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THE NATURE AND METHODS OF GOD'S ELECTIONS
VOL. XIII. OCTOBER 15, 1892. NO. 20.
THE NATURE AND METHODS OF GOD'S ELECTIONS.
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We have heretofore shown that election as
taught in the Scriptures is not in opposition to,
but in harmony with, the free moral agency of
the elected classes. We have endeavored to
show that, while during the Jewish age there
was an election or selection of a "house of
servants," as, during the present Christian age,
an election or selection of a "house of sons"
(Heb. 3:5,6) is in progress, yet neither of these
selections was or is arbitrary so far as individuals are concerned. God did arbitrarily fore-ordain
and determine that these two classes
should be selected, and arbitrarily set apart a
limited period of time for the selection of each;
and for aught we know to the contrary, he arbitrarily
and unalterably fixed the number of
each of these classes, so that not one more, nor
one less, shall complete each of these elect
classes, fore-ordained in this plan. But he did
not, and in harmony with his own justice he
could not, arbitrarily fore-ordain and elect that
certain individuals must be of these classes regardless
of their wishes and endeavors, and
regardless of the operations of his own arrangements
and regulations governing these
elections.
But before any are able to look at the subjects
of Election and Reprobation intelligently,
they must first of all get rid of the false and
blinding idea that election implies "selected
to go to heaven," and reprobation, "selected
to go to eternal torture." No such significance
attaches in any way to the words. God not
only applies justice to his creatures in the laws
governing them, but he applies the same to
himself; hence it would be as unjust and impossible
for God to choose, select or elect an
unworthy person to heaven as it would be for
him to torture a righteous person. Furthermore,
to be unchosen to a particular office or
position does not imply that the unchosen one
is wholly undesirable, but merely that he is not
chosen to the particular office or position for
which choice is being made.
Since God is good and all his plans are wise
and beneficent, it follows that to be selected by
him to perform any part of his plan is an
honor and a favor. Thus God, having purposed
in himself the redemption of mankind
from the curse, and the consequent lifting up
or restoration of all things (Acts 3:19,21), not
only foretold it, but began preparations for
that restitution. Accordingly, having also determined
that this restitution should be accomplished
by means of a "Kingdom of God" or
a government of earth in harmony with his
laws, and having predetermined that this Kingdom
should be of two parts, a human and a
spiritual, he began his preparation by selecting
first the natural or human portion of the proposed,
and as yet future, Kingdom.
Mark well that God fore-ordained these two
classes, and the work for which he intended
them, long before the individuals composing
them had any existence. But how has this
predetermined will of God operated in selecting
the predetermined classes for the predetermined
service of honor? Infinite wisdom
[R1457 : page 308] made choice among the families of earth and
chose Abraham and his family. Arbitrarily,
and without reason for such a choice? Probably
not: in all probability Abraham's family
was best suited to the divine purpose, the best
adapted to the execution of the plan God had
in view.
It was part of Israel's difficulty that they
supposed God's election of their nation an arbitrary
one, and thought it a sufficient guarantee
of God's exclusive favor to be able to say, Abraham
is our father--we are, through him, the elect
people of God. (Luke 3:8.) But this was a
mistake; for though God had chosen Abraham's
family for a special service, and separated them
by his law and favors from other nations, this
was the extent of the favor they enjoyed--
"To them were committed the oracles of God."
But by reason of this national favor each individual
of that nation had special knowledge
and opportunities beyond those of other nations;
and their faithfulness or unfaithfulness, obedience
or disobedience, to this knowledge and
favor decided which individuals of that called and
chosen and favored nation were worthy of the
position of future honor and service as members
of the human or earthly phase of the Kingdom
of God, which is to be established in ruling
and blessing power "under the whole heavens."
Which individuals, because of faith and obedience,
were accepted as making their election
sure to that future honor and service, we know
only in part. The names of some of the most
notable only are given by the Apostle. (Heb. 11:17-39.)
