Mostrando postagens com marcador comentários. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador comentários. Mostrar todas as postagens

sexta-feira, 13 de abril de 2018

LIVRO DE JOSUÉ: Interpretação Cristã



Os leitores cristãos enfrentam dois desafios interpretativos especialmente importantes no livro de Josué. O primeiro diz respeito à moralidade das ações descritas no livro. Segundo, qual é o significado da promessa de terra feita ao antigo Israel para Cristo e a igreja?
Primeiro, a tensão moral enfrentada pelos leitores cristãos é a aparente contradição entre a ordem de erradicar certas cidades cananéias (Deuteronômio 7:2; Josué 6:17-21) e o ensinamento de Jesus de amar nossos inimigos (Mt 5:44). É uma ideia equivocada que os israelitas eliminaram todos os cananeus em um ataque sanguinário e irresponsável. Embora este dilema ético não possa ser totalmente resolvido, compreender a situação especial ajuda a explicar as ações de Israel. (1) A prática de herem/haram - que significa “coisa devotada” (herem, substantivo) e “põe à destruição” (haram, verbo) - em que cativos e propriedades são devotados aos deuses é conhecido no antigo Oriente Próximo (2Reis 19:11; 2Crônicas 20:23). (2) A prática de Israel, entretanto, é limitada a certas cidades, sob condições específicas e por uma geração (Deuteronômio 20: 10-15; cf. uma exceção em 1 Sam. 15 com Num. 21: 1–3). (3) Os cananeus iniciam as guerras e planejam erradicar os israelitas (9:1–2; 10:1-5; 11:1-5). (4) A política de Israel é apenas um comando divino baseado em um princípio moral. A prática é frequentemente expressa em termos de manutenção da santidade. Deus usa Israel para destruir os cananeus por causa de sua idolatria e da conduta mais maligna (Gênesis 15:16; Lv 18: 24-30), que por sua vez tem o efeito de enfraquecer sua influência sobre Israel (Dt 20:17-18). Se cativos e propriedades são dedicados ao serviço do Senhor, não há incentivo econômico para a guerra. Além disso, a motivação não é a superioridade racial ou o nacionalismo (Deuteronômio 9:4-5), pois os hebreus também estão sujeitos à aniquilação, se forem igualmente iníquos (Deuteronômio 13:11-16; Josué 6:18; 7:15).

Em segundo lugar, os cristãos devem responder à questão de saber se a promessa de terra aos pais é uma promessa cumprida na história de Israel, sob a conquista de Josué ou da monarquia do rei Davi, ou se é uma promessa ainda a ser cumprida. Além disso, se ainda a ser cumprida, a promessa de terra destinada a um futuro Israel redimido, ou é cumprida na igreja cristã? Ou, nesse sentido, em certo sentido, é cumprido em ambos? A promessa de terra realizada em uma Israel/Palestina geopolítica real, ou é um tipo das realidades espirituais de Jesus Cristo e Sua igreja (antítipos)? Não podemos responder às perguntas em uma discussão satisfatória, uma vez que elas merecem uma audição completa, mas podemos indicar a posição desse comentário e explicar por quê. Este comentário toma uma posição mediadora ao postular que a promessa de terra encontra seu cumprimento na vida de Jesus e da igreja. No entanto, reconhecemos que a promessa de terra tem importância para um futuro reinado de Cristo na terra, mostrando que Ele é o Senhor do céu e da “terra” (Fp 2:10). (1) A conquista da terra é apenas provisoriamente cumprida, não completamente e não para sempre. A conquista é progressiva ao longo de muitos anos e não completa (por exemplo, Êxodo 23:29-30; Js 13: 1-7; 15:45-47), que é com Hebreus 4: 8–9. O tema da "terra" é usado metaforicamente para a vida cristã, desde o seu início até o descanso eterno (Hebreus 4:1-15). A ideia associativa do “templo” no centro geopolítico da terra (espaço santo; cf. Nm 35.34) tem sua presença na pessoa de Jesus Cristo e da igreja (João 2:21; 1Cor 6: 19). (2) O Novo Testamento minimiza a importância da promessa da terra (Rom. 9:4), embora outras características das promessas do Antigo Testamento sejam dadas como devidas, tais como “semente” e “bênção” (Gálatas 3; Rom. 4). Há referências explícitas a um cumprimento metafórico, afirmando que a terra não é o objetivo final das promessas (Hebreus 4:9; 11:10; 13:14). (3) O próprio Antigo Testamento sugere que a promessa de terra não é um dom territorial que está historicamente vinculado, mas um dom que vai além do espaço e do tempo. Isso é bem ilustrado na herança dos levitas, que não possuem um trato de terras comparável às outras tribos. Sua herança é o próprio Deus (Josué 13:33; cf. Deut. 18:1–2). Da mesma forma, aqueles em Cristo recebem como herança o Senhor e Suas bênçãos eternas, não uma concessão de terras que lembra a antiga era de Israel. (4) A possibilidade de uma terra possuída pelos santos na terra existe e não será exclusivamente judaica (Romanos 11:26; Apocalipse 20:1-6).

segunda-feira, 26 de fevereiro de 2018

CHRIST STILL WORKS BY R. E. NEIGHBOUR

The Baptism in the Holy Ghost or Before and After Pentecost
An Exegesis of Acts 1 and 2
by
R. E. Neighbour, D.D.
© 1930 by Union Gospel Press. Database © 2010 WORDsearch Corp.
WORDsearch Corp.
To my beloved brother, W. B. Musselman of the Union Gospel Press and to His God-Given Staff who have made possible the publication of my Books and Booklets, this Book is Most Affectionately Dedicated.

The Baptism in the Holy Ghost: Or Before and After Pentecost.

Chapter II.
Christ Still Works

"The former treatise have I made, O Theophilus, of all that Jesus began both to do and teach.
"Until the day in which he was taken up, after that he through the Holy Ghost had given commandments unto the Apostles whom he had chosen" (Acts 1:1, 2).
At the close of the gracious greeting to Theophilus, in which the inspired writer speaks of his former treatise (the Gospel of Luke), we have these striking words: "Of all that Jesus began both to do and teach". The inference is very plain: The Gospel of Luke records only the beginning of both the teachings and doings of Jesus Christ; the Book of Acts continues, but does not complete either His teachings or His doings.
The direct teachings of Christ were completed with the last inspired word of John's Revelation; the doings of Christ are not yet completed.
How refreshing is this statement: "Of all that Jesus began both to do and teach". How true is the implication: Christ still works.

