SCRIPTURE
STUDIES
VOLUME SIX - THE NEW
CREATION
STUDY
IX
THE JUDGMENT OF THE NEW CREATION
Jehovah the Great Judge of the Universe
—
All
Blessings, Favors, etc., are
from Jehovah, Through the Son
—
The New Creation to be Associates and Joint-Heirs with Christ
—
“All Power in Heaven and in Earth is Given unto Me”
—
The Father’s Judgment to Condemnation of
Mankind Already Expressed
—
The Judgment during the Millennium
One of Mercy and
Assistance
—
The Final Executive Judgment will be Justice without Mercy
—
Judgment of New Creation During the Gospel
Age
—
New Creation Judged by the Perfect Law of Love
—
The Supervision of the Glorious Head over the Body
—
“With What Judgment Ye
Judge, Ye Shall be
Judged”
—
We should Judge Ourselves Properly
—
“He that Judgeth Me is the Lord”
—
The Church Should
Judge Some Matters
—
“If Thy Brother Trespass Against Thee”
—
Forgive
Seventy Times Seven
Times
—
Offenses Against the Church
—
We must All Appear before the Tribunal of Christ.
WE have already seen*
that the whole world of mankind was judged unworthy of everlasting life by
the great Supreme Judge, Jehovah, when Adam, its progenitor, failed in
trial. “By one man sin
entered into the world, and death as the result [penalty, or sentence] of
sin, and thus death passed upon all men, because all are sinners.” (Rom.
5:12) Adam’s failure and sentence to death sealed the same sentence upon
all of his children. His
fall, his blemish, his sin, extended in a natural way, and with increasing
force and momentum, to his posterity.
We have already seen that this sentence was in every way a just
one, and hence irrevocable—that the great Judge of the Universe, having
justly determined man’s unworthiness of everlasting life, could not
reverse his own sentence, declare wrong to be right, and the unworthy to
be worthy of lasting life. But
we have seen, [page
396] too, that he had compassion on us, and that in his
gracious plan, framed before the foundation of the world, he contemplated
and made provision for the redemption of the entire race,*
in order to the granting of another trial, or judgment to all its
members—providing also that his Beloved Son, whose redemptive work made
at-one-ment possible, should be the Mediator of this new arrangement for
blessing and uplifting our race. We
have seen also that the period of this judging and uplifting of the
obedient, is the Millennial age, set apart as the world’s Day of
Judgment, or day of trial, and is to give to each an opportunity, not only
to come to a knowledge of the Lord and into harmony with him, but,
additionally, to prove by loyalty and obedience their worthiness of life
everlasting. We have the Apostle’s words to this effect, “God hath
appointed a day in the which he will judge the world in righteousness by
that man whom he hath ordained.”+ Acts 17:31
—————
*Vol. I, Chap. vii.
*Vol. V. +Vol. I, Chap. viii.
Beyond all question, Jehovah himself is the Supreme Judge, and his
Law the supreme standard, according to which all decisions must be made
respecting life eternal. Thus the Apostle refers to “God the Judge of
all,” and indicates that the Father is meant by referring in the same
sentence to Jesus as the Mediator. (Heb. 12:23,24)
Again he says, “The Lord will judge his people,” and
“Vengeance is mine, I will repay, saith the Lord.” (Rom. 12:19; Heb.
10:30) In these quotations from the Old Testament (Psa. 50:4; Deut.
32:35,36), the Lord referred to is Jehovah. Again, the Apostle says,
“God shall judge the secrets of men [‘the world’] by Jesus
Christ.” (Rom. 2:16; 3:6) Jehovah
was the original Lawgiver and Judge, and will forever maintain this
position and relationship to all of his creatures. His honor he will not
give unto another. (Isa. 42:8) Likewise he points out to us in the
Scriptures that he is the Shepherd of his people.
“Jehovah is my Shepherd; I shall not want.” (Psa. 23:1)
Again he designates himself the [page
397] Redeemer of his people: “All flesh shall know that
I, Jehovah, am thy Savior and thy Redeemer.” (Isa. 49:26)
In the highest sense of the word Jehovah himself is the center of
the entire plan of salvation and of its every feature; and any other view
of the matter is a defective one.
However, as it pleased the Father to create all things through the
Son (John 1:1)—so in all things it has pleased him to exalt our Lord
Jesus as his honored instrument. From
this standpoint we see that all blessing, all authority, all favors,
proceed from the Father and by the Son, and that the New Creation,
associated with the Son, are thus with him made ministers and joint-heirs
of the grace of God.
In so complete a sense does the Heavenly Father “rest from his
own work,” and make use of the Son as his honored agent, that our dear
Redeemer could say, “The Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all
judgment unto the Son.” (John 5:22)
Our Lord uttered these words before he had finished the work which
the Father had given him to do at Calvary, but he spoke from the
standpoint of that completed work; for, as we have already seen, his own
testing as concerned his fitness for the work the Father had purposed was
to be determined by his faithfulness even unto death.
Thus he not only demonstrated his worthiness to be a faithful and
merciful High Priest, but by his own blood suretied a New Covenant on
behalf of mankind, and opened up the new way of life, and obtained “the
keys of death and the grave”—the right to say to the prisoners in the
great prison-house of death, “Come forth,” and the right to bless and
uplift so many as will obediently hear his voice.
Strictly speaking, it was from the moment of our Lord’s
resurrection that the Father committed all judgment
unto the Son, and then it was that he declared, “All power [authority]
in heaven and in earth is given unto me” (Matt. 28:18), and his first
exercise of this authority was the commissioning of his apostles, as his
representatives, to commence the work of gathering the members of the
Bride class, the Church, the Ecclesia, his fellow
members of the New Creation. [page 398]
The Father’s judgment respecting mankind had already been expressed, and had
condemned all; and any further judgment on his part, under the laws of
absolute righteousness, could be of no particular profit to any of the
condemned race—all having “sinned and come short of the glory of
God.” “There is none
righteous, no, not one”; and the divine standard accepts nothing short
of absolute righteousness—perfection.
