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Prophetic Pen Pictures Of Our Day.
Nowhere do we find more striking and forcible
figures and similes than in Jehovah's words through the prophets. We here
consider some statements of Isaiah 28th and 29th
chapters relating to the church nominal. It is described under various
figures--Ariel, Jerusalem, Babylon,
Ephraim, Zion,
etc.--each representing some special feature.
DRUNKARDS OF EPHRAIM.
(Isa. 28:1-8.)
Here the Prophet's illustration is Ephraim,
probably because like Ephraim the Nominal
Gospel Church
was to increase in number and influence, and become proud and corrupt. The name
Ephraim came to be applied to the ten tribes who revolted against the kingdom
of the Lord and established a different mode of worship. So the prophet very
aptly uses it here as an illustration. He recognizes the fact that it has what
is considered a glory and beauty, and fruitfulness, but shows that their glory
is really their shame, and that their proud and haughty spirit must have a
fall.
The nominal church is represented as crowned
with pride and overcome with wine--intoxicated with the spirit of the world and
its pleasures. They are not on the mountain or hill top enjoying their
privilege of communion with God, but they are down reveling in the fatness of
the valley, the pleasures of the world. And Jeremiah says: "Wherefore
gloriest thou in the valleys, thy flowing valley, O backsliding daughter? that
trusted in her treasures. (Jer. 49:4.) But
says the Lord, Woe to the crown of pride, to the drunkards of Ephraim. The
crown of pride the drunkards of Ephraim shall be trodden under feet. vs.
1,3.
"And the glorious beauty which is on the
head of the fat valley, shall be a fading flower, and as the hasty fruit before
the summer; which when he that looketh upon it seeth, while it is yet in his
hand he eateth it up. vs. 4.
The glory of the nominal church is in numbers,
wealth and worldly prosperity. She has been more anxious to have a show of
growth, prosperity and fruitfulness before the world, than to have fruit
acceptable and well pleasing to God. God's plans work out slowly, and come to
maturity not by sudden spasmodic efforts, but by slow and steady development,
"The
bud may have a bitter taste,
But sweet will be the flower."
But the nominal church was not satisfied with
God's plans, and in her haste she has discarded his and adopted plans and
theories of her own. The result [R562 : page 4] has
been great fruitfulness of a certain kind. Moral and philanthropic enterprises
have been undertaken on a gigantic scale and the church has rapidly grown to
immense proportions, and has gained a most prominent and influential position
and name among men. Seeing this hasty fruit and regarding it good, the world
with its spirit of pride has greedily swallowed it. The spirit of the world has
swallowed up all the benevolent enterprises and stamped them all with pride and
boastfulness. And so also its fruit in numbers, is swallowed up by the spirit
of the world.
Again he says (vs. 7.) "The
priest and the prophet have erred through strong drink; they also have erred
through wine, and through strong drink are out of the way, they are swallowed
up of wine, they are out of the way through strong drink, they err in vision,
they stumble in judgment."
What a picture of the present condition of
things: Not only are the people of the Church intoxicated with the spirit of
the world, but the priests, the clergy also. And because of this intoxication
they err in vision and are unable to discern the truth; and they stumble over
the plain statements and marked fulfillments of God's Word.
This condition of things is true of the whole
nominal church of every denomination, so that "All tables are full of
vomit and filthiness so that there is no place clean." v. 8.
The tables, which should be laden with the bread of truth, are instead, covered
with a repulsive mass of mingled traditions and abominable errors.
The Lord has permitted the unfaithful stewards
for a long time to pursue their own plans and accomplish their own desires, but
it shall not always be so, for the Prophet declares: "Behold the Lord hath
a mighty and strong one which as a tempest of hail and a destroying storm, as a
flood of mighty waters overflowing, shall cast down to the earth with the hand.
The crown of pride, the drunkards of Ephraim, shall be trodden under
foot." (vs. 2,3.)
The Lord has mighty agencies preparing for and
already beginning this very work, as we have seen, for the nominal church is
already being cast down. But while calamity and destruction awaits the great
nominal church; and while their pride is to be humbled in the dust, it is not
to be so with the little flock of faithful ones to whom the Lord has called,
"Come out of her my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins and that
ye receive not of her plagues."
