SCRIPTURE
STUDIES
VOLUME SIX - THE NEW
CREATION
STUDY
XVII
THE RESURRECTION INHERITANCE OF THE NEW CREATION
Eye and Ear of Faith Must be Trained in Order to
Appreciate Spiritual Things
with Distinctness
—
“As All in Adam Die, Even so all in Christ
Shall be Made Alive”
—
The After Resurrection to Life
—
Anastasis
—
Re-standing
or Resurrection
—
Not a Judgment, or Trial, for Past Sins, But Another Trial for Life
—
“Accounted Worthy to Attain
Resurrection”
—
Punishment for Sins of This Life
—
“Some Men’s Sins
go Before to
Judgment”
—
“Thus is the [Chief] Resurrection of the [Special] Dead”
—
“It Doth not yet Appear What We Shall be”
—
“We
Shall be Like Him.”
ONLY in proportion as the eye of faith and the ear of
faith are trained through the divine Word, are the New Creatures enabled
to appreciate with any distinctness the grandeur and glories of their
future inheritance. They
cannot even begin to appreciate these as natural men, nor can they do so
until a full consecration has been made, and the holy Spirit has been
received as an earnest of the future.
Up to that time their knowledge of the future, even after they have
come into fellowship with God by faith and justification, is represented
in the Levites, who, though acceptable worshipers and servants of the
Tabernacle, were not permitted to enter into it and offer incense at its
golden altar, nor even to behold its grandeur.
Whatever knowledge the Levites might have of the glories of the
“Holy,” its candlestick and the light therefrom, its table of
shewbread, its golden altar and incense, was what he learned of these from
the consecrated priests, who alone had access to it.
Addressing these Royal Priests of the New Creation the Apostle
shows that, even with their fullest attainment of grace and knowledge and
faith and spiritual sight, they will not in the present life be able to
comprehend with clearness the things of the future, but must still accept
them by faith. [page 694] His words are, “It doth not yet appear what we
shall be, but we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him, for
we shall see him as he is.” (1 John 3:2)
This is satisfactory to the Lord’s people, for though they might
without impropriety be curious to know full particulars respecting their
spiritual bodies, shape, size, elements, etc., they can well imagine that
the new conditions will be so different from present conditions as to be
beyond the power of human brain to comprehend, no matter how particular
the description given. But
the whole question is settled with the assurance that the Church shall be
like her Lord, and see him—not as he was in the days of his humiliation,
the man Christ Jesus, nor as he appeared to the disciples after his
resurrection, robed in flesh in various forms, with various garments—but
see him “as he is,” behold his glory, and be like him, sharing his
glory. This is sufficient.
However, we are glad that the Lord did lift the veil to some slight
extent, permitting us a brief glance at the new conditions of our future
inheritance in the description of the First Resurrection, as given us by
the Apostle Paul. (1 Cor. 15:41-44) The
entire chapter is deeply interesting to every member of the New
Creation—not only the verses which relate to the First Resurrection, by
which the Church, the little flock, the Royal Priesthood, will be
perfected and enter into the joys of the Lord, but also by reason of its
suggestions respecting the world’s future hope.
Indeed, although the Apostle addressed his epistle to the saints
and not to others, nevertheless to have described the First Resurrection
only might have justified some in supposing that no blessing worthy of
mention remains for the world of mankind, or it might have justified
others in the thought that the resurrection of the world would be similar
and merely later on. The
mention of the two resurrections is specially helpful, therefore, as
corroborating the Scriptural testimony that God has a special portion
reserved in heaven for the Church—a spiritual portion—and that he has
an earthly portion which will in due time be revealed, and [page 695]
proffered to the world in general.
Because of this relationship between the First Resurrection of the
blessed and holy, the Church (Rev. 20:6), and the subsequent resurrection
of all men who will eventually accept God’s favor, it will be advisable
for us to take this subject just as the Apostle presents it, and consider
both resurrections.
“As
All in Adam Die, Even so All in Christ
Shall
Be Made Alive”
—1
Cor. 15:22—
This declaration is set forth as the conclusion of the Apostle’s
argument preceding it. He
disputes with some disposed to deny the resurrection of the dead, which he
affirms. He points out that their contention is irrational, because if the
dead cannot rise, then is not Christ risen from the dead; and if Christ be
not risen from the dead we have no Savior, no Advocate, no helper, and the
case of both the Church and the world is hopeless.
The penalty for sin being death,
it was necessary that Christ should die
for our sins, according to the Scriptures; but if he never arose from the
dead, our case is as hopeless as though he had never undertaken our
redemption, because, even if mankind were freed from the curse of Adam’s
transgression, freed from the death
sentence, it still would be in a hopeless condition, needing restoration;
and in order to obtain that, it would need the Great Physician, the great
Restorer.
After laying the strongest imaginable emphasis upon the necessity
of Christ’s resurrection, as well as upon death, saying, “If Christ be
not risen your faith is vain, ye are yet in your sins.
Then they also which are fallen asleep in Christ are
perished”—the Apostle proceeds to deal with the subject as proven, as
settled beyond all controversy, saying, “But now is Christ risen from
the dead, and become the first-fruits of them that slept.”
Having thus demonstrated his subject, and established the faith of
his readers in the general truth that a resurrection is not only possible,
but necessary, and that the proof of
[page 696] this lies in the fact that our Lord did not merely
pretend to be dead, but really “died
for our sins,” and as really arose from the dead, he points out that it
is on this basis of faith that we are privileged to think of our race as
dead in Adam—not as extinct, not as really dead, but as sleeping. We are
privileged to hope for them, according to the Lord’s promise, that in
the morning—the resurrection morning—they will all be awakened from
their slumbers, and come forth to more favorable conditions than those of
the present time—to a condition in which sin and death will not reign;
to a condition in which Satan will not have the power of death, but will
be bound; and in which the Redeemer will have full power, and will
exercise that power to the releasing of the prisoners from the great
prison-house of death. This uplifting will be for such of them as, under
those favorable conditions, shall hear (obey) his voice, and walk in the
highway of holiness, up, up, up, out of the valley of the shadow of death
to the full perfection of life and peace and blessing originally provided
for them by their Creator, but which they lost through father Adam’s
disobedience, and are to regain through the merit of the second Adam and
by obedience to him. This leads the Apostle up to the proposition (verse 21) that
it is God’s plan that “since by man
came death, by man
should also come the resurrection of the dead.” There is no mistaking the Apostle’s meaning, that the first
man through whom came death was Adam, and that the second man by whom
comes the resurrection is “the man Christ Jesus,” who declared in the
days of his flesh, “My flesh I will give for the life of the world.” And again, speaking of the intended results of this
sacrifice, he said, “I am the resurrection and the life.” John 6:51;
11:25
The declaration of our common version Bible, that “As in Adam all
die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive,” is manifestly a
mistranslation. Standing in
that form it is in conflict with other scriptures, which distinctly limit
the number of those who shall be made alive through Christ. The mistranslation favors the doctrine of
universal salvation, [page 697] in that it seems to imply that God’s favor and
blessing through Christ will not in any sense of the word take into
consideration the characters of those to whom life shall be given.
Other scriptures, however, make very clear that not all shall
“enter into life,” but only those who “do the will of the Father
which is in heaven.” A
plain statement on the subject is found in the Lord’s words, “He that
hath the Son hath life; and he that hath not the Son of God hath not life.” 1 John
5:12
Many, in reading this text, fail to give proper force to the words,
“Be made alive.”
They think of the passage as signifying merely an awakening from
the sleep of death; but its meaning is much more comprehensive and more
precious than this. The death
that came through Adam was not merely the loss of the little fragment of
life which the world possesses today; but the loss of life in its
completest sense and fullest measure, in which Adam possessed it as the
representative of the entire human family.
