True principles and uncertain details

TRUE PRINCIPLES AND UNCERTAIN DETAILS
or
THE DANGER OF GOING TOO FAR
IN OUR DEMANDS ON FELLOW-BELIEVERS
By Robert Roberts
1898

It has pleased God to save men by the belief and obedience of a system of truth briefly described as “the gospel of our salvation,” and also spoken of by Jesus and John and Paul as “the truth.” “Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.”– Jesus. For this reason, it is necessary for believers to be particular in requiring the full recognition of this truth at the hands of one another as the basis of their mutual association, and generally, to “contend for the faith once delivered to the saints,” as enjoined by Jude. Those men are to be commended who faithfully exact this recognition both at the hands of applicants for baptism and claimants for fellowship.

But there is a danger of going too far. We live in a world of extremes of all kinds. It is difficult for any length of time to maintain an equilibrium in the application of any principle on account of the disbalances of mind so prevalent in the population, and the tendency of men to drive each other into extravagant positions through the sheer friction of personal antagonisms.

This is probably more manifest in the Truth than in anything else, because of the obligation to make a firm stand which arises out of the Truth, as it arises out of nothing else. When men differ about the Truth, their differences are more unappeasable than in any other subject because of the greatness of the interests involved and an earnestness of purpose and a depth of affection created by the Truth, as by nothing else. It was not without a reason that Jesus foretold division as the result of his appearance — division so keen that “a man’s foes should be they of his own house.”

So much of division is inevitable, and while lamenting it, men of God can but submit, with as little asperity towards those who cause it as possible. But there are divisions that are uncalled for, and therefore sinful. Paul refers to such when he says: “Mark them that cause divisions among you contrary to the doctrine (the teaching on unity) that ye have learnt” (Rom 16:17). He was referring, no doubt, to the factions arising out of personal preferences, but the warning applies to all divisions that ought not to be made.

There is division enough, in all conscience division that is inevitable — division that must be, unless we are to ignore divine obligations altogether; but there are divisions that ought not to be. It is possible to go too far in our demands on fellow believers. How far we ought to go and where to stop, is at one time or other a perplexing problem to most earnest minds. They are afraid on the one hand of compromising the Truth in fellowship, and on the other, of sinning against the weaker members of the body of Christ. The only end there can be to this embarrassment is found in the discrimination between true principles and uncertain details that do not overthrow them.

There are general principles as to which there can be no compromise: but there are also unrevealed applications of these principles in detail which cannot be determined with certainty, and which every man must he allowed to judge for himself without any challenge of his right to fellowship. To insist on uniformity of opinion on those uncertain details is an excess of zeal which may he forgiven, but which meanwhile inflicts harm and distress without just cause.

An exception would, of course, be naturally made in the case of the construction of a detail that would destroy the general principle involved, such as where a man professing to believe in Christ might also believe in Mahomet or Confucius — of which there are examples. This supplementary belief destroys the first belief, for a true belief in Christ is a belief in his exclusive claims

It may help discernment if we consider some examples unaffected by uncertain details,

God

GENERAL PRINCIPLES.– “He that cometh to God must believe that HE IS and that He is the rewarder of them that diligently seek Him.” There can be no question as to our duty where men become unbelieving or doubtful of Cod’s existence, or of His favourable disposition towards and purpose to openly reward the men who are diligent in their quest of Him and ready in their obedience.

Uncertain Detail.– But as to how or where He exists, and in what form or aspect His person is shown and how surrounded — whether He inhabits a world of His own or be the radiant centre of a cluster of celestial worlds; and whether His name means I SHALL BE or I AM, or both, and I HAVE BEEN as well (as in the Apocalyptic formula, “which art and wast and art to come”), there is truth concerning all these points — truth that we shall know and revel in when we are spirit, but it is not possible in our present circumstances to be certain as to any of them, and we should do wrong to insist on any particular opinion as to them. The admission of the true principle that God exists and that He will reward His lovers and friends is all we can claim in fellowship at the hands of fellow-believers.

Man

GENERAL PRINCIPLE.– That God made man of the dust of the ground.

Uncertain Detail. — But as to whether it was a direct action of the Father’s formative energy, after the manner in which sound creates geometric figures in sand scattered loosely upon a tightly extended vibrating surface, or by the expert manipulation of angelic hands, we cannot be sure. There are grounds for a strong opinion in favour of the latter, but it would be unwarrantable to insist on the reception of that opinion as a condition of fellowship. It is sufficient if the brother or sister believe that “God made man of the dust of the ground.”

Man's State After Creation

GENERAL PRINCIPLE.– He was a living soul or natural body of life, maintained in being by the action of the air through the lungs like us, but unlike us, a “very good” form of that mode of being, and unsubjected to death.

Uncertain Detail.– Would he have died if left alone, unchanged, in that state if he had not sinned? Who can tell? The testimony is that death came by sin: but the fact also is that, not being a spiritual body, he was presumably not immortal. Are we going to insist upon an opinion on a point like this, about which no man can be certain? We shall act unwarrantably if we do so. It is sufficient if a man believe that Adam after creation was a very good form of flesh and blood, untainted by curse. The uncertain points must be left to private judgment.

The Angels

GENERAL PRINCIPLE.– That they are the Father’s multitudinous messengers in glorious bodily form, spiritual and immortal, to whom the brethren and sisters of Christ are to be made equal.

Uncertain Detail.– Where do they come from? Where do they live? Were they made immortal at the beginning, or did they come through a state of probationary evil like the race of Adam? Who can tell?

We may have a strong opinion, but are we going to ask believers to profess an “opinion” as a condition of fellowship? This would be going too far. It is sufficient that a believer believe in the existence and employment of the immortal angels of God. It would be a cruel extravagance to ask him to subscribe to an opinion which may be wrong.

The Earth

GENERAL PRINCIPLE.– That the earth is the promised inheritance of the saints.

Uncertain Detail.– Is the earth a globe or a plane, or is it a concavity as the latest speculation affirms on scientific grounds? Who can tell? If a brother choose to think it is a plane, let him think so. It matters nothing what his opinion of the shape of the earth is, so long as he believe that the earth is the inheritance of the saints. An opinion that the earth is going to be burnt up is an opinion that would interfere with the general principle, and therefore to be rejected: but any opinion as to the constitution of the earth is to be tolerated in charity

Sun, Moon and Stars

GENERAL PRINCIPLE.– God made them, and they are His.

Uncertain Detail.– Are they inhabited worlds, or are they mere lights in the expanse, as the new Koreishan science teaches? No one can tell, though there are grounds for a strong opinion. Let each one have his own opinion. We shall know all about it if we are chosen of the Lord at Christ’s return. If a brother admit that God made them, and that they belong to Him, he admits what has been revealed and what is essential to an adequate conception of the greatness of God. He must be allowed to differ from the rest, if he does so, as to what they are in themselves.

Reigning with Christ

GENERAL PRINCIPLE.– That the glorified brethren of Christ will reign with him as kings and priests with Christ, when he has set up the Kingdom of God at his return.

Uncertain Detail.– Will they be scattered over the surface of the earth in palaces of their own, with definitely allotted districts which they will individually administer: or will they be collected as one body always resident in Jerusalem near the person of Christ? There are good reasons for believing the former of these views to be correct, but as an uncertain detail, we dare not insist upon a particular opinion, as a condition of fellowship. It is sufficient if a brother believe that we shall reign with Christ, whatever dim ideas he may have as to details that do not interfere with the general principle.

The Devil

GENERAL PRINCIPLE.– That the Bible devil is the personified antagonism of flesh and Blood to God, in various forms and methods.

