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Rich To Hell--Poor To Heaven
--MAY 17.--LUKE 16:19-31.--
"Whoso stoppeth his ears at the cry of the poor, he also
shall cry himself, but shall not be heard."--PROVERBS 21:13.
DID our Lord mean that all rich men and all rich
women are to spend eternity in misery because of faring sumptuously every day,
and wearing purple and fine linen? Can it be true that in order to get to
Heaven we must be poor beggars, covered with sores, and have them licked by
dogs, and must eat crumbs from a rich man's table? Has character nothing to do
with future rewards and punishments? Again, will it be so that for all eternity
the rich, tormented in fire, will see the poor in bliss, and the honored poor
see the rich in eternal misery? Can this be the arrangement of an all-wise,
all-loving Creator--one who knew the end from the beginning?
For many years this parable has caused distress
of mind to the more saintly of God's people; both heart and head have rebelled.
We remembered that Abraham was very rich, likewise Isaac, Jacob, King David,
King Solomon, etc. We remembered that God Himself is very rich. Then we looked
up the subject in the Hebrew and the Greek, and found that Abraham did not go
to [R5444 : page 123] Gehenna,
the hopeless condition, the Second Death, but to Sheol, Hades, the tomb, the
grave, the state of death, where there is no fire.
Our greater knowledge increased the mystery; for
the Scriptures declare that Sheol, Hades, the tomb, is to be destroyed, that
all are to be brought forth from it in the resurrection. No other Scripture
seemed to agree with this parable. It stands in a class by itself, except as we
might use for its support one text in Revelation which speaks of a symbolic
beast and a symbolic false prophet in torment. Thus have the thinking people of
the Church been stumbled and perplexed by the story of this lesson.
NOW ALL IS
CLEAR, PLAIN
Now we see that our lesson is a parable. It is
not to be taken literally, any more than are the other parables and dark
sayings of our Savior; such as, "Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of
Man, and drink His blood, ye have no life in you"; or again, "If
thine eye offend thee, pluck it out...; if thine hand offend thee, cut it
off." Indeed, we find that Jesus spoke to the people only with parables. (Matthew 13:34.) None were ready for the depth of
His teaching until after the Holy Spirit at Pentecost began to give
qualification.
How simple it all seems now! how beautiful! Many
of God's people are rejoicing that in the light of the present understanding of
the Bible the Divine character is shining forth, beautiful in its Justice,
Wisdom, Love and Power.
It is not difficult for us to understand that
our lesson is a parable. To take it literally, as we have seen, would involve
the absurdity of supposing that all beggars go to Heaven, and that all wealthy
go to Hell; for the parable says nothing about character--either that the poor
man was good or that the Rich Man was bad. Viewed as a parable, we see that the
thing said is not the thing meant. Thus in other parables wheat and sheep
represent children of God; tares and goats represent those dominated by the
Adversary, the god of this world.
THE RICH MAN
OF THE PARABLE
In the parable under consideration, the Rich Man
represents a class, and the poor man, Lazarus, another class. Let us see: The
Rich Man was the Jewish nation, which had been in God's favor for more than
sixteen centuries. To the Jew had been given the promises, the Prophets, the
blessings and privileges of the Law Covenant. These symbolically were their
purple, fine linen and sumptuous table. The fine linen symbolized their typical
justification through typical sacrifices. Their purple raiment symbolized
royalty; for they were the typical Kingdom. Their sumptuous fare represented
the Divine promises, as St. Paul's
words imply.--Romans 11:9.
In Jesus' day Jewish favor began to wane. They
were completely cut off in A.D. 70, as all Jews will admit. During the interim
of forty years the Rich Man, the Jewish nation, sickened, died and was buried.
Nationally, they went to Hades, to the tomb; and their resurrection has not yet
been accomplished, although Zionism is the beginning of it.
But although nationally dead and buried, the
Jews individually have been very much alive during the last nineteen centuries.
They have had anguish of soul, as they have received persecutions--sometimes,
alas! from those who profess the name of Jesus, but who deny Him in their
practises. For all these centuries the Jews have cried out to God, who in the
parable is represented as Abraham, the Father of the Faithful. The only answer
that they have had is that there is a gulf of separation between them and God.
Thank God, this cannot much longer be the case! The New Dispensation dawns, in
which the Rich Man will return from Hades. Israel will be nationally
rehabilitated, and God's favor will again come to those of them who shall learn
needed lessons.
THE POOR MAN
OF THE PARABLE
The poor man of the parable represents an
outcast class. It included publicans and sinners, who had alienated themselves
from God's favor. It also included Gentiles, to whom Divine favor had never
been extended-- "aliens and strangers from the commonwealth of Israel."
(Ephesians 2:12.) These had no fine linen of
typical justification, and no purple, representing a share in God's favor as
part of His Kingdom. None of the promises belonged to them. All that they could
have would be merely such crumbs as would fall from the Rich Man's table.
The Scriptures illustrate two such crumbs given
to this class by Jesus. When He healed the Roman centurion's servant, it was a
concession at the request of the Jews, who declared that this man was a friend
and had done them good, by building a synagogue, etc. The healing of this
servant was a crumb. Similarly, the Syro-Phoenician woman got a crumb when she
came to Jesus entreating the recovery of her daughter, who was possessed of a
demon. The Master answered, "It is not proper to take the children's bread
and give it unto dogs." He here used the customary Jewish phraseology
respecting Gentiles--Gentile dogs. The Syro-Phoenician woman was not a Jewess
and had no claim on God's favor, but she replied: "Yea, Lord, yet the dogs
eat of the crumbs that fall from the children's table." Jesus noted her
faith and gave her the crumb which she desired.