I. Christ Is Not Dead, He Still Lives

The Lord Jesus lived and walked and wrought among men for the space of thirty-three years. He died in ignominy and shame, being crucified between two thieves. With his last breath all hope that He should have redeemed Israel died out of the hearts of the disciples. They once had strong hope that their great Master was the Messiah who would lead the Children of Israel out from under the Roman yoke. However when Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus took down the body of Christ from the Cross, and laid it away, their sky of hope became black with the clouds of despair.
A dead man ceases to work. His voice is no longer heard among men; his hands are folded "at rest," his labors are over. He may live in the lives and deeds of his successors who caught from him their inspiration, but that is not the dead at work.
1. Why Then Did the Holy Spirit Bear Witness through Luke That the Christ Taught and Wrought until the Day That He Was Taken Up? Let me quote the words of Acts 1:1-3.
"The former treatise have I made; O Theophilus, of all that Jesus began both to do and teach, Until the day in which he was taken up, after that he through the Holy Ghost had given commandments unto the apostles whom he had chosen:
To whom also he shewed himself alive after his passion by many infallible proofs, being seen of them forty days, and speaking of the things pertaining to the kingdom of God".
Now, let us read these verses again and put the emphasis on the expression, "Until the day in which He was taken up".
From this reading one supposes that death in no way ended the teachings or the doings of Christ. He died but He continued to teach and to toil. How could this be? The answer is plain—it is because "He shewed Himself alive after His passion".
The earth phase of the Lord's teaching and toiling in behalf of men and among men did not cease, as the work of all others has ceased, with death. He wrought in a special and definite sense "until the day in which He was taken up".
According to this the Holy Spirit bears witness that the death of Christ did not end His earth functionings. From the cradle to the tomb, are the boundaries God places over human activities. However Luke places the boundaries of the beginnings of the activities of this particular Person, the Son of God, from the cradle to the ascension.
Had death concluded the earth ministrations of Jesus Christ, had He remained entombed and held by death as all others have been held, we had never known the Church—Christianity had never been born.
It was what Jesus taught and did after His resurrection that led on to the story of the Acts of the Apostles.
There are a few things worth tabulating.
(1) It Was After His Resurrection That Christ Breathed upon Them and Said, Receive Ye the Holy Ghost.
(2) It Was After His Resurrection That Christ Wrought Many Signs before His Disciples Which Are Not Written in the Book of Books.
(3) It Was After His Resurrection That Christ Showed Himself Alive with Many Infallible Proofs.
(4) It Was After His Resurrection That Christ Taught the Disciples Many Things Pertaining to the Kingdom of God.
(5) It Was After His Resurrection That Christ Commanded His Disciples to Tarry in Jerusalem and Await the Promise of the Father.
(6) It Was After His Resurrection That Christ Gave Commandment to the Disciples to Go into All the World and Disciple the Nations.
(7) It Was After His Resurrection That Christ Gave Promise of Power to His Disciples.
Surely with the wide scope of meaning hidden in these seven statements, the Spirit was right when He wrote "until the day in which He was taken up".
What is the deeper meaning of all of this to us?
  1. It means that Christ was distinct from all other men in the boundaries of His earth term of service.
  2. It means that death in the case of Christ by no means closed His personal walk among men.
  3. It means that "things Jesus taught and did" in a most vital and enlarged way, went on after His decease.
  4. It means that when Christ removed His bodily Presence from personal contact with men, He went away alive and not dead.
  5. It means that a dignity and a glory is placed upon the "empty tomb" of Christ which naught can erase.
  6. It means that the post-mortem activities of Christ became the great source of the future life and activities of His Church.
How wonderful it all was! Jesus Christ loosed from the pangs of death; Jesus Christ alive and moving among His own; Jesus Christ teaching many things, and opening up the vista of the coming call of His Church; Jesus Christ strengthening and comforting His own.
In all of this there is a wonderfully invigorating message for the Church of all time. Christ is still saying to the Churches, "These things saith the First and the Last, He that was dead and is alive".
Let not our parting glimpse of Christ be at the tomb of Joseph where His body was laid. Let His last words be not those of the Cross. Let us pass with Him into those days beyond His passion, where He showed Himself alive. Let us catch the inspiration of His final words and works after His death and before He ascended up to the Father's right hand.

"Until the day in which He was taken up" adds new luster to His last command, "Lo, I am with you". It is not a dead Christ, but a gloriously living and victorious Christ, clothed with all authority and power, who says, "Go," and, "Lo, I am with you".

"Until the day in which He was taken up" adds new luster and glory to His own Divine Personage. Jesus Christ was not mere man, He was very God. His words and works "after His passion," proclaim Him Son of God; they put the crown of Deity upon His brow; they substantiate all He ever claimed as being one with the Father.

"Until the day in which He was taken up" adds new meaning to many words He spoke before His passion. Let us read once more the things He spoke before His death, under the shining light of what He said and did after His death.

How lifeless, how void of meaning would His statement, "I am the Resurrection and the Life" have been if Christ had not shown Himself alive after His passion.
How utterly useless would have been His words, "I am the Light of the world," had Christ not shown Himself alive with many infallible proofs.
How hopelessly impotent would have been the words, "I am the Way, the Truth and the Life," had Jesus Christ, after His passion, never been seen of His disciples during the forty days after His death and resurrection.
How meaningless had been the words, "Hereafter shall ye see the Son of Man sitting" on the right hand of power, and coming in the clouds of heaven", had the Lord Jesus never left the tomb and never taught many things about the Kingdom of God after His passion.
Thank God that Luke, the one, who, through the Spirit, wrote so faithfully and so convincingly of the Virgin Birth of Christ, now writes through the same Spirit so wonderfully of the forty days following Christ's passion, in which Jesus our Saviour continued to do and to teach many things.

II. Christ Is Not Dead, He Still Works

We wish now to emphasize the word began. Let us again quote verse 1. "The former treatise have I made, O Theophilus, of all that Jesus began both to do and teach".
The beginning of the doing and teaching of Christ, as we have already showed, ended when He was taken up into Heaven—His completed doing and teaching did not end there. We now come to the very heart of our message for to-day.
Christ Still Works. When He ascended up on high He had only begun His Word and work; after he was taken up, He continued what He had begun.
1. He still works because He is still alive. The question asked the weeping women who came to the tomb on the first day of the week, was, "Why seek ye the living among the dead"? Then the angel said, "He is not here, but is risen".
To John on the Isle of Patmos, Christ said, "I am He that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am alive for evermore".

2. He still works because He is still vitally connected with the things wrought down here. Jesus is with the Father. He has passed into the heavens. He is seated on the Father's throne. Yet, withal, His personal contact with things on earth has in no wise ceased.
When Stephen was stoned, he saw Heaven opened and Christ sitting at the right hand of God. This assures us of Christ's personal concern in the earth testimonies of His saints.
When Saul of Tarsus went on his way to Damascus with letters of authority, He was stopped by the Lord, who said unto him, "I am Jesus whom thou persecutest". Thus again Christ demonstrated His concern and His contact with the saints who served Him on earth. Their sufferings were His.
The Lord Jesus is personally in touch with the ones who work His will among men.

3. He still works because He is personally represented on earth and among His saints by the Holy Spirit. Just as Christ on earth did the works of the Father, spoke the words of the Father, and wrought the will of the Father, so the Holy Spirit does His will, works His works and speaks His words.
Christ ere He went away said, "All authority is given unto Me in Heaven and in earth. Go, * * and, lo, I am with you". This authority, this power is vested in the Holy Spirit, and we receive power, the Holy Spirit coming upon us.

4. He still works, because He works in and through His saints. This is no far-fetched statement. Where is the Christian worker who has not felt the presence of his Lord with Him? Christ said, "Without Me ye can do nothing". We have all learned the truth of these words. Paul wrote, "Having therefore obtained help of God, I continue unto this day". He also wrote "There stood by me this night the angel of God, whose I am, and whom I serve".
We have more than "good wishes," more than the "sympathy" of Christ in our work, we have Him. His bodily absence from us, in no wise hinders His actual Presence with us. The truth is that His absence increases His blessing on our work. He plainly said, "It is expedient for you that I go away". He said, "If I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you; but if I depart, I will send Him unto you".
We remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how He said, "Greater works than these shall ye do, because I go unto My Father".
Christ wrought with all power when on earth, but He works in a far larger way, and in a far wider sphere through His disciples, now, than He wrought then.
Luke's contention is true. The words and the ministry of Christ until the day that He was taken up, were only the words and the work that "He began, both to say and to do".
Concerning the words continuing, we can only bear witness that He still spoke after He had gone away. He Himself had said, "I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now". Perhaps many of these "many things," He said after His resurrection, during the forty days, but many more He said through the various Epistles of Paul, and Peter and James and Jude and John.
Concerning His works continuing, we can only bear witness that He still works unto this hour. His promise of His continued Presence and power was unto the end of the age. Thank God, He is still the life, the light and the power of every true service in the Gospel.
If some one would urge that the Lord does not Himself personally work, that the Spirit is the One who is here and who does the work; we reply that Christ wrought when on earth through the Spirit as truly as He now works through the Spirit. He was begotten in the womb of the virgin by the Holy Spirit; He was anointed of the Spirit at His baptism; He was filled with the Spirit, led by the Spirit and in the Holy Spirit He went about doing good. The words we are now considering in Acts 1:1-3 assert that Christ on the day He was taken up gave commandments unto the Apostles by the Holy Ghost.
Not only did Christ know the Spirit's Presence in all of His word and work, but He taught definitely that the Spirit would come upon His saints to panoply them for their work. This we will consider in our next address.
Just now we assert that Christ still works. He is not dead but liveth. He is not cut off from His saints but indissolubly joined to them. The Church is one body at work, and Christ is the living, directing Head of that body.

