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He Ascended, Leading Captives
---JANUARY
2.--ACTS 1:1-14.---
FIVE SPECIAL POINTS OF THIS STUDY: (1) THE NUMBER
OF APOSTLES LIMITED TO TWELVE; (2) THE IMPORTANCE OF
THE KINGDOM TO COME; (3) IT WAS NOT THEN DUE
TIME TO EXPLAIN THE TIME OF THE KINGDOM'S ESTABLISHMENT;
(4) BEFORE THE KINGDOM WOULD COME
THE DISCIPLES WOULD HAVE A GREAT WORK TO DO IN
PROCLAIMING IT THROUGHOUT THE EARTH; (5) AS
THE LORD'S ASCENSION WAS KNOWN TO FEW AND WAS WITHOUT
COMMOTION, SO HIS SECOND COMING WOULD IN
LIKE MANNER BE KNOWN TO FEW AND BE AS A THIEF.
"When
He ascended on High, He led a multitude of captives, and gave gifts unto
men."--Ephesians 4:8.
OUR lesson is from the pen of St. Luke, as
indicated by the first verse. (Luke 1:3.) There
are five special features to the Study. First is the declaration that the
Apostles were only those whom Jesus had especially selected to that office--St. Paul, by Divine
arrangement, subsequently taking the place of Judas. This is in contradiction
to the claim of the Bishops of England and of Rome that they are Apostolic Bishops, with
apostolic powers, but it is in full agreement with the Master's statement that
all others claiming to be apostles are "liars."--Revelation
2:2.
The second point of the lesson is that Jesus,
before leaving His Apostles, instructed them concerning the Kingdom of God.
This is in full accord with all the records of His previous teachings. Nearly
all of His teachings were in respect to this wonderful Kingdom of God which
will be established when He will come in power and great glory, and of which
His invited disciples and followers are to be members--sharing His glory and
His Throne, as His joint-heirs.
The third point we notice especially is referred
to in Verses 6 and 7. The Apostles inquired respecting the
Kingdom and the time for its blessing of Israel; but Jesus informed them
that it was not for them to know the times and seasons respecting the Kingdom (Acts 1:7)--that the matter was entirely in the
Father's hands. The fourth point of our Study centers in Verse 8,
where the Lord declares that prior to the establishment of His Kingdom His
Church would witness to it throughout the earth-- after receiving the blessing
at Pentecost. The fifth point of special notice centers in Verse 11,
in the statement of the angels, "This same Jesus...shall so come in like
manner as ye have seen Him go into Heaven."
WRONG VIEWS OF THE KINGDOM
Peculiar and conflicting views respecting the Kingdom of God,
the Kingdom of Messiah, are held by Protestants. Much
more logical, but equally unscriptural, is the view held by Roman Catholics. The
confusion of Protestants is lamentable. Some hold that somehow the Kingdom of God
began at Pentecost; others hold that somehow it began when Jerusalem was destroyed; and yet all of them
realize that the promises made by Jesus respecting His Second Advent must still
be future.
Roman Catholics hold that they set up the
Kingdom of God about the year 800 A.D.; first, by dividing between clergy and
laity, and exalting the clergy to be a special class; then, the Roman Church
having great power, and the kings of earth being comparatively weak, Papacy
established a spiritual rule over the kings and princes of the earth in the
name of Christ--the Popes being recognized as Christ's vicegerants, as reigning
instead of Christ, as His substitutes.
The kings and princes of earth were informed
that they might continue to rule the people if they would be obedient to the
Papacy; that in that event they would be kingdoms of God; but that if they
should fail to be obedient to Papacy, the latter would inform the people that
such kings were no longer to be recognized, but were disowned by God's
spiritual Kingdom, and would appoint other kings and other princes in their
stead. The rulers of Europe readily assented
to this partnership, by which the people would recognize them as having Divine
authorization to rule. Matters have progressed in this way for eleven hundred
years. Austria and Hungary still fully assent to the Divine power
in Papacy--though others of the kingdoms of Europe
have more or less broken the pact.
