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Chosen no: R-3054 , from: 1902 Year. |
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NADAB AND ABIHU CUT OFF
--LEV. 10:1-11.--AUGUST 10.--
Golden Text.--"Let us watch and be sober."--I Thess. 5:6.
ALTHOUGH not directly so stated, there is
sufficient ground for the inference that the
sin for which Nadab and Abihu were smitten
by the Lord, was committed while they were
under the influence of intoxicating liquor. The basis
for this inference is that immediately following the
description of their wrong doing and its punishment
comes the Lord's injunction,--"Do not drink wine
nor strong drink, thou, nor thy sons with thee, when
ye go into the tabernacle of the congregation, lest ye die;
...that ye may put difference between holy and
unholy, and between unclean and clean."--Vs. 9,10.
The two young men smitten in the prime of life,
were Aaron's oldest sons; there were two younger
brothers. All had just been consecrated to the
priesthood, under their father Aaron as the chief
priest, by the direction of their uncle Moses, carrying
out the divine arrangement. With many advantages
every way, they had corresponding responsibilities,
as well as grand prospects for the future, all of which
[R3055 : page 237] were destroyed because of their lack of reverence for
the Lord--their carelessness respecting his regulations,
and the vows which they had just taken upon
themselves as his special servants. Their experience
furnishes an excellent temperance lesson. How many
others in highly favored situations in life have come
to disrespect the Almighty's arrangements through
the use of intoxicating liquors!--how many have
similarly blighted their prospects in life, hastened
their death, and brought sorrow upon their kindred!
The Chicago Tribune has collected statistics respecting
the murders in the United States, between
the years 1891 and 1901, and declares that 53,000 of
these murders resulted more or less directly from the
use of intoxicating liquors. The statistics of the State
of Massachusetts for the year 1895 show that over
ninety-six percent of those convicted for crime
in that State, were users of strong drinks. In 1899
the New Voice obtained the testimony of one thousand
jailors (whose terms of office would aggregate more
than six thousand years of experience), and their returns
showed that seventy-two percent of the
criminals then in jails under their charge, were
brought there by drink. The American Grocer using
government statistics (April 1901) figures the total
bill of this country for liquid refreshments during the
year at $1,228,674,925. And of this amount it figures
that alcoholic liquors cost $1,059,563,787,--the remainder
representing the sum spent for tea, cocoa,
coffee, soda water and the like. Some one has calculated
that the money spent for alcoholic liquor
would equal a pile of silver dollars 1754 miles high;
and the Christian Observer remarks, "It would take
ten men with scoop shovels to throw away money as
fast as we are wasting it for grog."
In the presence of such a stupendous evil, blighting
earthly prospects for so many, depriving so many
of the reasonable comforts and necessities of life,
disqualifying so many for thoughts and deeds of
purity and goodness, and accomplishing instead so
much misery and sorrow, what Christian could feel
interested in the traffic? What Christian would not
be willing to forego personal rights and liberties in
connection with this terrible adversary of the race
and rejoice in any self-denials it might cause him,
even though he might feel himself stronger than the
majority of men, and thoroughly capable of withstanding
its insidious attacks and undermining tendencies
as respects character, etc? It is not for us
at the present time to make "sumptuary laws"
for the world, nor in any manner to attempt
to rule the world; but as surely as we believe
that when the Lord's Kingdom shall have fully
come it will thoroughly chain up this monster evil, as
one of the most powerful of Satan's agencies, just so
surely should all who so believe show to others by
precept and example their opposition to this curse.
There is, however, a deeper lesson for us in the
experiences of the two priests under consideration.
As they were members of the tribe of Levi, so those
whom they typified would be members of the "household
of faith." As they went further than this and
consecrated to the priesthood and were truly and
properly accepted of the Lord as priests, their antitypes
[R3055 : page 238] must be persons, classes, who have come under
the terms of the "royal priesthood" in the full, proper
sense of the word. They do not represent merely
nominal Christians--merely such as imagine themselves
consecrated to the Lord through a misunderstanding,
as is the case with many in the nominal
church of today: they represent persons, classes, in
the true, consecrated Church of the Lord.
The Scriptural account does not specify respecting
the wrong doing of Nadab and Abihu. The expression
"strange fire" does not clearly indicate to us
whether their wrong doing consisted in using an incense
other than the kind that the Lord had prescribed,
or whether they used it at the wrong time,
or in a wrong place, or whether the fire which enkindled
the incense was taken from some other place
than the altar, as the Lord had prescribed, or whether
their incense was repulsive to the Lord because the
offerers were in a state of intoxication--possessed of
a wrong spirit. The latter, as we have suggested,
seems to be implied in the declaration of the 10th verse respecting holy and unholy, clean and unclean
conditions of approaching the Lord.