The divine arrangement, therefore, was that our Lord Jesus should
be the Mediator, the go-between, the one who should satisfy justice and
represent the fallen race, and the one to whom the Father’s justice
would look as the representative of man, and who would be accountable for
the race. Jesus will occupy this mediatorial relationship between God
and men until he shall have accomplished fully the intended work—until
he shall have brought back into full harmony with God every creature who,
being brought to a knowledge of his Creator and his righteous laws, shall
desire to be and to do in complete harmony therewith.
More than this, his “all judgment” will include the execution
of his findings, for he will not only reward the obedient, but shall
“destroy those who corrupt the earth”—will destroy the wilful
sinners, destroy from amongst the people all who will not hear his voice,
his command, his instructions, putting down all sin and all
insubordination, including even the last enemy—death. 1 Cor. 15:25-28;
Rev. 11:18; 2 Thess. 2:8; Heb. 2:14
This judging will be in part as Mediator during the
Millennium—making allowances for the imperfections of humanity, and
punishing and rewarding correctively—and in part as Jehovah’s vicar,
or representative, at the close of the Millennium—bestowing the eternal
rewards of everlasting life to those found worthy, and of everlasting
destruction to those found unworthy.
And this last executive judgment will be along lines of justice
without mercy—the proper uses and purposes of mercy having been
fulfilled by his Millennial reign, in which mercy and assistance shall be
extended to every member of the race by their Redeemer.
And the body of Christ, the Church, shall be associated with him in
[page 399] all the various features of the blessing, judging,
ruling, correcting, etc., of the Millennial age of compassion and
helpfulness—and, possibly, also in the pronouncing and inflicting of the
final rewards and punishments.
Before proceeding to notice particularly the judgment
or trial of the New Creation during the Gospel age, prior to the
Millennial Kingdom, we should impress deeply upon our minds the fact that
all of these procedures, judgments,
etc., are of the Father, though through the Son and through the Church;
even as also we read respecting the resurrection of the dead, that God
raised up from the dead our Lord Jesus by his own power, and that he also
will raise us up; which statement we understand to be in full harmony with
our Lord’s declaration that “I will raise him up at the last day.”
“I will come again, and receive you unto myself.”
“I am the resurrection and the life.” 1 Cor. 6:14; John 6:39;
14:3; 11:25
The judgment
or trial of the New Creation must take place during this Gospel age,
before the Millennium shall have been fully introduced; because it is the
New Creation, Head and body, which is to do the work of the Millennial
age. It is in harmony with
this that the Lord declares that we “shall not come into condemnation [krisis, judgment] with the
world [not share in the world’s Millennial-day judgment or trial], but
are [already] passed from death unto life [in advance of the world],”
justified by faith and obedience as members of his body. (John 5:24)
So, then, the present time, the present life, is to each of the
consecrated ones his day of judgment, his day of trial, his day of
testing—to determine whether or not he shall be accounted worthy of life
under the terms of his call and consecration. The Apostle’s words agree
with this: “Judgment [krima,
final decision] must begin with the house of God.” (1 Pet. 4:17) As the
Apostle suggests, it gives the New Creation an exalted idea of the divine
requirements, or conditions for life everlasting, when they consider that
those who have forsaken sin and who have set their hearts to know and to
do the divine will need to pass through a time of trial to test [page 400]
them and to perfect character in them—such as the
Lord can approve.
Who
Is the Judge of the New Creation? And
What Is
The
Law or Standard by Which It Is Being Judged?
We answer that we are being judged by our Heavenly Father’s
perfect Law of Love—that we were justified by him (“It is God that
justifieth”), and that our consecration vows were made to him, and that
the entire New Creation, Head as well as under-members, are amenable to
the Father, as “God, the Judge of all.”
But this does not alter or interfere with what we have already seen
respecting the Father’s methods of dealing with us.
When he deals with us and permits us to approach the throne of his
heavenly grace, it is because he has made us acceptable in the
Beloved—in our Lord and Head, under whose robe of righteousness, only,
we can approach the Father or have his favor.
Nevertheless, all power, all authority, is vested in the Son, as
the Father’s agent and representative, and hence we see that, although
dealing directly with the Father, he grants us audience only through our
Advocate—even as in an earthly court an attorney represents his client.
The world will not have access to, or direct dealing with, the
Father through an Advocate during the Millennial age, but will, on the
contrary, deal directly with the Christ until its close, when the
perfected ones shall be presented to the Father.
The New Creation are all begotten of the Father—his children, and
not the children of Christ; and it is the Father who chastens every son
whom he receiveth. It is also
to the Father’s throne of grace that we are specially instructed to
pray—the way to which has been opened up by Jesus our Redeemer.
And yet, our Redeemer’s words are true in the most absolute
sense, “No man cometh unto the Father but by me.”
The relationship of the Lord Jesus to the Church is that of the
Head to the body, and the Head takes cognizance of and judges or
determines in respect to all the interests of the body, directing its
course, correcting difficulties, relieving and bringing general aid and
comfort, support [page 401] and strength to every member using frequently
fellow-members of the body as its ministers or servants.