As “die” meant the loss of all life, and Adam’s dying began
at once after his sentence, so to be “made alive” would mean not
merely a start back toward perfect life and out of death, but would
properly be understood to mean restoration to full perfection of life such
as Adam had before sin—to be made alive in the sense of being lifted up
out of death. It is proper that this full meaning of the word “life”
should be apprehended in considering this text, and we should remember
that from the Lord’s standpoint the entire race of Adam is dead; not
merely those who have gone into the tomb, but those also who are on their
way thither. Our Lord’s
estimate of life and death is illustrated by his words, “Let the dead
bury their dead; go thou and preach the Gospel.” (Matt. 8:22)
Here unbelievers are referred to as still dead, because of having
no union with the Life-giver; while the believers are equally referred to
as alive, though they are saved from death as yet only by hope, and cannot
experience the actual delivery from the power of death until the
resurrection. 2 Cor. 1:10; Rom. 8:24 [page 698]
The
After Resurrection to Life
We translate this text properly when we render it: “As all in
Adam die, even so all in Christ shall be made alive.” Only those vitally
connected with Adam died because of his sin.
Satan, although the father of lies and a murderer from the
beginning, did not die on account of Adam’s sin, because he was not in
Adam when the latter was condemned to death; likewise the angels which
kept not their first estate shared not in Adamic death, because they were
not in
Adam. The Apostle’s point is that Adam was the father, or
life-giver, of a race, and that by disobedience he, and the race which was
in his loins as well, inherited death conditions which hurry them to the
tomb more or less rapidly. Now,
then, as all who were in
Adam shared his sentence and condemnation, even so all in
Christ will share divine favor through him.
Adam’s race was in him actually and legally, without any choice
or volition—in him by nature. Those
in Christ come into him by
grace — individually and on conditions. Under the divine arrangement the redemption
of Adam from condemnation of death will ultimately affect all of his race,
to the extent of releasing them from the sentence of death, and to the
further extent of furnishing them the light, the knowledge and the
opportunity of coming into Christ; but it will be only those who will avail themselves
of this privilege, and come into Christ, that will be made alive,
in the full, proper sense of that word—lifted up out of death
completely. Adam’s wife was of him and represented by him, as well as were his children in
his loins: and so it is with Christ. His bride, or Church, is first
developed and gets life of his life; and later on the world, awakened from
the “sleep” of death and brought to a knowledge of the Truth during
the Millennium, will be privileged to come into him, as their “father” by consecration (Isa. 9:6); and
if they abide in this relationship it will mean their development to full
restitution of human perfection—to all that was lost in the first Adam.
Thus all in Christ will be brought
to perfection of
[page 699] life—“made alive”
in the absolute and complete sense. They
were in the first life-giver by nature, and failed through his failure. They will shortly be granted the opportunity of coming into
relationship with the second Adam, or life-giver, and if as proper
children they will obey his voice they shall live—be made alive.
This interpretation, and no other, fits the text to the context.
The Apostle progresses with the argument: After saying, “Even so all in
Christ shall be made alive,” he adds, “But every man in his own
order.” He mentions as the
first order, the Church, the Bride, the body of Christ, “the Christ,”
“the first-fruits,” the First Resurrection. (Phil. 3:10) These come
into relationship with Christ during this Gospel age under its “high
calling,” and constitute Christ’s “peculiar treasure,” and are to
be granted life on a special plane with the added glory, honor and
immortality here seen, and later to be more fully shown.
“Afterward,” declares the Apostle, as of a different order, the
remainder of those found
worthy of life shall be made alive, or lifted up completely out of
sin and death. The lifting up
of this second class will be the work of the Millennial age; their being
“made
alive” will be a gradual operation, attained by the close of
that period. An
exception—and therefore, perhaps, properly to be called another order or
band—will be the overcomers of the period previous to Pentecost, the
faithful ancient worthies, referred to by the Apostle. (Heb. 11:39,40)
These having been approved of God, “having obtained a good
report”—their trial having already taken place, it will be unnecessary
that their restitution out
of death and into
life should be a gradual work.
Their shortcomings went before to judgment.
Their resurrection, therefore, will be an instantaneous one, yet of
a different order or band or class from the Christ, Head, and body.
Following the resurrection of the ancient worthies to full
perfection of human mind and body, as the first order of natural man, we
may expect resurrection work to commence with the nations, or people of
the earth, at the time
[page 700] of the establishment of the Kingdom—really
nine-tenths dead, but by general usage called alive. Though not in their graves they will be from the divine
standpoint dead, and the life-giving, or restitution, processes will at
once begin with them. The
Lord’s Kingdom, operating in the world, and ruling it under laws of
righteousness and love, will be clearly before them; and the knowledge of
the Lord will fill the whole earth for their enlightenment.
They will then have full opportunity of choosing righteousness,
obedience and everlasting life; or of choosing unrighteousness,
disobedience to the voice of the Son of Man, and who become amenable to
the requirements of the Kingdom for their uplifting, will ever attain to
full restitution, full perfection, life.
After these shall have been started in the way of life, some of
those in the great prison-house of death, the tomb, will be called forth,
awakened, to be treated in precisely the same manner.
As the world becomes ready to receive them, others, and still
others, shall come forth from the tomb to enjoy those blessed
opportunities of restitution, resurrection, provided for them by God’s
grace through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.
But in every case the test will be the same: “He that will not
hear [obey] that prophet [the Christ] shall be cut off from amongst his
people [in the Second Death—“shall not see life”]. He who
hears that prophet, on the contrary, shall be lifted up inch by inch, step
by step, out of the death condition, until in Christ and fully
subordinated to him, he shall attain to life in its fullness, in its completeness.
The question will arise with some, Will it not be necessary that
every member of the human family shall go down into the tomb before
experiencing the powers of that resurrection? We answer that it will be
necessary for all those who will have part in the First Resurrection to go
down into actual death before participating in that resurrection’s
blessings, because such was their covenant, and such was the Lord’s
promise to them: “Be thou faithful unto death,
[page 701] and I will give thee a crown of life.”
It was necessary that the Lord, the Captain of our salvation,
should not only make consecration unto death as a living sacrifice, but
necessary also that he should complete that consecration in actual death.
And the same principle applies to the entire Church which is his
body, and which must “fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of
Christ, in order to be participators with him in the glory and blessing of
“his
resurrection,” the First Resurrection.
But as concerns the world of mankind, it is not necessary that they
should all go first into the tomb before participating in restitution,
resurrection, uplifting.
As we have already seen, the whole world, from the divine
standpoint, has been reckoned as dead ever since the condemnation came
upon Adam because of disobedience. The whole world is in prison at the
present time, shackled with weaknesses, mental, physical and moral.
There are different wards in this prison, and those whom men call
alive, but whom God calls dead (in trespasses and sins, and under divine
sentence), are, so to speak, still walking in the prison-yard, and have
not yet been shut up in their cells, the tomb; but they are in prison, and
none of them can break away from the fetters of death which are upon them.
If the order for release of all prisoners were sent to a jailer we
would understand it to apply, not only to those who were shut up in their
cells, but to all who were in any sense of the word behind the prison bars
and under his power and control as the jailer.
Just so it is with death, the great jailer.
He has committed millions of the race to the tomb, and other
hundreds of millions are still at partial liberty in the prison-yard, but
firmly and securely kept, and doing service with groans and travailings,
waiting for the deliverance.
The Lord does not explain the particulars of how those who have
gone into the prison precincts of the tomb shall be brought forth, so that
they may hear the voice of the Son of Man, and by obeying they may live.
(John 5:25) We may not,
therefore, arbitrarily decide just what the nature of the
[page 702] procedure will be.
Evidently it is not necessary for us to understand the particulars
of this matter. Nevertheless,
it is interesting for us to think of it, and we may assume that it will
not be offensive to the Lord that we should imagine a little respecting
the procedure. Our conjecture
has already been briefly stated,* that
each one who is the recipient of favor, as he grows in knowledge and in
love will be desirous of co-operating as much as possible in the blessing
of others, especially those near to him of kin, and that the general
channel of approach to the Lord on the subject would be by prayer and
preparation, in response to which the awakenings will take place.
