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Chosen no: R-236 a, from: 1881 Year. |
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The Presence And Harvest.
"What shall be the sign of
thy presence and of the consummation of the age?" - (MATT. 24:3.) (See Emphatic Diaglott.)
This rendering sheds light on the relation between the presence of
Christ and the Harvest. The Greek word parousia does not mean the act of coming,
but the being present. So the Lexicons tell us. The word aion does not mean
this globe, or this general order of things, but an era, or age.
This passage, it will be seen, gives no countenance to the quite popular
conception of the relation between the coming of Christ and the "wreck of
matter and crush of worlds." This false notion makes the subject one of
dread.
The word suntelia, translated end, does not mean a point, but a period of
time. The same word is used in Matt. 13:39: "The harvest is the end
[suntelia] of the age." In verse 30 Jesus shows that the harvesting is a
work done. "In the time [period] of the harvest." With these few
facts before us, reading the text gives this as the substance of the question:
"What shall be the sign [evidence] of thy presence and of the harvest of
the age?"
The sign of the presence is the sign of the time of harvest--one sign
(evidence in the aggregate) for two things. The worker and the work are related
to each other. Whoever believes, on the strength of what he considers good
evidence, that the harvest is come, ought to believe in the presence of Christ,
as Lord of the Angel reapers. The presence and the harvest are related not only
in the text, but in reason. Some who once consistently accepted both, because
of their relation, now deny the presence, and inconsistently hold that He will
not come until the end of the harvest. They will doubtless soon, in order to
regain the balance of consistency, discard the harvest also. Matt.
24:3must suffer violence, if it must be maintained that the harvest --the end
of the age, and its work,--precedes the coming of Christ; and this is the
position of all who deny the presence of Christ and yet teach that we are in
the harvest time.
It would not be so inconsistent with the order of the text should it be
claimed that the presence of Christ, for some preparatory reason, should
precede the harvest, as it was at the first advent, from His birth to His
ministry; but to invert the order and have the consummation of the age before
His arrival seems absurd.
We have no desire to make parallels, but when parallels really exist
between the closing work of the Jewish and Gospel ages, we are glad to accept
them, and regard them as a strength to the argument on the equality of the
"Two Dispensations." And it is strangely out of harmony with the
pattern character of the Jewish dispensation to claim, as some do, that though
Christ was present on the Jewish level to introduce the Jewish harvest, yet He
will not come to the level of the Gospel church until the Gospel harvest is ended.
There can be no doubt that the cause of this inconsistency, and denial
of the presence of Christ during the Gospel harvest, is a misapprehension of what
the level of the perfect Gospel church is. Paul gives us the key when he says:
"Ye are not in the flesh, but in the spirit, if so be that the Spirit of
God dwell in you." (Rom. 8:9.) The ideal of the flesh is a perfect flesh
man, but the ideal of the Spirit is "the spirits of just men made perfect."
(Heb. 12:23.) If a perfect flesh man has a flesh body, a perfect spiritual
being ought to have a "spiritual body"--and such Paul assures us will
be the case: "It is sown a natural [psukikon--animal] body; it is raised a
spiritual [pneumatikon] body." The former, even when perfect, is, and must
be, according to the law of the flesh; and the latter is by the law of the
Spirit. So Jesus, knowing both laws, says: "That which is born of
[produced by] the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of [produced by] the
Spirit is spirit."
No wonder that those who deny the presence and yet believe the harvest
is here, are anxious to ignore some of the parallels of the Two Dispensations. Losing
sight of the parallel causes them to ignore also the contract; for the second
coming is, [R237 : page 7] and should be, in harmony
with the spiritual character of the Gospel dispensation, even as the first
coming was in harmony with the fleshly character of the Jewish dispensation.
That spiritual beings are naturally invisible to mortals, has often been
proved; and that they have power to appear when it is necessary. God is said to
be invisible, and of Christ it is said: "Who is the image of the invisible
God, the first born of every creature;" (Col. 1:15) clearly implying that
as soon as creatures are born of the Spirit they, too, become invisible. Angels
are naturally invisible to mortals, and yet on special occasions they have been
seen, and men have the promise of being made like unto the angels, and also
like unto Christ.
The invisibility of the new being to mortals is more than implied in
Paul's teaching in 2 Cor. 4:14-18.
That the risen body of Christ was invisible to mortals, only when for
special reasons He appeared, should be admitted by all who ever knew that
truth, or who have read the account. That, though Christians are actually in
the flesh until these bodies are changed, (Phil. 3:21) God does not count them
in the flesh, but in the spirit, (Rom. 8:9) and therefore as "risen with
Christ" (Col. 3:1) "through the faith of the operation of God, who
hath raised Him from the dead," (Col. 2:12) cannot be ignored with
impunity.
As Christ risen is naturally invisible, as we have shown, so when we
have attained His perfect state, we too will be naturally invisible to mortals;
i.e., when we have actually attained that in which we are now counted, on
account of our faith, and the new work begun in us by the Spirit. That new
nature is spoken of as Christ in you; (Rom. 8:10, and Gal. 2:20) Christ formed
in you; (Gal. 4:19) "the hope of glory;" (Col. 1:27) "the inner
man;" (Eph. 3:16) and "a new creation," (2 Cor. 5:17). The last
passage, with its context, shows that this new nature by which we are related
to the second Adam, and not the old Adam, nature, is the basis of our
recognition as Christians, and of our fellowship. It also shows that the reason
we are so counted is because we are in Christ, and He is no longer known after
the flesh.
