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Views From The Watch Tower
THIS WONDERFUL PERIOD
THERE never was such a wonderful period! We
never before knew so much or could do so much. We never experienced an age of
equal comfort. No part of yesterday was as glorious as this hour.
The hundred years behind us are jammed and
crammed with achievements that out-balance the sum total of progress since the
signing of the Magna Charta.
The average mechanic enjoys luxuries that Midas,
with all his wealth, could not command. The college freshman has more real
information in his little finger than the erudition of the foremost scholar of
the Renaissance. We have done more to put existence on a sane, logical and
definite basis than the sum total of our ancestors.
A mere hundred years ago even the scientist
thought that the atmosphere was simply space--that gas was only a smell.
The first microbe hadn't disclosed his identity.
Metchnikoff's announcement of battling hosts in
every drop of human blood would have earned him a padded cell.
The best illumination George Washington could
secure came from tallow dips, lighted by striking a spark from flint and steel.
Every piece of fabric was woven by hand.
The only horse-power was four-legged and wore a
tail.
The steamboat was still building on the ways of Fulton's
brain, and the wheels of the steam engine had only moved in Stephenson's head.
It took Benjamin Franklin two weeks to send a
letter from Boston and get a reply from Baltimore.
Abraham Lincoln's angular frame never reposed in
a Pullman berth.
Garfield called a 20-day "liner" an
"ocean greyhound."
It is hardly a year since the father of
antiseptic surgery was gathered to his fathers.
Electric light, trolley cars, bicycles,
automobiles, department stores, skyscrapers, 10-cent collars, tinned salmon,
airships, penny newspapers, appendicitis and power cranes are infant ideas
still toddling in their diapers.
Thirty years ago electricity had never been
hitched to a wheel; gunpowder was the most powerful explosive; subways weren't
considered within range of possibility.
"Impossibility" is now an
old-fashioned word with a definition, but not a meaning. Almost every dream of
the past is a reality today.
The magic cities and the fairy kingdoms of your
grandmother aren't half so wonderful as the world in which you live.--The Cincinnati
Post.
* * *
PRESENT DAY
INVENTIONS FOREGLEAMS OF
MESSIAH'S KINGDOM
The above surely is not exaggeration! What
thanks should be rising from all our hearts to God, the Giver of every good and
perfect gift! How energetic we all should be to rightly use present blessings
and opportunities for our own good, for the good of our families and neighbors
--all men!
Thinking people cannot help wondering why so
many blessings have been crowded into our day. There is but one answer, and
remarkably few seem to realize it. Some are disposed to say that all of these
blessings come as a result of another onward step of evolution! Is this
reasonable? Do we see signs of excessive wisdom in ourselves or others? How
many people do any of us know personally who have ever invented any great,
wonderful or useful article of the many which go to make up our wonderful day?
Examining carefully the personality and history
of individuals through whom present day blessings come, we may well be
astonished. We find that very few of them have been men of great education, and
many of them are by no means great men in any sense of the word, except in the
one particular of their invention. It is by no means sure that the prodigies of
today are any more numerous than those of previous periods, but our facilities
for knowing about them have increased a thousand-fold.
Through the printed page the knowledge of an
invention, carried before the civilized world, becomes a stimulant to others,
furnishing, perhaps a connecting link for another invention. Many of our great
inventors tell us that they merely stumbled on their invention. Our successful
air-brake patent, for instance, is merely the development of the cruder thought
that water, hydraulic power, could be used to operate brakes. A still brighter
mind caught the thought, and realized that air would serve the purpose better.
As an illustration of the fact that mental
illumination may be along some one particular line, we remind our readers of
"Blind Tom." He was noted for his wonderful skill in playing any tune
that he might hear. He had no education; in fact, he was almost idiotic,
incapable of receiving an education. But he had an ear for music [R5153 : page 4] which made him famous. Can we
claim that we or others of our day stand so high intellectually as to be able
to look down upon some of the bright minds of the past? Have we many
Shakespeares, many Byrons, many St. Pauls, many Ciceros? Have we many Solomons?
or are there many who could compare with Moses?