However, since every feature of this work is done in the Father’s
name, and by the Father’s direction, it is properly considered as of the
Father and by the Son. 1 Cor. 8:6
It is in accord with this that we read, also, “If ye call on the
Father, who without respect of persons judgeth,” etc. And again, “My
Father is the husbandman: every branch in me that beareth not fruit he
taketh away; and every branch that beareth fruit he purgeth [pruneth] that
it may bring forth more fruit.” (1 Pet. 1:17; John 15:1,2)
Nevertheless, that the advocacy of our Head is fully recognized,
and that these disciplines, prunings, etc., are accomplished in us and
toward us through him, as the Father’s agent, is manifested from the
declaration of the same Apostle, “It is a fearful thing to fall into the
hands of the living God.” Thus he teaches us that we are not in the
hands of the living God directly, nor directly under the ministration of
his inflexible Law. We are in
Christ Jesus, covered by his merit, and dealt with through him as our Head
and Master, under the merciful provisions of the Abrahamic Covenant, made
operative toward us, by his blood.
The
Supervision of the Glorious Head
Over
the Body
We could not doubt the love and care of our glorified Head in
respect to his Church—“body,” “bride”—even if he had given us
no explicit declaration on the subject. However, in his last message to his faithful, he very
particularly shows that it is he who sits as the refiner and purifier of
the antitypical Levites, including the Royal Priesthood. Hearken to his
words to the seven churches of Asia Minor, representative of the seven
epochs of the one Church’s experience:
“Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen, and repent,...
else I will come upon thee
quickly and remove thy candlestick.”
“Be thou faithful unto death, and I
will give thee a crown of life.”
“I have a few things
against thee,...repent, or else I
will come unto thee quickly and will fight against thee with the
sword of my mouth.” “To [page 402] him that overcometh will I give to eat of the
hidden manna.” “I have a few things
against thee, because thou sufferest that woman Jezebel, ...I
gave her space to repent...I
will cast her...into great tribulation, ...and I will kill her children with death; and all the churches shall
know that I am he that searcheth the reins and hearts: and
I will give unto every one of you according to your works....He
that overcometh and keepeth my works unto the end, to him will I give power over the
nations.” “I have not found thy works
perfect before God.... He that overcometh,...I will not blot out his
name out of the book of life.” “These
things saith he that hath the key of David, he that openeth, and no man
shutteth; and shutteth, and no man openeth.”
“Behold I will make them of the synagogue of Satan,...to come to worship
before thy feet, and to know that I have loved thee.
Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I will also keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall
come upon all the world.” “Him
that overcometh will I make a pillar in the temple of my God.”
“Because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spew thee out of my mouth.” “I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire, that
thou mayest be rich;...As many as I love I rebuke and chasten; be zealous, therefore,
and repent.” Rev. 2 and 3
We call to mind, also, our Lord’s parables of the Pounds and the
Talents, in both of which he shows that at his return he will render
rewards to his faithful; “to those who by patient perseverance in
well-doing seek for glory, honor, and immortality [he will render] eternal
life”—to others, wrath in the day of wrath.
The parables distinctly picture the distribution of these rewards
to his servants, according to the degrees of faithfulness, by the “young
nobleman” after he has been invested with his kingly authority; and that
subsequently his enemies are to be dealt with.
Yet the Apostle ascribes both the rewarding and the punishing to
the Father. The key to the
matter is found in our Lord’s words, “I and my Father are one”—we
act in unison in every matter.
“Judge
Not, that Ye Be Not Judged. For
with
What
Judgment Ye Judge, Ye Shall Be Judged.”
—Matt.
7:1,2—
The competent judges of the Church are the Father and the Son—the
latter being the Father’s representative, to
[page 403] whom he has committed all judgment. (John 5:22,27)
The New Creatures are not competent to be judges one of another for
two reasons: (1) Few of them fully comprehend and appreciate the divine
Law of Love governing all. (2)
Evidently few can read their own hearts unerringly; many either judge
themselves too severely or too leniently, and, hence, should modestly
decline to sit in judgment of the heart of another whose motives may be
far from appreciated. It is because of our incompetence for judging that
the Lord—while assuring us that this shall be one of our future
functions in the Kingdom, after being qualified by participation in the
First Resurrection—forbids all private judgment amongst his followers
now; and threatens them that if they persist in judging each other they
must expect no more mercy and leniency than they show to others. (Matt.
7:2; Luke 6:38) The same
thought is enforced in the sample prayer given us, “Forgive us our debts
[trespasses] as we forgive our debtors.” Matt. 6:12
This is not an arbitrary ruling by which the Lord will deal
unjustly and ungenerously with us, if we deal thus with others: on the
contrary, a correct principle is involved.
We are “by nature children of wrath,” “vessels fitted for
destruction”; and although the Lord mercifully proposes to bless us and
relieve us of our sins and weaknesses and to perfect us through our
Redeemer, he will do this only on condition of our acceptance of his Law
of Love, and our heart-conformity to it.
He does not propose accepting unregenerates and having “children
of wrath” in his family. To
be fit for any place in the Father’s house of many mansions [planes of
being] (John 14:2) all must cease to be children of wrath and become
children of Love—being changed from glory to glory by the Spirit of our
Lord, the spirit of Love. Whoever, therefore, refuses to develop the
spirit of Love, and contrary to it insists on uncharitably judging
fellow-disciples, proves that he is not growing in knowledge and grace,
not being changed from glory to glory of heart-likeness to the Lord, not a
true follower of the Lord, and,
[page 404] hence, should not have mercy extended to him beyond
what he uses properly in copying his Lord.
The amount of his likeness to the Lord (in love) will be shown by
his mercy, and generosity of thought, word and deed toward his fellows.
Oh, that all the Spirit-begotten ones, the “New Creation,”
could realize that this spirit of judging (condemning), alas! so common
(indeed, almost the “besetting sin” of the Lord’s people) measures
their lack of the spirit of Love—their lack of the Spirit of
Christ—which, totally absent, would prove us “none of his.” (Rom.
8:9) We are persuaded that
the more speedily this fact is realized the more speedily will progress
the great transformation “from glory to glory,” so essential to our
ultimate acceptance as members of the New Creation.