These evidenced their worthiness
of the favors of God held before them, by the
sacrifices which they made of present honors
and comforts, to obtain the future and lasting
honors of heavenly promise. Therefore God
will in due time honor them by manifesting
them as his elect to the position and service to
which he called them, and will give them a
portion or share in the "heavenly city;" i.e., in the heavenly government or kingdom which
he will establish--the portion promised them
and to which they and all Israel were called or
invited, but for which the great majority were
unworthy. Yet the rejected Israelites are not
to be cast off from all favor of God; rather,
they will be blessed by and under the righteous
dominion which Christ will establish, and
in which their fellows are granted the earthly
portion. They shall see Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob and all the prophets in the Kingdom of
God, and they themselves unworthy of that
honor.*--Heb. 11:16; Luke 13:28.
*Our Lord does not mention himself and the apostles as
seen with Abraham and the prophets; because, though he
and the apostles and all the overcomers of the Christian
age will be in and of the same Kingdom, they will not
be of the human phase or portion of it, but of the spiritual;
and, like angels, invisible to mankind. Men will
see only the earthly or human department of that glorious
dominion.
The election of the full number for the human
portion of the Kingdom ended about the
time of Jesus' baptism and anointing, when he
began to bring life and immortality to light.
Then began the selection of the class which
God had predetermined he would select from
among men for exaltation to the "divine nature,"
and to constitute the spiritual phase of
the Kingdom which will restore and bless the
world. Of these Jesus was the first, the "forerunner,"
the chief or captain. In the selection
of this spiritual class, Abraham's literal
descendants, the Hebrews, have not been so
exclusively favored as they were in the previous
election; for instead of the light of truth (the
"oracles of God"), through which the call is
made, being confined to Israel, it has by God's
design and arrangement gone out into all the
earth--calling all who have "an ear to hear"
to justification, through faith in the blood of
Christ as their redemption price, and, further,
to sacrifice and glory--the "high calling."
The only pre-eminence given to Hebrews under
this last call is that it commenced with them.
(Luke 24:47.) The previous call was confined
to them.
Nor should we overlook the fact that, though
in the process of selecting these two classes
certain individuals were elected or chosen to do
a service in connection with the calling of these
classes, this in no way implied their election to
one of those classes. Thus Jacob, like Abraham,
was chosen to be a father of the favored nation,
and Moses, Samuel and others were chosen to
a service in the first selection, as Paul and the
[R1457 : page 309] other apostles, and others since, have been
chosen and selected for special service as God's
agents in the selection of the spiritual class;
yet their being elected to this service was in
no way an infringement upon their free moral
agency, and in no way decided for them the
question of their final election to the class to
which each was called.
Thus Paul, after telling us that God chose
him and prepared him for this service in early
life (Gal. 1:15), also assures us that he knew
full well that the call to this service, and the
fact that he was used as a servant in announcing
the "heavenly calling" to others, by no
means proved that he would attain the prize of
his high calling.
To be called to such special service as Paul
and the other apostles were called to was a
special honor which they must appreciate to
use; to have a call to the heavenly and the
future service is a still greater honor; and the
worthiness of the apostles, and of all who will
attain it, is, during this age, being tested by
the measure of their love and gratitude to God,
as shown in their obedience, and proved by
their self-denials.
That Paul understood that obedience or unfaithfulness
to the present opportunities was to
prove whether he was worthy or unworthy to
be a member of the already elect or predetermined
spiritual class--the "body of Christ"
--is clearly evident from his many statements
to this effect. For instance, he says, "I keep
my body under, and bring it into subjection [I
do not allow my human appetites, or ambitions,
or hopes, to govern my course, but I permit
the new mind, begotten of God's promises, to
rule], lest that by any means, when I have
preached to others [of the great prize for which
we run and sacrifice], I myself should be a
castaway"* [rejected as unworthy a place in
that choice company which God has predetermined
shall be composed of "overcomers"]. (1 Cor. 9:27.) "Brethren, I count not myself
to have apprehended [or grasped the prize to
which God called me, and for which I, with
you, am running]; but....I press along the
line towards the prize of the high calling."
(Phil. 3:11-15.) And in the preceding verses [R1458 : page 309] he tells us in what way he was running or pressing
along the line to win this great prize which
God has already predetermined to give to the
class whom he would select for it. He tells us
that he was casting away former hopes, and
ambitions, and honors, as though they were
worthless and vile, and spending every effort
to win a place in the body of Christ, and to
secure a share in the chief resurrection (to spiritual
being).
*"Castaway," here, is from the same Greek word elsewhere
translated "reprobate," and signifies rejected--not accepted.