We surmise that the world will then approach the “Royal
Priesthood” for help in sickness, etc., even as the Jews typically
applied to the Mosaic priesthood. Hence
prayer will be the usual channel for blessings.
—————
*Vol. IV, chap. xiii. p. 640.
Anastasis—Re-Standing
or Resurrection
The real meaning of resurrection, as a promise set before us in the Scriptures, has
been very generally lost sight of, partly because our English word
resurrection is used in a variety of ways.
For instance, it is not uncommon to speak of “resurrecting” an
article of clothing which had been for a time laid aside; and when a
graveyard is abandoned it is common to speak of “resurrecting” the
corpses which had been buried therein for removal and reburial.
Approaching more closely to the legitimate use of the word, many
Christian people speak of the resurrection
of Lazarus, the resurrection of the son of the widow of Nain, the resurrection
of Jairus’ daughter, etc., and carry the same thought in their minds
when they speak of the resurrection promises of the Scriptures, to take
place in the morning of the Millennial age. This grievous mistake has
greatly beclouded all thought upon this important subject.
It is not true that Lazarus and the others mentioned were
resurrected; they were merely awakened, reanimated.
There is a wide difference between [page 703] a mere awakening and a full, complete resurrection
out of death to perfection of life. To
awaken signifies merely to start again the machinery of
life—resuscitation—and this is all that was done for Lazarus or for
the son of the widow of Nain, or for Jairus’ daughter.
They were still under the sentence of death, and merely experienced
a little prolongation of the present dying conditions.
They were not lifted up, raised up out of death into perfect life
conditions.
The word “resurrection,” as found in the English New Testament,
is derived from the Greek word anastasis in every except one (Matt. 27:53, where it is from the
Greek, egersis, and should properly be translated, resurgence,
or reanimation). The word anastasis,
which occurs forty-three times in the New Testament, signifies to stand
again, or to raise
up again. It is never
used concerning the raising of a corpse to a standing position out of a
tomb, nor does it mean the mere revivifying or starting afresh the
machinery of life. It means something far more important. It is used as the antithesis, or opposite, of death—the
recovery out of death. To get
a proper view of the meaning of anastasis we must have first of all a proper view of what
constitutes life from the divine standpoint.
We must then see what constitutes dying and death; and with these
two thoughts before our minds we may grasp the thought of resurrection, or
raising up again out of death into the full perfection of life from which
we all in Adam fell.
Only two men ever possessed life: first, Adam, before his
transgression, before he brought upon himself the curse or sentence of
death and its processes of dying; and, second, the man Christ Jesus.
The moment the death sentence was pronounced against Adam his life
was forfeited, the dying process began, and he was in death—hence
no longer in life.
He kept sinking lower and lower into death, until finally he was
completely dead, as he was judicially dead from the moment of the
sentence. Adam’s posterity
has never had life; the spark which flickers for a few years not being
recognized of God, in view of the fact that the death sentence rests upon
all, and in view of the fact that those born into [page 704]
the world do not receive life in the full sense of
that word, but merely a dying condition.
As already pointed out the whole world is already dead, from the
standpoint of Justice; and God recognizes as having life (even reckonedly)
only those who have become united to the Son of God, the Redeemer of men,
the Life-giver.
If this thought of what constitutes life and what constitutes dying
be kept in mind—if it be remembered from what a glorious height and
perfection of life man fell into the present condition of degradation and
death—then, and then only, can the meaning of the word anastasis
be rightly appreciated as signifying a standing again, a
raising up again to the condition from which the fall took place
to the condition of perfection in which father Adam was created.
It is to this condition of perfection that God proposes to bring
all who will of the world of mankind through Christ.
The condition is that when brought to the knowledge of the Truth
they shall accept divine favor, and demonstrate their loyalty by obedience
to the spirit of the divine Law.
This word anastasis
is never used in connection with the mere resuscitation of the dead.
A careful examination of the forty-three texts of Scripture in
which this word anastasis
occurs will find them all in absolute accord with the definition and
signification here attached to the word—a re-standing, a re-covery
from death, a re-entrance
into perfect life. One text
alone out of the forty-three might be considered obscure by some: it is
found in Heb. 11:35. There anastasis is rendered
“raised to life again.” The
entire statement reads, “Women received their dead raised to life again.”
The general supposition regarding these words seems to be that the
Apostle referred to the two women whose sons were revivified, one by the
Prophet Elijah and the other by the Prophet Elisha. (1 Kings 17:17-23; 2
Kings 4:18-37) We dissent
from this view for two reasons:
(1) It is not in accord with the significance of the word anastasis, as indicated by
the other forty-two uses of the word in the New Testament. [page 705]
(2) Because such an interpretation would not so well agree with the
argument of the Apostle in Heb. 11. The
argument set forth is the faith of the ancient worthies in God and in a
future resurrection, which should be rewarded after the glorification of
the Church, as specified in verse 40. The “better resurrection” which
they might hope for, and which constituted the basis of their faith, is
still future, as declared in verse 39—they “received not the
promise”—they did not receive the reward; hence, any awakening
of their sleeping ones was not the reward, not the promise for which they
were seeking. The Apostle has
been mentioning Gideon, Balak, Samson, Jephthah, David, Samuel and the
prophets, who accomplished wonderful things under the Lord’s power and
in accord with their faith, hazarding, and in many instances sacrificing,
their lives in the Lord’s service. The women had less opportunity in
these respects, and yet the Apostle would have us know that the wives,
mothers and daughters in Israel, whose faith in the Lord was such as to
lead them to sympathize and cooperate with the men who engaged in these
warfares and sacrifices, were participants with their husbands, sons and
fathers; and by encouraging them to faithfulness became sharers with them
in the sacrifices of faith, and by faith looked forward into the future
and realized the better resurrection that would ultimately come to the
Lord’s faithful. Looking by
the eye of faith down into the future, they in
faith received their dead raised
to life again, or “by resurrection.” (R.V.) And who will dispute that if the faith of Abraham, when
willing to offer up his son Isaac, was acceptable to God, the faith of
wives, mothers and daughters in Israel, who fully entered into the spirit
of the male representatives in the sufferings, wars, endurances, etc.,
would be equally pleasing to the Lord; and would it not indicate that if
possessed of masculine powers they too would have been valiant in fight,
faithful in trials of cruel mockings and scourgings and of bonds and
imprisonment, etc? Such women
(probably few, as were the men whom the Apostle described) were no doubt
[page 706] approved of the Lord also, and will doubtless be
granted a part in the “better resurrection” provided by the Lord for
these ancient worthies.
While anastasis
signifies raising again, completely, out of death, it in no sense of the
word limits the process so as to make it either instantaneous or gradual.
As a matter of fact, we note that our Lord’s resurrection was an
instantaneous one from death to the perfection of life, while the world in
general is to have a gradual resurrection, or raising up to life, which
will occupy a large proportion of a thousand years, appointed for this
resurrection, or restitution, work. Neither does anastasis change the
nature of the being that shall be raised up, for the raised-up one will be
of the same nature as when he died. The
Apostle points this out in his discourse on the subject, assuring us that
in the resurrection the Lord will give to every seed its own appropriate
kind of body. (1 Cor. 15:35-38) A
human
being having gone down into death, resurrection processes would not change
his nature, according to the meaning of this word anastasis. It simply
signifies that the being that is in death is the being who is to be made
to stand up in life again.
Here we note the harmony of the Scripture teaching that (1) our
Lord Jesus changed his nature when he left the glory of the Father, and
became a man, taking our nature; (2) that he changed his nature again when
he sacrificed himself as a man, and was begotten as a New Creature at
the time of his baptism at thirty years of age.
It was this New Creature, no longer earthly, but heavenly, that was
resurrected on the third day and received a body as it pleased the
Father—a spirit body, a body of suitable kind.
He was raised up completely out of death to perfection of life on
the plane to which he was previously begotten.