Uncertain Detail.– What was the particular form of Bible diabolism that Michael encountered in the dispute about the body of Moses? What was the particular form of the Bible devil that tempted Jesus in the wilderness? We cannot positively know because we are not informed, and because the Bible devil is over and over again a man, an institution, a government, or a desire. We may have an opinion as to who the devil was in these two cases, but it is only an opinion, and a brother must be at liberty to hold whatever opinion commends itself to him in the case, so long as his opinion does not upset the general principle in the case, nor open the door for the supernatural devil of popular theology.

Moses

GENERAL PRINCIPLE.– Moses was the servant of God, and at his death, was honoured with a divine interment.

Uncertain Detail.– Is Moses living now? Some think so, because he appeared on the Mount of Transfiguration. Some think not, because that transfiguration is styled a ” vision.” What are we to do? Let every man have his own view, so long as the divinity of the work and writings of Moses is recognised. We shall find out presently from Moses himself whether he has been alive since the first appearing of Christ and the information will be very interesting; but how absurd it would be to require at the present moment a particular view on the point as a condition of fellowship.

Our Summons to Christ at His Appearing

GENERAL PRINCIPLE.– That we shall be gathered to meet Christ at his coming whether living or dead, when that great event occurs.

Uncertain Detail.– How shall we be gathered? Shall we be carried off as Elijah was, or Philip, or Christ himself — by the prehensile energy of the Spirit of God? or shall we he conveyed by natural means, such as railways and steamboats? Who can be quite sure? It matters not. When the time comes, there will be no mistake about it. There is a strong probability that it will be by the power of the Spirit of God, and not by human locomotion. But are we to reject a brother because he strongly thinks it will be by natural means? So long as he believes in “the coming of our Lord Jesus and our gathering together unto him,” he may form his own ideas as to the particular method by which we are to be gathered. No opinion on that point is inconsistent with the general principle.

Immortality

GENERAL PRINCIPLE.– That God will bestow immortality of nature on His accepted servants at the coming of Christ.

Uncertain Detail.– At what particular moment will this be done? Will it be done individually as we appear one by one before the judgment seat of Christ? or will it be done en masse when we have all been judged? If the latter, will it be done immediately the judgment is finished, or will it be deferred to the time when the whole earth has been subjugated by the war of the great day of God Almighty in which the saints take part? Who can tell? We may have our opinions, but we must not insist on our opinions as a condition of fellowship, unless opinions trench on general truth. An opinion to the effect that we are immortal already would clearly destroy the truth that we are to become so only when Christ comes and at his hands. In that case, we would be under the painful necessity of objecting. But provided the general truth is received, we dare not insist on a particular view as to the moment that general truth will be carried into effect.

The Temple

THE GENERAL TRUTH.– That Christ will build the temple of the future age as a house of prayer for all people.

Uncertain Detail.– What will be the size of it? What will be the shape of it? There are no grounds for absolute certainty. There are strong grounds for the view presented by brother Sulley in his temple book: but we should not be justified in making the reception of this view a condition of fellowship. It is sufficient that the general truth is received. Any view that may be entertained as to details is not inconsistent with the general truth.

The Judgment Seat

GENERAL PRINCIPLE.– That Christ will call the living and the dead before his judgment seat at his coming.

Uncertain Detail.– Where will he set it up? Will it be in Palestine, or in Egypt, or in the Arabian Peninsula, in the solitudes of Sinai? We cannot be sure. All available evidence seems to point in the direction of the last-mentioned; but an uncertain detail must not be made a basis of fellowship. We must not insist upon a man believing the judgment seat will be set up at Sinai or any particular place so long as he believes that “Jesus Christ will judge the living and the dead at his appearing and his Kingdom.”

Responsibility

GENERAL PRINCIPLE.– That men are responsible to the resurrection of condemnation who refuse subjection to the will of God when their circumstances are such as to leave them no excuse for such refusal.

Uncertain Detail.– But when, in our age, are men in such circumstances? Who can tell but God alone? Some think it is enough if a man have a Bible. Some think that is not enough unless the Bible is explained to him (as in a lecture or book). Some think that is not enough unless the man have the capacity to understand the explanation. Some think even that is not enough unless the hand of God is openly shown in certification of the divinity of the Bible, as in the apostolic age, when “the Lord worked with them and confirmed the word with signs following.”

What are we to do? Are we to insist upon a precise shade of opinion on a point about which no judicious man can be absolutely clear? All we can be sure about is that when men are “without excuse” knowing the judgment of God (Rom 1:20,32; 2:1); when they have “no cloak for their sin” like the men who saw the miracles of Christ, and yet both “saw and hated both him and his Father” (Joh 15:22,24), that they will come forth at the resurrection to receive punishment according to the righteous judgment of God. When men admit this, they admit enough for purposes of fellowship as regards this particular point. To insist on more than this is to go too far, and to inflict needless distress and cause unnecessary division.

No doubt the men who do so think they are doing God service. There is a little excuse for them in the extraordinary doctrine that has been propounded that in the matter of resurrection, God “does not proceed on principles of justice,” but on principles of law, and that if a man have not gone so far in submission and obedience as to be baptised into Christ, Christ has no hold on him, however great and deliberate a rebel he may be.

But they go unwarrantably beyond what is just in withdrawing from those who have not received this doctrine, but who are hazy as to the application of the scriptural rule of responsibility in our particular age. Their zeal for a true doctrine is good, but not the shutting of their eyes to the reasonable qualifications that belong to the true view of the subject. They read “He that believeth not shall be condemned,” and they exclaim, “Why hesitate?” They forget that these words refer to those who saw the signs. If they say, “No, they apply to everybody also”, they have to be reminded that they do not really think so themselves. Do they believe the Mahometans, and the Chinese who “believe not” will be raised to condemnation? Do they think the benighted millions of Christendom, who “believe not” will be raised? They do not. They have only to ask themselves “Why?” to he reminded of the qualifying fact associated with the words they quote. That qualifying fact was that the men referred to had no excuse for not believing. As Jesus said, ” If I had not come and spoken unto them (and done among them works which none other man did), they had not had sin” (to answer for). “If ye were blind, ye should have no sin” (in rejecting me).

God is just. The mere circumstance of believing not, is not a ground for resurrectional condemnation in the absence of those attendant circumstances that demand belief. So with the other statement, “He that rejecteth me,” etc. It has to be qualified by the parenthesis understood, “having seen the works I have done.”

But say they, “Where the Gospel has power to save” it has power to condemn; and if rejectors are not to be raised, what guarantee have we that acceptors will be saved?” The answer is, Where the Gospel has power to save, it certainly has power to condemn; but where has the Gospel power to save? Only where it is known and believed. In that case, it will condemn the man who does not conform to its requirements. But has it power to save where a man is ignorant or uncertain? No enlightened man would say “Yes” here, and therefore it will be observed that the conclusion as to the condemning power of the Gospel, where it has power to save, has no application to the class of persons in dispute, viz., men, who in the darkness of the age are uncertain as to the truth, though knowing it in a theoretical manner.

Men who say to Christadelphians, “I understand what you believe and it is beautiful; but is it true? If the Bible is divine, no doubt it is true; but I have my reservations as to the Bible.” There is no quarrel as to the men who recognise the Bible as the Word of God, and, understanding it, are aware of its demands upon them to repent and submit to the service of Christ; and yet refuse submission because of the present inconveniences of submission. The responsibility of these men to the resurrection of condemnation is without doubt, but where there is one man of this kind, there are hundreds who are in a haze and a maze of uncertainty as to the truthfulness of the Truth, though knowing what the Truth is, and concerning whom it is not possible to take the ground that they will rise to condemnation at the coming of Christ.

A mistake is made in contending for precise views on a matter that cannot be made precise. Where men admit that rebels and unbelievers who deserve punishment will rise at the resurrection to receive that punishment without reference to the question whether they are baptised or not, they admit all that can righteously be exacted from them. It is impossible for any man to say, who are so deserving. We know that God is just, and will do no unrighteousness. When men admit that He will resurrectionally punish the men who are deserving of it, whether baptised or not, it is inadmissible that we should withdraw from them because they are unable to say who are and who are not so deserving.

