<< Back |
Chosen no: R-1005 , from: 1888 Year. |
Change lang
| |
WHO ARE SONS OF GOD?
Few seem to get a clear idea of the
meaning of the words son and father. The
word father, signifies producer, generator,
life-giver, the word son correspondingly
signifying one produced, generated, one
who receives life from a father.
Applying these definitions, we find that
in a general way Jehovah God might be said
to be the father, producer or creator of
every living creature, from the crawling
worm to the great arch-angel. But a restriction
is placed about the word son, by
its use in Scripture, which shows us that
God uses the expression "sons of God"
with reference only to those of his creatures
whom he created more or less in
his own likeness; i.e., with mental and
moral qualities in harmony with his, and
capable of understanding his laws and arrangements.
This cuts off from the honorable
name of sons the lower, the brute
creation, but still leaves sons of various
natures--angelic sons, human sons, and
sons of divine nature.
Angels are called "sons of God" in
parable, in Job 1:6and 2:1. They are
again represented as "morning stars,"
i.e., early bright ones, rejoicing together
at the creation of this earth, when they
as "the sons of God shouted for joy."--
Job 38:7. As shown in the TOWER of
December '87, those angels which kept not their first estate are referred to as
"sons of God" up to the time of their
fall into sin.--Gen. 6:2,4.
Among men, Adam of course was a son
of God, i.e., God's creation. God was
his Life-giver, Creator, Producer or Father,
and hence he was a "son of God" and
is so designated, Luke 3:38. Be it noted,
however, that none of Adam's children
are called "sons of God" down to the
time that our Lord Jesus gave himself a
ransom for all. Those who, by wilful sin,
forfeit and lose the likeness of God,
the perfection in which he created them,
are reckoned as unworthy of the honorable
title of sons of God--as the brute creation
which never had and never lost
this likeness; and such are to be treated
as "natural brute beasts, made to be
destroyed." (2 Pet. 2:12; Eccl. 3:18.)
In the case of man (Adam), he was sentenced
to death at once, as unworthy of
life and the various privileges God had prepared
for his sons. Having misused his
grand superiority to the beasts, he was no
longer worthy of the honors prepared for
sons. From the moment of sin onward,
Adam was not recognized as a son of
God; and if he was fallen and degraded
from sonship, it is manifest that he could
in turn give life to none better or more
worthy of divine sonship than he himself
was. And so for four thousand years--
until our Redeemer's coming--there were
no sons of God, none whom God would
recognize as such, except our Lord and
those angels who kept their first estate of
purity and sonship. Even Abraham, and
Moses, and Elijah, and the prophets, were
not called sons of God. "Friend of
God" and "faithful servant" were the
dearest names then possible (Heb. 3:5,6.
Gal. 4:4-7); because no matter how
good their intentions they were all imperfect, fallen from the likeness and liberties
of sons of God, and had not yet been
redeemed from that great calamity.
Next in order let us consider our Lord
Jesus:--
GOD'S ONLY BEGOTTEN SON.
The question at once arises, How can
there be more than one son of God, since
that one is called the only begotten Son?
We answer: both statements are true.
God has "many sons," and one "only
begotten Son." Our Lord before he became
a man, was a spirit being, as "God
is a spirit," and angels are spirits; and
he was the "first born of every creature,"
or "born before all creation," as some
translate it--the beginning of Jehovah
God's creative work.--Rev. 1:8; 3:14.
And since he is both the first and the
last, the beginning and ending of Jehovah's
direct creative work, it is very evident
that he was the ONLY Son of God
thus directly begotten of the Father. And
since it is clearly stated that "all things
were made by him, and without him was
not anything made that was made (John 1:3),
it becomes the more evident to
every reasoning mind that His creation
was more directly and specially the Father's
work than that of any other creature,
or Son of God--man or angel; for though
it was the Father's power and vitality that
was given to angels, to men, to beasts,
and birds, and creeping things, yet with
none of these was the begetting a direct
work of Jehovah, as in the case of the
one Son distinguished forever among the
sons of God by the title, "only begotten
Son." And though God calls angels sons,
mark the pointedness of the apostle's question,
and how it points out our Lord's
superiority, when he asks, "Unto which of
the angels said he at any time, "Thou art
my [special] son, this day have I begotten thee.'"--Heb. 1:5; 5:5.
Our Lord did not lose his right to the
title "Only Begotten Son," by becoming
a man; for the life was not laid down
in death, when his nature was changed
and he was made flesh. That change
was only a transfer of existence from a
higher nature to a lower nature, from
spiritual nature to human nature; for, or
in order to the suffering of death by him
as a just man for the unjust; as the corresponding
price for Adam's sin-penalty.
Even as a man, then, our Lord retained
his title "only begotten Son of God."