Great
Britain was one of
the first to break with Papacy, under the leadership of King Henry VIII. He had
a dispute with the Pope, and forthwith proceeded to organize the British people
as another kingdom
of God and the Church of
England as a separate spiritual kingdom from Papacy; and the king himself and
his successors became the heads of both the Church and the state. Lutheranism
made similar progress in Scandinavia and
amongst the German States. These acknowledged Lutheranism; and Lutheranism in
turn acknowledged them as kingdoms of God. Thus today the kingdoms of this
world are still kingdoms of God on the authority originally from Papacy and
subsequently through Protestants.
AN ERROR--CHRIST'S KINGDOM FUTURE
All intelligent people, Catholics and
Protestants, now perceive that a serious mistake was made--that the kingdoms of
this world never were kingdoms of Christ, and that the name Christendom has
been misapplied to them. That name signifies Christ's Kingdom; and it is very
inappropriate to apply it to the warring nations of Europe,
now seeking to blow each other off the face of the land and off the face of the
sea. Moreover, the Apostle declares that "if any man have not the Spirit
of Christ, he is none of His," and tells us that the Spirit of Christ is
manifest in meekness, gentleness, patience, long-suffering, brotherly kindness,
love.--Romans 8:9; Galatians
5:22,23.
We are sure that in all those warring nations
there are [R5829 : page 12] saintly people
who manifest the Spirit of Christ; but we are equally sure that the warring
kingdoms themselves do not manifest this spirit, and are "none of
His." On the contrary, they manifest what the Apostle styles, works of the
flesh and of the Devil--anger, malice, hatred, envy, strife, bitterness. Bible
students are convinced that the great war now started in Europe is the
beginning of that great trouble which the Bible calls "Armageddon,"
and which the Bible declares will prepare mankind and usher them into the
Kingdom of God's dear Son, which will be "the desire of all nations"
(Haggai 2:7), and through which a Reign of
Righteousness will be established throughout the whole earth.
Jesus did not pretend to tell His people how
long or how short the time would be before the establishment of His Kingdom. He
declared the matter fully in the Divine care and not proper to be revealed to
God's people then. But elsewhere He did tell them of certain indications that
would be given them at the proper time, by which they would know, and be
enabled to lift up their heads and rejoice, realizing that their deliverance was
drawing nigh.
Similarly we are not to understand that the
Apostles expected Christ's Kingdom in their day, before their death. On the
contrary, we remember that St. Paul,
while foretelling his own death, declared that some of the Lord's people would
not sleep in death, but would be alive at the Second Coming of Christ and be
"changed in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye." (1
Corinthians 15:51,52.) Similarly St. Peter, without attempting to tell
of the times and seasons, declared that he put his message into writing and
committed it to holy men for the benefit of the Church after his death.--2 Peter 1:15.
Our Lord's words in Verse 8, to the effect that
His followers would give a witness throughout the entire world, was a further
demonstration that the Kingdom would not come in a few days or a few years, but
would be long enough away to give opportunity for a full testimony of the
Lord's favor to all people, nations, kindreds and tongues. And so it has been.
"THIS SAME JESUS SHALL SO
COME"
Bible students are coming to notice the exact
wording of the Scriptures more carefully than formerly. The statement that
Jesus would so come again in like manner as they saw Him go into Heaven, has
been generally taken to mean that Jesus would come a fleshly or human being. This
would be a contradiction of the statement that He was put to death in flesh,
but quickened, made alive, resurrected, in spirit. (1
Peter 3:18.) It would also contradict the Master's words that He was
about to ascend up where He was before--to the spirit plane, or condition. It
would also contradict His declaration, "Yet [R5830
: page 12] a little while, and the world seeth Me no more; but ye shall
see Me."--John 14:19.
In a word, the entire tenor of Scripture is to
the effect that when Jesus left the Heavenly glory and was made flesh, it was
not the Divine intention that He should remain a fleshly being forever, but
quite to the contrary-- that He took this earthly condition for the suffering
of death and would not need it afterward. Adam was a fleshly, human being; and,
in order to be the Redeemer of Adam and his race, Jesus needed to be a perfect
human being--"holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners." (Hebrews 7:26.) But there could be no reason why He
must continue to be a fleshly being and out of touch with all the Heavenly
conditions.