There is the less need for the extreme demands of some on this head, since those who have espoused the extraordinary doctrine that a man must obey God a little before he is punishable, have separated themselves from those who will not receive their doctrine. “But this has not brought peace,” say they. Do they imagine that this other movement is going to bring peace? Behold how much the reverse. They are separating men who ought to remain united because holding the same truth, though made by an artificial contention to appear as if they did not. They are sowing division and bitterness and strife on the plea of producing harmony and peace. They are refusing the friends of Christ because of uncertainties as to how much Christ will punish a certain class of his enemies. And compassing sea and land to make proselytes to this most unenlightened proceeding.

How perfectly melancholy it seems in the presence of the real work of the Truth. While the world is up in arms against the Bible, or where not against the Bible, against the doctrines of the Bible, and some good and honest hearts surrender, and joyfully profess faith in the writings of Moses, the prophets and the apostles, and receive the Gospel as preached to Abraham, and expounded by Jesus to the hearers of the apostolic age with all readiness of mind and they ask for baptism that they may become servants of Christ in the obedience of his commandments, and heirs of the great salvation promised to the faithful. We examine them and find them fully enlightened in “the glorious Gospel of the blessed God,” and we baptise them.

They come to the table of the Lord: an extremist steps forward and says:

“Do you believe rejectors of the truth will rise to condemnation?”

The newborn says: “I believe the rejectors referred to by Christ will rise.”

Extremist: “Will not all rejectors rise?”

Newborn: ” Not all rejectors, I think. The Mahometans reject Christ. I do not expect them to rise.”

Extremist: “You are trifling with the question.”

Newborn: “I think not. I understood that rejectors were not responsible unless they rebel against the light knowing it to be the light.”

Extremist: “That is what I mean, but many are hazy who these are: will you promise to withdraw from such?”

Newborn: “You put me in a difficulty there. If men believe that the Lord will punish those who deserve it, and that rebels and unbelievers will be excluded from the Kingdom of God, I should scarcely feel justified in refusing them because of any little uncertainty they might have as to the Lord’s precise method of dealing with them. It would depend upon the nature of their reasons. If they were to contend that Christ had no hold on rebels unless they were baptlsed, and that rebels could outwit God, as it were, by refusing to go into the water, and that in fact resurrectional condemnation was only for the obedient, and that the safe way for men when the Gospel comes is to have nothing to do with it, I confess I should look upon that as such a confusion of Truth in its most elementary principles as would justify me in refusing identification with it. But if their difficulty were merely as to the precise amount of privilege needful to make an unbeliever responsible, I should hesitate in refusing them. I should, in fact, fear to do wrong in doing so.”

Extremist: “Oh, I see you are prepared to compromise the truth for the sake of numbers.”

Newborn: “I think you are not justified in that expression of opinion.”

Extremist: “I have a right to form my own opinion.”

Newborn: “A man may have to answer for wrong opinions of that sort. You judge and condemn where you are forbidden to do so.”

If the Extremist will walk out under those circumstances, there is nothing for it but to bear it.

This “doctrine of fellowship” (as it is called) is also carried to an excess never contemplated in apostolic prescription. I was called upon by a man in dead earnest who contended there were no such things as “first principles,” and that every detail of Truth, down even to the date of the expiry of the Papal 1260, should be insisted on as a condition of fellowship.

Such outrageous extravagance would not be contended for by every extremist; but in principle, they are guilty of it when they insist on uncertain details, as well as true general principles.

Fellowship is friendly association for the promotion of a common object — with more or less of the imperfection belonging to all mortal life. To say that every man in that fellowship is responsible for every infirmity of judgment that may exist in the association is an extreme to which no man of sound judgment can lend himself. There will be flawless fellowship in the perfect state. Perhaps it is the admiration of this in prospect that leads some to insist upon it now. But it is none the less a mistake. This is a mixed and preparatory state in which much has to be put up with when the true principles are professed.

Judas was a thief, and Jesus knew it, but tolerated him till he manifested himself. Was Jesus responsible while he fellowshipped him? Certainly not. Judas was qualified for the fellowship of the apostolic circle by his endorsement of the common professed objects of its existence, viz., the proclamation of the Gospel of the Kingdom in conjunction with Jesus as the accepted “Christ, the Son of the living God.” His thieving character did not exclude him from that circle till he went and hanged himself.

There were men among the Corinthian brethren who denied the resurrection: did Paul charge the brethren with complicity with that heresy because of the presence of such among them? Doubtless their rejection of the resurrection nullified their claims for that place, but still it did not make the true brethren guilty of their false doctrine while merely tolerating them, pending an appeal to Paul.

If a man lend himself to the evil projects of others and wish them well in them, no doubt they are as responsible for those projects as if they actually promoted them with their own personal labours. This is the principle to which John gives expression when he says, “He that biddeth him (the holder of false doctrine) God-speed, is partaker of his evil deeds.” But the principle is carried too far when it is made applicable to the individual diversities and idiosyncrasies of a community concurring in a common object and a common doctrine and a common service, and having fellowship one with another in the promotion of these common things. Men thus associated together are not responsible for each other’s peculiarities or doubtful thoughts on matters of uncertain detail. They are responsible only for what they wittingly espouse. They would be responsible for the admission of a Mahometan, or a Papal idolator, or an orthodox denier of the Gospel, as such. They are not responsible for every shade of opinion that may dwell in the breast of a man admitted on account of his professed subjection to the Truth. It is nothing but monstrous to contend for a fellowship-responsibility of this sort. In fact, it would make fellowship impossible. It would turn ecclesial life into an intolerable inquisition, instead of a source of comfort and edification and help and joy, from the sharing of a common faith.

It is asked, Why did you take such strong ground then, with regard to fellowship, on the question of inspiration? Wise men do not require an answer. If there are those who feel they require it, here it is. The question of the inspiration of the Bible is a question of whether it is God speaking or man: a question of whether we may trust absolutely to what we read as of divine authority, or whether it may possibly be the vagaries of unenlightened human brains.

Such a question goes right to the foundation. It is the first of all first principles, for without the absolute reliability of the Bible, there is no such thing as a first principle possible. For any doubt to exist on this question was to render fellowship impossible on various strong grounds. Such a doubt was raised in harmony with the widespread rot that prevails under various learned auspices in the religious world. It was espoused warmly by some in our midst; by many others who do not profess to receive it there was an unwillingness to refuse it fellowship. Consequently, we had either to tolerate the currency of a doctrine quietly and gradually destructive of all Truth in our midst, or refuse to have anything to do with it, and stop up all leak-holes by insisting not only on the right doctrine, but on the refusal of toleration to the wrong.

To contend for the equal applicability of such measures to the question of the responsibility of rebels and unbelievers, does certainly seem to indicate an inability to distinguish between things that differ. A brother’s uncertainties on the subject is an affair of interpretation of the Lord’s acknowledged word. He does not deny the Lord’s utterances: he asks what do they mean? This is a position to be treated in a very different manner from the attitude that calls in question the authenticity of the Lord’s words. And any misapprehension he may labour under as to the meaning of the words does not affect any general truth in the case, but merely the application of said truth in detail. He does not say, “I believe rebels and unbelievers will go unpunished if they are not baptised.”

He says, “l certainly believe they will be punished, whether baptised or not, in all cases in which the Lord thinks they are deserving of it. But,” adds he, “I see the Lord makes blindness a reason for exemption. And therefore I feel in a state of uncertainty as to how much the Lord will punish various classes of unbelievers in a day like ours when all is so dark.” To apply to such a position the stringent measures called for by the denial of the complete inspiration of the Bible indicates a fogginess of mental vision.