III. A Word of Final Encouragement

If the Church had been sent forth to do a work for Christ, it might well have despaired. However, the Church sent forth to do a work with Christ, may well take heart.
Disassociated from our Living Head, we fail; associated, we succeed. Alone we can do nothing; with Him who strengtheneth us, we can do all things.
Years ago, when but a youth, plodding our way along in the work of our Lord, we almost despaired. We were at the end of our row. We had emptied our barrel, and preached every sermon we possessed. We had told all we knew, and doubtless some things we did not know. When we were about to desert the special revival services we were conducting, because we had "run dry," the pastor encouraged our hearts. He told us that God still lived. That the Lord would stand by us and teach us what we should say. For three more weeks we preached on, night after night, with increasing power and blessing from on high. From that day unto this we have sought to live in the consciousness of His abiding Presence. We have sought to work in the power of His might.
In this statement of Acts 1:1-3 the Church has every reason for encouragement. Why? Because Jesus Christ even until the day that He was taken up, had only begun to do and teach. It is He who still works.
Our work is His in a real and a blessed way.
He still says, "Come ye after Me, and I will make you to become fishers of men".
He still says, "I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to you".

The Baptism in the Holy Ghost: Or Before and After Pentecost.

The Baptism in the Holy Ghost BY R. E. Neighbour

The Baptism in the Holy Ghost or Before and After Pentecost
An Exegesis of Acts 1 and 2
by
R. E. Neighbour, D.D.
© 1930 by Union Gospel Press. Database © 2010 WORDsearch Corp.
WORDsearch Corp.
To my beloved brother, W. B. Musselman of the Union Gospel Press and to His God-Given Staff who have made possible the publication of my Books and Booklets, this Book is Most Affectionately Dedicated.

The Baptism in the Holy Ghost: Or Before and After Pentecost.
Chapter I.
The Holy Ghost and Us

We begin this morning the messages which God seems to lay upon our heart concerning the early life and ministry of the Apostles of our Lord as recorded in the Book of Acts.
Yet, shall we say the "Life and Ministry of the Apostles"? for we are convinced that the Book of Acts is, in reality, marking out the acts of the Holy Spirit, in the days of the deeds of the Apostles.
Perhaps, it would be better still to say, the Book of Acts sets forth the activities of both the Holy Ghost and of the Apostles. This conclusion is established in the Book itself. Chapter 15, verse 28 of the Acts, reads: "For it seemed good to the Holy Ghost and to us".
How blessed is this truth. The Holy Ghost, yet, not the Holy Ghost alone, but "the Holy Ghost" and "us". "Us"? Yes, but yet not "us" alone, but the "Holy Ghost and us". What meaneth this? Are we shut up in all of our service to the Holy Ghost? We are. Is the Holy Ghost shut up in His service to us? He is. This leads us to our first consideration.

I. The Church Is "Shut Up" to the Holy Ghost

What we mean by this expression is, the Church can "be" nothing and can "do" nothing apart from the Spirit of God.
The Church of the twentieth century may vainly imagine that it can serve in its own strength and by its own resources, but it is deceived. What folly was the boast of a recent world-wide church movement when it claimed that with men, money and machinery it could save the world.
We heard an evangelist say that it took grace, grit and greenbacks to run his campaigns. For very shame—shall the Spirit of God be utterly ignored by one who would seek to win souls? Shall emphasis be placed twice upon human maneuvers, while God and grace are given but once a recognition?
It stirs the soul to study the Book of Acts and to observe the utter dependence of the early saints upon the Holy Spirit.
1. The Disciples Had Been Commanded to Await the Coming of the Spirit.
"And that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his name among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem.
"And ye are witnesses of these things.
"And, behold, I send the promise of my Father upon you: but tarry ye in the city of Jerusalem, until ye be endued with power from on high" (Luke 24:47-49).
The commission of Christ was plain—the ministry of the Church was to be one of preaching, of bearing witness. However, the testimony of the saints was not to begin until the Holy Ghost had come. Jesus Christ knew how impotent the word and the work of the saints would be apart from the Spirit.
The Church apart from the Holy Ghost would be powerless imbecility. The street car could as easily run without a trolley and without connection with the dynamo, as the disciples could preach apart from the enduement of power from on high.
The disciples apart from the Holy Spirit would remain the same helpless and defeated dupes of human frailities as they had been of old when they frankly confessed, "We could not cast them out".
It was because of this that the Lord commanded them to await the Spirit's coming. Christ promised: "Ye shall receive power, the Holy Ghost coming upon you" (Acts 1:8).
It is still the same. The Church has never learned to walk nor to work alone. The centuries have not led us to a matured perfection of self-service that makes the presence and power of the Spirit of God unnecessary.

2. The Disciples Obediently Awaited the Coming of the Spirit. In the "upper room" they tarried, and as they tarried, they fasted and they prayed. They never for a moment dared to attempt the inauguration of their testimony until their "anointing" had come. They waited in Jerusalem "for the promise of the Father", which they had heard of Christ.
The saints who followed immediately in the footprints of the first disciples, and the saints who live twenty centuries beyond the hour of their first testimony do not need to await the coming of the Spirit, for the Spirit came to abide for the age. He was the One ever present and ready to help in the days of the first successors of the Apostles, and He is still the One ever-present and ready to help in our day. All who have lived since the coming of the Spirit need His presence and power quite as much as the first disciples needed it. We may not tarry and pray for His coming, but we may tarry and pray for His mighty workings.
Our lot is to stand in these end times, recognizing Him in all of the might of His presence. Our lot is to yield to Him, to obey His voice and to work under His guiding hand.