Of these he says: In that day--the very day of Babylon's fall--shall the
Lord of hosts be for a crown of glory, and for a diadem of beauty to the RESIDUE of his people. (verse 5.) And not only so, but the
Lord will be "for a spirit of judgment to him that sitteth in judgment,
and for strength to them that turn the battle to the gate." He will give
judgment, discretion, to those of his children who are endeavoring to judge, to
discern between the right and the wrong, the truth and the error, and who bring
all things new and old to the test of his Word. His strength also will be
furnished to all who battle against the forces of error.
"WHOM SHALL HE TEACH?"
If such is the condition into which the Church
has fallen; if the priest and the prophet and the people are all thus
intoxicated and out of the way, Isaiah raises the question, "Whom shall he
[God] teach knowledge? and whom shall he make to understand doctrine?" and
answers, them that are weaned from the milk and drawn from the breast." v.
9.
Here the illustration of an infant is used,
which Paul so forcibly applied to newly consecrated saints, whom he terms babes
in Christ. (1 Cor. 3:1.) And Peter also says
that such should as new born babes, desire the sincere milk of the word that
they may grow thereby. 1 Pet. 2:2.
These testimonies agree then, that while the
doctrines or revelations of God are for his children, yet until they have
passed the infant stage, and appropriated [R563 : page
4] the milk of first principles, they cannot be taught of him the
deeper things. Alas! how few to-day make such use of the first principles as to
grow thereby; and how applicable to many are the Apostle's words--"When
for the time ye ought to be teachers, ye have need that one teach you again
which be the first principles of the oracles [doctrines] of God; and are become
such as have need of milk and not of strong meat. For every one that useth milk
is unskillful in the word of righteousness, for he is a babe. But strong meat belongeth to them that are of full age, even those who by reason of use, have their
senses exercised to discern both good and evil."
We find that for this very reason, because they
do not grow but continue babes, many are so weak and helpless that in the day
of the Lord they will have great distress in their inability to understand the
Lord's dealings.
"For precept must be upon precept, precept
upon precept, line upon line, line upon line, here a little and there a
little." (v. 10.)
Because God deals with us as a wise parent, with
his children knowing that we need our food little by little, and the lighter
diet before the strong meat, therefore his truth is so arranged as to meet our
necessities: A little of the truth on any subject is placed here and a little
more there; and as we take these littles and put them together we gain strength
and are able to appreciate the whole of it. As we deal with children, so God
deals with us, giving us line upon line, and precept upon precept--the same
truths repeated over and over from different standpoints, thus enforcing his
teachings.
"For with stammering [despised or scorned]
lips and another tongue will he speak to this people--to whom he said, This is
the rest wherewith ye shall cause the weary to rest, and this is the
refreshing; yet they would not hear. But the word of the Lord was unto them
precept upon precept, precept upon precept, line upon line, line upon line,
here a little and there a little--so that they go and have stumbled backward,
and been broken and snared and captured." vs. 11-13.
[Young.]
Though the word of the Lord has been thus plain
and sufficient for the instruction and growth of his children, they have
disregarded it and gone backward, substituting their own theories in its place,
and in their attempt to substantiate their own theories by a reckless and often
deceitful handling of the Word of God, they have wrested the Scriptures, and so
stumble over its plain and harmonious teaching. The Lord had said, This plan
for the redemption, restitution, and blessing of mankind, as revealed in my
Word, is the comfort wherewith ye may cause the weary to rest. But the nominal
church has refused to hear, and priest and people are alike deaf. Therefore the
whole church nominal has gone backward, is taken in the snare of the adversary
and must fall and be broken.
But though the great system of religious
organization must fall, we rejoice to know that the saints who are blinded and
deceived by it, shall be delivered by its fall. Though the false teachers whom
they have heaped to themselves, having itching ears for worldly praise (2 Tim. 4:3) saying peace, peace, when there is no
peace, (Jer. 6:14) have misused their office,
the Lord will raise up other servants who will faithfully proclaim his truth.
They will not seek to please the ear with soft words, nor to lull the drowsy,
but will proclaim the unvarnished truth exposing hypocrisy and deception. With
stammering [despised or scorned] lips and another tongue will he speak
to this people. He will not choose the most approved and pleasing instruments
to human fancy, but the scorned instruments in his hand shall be mighty in
exposing the error and proclaiming the truth.