But few of the Lord’s people realize to what extent they judge
others, and that with a harshness which, if applied to them by the Lord,
would surely bar them from the Kingdom. We might have feared that, under
our Lord’s liberal promise that we shall be judged as leniently as we
judge others, the tendency would be to too much benevolence, too much
mercy, and that “thinketh no evil” might be carried to an extreme.
But no! All the forces
of our fallen nature are firmly set in the opposite direction.
It is more than eighteen centuries since our Lord made this
generous proposal to judge us as leniently as we will judge others, and
yet, how few could claim much mercy under that promise!
It will be profitable for us to examine our proneness to judge
others. Let us do so, prayerfully.
The fallen or carnal mind is selfish; and proportionately as it is for
self it is against others—disposed to approve or excuse self and to
disapprove and condemn others. This
is so thoroughly inbred as to be an unconscious habit, as when we wink or
breathe. This habit is the
more pronounced with advanced education.
The mind recognizes higher ideals and standards and forthwith
measures everyone by these, and, of course, finds something at fault in
all. It delights in
rehearsing the errors and weaknesses of others,
[page 405] while ignoring its own along the same or other
lines—and sometimes, even, hypocritically denouncing the weaknesses of
another for the very purpose of hiding its own or giving the impression of
superior character along the line in question. Such is the mean,
contemptible disposition of the old fallen nature.
The new mind, begotten of the Spirit of the Lord, the holy Spirit
of Love, is in conflict with this old mind of selfishness from the start,
under the guidance of the Word of the Lord—under the Law of Love and the
Golden Rule, and becomes more and more so as we grow in grace and
knowledge. At first all New
Creatures are but “babes in Christ” and appreciate the new Law only
vaguely; but unless growth is attained and the Law of Love appreciated and
measured up to, the great prize will not be won.
The Law of Love says: For shame that the weaknesses and
shortcomings of brethren or of others should be exposed before the world;
for shame that pity and sympathy did not at once advance to speak a word
in their defense, if too late to spread over their faults a mantle of
charity to hide them entirely! As
our noble, loving Master declared on one occasion, when asked to condemn a
sinner: “Let him that is without sin among you cast the first stone.”
The person without frailties of his own might be to some extent
excusable for assuming unbidden of the Lord the position of executioner of
Justice—taking vengeance on wrongdoers, exposing them, etc.; but we find
that our Master, who knew no sin, had so much Love in his heart that he
was disposed rather to condone and forgive than to punish and expose and
berate. And so it will
doubtless be with all begotten of his Spirit: in proportion as they grow
up into his likeness they will be the last to pray for vengeance—the
last to execute punishments by tongue or otherwise, until so commanded by
the Great Judge. He now, on
the contrary, instructs us, “Judge nothing before the time,” and
declares, “Vengeance is mine.”
Well has the Apostle delineated the spirit of Love, saying, “Love
suffereth long and is kind”—to the wrongdoer.
“Love envieth not” the success of others, seeks not to detract
from
[page 406] their honor nor to pull them back from it.
“Love vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up,” and,
consequently, never seeks to detract from the splendor of others to make
self shine by contrast. It
“doth not behave itself unbecomingly,” immoderately—it has no
extreme and selfish desires and avoids extreme methods.
Love “seeketh not that which is not her own”—does not covet
the honors or wealth or fame of others, but delights to see them blessed,
and would rather add to than detract from these blessings.
Love “is not easily provoked,” even to render just recompenses:
remembering the present distress of the entire race through the fall, it
is sympathetic rather than angry. Love
“thinketh no evil”; it not only will not invent and imagine evil, but
is so disposed to give the benefit of any doubt that “evil surmisings”
are foreign to it. (Compare 1
Tim. 6:4.) Love “rejoiceth
not with iniquity, but rejoices with the Truth [rightness]”: hence, it
would delight to uncover and make known noble words or acts, but would
take no pleasure in, but avoid, exposing ignoble words or deeds.
Love “covereth all things,” as with a mantle of sympathy — for
nothing and nobody is perfect, so as to stand full inspection.
Love anticipates and has her mantle of benevolence always ready.
Love “believes all things”—is not disposed to dispute claims
of good intention, but rather to accept them.
Love “hopes all things,” disputing the thought of total
depravity so long as possible. Love “endures all things”; it is
impossible to fix a limit where it would refuse the truly repentant one.
“Love never faileth.” Other
graces and gifts may serve their purposes and pass away; but Love is so
elemental that, attained, it may always be ours—throughout eternity.
Love is the principal thing. 1 Cor. 13:4-13
But if to tell uncomplimentary truth is to violate the Law of Love
and the Golden Rule, what shall we say of the still more disreputable,
still more unlovely, still more criminal habit so common, not only amongst
the worldly and nominally Christian, but also among true Christians—that
of telling about others disreputable things not positively known to be the
truth. Oh shame! shame! that
any of the Lord’s
[page 407] people should so overlook the Lord’s instruction,
“speak evil of no man”; and that any but the merest babes and novices
in the Law of Love should so misunderstand its message—that any without
the most indubitable proofs at the mouth of two or three witnesses, and
then reluctantly, should even believe evil of a brother or a neighbor,
much less to repeat it—to slander him upon suspicion or hearsay
evidence!
We
Should Judge Ourselves
“If
we would judge ourselves, we should not be judged [punished, corrected of
the Lord].” 1 Cor. 11:31
The Golden Rule would surely settle this disposition to
“gossip” about others and their affairs.
What slanderer wishes to be slandered?
What gossip wishes to have his matters and difficulties and
weaknesses discussed either publicly or confidentially?