3. The Disciples During the Days of the Church's Beginnings Always Maintained the Fellowship of the Spirit. As one runs through the Book of Acts he is struck by the way the Apostles and the Christians generally, gave recognition to the Holy Spirit.
(1) Peter's Words at Pentecost. On the very day that the Spirit came, as Peter and the rest preached and as the people under the burden of their conviction of sin cried out, "What shall we do"
"Then Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.
"For the promise is unto you, and to your children, and to all that are afar off, even as many as the Lord our God shall call" (Acts 2:38, 39).
This Scripture is especially significant in that the first converts of a new dispensation were given promise that they should receive the Holy Ghost. Peter insisted that the promise of the Father which Christ had given and which had now been fulfilled was not alone for the ones upon whom the Holy Ghost had fallen. He had come for all who should be saved. Those afar off, even we, ourselves, were made partakers of the promise.
That is, the Spirit came as much for twentieth century saints as He came for first century saints.
Did not Christ, in relating the promise of the Father, say that the coming of the Spirit and His enduement would be for the witnessing of the saints, beginning in "Jerusalem, and in all Judæa, and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost part of the earth" (Acts 1:8)?
Therefore the Spirit's enduement was not circumscribed to one age, nor to one locality. Until the last call of the Church is sounded and the Lord has taken her to be with Himself, she is to go forth with His message, clothed with His power.
(2) Lying to the Holy Ghost. So intimately was the Holy Spirit in fellowship with the early Church, that when Ananias and Sapphira intent to deceive the Apostles brought only a part of the price of their land, purporting to bring all, we read,—
"But Peter said, Ananias, why hath Satan filled thine heart to lie to the Holy Ghost, and to keep back part of the price of the land?
"Whiles it remained, was it not thine own? and after it was sold, was it not in thine own power? why hast thou conceived this thing in thine heart? thou has not lied unto men, but unto God" (Acts 5:3, 4).
This Scripture is full of far-reaching significance. The Holy Ghost and His saints are so intimately joined that an act against them is an act against the Spirit of God. Even Christ said to Saul, the persecutor of saints, "Why persecutest thou Me?"
The commonly called "benediction," which we hear every Lord's Day in the Churches, concludes thus, "And the fellowship of the Holy Spirit, be with you all". What is the intent of this word "fellowship"? The same word is found in Acts 2:44, "And all that believed were together, and had all things common". The expression "all things common" is the best meaning we know to the word "fellowship". Saints should hold all things common with the Holy Ghost.
This "fellowship" is so intimate, so indissoluble that none can divide between the One and the other. To touch the One is to touch the other; to antagonize the One is to antagonize the other.
(3) Looking for Spirit-Filled Men. When certain men were needed to take charge of certain exegencies that had arisen in the early Church, Peter said:
"Wherefore, brethren, look ye out among you seven men of honest report, full of the Holy Ghost and wisdom, whom we may appoint over this business" (Acts 6:3).
The Apostles served in the Spirit, and they demanded Spirit-filled men to serve even the Churches' tables. How the work of God suffers, when men who know not the Spirit are asked to serve jointly with the Spirit. If the key to the Acts of the Apostles was "the Holy Ghost" and "us," and if the same key should guide the work of the Church of to-day, what havoc must follow when men are chosen to serve who know nothing of walking in the Spirit? Can the Holy Ghost serve with men who are carnal, and walking in their own lusts?
(4) Resisting the Holy Ghost. Stephen was a man filled with the Holy Ghost and power. Therefore when he gave his great address to the Jews, and they with all resentment withstood his words, Stephen plainly said:
"Ye stiffnecked and uncircumcised in heart and ears, ye do always resist the Holy Ghost: as your fathers did, so do ye" (Acts 7:51).
Why could Stephen say that his persecutors were resisting the Holy Ghost? It was because he recognized that not he alone, but he and the Spirit of God proclaimed the Word. When Stephen was chosen, the saints recognized him as "full of the Holy Ghost". When Stephen died, witness was borne: "But he, being full of the Holy Ghost, looked up stedfastly into Heaven, and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing at the right hand of God".
We do not say that all ministers are so filled with the Spirit of the Lord; we do say, however, that when a minister is so filled, then to resist him is to resist God.
(5) Praying for the Holy Ghost. When the Apostles which were at Jerusalem heard that, under the preaching of Philip, Samaria had received the Word of the Lord they sent unto them Peter and John. What was the purport of this embassage? Let the Word itself explain:
"Who, when they were come down, prayed for them, that they might receive the Holy Ghost:
"(For as yet he was fallen upon none of them: only they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus.)
"Then laid they their hands on them, and they received the Holy Ghost" (Acts 8:15-17).
The promise of the Father had been inclusive of all believers. Thus the Apostles knowing the necessity of Holy Ghost infilling, sent Peter and John down to Samaria that they too might receive the Spirit.
Are saints ever delegated to-day to pray with other saints that they may be filled with the Spirit? Does the Church of to-day give the recognition that the Spirit should receive? We organize the church-es for every possible line of activity. There are Sunday School experts going through the land giving the latest data on "organized classes" and every other best method of how to conduct the School.
There are church experts in finance, traveling continually from church to church urging schemes and systems of money getting and of money giving; there are women delegated to travel in behalf of organized women's work; there are specialists sent out to stir up the young people and to aid them to perfect their distinctive Young People's societies, but who is delegated to ask, "Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed"?
Peter and John were sent down to pray that the saints might receive the Holy Ghost. Beloved, is their course not worthy of our consideration? Should we not go over the land urging upon the churches the need of the Spirit-filled life? Shall we not preach on the "Holy Ghost" and "us"? Shall we not press the need of walking in the Spirit?
(6) Sent Forth by the Spirit. We now come to a most vital vision of the Spirit's workings. Philip had been preaching in Samaria. Then the Lord commanded that he should go in the way to Gaza which was desert. Immediately Philip obeyed and went forth, not knowing whither he went. As he journeyed he approached a chariot in which was riding a man of Ethiopia, who was a great man under Candace, queen of the Ethiopians.
"Then the Spirit said unto Philip, Go near, and join thyself to this chariot.
"And Philip ran thither to him, and heard him read the prophet Esaias, and said, Understandest thou what thou readest"? (Acts 8:29, 30).
We need not marvel at the blessed results of this mission. The eunuch believed and was baptized and went on his way rejoicing. Why was Philip's message so fruitful? It was because Philip wrought in the Spirit.
Once again we get an angle of the inner meanings of our first text, "It seemed good to the Holy Ghost and to us". Once again we catch a glimpse of the deeper meanings of the hallowed relationship of the Spirit and the saints.
He is the Captain-general of our march. He tells us the way in which we should walk, the place in which we should serve.
This is seen time and again in the Acts of the Apostles. It is seen so plainly and forcefully that we have been led to call the Book of Acts not the Acts of the Apostles alone, but Acts of the Apostles and the Holy Spirit. Their acts were His. His acts were theirs.
When Paul and Barnabas remained in Antioch in preaching and praying, the Holy Ghost said, "Separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them". Later on, when Paul assayed to go into Bithynia, the Spirit suffered him not. Then again Paul was forbidden of the Holy Ghost to preach the Word in Asia.
In all of these things we see how definitely and positively the Holy Spirit took charge of the movements of the preachers of the early Church. No wonder they felt the impact of His presence. No wonder they wrought under the power of His might.
Do we, at this hour, need just as plain a leadership? Who is he who dare take the Spirit's place and seek to dictate to saints the way in which they should go, and the work that they should do? Let us not dethrone the Spirit's authority and enthrone the authority of denominational Boards and humanly-appointed committees.
(7) The Holy Ghost Fell on Them That Heard the Word. When the first great blessing of God came to the Gentiles in the conversion of Cornelius and his servants, the Holy Ghost fell on them. Let me quote the Scripture:
"While Peter yet spake these words, the Holy Ghost fell on all them which heard the word.
"And they of the circumcision which believed were astonished, as many as came with Peter, because that on the Gentiles also was poured out the gift of the Holy Ghost.
"For they heard them speak with tongues, and magnify God. Then answered Peter, "Can any man forbid water, that these should not be baptized, which have received the Holy Ghost as well as we?
"And he commanded them to be baptized in the name of the Lord. Then prayed they him to tarry certain days" (Acts 10:44-48).
We stand by in amazement. Think of the marvel of it all. Christ had said, "Go ye into all the world". "Every creature" was His command. Now Peter under the urge of the "net let down from Heaven" stands preaching the Word in the home of Cornelius a centurion of an Italian band, and the Holy Ghost falls upon them as they believe, even as He had fallen upon the Jerusalem saints at the beginning.
What joy! What benediction! The Gentiles are acclaimed members of the one body. They too are made partakers of the Holy Ghost? Has the Spirit ever repented that hour? Does He not still work through Gentile saints? Is it not with us as it was with the first Apostles,—"The Holy Ghost" and "us"?
What shall we say to these things? This. The Holy Spirit must be recognized, received, enthroned.
(8) In the Demonstration of the Spirit and of Power. The story of the ministry of the Apostle Paul, and of his varied missionary journeys takes up the major portion of the Book of Acts. This ministry he sums up for us in a word written to the saints at Corinth. These words are found in I Corinthians 2:4, 5:
"And my speech and my preaching was not with enticing words of man's wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power:
"That your faith should not stand in the wisdom of men, but in the power of God" (I Cor. 2:4, 5).
Paul preached not himself but Christ. Paul preached not in his own power, but in the Spirit's power. This was true in Corinth, it was also true in Ephesus and in Thessalonica. Hear his words to the Thessalonians:
"For our gospel came not unto you in word only, but also in power, and in the Holy Ghost, and in much assurance; as ye know what manner of men we were among you for your sake" (I Thess. 1:5).
What have we to say to these things? Have we passed so far beyond the natural wisdom and eloquence of Paul the matchless preacher, that we no longer need enduement from on High? Can we say to the Spirit, Stand Thou there, or be Thou gone, while we proclaim the wisdom of twentieth century scholastic conceptions?
Alas, alas, that the church has grown so bold as to seek to pursue its course apart from any real anointing from the Spirit. The last days have surely come when professed Christians hold merely a form of doctrine but deny the power thereof.