He well knew that, because redeemed, "all
in their graves" would in due time "come
forth:" but he knew, too, that only the elect
"little flock" would be raised spiritual beings
like their Captain and Forerunner; and he was
willing to sacrifice everything (as Christ also
did) to obtain a place in that elect class. The
Apostle knew also that from the moment of
consecration he was reckoned a member of that
chosen "body" or "bride" of Christ, and
that his name was "written in heaven" (Heb. 12:23);
and though he had full assurance of
faith each moment, because of full knowledge
that he was daily a living sacrifice, yet he also
knew that for him to turn back, or even to
"look back" (or desire to recover that which
he had sacrificed), would prove him unworthy
of the kingdom position. He well knew that
he who wrote his name in heaven, when he consecrated
and started to run, could blot it out;
and that the condition upon which it would
not be blotted out was, faithfulness to the end of the race. (Rev. 3:5.) And not until his
faithful course was closing with martyrdom
did he write, "I have fought a good fight; I
have finished my course; I have kept the faith;
henceforth there is laid up [reserved securely]
for me a crown of righteousness, which the
Lord, the righteous Judge, shall give me at that
day; and not to me only, but unto all them
also that love his appearing."--2 Tim. 4:7,8.
Yet, while remembering that God has made
the deciding of the matter, whether or not we
shall be members of the elect company to
which he called us, to depend upon our faithfulness
to the end--"unto death"--we should
[R1458 : page 310] ever bear in mind, as Paul did, that the prize
is not offered to us because of our worthiness
of it, but of God's grace or favor; and that
our running is acceptable only because of God's
"mercy" in imputing to us the merits of Christ,
our Redeemer, as the covering of our inherited
weaknesses and imperfections.--Rom. 9:16.
[R1458 : page 310]
SOME TEXTS OF SCRIPTURE
SHOWN IN THE LIGHT OF THE FOREGOING.
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(1) "Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed
lest he fall."--1 Cor. 10:12.
(2) "Give diligence to make your calling and election
sure; for if ye do these things ye shall never fall."--
2 Peter 1:10.
(3) "Whosoever of you are justified by the Law, ye
are fallen from favor." "Christ shall profit you nothing."
--Gal. 5:2,4.
(4) "For it is impossible for those who were once
enlightened,...if they shall fall away, to renew them
again unto repentance."--Heb. 6:4-6.
(a) "Him that is able to keep you from falling [stumbling], and to present you faultless."--Jude 24.
(b) "I am persuaded that neither death, nor life,...
nor things present, nor things to come,...shall be able
to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ
Jesus our Lord."--Rom. 8:38,39.
(c) "My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and
they follow me, and I give unto them eternal life. And
they shall never perish, neither shall any pluck them out of my hand. My father which gave them me is greater
than all; and no one is able to pluck them out of my
Father's hand."--John 10:27-29.
In the light of the foregoing statement of the
doctrine of election as deduced from Scripture,
the above and similar texts cease to seem
contradictory, and become clear, harmonious
and reasonable. To show the harmony we have
selected some of those apparently most contradictory
and positive, which will serve to illustrate
how all similar statements are in harmony.
The first four show the possibility of
falling from grace or favor; the last three seem
to many to teach that to fall from God's favor
is an impossibility.
It is a mistake to suppose that favor and love
are synonymous, for though the favor of God
always implies his love, yet the withdrawal of
favor does not imply hatred. To illustrate:
When God created our race representatively in
Adam, he placed it in a position of favor, and
when it afterward fell from that favor by disobedience
to the conditions, God so loved the
race (fallen from his favor), while yet sinners,
as to provide a ransom for all, that thereby he
might in due time restore all to the original
favor, thus giving another or second opportunity
to enjoy life as his favor, everlastingly.
Every act must be in harmony with his justice,
love and wisdom: not with one alone,
but with all of these divine attributes must
every act of God conform. Hence in dealing
with us, should we fall from his favor, whatever
happens to us will be in full harmony with
God's character--whatever his justice, wisdom
and love indicate to be best. Let us keep this
well in mind.
To fall from favor implies that those who fall
had first been lifted up, given a vantage ground
for present or future possibility and advantage.
The seriousness of the loss by a fall from favor
depends upon the greatness or amount of the
favor spurned or left.