As John says, "We beheld his glory [dignity,
perfection], the glory [perfection
and grandeur] as of the only begotten of
the Father, full of favor and truth."--
John 1:14.
But when our Lord in obedience to the
Father's purpose would redeem mankind,
nothing but his death could accomplish
the work. That was the penalty
imposed upon Adam and the race which
lost life in him--and that he must suffer if
he would redeem Adam's life (and ours
lost in him); so then the "Only Begotten"
died, ceased to be, and remained so until
the third day. Now, question: Did our
Lord cease to be the only begotten Son of
God when he laid down his life a ransom
for many? Yes, truly. When his existence
terminated in death the only begotten
Son had ceased to exist--was dead.
But in his resurrection, his re-creation, he
was again the only begotten Son of God,
for no agency was called into service to
accomplish his resurrection, but, as when
first created, he was the direct workmanship
of Jehovah, who so arranged that
not even this distinctive title and honor
of "only begotten" should be lost by his
obedient Son. Hence no agency of man,
nor even of the angel Gabriel, was permitted
in the work of our Lord's resurrection:
no agencies great or small were
employed, but it is written "Whom God
hath raised from the dead"--"God hath
both raised up the Lord, and will also
raise up us by his own power."--Acts 2:24;
3:15; 4:10; Rom. 4:24; 6:4;
8:11; 1 Cor. 6:14; 15:15; Col. 2:12;
1 Thes. 1:10; 1 Pet. 1:21. And since
his resurrection was a re-creation of the
same being or individuality first created, it
can still be said of him that he is the first
and the last, the beginning and the ending
of the creation of God, the Only Begotten
of the Father.--See Rev. 1:18.
POWER TO BECOME SONS OF GOD.
Coming now to the Gospel age, consider
the import of the words, "To as
many as received him, to them gave he
power [i.e., liberty] to become the sons
of God, even to them that believe in his
name," (John 1:12) and "Beloved, now
are we the sons of God, and it doth not
yet appear what we shall be, but we know
that when He shall appear we shall be
like him; for we shall see him as he is."
--1 John 3:2.
As already noted, all the human race
from Adam down came under condemnation
through his wilful sin (1 Tim. 2:14),
and all lost recognition as the sons
of God, as well as the likeness because
of which they had been so recognized
above the brute creation. Indeed since
their minds ceased to be godly, and
became carnal and devilish, they might
be said to have been reconstructed by the
tyrant Sin to bear much of the image of
God's adversary; and hence they might
in this sinful state be called sons of the devil, bearing his moral likeness. And
so our Lord declared even to the Jews,
"Ye must be born again"--"Ye are of
your father the devil." (John 8:44.)
And since the same apostle also records,
(1 John 5:19) that "The whole world
lieth in wickedness," it is evident that
the standing of all in God's sight is that
of children of the devil.
The question then arises, Since only
those possessing the perfect likeness of
God, are worthy to be called sons of God,
and since God himself refuses to call any
others by that honorable title, how can
we be called "sons of God" who are confessedly
imperfect, and who at most bear
but a slight likeness to the holy God?
The answer is, that our Lord Jesus gave power or liberty to become sons of God,
--"to them that believe on his name." Mark well, he did not make us sons, but
simply gave us the liberty or privilege to become sons. It follows then, that the patriarch
and prophets of the preceding
four thousand years could not become
sons, because they were not given that
privilege or liberty.
What did our Lord do for us to secure
us this great boon, this liberty or privilege?
Something must have been done, for Jehovah changes not (Mal. 3:6.)
He did not once declare Adam and his
children cut off from sonship and subject
to destruction in death, as brute
beasts, and then change that decree. Nor
could, nor would our Lord Jesus set aside
the divine decision to reinstate the sinners
to the dignity of sons and to worthiness
of life. No; he came not to oppose
the Father's will, but to obey it. "I
delight to do thy will, O God," was the
sentiment expressed in his every act and
word. "Not my will but thine be done,"
was his constant prayer. Hence we say,
he must have done something for us, by
which he lifted from us the embargo of
sin, to give us liberty to again become sons
of God. What did he do for us?
Ah yes! he did a great work for us;
he gave himself a ransom for us, he redeemed
[R1006 : page 3] us from all iniquity and from all
the condemnation and loss attaching to
it. Giving thus the price of Adam's guilt
he thereby purchased the dead and dying
race, with full right to do what he wills to them and for them. He wills to give
during this Gospel age, liberty to become
sons of God to all that believe on his
name. His name was called Jesus, which
signifies Saviour or Liberator.--(Matt. 1:21.)
