better present than a sword, the noblest
weapon of the Germans, a symbol of that instrument which your Highness, in
the service of my grandfather, helped to forge, to sharpen, and also to
wield—a symbol of that great building-time during which the mortar was
blood and iron—a remedy which never fails, and which in the hands of
Kings and Princes will, in case of need, also preserve unity in the
interior of the Fatherland, even as, when applied outside the country, it
led to internal union.”
[page 56]
The
London Spectator
commenting on this expression says:
“That is surely a most alarming, as well as astounding,
statement. There are two
explanations of it current in Germany—one that it is directed against
the claim of any German State to secede from the Empire, and the other,
that it announces the decision of the Emperor and his confederates to deal
with Socialists and Anarchists, if necessary, through military force.
In either case the announcement was unnecessary and indiscreet.
Nobody doubts that the German Empire, which was, in fact, built by
the sword at Langensalza, as well as in the war with France, would decree
the military occupation of any seceding State; but to threaten any party,
even the Socialists, with martial law, while it is trying to win through
the ballot, is, in fact, to suspend the Constitution in favor of a state
of siege. We do not suppose
that the Emperor intended anything of the kind, but it seems clear that he
has been brooding over the situation; that he feels the resistance of the
Socialists, and that his conclusion is—‘Well, well, I have still the
sword, and that is a remedy that never fails.’
Many a King has come to that conclusion before him, but few have
been so far left to themselves as to deem it wise on such a subject to
think aloud. It is a threat,
let us explain it as we will; and wise monarchs do not threaten until the
hour has arrived to strike, still less do they threaten military violence
as the remedy even for internal grievances.
‘The sword a remedy’ for internal ills ‘which never fails!’
As well say the surgeon’s knife is a remedy for fever which never
fails. Prince Schwartzenburg,
a Tory of Tories, with an irresistible army at his back, tried that remedy
under more favorable circumstances, and his conclusion after long
experience was embodied in the wisest of all political good sayings, which
the German Emperor would do well to consider—‘You can do anything with
bayonets—except sit on them.’
“What could a Roman Imperator have said that was stronger than
‘the sword is the remedy that never fails’? There is the essence of
tyranny in a sentence of that kind; and if the Emperor really uttered it
after consideration, it is not a leader that Germany has in him, but an
absolute ruler
[page 57] of the type which all modern history shows us to be
worn out. It may turn out, of
course, that the Emperor spoke hastily, under the influence of that
emotion, half-poetic, half-arising from an exaggerated sense of his own
personality, which he has often previously betrayed; but if his speech is
to be accepted in the light of a manifesto to his people, all that can be
said is, ‘What a pity; what a source of hopefulness has passed away!’”
The declaration of the present Czar of Russia, that he would uphold
autocracy as ardently as did his father, was another indication of failure
to heed the solemn warnings of his auspicious hour and of the Word of God.
And mark how it was received by the people of his dominion, despite
all the official energy exercised there to muzzle free speech. A manifesto
was issued by the People’s Rights Party of Russia, and circulated
throughout the empire.
The manifesto was in the form of a letter to the Czar, and was
remarkable for plain and forcible language.
After censuring him for his assertion of his absolutism it
declared:
“The most advanced zemstvos asked only for the harmony of Czar
and people, free speech, and the supremacy of law over the arbitrariness
of the executive. You were
deceived and frightened by the representations of courtiers and
bureaucrats. Society will
understand perfectly that it was the bureaucracy, which jealously guards
its own omnipotence, that spoke through you.
The bureaucracy, beginning with the Council of Ministers and ending
with the lowest country constable, hates any development, social or
individual, and actively prevents the monarch’s free intercourse with
representatives of his people, except as they come in gala dress,
presenting congratulations, icons, and offerings.
“Your speech proved that any attempt to speak out before the
throne, even in the most loyal form, about the crying needs of the
country, meets only a rough and abrupt rebuff.
Society expected from you encouragement and help, but heard only a
reminder of your omnipotence, giving the impression of utter estrangement
of Czar from [page 58] people. You
yourself have killed your own popularity, and have alienated all that part
of society which is peacefully struggling forward. Some individuals are jubilant over your speech, but you will
soon discover their impotence.