Upon which, there rises the exclamation: “How are the mighty fallen! What a change in the position of brother Roberts with reference to the question of fellowship! ” We can endure such objurgations because they come from the mouths of wellmeaning men, and because they are based upon entire misapprehension. We have changed in nothing since the day we commenced the active service of the Truth. In the beginning, we had to deal with men who were prepared to compromise first principles in fellowship. To every disease its own remedy. We took a line of argument suitable to the exigency. But now, there is another extreme of an equally destructive character in another way. It is an extreme requiring another kind of argument. Have we changed because we take a line of argument suited to a new dilemma? There are several sides to a camp. When the attack is on the north, the troops are sent that way in defence. Is the general inconsistent because when the attack comes from the west, he withdraws his troops from the north, and sends them to the new point of attack? We are sorry for all the brethren affected by the varying tactics of error (for this is an error of action of a very serious character: if it is not an error of doctrine). It is an offence against the little ones believing in Christ, of which he expressed such great jealousy. It may be forgiven as Paul’s persecution of the disciples was forgiven: but for the time being, it is a grave offence which we refuse to share. There is nothing for it but to wait. We are all helpless in these periodic fermentations, and must bear them as well as we can, and come through them with as little friction as possible in comforting prospect of the master hand that will soon take the helm, and give to the world peace, after storm; and to his accepted brethren, rest after the exhausting toils of this great and terrible wilderness.

True vine (John 15)

The figure of a vine and its branches is perhaps the best illustration of the intimate union between Christ and his followers. Other figures of speech approach the ideal, but are seen to fall short in some particular. That of the shepherd and his sheep gives us the thought of intimacy, but it is an intimacy between a guardian of a distinctly superior order and creatures of an inferior grade whom he watches over and protects. That of a husband and wife gives the idea of intimacy and union between two beings of the same order, but they are two persons with independent lives, and one of them will live on even though the other dies. And finally, that figure of the head and members does illustrate one life common to the whole, but it too falls short by comparison to the vine and branches in not being able to express the constant putting forth of new growths.

This picture of the vine and its branches has something very worthwhile to say about scriptural fellowship. Christ’s words are simple yet profound:

“I am the true vine” (v 1). It is significant that our Lord does not say, “I am the stem, and you are only the branches” (cp v 5). The whole plant is Christ, and we as the branches are a part of the whole — not just attached to Christ, but a part of Christ! Such an expressive statement gives sledge-hammer force to the warning of Christ in Mat 25:40,45:

“Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.”

Cutting off Christ

We should be extremely reluctant to cut off brethren, and no better reason can be given than this: that through lack of love and patience we may find ourselves

cutting off Christ!

This is analogous to the comical picture of the man in the tree who is so busy pruning that he inadvertently saws off the limb on which he is sitting! Comical indeed, naturally speaking; but the spiritual counterpart is a great tragedy. How many lives have been blighted by what in the beginning was an earnest (if misdirected) zeal for “purity”, but the outcome was the separation of the zealous remnant from any hope of nourishment which might have been received through the remainder of the vine. Children in the separated families have found this self-imposed isolation spiritually withering; the links to a healthy ecclesial life were never fused; adulthood finds them drifting away in greater percentages than their opposite numbers in the “loose” ecclesias!

Christ continues: “My Father is the husbandman. Every branch in me that beareth not fruit He taketh away” (vv 1,2). In this analogy the “branches” are pruned only by the Father. This is not to deny, of course, the scriptural duty of ecclesias in extreme situations to take the initiative and “purge out the old leaven”. However, as may be seen in other passages (notably 1Jo 2:19), sometimes it has been acceptable for the faithful ecclesia to wait until the Father, in His providence and infinite wisdom, severs the diseased or dead branches from their midst. (Compare also the lesson of the seven “stars” in Rev 1:16 — they are seen in Christ’s hand. To him is committed all authority from the Father; it is his prerogative alone to extinguish them if need be.)

“Abide in me”

The central exhortation of Christ’s parable in John 15 is found in v 4: “Abide in me”. Each branch must abide in the vine in order to bring forth fruit. If for any reason it is severed, the branch may continue in existence for a time, but in the day of reckoning the “husbandman” will gather it together with the other lifeless sticks and cast them into the fire of eternal destruction (v 6).

All of the emphasis here is upon our duty, our necessity, to attach ourselves solidly to the true vine, and never to relinquish our grasp. There is an old fable about a dog with a bone who was crossing a bridge one day, when he happened to glance down and spy his reflection in the water. Thinking this to be another dog and a rival claimant for his bone, he bared his teeth and gave out with a growl and a ferocious bark. Unfortunately, in the process he dropped his bone, which sank irretrievably to the bottom of the stream.

Like that dog, we sometimes forget who our real enemy is, and in giving our attention to fighting a supposed enemy we may lose our grip on the real prize. Christ has wisely advised us to hold firm to our hope, and not to worry overmuch about someone else’s right to that same hope. Unlike the dog’s one bone, there is food enough for all in Christ; the “branches” need not squabble among themselves,

What a sad and confusing picture we have today in the ecclesial world: a veritable host of “independent” branches, each one jealously grafting other branches back and forth, as if to say, “We alone are the people, and wisdom will die with us.” (In fact, some of these smaller communities are near extinction because of long-continued division and sub-division in pursuit of that elusive “purity”.) But all the while, whether they like it or not, they are all attached to the one vine — since the fundamental beliefs of each “branch” are sound (although some “branches” imply by their rhetoric that their rivals are really attached to brambles).

The wholesome picture

Let us get back to the wholesome picture of the true vine. In this ecclesial network it is our business, wherever we may be, to send out new shoots, to grow and consolidate — so that others through us may receive sustenance from Christ the one vine. Practically speaking, we must endeavor always to strengthen our bonds, with brethren in our local ecclesia, with brethren in isolation, with other ecclesias near and far. The “vine” of the Truth must be an intricately woven web of spiritual relationships, through all of which flows life from Christ. We must not be afraid thus to put out more “feelers” and bind ourselves closer and closer together with our brethren. The more we seek to be “one” with our brethren, both in joys and sorrows, the healthier will be our attitude toward fellowship. Where true love exists, misunderstandings and suspicions will be much less frequent. We may still periodically have to remove recalcitrant members from our midst, but if we are living up to this standard it will be a truly

painful

experience — as it should be!

It will not be something that gives us a secret pleasure at the thought of our own superiority. A full appreciation of our interdependent relationship with all our brethren will serve us well as a necessary check upon the traditional divisive tendencies of Christadelphia.

Trumpet, the

In ancient Israel, each city had a person positioned upon the wall in order to call out a warning about the approach of unexpected and possibly hostile people. This watchman had to “sound the trumpet” if an enemy was approaching, so that the townspeople could get ready for an attack. Prophets in Israel took on the function of spiritual “watchmen” (Eze 3:17; Jer 6:17), warning the people of impending punishment by God unless the nation changed its way.

But trumpets figure prominently in a variety of ways in Scripture — all of which have some bearing on our use of the symbol in this newsletter:

1. Trumpets summoned Israel to assemble before God:

“The LORD said to Moses: ‘Make two trumpets… for calling the community together… When both are sounded, the whole community is to assemble before you’ ” (Num 10:1-3, NIV).

What was true for Israel in Old Testament times will be true for spiritual “Israel” in the day when Christ returns. Then God’s people in captivity who have been waiting for His deliverance will hear the trumpet of assembly once again:

“And in that day a great trumpet will sound. Those who were perishing in Assyria and those who were exiled in Egypt will come and worship the LORD on the holy mountain in Jerusalem” (Isa 27:13).