Two of the three above-mentioned texts (a,b,c) assure us that God will not withdraw from us
any favor he ever bestows; he will never cast
us off or cause us to fall. And, more than this,
his love is so great that he will not permit
others to separate us from his favor contrary to
our own will. And since his love is so great
and his power all-mighty, we have full confidence
that no power in earth or heaven can
forcibly separate us from his love and the favors
granted us in and through our Redeemer.
Here rests our full assurance of faith--none can
pluck us from our Father's favor and protection:
"In God I have found a retreat,
Where I can securely abide;
No refuge nor rest so complete,
And here I intend to reside.
"Oh! what comfort it brings,
My soul sweetly sings,
I am safe from all danger
While under his wings."
But is there then no danger? There is no
danger of others plucking or forcibly separating
us from God's favor, or turning his love
away from us: the only danger is in our own
doings. We can despise or lightly esteem the
favors of God, and thus forfeit our privileges
under those favors, and fall from them; but
[R1458 : page 311] we cannot forfeit all favor, except by direct
and open apostasy. God will not force his
favors upon any, but decides that those who
do not appreciate the favors, when made fully
aware of them, are not worthy of them.
Text number 1 guards us on this very point.
Our safety is in a vivid realization of our own
helplessness and dependence upon God's favor.
To realize our own imperfection and inability
to justify ourselves is the safeguard against that
self-righteousness which spurns justification as
the favor of God, through the ransom given
by our Lord Jesus. True humility and dependence
upon God accepts his favor of justification
in the way he provides it--through Christ's
ransom--and thus prevents its possessors from
spurning, and counting a common or ordinary
thing, the sacrifice of Christ--"the blood of the
covenant." (Heb. 10:26-29.) In harmony with
this is the text marked a. God is able to keep
us from falling or even stumbling over his favors;
and he is so willing to aid us and keep us, that
he has in his Word made every provision for
our assistance, and assures us that the Scriptures
are able to make us wise regarding his
favors, so that we shall be able to avoid falling
from them, and to obtain them.
Here text number 2 applies, and shows that
while God has supplied every necessary aid to
keep us from falling, he has left the matter in
such a way as to make our earnest desire for
the promised blessings a condition of our not
falling from or failing to secure the favors offered
us. We must give diligence and attention to
the assistance and directions he has provided.
A difference in the extent of the fall and the
seriousness of the consequences is shown in
texts 3 and 4. The former shows a Jew who
had trusted in his ability to keep the Law, who
afterward came to see in Jesus his Redeemer,
and became his follower, and thus reached and
laid hold of justification, God's favor granted
through the ransom. Under false teaching he
had been led to the erroneous conclusion that
though Jesus was a good example of holy living,
yet all must still be justified, if at all, by
perfect obedience to the Law. Paul addresses
this one and all such in this text (3), and assures
them that by such conclusions they renounce
and reject God's favor, and place
themselves again just where they were before
they heard of Christ--under the Law, which
could never justify them.--Rom. 8:3--margin.
Their conclusion that Jesus was merely an
example and teacher was fallacious. There
were, and had been, many noble exemplars and
good teachers, and in thus regarding Jesus they
were rejecting all that was specially valuable
in him. Our Lord's example and teachings
[R1459 : page 311] could never give us everlasting life, unless his
Ransom-sacrifice had first justified believers.
Regarding Christ as an "example" would be
of no everlasting profit or advantage: nothing
could thus advantage them until past sins were
canceled, and they reckoned justified through the
shed blood (the death) of Christ.--Rom. 5:9.
This fall from grace, though serious, in that
it would hinder their progress and keep them
on the level of the Jew and the unjustified
world, would not necessarily be an everlasting
loss or fall, because, if they perceive not their
error sooner, the time will come when "every
hidden thing shall be made manifest." Then
a correct knowledge of the Lord shall fill the
whole earth, and "none shall need to say unto
his neighbor, Know thou the Lord! [or understand
thou of the ransom for sin] for all shall
know him from the least to the greatest;" and
then, if not sooner, these and the prejudice-blinded
Jews and all others shall see clearly and
enter gladly upon the favor from which the
Apostle tells us these were falling.
But the other text (4) tells of a fall from
favor that is a far greater loss, and one which
can never be regained in this or any other age.