The “world” has little else to talk about than gossip and
scandal, but the New Creation should preferably be dumb until the love and
plan of God have furnished them with the great theme of which the angels
sang—“Glory to God in the highest; on earth peace, good will toward
men.” Then the “words of
their mouths and the meditations of their hearts” will be acceptable to
the Lord and a blessing to those with whom they come in contact.
The Apostle, commenting upon the tongue, shows that this little
member of our bodies has great influence.
It may scatter kind words that will never die, but go on and on
blessing the living and through them the yet unborn.
Or, “full of deadly poison,” it may scatter poisonous seeds of
thought to embitter the lives of some, and to blight and crush the lives
of others. The Apostle
says—“Therewith bless [honor] we God, even the Father; and therewith
curse [injure] we men,...out of the same mouth proceedeth blessing and
cursing. My brethren, these
things ought not so to be. Doth a fountain send forth at the same place sweet water and
bitter?” James 3:8-11 [page 408]
“Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh”; so that
when we are gossiping about others, “busybodying” in their affairs, it
proves that a large corner of our hearts, if not more, is empty as
respects the love and grace of God. This
thought should lead us at once to the throne of grace and to the Word for
a filling of the Spirit such as the Lord has promised to those who hunger
and thirst after it. If, still worse than idle gossiping and busybodying,
we have pleasure in hearing or
speaking evil of others, the heart condition is still worse: it is
overflowing with bitterness—envy, malice, hatred, strife.
And these qualities the Apostle declares are “works of the flesh
and the devil.” (Gal. 5:19-21) Would that we could astound and
thoroughly awaken the “New Creation” on this subject; for if ye do
these things ye will surely fall, and no entrance will be granted such
into the everlasting Kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Fitting for the Kingdom leads us in the very opposite direction, as
the Apostle Peter declares, “Add to your faith patience, brotherly
kindness, love; for if ye do these
things ye shall never fall; but gain an abundant entrance into the
Kingdom.” (2 Pet. 1:5-11) The
Apostle James is very plain on the subject and says: “If ye have bitter
envyings and strife in your hearts, glory not and lie
not against the truth. This wisdom descendeth not from above, but
is earthly, sensual, devilish.” (James 3:14,15)
Whoever has such a slanderous and bitter spirit has the very
reverse of the Spirit of Christ, the holy Spirit, the spirit of Love: let
him not lie either to himself or to others—let him not glory in his
shame—let him not thus put darkness for light, the spirit of Satan for
the Spirit of the Anointed.
Proceeding, the Apostle declares the secret of the confusion and
unrest which has troubled the Lord’s people at all times, to be in this
unclean, only partially sanctified condition of the heart, saying,
“where envying and strife is, there is confusion [disquiet, unrest] and
every evil work.” (James 3:16) If
these weeds of the old fallen nature are permitted to grow they will not
only be noxious but will gradually
[page 409] crowd out and kill all the sweet and beautiful
flowers and graces of the Spirit.
Proper
Judging of Ourselves
The Apostle Paul refers to our proper growth as a New Creation and
our proper judging or criticizing of ourselves, saying, “Having,
therefore, these promises, dearly beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from
all filthiness of the flesh and spirit—perfecting holiness in the
reverence of the Lord.” (2 Cor. 7:1)
“Let a man examine himself”—let him note the weaknesses and
filthinesses of his fallen, fleshly nature and seek to cleanse himself,
“putting off” the deeds of the “old man” and being renewed,
changed from glory to glory, more and more into the image of God’s dear
Son, who is our Exemplar as well as our Redeemer and Lord. But the Apostle Paul urges that we cleanse not only our flesh
as much as possible, but also our spirits, or minds—that the new mind,
the holy resolution, or will, be given full control, and that every
thought be brought into captivity to the will of God as expressed by and
illustrated in Christ.
It will be in vain that we shall endeavor to cleanse the flesh and
to bridle the tongue if we neglect the heart, the mind, the spirit, in
which are generated the thoughts, which merely manifest themselves in
filthiness of the flesh—by words and deeds.
Only by prayer and perseverance can this cleansing necessary to a
share in the Kingdom be accomplished—“perfecting holiness in the
reverence of the Lord.” Not
that we may hope, either, to effect an absolute cleansing of the flesh.
It is the absolute cleansing of the will, the heart, the spirit,
that the Lord demands (implying as complete a cleansing of the flesh and
tongue as we can accomplish). Where he sees the heart pure and true to him
and his spirit and law of Love he will, in due time, give the new body
suited to it. “Blessed are
the pure in heart,
for they shall see God.” Matt. 5:8
How appropriate here are the Apostle’s words (2 Thess. 3:5):
“The Lord direct
your hearts into the love of God”—the love that is gentle,
meek, patient, long-suffering—that seeketh
[page 410] not more than her own, and that is not puffed up, nor
envious—that thinketh and speaketh no evil, but trusteth and is kind and
considerate according to the Golden Rule. We need to have our hearts directed
into this love, for as a New Creation we are walking in a new way—not
after the flesh but after the Spirit.
And the Lord alone is our competent guide and director—though he
may use various of his “members” as his mouthpieces.
“Thine ears shall hear a voice behind thee [from the past],
saying, This is the way, walk ye in it.” Isa. 30:21
“Yea,
I Judge Not Mine Own Self—He That
Judgeth
Me Is the Lord”
There are a few of the New Creation—remarkably few, though—who
seem disposed to judge themselves unmercifully. Properly they criticize
their every fault and weakness and desire to be rid of every blemish; but
improperly they forget that the Lord knows us not and judges us not
according to the flesh, but according to
the spirit—the
intent, the will, the desire, the effort.
They give too much heed to the words of Pharisees, “I thank thee
that I am not as other men,” and too little heed to the inspired words
of the Lord, respecting the grounds of his acceptance, and the virtue of
the precious blood in cleansing from all sin.
