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Chosen no: R-5209 a, from: 1913 Year. |
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Qualities And Attributes Of Jehovah
THE SCRIPTURES declare a "beginning of the
creation of God." His qualities and attributes were the same then that
they are now; for the Scriptures also declare His unchangeableness--"the
same yesterday, today and forever."--Hebrews 13:8; Psalm 90:1,2.
The
completeness of the Divine perfection is such that companionship is not
necessary to the happiness of Jehovah. The One who "inhabiteth
eternity" is self-centered. The creation of angels and of man was indeed
His pleasure, because, benevolently, He desires to do good, to give capacity
for pleasure and to afford it opportunity for gratification. Furthermore, the
highest good of His creatures calls for an exhibition to the full of all the
elements of Divine character--Divine Justice, Love, Power and Wisdom.
BELIEF
IN SATAN LOGICAL
The
declaration of the Bible respecting the Father's Power is that "the eyes
of the Lord [the intelligence of Jehovah] are in every place, beholding the
evil and the good." (Proverbs 15:3.) This
statement implies that there are things evil as well as good; things which God approves and things which He disapproves. This citation comes
the nearest to a suggestion of God's omnipresence contained in the Scriptures.
The
fact that the Lord has knowledge of all conditions of things is not out
of harmony with the other fact that He permits conditions which He disapproves, and which He declares that He will ultimately destroy. "All the
wicked will He destroy."--Psalm 145:20.
If
we accept the great Divine premise that the Bible is the Word of God, then we
are bound to accept the declaration that there is a being called Satan, that he
is the "god of this world" (2 Corinthians
4:4), and that he now works in the "hearts of the children of
disobedience." (Ephesians 2:2.) These
words imply not only that there are evil principles at work in this
world, but that behind them there are evil spirit beings, of whom Satan
is the inspirer and through whom he is working.
Certain
statements are made respecting Satan which could not properly be applied to a principle
of evil, or to a working of error; as, for instance, Jesus declared that Satan
was a "murderer" from the beginning--and a "liar." (John 8:44.) Errors and principles are not
murderers and liars. It would be a misuse of language to make such application.
Only an intelligent being can be a murderer or a liar. Hence the whole tenor of
the Scriptures [R5210 : page 101] upholds
the assertion that there is such a being as Satan and that he is in opposition
to God.
If
we were to suppose the everlasting continuance of Satan as a being, as an
adversary of God, the matter would seem strange to us, because irreconcilable
with our conception of Divine Power. We have the statement of the Scriptures
respecting his reign and ultimate destruction. (Hebrews
2:14.) With this information we have a reasonable, logical thought on
the subject. When we consider the Scriptural presentation further, that
originally Satan was not an evil being, but that he made himself
evil by the exercise of personal liberty and became the enemy of God, the
subject seems to be clear and reasonable. In fact, this is the only rational
solution to the problem of his existence.
To
suppose that there is no Satan is to suppose that God has permitted His Word to
deceive mankind in this respect, or that the Devil is a manifestation of God
Himself --a position which is unthinkable. Nor is it logical to say that there
is a Devil, an opponent of God, and at the same time to maintain that God is
all in all, and omnipresent --everywhere present. But we do not find this
latter statement to be Biblical. The Scriptural proposition is that at the
close of the Millennial Age, when Christ shall have conquered sin and Satan,
when Satan shall have been destroyed, and when the Kingdom of the Universe
shall be in absolute harmony, then God will be all in all. (I
Corinthians 15:28.) To all eternity there will be no opposition to His will. There is opposition now, however, in many places and at
many times. But ultimately, God will have full control.
THE
OMNIPOTENCE OF JEHOVAH
To
say that God is all Power is sophistry of language which often misleads
the one questioning as well as the one attempting to answer him. The statement
is not correct. If God is all Power, then He is not Love or Justice or Wisdom. He
would thus be limited to the one great attribute of Power, or force. Such
cannot be the thought entertained by any logical mind. It is, nevertheless, a
form of statement that is often used, perhaps unintentionally, but very
injuriously to the reasoning faculties.
The
Bible nowhere says God is all Power. There is a marked difference between being power and exercising power. God is all-powerful. He has the ability to
exercise power in any direction to the extent that He wills. If
He had chosen, He could have so created Satan that he could not think or do
other than in harmony with the Divine will; or He could have exercised His
power to crush the Adversary and thus have destroyed him long ago. But He has
permitted Satan to exist for six thousand years, in the sense that He does not
restrain the Devil from doing evil. The Scriptures, however, tell us that God
will eventually destroy him.