The Apostle assures us of those who thus fall
away, that "it is impossible to renew [or restore]
them again." Why is it thus--why the
difference in these fallings? We answer: Because
those of the class here referred to (Heb. 6:4-6)
have had fuller knowledge; and by having
gone along from favor to favor, their fall is
without excuse and indicates deliberation, a
wilfulness, wholly inconsistent with their knowledge.
While the others (text 3) were but deceived
"babes," these (text 4) were matured
and advanced in knowledge beyond first principles.
And any who have not advanced to
[R1459 : page 312] the point of favor here indicated could not fall
from it; and from such state of favor only is
it possible to fall so utterly as to be beyond
hope--in the second death.
But notice carefully the conditions of such a
fall--the height of the multiplied favors, from
which if any fall it is impossible to restore or
renew them. They must have been "once enlightened,"
brought to discern sin clearly, its
penalty, and the ransom price given for the
sinner. They must have "tasted of the heavenly
gift:" not merely heard of Christ's sacrifice,
etc., but tasted in blessed experience the results
of that ransom in realizing sins forgiven,
and communion and fellowship with God restored,
through "the blood of the Lamb."
They must have been "made partakers of the
holy Spirit," coming into heart fellowship
with God's plans, and for a time at least being
co-workers with him--begotten by the Spirit
to fuller appreciation of the truth and to new
hopes and aims. They must "have tasted of
the good Word of God," by experiencing the
pleasures of the appreciated fulfilment of some
of the statements and promises thereof, and by
recognizing a grandeur and beauty in the as
yet unfulfilled portions. These must also have
tasted, experienced or come to appreciate "the
powers of the coming age," realizing from the
good Word of God the blessings and powers
that will then be brought into exercise for the
blessing and restoring of mankind, all as the
fruit and result of the ransom.
Should such as have seen, tasted, experienced
and enjoyed all these favors then fall away to
the extent of "denying the Lord having bought
them" (2 Pet. 2:1--Diaglott), denying the
ransom--the very foundation of all those hopes
and blessings seen and experienced--they would
be treading under foot the Son of God, in rejecting
the blood of the covenant, wherewith they were sanctified (and in which they had trusted, and
on account of which they had been privileged
to grow in grace and knowledge). If they thus
count that blood an unholy (ordinary) thing,
and despise the favor of God in providing the
sacrifice for our sins (Heb. 10:25-29), there is
no forgiveness for them further; no restoring
from such a miserable fall from such heights of
favor and knowledge. And who, except those
who thus "fall away," would dispute the righteousness
of this, our Father's decision? The
expression of his justice and wisdom, in full
harmony with his character of love, is that such
shall "be as though they had not been" born.
The prolongation of such lives could not be a
profit or a pleasure to God, to themselves or
to their fellows.
The sentence is manifestly just. It is wise,
because if these have thus seen the grand outline
of God's plans, and despise and repudiate
the divinely-appointed foundation of it all, then
moral force, the force of truth, is seen to be
unavailing upon them, and God sees that thereafter
it would be impossible to renew them or
to make them recognize the beauty of his way.
Therefore divine wisdom has decided that all
thus out of harmony, without possibility of
reformation, shall be utterly destroyed as thorns
and briers are destroyed, and for the same
reason.--Heb. 6:7,8.
And this same principle will obtain in the
next age as well, when the full opportunities
of that age of favors are enjoyed by all the
world. Those who wilfully reject and despise
the precious blood, spurn forgiveness through
it, and thus crucify Christ afresh, will thereby
fall hopelessly; because, after having enjoyed
the blessings secured by the ransom, they spurn
and reject it. Christ dieth no more. The
one sacrifice once fully appreciated and wilfully
rejected leaves the rejectors in the same
state as though no ransom had ever been given.
It remands them again under the original penalty,
death, extinction. And, because they had
once been redeemed from it as the Adamic penalty,
and had thus again come under it of their
own will and act, it is called the second death.
Thus may not all see clearly God's election
of classes for future service, and of nations and
individuals for present service, and yet recognize
that God leaves his creatures free to exercise
their own wills in accepting or rejecting
his arrangements and favors? He seeks such to
worship and serve him as serve from the heart--
in spirit and in truth; and such preeminently
are the classes selected in this and in the preceding
age for the Kingdom's positions and honors.
====================