Similarly the Church, the New Creation, under and associated with
her Lord, the Head, is to have part in the same resurrection; and because
they are counted as members of his body they are said to have part in
“his resurrection”—the First Resurrection (chief, most important).
They, too, are “begotten again,”
[page 707] “begotten
of the Spirit” as New Creatures—therefore their different
resurrection.
The natural man, who does not become a New Creature, who does not
experience a begetting again to a new nature, remains a natural man, and
his anastasis,
or standing up again, will signify his uplift as a human being to the full
perfection of the human nature, from which the whole race fell
representatively in the person of Adam.
The “better resurrection” for which the Apostle tells us the
ancient worthies hoped, will not be the First Resurrection, which is
limited to those called during the Gospel age—Christ the Head and the
Church his body. The “better resurrection” which these ancient worthies
will receive, superior to that of their fellow-creatures, will consist in
its being an instantaneous resurrection to human perfection, at the
beginning of the Millennial age, instead of a gradual resurrection “by
judgments” during that age. This
will permit them to be the honored servants of the Christ, the servants of
the Kingdom, during the Millennium, and, as perfect men, to be made
“princes [chiefs] in all the earth.” (Psalm 45:16)
It will be the privilege of these worthies to administer the laws
of the Kingdom, as the agents and representatives of the spiritual Christ,
unseen of men. Their
blessing, therefore, above their fellows,*
will be twofold; first, in that their trial is in the past, and that their
reward of perfection will be instantaneous, giving them, by reason of
this, nearly a thousand years of advantage over others; and second,
because, under the Lord’s providence, this will permit them to
participate in the great work of restitution and blessing as the earthly phase of the Kingdom, the human agents, or
channels, through whom the Christ will largely operate.
—————
*The great company, although they cannot
be counted in as participants of the First Resurrection, and sharers of
its glory, honor and immortality, nor counted in with the ancient
worthies, must, nevertheless, be counted as overcomers even though the
overcoming be through great tribulation.
And as overcomers, they must be esteemed to pass from death unto
life, and, therefore, to be subjects of an instantaneous resurrection, and
not a gradual one, as in the case of the world, whose trial is future.
[page 708]
The anastasis
of the world in general will be dependent, in the case of each individual,
upon his own progress on the “highway” of holiness.*
As the Master explained, “All that are in their graves shall hear
the voice of the Son of Man, and shall come
forth.” But the
coming forth is merely the awakening in the case of those whose judgment,
or trial, shall not have been previously passed successfully; and as only
the overcomers of this Gospel age will come forth to the First
Resurrection, and the overcomers of the past ages to a better resurrection
on the human plane, the remainder of the world will come forth, as the
Lord has declared, to a resurrection by judgment. John 5:29+
In John 5:25, our Lord indicates how the passing from death to life
is to be accomplished, saying, “The hour cometh, and now is, when the
dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, and they that hear shall
live.” Bearing in mind that
the whole world is dead from the divine standpoint, we see that the
apostles and the early Church were called out of this dead world, and as
members of it were granted the opportunity of hearing the message of life
from the Son of God. In
proportion as they gave heed they came into closer and closer vital
relationship with the Life-giver: and so all who have become one with him
from that day to the present have heard [obeyed] his voice, his message,
and proportionally have come into his favor and will share his [page
709]
rewards. Similar
will be the procedure of the coming age: “The knowledge of the Lord
shall fill the whole earth,” and “There shall be no need to say to
one’s neighbor, Know thou the Lord, for all shall know him, from the
least unto the greatest.” “All
that are in their graves shall come forth,” shall be awakened that they
may “hear the voice of the Son of God, and they that hear [obey] shall
live.”
—————
*Vol. I, p. 205.
+The rendering of our Common
Version, “resurrection of damnation,” is a serious error which has
greatly assisted in beclouding the minds of many respecting the true
import of this passage. Many
seem to gather from it the thought that some will be resurrected merely to
be damned or condemned again. The
very reverse of this is the truth. The
word rendered “damnation” in this verse is the Greek word krisis,
which occurs repeatedly in the same chapter and is properly rendered
judgment. It should be so rendered in this case, and is so rendered in
the Revised Version.
As with the Gospel Church of the present time, the hearing of the
voice of the Son of God is a gradual matter, line upon line, precept upon
precept, so it will be with the world during the Millennial age.
The obedient will gradually come to a clearer and clearer
appreciation of the lengths and breadths and heights and depths of divine
love and justice and provision. But
those who will obey that great Teacher’s commands will not then receive
persecutions and oppositions, as do those who seek to follow his Word now,
for then Satan will be bound, and the laws of the Kingdom will be in
force, and those who are in accord with righteousness will be blessed and
uplifted, and those who would fight against the Kingdom and oppose its
rule in any particular will, after reasonable trial, be esteemed despisers
of the grace of God, and will be cut off from amongst the people. Acts
3:23; Isa. 65:20
We see, then, that the declaration of our Lord of a general
awakening of the dead signifies a great blessing, the fruit of his
redemptive work. We see that
those who have done good, who shall come forth unto “the resurrection of
life”—that
is, who will come forth in the resurrection fully alive—can refer only
to overcoming classes, the Church, the ancient worthies, and the great
company. These alone can be said to have done good, done well in the
Lord’s estimation—passed divine approval.
We should not understand the expression “done good” to mean
done perfectly, up to the divine standard in thought, word and deed,
because the Apostle expressly explains to us that “there is none
righteous, no, not one,” in all these particulars.
The nearest approach to righteousness which is possible to any of
us is purity of heart—righteousness of intention. [page 710]
The remainder of the world are all included together in the term
“they that have done evil”—who have not been acceptable to God. This includes not only those who have not been acceptable as
heathen, because they have not known the great Redeemer, and, therefore,
have not been privileged to approach the Father through him, but it
includes, also, all those who have heard something respecting Jesus, and
who have understood something respecting his reconciling work, and who,
possessing this knowledge in various degrees, have not responded to the
privileges and opportunities accorded them—have not consecrated
themselves fully, completely. All
these, from the divine standpoint, have “done evil”—they are
disapproved.
It will be noted at once that this class includes many “highly
esteemed amongst men,” both in and out of nominal church systems—many
of the noble, the wise, the rich, the great and the learned.
It surely must cause our hearts to rejoice, then, that the Lord has
provided for the awakening of these also, and that although they will not
“come forth” unto the life-resurrection they will “come forth” to
have the opportunities of participation in the gradual resurrection by
judgments that during the Millennial age, the thousand-year day of
judgment,* or trial, they may stand their
tests under such favorable conditions as God’s Word has indicated.
They shall hear the voice of the Son of God—not the jargon of
conflicting creeds, as expressed by the different sects of Christendom and
of the world. It will be a
pure language, or a pure message, that will be given to them. (Zeph. 3:9)
Their blind eyes shall all be opened; their deaf ears shall all be
unstopped; they shall hear; they shall know; and it will be entirely their
own fault if they do not profit by the joyful message and lay hold upon
the favors of God extended to them through the Life-giver, the Christ, and
thus step by step, inch by inch, gain victories over their weaknesses and
imperfections, mental, moral and physical, until, [page
711] in the close of their judgment, or trial time, they
shall have attained to life-conditions—perfection—to all that was lost
in Adam and redeemed by the precious blood of Christ.
—————
*Vol. I, p. 137.
Not
a Judgment, or Trial, for Past Sins; but
Another
Trial for Life
We are to remember that the trials and testings which will then be
upon the world in general will not be in the nature of trials to which
criminals are subjected in the present time, when the Court and jury sift
the evidence to ascertain whether or not the culprit is guilty, and, if
so, what the punishment should be. There
is no question respecting the guilt of our race, and no trial or judgment
is proposed to ascertain whether man was guilty of disobedience to God,
nor to ascertain whether or not God’s penalty of death was a just one.
The judgment, or trial, of the Millennial age will be along totally
different lines, and would correspond more nearly to the treatment of a
child whom the parent had found guilty and worthy of stripes, and to whom
the stripes had been administered, and who, after receiving his punishment
would be asked by the parent: “Now, do you acknowledge your fault?