II. The Holy Spirit Is Shut Up to the Church

How else can the Spirit work? He is dependent upon our lips, our feet, our hands. As the Church has failed to yield herself to the Spirit of God, and has refused to follow His dictates, the Spirit has Himself become circumscribed in His power to reach men.
The Church is impotent apart from the Spirit of God. So also is the Spirit helpless to work apart from the Church. He, the Holy Ghost came to convict the world of sin, of righteousness and of judgment to come. But how does the promise read? Hear it!
"Nevertheless I tell you the truth; It is expedient for you that I go away: for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you; but if I depart, I will send him unto you.
"And when he is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment:
"Of sin, because they believe not on me; "Of righteousness, because I go to my Father, and ye see me no more; "Of judgment, because the prince of this world is judged" (John 16:7-11).
Mark the words—"I will send Him unto you". It is when He comes unto us, that He is to convict the world. It is not when He comes to the sinner. The Spirit of God works through the believers.
Let us watch the great Pentecostal refreshing. Acts 2:4 says, "They were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and began to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance".
They did not speak apart from the utterance which the Spirit gave; neither did the Spirit speak apart from the lips that they yielded to Him.
When Cornelius sought light, the Spirit of God needed Peter's lips to impart the light. When the Ethiopian eunuch sought salvation, the Holy Spirit called for the voice of Philip to teach him. The eunuch being asked of Philip if he understood what he read, said, "How can I except some man should guide me"? When the Macedonian held out his hands for help, it was Paul who saw the vision. God has so ordained that we are His witnesses. Yet, we are not witnesses apart from a greater Witness.

Hear the words of Acts 5:32: "And we are His witnesses of these things; and so is also the Holy Ghost, whom God has given to them that obey Him". It is true—we are shut up to the Holy Ghost, and the Holy Ghost is shut up to us.
The Spirit is all to us in our testimony; so also, weak as we are, and nothing as we are in ourselves, yet, so also are we vital to Him in His testimony.
This first message from the Acts has been given for the purpose of showing the vital relationship, the close fellowship between the saints and the Spirit. In our next message we will begin a detailed study of the Acts of the "Holy Ghost" and "Us".



The Baptism in the Holy Ghost: Or Before and After Pentecost.

REVELATION 1.4-8 BY JOSEPH SEISS

The Apocalypse
Lectures on the Book of Revelation
by
Joseph A. Seiss
The Apocalypse cover image
Database © 2006 WORDsearch Corp.
WORDsearch Corp.

The Apocalypse: A Series of Special Lectures on the Revelation of Jesus Christ.

Lecture 2.
(Revelation 1:4-8)

JOHN'S SPECIAL INTRODUCTION—CHRISTIANITY COURTEOUS—THE CHURCHES—THE BLESSING IMPLORED UPON THEM—AN EXULTANT ASCRIPTION—THE BASIS AND CHARACTER OF IT—A SOLEMN PROPHETIC ALLUSION—THE COMING AGAIN OF CHRIST—HOW THE EARLY CHRISTIANS VIEWED THE SUBJECT—A DEVOUT REFERENCE TO THE SAVIOUR'S TESTIMONY CONCERNING HIMSELF.

Rev. 1:4-8 (Revised Text).—John to the seven churches in Asia, Grace unto you and peace, from Him who is, and who was, and who is to come, and from the seven Spirits which [are] before his throne, and from Jesus Christ, the Faithful Witness. The First-born of the dead, and The Prince of the kings of the earth.
Unto Him that loves us, and freed us from our sins by his own blood, and hath made us a kingdom,—priests unto Him who is his God and Father; to Him be glory and dominion unto the ages. Amen.
Behold, he cometh with the clouds, and every eye shall see him, and they which pierced him, and all the tribes of the land shall mourn about him. Even so; Amen.
I am Alpha and Omega, saith the Lord God, who is, and who was, and who is to come, the Almighty.

There is not another book of holy scripture which opens with so much special remark and solemnity. There is everything here to impress the belief, that there is not another so profoundly important, or meant to be studied with such particular care and seriousness. We have had before us the impressive account of itself with which this marvellous book opens. The text is a special additional preface, by John, which will be quite sufficient to occupy us tonight. Strictly, it is no part of the Apocalypse. It has proceeded from the same Spirit, and is in a measure anticipative of its contents; but it deals more with the writer's personal feelings, than with any features of the grand message itself. It is the mere prelude to the piece—the apostolic overture to the Revelation of Christ. But, it is a magnificent introduction. Though marked with the frequent sententious abruptness of this apostle's writings, there is not, in all human literature, a more sublime or appropriate opening. Separating it into its several parts, I find
I. AN AFFECTING SALUTATION;
II. AN EXULTANT ASCRIPTION;
III. A SOLEMN PROPHETIC ALLUSION;
IV. A DEVOUT THEOLOGICAL RECOGNITION.

Having carefully surveyed these, we shall have comprehensively explored the whole text. May the Lord aid us in the attempt, and fill us with the Spirit of him whose words we are to consider!

As to the Salutation, we may note first that Christianity is courteous. It enlivens all kindly feelings, and prompts to every gentle amenity from one to another. There is no refinement of manner, or polish of feeling and behaviour, which it does not foster. Coarseness and vulgarity have no place in the domain of genuine piety. He who speaks in the text was bred in humble life, but, by the exalting power of the gospel which he preached, he was raised into a courtliness of tone and temper, as sincere as it was lovely. He does not venture to deliver his great message to the Churches without first declaring his own kind wishes towards them. Though a high officer, and addressing persons of much inferior estate to himself, his loving heart begins with the pouring out of gracious affection, sympathy and benediction. By apostolic example, then, as well as by apostolic precept, we are taught to be kindly affectioned one toward another, and to be courteous to all men.

This gracious Salutation is addressed "to the seven Churches in Asia." We sometimes speak of "the Church" in its entire collective capacity, as if it were but one body. And such it really is in its source, head, faith and sacraments, but not in its earthly organization. We also speak of the Church of a particular country or denomination; and not improperly when we wish to designate clusters of Churches of particular and distinctive type, or regime, or geographical contiguity. But the Scriptures express themselves differently. They do not contemplate the Christians of so many countries or confessions, as so many Churches; but find a Church in every individual congregation, having its own minister, elders and deacons, without regard to any corporation other than itself. "Asia" is a large district of country, lying on the north of the Mediterranean, east of the outlet of the Euxine. It had but one general government at the time. But the Apocalypse does not speak of the collective body of Christians on that territory as "the Church of Asia." They were organized into distinct congregations in the several towns and cities, and these separate and independent assemblies are spoken of as so many "Churches." They are addressed singly as "the Churches which are in Asia," such as "the Church in Ephesus," "the Church in Smyrna," "the Church in Pergamos," &c. The ecclesiastical unit is, therefore, to be reckoned from the local assembly under one minister, and such helpers as may be grouped around him, in the acknowledgment and the administration of the commands of Christ. These several units, or any number of them, may lawfully join together in other and more general organizations and administrations, but never so as to ignore or supersede the proper churchly character of each without regard to the rest. The original order of the Church, as the apostles founded it, and as they addressed and left it, is congregational. And every system which obliterates that order, in so far departs from what God and his inspired servants have authorized and ordained. John knew of no Churches but the individual congregations, however they might voluntarily come together for mutual counsel and general edification.

Note also the style and substance of this Salutation. Such addresses were common in the intercourse of the ancients. Their writers were accustomed to wish to their readers every good and prosperity. The Egyptian steward greeted the Hebrew strangers with the words—"Peace be to you." The Assyrian King headed his royal proclamation with—"Peace be multiplied unto you." And David sent to Nabal saying: "Peace be to thee, and peace be to thine house, and peace be unto all that thou hast." The like may be heard to this day, in the common salutations of the people of those lands. But never did Jew or Gentile give such a salutation as this. It is not the ordinary prosperity of the world which is here bespoken, but something infinitely higher. John wishes the Churches "peace" indeed, but a peace preceded by, and rooted in "Grace." No one, in his right mind, will despise the comforts and blessings of this life. They are all good and precious gifts of God, which are to be thankfully received and devoutly appropriated. But, what is all this world's prosperity if there be no peace with God, and no spiritual consolation in the conscience? Of what avail is it to pass brilliantly over the stage of time, only to sink forever in the darkness and sorrows of eternity! What we sinful beings need is Grace, and the peace which has its root in grace. "By the deeds of the law shall no man living be justified." There must be some outlet of Divine benignity by which we can be accepted notwithstanding these disabilities under the law. That outlet has been found in the Gospel, which publishes absolution and eternal life on the simple condition of faith. And this is that "Grace" of which the apostle speaks, and by which Paul declares Christians to be saved. It is God's favour to us in Christ Jesus, notwithstanding our fallen condition. It is the forgiveness of sins, the inspiration of a new life, the renewal of the soul to holiness. It is the removal of God's wrath from us and our purgation from all enmity towards God, reconciliation and atonement with our Maker, and full participation in all the blessings of his uninterrupted favour. It is justification, and all the peace with God, and in our own hearts and estate, resulting from justification. In other words, what the apostle here bespeaks upon the Churches is, the entire fulness of the blessing of the Gospel, in all its length and breadth and depth and height of consolation and eternal prosperity.

