Cutting up the “baby”

An old proverb warns against “throwing out the baby with the bathwater”. (In societies where almost everyone has a bathtub and running water, and where the bathwater drains out of the tub at the flip of a switch, the reader may have to reflect on this proverb just a bit!) The point, of course, is to distinguish between primary and secondary matters, and to treat each accordingly.

A well-known Bible story deals with a baby also. Once the wise king Solomon was called upon to judge a case involving two women and one baby (1Ki 3:16-28). It seems that one mother had accidentally smothered her baby, and, discovering this, had switched her dead baby with the living baby of her neighbor. Now both mothers stood before the king, each claiming that the remaining live baby was hers.

“Then said the king, ‘The one saith, This is my son that liveth, and thy son is the dead: and the other saith, Nay; but thy son is the dead, and my son is the living… Bring me a sword.’ And they brought a sword before the king. And the king said, ‘Divide the living child in two, and give half to the one, and half to the other.’ Then spake the woman whose the living child was unto the king, for she yearned upon her son, and she said, ‘O my lord, give her the living child, and in no wise slay it.’ But the other said, ‘Let it be neither mine nor thine, but divide it.’ Then the king answered and said, ‘Give her the living child, and in no wise slay it: she is the mother thereof.’ And all Israel heard of the judgment which the king had judged; and they feared the king: for they saw that the wisdom of God was in him, to do judgment” (1Ki 3:23-28).

The wise king understood clearly that the true mother would desire more than anything that her baby live, even if it were in the hands of another woman. Its life was infinitely more precious than anyone else’s “property rights”! But the impostor (to satisfy her pride, or her injured feelings, or out of sheer spite?) said, “Divide it!”

Sometimes (almost always!) “dividing the baby” will have disastrous results, for everyone concerned. New and young converts to the truth are characterized in Scriptures as “babes” (Mat 1:25; Luk 10:21; Rom 2:20; 1Co 3:1; Heb 5:13; 1Pe 2:2), easily influenced and even manipulated by their elders — their fathers and “mothers”.

Ecclesial controversies may have (or may seem to have) an invigorating effect on some “elders” and “parents”. It can be exhilarating to “stand firm for the truth”, regardless of the circumstances, to fight for purity, to defend one’s fellowship stand, to attack the faith of others, etc, etc. But the same controversies can be very damaging, even perhaps fatal, to the “babes” in the truth who (not really by their own choice) become a party to them.

So this exhortation is especially to the older, experienced brother and sister: Be careful how you “fight” for the truth. Be careful that any “charges” you bring against others are true, and fair, and fairly stated — not colored by prejudice or pride or anger. Be careful how you treat others who may be part on the One Body as well as you.

And be very careful before you do anything that could be construed by the wise King and Judge as “cutting up the baby”! Because… the “baby” belongs to him!

D source, problems

One of the absolute cornerstones of the entire Documentary Hypothesis (DH) is that Deuteronomy was written during the early part of the reign of Josiah, so as to provide justification for his reforms. According to the critical scholars, the “book of the law” that was found by Hilkiah was this brand-spanking-new book of Deuteronomy, written down as a “pious fraud” so as to convince the people that the reforms of Josiah were exactly that: reforms that hearkened back to the words of Moses hundreds of years before. This issue of the dating of Deuteronomy is so important to the DH that I would like to take the time to explain the DH position just a little bit more. The easiest way to do this is to quote a few paragraphs from “Who Wrote the Bible?” by Richard Elliot Friedman.

P 23: “By the beginning of the nineteenth century, the two-source hypothesis was expanded. Scholars found evidence that there were not two major source documents in the Pentateuch after all — there were four!… [In 1805] a young German scholar, WML De Wette, observed in his doctoral dissertation that the fifth of the Five Books of Moses, the book of Deuteronomy, was strikingly different in its language from the four books that preceded it… De Wette hypothesized that Deuteronomy was a separate, fourth source.”

Pp 101-102: “The book that the priest Hilkiah said he found in the Temple in 622 BC was Deuteronomy. This is not a new discovery. [Many early church fathers held this position.] In Germany in 1805, W. M. L. De Wette investigated the origin of Deuteronomy. He argued that Deuteronomy was the book that Hilkiah handed over to King Josiah. But De Wette denied that the book was by Moses. He said that Deuteronomy was not an old, Mosaic book that had been lost for a long time and then found by the priest Hilkiah. Rather, De Wette said, Deuteronomy was written not long before it was ‘found’ in the Temple, and the ‘finding’ was just a charade. The book was written to provide grounds for Josiah’s religious reform… From the law of centralization and other matters, De Wette concluded that the book of Deuteronomy was not a long-lost document, but rather was written not long before its ‘discovery’ by Hilkiah. Though it may have been written for legitimate purposes, it was nevertheless falsely attributed to Moses. De Wette referred to it as ‘pious fraud’.”