“In another section of society your speech caused a feeling of
injury and depression, which, however, the best social forces will soon
overcome, before proceeding to the peaceful but obstinate and deliberate
struggle necessary to liberty. In another section your words will
stimulate the readiness to struggle against the present hateful state of
things with any means. You
were the first to begin the struggle.
Ere long it will proceed.”
Thus all the nations of “Christendom” are heedlessly stumbling
on in the long-preferred darkness. Even
this fair land of boasted liberty, in many respects so richly favored
above all other nations, is no exception; and it, too, has had many
warnings. Note the almost
prophetic words of its martyr President, Abraham Lincoln, written shortly
before his assassination, to a friend in Illinois.
He wrote:
“Yes, we may all congratulate ourselves that this cruel war is
nearing its close. It has cost a vast amount of treasure and blood.
The best blood of the flower of American youth has been freely
offered upon our country’s altar that the nation might live.
It has been a trying hour indeed for the Republic. But I see in the
near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes me to tremble
for the safety of my country. As
a result of the war, corporations have been enthroned, an era of
corruption in high places will follow, and the money-power of the country
will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the
people until all the wealth is aggregated in a few hands, and the Republic
is destroyed. I feel at this
moment more anxiety for the safety of my country than ever before, even in
the midst of war.”
And again in the year 1896, Representative Hatch of Missouri, in a
speech before Congress in financial and social matters, is reported in the
public press to have said:
[page
59]
“Mark what I say! If
the inexorable law of cause and effect has not been expunged from the
statute book of the Almighty, unless a halt is called very soon, you may
expect to see the horrors of the French Revolution put on the American
stage with all the modern improvements, and that within the next decade.
Nor am I alone. That
gentleman, Astor, who went to England some time ago, bought him a place on
the island and became a British subject, saw what is coming as plainly as
I do, so he took time by the forelock and skipped out when there was not
such a rush for staterooms as there will be after a while.
He knew very well that if things would keep on as you and I have
seen them for some time past the time was not far off when there would be
such a crowd of his class of people hurrying aboard every outgoing steamer
he might be shoved off the gangplank.”
The Hon. H. R. Herbert, Secretary of the U. S. Navy, in a speech at
Cleveland, O., April 30, 1896, used the following language in a very
moderate speech to business men:
“We are entering upon an era of vast enterprises that threaten to
occupy to the exclusion of others all the ordinary avenues of human
progress. The optimist may
tell you that this is to be for the betterment of the conditions of human
life, that large enterprises are to cheapen products, cheapen
transportation. The mammoth
store in which you can get everything you want, and get it cheap, is
everywhere appearing. Industrial
plants with millions of capital behind them are rapidly taking possession
of the field once occupied by smaller enterprises of the same character.
“Human wit seems unable to devise, without dangerously curtailing
the natural liberty of the citizen, any plan for the prevention of these
monopolies, and the effect is the accumulation of vast wealth by the few,
the narrowing of the opportunities of the many, and the breeding of
discontent. Hence conflicts
between labor and capital are to be of greater significance in the future
than in the past.
“There are thoughtful men who predict that out of the antagonisms
between capital and labor is to come a conflict that will be fatal to the
republican government among us, a conflict that will result first in
anarchy and bloodshed and [page 60] then in monarchy under some bold leader who shall be
able by military power to bring order out of chaos.
“Sometimes we are pointed to Socialism as the logical outcome of
the present condition. The first experiments in this direction, it is said, are to
be made in the cities, the employers, with unlimited means at their
command, and the employees, with little opportunity for advancement,
except by the ballot, are to contend with each other, class against class,
for the control of municipal governments.
This is one of the perils of the future...It was once supposed that
the American farmer would forever stand as an immovable bulwark, but a
change has come over the spirit of many of our farmers.”
The ecclesiastical powers of Christendom have also had line upon
line and precept upon precept. They
have been warned by the providential dealings of God with his people in
the past, and by occasional reformers.
Yet few, very few, can read the handwriting on the wall, and they
are powerless to overcome, or even to stay, the popular current. Rev. T.
De Witt Talmage seemed to see and understand to some extent; for, in a
timely discourse, he said:
“Unless the Church of Jesus Christ rises up and proves herself
the friend of the people as the friend of God, and in sympathy with the
great masses, who with their families at their backs are fighting this
battle for bread, the church, as at present organized, will become a
defunct institution, and Christ will go down again to the beach and invite
plain, honest fishermen to come into an apostleship of righteousness—manward
and Godward. The time has
come when all classes of people shall have equal rights in the great
struggle to get a livelihood.”