They forget, in their reasonings on the matter, that if they were
perfect or could do perfectly they would need no Savior, no Advocate. They
forget that “by grace ye are saved” and not by works of the flesh.
Such need to apply to themselves the Apostle’s words, “It is a
very small thing that I should be judged of you, or of any man’s
judgment: yea, I judge not mine own self.
For I know nothing of myself [amiss as a steward], yet I am not
thereby justified: but he that judgeth me [and all] is the Lord.
Therefore judge nothing before the time, until the Lord come, who
will both bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and will make
manifest the counsels [intentions] of the heart.” 1 Cor. 4:3-5
Our confidence is in the Lord, and not in our weak, fallen [page 411]
flesh. We
have learned of the grace and mercy of God toward all who are trusting him
and seeking to walk after the spirit of Love, even though unable to walk fully up
to its perfect requirements.
We are not hoping, therefore, to be perfect in the flesh but
perfect in spirit, in intention; and that our faith and zeal will (through
the merit of our Redeemer) be counted as making up for our actual
blemishes, which we hate and strive against daily.
As we consider the matter we ask—Does God love us who by nature
were children of wrath even as others?
Is he for us, willing to assist us and to give us credit for every
good desire and effort, even though it result in partial or total failure?
Yes, the Lord answers: “The Father himself loveth you.”
The Apostle adds—If God so loved us, while we were yet sinners,
that he gave his Only Begotten Son for our redemption, “shall he not
with him freely give us all things [needful to us in our race for the
prize he sets before us in the Gospel]?”
Surely if he loved us while sinners, he loves us still more
tenderly now—now that he has adopted us into his family—now that he
sees in our hearts an earnest desire to do his will.
Let us, then, be of good faith and approach with courage to the
throne of the heavenly grace, that we may obtain
mercy and find grace to help in every time of need. Heb. 4:16
A word of warning, however, is needed on the other side of this
question. We have all known
instances in which humility and lack of confidence, and fear and distrust
of God’s grace, have given place to an opposite condition of brazen
self-assurance and total blindness to faults and pharisaical thanks for
being better than other men. Alas!
this is a most deplorable and we fear hopeless state!
Faith is needful, but it must be faith in God and not in self. The occasion of such a deflection will generally be found in
a neglect of the Law of Love and the Golden Rule. The perversion of love for the Lord, love for his gracious
plan, love for the brethren of the New Creation and sympathetic love for
the world of mankind is—self-love, self-importance, self-honor,
self-glorification. Let us beware of this side track which leads far from
the Lord and his Spirit and his Kingdom.
Though leaders
[page 412] are specially liable to this snare, others also are
exposed to it. Some very
deficient in every qualification for teachers become sadly “puffed up in
their fleshly minds”—proud, knowing nothing, “but doting about
questions and strifes of words, whereof cometh envy, strife, railings,
evil-surmisings ...from such withdraw thyself.
For godliness with contentment is great gain.” 1 Tim. 6:4-6; see
also 1 John 3:9,10.
The Church Should Judge Some Matters
While individually we are not to judge, or condemn, but to await
the Lord’s time for public manifestation of his decision in respect to
each member of his body, the “New Creation,” yet in some cases the
Church [congregation—Ecclesia] is in duty bound
to judge. For instance, the
Apostle mentions a case of fornication publicly acknowledged by the
offender against morals, and known to the entire Church; he declares that
in fellowshiping such a confessed libertine the Church had erred; and
forthwith he exercised his apostolic authority in excommunicating the
transgressor, separating him from the fellowship of the believers,
figuratively delivering him over to Satan, to chastisements, for the
destruction of his carnality, that the spirit, the new mind, might thus
ultimately be saved, in the day of the Lord, in the reckoning time at the
close of this age. 1 Cor. 5:5
Only the Lord himself or one of his apostles (the special twelve,
of whom Paul was the last, chosen to Judas’ place) would have the
authority, the right, to proceed in the manner declared; just as only an
apostle could have dealt as Peter did with Ananias and Sapphira. (Acts
5:1-11) The Apostle Paul explains his position further, saying, “I
wrote unto you in an epistle, not to company with fornicators.
Yet not altogether [forbidding dealings] with fornicators of this
world, or with the covetous, or extortioners, or with idolaters; for then
must ye needs go out of the world.”
He would have them see that it is one thing to have business
dealings with the unsanctified, and an entirely different matter to [page 413] recognize such as fellow-members of the New Creation.
The lowering of the moral standard would be no kindness to the
transgressor, either; he would be more helped by seeing that his
uncleanness separated him entirely from the Lord’s people; and if really
begotten of the Spirit of God he would the more quickly and the more
keenly realize his true position, learn the lesson and repent.
The Church practiced a mistaken charity toward the offender and,
thereby, risked a general demoralization amongst its members, and also a
contagion amongst all believers in other congregations who might learn of
the conditions prevailing at Corinth.
The Apostle outlines briefly the duty of the faithful in such
cases; and we paraphrase his words as follows: What I have written unto
you is, that you should not have fellowship with a man known as a
“brother” if he be a fornicator,
or covetous,
or an idolater, or a reviler,
or a drunkard, or an extortioner—no,
not so much as to eat with such. Indeed,
I am not attempting to judge the world; but I am urging that you as a
Church should judge those whom you accept as brethren. God will judge the
outsiders: your duty is to put away from your midst wicked persons. 1 Cor.
5
The Apostle follows this argument by criticizing the fact that in
disputes between brethren there was a disposition to go to worldly
law-courts for justice instead of enduring the wrong patiently if it were
endurable, or, if unbearable, taking it to the Church as a court of last
resort. The Apostle urges
that if God is selecting the Church to be the future judge of the world,
its members should certainly be no less fair and honorable and just in
their decisions than the world, even now.