No wonder Wellhausen, considered the father of the Documentary Hypothesis, himself described De Wette as the real father of the idea! This idea of Deuteronomy being a ‘pious fraud’ written during the time of Josiah is absolutely essential to the DH. I intend to show that it could not possibly have been written during this time period.

For starters, the reforms enacted by Josiah were not without powerful opposition. Prior to Josiah’s reign, Manasseh had reigned for 55 years and Amon had reigned for 2 years. In 2Ki 21 and 2Ch 33 we read about the idolatrous practices that went on during their reigns, and it is easy for us to forget that these practices were conducted with the assistance of professional “priests”. These were powerful people who would not have stood by and allowed Josiah to pull off this stunt of ‘”finding” a supposedly ancient book that was really just a recent creation. Now we would not expect their literature to last, although we would reasonably expect to find some hints, either in Kings, Chronicles, or prophets like Jeremiah, or their opposition. But none is to be found.

In Deuteronomy we find several things that would be expected were the book really intended as a “pious fraud” to help Josiah’s reforms along, and also several things that are either irrelevant or even potentially counterproductive to his reforms. I will now concentrate on the “expected but missing” elements, and later on the “irrelevant or potentially counterproductive” ones. Both sets are devastating to the DH.

The first of the “expected but missing” items relates to what critical scholars claim is actually a supporting element of their theory — the mention of kings in Deu 17. In Deu 17:14-20, we read of how the Israelites will one day “want a king like the nations around them”, about how this king should not multiply horses or wives for himself, and about how he should write out a copy of the law for himself so that he will constantly consider it. According to critical scholars this is just a little too neat. Surely Moses could not have written these things hundreds of years before they were fulfilled in detail. In other words, the critical scholars believe that whenever prophetic words are closely or exactly fulfilled the only reasonable explanation is that the words were not prophecy, but were rather written after the fact. Thus, they cite this section in support of the DH.

On the contrary, it must be remembered that the primary goal of Deuteronomy, according to the DH, was to provide justification for Josiah’s reforms. If that is the case, and if the writer of Deuteronomy was willing to create the supposed prophecy of Moses with regard to kings of Israel, then why stop there? Only seven vv about kings? Surely any effort at creating Deuteronomy as a work of pious fraud would have gone on, making it look as if Moses were saying that people should honor and follow any kings who do obey the law. Where are the words about a king supporting the priesthood? And if these words were written in a way that condemned the particular weaknesses of Solomon, where are the words that condemn the idolatrous practices of Manasseh and other unfaithful kings? It seems ridiculous to suppose that the writer of this pious fraud would condemn Solomon’s practices but not the practices or the kings previous to Josiah, especially when (a) these later practices were the ones that Josiah was trying to get rid of, and (b) these later practices were the height of the evils conducted by the kings of the southern kingdom of Judah.

Deuteronomy also says absolutely nothing that deals with the division of Israel into northern and southern kingdoms. By the time of Josiah the northern kingdom had come and gone, and only the southern kingdom of Judah was left. Where are the words in Deuteronomy in which Moses exhorts those of the faithful remnant to learn from the lessons of what would happen to their unfaithful brethren?

The next item concerns another item that critical scholars use to bolster their theory about Deuteronomy. This relates to the phrase “beyond the Jordan” or “on the other side of the Jordan”. At issue is the opening verse of the book, the first part of which reads “These are the words which Moses hath spoken unto all Israel, beyond the Jordan.” (YLT — I cite this one here because in the refs in Deu and Jos where this phrase literally occurs in the Heb, most modern translations seek to obviate the confusion by wording the translation less than literally, which in this case obscures the evidence.) Why, the critical scholars ask, would Moses describe the side of the Jordan that he was on as “beyond the Jordan”? The critical scholars submit that this is a mistake in the “pious fraud”. But an honest look into the phrase reveals that, just as “Transjordan” has been used in modern times to describe the area east of the Jordan even by those in the region, so Moses used this phrase properly. Even in Deu, “beyond the Jordan” is used in Deu 3:8,20,25; and Deu 11:30 to describe the area west of the Jordan. If you read these in context they might not seem like problems because the speaker is admittedly on the eastern side of the Jordan at the time the words were spoken, but in Jos 9:1 and Jos 22:7 we come to a different situation. In these refs the speaker is on the west side of the Jordan, and refers to the west side as “beyond the Jordan”. This is permissible because in context the speaker has been dealing with the eastern part of the Jordan, and is now referring back to the western part. In Deu 1:1; 4:41,46,47,49, Moses is likewise “permitted” to speak of the side of the Jordan that he is on as “beyond the Jordan” because in context he is exhorting the Israelites concerning how they ought to live once they cross over.