And yet this man, with a stewardship of talent and influence which
but few possess, did not seem in haste to follow his expressed convictions
as to the duties of influential Christians in the hour of peril.
The warnings go forth, and convictions of duty and privilege fasten
upon many minds; but, alas! all is of no [page 61]
avail; they go unheeded. Great power has been, and to some extent still is, in the
hands of ecclesiastics; but, in the name of Christ and his gospel, it has
been, and still is, selfishly used and abused.
“Honor one of another,” “chief seats in the synagogues,”
and “to be called Rabbi,” Doctor, Reverend, etc., and seeking gain,
each “from his own quarter [or denomination]” (John 5:44; Matt.
23:6-12; Isa. 56:11), and “the fear of man which bringeth a
snare”—these hinder some even of God’s true servants from
faithfulness, while apparently many of the under-shepherds never had any
interest in the Lord’s flock except to secure the golden fleece.
While we gladly acknowledge that many educated cultivated, refined
and pious gentlemen are, and have been, included among the clergy in all
the various denominations of the nominal Church, which all through the age
has included both wheat and tares (Matt. 13:30), we are forced to admit
that many who belong to the “tare” class have found their way into
pulpits as well as into the pews. Indeed
the temptations to pride and vainglory, and in many cases to ease and
affluence, presented to talented young men aspiring to the pulpit, have
been such as to guarantee that it must be so, and that to a large extent.
Of all the professions, the Christian ministry has afforded the
quickest and easiest route to fame, ease and general temporal prosperity,
and often to wealth. The
profession of law requires a lifetime of intellectual energy and business
effort, and brings its weight of pressing care.
The same may be said of the profession of medicine.
And if men rise to wealth and distinction in these professions, it
is not merely because they have quick wits and ready tongues, but because
they have honestly won distinction by close and constant mental
application and laborious effort. On
the other hand, in the clerical profession, a refined, pleasant demeanor,
moderate ability to [page 62] address a public assembly twice a week on some theme
taken from the Bible, together with a moderate education and good moral
character, secure to any young man entering the profession, the respect
and reverence of his community, a comfortable salary and a quiet,
undisturbed and easy life.
If he have superior talent, the people, who are admirers of
oratory, soon discover it, and before long he is called to a more
lucrative charge; and, almost before he knows it, he has become famous
among men, who rarely stop to question whether his piety—his faith,
humility and godliness—have kept pace in development with his
intellectual and oratorical progress.
In fact, if the latter be the case, he is less acceptable,
especially to wealthy congregations, which, probably more frequently than
very poor ones, are composed mostly of “tares.”
If his piety indeed survive the pressure of these circumstances, he
will, too often for the good of his reputation, be obliged to run counter
to the dispositions and prejudices of his hearers, and he will shortly
find himself unpopular and undesired. These circumstances have thus brought into the pulpit a very
large proportion of what the Scriptures designate “hireling
shepherds.” Isa. 56:11; Ezek. 34:2-16; John 10:11-14
The responsibility of those who have undertaken the gospel ministry
in the name of Christ is very great.
They stand very prominently before the people as the
representatives of Christ—as special exponents of his spirit, and
expounders of his truth. And, as a class, they have had advantages above other men for
coming to a knowledge of the truth, and freely declaring it.
They have been relieved from the burdens of toil and care in
earning a livelihood which fetter other men, and, with their temporal
wants supplied, have been granted time, quiet leisure, special education,
and numerous helps of association, etc., for this very purpose. [page 63]
Here, on the one hand, have been these great opportunities for
pious zeal and devoted self-sacrifice for the cause of truth and
righteousness; and, on the other, great temptations, either to indolent
ease, or to ambition for fame, wealth or power.
Alas! the vast majority of the clergy have evidently succumbed to
the temptations, rather than embraced and used the opportunities, of their
positions; and, as a result, they are today “blind leaders of the
blind,” and together they and their flocks are fast stumbling into the
ditch of skepticism. They
have hidden the truth (because it is unpopular), advanced error (because
it is popular) and taught for doctrine the precepts of men (because paid
to do so). They have, in
effect, and sometimes in so many words, said to the people, “Believe
what we tell you on our authority,” instead of directing them to
“prove all things” by the divinely inspired words of the apostles and
prophets, and “hold fast” only “that which is good.”