The great lesson here for the royal priesthood
is not so much in respect to intoxicating liquors, as
in respect to a wrong spirit and unclean condition of
mind and heart in approaching the Lord. We are
bound to suppose that those who have made a consecration
to the Lord and are seeking to "cleanse
themselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit,
perfecting holiness in the fear of God." (2 Cor. 7:1),
will not be guilty of literal intoxication. Those who
have received to any degree the spirit of the truth
and have come to appreciate in any measure the
spirit of a sound mind, surely realize that in our soberest
and most favorable condition, our minds are
none too sound;--they realize that continually the
Lord's people have need of his assisting grace supporting
their imperfect judgments, and they could not
ask for such grace to help were they not also using
their best endeavors to preserve and exercise what
sense they have naturally.
The lesson for the consecrated, therefore, is in accord
with what the Apostle has written, "Let us
therefore fear, lest a promise being left us of entering
into his rest, any of you should seem to come short
of it." (Heb. 4:1.) Our consecration through faith in
the Lord has brought us under the anointing of the
holy spirit, has permitted us to enter into the holy and
to enjoy the privileges and favors of those "deep
things of God" which none can see or appreciate
without the anointing of the spirit. Outsiders--
not of the consecrated and accepted class, not of the
royal priesthood, the peculiar people, and who therefore
have no privilege in the way of offering incense
to the Lord, have no such opportunities as we of offending
the Lord by offering him unacceptable
sacrifices,--unacceptable prayers, unacceptable services.
As we do not know in which way these two
sons of Aaron offended against the divine arrangement
or whether they both offended alike, we may
lay to ourselves, as the antitypical priesthood, lessons
all along the line.
(1) When we approach the Lord we are not to
come to him under the influence of an evil spirit, intoxicated
with the spirit of the world or of Babylon,
by whose wine it is declared all the nations have been
made drunken.--Rev. 14:8; 18:3.
(2) When we would approach the Lord even in
a right spirit, we must make sure that we have the
proper incense which he has stipulated will be acceptable
to him, whose ingredients represent the
perfections of our Lord Jesus reckonedly appropriated
to us.
(3) Additionally we must be sure that we do
not get fire for our incense from any other quarter
than from the altar--consecrated fire or zeal, sanctified
by the merit of our Lord's sacrifice.
In "Tabernacle Shadows of the Better Sacrifices" we have offered the suggestion that these two
priests possibly represent two different classes in the
church--two classes amongst those who have made
consecration to the royal priesthood and have been
accepted, both of which classes will fall from the
priesthood. We have suggested that one may represent
the class who will die the Second Death (Heb. 6:4-6;
10:26,27) and that the other may represent
the class who lose their membership in the royal
priesthood because of an insufficiency of zeal to make
their calling and election sure; but who, nevertheless,
are at heart loyal to God and will be "saved so as by
fire," through great tribulation. (Rev. 7:14.) True
there is nothing in the type to indicate any difference
between these two, nothing to indicate any hope in
the future for either of them. We think it not unreasonable,
however, to surmise that the type merely
shows that both men lost their standing in the
priestly company by reason of failure to rightly appreciate
their privileges. We are assured that all
these matters are typical, yet we find it difficult to suppose
this type to mean that one-half of all who consecrate
to the Lord as members of the royal priesthood,
will suffer the Second Death. Yet this would seem
to be the only alternative interpretation, if we reject
the thought that the two men merely represented
the two classes who lose the priesthood without indicating
their proportion as respects the whole. The
two should have a meaning;--either as one half of the
whole or as two classes. We accept the latter view;
because the Scriptures clearly show two classes who
will lose the royal priesthood, and because the other
proposition, that they represented one-half of the
consecrated lost in Second Death, seems to us wholly
untenable.
In any event the lesson to those who desire to be
faithful to their privileges, is a strong one, having
made our consecration to the Lord, having received
of his anointing, let us seek carefully to "make our
calling and our election sure" to the blessings and
privileges of the future--as the dispensers of divine
bounties to mankind in general, in the Millennial
Kingdom, associated with our Lord. Let us take all
the lessons out of this that we can, as respects due
reverence to him with whom we have to do, and due
appreciation of the proper spirit, the proper incense
[R3055 : page 239] and the proper zeal to be used in coming before the
Lord, that we may abide in his love and favor.
MISCONCEPTIONS CAUSE DIFFICULTIES TO MANY.