The great rock of truth on which both the houses
of Israel
fall, is Christ as the world's Redeemer. This was the rock over which the
typical Jewish house did fall, and true to the type, we find the Gospel house
(nominal) ready to stumble over the very same rock. No small number of
the influential in the church nominal have already declared, and boldly teach
that Christ was not our ransom or substitute, bearing our death penalty for us,
in our room and stead. But notwithstanding all the deceptive sophistry that men
may use to establish their theories, the plain simple statement of God's Word
is that "The wages of sin is death"-- not everlasting dying
but everlasting deprivation of life--and that "God sent his Son to be the
propitiation [satisfaction] for our sins...and not for ours only, but also for
the sins of the whole world" (1 John 2:2and
4:10); that by his paying our penalty we might be released from
death--have a right to life--to a resurrection.
This is the only foundation of the rest wherewith
we may cause the weary to rest, and whosoever accepts of the ransom through the
precious blood of Christ, may securely rest in full assurance of hope: Jesus
said, "Come unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden and I will give
you rest."
But as with the Jew, so now, men object to God's
way and desire a way of their own; and the plainest statements of Scripture and
experiences of life are twisted and mystified, and the church is found
bolstering up Satan's lie--"Thou shalt not surely die." Their belief
concerning the future condition of the righteous and wicked is expressed in the
following verses and many others of similar import:
"It is
not death to bear
The wrench that sets us free,
From dungeon chain to breath the air
Of boundless liberty."
And again:
"What
to be banished from the Lord
And yet forbid to die,
To linger in eternal pain,
And death forever fly."
If eternal pain and deep despair are the wages
of sin, they do not believe that Jesus became their ransom, substitute,
assuming that penalty and thus liberating them.
The cross of Christ loses its power and value in
their sight as soon as they begin to reason and mix the truth with their false
traditions. The ransom was to the Jew a stumbling block, and to the worldly
wise of to-day it is foolishness; but to us who believe, it is precious, and in
its merits we rest. With such a belief they are unprepared to see that Jesus'
death as a man was the settlement of the indebtedness of mankind incurred by
Adam's sin; and error on this point blinds to every other doctrine of Scripture
built upon it. This is the very first principle of the Gospel and to those who
are unskillful in this, how can God teach his doctrines or plans based on this?
It is because they fail to use his lines and precepts that they fail to grow,
and are weak against the besetments of the adversary in this day of the Lord.
Who shall be able to stand? (Mal. 3:2.)
We find the great mass of our beloved fellow-Christians in just the position
described where they shall be ensnared and captivated by error; hence we cry
aloud and spare not.
It is not God's fault that such stumble and are
ensnared by the adversary. The Scriptures abound with testimony as to the
reality of death and the necessity and value of our ransom. The blood marks may
be traced from Genesis to Revelation. By Apostles, Prophets, and types, the
Lord has shown that, "without the shedding of blood there is no remission
of sins"; and those who stumble on this subject are without excuse.
The nominal church, as a whole, has not yet
reached this climax of unbelief, but their course lies in that direction, and
such will be the inevitable result.
As soon as the spirit of inquiry which is
abroad, forces them to think, they will see the dilemma in which they are
placed between the doctrine of ransom and the theory of eternal torment. And so
tenaciously do they hold to the latter, that they will prefer to deny the
former when pressed for a reason for their belief.
To the unfaithful teachers of to-day, Isaiah
calls, "Wherefore hear the Word of the Lord ye scornful men that rule this
people which is in Jerusalem, [another symbol of the church] because ye have
said, We have made a covenant with death and with hell [sheol--the tomb]
we are at agreement, when the overflowing scourge shall pass through, it shall
not come unto us; for we have made lies our refuge, and under falsehood have we
hid ourselves." Verse 15.
This is rather to be understood as the Lord's
opinion. He terms their theory that "Death is the angel God has
sent," an agreement with death, and their system of false theories, a
refuge of lies.
"Therefore, thus saith the Lord God, Behold
I lay in Zion
for a foundation a stone, a tried stone, a precious corner-stone, a sure
foundation: he that believeth shall not make haste." V. 16.