THE
MILLENNIUM HAS COME!
We must look in another direction, if we would
rightly understand and properly appreciate the meaning of the wonderful
inventions of our day. They are coming to us because we are living in the
dawning of a New Dispensation! They are the foregleams of an Epoch so wonderful
as to be beyond our most vivid imagination. Evidently God has been gradually
lifting the veil of ignorance from the eyes of human understanding. Gradually
He has allowed us to see the power of steam --gradually to learn how to apply
it. Later He lifted the veil in respect to electricity. Now its marvels are
enlightening the world.
Shortly chemistry will be accomplishing wonders
for us--no doubt making unnecessary the mining of coal. From the air that we
breathe and the water that we drink we shall doubtless shortly know how to
separate the elements necessary to furnish us the light and the heat
indispensable to the world's progress. Everything is getting ready for the
Millennium! Not only is it coming, but it is here! We are
not, indeed, enjoying its full blessings yet; but what we are enjoying is a
foretaste of them.
All of our hearts should be attracted more and
more to the Lord in thankfulness for His wonderful mercies. More and more we
should be studying His Divine Word, the Bible. From it we should be coming
daily to a clearer understanding of the Divine Character and Plan. This alone
will chase away our ignorance and superstition, and bring us love, joy, and
peace.
The blessings of God now coming to the world
will center in Christ's sacrifice at Calvary. During the past eighteen
centuries, His redemptive work has been the gathering of the Church, and now it
is to mean the blessing [R5154 : page 4] of
all the families of the earth, as the Scriptures have promised. Yea, the
Scriptures clearly show that these blessings are intended for those who are in
their graves, as well as for the living.
----------
IS THERE A
LACK OF CONFIDENCE IN THE MINISTRY?
Rev. Chas. E. Newlin addressed the regular
monthly meeting of Methodist preachers in Atlanta some days ago, and in the
course of his address Mr. Newlin used the words: "I can prove by 99 per
cent. of the business men of Atlanta that they lack confidence in the real,
true manhood of the preachers of the city."
The Rev. B. Frank White, in leaving the
pastorate of the First Presbyterian church, of Connellsville, Pa., is quoted as
saying: "A man can't be honest in the ministry and hold his job." As
Mr. White expects to remain in the ministry, although seeking another field,
the inference is that he prefers a station where he can preach the word in a
style more in keeping with his conscientious scruples.
The writer is inclined to believe that both of
the assertions above quoted are rather broad, if not more or less exaggerated.
We believe that the great majority of ministers are honest and are doing all in
their power to advance the cause of religion here on earth; we also believe
that there are some in the pulpit who have no right to be there. The vision
they saw in the clouds, "G. P. C.," meant not to "Go Preach
Christ," as they imagined, but to "Go Pick Cotton."--South
Georgia Progress.
WHY
MINISTERS DESERVE SYMPATHY
Christian ministers deserve considerable
sympathy. They are at the present time in a very trying position. It is the
conscientious ones who are in trouble. Behind them are the creeds and theories
of the Dark Ages, to which they are chained:
(1) By the vows which they took at their
ordination.
(2) By the honor of their position in the sight
of their friends and neighbors.
(3) By their financial necessities and those of
their families.
Ministers possessed of an education know not
only that the creeds of the past are in conflict with each other and with
reason, but also that those creeds are in conflict with the Bible. Better
translations and older MSS. have shown us the fallacy of deductions made by our
forefathers. Every educated minister now knows that the Hebrew word translated
"hell" in the Old Testament Scriptures, means the tomb--the state of
death--the only hell that was known for four thousand years. They know that in
our Common Version of the Bible this word Sheol is translated grave and pit more times than it is translated hell. They know that it never means and
never did mean, anywhere, a place of fire and torture.
Baptist ministers have gotten out a new Bible,
in which they go to the trouble of translating this word Sheol by three English
words, "the under-world." This hides the truth from the average mind
about as much as the mistranslation hell does. But it helps our Baptist
friends a little in dealing with Sheol, for of course, in the grave, in the
tomb, is in "the under-world." Of course nobody thinks there is
another world of living people in the center of the earth. It is only the dead
that are in the under-world--in the tomb.