If Deuteronomy was written as a “pious fraud” to provide justification of Josiah’s reforms, then why does it deal with so many things that are irrelevant to Josiah’s reforms, along with some things that would actually speak against them?

For example, in Deu 20, there are laws about how warfare is to be conducted by the Israelites. These have nothing to do with any of the events of Josiah’s reign. What is the point of the detailed laws about identifying clean and unclean animals in Deu 14? Even though the Jews were quite idolatrous during Josiah’s reign, there is no evidence in Kings, Chronicles, or the prophets that they had forsaken this particular aspect of the Law. What would be the point in describing the cities of refuge in Deu 18, particularly when some of the cities were outside the territory controlled by Josiah? The rule about taking foreign women captive in battle, or ‘cursed is everyone who hangs on a tree’, making a parapet upon your roof, not mixing wool with linen, and not muzzling the ox while it is treading out the grain? These are just samples that I selected while skimming through Deuteronomy that have nothing to do with Josiah’s reforms, but make sense as part of Moses’ final exhortation to the people.

In skimming through Deuteronomy there were an item that struck me as being contrary to the aim’s of Josiah’s reforms: the mention of the exclusion from the assembly of those of the Ammonites or Moabites and their descendants. Introducing these as part of this “pious fraud” strikes me as incredible because they would speak against the founder of the dynastic line to which Josiah belonged: David. This matter is further complicated by an issue that is in fact magnified when the full claims of the DH are considered. While in this study we have particularly been focusing upon the issue of the authorship of the Pentateuch, it is worth realizing that according to the DH the “Deuteronomistic History” was written at the same time as Deuteronomy. This “History” refers to the historical books that begin where Deuteronomy ends and ends essentially with Josiah, and refers to the books of Joshua, Judges, Ruth, Samuel, and Kings. (Yes I am aware that Kings deals with events past the time of Josiah. The DH posits a second Deuteronomistic writer who wrapped things up for the period from Josiah to the release of Jehoiachin, and that this second writer may have even been the first writer just tying up loose ends a few years after the “first edition” came out only to be followed by Josiah’s sudden death. See ch 7 of Friedman’s “Who Wrote the Bible” for more information about this second Deuteronomist, but note that this “second edition” talk only concerns the books that follow Deuteronomy, not Deuteronomy itself.)

Back to the main point: this issue of Deu 23:3 effectively speaking against David, I mentioned that this matter is further complicated by an issue that is in fact magnified when the full claims of the DH are considered. I am speaking here of the book of Ruth. My question is, why in the world would the Deuteronomist write a section of law that would effectively speak against David because of the Moabite blood in his veins, and then proceed to write a book whose main point is the faithfulness of a Moabite ancestor of David?? In fact, why write the book of Ruth at all during the period of Josiah’s reign?

But the most fundamental problem with the DH as it relates to Deuteronomy is the commandment to build an altar and assemble at the Mt Ebal/Mt Gerizim/Shechem area, commanded by Moses in Deu 11:26-32; 27:1-14 and fulfilled in Jos 8:30-35. Related to this is the matter concerning “the place where God’s name will dwell”, mentioned repeatedly in Deuteronomy.

According to critical scholars, the key reason for writing Deuteronomy was to provide a justification for the centralization of worship in Jerusalem. So then why in Deuteronomy would we find this key scene being twice described, whereby Shechem would be so honored and Jerusalem would not be mentioned in any way whatsoever? In fact, the only explanation that would even be remotely plausible would be to note that the Deuteronomist had no choice but to mention this because it was a well-known authentic part of national history. But even this explanation defeats the purpose of the book, and even if it were a historical event it would be fully expected to either (a) leave the incident out, or (b) construct it in such a way that the event was intended to foreshadow the different place where God would cause His name to dwell. Including the event and relating it the way that it is recorded is not at all helpful to Josiah’s reforms, it that is in fact the purpose for writing Deuteronomy.