In the preceding chapter, before mentioned and to which attention is now
called, the two natures, or men, are contrasted;--the old being the outward,
the seen, the temporal, the perishing; while the new is the inward, the not
seen, renewed day by day, the eternal. Those who cannot see that the new
creature is invisible to mortals, both in the pre-natal and perfect state, it
is to be hoped, are not willfully blind.
Failing to apprehend the double relationship of the Christian, in all
its bearings, has caused some to misapprehend our position as to the presence
of Christ. As natural or mortal beings we are related to the first Adam, but in
our new nature we are related to the second Adam. Now we are as new beings in
an "earthly house," and so our bodies are said to be the "temple
of the Holy Spirit." We do not, however, wish to be unclothed, but clothed
upon with the heavenly house, or house from heaven. 2 Cor.
5:1-8.
There are two phases of service appropriately related to these two
phases of life--an external service and an internal service. The
"court" and the "holy place" of the tabernacle seem to
represent these two phases of service. The court was open and visible, but all
beyond the first vail was covered with dyed rams' skins, "and a covering
of badgers' skins above that." Ex. 36:19. No eye could penetrate it. The
only light there was from the lamps. The court (sometime also called the
"holy place," (Lev. 14:13and Ex. 29:11,31) was the place of sacrifice
and of washing, and seems to represent our more earthly phase of life, and the
disposition to be made of the flesh, by the indwelling Spirit. (Rom. 8:13.) But
the "holy" or second apartment seems to represent our hidden life--in
which "we walk by faith, not by sight." In this department and by
faith, we eat of the hidden bread, walk in the light the world cannot see, and
serve at an unseen altar. When we ascend to the perfection of spiritual beings
we will see Him with eyes immortal; but while we walk by faith, we must receive
His presence by faith, under the leadings of the Spirit. Nickname our view as
men may please, to us it appears in harmony with the Law and the Prophets.
The philosophy of the plan, as well as the general statements of the New
Testament, teaches the higher and spiritual and invisible character of the
coming of Christ to receive His saints to Himself. To ignore that philosophy
and those teachings is to ignore the relation of the natural and the spiritual
as seen in the two Adams, the two Dispensations, the two Jerusalems, the two
bodies and the two-- "First the natural, afterward the spiritual," in
almost every element of the plan.
The fact that a sign of His presence was needed and given is evidence
that the presence was to be invisible to the natural eye. The sign--(all the
evidences)--is for the church. This is proved by the general plan. "Light
is sown for the righteous." The world is to learn by judgments, which will
doubtless be the appearing of the sign to them. There is doubtless import in
the fact that the disciples came to Him privately, saying: "Tell us when
shall these things be," &c.
The condition of the world--their excuse and ignorance--during the first
part at least of the parousia--presence --of Christ--is stated by Himself. (See
Matt. 24:37-39.) The word coming in this passage is not Erkomia, but Parousia. The
Saviour compares the period of His presence to "the days of Noah"--
not to the flood, as some suppose, but to the "days which were before the
flood," while the ark was preparing." (See verse 38and compare 1 Pet.
3:20.)
In Luke 17:26, instead of "coming," we have a "phrase "in
the days of the Son of man," which agrees with the idea of Presence. That
this presence, in his days precedes, for a time, the rapture or taking away of
the saints, is proved by the light given for them by the Saviour; and by the
fact that the day does not come unawares on the watchers, because they walk in
the light. (Luke 21:34-36 and 1 Thess. 5:1-5. Another
evidence that He will be present for a time and that presence proclaimed,
before the wise are gone, may be drawn from the contrast between the work of
the "Faithful and wise servant" and the "Evil servant." (Matt.
24:45-51.) The evil servant says: "My Lord delays," and smites his
fellow servant, who must be proclaiming the opposite, which is, "My Lord
no longer tarries." Until he has come of course he delays. It is not so
much the honest doubt that is to be condemned as the persecuting spirit.
This Suntelia--the end of the age, the harvest--agrees with Peter's
"Last of the days," in which he says: "Scoffers will come with
scoffing," and saying, 'Where is the promise of His presence?'" The
scoffer's point is that nothing in the circumstances appeals to the natural
eyes "All things continue in this way from the beginning." 2 Pet.
3:3-4. (Diaglott) "If your Christ has been present these seven years, He has
done nothing"--an expression some use (and we give it free from its
severity) sounds a little like the plea Peter mentions. If the harvest work has
been in process, He has not been idle, for even though the Reapers are the
Angels, He is Lord of the Angels as well as men. He is therefore the chief
Reaper--the Lord of the Harvest. If there is no evidence of the presence, there
is none of the Harvest,--the sign of the one is the sign of the other. To use
the amount of evidence is great--coming by a combination of the prophetic
periods, the parallels and the "signs of the times." There are
doubtless unseen facts which, when knowledge is perfected, will be found in
harmony with what we have seen. But there is so much evidence which appeals to
faith, [R237 : page 8] that we are encouraged to hold
fast. We think if Jesus were present in the flesh, as when he came to the Jews,
He would say now as then: "Ye can discern the face of the earth and of the
sky; how is it that ye cannot discern this time?" The clearer the
understanding, the deeper will be the impression of the facts, and the
sanctifying effect will be the greater.
J.H.P.
W.T. R-236 a : page 7 – 1881 r.