As the Jews died to their favor, so the outcast
publicans, sinners and Gentiles died to their disfavor; such of them as desired
the favors of God, hungering and thirsting for His Word of promise, were
received by Him. The early Church was made up of this Lazarus class, rejected
by the Pharisees as publicans, sinners and Gentiles. Instead of being any
longer alienated from God, these became the children of God and heirs of His promises.
In the parable they are represented as children of Abraham--in his arms. In the
type, Isaac was the beloved son of promise to the literal Abraham. In the
antitype, Jesus and His followers are the Spiritual Seed of Abraham, received
to God's bosom and favor. Thus St. Paul writes, "If ye be Christ's, then
are ye Abraham's Seed, and heirs according to the Promise"--made to
Abraham.--Galatians 3:29.
"A GREAT GULF
FIXED"
The great gulf between Judaism and Christianity
has been fixed for more than eighteen centuries. During all this period no Jew
has been permitted to come near to God, and no Gentile permitted to take the
former position of the Jew, or in any manner to claim favor aside from Christ.
In the Divine Plan the gulf was fixed unalterably. "There is none other
name given under Heaven amongst men whereby we must be saved"-- whereby we
may come into heart relationship with God. This gulf dates from the time that
Christ came and offered Himself to Israel, and was rejected and
crucified.
Thank God, His Word points us to another change
of dispensation at the Second Coming of Christ! Then the Lazarus class, now
children of God by faith, will be made actually and gloriously His children
beyond the veil. In association with Jesus their Lord, they will take control
of the world; for they will be His Bride and Joint-heir in the Kingdom. What
will happen to the Rich Man then? Oh, he is to have a resurrection from Hades! [R5444
: page 124]
While God's Kingdom will be represented on the
spiritual plane by the Lazarus class, it will be represented on the earthly
plane by another class, which will be Jewish. The Jews who crucified Jesus will
not be made princes in the earth in association with Messiah's spiritual
Empire, but some of their brethren will be--a class whom they have been
accustomed to call fathers will be made Princes. These Scripturally are known
as "Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and all the Prophets," and all who during the
Jewish Epoch proved themselves loyal to God and faithful, described by St. Paul
in Hebrews 11:32-40.
St.
Paul refers to this recovery of the Jews
to Divine favor in Romans 11:25-33. He
there points out that as we who are now the people of God were not always so,
but were received to Divine favor when Israel was broken off from God's favor,
so in due time those Israelites cut off from the favor of God will receive
favor through our favor. That is to say, when the Church shall have attained
the prize of glory, honor and immortality, as Spiritual Israel, then the gulf
separating Natural Israel from God's favor will have been passed. Then favor
will return to Natural Israel. Coming to them through the [R5445 : page 124] glorified
Spiritual Israel, it will extend through them to all nations, peoples, kindreds
and tongues of humanity, during the Millennial Age.
This is the Divine Promise, "In thy Seed
shall all the families of the earth be blessed." The Spiritual Seed of
Abraham, the Church, gets the first share in this Promise, and the natural seed
of Abraham gets the second part; but both together will be used by the Lord in
rolling away the curse and pouring out, instead, favors and blessings upon
humanity, upon whomsoever will accept them.
DIVES' FIVE
BRETHREN
The parable represents Dives as praying for a
drop of water to cool his parched tongue. Symbolically, parabolically, this
represents the Jewish people in great distress, asking God to allow Christians
to give them some help from their troubles. Have the Jews ever appealed to God
for help? Have they prayed for relief from the persecutions which have come to
them in the past and which to some extent still continue in Russia? Surely
they have! Moreover, they have appealed to representatives of the Lazarus
class--representatives of Christianity-- desiring that their release and relief
should come through them.
An illustration of this prayer for relief in our
own day was afforded in the appeal of the Jews to President Roosevelt that he
would use his influence with the government of Russia for the amelioration of
Jewish persecutions. Did they get this drop of water? Nay! Mr. Roosevelt
replied that the comity of nations would not permit such a communication from a
friendly nation.
The parable goes further and develops the fact
that the Rich Man had five brethren in danger of joining him in the trouble
that was upon him. Who were his five brethren? We reply that the Jews of
Palestine in Jesus' day represented chiefly the tribes of Benjamin and Judah,
while the majority of the other ten tribes were scattered abroad in various
lands. The question raised is, Did this trying experience affect merely the
Jews of Palestine, who had enjoyed most of God's favors, or did it include also
the Jews scattered abroad? The answer is given in the parable, "They have
Moses and the Prophets; let them hear them." This proves that Jews only
were referred to; for no Gentile had Moses and the Prophets. The number five is
in full accord, also. Whereas two tribes, Judah and Benjamin, were represented
by the one Rich Man, so proportionately the other ten tribes would be
represented by five brethren.
And so it was. The Message of the Gospel, which
began with the Jews in Palestine, was extended to every land; and the Apostle
Paul, in going to any cities amongst the Gentiles, preached first to the Jews,
saying, It is expedient that the Gospel should be preached first to you; but
seeing you reject the grace of God, lo, we turn to the Gentiles. (Acts 13:46,47.) In other words, the test upon all
Israelites was the same.
Thus we are finding a depth of wisdom in Jesus'
teachings beyond anything we could even have dreamed. We are finding, too, that
the horrible nightmare doctrines of the Dark Ages poisoned our judgments,
crossed our spiritual eyesight, and hindered us from seeing the beauty of the
Lord's Word. Thank God for the New Day and the light that it is shedding upon
the Bible!
W.T. R-5444a : page 122 - 1914r