"Thou shalt call his name Jesus;
for he shall save his people from their
sins." Hence we see that it is to them
that receive him in the sense of believing
in him as their Saviour or Liberator, that
he gives now the liberty of becoming sons
of God--none others. Believing that such
a person lived at such a time is not the
kind of belief which brings the liberty:
believing that he was a fine man who
taught many excellent precepts, is not
the kind of belief necessary: believing
that he set a good example, and that all
should try to follow it as best they can,
is not the belief demanded here: No, it
is a different belief, a belief in and recognition
of his name Saviour: the recognition
and acceptance of him as the one
who saves his people from their sins. No
one who rejects the Bible account of the
fall and condemnation of all in Adam,
and the utter loss of sonship and all its
privileges (life, etc.), can possibly receive
and "believe" in this SAVIOUR or Liberator,
who by redeeming them grants them
liberty or privilege to become sons of God.
But is it only to "believers" in his name
that our Lord grants this privilege? Only
these; belief in no other person will do,
nor will the acceptance of our Lord by
any other name than the one which acknowledges
his ransom-sacrifice avail--
he must be recognized as Saviour, and
not merely as Lord and Guide. He saves
his people from their sins that are past as
well as teaches and guides them to abhor
and avoid sin for the future.
Next let us examine the liberty which
proper believers obtain through the Saviour.
What does the expression liberty signify as here used? It simply means
that our Saviour, having paid the penalty
of Adam's sin, offers to all who accept of
his finished work, and who desire to return
to the likeness of God and to sonship,
a clear receipt of exoneration from
the sin which brought condemnation upon
all six thousand years ago, and that he
will throw about such the robe of his own
righteousness to cover all their present
imperfections and unavoidable weaknesses,
so that they may at once go to God and
thus find acceptance and grace to help, until having proved by their obedience in the
present life, the sincerity of their consecration
to God's will and service, they
shall ultimately be delivered from all the
present weaknesses into the grand, perfect
spiritual bodies like unto our Lord's. This
is the promise to such overcomers, who thus
will be received into final and complete [R1006 : page 4] sonship, as heirs of God, and joint-heirs
with Jesus Christ their Lord and Saviour.
This is what the apostle means when
he says: "Beloved now are we the sons
of God--and it doth not yet appear what
we shall be; but we know that when He
shall appear we shall be like him." The
"we" here does not refer to the world of
mankind, but to the saints, the truly consecrated,
who believe in the only name [Jesus--Saviour] whereby we must be
saved. As already shown God really has
no imperfect sons, such as we now are,
hence in the full sense we will not be sons
until in the end of this age, the selection
and trial of these probationary sons being
complete, they shall be received to the
full perfect likeness of God--like unto
their Redeemer and King. But now we
may reckon ourselves Sons of God by
faith. Grasping by faith the anticipated
end of our high calling, we may and do
speak of the things which are not yet fully
accomplished, as though they were completed.
In saying, Now are we the sons
of God, and grasping it as a reality, we
fasten to it by the threefold cord of faith,
the three parts of which are first, faith in
the perfect sacrifice, and finished work of
him who gave us liberty or privilege
to become sons; second, faith or confidence
in promises made us of grace to
help us overcome and quench all the fiery
darts of our opponents; third, faith or
confidence in our consciousness that our
consecration is full, complete, and that
our desire is to know and do the Father's
will under any and all conditions. This
threefold cord of faith, firmly fastened
upon our promised inheritance and sonship,
to be verified to us when we are tried
and made perfect, will indeed be "an
anchor to the soul both sure and steadfast,"
which will enable us to say and feel
that even now (by faith) we are the Sons
of God, though not yet clothed upon with
our perfect bodies.
WILL LIBERTY TO BECOME SONS OF GOD
BE GIVEN TO ALL MEN?
Do not answer this question hastily--
give it due consideration. At first you
may be inclined to differ from our view
when we answer that it will not. To us
it seems clear that this liberty is connected
with the special high-calling of
this Gospel age, and ceases with it.
Call to mind again what we saw above
to be the meaning of the words father
and son: father--life-giver or creator;
son--offspring, one who receives life from
a father. Now consider man as represented
in Adam. At first he was God's
son, but afterward because of sin he forfeited
all, and ceased to be, as God's son.
Now if brought back to life and perfection,
whoever is his life-giver will be his father.
Since man's life was forfeited totally, it
follows that his resurrection will virtually
be his re-creation, and he who re-creates
will be the father of the re-created being,
in the same sense that Jehovah God was
Father to the being destroyed by sin.
While all things which our Lord Jesus
did, were done according to the will and
plan of the Father, yet the Scriptures are
particular to keep separate the work of
Christ Jesus in man's redemption. Our
Lord Jesus "bought" the world; he gave
the "corresponding price" for all; and
the earth and all belonging thereto are
called his "purchased possession." (Eph. 1:14.)