For long centuries the clergy of the Church of Rome kept the Word
of God buried in dead languages, and would not permit its translation into
the vernacular tongues, lest the people might search the Scriptures and
thus prove the vanity of her pretensions. In the course of time a few
godly reformers arose from the midst of her corruption, rescued the Bible
from oblivion and brought it forth to the people; and a great protestant
movement—protesting against the false doctrines and evil practices of
the Church of Rome—was the result.
But ere long Protestantism also became corrupt, and her clergy
began to formulate creeds to which they have taught the people to look as
the epitomized doctrines of the Bible, and of paramount importance.
They have baptized and catechised them in infancy, before they had
learned to think; then, as they grew to adult years, they have lulled them
to sleep, and given them to understand that their safe [page 64]
course in religious matters is to commit all
questions of doctrine to them, and to follow their instructions,
intimating that they alone had the education, etc., necessary to the
comprehension of divine truth, and that they, therefore, should be
considered authorities
in all such matters without further appeal to God’s Word.
And when any presumed to question this assumed authority and think
differently, they were regarded as heretics and schismatics.
The most learned and prominent among them have written massive
volumes of what they term Systematic Theology, all of which, like the
Talmud among the Jews, is calculated to a large extent to make void the
Word of God, and to teach for doctrine the precepts of men (Matt. 15:6;
Isa. 29:13); and others of the learned and prominent have accepted
honorable and lucrative professorships in Theological Seminaries,
established, ostensibly, to train young men for the Christian ministry,
but in fact to inculcate the ideas of the so-called “Systematic
Theology” of their several schools—to fetter free thought and honest
reverent investigation of the sacred Scriptures with a view to simple
faith in their teachings, regardless of human traditions.
In this way generation after generation of the “clergy” has
pressed along the beaten track of traditional error.
And only occasionally has one been sufficiently awake and loyal to
the truth to discover error and cry out for reform.
It has been so much easier to drift with the popular current,
especially when great men led the way.
Thus the power and superior advantages of the clergy as a class
have been misused, although in their ranks there have been (and still are)
some earnest, devout souls who verily thought they were doing God service
in upholding the false systems into which they had been led, and by whose
errors they also had been in a great measure blinded.
While these reflections will doubtless seem offensive to [page 65]
many of the clergy, especially to the proud and
self-seeking, we have no fear that their candid presentation will give any
offense to any of the meek, who, if they recognize the truth, will be
blessed by a humble confession of the same and a full determination to
walk in the light of God as it shines from his Word, regardless of human
traditions. We rejoice to say
that thus far during the harvest period we have come to know a few
clergymen of this class, who, when the harvest truth dawned upon them,
forsook the error and pursued and served the truth.
But the majority of the clergy, alas! are not of the meek class,
and again we are obliged to realize the force of the Master’s
words—“How hardly shall they that have riches enter into the kingdom
of God!” whether those riches be of reputation, fame, learning, money,
or even common ease.
The common people need not be surprised, therefore, that the clergy
of Christendom, as a class, are blind to the truths due in this time of
harvest, just as the recognized teachers and leaders in the end of the
typical Jewish age were blind and opposed to the truths due in that
harvest. Their blindness is indeed a recompense
for their misused talents and opportunities, and therefore light and truth
cannot be expected from that quarter.
In the end of the Jewish age the religious leaders significantly
suggested to the people the inquiry, “Have any of the rulers or of the
Pharisees believed on him?” (John 7:48) and in accepting their
suggestion and blindly submitting to their leadings, some missed their
privilege, and failed to enter into the blessings of the new dispensation. So it will be with a similar class in these last days of the
Gospel dispensation: those who blindly follow the leading of the clergy
will fall with them into the ditch of skepticism; and only those who
faithfully walk with God, partaking of his spirit, and humbly relying upon
all the testimonies of his precious Word, shall be able
[page 66] to discern and discard the “stubble” of error
which has long been mixed with the truth, and boldly to stand fast in the
faith of the gospel and in loyalty of heart to God, while the masses drift
off in the popular current toward infidelity in its various
forms—Evolution, Higher Criticism, Theosophy, Christian Science,
Spiritism, or other theories denying the necessity and merit of the great
Calvary sacrifice. But those
who successfully stand in this “evil day” (Eph. 6:13) will, in so
doing, prove the metal of their Christian character; for so strong will be
the current against them, that only true Christian devotion to God, zeal,
courage and fortitude will be able to endure to the end.
