<< Back |
Chosen no: R-1372 , from: 1892 Year. |
Change lang
| |
THE DOWNFALL OF JUDAH
LESSON X., MARCH 6, JEREMIAH 39:1-10.
Golden Text--"Behold, your house is left unto you
desolate."--Matt. 23:38.
In this lesson we have an exhibition of the
severity of God's dealings with his covenant
people when, notwithstanding the Lord's repeated
expostulations, warnings and chastisements,
they wilfully pursued a course in violation
of their national vows. Israel, unlike any
other nation of the world, was brought into
special relationship with God. God chose them
to be his people, and favored them above all
other people, by giving them his law, by raising
up for them judges and prophets, and by
specially guarding and directing them in so far
as they submitted to his will, as well as by
warning, counseling and chastising them when
they became wilful and disobedient.
On the other hand, Israel, as a nation, entered
into a solemn covenant with the Lord,
saying, "All that the Lord hath spoken we will
do." (Exod. 19:1-8.) For the faithful keeping
of this covenant God promised them all
manner of earthly blessings--blessings in the
city, blessings in the field, blessings of a numerous
offspring and of the increase of their cattle
and their flocks, blessings of their basket and
[R1372 : page 61] store, and ample protection from all their national
enemies. (Deut. 28:1-14; Lev. 26:1-13.)
But if they would disregard their covenant,
corresponding curses were pronounced against
them. If they walked contrary to him the
Lord declared his intention to walk contrary
to them.--Deut. 28:15-68; Lev. 26:14-46.
It was in fulfilment of this covenant on God's
part that the events of this lesson came to pass.
Judah, like backsliding Israel (the ten tribes),
which had been previously carried away captives
(2 Kings 17:1-24), had not profited by
that example of the Lord's displeasure, nor by
the warnings of his prophets, but had out-rivaled
her sister in corruption (Jer. 3:8); and
now her cup of iniquity was full and the Lord
poured upon her her merited punishment, due
alike to king and people; for "neither Zedekiah,
nor his servants, nor the people of the
land, did hearken unto the words of the Lord
which he spake by the prophet Jeremiah."
The seventy years which followed the overthrow
here depicted are frequently referred to as
the seventy years captivity, but the Scriptures
designate them the seventy years desolation of the
land--a desolation which had been predicted by
the prophet Jeremiah (25:11), saying, "And this
whole land shall be a desolation, and this nation
shall serve the king of Babylon seventy
years." The completeness of the desolation is
shown in verses 8 and 9of this lesson and also
in 2 Chron. 36:17-21; and although the king
of Babylon allowed certain of the poor of the
land to remain, and gave them vineyards and
fields, yet it was the Lord's purpose that the
land of Israel should be desolate seventy years,
and so it was. In the same year Gedaliah,
whom the king of Babylon had made governor
and under whom many of the Jewish fugitives
were disposed to return from neighboring countries,
was assassinated, and the entire population
speedily removed into Egypt for fear of
the wrath of the king of Babylon.--2 Kings 25:21-26;
Jer. 41:1-3; 43:5,6.
The reason why the land must be desolate, and that for exactly seventy years, is a very interesting
study, and it is clearly stated to be--
"To fulfill the word of the Lord by the mouth
of Jeremiah, until the land had enjoyed her
sabbaths; for as long as she lay desolate she
kept sabbath to fulfill threescore and ten [70]
years." (2 Chron. 36:21.) For a full explanation
of this see MILLENNIAL DAWN, Vol. II.,
Chap. vi. The significance of the seventy
years desolation is shown on page 191.
To consider the subject of this lesson merely
as a scrap of history and to draw a moral lesson
therefrom is to fail, utterly, of getting its true
significance. It should be considered in its
relationship to the great plan of God in which
it was a clearly marked and important step.
(1) It marks the beginning of the great
Jubilee cycle.
(2) It marks the close of God's typical
kingdom, of which Zedekiah was the last king,
and concerning whom it was prophesied: "And
thou, death-deserving wicked one, prince of Israel,
whose day is come at the time of the iniquity
of the end [or termination of the typical
Kingdom of God]--Thus saith the Lord Eternal,
Remove the mitre, and take off the crown:
this shall not be so always; exalt him that is
low, and make low him that is high. Overthrown,
overthrown, overthrown will I render
it also, and it shall not belong (to any one),
until he come whose right it is, and I will give
[R1373 : page 61] it him."--Ezek. 21:31,32.--Leeser's translation.