Having thus become possessed
of sin-wrecked, dead humanity, it is the
purchaser's privilege and design to begin
the work of restoring all things--of giving
life to the dead world, which he purchased
eighteen hundred years ago. He
delays the commencement of this life-giving
work until the "little flock" to
whom he gives liberty to become sons of
God is complete. "He is not ashamed to
call them BRETHREN," and they shall be
his joint-heirs in the purchased possession,
and his co-workers in restoring the redeemed
race to life.
Since it is from death that man is saved,
the Saviour is evidently the life-giver. In
fact the Syriac MS. of the New Testament
gives the name LIFE-GIVER in every
instance where we have the name Saviour
in our common translation. The special
work of the Millennial age will be to
awaken the dead, and by gradual process
give to them the life secured for them by
their Redeemer as they shall believe and
accept of it upon the conditions (obedience,
etc.) which the Life-giver, as judge
of all, shall require. This being the case,
it must be evident to all that (separating
the works of the Father and the Son--
John 5:17,) the life-privileges which come
to the world, come directly from the
Son--our Lord Jesus: He BOUGHT them
with his own precious blood, and He it is
that will restore all who will comply with
the conditions, to full perfect LIFE at His
appearing and kingdom of a thousand
years. He therefore is the one and only direct life-giver to whom the world must
look; and as life-giver is the true meaning
of father, He is properly declared in
prophecy to be to mankind "The everlasting
Father," as well as the "Prince of
Peace" and the "Mighty God" [ruler].
Hence it is, that though Abraham and
David, etc., are spoken of as fathers of
Jesus,--"of whom according to the flesh
Christ came"--yet it is also declared that
"Instead of thy fathers shall be thy
children," (Psa. 45:16,) meaning, instead
of the fathers continuing as such, they
shall, by the fact that our Lord becomes
their LIFE-GIVER in resurrecting them,
thus become his children--his sons.
As heretofore shown, the process of life-giving
while it will begin with the awakening
from the tomb, the giving of a measure
of life such probably as men now generally
possess, (as illustrated in the awakening
of Lazarus from the tomb,) and such only
as "obey that prophet," will reach completeness,
in full restoration to all that
was lost--human perfection--LIFE in the
full sense of the word. That only such
as "hear [obey] shall live" in this perfect
sense of attaining life, see John 5:25.
All others awakened and granted a
knowledge and full opportunity of gaining
this perfect and lasting life, who will
reject it by rejecting its conditions,--conformity
to God's perfect law--will be
"cut off" in the second death. They will
not become sons of Christ, because of refusal
under full opportunity to receive his
image. Those refusing the likeness of
Christ or the proffered terms of the age
of Restitution will be treated as Jehovah
treated Adam when he chose disobedience;
only, that the experience being
greater there will be no preparation
for another redemption. Such as die
the second death are not sons as above
shown, but as those who having the opportunity
yet despise the likeness of the
Life-giver they will be treated "as brute
beasts--destroyed."--2 Pet. 2:12;
Eccls. 3:18-20.
The question may occur to some, How
comes it that our Lord who redeems or
purchases all, is not the LIFE-GIVER to the
"little flock" of the Gospel age as well
as to the world in general?--Where and
how comes the distinction between us as
the "Sons of God" and "brethren" of
Christ, and the world as children of
Christ?
We answer: He who redeemed all, did
not actually give or restore to us the perfect
human life as he will to the world in
the next age, but instead he threw over us
the mantle of his merit, of his imputed
[R1007 : page 4] righteousness, and thus introduces us directly
to the Father, to be begotten BY
HIM as "new creatures," "partakers of
the divine nature" (not restored human nature, grand as that will be), and joint-heirs
with our Lord and Redeemer.
The liberty [freedom from condemnation,
--otherwise known as justification through his blood] which our Redeemer
grants us is FREE; we can do nothing to
purchase or merit it; it must be accepted
as a free gift of God through our Lord
Jesus Christ, or not at all. But there the
free part stops. Having obtained the privilege
or liberty to become Sons of God, the
matter thereafter rests with us, and to profit
by this great privilege or liberty, we must
work out our salvation, with fear and
trembling. Appreciating the grandeur
of the privilege put within our grasp, we
must act soberly, wisely, earnestly, not as
them who idly play and beat the air, but
as true soldiers we must fight a good fight.
We must overcome our former master,
Sin; and let not Sin reign and rule in us,
but throwing all our (at most) little influence
on the side of our new Captain,
Leader, and Fore-runner Christ Jesus,
we must overcome the world, that with
him we may be sons of God without rebuke
in the midst of a wicked and perverse
generation, among whom we are to
shine as lights. (Phil. 2:15) If thus we
prove our earnestness, and love and zeal
for God and his truth, we shall be accounted
"meet to be partakers of the inheritance
of the saints in light." (Col. 1:12.)