Do you acknowledge the justice of the punishment you have received?
and are you willing henceforth to be an obedient child?” Upon an affirmative answer the parent might say—“We will
see! I will judge, or try, or
test you during today, and if I find you sincerely repentant and earnestly
desirous of doing my will, I will by evening bring you back into full
fellowship, and grant you all the privileges which you had before the
transgression.” Such is the nature of the judgment, or trial, of the
next age—a trial to ascertain which members of the guilty world, after
having suffered the wages of sin, death, for six thousand years, with
groans and travailings of pain shall have learned the lesson of the
exceeding sinfulness of sin, and the great blessing that attends
righteousness, and shall desire to be conformed to the will of God in all
things. [page 712]
Obedience will be enforced from the beginning, and only those who
positively refuse to make progress will be cut off even after a hundred
years of trial; such as make even outward progress, and conform outwardly
to the laws of the Kingdom, will be permitted to go on, and be granted
opportunities of growing in grace, in knowledge and in love. But in the
end of the Millennial age there will come a crucial test of all—not in
respect to their outward conduct, which must have been good, else they
could not have maintained their position, but would have been previously
cut off from life, in the Second Death.
This final test will be in respect to their heart
loyalty to the principles of righteousness. All will be tested in
this regard; and all not found thoroughly loyal and obedient to the Lord
will be cut off in the Second Death—will be permitted to go no further
in the enjoyment of the divine favors.
But how gracious the divine provision thus made!
How long-suffering does this divine plan show our heavenly Father
and our Redeemer to be toward the children of men!
Surely such patience and forbearance will attract to the Lord all
who will be worthy of life everlasting; and as respects the destruction of
others, all in accord with the Lord will be prepared to say, in the
language of inspiration, “True and righteous are thy judgments, Lord God
Almighty!” Rev. 15:7
Accounted
Worthy to Attain Resurrection
From this standpoint we see a meaning in the Lord’s words,
“They that shall be accounted worthy to attain that world and the
resurrection.” (Luke 20:35) Extremely
few, a “little flock” only, are counted worthy to attain that world
and the “better” resurrection in advance of the Millennium. The great
mass of mankind, including those to whom the Lord addressed these words,
will come forth unto “resurrection by judgment,” and then it will
remain for them to prove themselves worthy of perfect life, which alone
will be permitted to endure beyond the Millennial age into the everlasting
ages of the future. The
obedient [page 713] only will be permitted to attain to resurrection,
being lifted fully and completely out of death—a gradual progress, and
gradual attainment. As we
have already seen, those who will then walk on the highway of holiness
must “go up
thereon.” It will be an
upward, ascending path, and require effort and overcoming on the part of
those who would retrieve all that was lost—human perfection.
As we closely scrutinize this feature of the divine plan, we are
amazed at its reasonableness and consistency, and the advantages it will
offer to those for whom it is provided.
We can readily see, for instance, that any other plan would be to
the disadvantage of those for whom the Millennial advantages are specially
designed. Take for instance,
Nero. Suppose that he were given an instantaneous resurrection to
life—suppose that he should “come forth” from the tomb perfect,
mentally, morally and physically: that would not be Nero.
That perfect being could not in any sense of the word identify
himself with the Nero of the past; nor could those who had been his
associates identify him. Neither could we imagine him to “come forth” perfect as
respects human organism, and yet imperfect in mind and character. All who
have learned even the first principles of the laws of physiology, must see
at once the absurdity of such a proposition. Those laws most distinctly
teach us that character and organism are one; that a perfect organism
would surely indicate a perfect character.
But if we should, for the moment, assume either of these
unreasonable propositions we would at once be met with the objection that
a thousand years would be too long a period in which to test the obedience
or disobedience of a perfect being.
Adam, as a perfect being, received a very brief trial, so far as we
may judge from the Scriptures.
Further, if we could imagine the world perfect and on trial, we
would be obliged to imagine them also as subjected to the perfect law; and
that being without imperfections they would also be without any screen, or
covering of blemishes, and therefore in the very same position that [page 714]
Adam stood at the beginning, in his trial.
In this view of things there would be no necessity for Christ’s
Mediatorial Kingdom and reign of a thousand years; because the perfect law
represents divine justice, the same that dealt with Adam in the beginning,
and the same that must pass upon mankind in the end—at the close of the
Millennium, ere the world could be accepted by God to everlasting favor.
Such views, we see therefore, are entirely at variance with the
divine arrangement.
Let us now notice the beauty and harmony and reasonableness and
consistency of the divine plan of a resurrection by judgments.
(1) The world coming forth in practically the same mental, moral
and physical condition in which they entered the tomb, would at once
identify themselves personally and in relationship to others. “As the tree falleth there it shall be,” and the
awakening, or calling forth from the tomb, will be as the termination of a
sleep, the very figure which the Lord uses not only in respect to the body
of Christ, but to the world in general, whose future awakening, being a
part of his plan, is spoken of as an arousing from sleep.
As one awakening from a sleep finds himself in practically the same
condition in which he lay down, plus a slight invigoration, and is able
speedily to recall the events and circumstances that preceded his sleep,
so we believe it will be with the world in general, when they shall
“hear the voice of the Son of Man and shall come forth.”
We do not mean by this that they will come forth in precisely the
same physical condition as at the moment of dying, because this would
involve an absurdity. For
instance, the one whose lungs were decayed until the last breath was a
gasp, we need not expect will come back gasping and without lungs; the one
whose head had been severed from the body would not be awakened without a
head, and likewise the one who had lost arms or feet or fingers or toes,
could not reasonably be expected to “come forth” without these
members. In the absence of
anything definite in the Scriptures to guide our judgments, we must
suppose [page 715] that the coming forth of the world will be with what
would now be considered average health and strength; such, for instance,
as the Lord was pleased to grant to those whom he healed at his first
advent. The healed ones were
not made perfectly
whole, else many of them might have lived for centuries, as did the
perfect Adam. Rather, we are
to presume that the restorations were to average health and strength, and
that so it will be in the awakening time, when the same voice shall call
them forth from the sleep of death, that they may hear his words and by
obedience “attain unto” life
everlasting and its perfections of mind and body, for which he has
arranged the times of restitution and the Kingdom disciplines, judgments
and blessings.
The threads of existence being taken up just where they were
dropped in death, the weaving of experience will proceed and rapidly adapt
itself to the changed conditions; and meantime the individual will neither
lose his identity, nor be lost to the world and social circle of which he
has been a part. Thus past
experiences with sin and selfishness will constitute a valuable asset of
knowledge, helpful in proper estimations in the future, enabling the
revived one to appreciate the advantages accruing from the reign of
righteousness and life as in contrast with the previous reign of sin and
death. It will be to his
advantage, too, that he must first of all accept Christ the King as his
Redeemer, acknowledging his own imperfection and unworthiness—must lay
hold upon the Life-giver before ever he can start upon the highway of
holiness. It will be to his
advantage, too, that he must take steps himself in the overcoming of his
own weaknesses, and in the attainment of perfection set before him as the
goal.
The lessons of experience thus gained will be deeply engraven upon
his memory, upon his character, and will fit and prepare him for the final
testing in the close of the Millennial age, when absolute heart-loyalty
will be required. Meantime, however, his imperfections will not work to
his detriment or hindrance, for in proportion to his weakness or [page 716]
strength of character will be the requirements of the
judges—all of whom are being now prepared by their own experiences with
sin and weakness to judge sympathetically and to be truly helpful.
Such experiences on the part of the judges would not be so
essential were not this the divine plan of gradual
recovery—“resurrection by judgment.”
This view is in full accord, too, with the divine statement by the
mouth of Daniel the prophet respecting the resurrection: “Many of them
that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting
[lasting] life, and some to shame and everlasting [lasting] contempt.”