Those who do not see with us the great divine
plan of the ages, with its wonderful opportunities of
the future for the blessing of all the families of the
earth;--who do not see with us that the present age
is merely for the selection of the royal priesthood for
the future work of glory and blessing of mankind;--
who do not see with us that the Jewish system with its
priesthood, sacrifices, incense, etc., etc., were merely
types or shadows of the higher things in God's plan
now being developed;--such are apt to look at the
statements of this lesson with astonishment; and are
apt to feel that God acted in a very arbitrary manner
toward these two priests in striking them down in
death, because of some failure to approach him in
the prescribed manner. They fail to see that the Lord
[R3056 : page 239] was instituting types which must be carried out to the
very letter, and which must illustrate the exactness
of his dealings with the "royal priesthood."
Looking at the matter in a wrong light, they not
only see the two men suddenly deprived of life, but
they reason that if God's anger thus destroyed them
--then, the very next moment, according to their
theory, they would appear at God's bar for their
eternal sentence; and since they could not believe
that the two men who were unfit to live amongst men
were any more fit to live in heaven, they feel obliged
to conclude, according to their theory, that the Lord
not only suddenly smote them down as respects their
earthly life, but additionally turned them over for an
eternity of torture at the hands of devils. Those
who really believe this misrepresentation of the divine
plan must necessarily be unfavorably influenced
by it in their own dealings with their children, their
neighbors, etc.,--their ideas of justice and of love,
etc., must necessarily be blunted by such misconceptions
of the divine character and procedure.
To our understanding of the teachings of the
Lord's Word, on the contrary, there would be no
such difficulty as this. Nadab and Abihu were men,
members of the fallen race, all of whom are under
sentence of death. They had been merely reckonedly,
not actually, justified, because "the blood of bulls
and goats could never take away sin." They were,
therefore, although typically occupying the place of
priests, not really different from the remainder of
the world--for they had received no release from the
Adamic condemnation. Hence, since their position
and all were typical, so also their death under the
circumstances could mean no greater loss to them
than death under other circumstances would mean
to their fellows--they merely went into the tomb a
little sooner than they otherwise would have done.
But long centuries after their death and the death of
their fellows,--better and worse,--in God's appointed
time, the great antitypical sin-offering appeared;
--and the great antitypical Priest, offered the great
sacrifice for sins accomplished at Calvary, and the
whole world was brought back from the sentence of
sin and death--including Nadab and Abihu, Aaron
and Moses, and all the remainder of our race,--including
also us who were not yet born.
The Atonement day sacrifices begun by our Lord
and Redeemer, continue; and we, his called ones of
this Gospel age, are privileged to participate in the
sacrificing work with our great High Priest, as the
sons of Aaron participated with their father. Soon
the entire work of sacrificing will be at an end; soon
the great High Priest will finish the work of making
an atonement, and will then, as did the priest in the
type, come out to the altar and lift up his hands and
bless all the people--the dead and dying world. The
day of blessing will be a long one, because "a day
with the Lord is as a thousand years." It will be
quite sufficient to accomplish the purposes intended,
of lifting up, helping, strengthening, blessing, bringing
to full restitution, all who will come into harmony
with the Father. In that day Nadab and Abihu
with others of mankind, who have done better and
who have done worse, will be on trial before the judgment
seat of Christ,--the Church, the royal priesthood,
being associated with Him in the judgment.
(I Cor. 6:2.) In proportion as any have had favorable
opportunities and used them unfavorably, in
similar proportion have they degraded themselves so
that they will proportionately experience stripes and
difficulties in getting started upon the great "highway
of holiness," which will then be opened up for
the whole world of mankind,--that they may return
thereon to the Lord and to eternal life; and only
those who fail to come back under such gracious
opportunities, into full harmony with the gracious
divine plan, will be destroyed irrevocably in the Second
Death.
"LET US WATCH AND BE SOBER."
The Apostle's exhortation in our Golden Text is
well worthy of being continually borne in mind by
all who would make their calling and election sure
to a place in the glorious priesthood of the future--
"Let us watch and be sober." Let us watch in the
sense of taking careful notice of all the directions
which the Lord our God has given us, respecting
what would not be acceptable service to him. Let
us watch ourselves, striving to walk as nearly as
possible in the footsteps of the great High Priest,
who was, we are sure, right and acceptable to the
Father in every particular. Let us be sober--not
only not literally intoxicated with ardent spirits, but
let us not be intoxicated with "the spirit of the
world," or the spirit of Babylon, churchianity. Let
us have the spirit of Christ, the spirit of a sound mind,
the spirit of meekness, the spirit of gentleness, the
spirit of love for God, for our fellows, and for all men,
seeking as we have opportunity, to do them good.
Let us be sober in the sense that we will not be
frivolous; that while happy, joyous in the Lord, free
from the anxious cares that are upon many others
through misapprehension of our Father's character
and plan, we may, nevertheless, be sober in the sense
of earnest, appreciative of present opportunities and
privileges in connection with the Lord's service;--
not thoughtlessly negligent, letting opportunities and
privileges slip through our hands to be afterwards
regretted.