Notice also the sources from which he implores all this. From man, no such blessings could come; nor yet only from God as God, or from this or that person in the Godhead alone. The whole Deity in its mysterious and eternal Triunity is concerned in furnishing what is bespoken. It is first of all "from Him which is, and which was, and which is to come;" that is, from the Absolute One, who knows no change, no dependence on time or place, but to whom the present, the past, and the future are one and the same eternal now; who is, and who was, and who is to be, even the infinite, incomprehensible, unapproachable Father of lights, from whom cometh every good and every perfect gift, and with whom is neither variableness, nor the least shadow of turning. Hence the joyful thanksgiving, "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, which, according to his abundant mercy, hath begotten us again unto a lively hope."

In the next place it is "from the seven Spirits which are before his throne;" that is, from the Holy Ghost, in the full completeness of his office and powers, as sent forth for the illumination, comfort and edification of all the subjects of God's redeeming grace. "Seven" is the number of dispensational fulness and perfection; and as there are seven Churches, making the one Church, so there are "the seven Spirits of God," making up the completeness of the one gracious administration of the Holy Ghost. "Before the throne;" that is, connected with the throne, and fulfilling the purposes of Him who sits upon the throne. The Holy Ghost is one sent. (Jn. 14:26.) He goeth forth from the throne, and serves in behalf of the throne. He is God himself imparted to work in his elect the good pleasure of his own will, making his grace availing in them and for them, filling them with "all peace and joy in believing," helping their infirmities, witnessing to their adoption, and carrying into effect all the divine administrations of the kingdom of grace.

But there is a third, from whom these great blessings are implored—"from Jesus Christ." There is neither grace nor peace for man, except through Christ. He is the stone which was set at naught by the builders, who is become the head of the corner. Neither is there salvation in any other; for there is none other name under heaven given among men whereby we must be saved. (Acts 4:11, 12.) If God the Father hath begotten us again to a lively hope, it is only "by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead." If we now have liberty to enter into the holiest, it is only "by the blood of Jesus, by a new and living way, which he hath consecrated for us, through the veil, that is to say, his flesh." (Heb. 10:19, 20.) And if there cometh to us peace, it is because "this man is our peace," and standeth and feedeth in the strength of the Lord, and in the majesty of the name of the Lord his God. (Micah 5:4, 5.)

And as three titles are given to each of the other sources of grace and peace to the Churches, three are also given to Christ. If the eternal Father is He which is, and which was, and which is to come; if the Holy Ghost is spirit, sevenfold, and before the throne: Jesus Christ is "the faithful witness, the firstborn of the dead, and the Prince of the kings of the earth." Isaiah prophesied of him as "A witness to the peoples: a leader and commander of the peoples." God said of him, "I will make him my firstborn, higher than the kings of the earth," and his throne" as a faithful witness in heaven." (Isa. 55:4; Ps. 89:27, 37.) And as was predicted, so it has come to pass. "To this end was I born," says he, "and for this cause came I into the world, that I should bear witness unto the truth." Having died a martyr to his testimony, and given his life an offering for sin, he was restored to life again, as all the Scriptures witness, and became "the first fruits of the resurrection," "the firstborn from the dead." And having been "faithful unto death," God hath exalted him, far above all principalities and powers, that at his name every knee should bow, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.

Conceive of these three, then, as one Almighty and ineffable Godhead,—the Father in the absoluteness of his unchanging nature and universal presence, the Spirit in all the completeness of his manifold energies and diversified operations, and the Son in the virtues of his blood-sealed testimony, of the new begotten power of his resurrection, and of the super-royal administrations of his eternal kinghood, each in his place, and all as one, laid under contribution, and unreservedly and irrevocably pledged, for the blessedness of them that believe;—sound the depths of such a fountain of good; test the firmness of such a basis of confidence; survey the strength and majesty of such a refuge for the soul; weigh the treasures of bliss which are opened up in such a presentation; and you may begin to form some conception of the resources of the saints, and of the real breadth and joyousness of this apostolic Salutation to the Churches. Is it any wonder that John's heart took fire at the contemplation, or that he should abruptly pass from affectionate greeting to jubilant doxology? Surely "the name of the Lord is a strong tower: the righteous runneth into it, and is set on high."

II. Let us look, then, for a few moments at this exultant Ascription. He does not even name the object of it. He seems for the time to be so bewildered among the glories of the Godhead as not to distinguish whether but one, or three, are embraced in his joyous adoration. He speaks of One who loves, and one who atones, and one who renders this love and atonement effective to our deliverance and exultation; and yet includes the three in one, giving glory and dominion forever and ever unto Him that loves us, and freed us from our sins by his own blood, and made us a kingdom, priests unto his Father and his God. But before he completes the sentence, his rapt heart settles upon Him alone whose Apocalypse he is about to unfold. A higher testimony to the proper Deity of Christ could not well be given. He also runs together the present, the past, and the future in the same conception, as in the previous description of God himself. He speaks of an exercise of Divine love, which now is (αγαπ ησαντι, loved); of a cleansing by blood, which has taken place; and of a regency and priestly dignity which remains to be realized in its fulness hereafter. All these are embraced in the grace and peace of which he had just spoken, and each separately, as well as all conjointly, is made the subject of sublime praise to Him from whom it proceeds. Observe the particular specifications.

The ever adorable One "loves us." We are apt to think of the great love of God as past; as having spent its greatest force, and reached its highest culmination, when he gave his only begotten Son to humiliation and death in our behalf. But in this we are mistaken. That love is a present love, and in as full force at this moment as when it delivered up Jesus to the horrors which overwhelmed him on the cross. Nay, the greatest stress and perfection of it is in exercise now, being the more intensified by reason of what was there so meekly endured for us. That was a love for enemies; what must it then be for friends? That was for man in his unloveliness and sins; what must it then be for those who have been washed from their sins, and clothed in all the heavenly beauty of the Saviour's righteousness? That was a love for the self-ruined and the lost, without claim upon Divine compassion; what must it then be to the redeemed, who are recommended by all the worth and claims of the sinlessness, and unswerving obedience, and high Divinity of Christ? Oh, the breadth, the length, the depth, the height, of the love of Christ! Who shall measure it? Who can comprehend it? It encompasses us like a shoreless, bottomless sea. It passeth knowledge. It transcends all thought. And it is in full force now, to make us forever blessed. Alas, what Doxology is strong enough adequately to acknowledge it?