(Dan. 12:2) Here we see the same division of the awakened ones that our
Lord more particularly explains. One
class is awakened to life in its full, complete sense—lasting life; the
other class is awakened, but not in life.
When awakened it is still in death, because not approved of
God—not vitally connected with the Son.
“He that hath the Son hath life; he that hath not the Son shall
not see life.” The world in
general, then, “come forth” that they may be brought to the knowledge
of the fact that life and restitution
have been provided by God’s grace through the great atonement sacrifice;
that the Life-giver has taken his great power and glory, as Prophet,
Priest and King, and that by coming into him they may gradually, step by
step, attain to life.
The prophet’s statement respecting this second class—that they
come forth to shame and lasting contempt—is significant. If they came
forth perfect they would not be in a shameful and contemptible condition,
for perfection is always admirable. These
words, therefore, attest that they come forth imperfect, and our Lord’s
added explanation assures us that they come forth in their imperfection,
that they may, if they will, attain resurrection, perfection, under the
trials or judgments to which they will be subjected—rewarding their
obediences and chastising and disciplining their disobediences.
We have already used Nero as an illustration; and as he surely will
be one of those who will come forth to shame and [page 717] to lasting contempt, we may as well use him in
further illustration. When we remember that the awakening of the sleeping
world will not begin until the present generation of the world shall have
been brought under the Kingdom power, to a considerable measure of
righteousness and intelligence, we will readily perceive that Nero, on
coming forth, will find himself in the midst of very different social
conditions from those prevailing when he died.
He will find vices such as he practiced and cultivated very much
discredited, and the virtues which he shunned and persecuted he will find
installed in power and in general favor.
He will be utterly out of accord with all of his surroundings, much
more so than others less wilful, less profligate, less vicious, less
contemptible. He will find
himself well known through the pages of history, and in general contempt
because of his abuse of his powers and opportunities—not only as the
murderer of his own mother, but also as the persecutor and torturer of the
Lord’s faithful ones.
Every good and virtuously disposed person is bound to hold such a
character as his in “contempt,” and under such circumstances he will
be bound to suffer great “shame.” However, he comes forth unto a
resurrection by judgment—for the purpose of being accorded an
opportunity of rising up out of his
shameful and contemptible condition to the full perfection of human
nature; and to what extent he will attain unto life, to what extent he
will attain unto resurrection out of death, will depend entirely upon
himself. First of all, he
must know the Truth; he must see himself in his true colors; he must see
in contrast the perfect man—as represented in the ancient worthies, the
“princes” of that time. He must see in operation the laws of
righteousness in contrast with his previous knowledge of the operation of
the reign of sin and death. If,
then, he determinedly maintains an evil influence and hardens his heart
and refuses obedience, he must die the Second Death—after having enjoyed
and rejected the privileges and opportunities which the Lord has provided
for him and all mankind. [page 718]
But if, on the contrary, he shall humble himself, acknowledge his
sin, and become obedient to the laws of the Kingdom, he will thus at once
begin his upward course toward life—his resurrection, or rising up,
toward complete recovery from the fall.
If he shall thus “go
up” on the highway of holiness, he will at the same time be
purging himself from the “contempt” of his fellows, and
correspondingly relieving himself of “shame.”
For we cannot doubt that if there is joy in heaven over one sinner
that repenteth, there will be joy on earth amongst all right-minded people
as they from time to time shall see sinners turning from the errors of
their ways to obedience to the Lord; and the laudable contempt of the
former for sin and its meanness must gradually give place to sympathetic
appreciation of the efforts being put forth in the direction of
righteousness. So that should
Nero ever become fully obedient to the Lord, and attain unto life
everlasting in the “resurrection by judgment,” he will be highly
respected and his past will be fully forgotten—just as now, when
thinking of the Apostle Paul, we remember his noble self-sacrifices and
faithfulness to the Lord, disassociating him from Saul, the persecutor
whom he denominated “the chief of sinners.”
Punishments
for Sins of this Life
Does someone ask, Will there not be punishments for the sins of the
present time? We reply that
Justice is sure to mete out a punishment for every sin.
Adam’s sin, as we all recognize, has been punished for six
thousand years, and under that punishment the whole creation has groaned
and travailed and sunk down into death.
That sin and all additional sins influenced by the weaknesses and
depravities resulting from Adam’s sin, are all included in the atonement
accomplished by the great sacrifice for sins.
The sins needing additional punishment would be such as do not
directly result from the Adamic fall and depravity—such as have been to
some extent wilful. Such
wilful sins must all be punished; but we are evidently not at the present
time [page 719]
competent to judge what would be a right or
reasonable penalty for such sins—wholly or partially wilful.
Doubtless this was one reason why the Lord instructed us to
“judge nothing before the time.”
Eventually the judgment will be in our hands—as it is written,
“Know ye not that the saints shall judge the world?”—our Lord Jesus
being the chief of these judges. The
Lord’s declaration is that he who knew his Master’s will and did it
not shall be beaten with many stripes, while he who knew not and did
things worthy of stripes shall be beaten with few stripes. (Luke 12:47,48)
This indicates to us that the guilt of wilful sin is to be measured
largely by our knowledge of the Lord and of his will.
Hence the Church, and those who have during this Gospel age come
under the light and influence of the Church, will be held responsible in a
larger degree than others. Nero,
although not of the Church, not begotten of the Spirit, and therefore,
less responsible proportionately than the Church, had, nevertheless,
considerable contact with the children of the light; and hence, we may
presume, had a large measure of responsibility in connection with his
crimes.
“Some
Men’s Sins Go Before to Judgment”
In considering the punishments of wilful sins on account of light
enjoyed, we are not to forget the Apostle’s statement, that “Some
men’s sins go before to judgment, and some they follow after.” (1 Tim.
5:24) We know not to what extent Nero’s sins have already
received some measure of punishment; we know not to what extent he
suffered mentally or physically; we know not, therefore, to what extent
punishment for his sins will come after and overtake him during the
Judgment age. For argument’s sake let us suppose that he received no
special punishments in the past, and that stripes for his sins will all
follow after, and let us inquire what will be the nature of the record
against him, and how will the stripes, or punishments, be inflicted upon
him? We are not competent to
answer these questions without
[page 720] reservations or provisos, but we all recognize a
general principle already in operation in every man, recording the results
of his own violations of knowledge and conscience. We see that in
proportion as truth, light, knowledge and conscience may be violated, in
that same proportion character is undermined; and to whatever extent this
proceeds, restitution will be the more difficult for him.
We can reasonably judge that Nero must have undermined his
character and conscience to a very large extent indeed.
If, then, in the awakening he shall “come forth” as he died,
merely to an opportunity for development, we can readily see that every
downward step which he took in the past, every violation of conscience,
every known opposition to righteousness, worked an injury to his character
which, if ever overcome, will require proportionate effort to retrace his
steps and to build again that portion of the character he wantonly
destroyed. It is not for us
to say that this and this alone will be the punishment for the sins of the
present time; but that this should be the case seems reasonable to us.
We are satisfied in any event, to rest the matter here, confident
that the decisions of the glorified Church will have the full indorsement
of all who have the Lord’s Spirit. We cannot suppose that our Lord will
take pleasure in rendering evil for evil, or in causing needless pain even
to the most villainous, but that the decision of the great Supreme Court
already rendered will stand, viz., “The wages of sin is death”—the
Second Death.
“Thus
Is the [Chief] Resurrection
of
the [Special] Dead”
—1
Cor. 15:42—
The resurrection of the Church is
designated the First
Resurrection, not in the sense of priority (though it will have
priority), but in the sense of being chief, best,
superior. We have
already seen that there are different orders in the resurrection—three
of which are unto
life, unto perfection, though on different planes of being; the Church
occupying [page 721] the first place, the
“great
company” and the ancient worthies
following in order; and that subsequently, or last, will be the general
resurrection of the world, open to the whole world of mankind, so
many as will accept the divine provisions and arrangements—the
resurrection by judgment to be completed only with the close of the
Millennial age. In
this sense of the word it will indeed be a fact that “the rest of the
dead” will live
not “until the thousand years are finished”—they will not have life
in its full, proper, complete sense; they will not be raised up completely
out
of death until then. Thus
viewed, the spurious clause of Rev. 20:5*
is found to be in full accord with the general tenor of Scripture. All
these resurrections subsequent to the first, or chief one, will
undoubtedly be under the power and control of the glorified Church, whose
glorious Head has, to this end, received all power and authority from the
Father.