And all those who belong to Christ, even those who are in the graves, will also hear the trumpet calling them to assemble before him:

“At that time the sign of the Son of Man will appear in the sky, and all the nations of the earth will mourn. They will see the Son of Man coming on the clouds of the sky, with power and great glory. And he will send his angels with a loud trumpet call, and they will gather his elect from the four winds, from one end of the heavens to the other” (Mat 24:30,31).

2. The feast of trumpets called Israel together on the first day of the seventh month, to prepare them for the Day of Atonement: the national offering for sin, the national day of repentance, and the time for a collective forgiveness of sins:

“Say to the Israelites: ‘On the first day of the seventh month you are to have a day of rest, a sacred assembly commemorated with trumpet blasts’ ” (Lev 23:24).

“On the first day of the seventh month hold a sacred assembly and do no regular work. It is a day for you to sound the trumpets” (Num 29:1).

“Then have the trumpet sounded everywhere on the tenth day of the seventh month; on the Day of Atonement sound the trumpet throughout your land” (Lev 25:9).

“Sound the ram’s horn at the New Moon, and when the moon is full, on the day of our Feast” (Psa 81:3).

Does this have a spiritual counterpart? Yes. For the believer in Christ, any time (but especially the time of the partaking of the memorials of the body of Christ) is the time for self-examination and repentance (1Co 11:26-31). Think of the “trumpet” as a personal call to come into the presence of God, to look at yourself, to acknowledge your sins, and to seek the forgiveness and cleansing and renewal which only God can provide.

3. The trumpet of “jubilee” proclaimed freedom to slaves and the restoration of their inheritance:

“On the Day of Atonement sound the trumpet throughout your land. Consecrate the fiftieth year and proclaim liberty throughout the land to all its inhabitants. It shall be a jubilee for you; each one of you is to return to his family property and each to his own clan. For it is a jubilee and is to be holy for you… In this Year of Jubilee everyone is to return to his own property” (Lev 25:9-13).

“Blow the trumpet in Zion, declare a holy fast, call a sacred assembly” (Joel 2:15; cp Isa 58:1).

The trumpet of God’s message proclaims, to those who will hear and act in faith, that they can be “freed” from their past sins, and that they can become heirs of the Promised Land. When the final “jubilee” trumpet sounds, then all those who have believed, living and dead, will be freed from their shackles of mortality or death and will enter into the glorious inheritance provided by the Father to His beloved children.

4. Trumpets warned of approaching armies:

“When I bring the sword against a land, and the people of the land choose one of their men and make him their watchman, and he sees the sword coming against the land and blows the trumpet to warn the people, then if anyone hears the trumpet but does not take warning and the sword comes and takes his life, his blood will be on his own head. Since he heard the sound of the trumpet but did not take warning, his blood will be on his own head. If he had taken warning, he would have saved himself” (Eze 33:2-4).

“Moses sent them into battle, a thousand from each tribe, along with Phinehas son of Eleazar, the priest, who took with him articles from the sanctuary and the trumpets for signaling” (Num 31:6).

We should not be so much interested in accurately predicting future events as in warning ourselves and others to be ready when Christ comes. And so we look at the world around us in light of Bible prophecy. All that we see — and all that we might understand, even after the fact — strengthens us in the resolve to DO the things we should. Christ is coming in the clouds of heaven and with his holy angels (Mat 24:30,31); they are coming as an army, to take terrible vengeance on God’s enemies (Rev 19:11-16). If we hear the warning “trumpet”, and thus are waiting, and watching, and DOING, then they will not come as an army to destroy us!

5. Trumpets signaled the approach or coronation of a king:

“There have Zadok the priest and Nathan the prophet anoint him king over Israel. Blow the trumpet and shout, ‘Long live [the king]!’ ” (1Ki 1:34).

“Jehoiada brought out the king’s son and put the crown on him; he presented him with a copy of the covenant and proclaimed him king. They anointed him, and the people clapped their hands and shouted, ‘Long live the king!’… and all the people of the land were rejoicing and blowing trumpets” (2Ki 11:12,14).

Likewise, our “trumpet” hopes to signal the approach of the great King, the Lord Jesus Christ, when he comes back to the earth to sit upon his throne:

“The seventh angel sounded his trumpet, and there were loud voices in heaven, which said: ‘The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and he will reign for ever and ever’ ” (Rev 11:15).

6. The trumpet was sounded to assemble an army:

“When you go into battle in your own land against an enemy who is oppressing you, sound a blast on the trumpets” (Num 10:9; cp Num 21:6).

“God is with us; he is our leader. His priests with their trumpets will sound the battle cry… Then they cried out to the LORD. The priests blew their trumpets and the men of Judah raised the battle cry” (2Ch 13:12-15).

7. And, finally, trumpets are directly connected with the resurrection of the dead:

“For the Lord himself will come down from heaven, with a loud command, with the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet call of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first” (1Th 4:16).

“Listen, I tell you a mystery: We will not all sleep, but we will all be changed — in a flash, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, the dead will be raised imperishable, and we will be changed” (1Co 15:51,52).

The sound of the trumpet conveys, above all else, a sense of urgency, of excitement, of immediacy, of the “here and now”. A trumpet blast never lulls its hearer to sleep; it shocks him out of his slumber to sit bolt upright — eyes wide open, thoughts racing, and pulse pounding.

Listen! Get ready! The King is coming!

He’s coming for you!

Unknown God

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The god to which Aratus originally referred (in the poem quoted by Paul in Acts 17) would have been Zeus, because for many years Zeus was regarded as the greatest god in the Universe. Zeus of course is Jupiter, one of the brightest planets in the sky, and to the ancients was the most powerful of all the known astral deities.

Who was the “unknown God” whose altar is described in Acts 17?

Background: after Hipparchus discovered the precession of the equinoxes* (c 128 BC), the Greeks realized that there was “a hitherto unknown” extremely powerful God, a God of gods who was not in the known pantheon of the gods, but a God who upheld and had the power to move the entire Universe.

[* Footnote: The occurrence of the equinoxes earlier in each successive sidereal year, caused by the gradual westward movement of the equinoctial points along the ecliptic as the result of the change in direction of the earth’s axis as it turns around the axis of the ecliptic so as to describe a complete cone approximately every 25,800 years: precession is the result of the attraction of the sun and the moon upon protuberances about the earth’s equator: Webster’s New World Dictionary.]

David Ulansey writes: “At the time Hipparchus made his discovery, Mediterranean intellectual and religious life was pervaded by astrological beliefs. It was widely believed that the stars and planets were living gods, and that their movements controlled all aspects of human existence. In addition, at this time most people believed in what scholars call ‘astral immortality’: ie, the idea that after death the human soul ascends up through the heavenly spheres to an afterlife in the pure and eternal world of the stars. In such circumstances, Hipparchus’ discovery would have had profound religious implications. A new force had been detected capable of shifting the cosmic sphere: was it not likely that this new force was a sign of the activity of a new god, a god so powerful that he was capable of moving the entire universe? Given the pervasive influence in the Greco-Roman period of astrology and ‘astral immortality’, a god possessing such a literally world-shaking power would clearly have been eminently worthy of worship: since he had control over the cosmos, he would automatically have power over the astrological forces determining life on earth, and would also possess the ability to guarantee the soul a safe journey through the celestial spheres after death.” [The Origins of the Mithraic Mysteries: Cosmology and Salvation in the Ancient World]

So here we have the discovery of a new God, a God previously unknown to their culture, a God about whom nothing had been written or described, yet a God who, being outside the cosmic sphere, clearly must have had power over all the other gods they had known, for their movements were well known and constrained within the Universe (ie, the planets). This was truly a God of gods.

In Act 17, Paul is on Mars Hill addressing the Greek philosophers, who, being heavily into new ideas, had already erected an altar to “The Unknown God”.