"And freed us from our sins by his own blood." We are prone to overlook this as an accomplished fact. As we refer the height of the Divine love and compassion to the past, and so diminish the comfort which belongs to us from it as a present reality; so we are too apt to refer our absolution in Christ's blood to some future attainment, and to hold back from the proper appropriation of its virtue except as connected with certain works or experiences of our own. In both instances we are grievously at fault. As God's great love, in all its fulness, is a present love; so our absolution through the blood of Christ is a past absolution. We have not to wait and work to be forgiven. The work has long since been done. The decree went forth, the releasing word was spoken, the forgiveness was declared, when Jesus left his tomb; and all that any man has to do on that subject is to believe it, and to appropriate to himself the glorious reprieve. What saith the Scripture? "God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through him might be saved. He that believeth on him is not condemned." (Jn. 3:17, 18.) What of "the hand-writing of ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us?" Has not Jesus long since entirely disposed of it? Does not the apostle testify that He hath blotted it out, and taken it out of the way, nailing it to his cross? (Col. 2:14.) It is not written, that "there is now therefore no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit?" (Rom. 8:1.) And in the light of passages like these, I should stultify the message which God has given me to deliver, and detract from the richness of that Gospel which I am ordained to preach, if I did not come to you with the blessed announcement of a pardon already passed, and a complete absolution already spoken, for all your sins, however many or deep-dyed, on the simple condition that you but believe my word, and take the assurance to your souls. And we live beneath our privilege and fail to make the required use of the great expiation which has been wrought, and want in proper appreciation of our Saviour's work, if we do not rise up from our prostration under the law, and cast from us forever the whole burden of its condemnation. Can you not feel, even as I pronounce these words, the starting pulsations of that life of freedom which flows down to us from Calvary's cross? Can you not this moment look back to that mysterious and all-availing immolation of the Son of God, and believe that it was the taking away of your guilt, even yours? O my downcast, sorrowing brother, look, look, at that scene of sacred blood-shedding; weigh the virtues of that expiation; fathom the depths of its power; realize the blessedness of its efficacy; behold in that day of atonement the incoming of thy year of jubilee, breaking thy bonds, returning to thee thy lost estate, restoring thee to thy unfallen friends; and see if there be not cause for some Miriam's song of triumph—some reason for thee to join in this joyous doxology.

"And made us a kingdompriests unto his God and Father." The glory brightens as the account proceeds. That we should have a place in the affectionate regard, and tender, effective love of the great Lord, is much. That we should have forgiveness for all our sins, made perfect by his free grace at the cost of his own life's blood, is almost too much for belief. But, to affection is added honour, and to salvation, official dignities. We are not only loved, and freed from our sins, but, if indeed we are Christians, we are princes and priests, named and anointed for immortal regencies and eternal priesthoods. Let men despise and contemn religion as they may, there is empire connecting with lowly discipleship, royalty with penitence and prayers, and sublime priesthood with piety. Fishermen and taxgatherers, by listening to Jesus, presently find themselves in apostolic thrones, and ministering as priests and rulers of a dispensation, wide as the world, and lasting as time. Moses, by his faith, rises from Jethro's sheepfold to be the prince of Israel; and Daniel, from the den of condemnation and death, to the honour and authority of empire; and Luther, from his cell, to dictate to kings and rule the ages. There is not a believer, however obscure or humble, who may not rejoice in princely blood, who does not already wield a power which the potencies of hell cannot withstand, and who is not on the way to possess eternal priesthood and dominion.

Consider, then, what is embraced in the priestly reign of the saints in the ages to come,—"what untried forms of happy being, what cycles of revolving bliss," are before us in those high spheres,—what sceptres are to be wielded and what altars served amid the sublimities of our immortal destiny,—what streams of ascending influence shall concentrate in those holy administrations, letting forth God to his creatures, and guiding the adoration of realms unknown as yet to the unsearchable bosom of the invisible God;—and who that believes does not feel his heart stirred to its profoundest depths, and the devout ascription of "glory and dominion forever and ever" rising unbidden to his lips, unto Him who so loved us, and has done such great things for us? "Oh, that men would praise the Lord for his goodness, and for his wonderful works toward the children of men!"

III. But we pass to another topic, in which we find a preeminently solemn prophetic Allusion. The mention of these kinghoods and priesthoods of the saints, and the glory and eternal dominion of Christ, suggests an occurrence which must precede the full realization of these things, both for Christ and his people. And, with his soul on fire with these sublime contemplations, thirsting for the great consummation, and running over with interest in the tidings which he was about to communicate, the loving apostle seems to have felt as if the grand climacteric of time had come: "Behold he cometh with the clouds; and every eye shall see him, and they which pierced him: and all tribes of the land shall mourn about him. Even so. Amen."

Again he omits to mention the name of Him of whom he is speaking. There is, however, no room for mistake. This coming One is the same who freed us from our sins by his own blood, and who is to have glory and dominion forever and ever. John was present when that blessed One left the earth. He had heard the angels say: "Ye men of Galilee, this same Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven." (Acts 1:11.) He had seen how "a cloud received him out of their sight," and thenceforward carried in his memory what the words of the angels authorized him to regard as a picture of something in the future to which he ever looked with the profoundest interest. And all the stupendous visions of the Apocalypse did not for one moment disturb that picture, or divert his mind from it. However variously he may have been moved, as scene followed scene in the great exhibition of the Divine purpose, the keynote to which he ever returned was the coming and kingdom of that ascended Lord. Even in all the long course of unending ages, that upon which his thoughts most firmly fastened was, the coming again of the Lord Jesus. With this he begins; with this he continues; and with this he ends. But let us separate his words a little, and look at their several implications individually.

"He cometh." Here is the great fact unequivocally stated. Christ has not gone to heaven to stay there. He has gone for his Church's benefit; and for his Church's benefit he will return again; not in spirit only, not in providence only, not in the mere removal of men by death, but in his own proper person, as "the Son of man." Few believe this, and still fewer lay it to heart. Many sneer at the very idea, and would fain laugh down the people who are so simple as to entertain it. But it is nevertheless the immutable truth of God, predicted by all his prophets, promised by Christ himself, confirmed by the testimony of angels, proclaimed by all the apostles, believed by all the early Christians, acknowledged in all the Church Creeds, sung of in all the Church Hymn-books, prayed about in all the Church Liturgies, and entering so essentially into the very life and substance of Christianity, that without it there is no Christianity, except a few maimed and mutilated relics too powerless to be worth the trouble or expense of preservation. That religion which does not look for a returning Saviour, or locate its highest hopes and triumphs in the judgment scenes for which the Son of man must reappear, is not the religion of this book, and is without authority to promise salvation to its devotees. And those addresses to the Churches which have no "Behold he cometh" pervading or underlying them, have not been indited by "the Seven Spirits of God," nor sent by Him whose Apocalypse is the crown of the inspired Canon. Murmur at it, dispute it, despise it, mock at it, put it aside, hate it, and hide from it, as men may, it is a great fundamental article of the Gospel, that that same blessed Lord, who ascended from Mount Olivet, and is now at the right hand of God the Father Almighty, shall come from thence to judge the quick and the dead, and to stand again on that very summit from which he went up. This is true, as Christ himself is true; and "he that hath an ear to hear, let him hear." Amen.

"He cometh with the clouds." Here is the great characteristic in the manner of his coming. With the clouds," that is, in majesty and glory;—with the awful pomp and splendour of Him "who maketh the clouds his chariot: who walketh upon the wings of the wind."

"And every eye shall see him." Here is the publicity of the sublime event. It is not said that all shall see him at the same time, or in the same scene, or with the same feelings. Other passages teach us that some eyes will see him whilst he is yet to others invisible; and that he will be manifested to some at one time and place, and to others at other times and places, and in different acts of the wonderful drama. But, somewhere, at some time, in some stage of his judicial administrations, there never has been and never will be that human being who shall not see him. To every one that has lived, and to every one who shall live, he will show himself, and compel every eye to meet his eye. The dead shall be brought to life again, and shall see him, and the living shall see him. The good shall see him, and the wicked shall see him. Some shall see him and shout: "Lo, this is our God; we have waited for him, and he will save us: this is the Lord; we have waited for him, we will be glad and rejoice in his salvation; "and others shall see him and cry to "the mountains and rocks: Fall on us, and hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb; for the great day of his wrath is come; and who shall be able to stand?"

"And they which pierced him." Though his manifestation shall be absolutely universal, it has an awful distinction with reference to some. Of all beings who shall then wish to be saved that sight will be those who murdered him. But they shall not escape it. They must each and all some day confront him, and meet his all-penetrating gaze. From the wretched man who betrayed him, down to the soldier who pierced his side, and all who have made common cause with them in wronging, persecuting, wounding and insulting that meek Lamb of God, shall then be compelled to face his judgment-seat, and to look upon him whom they have pierced.