These oncoming waves of infidelity will surely carry all others
before them. It is written, “A thousand shall fall at thy side and ten
thousand at thy right hand; but it shall not come nigh thee, because thou
hast said, The Lord is my protection, and the most High hast thou made thy
refuge...He that dwelleth in the secret place [of consecration, communion
and fellowship] of the most High, shall abide under the shadow of the
Almighty ...He shall cover thee with his feathers, and under his wings
shalt thou trust: his truth shall be thy shield and buckler.” Psalm 91
Individual Christians cannot shirk their personal responsibility,
placing it upon pastors and teachers, nor upon councils and creeds.
It is by the Word of the Lord that we are judged (John 12:48-50;
Rev. 20:12), and not by the opinions or precedents of our fellowmen in any
capacity. Therefore all should imitate the noble Bereans who “searched
the Scriptures daily” to see if the things taught them were true. (Acts
17:11) It is our duty as
Christians individually to prove all things we accept, and to hold fast
that which is good. “To the
law and to the testimony; if they speak not according to this word, it is
because there is no light in them.” Acts 17:11; 1 Thess. 5:21; Isa. 8:20
[page 67]
The same principle holds good in temporal, as well as in spiritual
things. While the various
ships of state are drifting onward to destruction, those who see the
breakers ahead, while they cannot alter the course of events in general,
can, to some extent at least, seize present opportunities wisely to
regulate their own conduct in view of the inevitable catastrophe; they can
make ready the lifeboats and the life preservers, so that when the ships
of state are wrecked in the surging sea of anarchy, they may keep their
heads above the waves and find a rest beyond.
In other words, the wise policy, to say nothing of principle, in
these days is to deal justly, generously and kindly with our fellowmen in
every rank and condition of life; for the great trouble will spring from
the intense wrath of the angry nations—from the dissatisfaction and
indignation of the enlightened masses of the people against the more
fortunate, aristocratic and ruling classes.
The subjects of dissatisfaction are at present being widely
discussed; and now, before the storm of wrath bursts, is the time for
individuals to make known their principles, not only by their words, but
by their conduct in all their relations with their fellowmen.
Now is the time to study and apply the principles of the golden
rule; to learn to love our neighbors as ourselves, and to act accordingly. If men were wise enough to consider what, in the very near
future, must be the outcome of the present course of things, they would do
this from policy, if not from principle.
In the coming trouble it is but reasonable to presume that, even in
the midst of the wildest confusion, there will be discriminations in favor
of such as have shown themselves just, generous and kind; and extreme
wrath against those who have practiced and defended oppression.
It was so in the midst of the horrors of the French Revolution; and
that it will be so again, is intimated by the counsel of the Word of the
Lord, which says, “Seek righteousness, seek [page 68]
meekness: it may be ye shall be hid in the day of the
Lord’s anger.” “Depart
from evil and do good; seek peace and pursue it.
The eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous, and his ears are open
unto their cry. The face of
the Lord is against them that do evil, to cut off the remembrance of them
from the earth.” (Zeph. 2:3; Psa. 34:14-16)
These words of wisdom and warning are to the world in general. As
for the “saints,” the “little flock,” the “overcomers,” they
are promised that they shall be accounted worthy to escape all those things coming upon the world. Luke 21:36
The
Relationship of the Heathen Nations to Christendom
and
to the Great Tribulation
While the fierce anger of the Lord is to be visited upon the
nations of Christendom specially, because they have sinned against much
light and privilege, the Scriptures clearly show that the heathen nations
have not been without responsibility, and shall not go unpunished.
For many generations and through many centuries they have taken
pleasure in unrighteousness. Their
fathers in ages past forgot God, because they did not like to hold his
righteous authority in remembrance: they loved darkness rather than light,
and wilfully pursued the folly of their own imaginations; and their
descendants have steadily walked on in the same downward course, even to
the present day.