Having been distressed that Athens was “wholly given to idolatry” (v 16), in v 22 Paul challenges their exceptionally superstitious behavior and worship, and draws their attention to the altar of the Unknown God. It may be true that many people worshipped with a sort of blind “just in case” manner, but this was not the real issue on Mars Hill. With one major exception, these people were experts in the gods they worshipped, which is why they wanted to hear Paul out (v 20) — because he seemed to be preaching a new one. Remember that Athens was the Cambridge University of the day, a place where all the theories of the Universe were discussed and threshed out together, and any new theory of the Universe from a newcomer like Paul would have been rather suspect, but, considering they were well aware of the deficiencies in their own theories, well worth a hearing just in case. And Paul did not exist in a vacuum either, and would have had a reasonably good idea of who the various gods were, and what the worship was all about.

So pointing to the altar (metaphorically speaking) of the Unknown God, he says: “Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship, him declare I unto you.”

Note that the “God” is singular, and that Paul does not treat this altar as their insurance for worshipping all the gods that they may possibly have forgotten. Clearly he is telling them (and us) that the Unknown God they were already worshipping was the very same God that Paul knew about, and had been preaching about. The unusual and remarkable thing about their worship was their ignorance; although they knew that the God must have existed (or else why bother worshipping him), they didn’t know who he was. They didn’t even know his name. But Paul seems to have known that this God was their GUT (Grand Unified Theory) that would bring everything together, but the knowledge of which so far had eluded them.

Paul wants them to understand he is going to reveal the truth to them about this God so that they would know him. And he starts…

“God that made the world (cosmos, Universe), and all things therein, seeing that he is Lord of heaven and earth…”

…by which Paul confirms that he is talking about the same super-cosmic God realised post-Hipparchus, ie, a Lord of heaven (God of gods) and earth, and, not just a mover in the cosmos, but in fact the Mover of it. This God is the answer to life, the Universe and everything. Being such a superior sort of God, he…

“dwelleth not in temples made with men’s hands; neither is worshipped with men’s hands, as though he needed anything, seeing he giveth all life, and breath, and all things.”

All of this confirmed and built upon what they already believed or suspected about this Unknown God who moved the Universe. Paul goes on…

“And hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on the face of the earth…”

(ie, he is not a tribal God, or even a national God)…

“…and hath determined the times before appointed…”

(he controls everything and it is all going according to plan)…

“…and the bounds of their habitation.”

So far Paul is not only preaching the truth about God, but he is also confirming things they already knew, believed or suspected about this God they had discovered from the witness of creation, yet culturally and historically didn’t know anything about.

Next, as per the NIV: “God did this so that men would seek him, and perhaps reach out for him and find him…”

In other words, God has built and ordered creation in such a way that men might seek Him, and perhaps even stretch themselves so far outside of themselves that they might even find God. Paul seems to be hinting that, despite their recognition of their ignorance, in some ways they were getting close… and now he, Paul, was here on Mars Hill to declare unto them the revealed truth about this unknown God, and to preach his salvation through the resurrection of the dead (v 31) (rather than ascent through astral spheres).

Paul then confirms this analysis, first with a profound philosophical truth, and then by an explicit reference to a similar philosophical truth they had already worked out for themselves…

“…though he be not far from every one of us, for in him we live, and move, and have our being; as certain of your own poets have said, ‘For we are also his offspring.’ ”

Now it may well be true that the poem was originally written about Zeus. But by the time Paul was talking on Mars Hill, Zeus had been dethroned. Jupiter (Zeus) could be seen most every night in the sky, moving about through the cosmic sphere as planets are wont to do. But since Hipparchus had discovered the precession of the equinoxes, clearly there was a new force to be reckoned with who was Lord of Zeus, far above all principalities and powers, the creator of both the gods and of man; and although hitherto invisible to mortal eyes, by his power and existence had been evidenced by the things they themselves had discovered…

“…because that which may be known of God is manifest in them; for God hath shewed it unto them. For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even his ETERNAL POWER and Godhead, so that they are without excuse” (Rom 1:19-20).

And so Paul concludes his theme by introducing repentance, the day of judgment, and the resurrection of the dead. Significantly, and suggestive of another link with Romans 1, few of his audience were impressed. Some mocked: and others said they would hear him again of this matter. But they were truly without excuse…

“Because that, when they knew God, they glorified him not as God (should have been glorified), neither were thankful; but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened.”

— surely a reference to the Greek philosophers —

“Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools…”

Whether or not the poem was written about Zeus, by the time Paul refers to it Zeus was not regarded as the supreme God (at least not by the more advanced philosophers in Athens) because the Unknown God who moved the Universe had supplanted Zeus. Yet the idea expressed in the poem was still true insofar as it referred to the qualities of an ultimate God of gods who created all things. So Paul could safely transfer the use it on Mars Hill, and the fact he got away with it suggests that they had already done this themselves.

In any case, if it was Zeus and none other, then from Acts 17 we would have to conclude that Paul was teaching that Zeus was the God in whom we live and move and have our being, and they would happily conclude that Zeus was the God that Paul was preaching.

This cannot be true, however, because Paul was preaching all about The Unknown God, and Zeus was very well known to them. (JP)

Viper of Isa 59

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We do not here enter upon a lengthy discussion of the serpent in Scripture. We know it to be a symbol of the deceitfulness of sin from the beginning. (This is not to discount its literality in the Garden of Eden, of course.)

Viper (“Epheh”)

The word “viper” in Isa 59:5 (Hebrew “epheh”) is an exceptional word. It may be a term that encompasses all of the vipers found in Palestine — although (in contrast to some of the familiar vipers) the type Isaiah has in mind does lay eggs. “Epheh” is from a root meaning to “hiss”, and therefore the word emphasizes the power of the tongue — for it was by verbal communication that the original serpent implanted the lie in the mind of Eve. If it had been otherwise (or if the serpent of Gen 3 were a symbol only) there would have been no real force to Paul’s allusion in 2Co 11:3,4: “…As the serpent beguiled Eve… he that cometh preacheth another Christ…” (the power of speech bringing the “lie” again!).

This word “epheh” is not the ordinary Hebrew word for serpent. It appears but three times:

  • Job 20:16 — “The viper’s tongue shall slay him.” From this we learn the viper was deadly, as is the tongue of the wicked speaking lies. It was recognized as a miracle that Paul escaped death after being bitten by one (Acts 28:3,5,6).

  • Isa 30:6 — The viper is said to inhabit the “land of trouble and anguish” — the wilderness of Sinai. From this we learn that those who are bitten by it and follow its ways are led at last to the “wilderness of death”.

  • Isa 59:5 — We should like to examine this verse and its context more thoroughly.

All are Under Sin

In Rom 3:9-20 Paul cites Isa 59 along with other verses to prove “both Jews and Gentiles, that they are all under sin”. In vv 13,14 he stresses the sinfulness of the tongue, with the “poison of asps” (quoting from Psa 5:9; 140:3; 10:7). Then, in vv 15-17 he stresses the feet of the wicked — pointing to their evil “ways” (quoting from Isa 59:7,8).

Both these views of sin (as evil deeds and evil words) are summarized in Isa 59:3:

Evil DEEDS Evil WORDS
Gross, OPEN sins “Your hands are defiled with blood” “Your lips have spoken lies”
Small, HIDDEN sins “Your fingers… with iniquity” “Your tongue hath muttered perverseness”

Here we might stop and examine ourselves a little more ruthlessly than is our custom. Are we proud of our open and forthright “righteousness”, while at the same time using our public profession as a cloak for small, petty, hidden (or so we think) sins? Do we do good with the outstretched hand, but never get around to controlling the wayward little finger? Do we profess, for example, complete truthfulness in open communion with our brethren, but yet mutter in private conversation little “white lies”, little slanders, little criticisms to no profit and great hurt?

This in fact we all do — for “there is none righteous, no, not one” (Rom 3:10). Every one of us is separated from God by what we are, by what (try as we might) we cannot really help being — SINNERS! — “Your iniquities have separated between you and your God” (Isa 59:2).