Other foundation can no man lay than that which God laid--Jesus Christ, who
died for our sins--the just for the unjust. There is no other real foundation,
and faith built upon any other is not recognized nor owned of God. They who
build upon their own works, and they who build their faith on the
changeableness of the unchangeable God and suppose that he who once condemned
man as unfit to live, will reverse his decision and bring him to life again,
build upon the sand and have no foundation; for God lays but the one
foundation--Christ, [R564 : page 4] who by the
favor of God tasted death for every man.
Some in their "haste" pass by
the ransom and its legitimate fruit the resurrection --restitution. This
is too slow a process for them. They have a speedier way by which that which
God terms "the last enemy"--DEATH--becomes a near and hasty road to
glory. But he that believeth God's testimony "shall not make
haste;" such, taking God's plan instead of hastily constructing
theories of their own, are resting on the sure foundation. They await in hope
and trust the time when the value of the ransom will be shown in the
release from death of all for whom Christ died --every man. Such find it
as the Lord promised: "This is the rest wherewith ye shall cause the weary
to rest and this is the refreshing."
"Judgment also will I lay to the line and
righteousness to the plummet; and the hail shall sweep away the refuge of lies,
and the waters shall overflow the hiding place." For centuries God has
permitted the God of this world, Satan, to blind men and to mystify and obscure
the truth. He has permitted good to be called evil, and evil good. He has
permitted his own character and plans to be misrepresented. But now comes the
time when woe will be unto them which call evil good and good evil and pervert
the way and word of the Lord. He will mark out clearly and definitely with line
and plummet, the right and wrong, the crooked and the straight. Everything
wrong must be overthrown and the crooked made straight. The more firmly error
is rooted the greater will be the shock. This will apply to truth and error on
every subject and especially in the greatest of all--religion. Already the
shock begins to be felt both by the church and the world, but more especially
by the former.
Water symbolizes truth and hail represents hard,
cold forcible truths, or truths put in a forcible way, as judgments. Thus we
are shown that when God's time comes, all error and deceit, every refuge of
lies will be swept away and destroyed, for God will have all men to come to the
knowledge of the truth, that they may avail themselves of its
advantages.
The burning up of all the hay, wood and stubble,
errors of those building on the rock of Jesus the ransom, is
shown by Paul, (1 Cor. 3:12.) and the
overthrow of all systems which reject the only foundation is well illustrated
by Jesus in his simile. (Luke 6:48.) The
difference between building on the rock, and building in the sand alongside the rock is very great when the floods come and beat upon such a faith.
"And your covenant with death shall be
disannulled and your agreement with hell [sheol, the tomb] shall not
stand; when the overflowing scourge [whip, rod--chastisement] shall pass
through [in the Day of the Lord], then ye shall be trodden down [oppressed] by
it. [R564 : page 5] From the time that it goeth
forth [in its very commencement] it shall take you; for morning by morning
shall it pass over by day and by night; and it shall be a vexation [distress,
perplexity] only until he shall make you to understand doctrine." [See margin.] Verses 18,19.
Because the church is so largely composed of babes uninstructed in the word of the Lord, and therefore unable to understand his
dealings, therefore in this time of judgment--testing and sifting such will be
discouraged, vexed, and much troubled as they shall witness the overthrow of
many things which they had deemed essential to the progress of God's cause in
the world. They do not see that the separation of wheat and tares, and of the
ripe and unripe wheat is now due. They do not see that those building on the
sand must be manifested and distinguished from those who build upon the
foundation which God hath laid, hence their distress as their wood, hay and
stubble faith is consumed, and when they see the "refuge of lies"
which they mistook for truth, entirely swept away. But this overthrow and
destruction of venerated theories shall be a vexation to them until they are
made to understand the true doctrine revealed in God's word. When thus
liberated they will rejoice in the overthrow of every form of error and its
replacement with truth.
"For the bed is shorter than that a man can
stretch himself on it." A bed is a place for rest and refreshment and
symbolizes a faith--a creed. God provides the good and suitable resting place
or faith in his word; saying, "This is the rest wherewith ye
shall cause the weary to rest and this is the refreshing." Rejecting his,
they have made beds to suit themselves--sectarian creeds--but God condemns
them; they are so short and contracted that only babes can stretch themselves
therein--those who are more developed--men ("In understanding be ye
men." 1 Cor. 14:20) being cramped and
uncomfortable, can find no rest in such, and are getting out of them.