The
scope of the exercise of Divine Power is the Universe, but it is difficult for
our finite minds to comprehend the meaning of this word--Universe. Astronomers
tell us that by the aid of photo-astronomy they can see nearly 125,000,000
suns--the centers of solar systems like our own, with supposedly more than a
billion of planets more or less like our earth. These, we may assume, are in
process of development, are in preparation for inhabitants, whom the great
Creator will in due time provide. From the Scriptural standpoint, however, the
great work of human creation began with our earth. What a boundless thought we
have in the mere suggestion that the billion worlds are to be peopled, and that
the lessons of righteousness and sin, of life and death eternal, now being
taught to humanity, will never need to be repeated!
We
stand appalled at the immensity of space and at the law and order which
everywhere reign! We heartily assent to the words of the Prophet David,
"Day unto day uttereth speech, and night unto night showeth knowledge. There
is no speech nor language where their voice is not heard." (Psalm 19:2,3.) The person who can look upon this
wonderful display of superhuman power and believe that these worlds created
themselves, shows to the majority of us that, if he has brains, they are sadly
disordered, unbalanced. Whoever, after mature thought, concludes that there is
no God, that everything came to be what it is by chance or by the operation of
some blind force--that person is described in the Scriptures in the following
words, "The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God."--Psalm 14:1.
As
scientific instruments demonstrate to us the immensity of the Universe, we
perceive that the Prophet used very moderate language indeed in his description
of the majestic power and greatness of the Creator, when he represents Jehovah
as weighing the mountains in His balance and holding the seas in the hollow of
His Hand. [R5210 : page 102] (Isaiah 40:12.) From His standpoint, a thousand
years are but as a watch in the night. (Psalm 90:4.)
How insignificantly small we all feel in the presence of our God! No wonder
some great men are inclined to say that humanity is too insignificant from the
Divine standpoint to be worthy of the least consideration--much less to be
objects of Divine care and providence!
THE
OMNISCIENCE OF JEHOVAH
To
say that God is all Knowledge is also an inaccurate statement. If God
were all Knowledge, how could He be all Power? God has all Knowledge,
possesses all Knowledge. But this is a different matter. If we say, "The
boy has a hoop," we do not mean that he is a hoop. To be a
hoop and to have a hoop are not the same. God is omniscient; that
is, He knows all things. This very fact proves that He is a personal
God. There can be no knowledge without personality. Knowledge implies
cognizance of external things. Amongst the things outside the Divine Person are
things both good and evil.
When
we read that God created man in His own image and likeness (Genesis
1:26,27), we may know that man is not God. He was merely made in the image of God. Because God is perfect, therefore the human being made in His image
would be satisfactory to God. That human being had knowledge. But he neglected
the Word of God, and thus he learned something by his neglect. What he learned
is mentioned in the Scriptures. "He is become as one of Us [the Elohim],
to know good and evil." (Genesis 3:22.)
This statement proves that God knows good and evil.
If
God did not know evil from good, then He could not be our Instructor. By His
laws, His principles, God sets before our minds that which is right and that
which is wrong. Adam knew how to discriminate between right and wrong, but his
disobedience increased his knowledge of both good and evil. In his fallen
condition man cannot always determine between them. Therefore God gave Israel a Law,
and man's knowledge of that Law assists him to discriminate between good and
evil.
One
of old time said, "Thou art a God which hidest Thyself." (Isaiah 45:15.) How true! As a result the world by
wisdom knows not God. He is near in His Wisdom and Love, yet He can be seen
only by those whose eyes of understanding have been opened. But we are glad
that the time is coming when all the blind eyes shall see clearly. "As
truly as I live," says Jehovah, "all the earth shall be filled with the
glory of the Lord." "The earth shall be filled with the knowledge of
the glory of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea." (Num.
14:21; Hab. 2:14.) Then all shall see
what God hath wrought, and our temporary blindness will but accentuate the
glorious brightness of His Wisdom, Justice, Love and Power.
"GOD
IS LOVE"
God
is Love in the sense that the term Love represents the central principle of the
Divine character. There is nothing contrary to love in God. The Scriptures do
not teach that there is nothing except love anywhere--that God is everywhere
and love is everywhere. But they teach that God is a loving character. This
does not militate against the other statements that God is just, wise and
powerful. But this quality of Love best of all represents the Divine Being. All
of His Justice is in harmony with His Love. There is no exercise of Justice or
Power in an evil sense, for all His attributes work together for good to all
His creatures.
The
Scriptures encourage us to reason from the known to the unknown. They tell us
that although God is so great, so wise, so powerful, He is also just and
loving. And the more we consider the matter, the more reasonable the Bible
description of the Almighty appears. His Power we see demonstrated. The Wisdom
of One so great cannot be doubted. When we come to consider, Could One so wise
and so powerful be unjust or ungenerous? Our hearts answer, No! No one is
really great who is devoid of justice and love. So surely as our God is
Jehovah, He must possess these qualities.