Faithfulness in our warfare implies
that we will be continually losing
mental and moral likeness to the world,
and be more and more conformed to the
image of God's dear Son, who is a perfect
likeness for us to copy after.--Rom. 8:29;
1 Pet. 2:21.
But if the liberty or privilege granted
to us of becoming sons of God consisted
only of a covering of the sins that
are past, if it in no way continued to cover
our imperfections, it would avail us nothing;
for cleansed in the morning and
presented to the Father as candidates for
sonship, we would through inherited weaknesses
and imperfections be defiled and
worthy of condemnation again before
night; hence, as the apostle declares, it
would be a fearful thing for us in our present
condition to have to deal direct with
the perfect laws of the Father; and we
are glad that he has graciously provided
that we shall have our standing before
him as yet, not as individuals, but as body members of the perfect one whose robe of
righteousness covers fully our every deformity
and weakness, whose sacrifice
made full atonement for every result of
inherited depravity to which our shattered
depraved "earthen vessels" are subject.
So then we are safe so long as we abide
in him--under the cover of his merit;
while in him, we are "accepted in the beloved"
by the Father, as sons. But having
been admitted to this privilege, having
tasted that the Lord is gracious, having
learned the necessity of abiding in
him, we must do the abiding--we must
not ignore the precious blood through the
merit of which this access into sonship
and joint-heirship was obtained; we must
not ignore our Redeemer, and attempt to
offer our own imperfect works as meritorious
and acceptable (See the type of this
Lev. 10:1-4. Num. 3:3,4), else we shall
come to nought. If any branch abide not in the vine it is cast forth, and destroyed.
(John 15:5,6.) So then the liberty which our Lord grants to all who come
unto the Father by him and in him, (John 14:6.)
is full and complete; and the assistance
rendered such as draw nigh to
God with their whole heart is sufficient, that they may come off conquerors through
[in] him who loved them and gave himself
for them. This sufficiency of grace
to help in every time of need is supplied
mainly through God's Word, the exceeding
great and precious promises of which
are given us that thereby we may overcome
self and the world, and become partakers
of the divine nature.--2 Pet. 1:4.
It is thus that the Father deals with
those to whom, through the Son, liberty
to become sons is now granted, viz., by
the word of his grace--the Scriptures.
Granted the privilege, or liberty, or ability,
to do so through their Redeemer's
merit, these are then "begotten by the word of truth that they should become a
kind of first fruits of God's creatures."
--James 1:18.
The apostle Peter clearly tells the whole
story saying: "The God and Father of
our Lord Jesus Christ...hath begotten
us...to an inheritance incorruptible,
undefiled, and that fadeth not away, reserved
in heaven for us, who are kept by the power of God [his exceeding great and
precious promises and providences upon
which we lay hold] through faith unto
salvation, ready to be revealed in the last
time" [--in the end of this age when the
body, the "Royal Priesthood," the little
flock of Sons of the "divine nature" shall
be completed and glorified.] "Wherein
ye rejoice greatly though now for a season
if need be ye are in heaviness through
manifold temptations, that the trial of
your faith...might be found unto [or
result in] praise and honor and glory at
the appearing of Jesus Christ...Of
which [special] salvation the prophets
have enquired and searched diligently,
who prophesied of the grace [peculiar
favor] that should come unto you."--
1 Pet. 1:2-10.
Since the overcomers of the Gospel age
--those who use their ransomed privilege
or liberty and become sons of God on
the divine plane of sonship--are to be so
closely identified with their Lord and
Head Christ Jesus, as to be called "members
of his body," his "bride" and his
joint-heirs, it is evident that they with
him, and by virtue of the ransom which
he gave, are to be members in particular
of that great Prophet and Life-giver
Christ, and will share in the work of life-giving, restoring the dead and dying
world to perfection; hence the term Everlasting
Father, as well as every other title
of the Head, is to be shared by his joint-heirs
and co-workers. In harmony with
this, note the Apostle's words in Heb. 11:39-40.
Here speaking of even the overcomers of the past he contrasts their position
[sons of Christ] with our position as
sons of God in Christ saying: These all,
having obtained a good [record] through
faith received not the promise [made to
them], God having provided some BETTER
THING FOR US, that they without us should
not be made perfect."--Heb. 11:40.
Since in God's plan they are to be
the children of Christ instead of the
fathers, it follows that they could not get
their life--be perfected--until the Christ
(head and body) their Everlasting Father
(or father of their everlasting life) shall
first be made perfect on the higher plane
--Sons of God of the divine nature.