Concerning the responsibility of these nations, the Apostle Paul
(Rom. 1:18-32) tells us very plainly what is the mind of the Lord, saying,
“The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and
unrighteousness of those men who, through injustice suppress the truth;
because the knowledge of God is apparent among them, for God hath shewed
it unto them. For his
invisible things, [page 69] even his eternal power and deity, since the creation
of the world are clearly seen, being perceived by the things that are
made; so that [having this light of nature—i.e., the testimony of nature
as to the existence, power and goodness of God, and of conscience
indicating what is right and what is wrong] they are without excuse [in
pursuing an evil course of life]; because though they knew God [to some
extent at least]; they did not glorify or thank him as God, but became
vain in their reasonings, and their perverse heart was darkened [as the
natural result of such a course]. Assuming
to be wise men, they became fools, and changed the glory of the
incorruptible God into an image-likeness of corruptible man, and of birds,
and of quadrupeds, and of reptiles. Therefore God gave them over, through
the lusts of their hearts for impurity, to dishonor their bodies among
themselves; who exchanged the truth concerning God for a false religion,
and reverenced and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is
worthy of praise forever. Amen!
“On this account God delivered them over to infamous passions
[i.e., God did not strive with or endeavor to reclaim them, but let them
alone to pursue their chosen evil course and to learn from experience its
bitter fruits]... And as they did not choose to retain the knowledge of
God, God gave them over to a worthless mind, to do improper things,
abounding in every iniquity; in wickedness, in covetousness, in malignity;
full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, bad habits; secret slanderers,
revilers, haters of God, insolent, proud, boasters, devisers of evil
things, disobedient to parents, obstinate, covenant breakers, destitute of
natural affection, without pity; who, though they know the ordinance of
God [that those who practice such things are worthy of death], not only
are doing them, but even are approving those who practice them.”
[page 70]
While, as here shown, the heathen nations long ago suppressed what
truth was known in the early ages of the world concerning God and his
righteousness, and preferred darkness rather than light because their
deeds were evil, and out of their evil and vain imaginations invented
false religions which justified their evil ways; and while succeeding
generations have endorsed and justified the evil course of their
forefathers by subscribing to their doctrines and walking in their
footprints, thus also assuming the accumulation of their guilt and
condemnation, on the very same principle that the present nations of
Christendom also assume the obligations of their preceding generations,
yet the heathen nations have not been wholly oblivious to the fact that a
great light has come into the world through Jesus Christ.
Even previous to the coming of Christ the wonderful God of Israel
was known among many heathen nations through his dealings with that
people; and all through the Gospel age the saints of God have been bearing
the good news abroad.
Here and there a few individuals have heeded the truth, but the
nations have disregarded it generally, and walked on in darkness. Therefore “the indignation of the Lord is upon all
nations.” (Isa. 34:2) The
heathen nations are now, without the gospel and its advantages, judged
unworthy of a continued lease of power; while the so-called Christian
nations, with the gospel light and privileges of which they have not
walked worthy, are also, by its standard of truth and righteousness,
judged unworthy of continued power.
Thus every mouth is stopped, and all the world stands guilty before
God. Of all the nations
“there is none that understandeth, there is none that seeketh after God. They are all gone out of the way, they are together become
unprofitable; there is none that doeth good; no, not one.” [page 71]
The justice of God in punishing all nations is manifest; and while
the heathen nations will receive the just reward of their doings, let not
the greater responsibility of Christendom be forgotten; for if the Jews
had “much advantage every way” over the Gentile nations, chiefly in
that unto them were committed the oracles of God (Rom. 3:1,2), what shall
we say of the nations of Christendom, with their still greater advantages
of both the Law and the Gospel? Yet it is true today of Christendom, as it
was then of the Jewish nation, that the name of God is blasphemed among
the heathen through them. (Rom. 2:24)
Note, for instance, the imposition of the liquor and opium traffics
upon the heathen nations, by the greed of the Christian nations for gold.
A reliable witness, who speaks from the personal knowledge wrote,
some time ago, to the New York Voice as follows:
“According to my own observations on the Congo and the West Coast
[Africa], the statement of many missionaries and others, drink is doing
more harm to the natives than the slave trade now or in past times.