When
we came in contact with the Bible, and particularly after we learned something
of its teachings and got rid of the misrepresentations which gathered about it
during the Dark Ages--then we began to recognize it as the Message of Jehovah
to His creatures. It informs us that the great Creator of the Universe is not
only Almighty and All-wise, but loving and kind, with Justice as the foundation
of His Empire. (Psalm 89:13,14.) From the
Bible we learn, too, that our Creator has been pleased to make us in His own
image, in His own moral likeness, to the intent that we may enjoy Him and the
fruits of His righteousness to all eternity.
All
the Power, all the Justice, all the Wisdom, of God must be used in accordance
with His own character, which is Love. It will therefore be loving Wisdom,
loving Justice, which He will use toward all creation in the exercise of His
loving Power for their good. He created man. He permitted Adam to disobey His
Law, telling us that [R5211 : page 102] He
knew in advance what man would do and that He permitted man to do wrong.--Isaiah 46:9,10.
In
permitting sin to enter the world, God had two ends in view. He purposed to
give an illustration to the angels respecting the results of obedience and of
disobedience. He also intended that the human family should gain a lesson from
this experience. Thus we know that God's arrangement from the beginning has
been for a resurrection of the dead. "As all in Adam die, even so shall
all in Christ be made alive."--I Corinthians
15:21,22.
If
we were to take any fragment of Scripture as a basis for a system of doctrine,
we would find ourselves either teaching universalism on the one hand, or
claiming that God has no Wisdom, or that He purposed the evil, or what not. We
would get into all sorts of confusion. But when we see the perfect adjustment
of God's Justice, Wisdom, Love and Power, and realize that He has good purposes
respecting the evil, that He has fully marked out what it shall do and what it
shall not do, either in its present influence, or in its ultimate influence,
this gives us confidence in the character of God.
THE
PERMISSION OF EVIL
From
only one standpoint can Divine Wisdom and Love be discerned in connection with
the history of mankind. It must include the Age about to be ushered in-- the
period of Messiah's reign of righteousness. This will be the time when every
member of Adam's race, sharing the penalty of sin and death because inheriting
his weaknesses, will be set free from these; the time when the full knowledge
of the glory of God shall be granted to every human being, and when a full
opportunity will come to each, by obedience, to gain life everlasting.
The
lesson thus far taught is the goodness and the severity of God--His goodness in
bringing us into being, and His severity in the punishment of Father Adam's
wilful transgression; also to both men and angels, Justice, unswerving Justice. The next lesson to be taught to God's intelligent creatures is that
God is Love. The foundation for these lessons is already laid in the Ransom-sacrifice
of Jesus, through and on account of which He becomes the world's Redeemer and
Restorer. A few [R5211 : page 103] can
believe this Message by faith; but not many have the ear of faith or the eye of
faith. Only the saints are able to appreciate this great fact at the present
time.
That
which is now secret and understood only by the few is shortly to be made
manifest to every creature in heaven and in earth. All will then see and be
able to appreciate the great fact that the redemption accomplished by the
sacrifice of Jesus is world-wide and means a full deliverance from the
sin-and-death condemnation which passed upon Adam and all of his race, to all
who will accept the same as a gift from God. The remainder will be destroyed in
the Second Death.
THE
SECOND DEATH THE ESSENCE OF WISDOM
As
for the Second Death, we easily see that if God created man in His own image,
man must of necessity be a free moral agent; otherwise he would not be in God's
image. If he was created a free moral agent, he must have the power or
privilege to will wrong as well as right. If he exercise his power in the
direction of evil, God has the power to destroy him. On the other hand, if he
live in harmony with righteousness God has the power to grant him life to all
eternity.
The
destruction of the wicked in the Second Death is the essence of Wisdom. As to
the declaration that God is too pure to behold evil (Habakkuk
1:13), the thought of the original seems to be that God's character is
so pure and so righteous that He will not continue to behold evil. He will not
permit evil to exist to all eternity, for this condition would not be pleasing
to Him.
This
very thought implies that there is evil to behold. If not so, how could He
behold it? But this is all consistent with the Divine Plan. Ultimately all evil
shall be destroyed. Ultimately all creatures which are "in heaven and on
earth and such as are in the sea" shall be heard saying, "Blessing
and honor and glory and power, be unto Him that sitteth upon the Throne, and unto
the Lamb forever and ever."--Revelation 5:13.
W.T. R-5209
a : page 101 – 1913 r.