The least esteemed in the Church should be trustworthy in such
matters. Is there not one in
your midst in whose wisdom and integrity all could trust implicitly, and
to whose decision disputants would bow?
“Why do ye not rather take wrong?”
Why do ye not suffer injustice, if you consider the decision
unfair?—why not suffer loss, rather than perpetuate quarrels or resort
to public courts with charges against each other?
Nay, says the
[page 414] Apostle, I perceive that not only are you unwilling
to suffer injustice for the sake of peace and harmony in the body of
Christ, but worse, and more of it: there are some among you willing to do
wrong and defraud—even their brethren.
Are you not as the Lord’s Church seeking to attain the Kingdom?
And “know ye not that the unrighteous [unjust] shall not inherit the
Kingdom of God? Be not
deceived: neither fornicators,
nor idolaters,
nor adulterers,
nor effeminate,
nor abusers
of themselves with mankind, nor thieves,
nor covetous, nor drunkards,
nor revilers,
nor extortioners
shall inherit the Kingdom of God. And
such were some of you: but ye are washed; but ye are sanctified; but ye
are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our
God.” 1 Cor. 6:1-11
This statement of offenses which would debar from the Kingdom is to
be a guide respecting offenses which should debar from fellowship in the
Church. In respect to all
these things, then, the words apply—“Put away from among yourselves
that wicked person,” whosoever he may be, that is guilty of any of these
offenses.
“If
Thy Brother Trespass Against Thee”
But is not this in conflict with our Lord’s command, “Judge not
that ye be not judged?” Must
we not first judge the evildoer individually, and then talk, or gossip,
about his evil deeds, or do “evil speaking” respecting him, so that
the entire Church may know and repudiate the evildoer?
By no means: the divine arrangement is fully in harmony with itself
when rightly understood. If A
and B have a difference, and A believes himself to be defrauded by B, he must not judge B in
the sense of condemning him. He
may only say, “There is a difference between us, and I feel sure that I
am right; though B may feel equally confident that he is right and that I
have not been wronged.” A
may not disfellowship B on this account, for to do so would be to judge
him—to condemn him.
He may say, to himself, “The matter is trivial, anyway, as
between brethren, and I will let it drop, believing that B, as a brother
in the Lord, would [page 415] not wrong me intentionally, and that it may be that
my view and not his is the wrong one.”
However, if he be not able to take this view he still must not
judge, must not decide, that he is right and B wrong—but must go
to B and explain how the matter appears to him, and if possible
reach a kind, brotherly agreement, perhaps by mutual concessions.
But if they cannot agree, he may ask two or three of the wisest
brethren of the Church, C and D (brethren in whose sincerity B as well as
himself would have great confidence), to go
with him to see B on the subject—not to condemn B, for even A
himself must not have judged, or condemned, him; but to hear the matter in
the presence of A and B and give their advice to both.
This should result satisfactorily to all—especially if all have
the spirit of love one for the other and the desire to do right toward one
another as members of the anointed body.
But if peace is not yet established, there still is to be no
judging, no condemnation; for two or three brethren cannot “judge”
but only the Church.
If when A took with him C and D, they gave their opinion against A
and in favor of B, that should end the matter. Under such conditions A
cannot take the question to the Church.
He evidently would be quite self-opinionated and “heady” to
carry the matter further. The
Lord’s instructions give him no further privilege (Matt. 18:15); but if
he were still dissatisfied, we know of no principle that would be violated
if he took two or three other able and unprejudiced brethren, E, F, G, to
B, for a fresh hearing of the case and for their advice.
But if, when A took C and D to B, they all sided with A’s
contention that B had wronged him and refused to desist, and if B after a
reasonable time refused or neglected to right the wrong, A would be
privileged in conjunction with C and D to call a meeting of the Church, to
whom the whole matter should be rehearsed by both A and B—for it is to
be supposed that if B still associates with the Church he recognizes its
counsel and authority, and it is to be presumed also [page 416]
that B is conscientious. When the Church hears the matter, it is not to be forgotten
that only the justified and sanctified constitute the Church, and that they
are sitting in judgment in the name of their Lord and Head and to deliver his
judgment. The matter is not to make a factional fight in the
Church, but to preserve its unity in the bonds of peace. A and B, of course, should not vote, nor should anyone vote
who felt any other than a desire to express the Lord’s judgment in the
matter. The decision should
be unanimous, or practically so—even though this should require some
modification of the extremes of sentiment.
Let justice always be tempered with mercy, “Considering thyself,
lest thou also be tempted.” Gal. 6:1
The Church’s decision is to be accepted as final by all; and
whoever refuses to accept and conform to its requirements in such a matter
of morals (not of conscience) is to be unto the others “as an heathen
man or a publican”—until such time as he shall cease to defy the
Church—when, of course, he shall be forgiven and received fully into
fellowship as before. The
object is not to cast the brother off utterly; but merely to show disfavor
toward his wrong course with a view to assisting him to its correction.
To treat such an one “as an heathen man and a publican” would
not mean to slander or dishonor him even after he had been cast off. The Lord’s people are not to be slanderers or backbiters
under any circumstances: the general command—“Speak evil of no man,”
covers the case exactly. We
are neither to speak ill of, nor to look cross at, publicans and sinners,
nor to refuse to do business with them; but we are to withhold from them
the special fellowship and courtesy appropriate to the brethren of the New
Creation and possessed of the holy Spirit and its love, joy and peace.
Should B refuse to hear the Church and to desist from doing wrong
to A, and then later repent and be received back into full fellowship, his
contumacy should be remembered against him if at any time he were
nominated for the duties of an Elder.
He would need to manifest a decided [page 417]
change before being considered fit for that service;
for even if he were thoroughly conscientious, his course would, at least,
prove him rather obtuse as respected right where his personal interests
were involved. Indeed, to
refuse to heed the counsel of three brethren and to necessitate the
bringing of the wrong to the Church for adjudication would be an
unfavorable indication, even if he afterward heard the Church and obeyed
it and made amends to A.
