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Israel's Experiences Typical, Allegorical
--JANUARY 3.--JUDGES 2:1-19.--
NATURAL
ISRAEL'S ENEMIES--SPIRITUAL ISRAEL'S ENEMIES--
NATURAL ISRAEL'S JUDGES OR DELIVERERS--SPIRITUAL ISRAEL'S
REFORMERS AND HELPERS--TYPICAL IDOLATRIES AND
THEIR ANTITYPES--ISRAEL'S LAST DELIVERANCE NOW DUE--
GENTILE TIMES HAVE ENDED--PALESTINE SOON WILL
BE POSSESSED BY ABRAHAM AND HIS NATURAL SEED UNDER THE
SUPERVISION OF MESSIAH AND HIS SPIRITUAL BRIDE, THE CHURCH.
"I
will heal their backsliding, I will
love them freely."--Hosea
14:4.
TODAY'S
Study tells us of the death of Joshua, who became the leader of the Israelites
at the death of Moses. He was a worthy example of faithfulness to God amongst
his people. Under Divine direction he divided the land
of Palestine amongst the ten tribes of
Israel,
giving each his portion with the understanding that the portion was the gift of
the Lord, and that the more faith possessed the more quickly would the tribe
enter into its inheritance.
The
Israelites were enjoined by the Lord through an angel, especially sent as God's
representative, that they should speedily take possession of the land, driving
out their enemies, destroying their idols and altars of worship, and thus
conquering the entire country for themselves as God's people and ridding
themselves and their children of all idolatrous temptation. But instead of
doing this, they made leagues with the various heathen peoples inhabiting the
land, and brought themselves into more or less of a friendly relationship. This
disobedience to Divine command proved to be a serious snare.
In
studying the history of Israel,
we are to remember that the Apostle tells us those things were allegorical. (1 Corinthians 10:11.) They were true, they were
real occurrences; but their chief object and purpose, from God's standpoint,
was to illustrate certain great truths for Spiritual Israel, coming
afterwards--the Gospel
Church. Thus, for
instance, when the Christian enters upon his new life as a result of his
consecration to God, it corresponds to crossing Jordan--dying to old interests and
entering into the new inheritance. Under the leadership of Jesus, our Joshua,
we enter into new life full of courage and faith. Victories result.
Then
we learn that the New Creature is to conquer the perverted appetites of his own
flesh, which correspond to the idolatrous peoples who resided in Canaan. It is the duty of the New Creature to drive out
these earthly hopes, ambitions, weaknesses, perversions, and oppositions to the
Lord and His righteousness. If the work of exterminating were carried on
thoroughly, the result would be a ripened character, strong in the Lord, full
of faith, obedience, joy, peace and blessing.
However,
like the Israelites of old, in too many cases the Lord's people make a truce
with their own fleshly weaknesses. They fail to drive these out, and fail to
overthrow the altars of passion, avarice, etc. These weaknesses and depravities
of the flesh for a time cower before the new nature, entreating mercy, patience
and a measure of gratification. But so surely as these are granted, the result
is that the passions and weaknesses become stronger and stronger and the New
Creature is worsted in the battle, until he must cry to the Lord for
deliverance, lest he perish before the onslaught of his own passions and
desires. Thus the lives of many Christian people are a succession of battlings
and defeats --captivities. The battle should have been fought out at first. The
will should have been fixed firmly on the side of righteousness, truth,
obedience to God.
It
is difficult to determine how much all of the Lord's people suffer as a result
of not being firm enough, rigorous enough, in their dealings with their own
flesh, especially at the beginning of their Christian experiences. The only
remedy is to cry unto the Lord as the Israelites did when they found themselves
hard pressed. As the Lord delivered them, so He is willing to deliver all of
His Spiritual Israelites.
However,
it is certainly a shame for Christians that their defeats are so numerous, as
it was a shame to the Israelites that, during the period of the Judges, they
were eighteen times oppressed by their enemies--slaves where they should have
been masters. The one great lesson of all this to the Natural Israelites and to
the Spiritual Israelites is the lesson of God's mercy, as expressed in our
text. The Lord is very gracious, willing to forgive our trespasses and to
assist us when we realize our [R5598 : page 381] wrong
condition and appeal for help. "I will heal their backsliding, I will love
them freely."
JOSHUA'S WISE EXHORTATION
The
Book of Joshua closes with the account of his death, and the Book of Judges
begins with incidents covering the same period. When Joshua realized that his
work was done and that he was about to be gathered to his fathers--to sleep
with his fathers in death--he called the Israelites, and reminded them of the
Lord's mercies and manifest favors toward them in bringing them thus far and
finally giving to each tribe the allotment of its inheritance in the Promised
Land. Then he warned them respecting the dangers of the situation, the
necessity for being separate from the people of the land--Gentiles; otherwise
the tendency might be toward idolatry. He urged upon all a full settlement of
the mind, the will, on the side of the Lord and against all the heathen
religions. It was then that he took his stand and announced, "Choose ye
this day whom ye will serve; as for me and my house, we will serve the
Lord." The others joined with him in the same resolve.