—————
*We have already drawn attention to the
fact that the clause “The rest of the dead lived not again until the
thousand years were finished,” is without any support from ancient MSS
of earlier date than the fifth century; nevertheless it is in full accord
with what we are here presenting, for the term “lived
not” should be understood to refer not to awakening but to full
restitution to life in the perfect degree.
See footnote Vol. I, p. 288.
Having considered the resurrection work of the Church for others,
let us now consider what the Scriptures have to show particularly
respecting the First Resurrection. With
what bodies will the New Creation come forth?
What will be some of their qualities and powers?
The Apostle declares, “As is the earthy so are they also that are
earthy; and as is the heavenly so are they also that are heavenly.” (1
Cor. 15:48) We understand
these words to signify that the world in general, who will experience
restitution to human perfection, will be like the earthly one—like the
first Adam, before he sinned, and like the perfect “Man Christ Jesus”
was before his begetting to newness of nature.
We rejoice with the world in this grand prospect of again becoming
full and complete earthly images of the divine Creator. But we rejoice still more in the precious promises [page 722]
made to the Gospel Church, “the called ones”
according to the divine purpose, who are to have the image of the heavenly
One—the image of the Creator, in a still higher and more particular
sense—to be not fleshly images, but spirit images.
“We shall be like him [the glorified “changed” Jesus], for we
shall see him as
he is.” He is a
spirit being, “the express
image of the Father’s person,” “far above angels,
principalities and powers, and every name that is named,” and hence, far
above perfect manhood. If we
shall be like him and share his glory and his nature, it means that we too
shall be images of the Father’s person, “whom no man
hath seen nor can see, dwelling in light which no man can approach unto”; but to whom we can approach and whom
we can see as he is, because we have been “changed.” 1 John 3:2; 1
Tim. 1:17; 6:16; Exod. 33:20
Lest any should misunderstand him, the Apostle guards the above
language by adding, “As we
[the Church] have borne the image of the earthly [one], we shall also bear the
image of the heavenly [One].” It
is not the Apostle’s thought that all shall bear the image of the
heavenly One, in this sense, ever. Such
was not the design of our Creator. When he made man he designed to have a fleshly, human, earthly
being, in his own likeness [mentally, morally], to be the lord and ruler
of the earth, as the representative of his heavenly Creator. (Gen.
1:26-28; Psalm 8:4-7) The
selection of the New Creation, as we have seen is wholly separate and
apart from the earthly creation. They
are chosen out
of the world, and constitute but a “little flock” in all,
called to be the Lord’s Kingdom class, to bless the world during the
thousand years of the Millennial age—subsequently, we may be sure,
occupying some very high and responsible position, and doing some very
important work, in the carrying out of further divine purposes—perhaps
in connection with other worlds and other creations.
But the Apostle guards the matter still further, saying in
explanation of the foregoing (verse 50), “Now this I say, brethren, that
flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God.”
Thus he distinguishes between our [page 723] present condition in the flesh and our future
condition as spirit beings; most positively declaring that so long as we
are in the flesh we cannot constitute the Lord’s Kingdom in any actual
sense, because that Kingdom is to be a spiritual one, composed of spirit
beings. Our Lord himself, the
Head, the chief, the leader, the example to his Church, is the glorious
spirit being, a glimpse of whom was granted to the Apostle Paul (1 Cor.
15:8), and a vision of whom was granted to the Apostle John in Apocalyptic
vision. “We shall be like him”—not flesh and blood, like the
remainder of the race from which we were selected, and whose restitution,
or resurrection by judgments, will bring them back to the perfection of
the flesh-and-blood conditions, as the same restitution times will bring
the earth to the condition represented by the Garden of Eden in the
beginning.
But the Apostle recognized the fact that it would be difficult for
us fully to grasp the thought of so thorough a change
of the Church from fleshly, earthly conditions to heavenly, spirit
conditions. He perceived that our difficulty would be less in respect to
those who have fallen asleep in death than in respect to those alive and
remaining unto the presence of the Lord.
It is much easier for us to grasp the thought that the sleeping
ones will be resurrected in new spiritual bodies, such as the Lord has
promised to provide, than to grasp the thought of how those of the saints
living at the time of the Lord’s second presence, will be accepted of
him into his spirit Kingdom. The
Lord, through the Apostle, makes this very clear to us, saying, “There
is a mystery connected with this matter, which I will explain: we shall
not all sleep, though we must all be changed—in a moment, in the
twinkling of an eye, at the last trump—the seventh trumpet.” 1 Cor.
15:51,52
While the Lord, through the Apostle, did clear away a mystery to
some extent by these words, nevertheless a considerable measure of mystery
has since beclouded even this plain explanation; for many of the Lord’s
dear people have confounded the word “sleep” with the word “die,”
and
[page 724] have supposed the explanation to be that the saints
remaining over until the presence of the Lord would be changed without
dying, which is not at all the thing stated.
Take the case of the apostles, for instance; they died, and from
the moment of death they were reckoned as being “asleep” until the
moment of the resurrection. The
dying was a momentary act, while the sleep, or unconsciousness, continued
for centuries.
This thought of the word “sleep” must be attached to the
Apostle’s words, in order that they may be understood, viz.: It will not
be necessary that the Lord’s people who remain over until his second
presence shall sleep in unconscious death
even for a moment. They will die,
however, as is declared by the Lord, through the prophet, speaking of the
Church: “I have said, Ye are gods, all of you sons of the Most High; yet
ye shall all die like men, and fall like one
of the princes.” (Psa. 82:6,7) The
world in general dies like Prince Adam, as his children, sharers of his
sentence; but the faithful in Christ Jesus die with him—with Prince
Jesus. (Isa. 9:6; Acts 3:15; 5:31) Justified
through his sacrifice, they become dead
with him, as joint-sacrificers.
They “fall” under death sacrificially—like the second Prince.
“If we be dead with him we shall
also live
with him.” But, as
the Apostle points out to us, the death of these will mean no sleep of
unconsciousness—the very moment of dying will be the very moment of
“change,” or clothing upon with the house from heaven, the spiritual
body.
The “change” to come to those of the Church remaining until the
presence of the Lord is thus set forth as being in every sense of the word
a part of the First Resurrection. In
no particular does it differ from the death experience which must be
common to all the members of the one body.
The only point of difference between other members of the body and
these will be that which the Apostle specifies; viz., they shall not “sleep.” These last members of the body will not need to sleep—not
need to wait for the Kingdom to come, for it will then be set up.
They will pass immediately from
[page 725] the activities of the service on this side the veil
in the flesh to the activities of service on the other side the veil, as
perfected New Creatures, members of the Christ.
“It
Doth Not Yet Appear What We Shall Be”
Respecting the powers and qualities of the New Creatures,
perfected, the Apostle tells us that they will not all have the same
degrees of glory, though they will all have the same kind of glory—will all be celestial or heavenly beings.
There will be one glory common to all these celestial beings, and
another glory common to the human, or terrestrial, beings.
Each in its perfection will be glorious, but the glories of the
celestial ones will be superior—transcendent. The Scriptures tell us
that the Church as a whole shall “shine forth as the sun.” (Matt.