With this background we progress to v 5. This verse lays stress upon the “eggs”, the “seed” of the serpent — and therefore directs our meditations toward Gen 3:15, the age-old enmity between the seed of the serpent and the seed of the woman.

The “serpent” is the thinking of the unenlightened mind, or the mind superficially enlightened in the Truth but yet impervious to its influence. The “serpent” is the “lust of the flesh”, an integral part of our mental make-up inherited from Adam. Its seed, or offspring, is first sin and then death. This “genealogical table” is outlined by James (1:14,15):

  1. In the “first generation”, “Lust” (or the Serpent) “marries” the “Strange woman”;

  2. In the “second generation”, their union brings forth “Sin” (another “serpent”);

  3. In the “third generation”, “Sin” begets “Death” (the third “serpent”); and

  4. There is no “fourth generation”: “Death” is the end of his “line”!

A man is tempted by the “strange woman”, the evil thought, and he is drawn away by his own lust. He becomes the embodiment of the serpent, In a figurative sense, he becomes “Lust”. Lust, in the carelessness of his youth, begets the illegitimate son Sin. And Sin, after a long and vigorous but ruinous life, begets Death the feeble grandson. This “genealogy” has three generations only and always, never two (for Sin cannot stop short of Death) and never four (for Death ends all)! The “seed of the serpent” runs its course and then finds its way back to the dust from whence it came. But never fear, this is not the end of the Serpent clan! There are an infinite number of collateral lines, because new sons and daughters are, so to speak, continually being adopted into the family!

“There was no man”

So what do we do — all of us who are “proved (charged) under sin”? If we have any particle of true enlightenment or desire God-ward, we try to destroy the serpent within us. We try to crucify the flesh with the lusts thereof (Rom 6:6-16). We try to crush the serpent eggs before they are hatched (v 5).

But we fail — inevitably, dismally. We crush the eggs beneath our feet, but the vipers break forth anyway. “That which is crushed breaketh out into a viper.” And the bite of the new-born is just as deadly as its parent. There is no escape: Our iniquities have separated us from God.

At this point comes the inevitable question: “Is the LORD’s hand shortened, that it cannot save?” Our Father answers in the negative. Despite outward appearances, there is hope, and the answer comes in v 16 — “He saw that there was no man” — Not a single man anywhere that could redeem his brother (Psa 49:7) by slaying his enemy the serpent and his seed. Not a single man who could crush the viper’s eggs without himself being bitten fatally. “Therefore his own arm brought salvation” — God could not, would not, leave man in such a hopeless condition. His purpose to fill the earth with His glory (Num 14:21; Hab 2:14) in perfect men of His image (Gen 1:26; Col 1:15; 3:10) must be fulfilled.

“God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son…” (John 3:16).

“God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself…” (2Co 5:19).

“God sending His own Son…” (Rom 8:3).

“No man” (v 16) was directly involved in this campaign against the serpent power. No man, that is, except the special man God would provide. Therefore God’s first promise to fallen man was of the “seed” of the woman (Gen 3:15) — a man with no human father (Luke 1:35); “made of a woman” (Gal 4:4); yet at the same time “made sin” (2Co 5:21); “in the likeness of sinful flesh” (Rom 8:3):

“Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took part of the same; that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the devil” (Heb 2:14).

The implications of Christ’s humanity are of greatest familiarity to us, since this is the ground on which we defend the Truth against many popular errors. But let us always keep in mind, and be thankful for, Christ’s “divinity” properly understood. However it was and in how many different ways God “made this man strong for Himself” (Psa 80:15,17) we cannot know as a certainty. It is possible in speculation to approach the folly of trying to examine and dissect “scientifically” the greatest “mystery” of all: God manifest in the flesh (1Ti 3:16) for our redemption.

Let us be content to have as a foundation the beautiful promise of Isa 59: There is no ordinary man (v 16) who can completely and successfully crush the eggs of the viper (v 5). But Yahweh’s hand is not shortened by our failures (v 1): His “Arm” will bring salvation through a life of perfect righteousness (vv 16,17). In death and resurrection, His “Arm” will become a Redeemer to turn the effect of transgression away from His children (v 20) and establish God’s covenant with His seed forever (v 21).

It was this awesome panorama of God’s plan of redemption that Paul had before his eyes when he penned the letter to the Romans: “For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God; being justified freely by His grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus: whom God hath set forth to be a mercy seat through faith in his blood, to declare His righteousness for the remission of sins…” (Rom 3:23-25).

Temptation

Temptation is a state experienced when a person thinks thoughts, considers intentions or desires things which are contrary to the thoughts, intents and desires of Almighty God. When those thoughts are fulfilled through action, those intentions translated into achievements and those desires satisfied by accomplishment, then sin is committed. Sin unrepented of by the sinner and not forgiven by the Father leads to death. Temptation is a link in the chain of circumstances that leads to death (Jam 1:14,15).

Temptation and life

Temptation is also a link in the chain of circumstances that can lead to life. Temptation is necessary. It is the means whereby faith is tested (Jam 1:2,3,12).

Temptation is universal

It is no respecter of persons. No one escapes its influence. It is not confined by time or place, nor restricted by age, social standing, intellect, race, gender or creed (Gen 3:6; 2 Sam. 11:2-5; Mat 4:1-11; Rom 3:10,12; 1Co 10:13; Heb 4:15).

Temptation — its origin

Temptation can arise because of our situation. The people we are with, the place we are in, and the time may all have an influence (Gen 3; Jos 7; Mat 19:3; 26:14-16; Luk 20:21-26). Temptation may arise because of our unique emotional constitution. Not everyone exposed to the same situation will be affected in the same way (1Co 8:7-13).

Temptation can be overcome

We have been promised that we shall have the strength for all eventualities (1Co 10:13).

Temptation — its conquest

Overcoming temptation involves appreciating that danger exists, recognizing the cause, and taking appropriate action. Sometimes that action involves avoidance, sometimes confrontation (Pro. 4:14,15; Mat 5:29,30; Mar 8:33; Jam 4:7,8).

We must not place ourselves in situations where temptation will arise. We must remove ourselves from circumstances where temptation has arisen (Psa 1:1; Luk 4:30).

We should seek the company of those who are wise and strong, and who will influence us for good (Pro 9:6; 13:20; 22:24).

We must starve our wayward emotions of food (Rom 13:14; Eph 4:22).

We must be quick and decisive when we are confronted with temptation, and positive in our reaction against it (Pro 1:10-15; Mat 16:23; Heb 12:1,2).

We must be awake to and aware of the insidious nature of temptation (Mat 26:41; Luk 12:15; 1Co 10:12; 1Pe 5:8).

Inadequate on our own to conquer every temptation, we must seek God’s help in prayer and through His Word. We have a pattern of perfection. We need to emulate and adopt that model (Mat 6:13; 26:41; Heb 12:1,2; 2Pe 2:9).

Sin breeds sin. Overcoming one temptation strengthens us to overcome the next (Jam 1:2-4).

Ten nations

In dealing with the Gentile nations, TEN may be a significant number:

  • The land promised to Abraham is defined as the land of ten kings (Gen 15:19-21).
  • The great image of Nebuchadnezzar’s dream is struck on the feet and toes (ten?) by the little stone which represents Christ (Dan 2).
  • The great and terrible fourth beast of Dan 7 had ten horns (Dan 7:7;24; cp Rev 12:3; 13:1; 17:7,12).
  • Ten nations are listed in Psa 83, which make themselves the enemies of Israel.
  • Ten nations are listed in Eze 38:1-6, as participating in (or, in some cases, perhaps, witnessing) the great invasion of Israel in the Last Days.