Our
lesson tells us that all the days of Joshua, and the days of the others of the
judges who outlived Joshua, things went well with the Israelites. They had the
Lord's blessing and were prosperous. These leaders had in mind the Lord's
wonderful dealings, and realized the importance of being on the Lord's side, if
they would have His blessing. The idolatries that came in were subsequent.
The
true God has always prohibited idols, while the false gods have usually been
represented by idols. The idols, according to human reasoning, would appear to
be an excellent way of keeping religion before the mind; but it was not God's
way, and hence was not advantageous. As the Israelites noted the idolatrous
worship of their neighbors, they doubtless felt that the latter were the more
religious, because of this outward demonstration.
Moreover,
in connection with the heathen forms of worship were various licentious
practises, which to some extent would draw from curiosity and, through the
weaknesses of the flesh, appeal to the Israelites. The true God, on the
contrary, had instituted in their midst a worship which was pure in itself, in
every way condemning sin, pointing out the necessity for its cancelation and
the need for drawing near to God in the way of His appointment. In a word, the
true religion appealed to the highest and noblest sentiments, while the false
religions of the Canaanites appealed to the baser passions, combining a form of
godliness with gratification of the flesh, dancings and various saturnalia.
But
as for the Christian who condemns the Israelites very severely for wandering
off, time and again, into the idolatries of his heathen neighbors and requiring
to be punished of the Lord that he might turn again and seek the Lord in the
right way--let such Christian remember the antitype--how forms of godliness are
inclined to take the place of true heart-worship, reverence; and how the
weaknesses of the flesh are inclined to assert themselves, to justify themselves
and, if possible, to make themselves appear to be in accordance with the Divine
will. Let them remember that many today worship the golden calf more than they
worship God, requiring chastisements time and again to correct them, to awaken
them to their real condition. Let them remember, too, that the Christians have
made idols equally as hideous as any made by the heathen--not idols of stone or
wood or bronze, but more hideous misrepresentations of the Divine
character--our printed creeds.
Verse
17and
its connections seem to indicate that the record of our lesson covers a long
period of centuries of Israel's
experiences, under many judges. When they repented, the Lord raised up judges,
or, as we say, deliverers, through whom their adversities would be corrected. Yet
even these repeated experiences did not deeply enough impress the great lesson,
so that they needed to learn their lessons over and over. When the judge would
bring them back from their adversities, and they would have rest for some years
during his lifetime, it was merely to fall away after his death. Nevertheless,
the Lord's Covenant was with the nation. The centuries since have shown the
persistency of God's mercy.
GOD'S
FAVOR RETURNING TO ISRAEL
As
we have previously pointed out, the Bible indicates very clearly that Israel's last
great lesson of oppression under the Gentiles closed in 1914. The period of
chastisement, twenty-five hundred and twenty years long, began where the crown
was taken from King Zedekiah, B.C. 606. (Ezekiel 21:25-27.)
They have not been an independent nation in all these twenty-five hundred and
twenty years. As the Lord declared, Zedekiah was the last of the line of David
who should reign until Messiah's Kingdom would be established. The end of
Gentile Times, then, marks the beginning of Messiah's Kingdom. Everywhere we
see manifestations that He as the great Judge is taking over the affairs of the
world, and that Israel's
final deliverance is at hand.
Spiritual
Israel
must first be delivered by the glorious "change" of the First
Resurrection. Thus the Spiritual Empire will first be established. Following
that great event and the incidental Time of Trouble will come the exaltation of
representatives of Natural Israel to be the [R5599 :
page 381] earthly exponents of the Heavenly Kingdom. These will be the
Ancient Worthies of the Hebrew people--Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and all the
Prophets. Others of the Hebrew people, delivered from Gentile domination, will
nevertheless get their blessing through their acceptance of the Kingdom
arrangements, which includes the thought that their eyes of understanding will
open and that they will recognize the great King.
Thus
it is written that they that pierced Him shall look upon Him and mourn because
of a realization that they crucified the Prince of Life. Nevertheless they will
have a great blessing, in proportion as they have been seeking conscientiously
to serve God and the principles of His righteousness. Then the Lord will pour
upon them the spirit of prayer and supplication, in connection with which they
will have so much blessing. (Zechariah 12:10.)
And this blessing of the Lord, coming upon Israel first, means also the
blessing of all the world.
All
who realize the fulfilment of the Times of the Gentiles should be looking for
and co-operating with the further steps of the Divine Plan. One of these is Israel's repossession of the control of Palestine, the
inheritance of Abraham and his family. The time is ripe. It remains for Jews,
who by God's favor have the wealth now, to use that wealth in the furtherance
of the hope of Israel.
But a failure on man's part to appreciate and use opportunities will not
interfere with the Divine Plan. The hour of blessing is coming. Through some
instrumentality Palestine
will shortly pass into the possession of the Jews.
Note
the fact that promptly at the close of the Jewish year in September, Russia
published her decree giving the Jews full religious liberty and privileges as
citizens. Germany
quickly followed. Great
Britain also honored the Jews. Legally,
therefore, the Jew today--since the close of Gentile Times--is accorded the
same liberties as other people. He is no longer "trodden down of the
Gentiles."
W.T.
R-5598 a : page 380 – 1914 r.