Then, dearly beloved, appreciate more
fully than ever before your privilege as a
Son of God and understand the Apostle's
words, "Being justified by faith, we have
peace with God, through our Lord Jesus
Christ, by whom also we have access [R1007 : page 5] (by faith) in to THIS GRACE [special
favor] wherein we stand,--rejoicing in
hope of the glory of God" [as sons,
as joint-heirs with our Redeemer in his
great work of reconciling the world,
whom he has already redeemed.] And
from this standpoint of hope and grand
anticipation, knowing that we must be
tested and tried, "we glory in tribulations
also," knowing that it is by such
means, with his promises, that the Father
would develop in us patience, experience,
and hope, as well as the love of God
shed abroad in our hearts by the holy
spirit of the truth imparted to us from the
truth.--See Rom. 5:1-5.
Be strong then, acquit yourselves like
earnest, sober men, receiving now by faith
(trust) the grace [special favor] to be
brought unto you at the coming of our
Lord Jesus, for HE that raised up Christ
from the dead will raise up US also, by
Jesus who will present us before him, unblamable
and unreprovable in love.--See
2 Cor. 4:14-18.
LIBERTY OF THE SONS OF GOD.
"For we know that the whole creation
groaneth and travaileth in pain together
until now." "For the earnest expectation
of the creature waiteth for the manifestation
of the SONS OF GOD." "Because
the creature itself shall be delivered from
the bondage of corruption [death and dying]
into the glorious liberty of the children
of God."--Rom. 8:2.
Though the race in general will not become
sons of God, it is here expressly
shown that they may obtain, through the
Sons of God, the liberty or freedom from
death, pain, etc., the common heritage of
all sons of God. The children of the
Christ--all who receive the redemption
life--will stand as dear and as close to the
Father Jehovah, as sons, even as in the
earthly family the grandsons are as dearly
loved and as kindly treated. And they
shall be treated as sons, having full release
from all corruption and from all condemnation.
But here again it is shown that
"they without US [the sons and heirs]
cannot be made perfect;" they cannot
receive the life provided for them until
all the sons of God are selected and glorified.
"The manifestation of the Sons
of God" is therefore the great event for
which the whole creation waits and hopes
and groans, even though in ignorance
their hopes and expectations of the future
are not clear and fixed, but only a vague
longing for "a golden age" a "good
time coming by and by."
ONLY THE CONSECRATED ARE SONS.
The liberty to become Sons of God not
only did not extend to those men who
lived before the Redeemer came and purchased
the world, but it has extended to
only a comparatively few during this Gospel
age; the great mass of mankind even
in the present day know nothing about
our Lord Jesus, and how could they believe
on him "of whom they have not
[R1008 : page 5] heard?" (Rom. 10:14.) And of those
who have even heard that there was such
a person, how few comparatively believe
in or recognize the meaning of his name
Saviour; yet none but these have even
the liberty or privilege of becoming Sons
of God.
Look again, and see among the comparatively
few, even of those who do recognize
him as the Redeemer, the Saviour,
and who therefore were all granted this
privilege, liberty, favor, and note how few have availed themselves of the great
privilege,--how few have become Sons of
God. To see clearly just what class of
believers constitutes the Sons of God, let
us now examine the process by which
those who "believed in his name" were
granted and accepted the proffered liberty
and became Sons of God, joint-heirs with
Jesus Christ their Lord.
We have said that all such are covered by the robe of Christ's righteousness imputed
to them, because of which they
find acceptance with the Father. But to
whom does the Lord give his robe for this
purpose? Not to all believers; for though
all have the liberty to wear the robe and
obtain "access," all do not choose to use
it by fulfilling the conditions. The robes
are provided for the BODY OF CHRIST, and
to come under those robes we must get
into that consecrated company, into that
select class, known as those whose names
are written in the book of life--and as
branches in the Vine. This is the class
to which the Master said, "Abide in me and I in you. As the branch cannot bear
fruit of itself except it abide in the vine,
no more can ye except ye abide in me...If a man abide not in me, he is
cast forth as a branch." To the same class
the apostle John wrote, "Abide in him." The apostle Paul wrote that God "hath
chosen us in him" and exhorts "so walk
ye in him"--"rooted and built up in him," for "ye are complete in him." And of
his own aims he says, "That I may win
Christ and [abiding in him to the end]
be found in him" complete at last.--See
John 15:4,6; 1 Cor. 8:6; 2 Cor. 5:21;
Eph. 1:4; Phil. 3:9; Col. 2:6,7,9;
1 John 2:5,6,28.
The way in which we get into Christ,--
counted in as members of his body, and
therefore under the robes of his righteousness,
--is fully explained by the Apostle in
Rom. 6:3-5. He there shows that such
members are immersed or buried into
Christ, i.e., their wills, plans, etc., are
completely buried; such having thereafter
no will of their own; instead, the
will of Christ reigns in and rules over
them, controlling their acts, and words,
and looks and thoughts. Being dead to
self, to their own wills, plans, etc., for
them to live is for Christ to live; and in
them Christ is still present in the flesh,
they being his representatives before men.