Isaiah has a section of ten “burdens” upon (presumably) Gentile nations:

  • Babylon, or Assyria (Isa 13; 14:1-27),
  • Philistia (Isa 14:28-32),
  • Moab (Isa 15; 16);
  • Damascus (Isa 17);
  • Egypt (Isa 18-20);
  • the desert of the sea (Isa 21:1-10);
  • Dumah (Isa 21:11,12);
  • Arabia (Isa 21:13-17);
  • the valley of vision (Isa 22); and
  • Tyre (Isa 23).

Jeremiah has a similar grouping of approximately ten Gentile nations, against which he issues oracles of warning and doom: Egypt (Jer 46); the Philistines (Jer 47:1-7); Moab (Jer 48); the Ammonites (Jer 49:1-6); Edom (Jer 49:7-22); Damascus, or Syria (Jer 49:23-27); Kedar and Hazor (Jer 49:28-33); Elam (Jer 49:34-39); and Babylon (Jer 50; 51).

In one single prophecy (Jer 25), Jeremiah enumerates approximately ten nations (perhaps as many as 13 or 14, depending on how they are grouped), nations that are destined to drink the cup of the LORD’s wrath — namely, Egypt, Uz, the Philistines, Edom, Moab, Ammon, Tyre and Sidon, Dedan, Tema, Buz, Arabia, Zimri, Elam, Media, and Sheshach (a cryptogram for Babylon).

Ezekiel also has a similar grouping of judgments against Gentile nations — not quite as many in number: Ammon (Eze 25:1-7), Moab (Eze 25:8-11), Edom (Eze 25:12-14), Philistia (Eze 25:15-17), Tyre (Eze 26-28:19), Sidon (Eze 28:20-24), and Egypt (Eze 29-32)

There is quite a bit of overlapping among the different lists, but there are still somewhat more than ten nations in total which are identified in these lists. Quite possibly, however, ten should be seen as a figurative number, of ALL the enemies of Israel in the last days — which will surely be defeated and destroyed by divine Power if they attack God’s People and Land.

Notice, for example, how “all languages and nations” seem to equate to TEN men in Zec 8:23.

Sometimes, however, TEN seems to signify “more than a few” or “quite a large number”, without being specific: Gen 31:7,41; Num 14:22; Job 19:3; 1Sa 1:8; Ecc 7:19.


Also see Lesson, Beasts, heads, and horns.

Ten toes, identity

Rome’s 10 Toes and the Gap

“Finally, there will be a fourth kingdom, strong as iron — for iron breaks and smashes everything — and as iron breaks things to pieces, so it will crush and break all the others. Just as you saw that the feet and toes were partly of baked clay and partly of iron, so this will be a divided kingdom; yet it will have some of the strength of iron in it, even as you saw iron mixed with clay. As the toes were partly iron and partly clay, so this kingdom will be partly strong and partly brittle. And just as you saw the iron mixed with baked clay, so the people will be a mixture and will not remain united, any more than iron mixes with clay. In the time of those kings, the God of heaven will set up a kingdom that will never be destroyed, nor will it be left to another people. It will crush all those kingdoms and bring them to an end, but it will itself endure forever” (Dan 2:40-44).

It has been argued that there must be a continuity between the iron Roman Empire and the ten toes, part of iron and part of clay. And that the theory that the ten toe kingdoms (and the ten horns, and the ten kings of Revelation) are 10 Arab nations do not provide such continuity. Implicit in this argument is the assumption that the ten Roman toes represent ten independent European nations that arise out of Roman territory in medieval times and beyond.

However, what sets Babylonia, Medo-Persia, Greece, and Rome apart from all kingdoms in world history is that each successively ruled over Jerusalem and the Land of Promise. This leads one to think that the ten “Roman” toes must also participate in the “treading down” of Jerusalem, and this was never true of the European provinces listed by JT in Eureka.

So were there ten “toes” which did participate with the Roman power in the subjugation of Jerusalem? What follows are quotations from Josephus’ “Wars of the Jews”:

“So Vespasian sent his son Titus from Achaia… to Alexandria, to bring back with him from thence the fifth and tenth legions, while he himself, when he has passed over the Hellespont, came by land into Syria, where he gathered together the Roman forces, with a considerable number of auxiliaries from the kings of that region” (III, i, 3).

As the Roman legions, with their “considerable number of auxiliaries”, were making their way into position for an attack on Jerusalem, Jewish rebels mounted an attack on Ashkelon (III, ii), which was repulsed.

“There was also a considerable number of auxiliaries got together, that came from the kings Antiochus [Syria] and Agrippa [Galilee], and Sohemus [Iturea], each of them contributing one thousand footmen, that were archers, and a thousand horsemen. Malchus also, the king of Arabia, sent a thousand horsemen, besides five thousand footmen, the greatest part of whom were archers; so that the whole army, including the auxiliaries sent by the kings, as well horsemen as footmen, when all were united together, amounted to sixty thousand, besides the servants, who, as they followed in vast numbers, so because they had been trained up in war and the rest, ought not to be distinguished from the fighting men” (III, iv, 2).

Then there were the Idumeans, who were particularly vilified by the Jews, because they at one time seemed to be fighting on Israel’s side (IV, v).

So a brief survey of Josephus’s “Wars of the Jews” yields at least six Roman “toes” assisting in trampling down Jerusalem: Syria (with other kings of that region), Ashkelon, Galilee, Iturea, Arabia, and Edom.

Further, Josephus also mentions that Jerusalem was situated in the center of ten other provinces in the whole of Judea, over which it reigned supreme (3:3:5). Some of these other provinces not listed above might well have provided “auxiliaries” to the Roman legions for the assault on Jerusalem, making a full total of ten.

So the continuity is this: Rome (with its Arab auxiliaries) trampling down Jerusalem in AD 70. Then a long “gap” while there are no appreciable numbers of Jews in the Land of Promise, until the Last Days… when the Jews return in large numbers to Palestine, forming an independent nation of Israel, and when out of the old Roman Empire there arise another ten or so Arab “toe kingdoms” to challenge Israel in the Land.

Tests

  1. THE WORLD TEST. Is it worldly? Will it make me worldly to do it (Joh 15:19; 1Jo 2:15-17)?
  2. THE QUALITY TEST. Is it good for me physically, emotionally, and spiritually (Rom 12:9)?
  3. THE TEMPLE TEST. Can I do it when I remember my body is God’s temple and must not be marred or misused (1Co 6:19)?
  4. THE GLORY TEST. Will it glorify my Lord, or will it on the other hand possibly bring shame to his name (1Co 6:20; 10:32)?
  5. THE BLESSING TEST. Can I honestly ask God’s blessing on it and be sure I’ll not regret doing it (Pro 10:22; Rom 15:29)?
  6. THE REPUTATION TEST. Is it apt to damage my testimony for the Lord (Phi 2:15)?
  7. THE CONSIDERATION TEST. Am I being considerate of others and the effect this might have on them (Rom 14:7,21)?
  8. THE APPEARANCE TEST. Will it look bad? Does it have the appearance of what is wrong or suspicious (1Th 5:22)?
  9. THE WEIGHT TEST. Could this slacken or sidetrack me in running the Christian race (Heb 12:1; 1Co 9:24)?
  10. THE COMING OF CHRIST TEST. Would I be ashamed to be found doing this when he comes again (1Jo 2:28)?
  11. THE COMPANION TEST. Can I invite Christ to go with me and participate with me in this (Mat 28:20; Col 3:17)?
  12. THE PEACE TEST. After having prayed about it, do I have perfect peace about doing it (Col 3:15; Phi 4:6-7)?

The OT is…

The Old Testament is a book of unfulfilled prophecies… fulfilled in his life by Christ the prophet.

The Old Testament is a book of unexplained ceremonies… explained in his death by Christ the priest.

The Old Testament is a book of unsatisfied longings… satisfied in his resurrection by Christ the king.