13:43) This description by
our Lord himself of the future glory is applied to all who are of the
“wheat” class; yet in the light of the Apostle’s explanation (verse
41) we perceive that individually there will be differences in the
positions and honors of the church. All
will be perfect, all will be supremely happy, but, as the Father is above
all, and as he has exalted the Son to be next to himself, and as this
indicates differences of glory, majesty and authority, so amongst the
followers of the Lord, all of whom are acceptable, there will be
differences of station, “as star differeth from star” in magnitude and
brilliancy. 1 Cor. 15:41
Our Lord, in two of his parables, intimates the same difference
amongst his glorified followers. He
who had been faithful with five talents was to have special commendation
at the Lord’s return; while the other faithful ones who had a lesser
number of talents, would be dealt with proportionately. He who had been
faithful in the use of his pound, so as to gain ten pounds, was to receive
rulership over ten cities; and he who was faithful over his pound to the
gaining of five pounds would have proportionately increased talents,
blessings, opportunities and authority. Matt. 25:14-30; Luke 19:11-27
[page 726]
Nor need we wonder at this, for looking back we see that while the
Lord chose twelve apostles and loved them all, there were three of them
whom he specially loved, and who were on various occasions nearer to him
and in still more confidential relationship than the others.
We may be sure, too, that when the “Book of Life” is opened,
and when positions closest to the Master in the throne are to be
apportioned, those on the right hand and those on the left hand (nearest
to his person), will be recognized by all as worthy of the honor and
distinction accorded them. (Matt. 10:41) It would not surprise us at all
to find the Apostle Paul next to the Master, with possibly John on his
other hand. The thought is
not that of location, or position, on a bench—throne—but closeness of
relationship in power and majesty of the Kingdom. We may be sure that all who will constitute the “little
flock” will be so filled with the Lord’s Spirit as in honor to prefer
one another; and we may know certainly that there will be no jealousies,
but that the divine judgment respecting worthiness will be fully approved
by all the New Creation. This
is so in the present time, and much more may we expect it in the future.
In the present time we read that “God has set the various members
in the body as it hath pleased him,” and all who are in accord with the
Lord are continually seeking, not to change the divine arrangement, but to
recognize it and to cooperate therewith.
So also it will surely be in the future.
Describing the differences between present conditions and those of
the future, the Apostle says, “It is sown in corruption: It
is raised in incorruption.” “It”—the
New Creature, whose existence began at the time of consecration and
begetting of the Spirit. The
New Creature that has been developing and seeking to control the flesh and
to make it its servant, in accord with the divine will—the New Creature
that is said to have lived in the flesh, as in the tabernacle, while
waiting for the new body. “It” was sown in corruption, in a corruptible body: “It”
went down into death; and yet “It”
is not represented as being dead, but as merely [page 727]
sleeping, while its earthly tabernacle was dissolved.
It is the same “It,”
the New Creature, that is to be clothed upon with the heavenly house, the
spiritual body, in the First Resurrection.
This spiritual body in which “It”
is raised, the Apostle declares, will be an incorruptible one—one which
cannot corrupt, which cannot die. The
word here rendered incorruption is aphtharsia, and signifies that which is death-proof, that which
cannot corrupt or die or pass away. It
is the same word rendered “incorruption”
in verses 50,53 and 54, of this chapter, and the same word which is
rendered “immortality” in Rom.
2:7, and again in 2 Tim. 1:10.
The declaration, that our spiritual bodies shall be incorruptible,
immortal, is a most momentous one, because we are distinctly informed that
this quality of immortality belongs inherently to Jehovah alone; while it
is declared of our Lord Jesus, that because of his faithfulness, his high
exaltation consisted in part in his being granted life
in himself, as the Father hath life in himself.
The thought there is the same—that the glorious Head of the
Church experienced just such a “change” to immortality, to
incorruption, to participation in the divine nature.
It does not amaze us that the plan of God should be thus liberal
toward our dear Redeemer; but it surely does astonish us that this quality
of the divine nature, given
to none other than our Master, should be promised to the members of his
body, who walk in his footsteps, and are seeking for glory, honor and
immortality. 2 Pet. 1:4; Rom. 2:7
“It
is sown in dishonor; It
is raised in glory.” Here
again the New Creature is referred to by the word “It.”
During the present life the world knoweth us not; it realizes not
that we are begotten of the Father, to be his children on the spiritual
plane, and that we are only temporarily sojourning in the flesh, for the
purposes of our trial, for the testing of our faithfulness to our covenant
of sacrifice. “Now are we
the sons of God.” But,
unrecognized, we are disesteemed by the world; and because of our
consecration to the Lord we may [page 728] not occupy even as honorable positions amongst men as
we might have the natural talents to occupy were they devoted to worldly
pursuits. In any event, both
individually and collectively the Church in the flesh is now, as the
Apostle here declares, “in dishonor,” in disesteem; and, as he
elsewhere declares, our body is at present a body of humiliation
(misrepresented in our common translation as “a vile body”). (Phil.
3:21) But what shall be the
condition by and by? Will the dishonor all be past?
Will the Church (Head and “body”) be such as both angels and
men will appreciate and honor? Will
the New Creation thus be “in glory?” Oh yes!
This is the assurance.
“It
is sown in weakness; It
is raised in power.” The
New Creature is still referred to—the weakness mentioned being that of
the present mortal bodies, their imperfections, which all New Creatures
deplore, and which God graciously counts as not being the weaknesses of
the New Creature, whose purposes, or intentions toward the Lord are pure,
perfect, loyal and strong. That these weaknesses will not attach to the new resurrection
bodies of the “elect” is most specifically stated. “It is raised in power”—the power of perfection, the power of
the new nature, the power of God.
“It
is sown a natural body; It
is raised a spiritual body.” The same It,
the same New Creature. It is
a natural body now—the only tangible thing is the flesh.
Only by the grace of God are we permitted to reckon the new mind a New
Creature, and to await the time when this new mind will be granted a
spirit body, suitable to it. The
spirit body will then be It, in the same sense that the natural body is now It.
What a glorious prospect this is!
Truly, it is incomprehensible to us who have no experiences except
such as are common to the natural man—except as our minds have grasped
by faith the promises and revelations of the Lord, and have entered into
the spirit of “things not seen as yet.”
But if the very thought of the coming glories has lifted us up above the world
and its cares, its trials, its follies and its
[page 729] pleasures, how much more will the realities mean to
us when we shall be perfect and like our Lord and share his glory!
No wonder our Lord said to Nicodemus, “If I have told you of
earthly things, and ye believe not, how can ye believe if I tell you of
heavenly things?” No wonder
it declares that we must first be begotten of the holy Spirit before we
can even begin to comprehend heavenly things. Unquestionably, therefore,
our ability to run the race set before us in the Gospel, our striving to
overcome the spirit of the world and the besetments of the Adversary, will
be in proportion as we shall be obedient to the divine counsel, and love
not the world, and lay aside every weight and the easily besetting sin,
forgetting not the assembling of ourselves together, and searching the
Scriptures daily, and in every sense of the word making use of the
privileges and mercies and blessings conferred upon us as children of God.
If we do these things we shall never fail, but so an entrance shall be
ministered unto us, abundantly, into the everlasting Kingdom of our Lord
and Savior Jesus Christ.” 1 John 3:2,3; Rom. 8:17; John 3:12; 1 Cor.
2:14; 1 John 2:15; Eph. 6:10-18; Heb. 12:1,2; 10:25; John 5:29; Acts
17:11; 2 Pet. 1:4-11 [page 730]
Longing for Home
As pants the hart for water brooks,
So pants my soul for Thee.
Oh, when shall I behold Thy face,
When wilt Thou call for me?
How oft at night I turn mine eyes
Towards my heavenly home,
And long for that blest time when Thou,
My Lord, shalt bid me, “Come!”
And yet I know that only those
Thy blessed face shall see,
Whose hearts from every stain of sin
Are purified and free.
And oh, my Master and my Lord,
I know I’m far from meet
With all Thy blessed saints in light
To hold communion sweet.
I know that those who share Thy throne
Must in Thy likeness be,
And all the Spirit’s precious fruits
In them the Father see.
Lord, grant me grace more patiently
To strive with my poor heart,
And bide Thy time to be with Thee
And see Thee as Thou art!
G.W.S.
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