All educated ministers know further that the
word Hades, in the New Testament translated hell, is the Greek equivalent
of the Hebrew word Sheol, and likewise means the under-world, the tomb, the
state of death or condition of death. The trouble with these ministers is that
they know that their congregations are not generally aware of the truth on the
subject, and they fear to tell those truths lest they should be accused of
having practiced deception in the past, when as a matter of fact they had
simply taken from theologians of the Dark Ages what they in turn gave to the
people, without examining the Scripture proof.
HONESTY TO
GOD AND RELIGION MOST COMMENDABLE
Another difficulty confronting these ministers
is this: For the past twenty years the colleges of the United States, Great
Britain, Germany, etc., have been teaching the Evolution Theory--that man was not created in God's image, that he was not in God's sight "very
good," and that he did not fall down from Divine favor. It
teaches, on the contrary, that he was an evolution from the ape, and instead of
falling has been rising in the scale of intelligence and getting
nearer to God's image every year, all the time.
Following the Evolutionists came the Higher
Critics, declaring that the Bible is really old wives' fables and not at all
inspired. Nearly all graduates of colleges and seminaries for the past twenty
years have gone into pulpits, consecrated to the preaching of God's Truth from
the Bible standpoint, in violation of whatever conscience they have.
These generally are the great and popular
preachers of all denominations. They consider not the vows of their ordination,
but practically say, "We do not hide our unbelief to any great extent. We
answer questions [R5154 : page 5] of the
people with a measure of candor, dodging occasionally; and if they know
anything about the Bible themselves, they know that we do not believe in its
inspiration. If they wish to continue us as their preachers and to honor us and
to pay our salaries, we will continue to serve them. By and by we will get
their faith in the Bible thoroughly undermined; and then we will come out into
the open. Then we will tell them that we falsified a little for their good, as
a mother would tell her babe some fairy story for its entertainment."
The preachers who are in trouble are the
conscientious ones who believe the Bible to be true and who have not yet gotten
their bearings. They cannot long believe in an eternity of torture, yet are
afraid to follow the course of the International Bible Students Association in
a thorough Bible Study which ignores the creeds. These poor men know not what
to believe, and are in great trepidation when a question is asked them by the
people who pay them for religious advice. They cannot dig. To beg they are
ashamed. And to tell the whole truth about what they know and what they do not
know respecting the Bible they are afraid. They have our sympathy.
Our advice to all such is, "Tell the truth
and shame the Devil!" Take your stand for what truth you see, and seek for
more light upon God's Word in this glorious dawning of the New Era, in which
God declares that He is pleased to give an increase of light on things Divine.
"The wise shall understand, but none of the wicked [or hypocrites] shall
understand."--Daniel 12:10.
It would appear as if we are living in the time
of special testing so clearly foretold by the Lord. Everything hidden would be
uncovered, He said. He will bring to light the hidden things of darkness. (I Cor. 4:5.) If we would not be put to shame
before Him, we must be honest. Who can doubt that honesty, especially in
respect to God and religion, is most estimable from the Divine standpoint? None
of us have anything whereof to boast. But if we are honest with our God, we can
look up to Him, by faith realizing that we are acceptable through Jesus Christ
our Lord.
----------
THE REMEDY
FOR INEQUALITY OF CONDITIONS
"The struggle under the competitive system
is not worth the effort," wrote the publisher at Girard, Kan., of a widely
circulated Socialistic newspaper, just before he committed suicide. Could there
be a more mistaken reason for a Socialist's self-destruction?
This man's peculiar creed had been
accepted within a few days of his death by a million of his
countrymen. A new political party that subscribed to many of his beliefs had
polled 4,000,000 votes. If Socialism is a true remedy for political
and industrial ills, those who preach it should be filled with
confidence and hope.
It is to be feared that it is not a true
remedy. Human nature is competitive. No matter how it may be governed, it
will not be radically changed.--N.Y. World.