(Phil. 1:21.) These share the reproaches
of Jesus their Head and Lord now and have
fellowship as members of his body, in the
sufferings of Christ; and in due time, if
they continue faithful unto the end, they
are promised membership in the church
or body to be glorified--joint-heirship in
the glory and dominion and work of their
Lord when the sufferings are past.--
Rom. 8:17.
These are represented in the Jewish
types by the priesthood and its head, the
High-Priest. The high-priest of our profession,
or order, is Jesus; and all the
under priests together with him constitute
the Royal Priesthood, as Peter says.
As the under priests were all represented
in the person of the High Priest, by
his head and members, so in our priesthood;
while we are each severally priests,
we are all represented in our High Priest
as body members in particular. (1 Cor. 12:27.)
Our Lord the head of the body
is not covered with any covering, for he
was perfect; "in him was no sin;" but
we all need the covering of his white
robes of justification, else we never could
have found access into the "holies" and
"into this grace wherein we stand rejoicing
in hope of the glory of God" soon
to be revealed in us as Sons and heirs--
joint-heirs with Jesus Christ our Lord.
So then we see that only those who after
believing in the only name, Saviour, followed
on and consecrated themselves, took
up the cross and sufferings of Christ and
shared them,--only such were accepting
of the liberty to become Sons; and only
such coming into his "body" and under
his robes are presented before the Father,
or accepted as Sons. In these only, can
we see a begetting of the truth and a desire
to be conformed to the image of God's
only begotten Son.
But are not all believers under Christ's
robes? even those who do not consecrate
themselves? No; only the consecrated.
In fact the others have no need for those
presentation robes [robes in which to be
acceptably presented to the Father as candidates
for Sonship and heirship] because
they do not wish to occupy the positions of sons, after they find that its distinguishing
features in the present time are trials and
sufferings, etc., in the "narrow way."
(Heb. 12:6.) To be a Son implies both
special favor and special endurance, and
since the only benefit of the "robe" consists
in making the wearers presentable to
the Father, and since these do not desire
to thus present themselves living sacrifices
to God, holy and acceptable [as sons and
heirs] through [in] Jesus Christ, it is manifest
that to cover such with a robe would
be useless.
The question then occurs: Do believers
in Christ who have not consecrated, but
merely practiced benevolence and moral
reforms,--who endeavor to live moderately,
soberly, honestly, truthfully, etc.,
influenced to such a life by their faith in
Scripture and in our Lord,--have these
no blessing as a result of their faith, etc.?
We answer, Yes; every one who lives
moderately, morally and temperately,
has a reward daily and hourly,--in his
health and true pleasure; and his every
deed of kindness and generosity done
from unselfish motives always brings a
blessing to the doer in the present life,
and is sure of a suitable recognition by the
Master in the Kingdom, after the resurrection
and exaltation of the "Body"
class. (See Luke 14:14.) These too
may have quite a measure of joy and peace through believing in the Saviour. They
can see in Christ, dimly the Redeemer
and realize (even though vaguely) that he
is the one through whom God has arranged
to save all who shall be accounted worthy
of the gift of life. Thus all believers
have much advantage over the ignorant
and blindfolded even in the present life;
and present progress in righteous living
will be a step of progress beneficial to
such in the "times of restitution" under
the Kingdom soon to be set up in power.
So then all who have consecrated, and
only they, have the "robe" which assures
to them access to God and to sonship.
Question--Will all the consecrated become
sons of God? Many have consecrated (i.e., resolved on complete submission
to the will of Christ at any cost)
who do not fulfil their consecration, who
do not follow the Lamb through evil as
well as good report, but instead are drawn
away into half-hearted service, dividing
their services between God and Mammon.
Only a "little flock" of "overcomers"
are represented as attaining to
joint-heirship with Christ their head, only
such constitute his "body" as finally glorified.
Now the question is concerning
the great number who do not fully and
freely fulfill their covenant--will they be
sons of God?
In our opinion, yes; their heart intentions
were good, and their "robe" was
good, and if they do not cast away the
robe of Christ's righteousness and deny
his name Saviour, and do not wilfully violate their covenant, they stand in the
position mentioned by the apostle: their
works shall suffer loss, but themselves
shall be saved so as by fire [severe discipline
destroying what such do not sacrifice].