When we remember that the perfect Adam was a
little lower than the angels, we must see that the perfect man Jesus was also a
little lower than the angels. But that He did not keep this lower condition is
fully asserted by St. Paul,
who, after telling about His faithfulness even unto death, declares,
"Wherefore God hath highly exalted Him, and hath given Him a name above
every name." (Philippians 2:9, 10.) The
exalted Jesus is a spirit Being of the very highest order--"of the Divine
nature" --who sat down at the Father's right hand, on the Father's Throne,
waiting for the time when He would take His own Throne, establish the
Millennial Kingdom and associate the Church with Him in His Throne as His
Bride. "To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with Me in My Throne,
even as I also overcame, and am set down with My Father in His Throne."--Revelation 3:21.
During the forty days after His resurrection,
Jesus appeared and disappeared some ten or eleven times, mostly for a few
moments each. Our lesson tells us that during these visits to His faithful He
gave them instructions. He did not appear to them as a spirit being to strike
them down with the glory of His presence, shining above the brightness of the
sun, as He subsequently appeared to Saul of Tarsus. (Acts
26:13.) On the contrary, He appeared as a man, sometimes in one form
and sometimes in another form--as a gardener, as a traveler, etc. On two
occasions He appeared in bodies similar to the one in which He had been
crucified, showing the spear marks and the nail prints. These bodies were
materialized in the upper room when the doors were shut; and of course clothing
was materialized at the same time, for He was not naked.
These manifestations of Jesus were for the
purpose of demonstrating unquestionably to His disciples the fact that He was
no longer dead. His appearance in different bodies was to prove that none of
these bodies was His real spiritual body, but merely a manifestation. The Bible
tells us of previous manifestations of the same kind when our Lord was a spirit
being, before He became a man. Away back in Abraham's time, the Lord with two
angels materialized and talked with Abraham and ate with him. (Genesis 18.) When
Jesus arose from the dead, quickened in spirit, He had gotten back again to
where He was before. The description of the resurrection change of the Church
fits equally well to the Lord. He was sown in death--"in weakness, raised
in power; sown in dishonor [a companion of thieves], raised in glory; sown an
animal body, raised a spiritual body."--1 Cor.
15:42-44.
"COME IN LIKE MANNER"
It should be carefully noted that the angels did
not say, "come in like form." The Lord departed from them in
some kind of fleshly body, or form, which would enable them to see Him
ascending into the clouds as they could not see His spirit body. The manner of
Jesus' going did not appertain to His form. Our Lord's manner of going was
quiet, secret, unknown to the world, known only to His disciples, without
noise, without ostentation, without trumpets or bugles. He will so come in like
manner-- unknown to the world. He will be present as a thief in the night; and
none will then know of His presence, except His disciples.
How contrary all this is to what we once
supposed, when we thought of our Savior as forever degraded to human
conditions, which at their best are a little lower than the angelic! How sadly
we misunderstood the matter when we used to sing:
"Five
bleeding wounds He bears,
Received on Calvary;
They pour effectual prayers,
They strongly plead for me!"
When we thus sang, we evidently did not
understand the [R5830 : page 13] methods of
the Lord's intercession for His saints any more than we understood His
glorification as a spirit being, "far above angels."
Now we understand that the seventh trumpet, with
which He comes, is not a literal trumpet, but a symbolical one; and that like
the preceding six, it makes no noise upon the air. Now we see that the world
will not be conscious of the Master's Second Advent during the thief stage, nor
until the Great Time of Trouble, when He shall be revealed in flaming fire,
taking vengeance. (2 Thessalonians 1:9.) What
the world will then see will be the trouble; and gradually they will come to
understand that the great King is identified with the trouble which will be
making preparation for the establishment of the Reign of Righteousness by the
overthrow of everything that is unrighteous.
W.T.
R-5829 a
: page 11 -1916 r.