"And all the tribes of the land shall mourn about him." Is not this a special word for the Jews? Is it not an allusion to a wail of penitence which shall be elicited from long apostate Israel, when they shall look upon him whom they have pierced, and doubt of his messiahship no more? Does it not refer to the fulfilment of Zechariah 12:10, where the house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem shall mourn for him, as one mourneth for his only son, and shall be in bitterness for him as one is in bitterness for his firstborn? Oh, the intensity of that bitterness! Brethren, I do not wonder that worldlings and half-Christians have no love for this doctrine, or that they hate to hear about Christ's speedy coming. It is the deathknell of their gaieties and pleasures—the turning of their confidence to consternation—the conversion of their songs to shrieks of horror and despair. There is a day coming, when "the loftiness of man shall be bowed down, and the haughtiness of man shall be made low;" when there shall be "upon the earth distress of nations, with perplexity;" when "all the tribes of the earth shall mourn;" when men shall "go into the holes of the rocks, and into the caves of the earth," "into the clefts of the rocks, and into the tops of the ragged rocks, for fear of the Lord, and for the glory of his majesty;" when men "shall seek death, and shall not find it; and shall desire to die, and death shall flee from them." And that day is the day of Christ's coming, and those dismayed ones are such as love not his appearing. Fear and dread shall fall upon the wicked; trouble and anguish shall make them afraid; and men's hearts shall fail them for fear, and for looking after those things that are coming on the earth. The saints will then have been caught away to their Lord. From the same field, the same shop, the same bed, one shall have been taken and the other left. And on those remaining ones, who had not watched, neither kept their garments, nor made themselves ready, shall the terrors of judgment fall, and not a family or tribe of all that live shall escape.

"Even so, Amen." Some take this as the seal and ratification of the solemn truths which have just been uttered. If this be the true meaning, what particular stress is to be laid upon these things—how sure to come to pass—how unmistakably certain! Brethren, it does seem to me, when I look at the Scriptures on this subject, that even the best of us are not half awake. May God arouse us by his Spirit, and not permit us to sleep till the thunders and terrors of the great day are upon us! But I find another and more natural sense of these words. I find in them John's acquiescence in all that the great day is to bring, and his prayer, as repeated at the end of the book, that the Lord would hasten its coming. Terrible as it will be to the wicked, and the unprepared, and those who refuse the warnings which we give them, it is a precious day to the saints, a day to be coveted, and to be prayed for with all earnestness of desire. The poor faint-hearted Christianity of our times can hardly contemplate it without trembling and annoyance. Many who profess and call themselves Christians would rather not hear about it, and would prefer, if they had their choice, that Christ might never come. It was not so in the days of Christianity's pristine vigour. Then the anxious inquiry of disciples was, "Tell us, when shall these things be? and what shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world?" "Lord, wilt thou at this time restore the Kingdom to Israel?" Then Christians wrote to each other in joyous congratulation, that their citizenship was in heaven, whence they looked for the coming of the Saviour; and comforted one another in the assurance that the Lord himself is to descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God; and, as directed by their Lord, lifted up their heads, and looked up with joyful hope at every turn in human affairs which they could by any means construe into a probable herald of his hearing epiphany. Then the prayer, "Thy Kingdom come," had a depth of meaning and lively anticipation which now has wellnigh been lost. Then "the appearing of Jesus Christ" had a power over the soul which made it "rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory;" and the most earnest and constant call of apostles and their followers was, "Come, Lord Jesus; come quickly. Even so. Amen." Nor can the Church ever be her true self, or enter into the true spirit of her faith, or rise to the true sublimity of her hope, where this is not the highest object of her deepest desire. For how, indeed, can we regard ourselves as rightly planted upon the apostolic foundation, if we cannot join with heart and soul in this apostolic prayer?

IV. To all this, the apostle yet adds a most devout reference to Christ, and to Christ's declaration concerning himself, the further to confirm the solemn truthfulness of his words, and to incite us to lay the more stress upon them.
Great things, and, to human reason, very improbable things, were upon his mind, and about to be submitted to the Churches. Their importance, and the predisposition on the part of men to disregard them, seemed to call for some especial pledge of the likelihood and certainty of their accomplishment. And that pledge he gives by devoutly referring everything to that omniscient, eternal and almighty Being, whose Apocalypse he was commissioned to describe. He invokes the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the ending,—He who was, and is, and is to come, the Almighty,—as his judge in these utterances, to whom also he leaves the fulfilment of all that had been given him to write. It was as much as to say, if this was not a faithful and honest declaration of his inmost feelings and belief, and a true account of what he had seen and heard, such is the majesty of the Being who is to deal with him for it; and that, if there be any unlikelihoods in these things, such is the character of Him from whom he has received them, and to whom he refers for the power to make good his words.

And how sublime is the majesty of our blessed Redeemer as thus set forth! Never before had he given such an account of himself. He had intimated as much, and permitted his apostles to use language which implied the same. But never till in this Apocalypse had he formally assumed to himself such Divine majesty. He here proclaims Himself to be The Almighty, the very God, the One existing before anything was made, comprehending all things in His own existence, and possessing immensity and eternity. Look a moment at the particulars.

"I am Alpha and Omega." These are the names of the letters which begin and end the Greek alphabet. It is the same as if it were said in English, "I am A and Z." That is, our Saviour claims to be what letters and language were meant to be, namely the expression of truth. He is The Word—the embodiment of all Divine verities from first to last. God is a Spirit—an invisible, incorporeal, intangible, unapproachable Spirit. But that hidden and unsearchable Mind may be expressed, may let itself forth in comprehensible utterance. And that expression, that utterance of invisible Godhead is Jesus Christ—the Divine Wisdom—the only communication from the absolute to the created.

"The beginning and the ending." This is not found in some of the oldest and best copies of this book. It was, perhaps, introduced merely as an explanation of the clause going before it. It does not seem to convey any additional thought. He is the first, because all things took their beginning from him; and he is the last, because in him shall all things have their consummation. But what follows is unmistakably genuine.

"Who is, and who was, and who is to come." This sublime form of speech is used to describe the Eternal Father; but it belongs equally to the Son. He is the I Am, whose being is the same through all reckonings of time. As the Father exists in all the past, present, and future, eternal and unchangeable; so Christ, who is the express image of the Father, is "the same, yesterday, to-day, and forever." He was with the Father before the world was. He is now at the right hand of the Father. And he is to come in the name and the glory of the Father in those eternal administrations which are the joy and hope of his people.

"The Almighty." Than this there is no higher name. It declares the complete and unqualified subjection of all created things to our Lord Jesus Christ. It leaves nothing which is not put under Him. Oh, the adorableness and majesty of our Redeemer! Who could play false in such a presence? What son of Belial may escape righteous retribution in such hands? What untruthfulness can there be in such a Being? What lack for the full performance of all the will and purpose of One with such characteristics! Rather than give way to doubt and unbelief, let us fall down in lowly adoration at his feet, take His truth, and rejoice in Him as our hope and our everlasting consolation.

But, I must conclude these observations for the present. The Apostolic prelude to this solemn book is sufficiently before us to be made of great spiritual profit. Let us see to it that we do not fail to realize that advantage which it is intended and so well fitted to impart. Here is grace and peace from the Triune God spoken for our acceptance; let us see to it that we do not receive the inspired salutation in vain. Here is a glorious celebration of an accomplished absolution, an existing love, and sublime endowments, all made ours in Christ Jesus; let us make sure that our hearts are in tune to the same lofty song. Here is an apostolic admonition to direct our most earnest thoughts to the personal return of our Lord, which is to be so dreadful to the unready and so joyous to them that watch and pray; let us make it our business to be properly exercised in that "Behold." Here also we are referred to the ineffable greatness and Divinity of our Redeemer and Judge; and let us beware how we trifle with his word, question his power, or dash ourselves against his Almightiness.

And "unto Him that loves us, and freed us from our sins by his own blood, and hath made us a kingdom—priests unto Him who is his God and Father; to Him be glory and dominion unto the ages. Amen."


The Apocalypse: A Series of Special Lectures on the Revelation of Jesus Christ.