(3) It marks the beginning of the Times of
the Gentiles, concerning which our Lord said,
"Jerusalem shall [continue to] be trodden down
of the Gentiles until the times of the Gentiles
are fulfilled" [or completed].--Luke 21:24.
Nearly twenty-five hundred years have elapsed
since Zedekiah lost his crown; and every scattered
Israelite throughout the world realizes
that not another king of the house of David,
in which centered all the promises, has ever
since been upon the throne. Many of them are
convinced that they will not have another until
Messiah shall take to himself his great power
and reign. Yet they see not that Jesus of Nazareth
is the promised one. The eyes of their
understanding are yet blinded by prejudice.
They see not that the heir of the throne must
come from the seed of David, although they are
witnesses that since the rejection of Jesus the
genealogies which previously were sacredly cared
for have been lost, and none have been kept
for centuries by which they could distinguish
an heir to David's throne. In fact, all tribal
and family relationships are now obliterated
among the Jews. But, thank God, the morning
of the restitution age is dawning, and in that
day their blindness will be healed and they
will recognize the fact that the one whom they
pierced is both the son and the Lord of David,
and the one whose right it is, to take the throne
and to fulfil all the gracious promises of God.
While the Jews have been thus unbelieving
of God's Word and ignorant of the steps of his
great plan, the other nations have erred in another
way. Seeing Israel's kingdom cut off,
and finding themselves for centuries uninterfered
with in ruling the world, they conclude
that it shall so continue always, and know not
that their days of empire are limited to "seven
times" or 2520 years, which will end in A.D.
[R1373 : page 62] 1915, giving place to the Kingdom of God in
the hands of the Messiah--him whose right it
is to rule the world, and through whose kingdom
all the families of the earth shall be blessed.
Even the majority of the Christian people
who throughout the civilized world study this
lesson, and who for years have prayed, "Thy
Kingdom come, thy will be done in earth as it
is done in heaven," have no expectation that he
who redeemed the world is yet to be its veritable
ruler, taking the kingly scepter and crown
of which those removed from Zedekiah were
only the types, and reorganizing God's Kingdom
"under the whole heavens" of which the
kingdom of Israel was but a figure.
The Golden Text has no direct reference to
the lesson, although connected with the same
divine plan. It marks another step in that
plan. When the seventy years of desolation
were ended, God opened the way for the return
to the land of promise of all those Israelites who
had faith in his promises; yet under such difficulties
and trials as served to sift and test them.
But although they tried often to re-establish
their own government, they were not permitted
so to do, but were continually "overturned"
between the several successive empires of gentile
times. Nevertheless God kept them together
as a people until Christ came (Gen. 49:10),
that as a people they should have the first opportunity
to accept him and come into the
higher favor of the New Covenant.
It was after the Savior and his disciples had
for three and a half years proclaimed the Kingdom
at hand, and ready to be given them if
they were ready to accept it properly (and when,
rejecting it, they were crying out "Crucify
him"), that the time came for the utter desolation
of that nation as a people in the words of the
golden text. There was the great turning point
in Israel's history. The desolation of the land
for seventy years and the removal of the crown
and kingdom for 2520 years was a great calamity,
but the leaving of the house utterly desolate
as a result of their rejecting and crucifying
the King has been far worse, themselves being
the witnesses.
Meantime what the nation of Israel rejected
was accepted by a remnant of that people
(Rom. 11:7) and the foreordained number is
being completed from among the gentiles--a
people for his name--the Bride and joint-heir
of the King of Glory. Soon this "little flock"
will be complete, the union of Bridegroom and
Bride will follow, and then the Kingdom of God
will come in power and great glory; and fleshly
Israel will be first of the nations to realize
its Millennial blessings.--Rom. 11:20-33.
These various topics are fully discussed in
MILLENNIAL DAWN, Vol. I., Chapters xiii. and
xiv., and Vol. II., Chapters iv., v. and vi.
[R1373 : page 62]