Such are building on the rock, though it be with wood, hay and stubble,
and though they will suffer the great loss of
the prize--the kingdom and the joint-heirship
with Christ--yet they themselves,
under the Master's discipline, will be
saved, brought to perfection, because their
hearts were longing for better things even
when they fainted by the way, and got
their "robes" contaminated with the affairs
of this world. They did not keep
their garments unspotted from the world,
and hence they are represented as washing away such defilements of their "robe"
in the Lamb's merit, but with great tribulation to themselves. We read of this
"great multitude" that they came up
"through great tribulation and washed
their robes and made them white in the
blood of the Lamb." "Therefore are
they before the throne and serve." (Rev. 7:15.)
They suffered great loss by reason
of their failure to go forward boldly
in self-sacrifice for the Lord and his truth
--the loss of the crown, and the loss of
positions in the throne, and suffered more
tribulation than if they had been faithful,
but holding to their "robes" they were
finally brought off victors of the second
grade with palms of victory, though not
with the crowns of glory to which they
were invited, and to obtain which their
robes gave them liberty or privilege.
Beloved, "Abide in Him;" let the
mind of Christ dwell in you richly, let his spirit control your mortal bodies and
present them living sacrifices, partakers of
his sufferings and death, that you may be
glorified with him also in due time and
crowned sons of glory.
[R1009 : page 5]
STRANGE CHILDREN.
"For they have begotten strange children."
--Hosea 5:7.
"They are not all Israelites that are of Israel."
--Rom. 9:6.
Since the true "church of the first born
whose names are written in heaven," are
all of this consecrated class, begotten by
the word of truth, sons of God possessing
the "mind of Christ," it follows that
many of the nominal church are what
might well be called "strange children," begotten not of the truth, but begotten
of error; partaking not of the spirit or
mind of Christ our head, but of the
spirit or disposition of the world. These,
God does not acknowledge as his sons.
Many of them are well meaning, i.e., honest and kind, lovers of peace and
plenty more than lovers of the truth with
the tribulations, and persecutions, and
self denials, which faithfulness to the truth
always brings, things which every son of
God begotten of the spirit of the truth
appreciates as the foretold witnesses of
the spirit to their faithfulness. (2 Tim. 3:12.)
These are as really the "children
of this world" as were the popular religionists
of the nominal typical church,
Israel after the flesh. In the next age such
may become children of Christ by faith,
and obedience to his just requirements,
but they do not become "Sons of God"
now, because of one of two reasons: either
because, being blinded by the delusions of
the god of this world they cannot discern
even fundamental truths, or else because
though seeing the fundamentals they do
not appreciate the privilege or liberty afforded
them of becoming sons, preferring
rather lives of ease to lives of self-sacrifice
with Christ, preferring the pleasures
and ambitions of the present world (age)
to what they can see of the honor and
glory promised to those who shall become
sons.
As the true sons, begotten of the truth, [R1009 : page 6] are the "wheat" described in our Lord's
parable, so those nominal children of
God, "strange children," developed by
fear and error and by false ideas and
theories, are the "tares," and the "field
is the world" which makes no profession
of Christ, containing elements which in
the next age under the rule of the great
Master and King will be accepted and
used of him, but which at present untilled
brings forth noxious weeds.
In the time of separation (the "harvest")
the wheat and tares so long permitted
to grow together are to be separated.
The "tares," which constitute the
majority in the nominal church or kingdom,
will be separated from the true sons
of God, the consecrated, who as joint-heirs
with their Lord of the kingdom,
will be established, "set up" in power and
great glory. The "tares" on the contrary
will be consumed as "tares" (as imitations of the true) and will be resolved
into the elements of the field again. "He
that hath an ear to hear let him hear!"
The gathering together of the elect to
receive the kingdom is in progress--they
are being gathered, not into one place,
but into one condition of heart and mind.
Those who love the friendship and companionship
and communion of the worldly
minded, tares, shall suffer loss, and have
their portion with them, partaking of their
"plagues" in the trouble already beginning.
Think not that the "harvest" time
is a time of peace and quiet. Nay! the
Jewish harvest proves to the contrary that
it is a time of commotion and unsettling,
a time for breaking up of old associations,
for bundling tighter the bundles of the
tare classes, and for the gathering of the
true wheat into the barn. All this is a
part of the test put upon the true wheat,
to prove the "overcomers."
For the joy and refreshment of such,
let us suggest here a Bible reading, pointing
out our high calling now, our acceptance
in the Beloved, our final exaltation
and joint-heirship with him, and our
glorious work of blessing the world in the
coming age. These promises are indeed
a great power of God unto salvation to
all them that believe and obey them.
Take your Emphatic Diaglott and read--
Col. 1:9 to 28; next read 1 Pet. 1:2 to 23;
next Eph. 1:3 to 14and finally,
Acts 20:32.
====================