That carries off people, destroys villages; this not only slays by
the thousands, but debauches and ruins body and soul, whole tribes, and
leaves them to become the parents of degenerate creatures born in their
own debauched image...All the workmen are given a big drink of rum every
day at noon, and forced to take at least two bottles of gin as pay for
work every Saturday night; at many of the factories, when a one, two or
three years’ contract expires, they are forced to take a barrel of rum
or some cases or demijohns of gin to carry home with them.
Native traders are forced to take casks of liquor in exchange for
native produce, even when they remonstrate, and, gaining no redress, pour
the liquor into the river; traders saying, ‘The niggers must take rum,
we cannot make money enough to satisfy the firm at home by selling them
salt or cloth.’ Towns are
roaring pandemoniums every [page 72] Sunday from drink.
There are villages where every man, woman and child is stupid
drunk, and thus former religious services are broken up.
Chiefs say sadly to missionaries, ‘Why did not you Godmen come
before the drink did? The
drink has eaten out my people’s heads and hardened their hearts: they
cannot understand, they do not care for anything good.’”
It is even said that some of the heathen are holding up the
Christian’s Bible before them, and saying, “Your practices do not
correspond with the teachings of your sacred book.”
A Brahmin is said to have written a missionary, “We are finding
you out. You are not as good
as your Book. If your people
were only as good as your Book, you would conquer India in five years.”
See Ezek. 22:4.
Truly, if the men of Nineveh and the queen of the south shall rise
up in judgment against the generation of Israel which the Lord directly
addressed (Matt. 12:41,42), then Israel and every previous generation, and
the heathen nations shall rise up against this generation of Christendom;
for where much has been given much will be required. Luke 12:48
But, dropping the morally retributive aspect of the question, we
see how, in the very nature of the case, the heathen nations must suffer
in the fall of Christendom, Babylon. Through the influences of the Word of
God, direct and indirect, the Christian nations have made great
advancements in civilization and material prosperity in every line, so
that in wealth, comfort, intellectual development, education, civil
government, in science, art, manufacture, commerce and every branch of
human industry, they are far in advance of the heathen nations which have
not been so favored with the civilizing influences of the oracles of God,
but which, on the contrary, have experienced a steady decline, so that
today they exhibit only the wrecks of their former [page 73]
prosperity. Compare
for example, the Greece of today with ancient Greece, which was once the
seat of learning and affluence. Mark,
too, the present ruins of the glory of ancient Egypt, once the chief
nation of the whole earth.
In consequence of the decline of the heathen nations and the
civilization and prosperity of the Christian nations, the former are all
more or less indebted to the latter for many advantages received—for the
benefits of commerce, of international communication and a consequent
enlargement of ideas, etc. Then,
too, the march of progress in recent years has linked all the nations in
various common interests, which, if seriously unsettled in one or more of
the nations soon affect all. Hence
when Babylon, Christendom, goes down suddenly, the effects will be most
serious upon all the more or less dependent nations, which, in the
symbolic language of Revelation are therefore represented as greatly
bewailing the fall of that great city Babylon. Rev. 18:9-19
But not alone in Babylon’s fall will the heathen nations suffer;
for the swelling waves of social and political commotion will quickly
spread and involve and engulf them all; and thus the whole earth will be
swept with the besom of destruction, and the haughtiness of man will be
brought low; for it is written, “Vengeance is mine: I will repay, saith
the Lord.” (Rom. 12:19; Deut. 32:35)
And the judgment of the Lord upon both Christendom and Heathendom
will be on the strictest lines of equity.
[page 74]
The
Coming Storm
“Oh!
sad is my heart for the storm that is coming;
Like
eagles the scud sweepeth in from the sea;
The
gull seeketh shelter, the pine trees are sighing,
And
all giveth note of the tempest to be.
“A
spell hath been whispered from cave or from ocean,
The
shepherds are sleeping, the sentinels dumb,
The
flocks all scattered on moorland and mountain,
And
no one believes that the Master is come.
“He
has come, but whom doth he find their watch keeping?
Oh!
where—in his presence—is
faith the world o’er?
The
rich, every sense in soft luxury steeping;
The
poor scarce repelling the wolf from the door.
“O
man, and O maiden, drop trifling and pleasure!
O
hark! while I tell of the sorrow to be.
*
* *
As
well might I plead in the path of yon glacier,
Or cry out a warning to wave of the sea!”
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