Forgive,
Seventy Times Seven Times
Suppose that when A went first to B, to discuss the injustice done
to A, the conference resulted in B’s acknowledging his fault and
endeavoring to right the same to the best of his ability; or suppose he
thus repented after the second visit of A with C and D, what should be the
attitude of A toward B? He
should forgive him, and that most heartily. He may not even put upon him a
penalty but remember the words—“Vengeance is mine, I will repay, saith
the Lord!” But how often
may this be kept up? How many
times must we forgive if he repents? How long must we bear with his weaknesses?
“Seven times?”—asked Peter.
Our Lord’s answer comes down to us equally—“I say not unto
thee until seven times, but until seventy times seven.”
We must forgive the trespasses of others as we would have our
Father in heaven forgive our trespasses against his divine law.
If tempted to despise our brother on account of his weaknesses, we
must think of our own weaknesses, and remember that he who shows no mercy
shall receive no mercy.* James 2:13
—————
*See, additionally, Chapter vi—“Discipline in the Ecclesia.”
Offenses
Against the Church
We have considered the procedure proper in judging offenses against
the individual; but in the case of the fornicator mentioned by the
Apostle, and in other supposable cases, the offense might be against no
particular member of [page 418] the Ecclesia;
but against the whole—against the cause we unitedly represent.
What then should be the mode of procedure?
It might be the same as in the individual grievance, if the sin
were not public property. But
if the matter were publicly known, it would be the duty of the elders to
cite the offender before the Church for trial, without the preliminary
private visits; because the publicity had taken it beyond any private
settlement. Likewise, if it were a case of slander against the elders or
any of them, the hearing should be by the Church and not privately;
because the slanderers, if they conscientiously thought they had a good
cause, yet had neglected the Lord’s rule (“Go to him alone,” and
afterward “Take with thee two or three others”) and had spread
scandalous and defamatory tales, had thereby carried
the matter beyond the power of individual
rectification and made
it a matter for the Church.
In such cases it would be proper for the slandered Elder to call
together the Board of Elders as representatives of the Church, and to deny
the calumnies and ask that the slanderers be indicted to answer charges of
slander and false-witnessing before the Church; because their offense was
toward the Church (1) in that it was contrary to the rules laid down by
the Head of the Church and contrary to decency and good morals; and (2)
because the slander being against an Elder chosen by the Church was thus a
slander against the entire Church selecting him.
The slanderers should be condemned and rebuked and required to
acknowledge their error; but after doing this they would have a right to
proceed against the Elder supposed to be in error, just as they should
have done at first.
We
Must All Appear Before the Tribunal of Christ
—2
Cor. 5:10—
The “we” of this text, undoubtedly refers to the Church—the
New Creation. It is not,
however, to be confounded with the gathering of “all nations” before
the Son of Man when he shall come in his glory and all the holy messengers
with
[page 419] him, as recorded in Matt. 25:31-46.
When the Son of Man “shall sit on the throne of his glory” he
has promised that his faithful Ecclesia, his Bride, shall
share that throne and glory, and shall share in that Millennial judgment
of the nations, including “all that are in their graves.”
The Church’s judgment is evidently pictured and described by our
Lord in Matt. 25:14-30 and Luke 19:12-26. It will take place in the end of
this age and be the first work of the King at his second advent, before he
begins to deal with the world. He
will first reckon with his own servants, to whom he intrusted various
stewardships of wealth and influence, talent and opportunity, which they
have been more or less faithful, persevering and self-sacrificing in
using. These must all be reckoned with, and the faithful be rewarded and
given rule over two cities, five cities or ten cities—otherwise
designated “the joys of thy Lord.” The rewards will not all be alike as respects glory and
honor, though all will be glorious and honorable.
“As star differeth from star in glory” so shall be those who
will share the First Resurrection to “glory, honor and immortality.” 1
Cor. 15:41
Faithfulness, love, zeal will be the tests.
Those who have talents and bury them in the earth, in business or
pleasure or sloth, will thus show lack of love and appreciation—and
consequently unworthiness of the Kingdom, and will not enter “the joys
of the Lord,” nor be permitted to reign with him in the blessing of the
world. [page 420]
“The
Lord Knoweth How”
—2
Pet. 2:9—
“I will trust, and not be afraid.” Isa.
12:2
“The storm-clouds are rolling across the
horizon,
And peal upon peal of the thunder is heard:
The flashes of lightning are vivid and awful:
Yet never a fear in this bosom is stirred,
For is it not written, and everywhere shown,
‘The Lord knoweth how to deliver His
own!’
“The gleam of the sword can be seen in the
distance,
The moans of the wounded and dying we hear;
And warfare and bloodshed are growing more
rampant:
But none of these things can awaken a fear,
For is it not written, and everywhere shown,
‘The Lord knoweth how to deliver His
own!’
“The foe we contend with is artful and
cunning,
And many, indeed, are the snares he has laid:
We are not unmindful of Satan’s devices,
Though of his temptations we are not afraid;
For is it not written, and everywhere shown,
‘The Lord knoweth how to deliver His
own!’
“‘The Lord knoweth how,’ though we
often are puzzled,
And to our conceptions no pathway is clear;
But since we are guided by Infinite Wisdom,
The word He hath spoken forbids every fear:
For is it not written, and everywhere shown,
‘The Lord knoweth how to deliver His
own!’
“‘The Lord knoweth how,’ is our
strength in our weakness,
The promise of sunshine, though storm-clouds
appear;
A peaceful assurance amid every battle,
The way of escape from each trial and fear;
For is it not written, and everywhere shown,
‘The Lord knoweth how to deliver His own!’” |