* * *
We agree with the Editor of the World, that four millions of American voters and as many millions abroad are
Socialists from the conviction that Socialism is the proper remedy for the
world's difficulties. We agree with the Editor of the World, also, that
these well-meaning men are deceiving themselves. The only remedy for the
inequality of human conditions is the one which God has declared He will
provide. Selfishness is so ingrained in humanity that apparently none can be
absolutely just when self-interest is in the opposite balance.
God purposes to settle the whole matter for rich
and poor in His own way--and His way must be the best way. He purposes to
change the hearts of men. In the Bible He tells us that He will take away the
stony heart and give a heart of flesh. (Ezek. 36:26.)
This signifies that He will make mankind more tender-hearted, more sympathetic.
He will restore that condition of things which existed at the beginning, when
Father Adam and Mother Eve were created in the Divine likeness, and declared to
be very good and acceptable in God's sight. --Genesis
1:26,31.
The fall drove our first parents from Eden and
necessitated the battle for daily bread, against thorns and thistles, etc.
Under this influence selfishness has developed and now, after six thousand
years, is deep-seated. What a blessing it will mean for God to take away this
stony heart and to give the heart of flesh! When that time shall come and that
change shall have been effected, Socialism will be a success and surely will
prevail throughout the whole earth.
But, you ask, by what mighty miracle can this
change of heart be accomplished? How can the whole world be thus converted? The
Bible answers that it will be done, not by sudden conversion, but by a gradual
one, which will [R5155 : page 5] require
nearly a thousand years for its accomplishment.
Are we asked, What power could intervene and
force this change of heart upon humanity? The Bible answers that it will be
Divine Power represented in Messiah's glorious Kingdom. The Second Coming of
Christ, once supposed to mean the destruction of the world, Bible students now
see to mean the very reverse--the blessing of earth, the taking away of the
curse, the lifting of the fallen race to all that was lost in Eden, and the
destruction of the finally impenitent.
FOREGLEAMS
OF MESSIAH'S KINGDOM
We are not to look into the sky to see Messiah
come, but rather to remember that His resurrection exalted Him to the glory
which He had with the Father before He became a man. He will at that time
indeed empower earthly representatives, to whom the world will look for
guidance and instruction; but Messiah and His glorified Church, His Bride, will
be invisible to men--on the spirit plane.
Many of our readers will be surprised to know
that the glorious blessings of Messiah's Kingdom will steal over the world
gradually, coming through human channels-- entirely unaware of being
used of the Lord. Bible students are so interpreting the wonderful things of
our day. They are foregleams or early dawning of Messiah's Thousand-Year-Day,
during which He will roll away the curse and shed forth Divine blessings.
Whoever can see the matter from this standpoint must be deeply interested in
every fresh advance of invention. In another column we refer to some of these
present-day wonders which have come in during the last century.
If it be true, as we hold, that these blessings
are the foregleams of Divine favor through Messiah's Kingdom, with what
patience should all exercise themselves to wait upon the Lord, and not to seek
to disturb too radically any present condition which is at all bearable! Who
will dispute that everybody today is much better off than his grandparents
were--even fifty years ago? St. Paul by inspiration declares that
"Godliness with contentment is great gain." We commend this thought
to Socialists and every one else.
We do not claim that even-handed justice
prevails, nor do we admit that it would be possible under present conditions.
People of superior brain power will not use that power for the public good
solely. All still have a [R5155 : page 6] sufficiency
of selfishness to claim that their superior qualities justly entitle them to
superior conditions. Why may we not concede this point, rejoice in the
blessings we have, be thankful to God for them, and wait patiently for His
Kingdom?
Under present (selfish) conditions each workman
demands wages according to his skill. Why quarrel with the wealthy, learned,
more capables on that score? What great advantages have come to the world thus!
Why stop it before God's providence brings us a better rule--the Golden Rule.
"Have patience, brethren," and be ye peacemakers not strife-breeders.
W.T. R-5153a : page 3 -
1913r