"And the covering is narrower than that he
can wrap himself in it." The assurances offered by the nominal Church are so vague and unsatisfactory that those in such beds find it
difficult to cover or assure themselves. Their knowledge of God is so narrow
and meager that they know not the meaning of "full [wide; ample] assurance
of faith." (Heb. 10:22.) The uncovered,
shivering and doubting condition of the great majority is expressed in some of
the familiar hymns from which we give some extracts:
"Tis a
point I long to know,
Oft it causes anxious thought;
Do I love the Lord or no,
Am I his, or am I not."
"When
thou my righteous Judge shall come,
To take thy ransomed people home,
Shall I among them stand?"
"But
can I bear the piercing thought
What if my name should be left out,
When thou for them shalt call?"
"Thy
pardoning voice O let me hear,
To still my unbelieving fear,
Nor let me fall I pray."
God declares--"Their fear toward me is
taught by the precepts of men." (Isa. 29:13.)
The nominal church in its "haste" to convert the world has
exaggerated and wrested parables and symbols in using them to threaten the
world, and to frighten them into their beds for promised rest; but their
unlawful "haste" has worked to their own unrest, for they have
so convinced themselves of God's injustice that they find it difficult to
satisfy themselves of their own security, fearing lest by some thoughtless word
or act they should endure eternal torture. Hence saints who have grown so as to
discover the shortness of the bed and the narrowness of the covering cry out:
"A
point of time a moments space
Removes me to that heavenly place,
Or shuts me up in hell."
"A
half-awakened child of man
An heir of bliss or pain,
A worm of earth, I cry"--
"Eternal
things impress!
Give me to feel their solemn weight
And tremble on the brink of fate."
"What
after death for me remains?
Celestial joys or hellish pains
To all eternity!
"How
then ought I to live on earth?"
"My sole concern, my single care,
To watch, to tremble and prepare
Against that fatal day."
Our hearts are full of pity for these whose fear
and distress is caused by their short beds and narrow covering, and we urge
them to come out into the broad place, and to rest with us in the testimonies
of God alone.
Those who rest in God's word are described in Psalm 149. While the others are in anguish and
fear, these "Sing aloud upon their beds." The high praises of Jehovah
are in their mouths--the new song; and their security, his word is in their
hands--the sword of the spirit.
"For the Lord shall rise up as in Mount
Perazim, he shall be wroth as in the valley of Gibeon, that he may do his work,
his strange work, and bring to pass his act, his strange act." (v.
21.) The cases mentioned as illustrations of the destruction of this
day are remarkable. At Perazim the idol-worshipers who came against God's newly
anointed king, David, to oppose the establishment of his kingdom, met the power
of Jehovah whom he represented. (2 Sam. 5:20,21.)
At Gibeah there was a great slaughter by the Lord with hailstones from heaven
of those who attempted to interfere with Joshua and Israel in taking possession of the
promised land. (Josh. 10:10,11.)
The Lord warns that those who oppose the
establishment of his anointed in the real Canaan,
shall similarly bring upon themselves destruction. "Now, therefore, be ye not mockers lest your bands be made strong; for I have heard from the
Lord of hosts a consumption [R565 : page 5] even
determined upon the whole earth." (v. 22.)
Some seem inclined to treat lightly the
predictions of overthrow or consumption of the present order of things and the
introduction of the new order. Such feel so confident as they look at the
perfection of Babylon's
ramparts of defence, and as they look at the formidable armament of nations,
that they need the caution of the Lord's words, "Be ye not mockers."
To take a position of opposition is to make the fall so much the more severe
when it comes. Those who reject and mock at the truth are more tightly bound by
Babylon's cord
of influence and prejudice-- their bands are made strong. The consumption or
destruction of hoary and venerated systems of error both civil and religious,
is "the act--the strange act," which the Lord will
shortly bring to pass. It is a strange act to all those not instructed from his
word, and who so highly esteem these false systems which are doomed to
destruction.
(TO BE
CONTINUED.)
W.T. R-562a : page 3 - 1883r