There is no mention of Jerusalem at all in Deuteronomy; not even a hint. (Some would argue that there are maybe a couple of hints. I will not debate the point. My point is that there are no clear hints that would be readily apparent to the people of Josiah’s day.) The later importance of Jerusalem was certainly known to God in Moses’ day, and in Gen 14 (Salem) and Gen 22 (Mt Moriah) there are the first hints about the appropriateness of this later importance. But there is nothing in Deuteronomy, which makes no sense if indeed it was written as a “pious fraud” during Josiah’s reign.

This is also the issue of “the prophet like me” in Deu 18. What purpose does this serve if indeed Deuteronomy were written to bolster the claims of Josiah’s call to reformation? Nobody in Josiah’s reign would fit this, except perhaps Josiah himself. But in the book of Joshua, Joshua very clearly fulfills the initial aspect of this prophecy, thus deadening the claim that it was written so as to get the people to follow Josiah. If Deuteronomy really were the “pious fraud” that the critical scholars claim, then the “prophecy” of the coming prophet should have been left unfilled by the Deuteronomistic Historian, so that Josiah could be claimed to fulfill this prophetic role.

(DB)

Daniel 2 image

It really was an astonishing dream which Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon had. No wonder he came out of it with a scream. And it must have a terribly important meaning, something to do with himself, for hadn’t he seen his own face in it?

Well, he had an entire trade union of sorcerers, soothsayers and magicians to be his interpreters in all mysterious matters. They’d tell him what it meant!

But could they? He was pretty sure that more than once they had “conspired to tell (him) misleading and wicked things” (Dan 2:9). So to test them he demanded that they tell him first the details of the dream. Then he’d be prepared to listen to their interpretation of it.

Of course, that stumped them completely. So, “Off with their heads!”

But in the nick of time, there stepped forward a young Hebrew prophet claiming that with the help of his God both the dream and its meaning would be made known.

An image of metal

Sure enough, next day Daniel began to spell out the dream, detail by detail, while Nebuchadnezzar sat there on his throne wide-eyed with astonishment.

What the king had seen was a great metallic image with:

  1. A head of gold.
  2. Chest and arms of silver.
  3. Belly and thighs of bronze.

  4. Legs of iron.
  5. Feet of mixed iron and clay.

What did it stand for? Daniel explained that here was a succession of empires, beginning with the empire of Babylon — of course, for that face had Nebuchadnezzar’s own features.

Its meaning

The identification of these empires is easy to anyone who knows a bit of ancient history. Indeed, other places in the Bible provide simple clues to confirm that the sequence goes like this:

  1. Gold / Babylon
  2. Silver / Persia
  3. Bronze / Greece
  4. Iron / Rome

But why stop there? Since the time of Rome there have been quite a few other empires, most of them every bit as important as these. What about the Mongol empire of Genghis Khan? the T’ang and Ching dynasties? the Aztec and Mayan empires? Philip II’s Spain? Napoleon’s Imperial France? the British Empire? The British Empire of Queen Victoria encompassed fully 25% of the land mass and population of the whole world, considerably more than did any of the four “empires” of Daniel!

An important qualification

There is a simple explanation why these other empires are not part of the prophecy. The vision was not intended to be a prophetic history lesson about all future world empires. These four empires were the powers that would oppress the Jews, Daniel’s people, in their own Land of Israel. This qualification explains what would otherwise be two difficulties:

  1. The third kingdom of bronze is described (Dan 2:39) as “(ruling) over the whole earth”. But the Greek empire of Alexander the Great, big as it was, did not cover all the earth, not even all known civilization. However, the Old Testament word eretz, translated “earth”, also very commonly means “land” — and quite especially the Land of Israel. Alexander incorporated Israel into his growing empire.

  2. Secondly, the empire of Rome is described as “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” (Dan 2:40). Yet this “crush-and-break” description seems inappropriate to Rome. For wherever the Romans went, they took the blessings of law and order and settled government, the famous “Pax Romana”. But — once again — these words were grimly true concerning Rome’s relations with that little province of Judea. Unable to tame these turbulent Jews, the frustrated Romans eventually trampled down Jerusalem and leveled the land from end to end. Jews were deported everywhere, and a decree was issued that they must not return to their own land. So Daniel’s prophecy — when taken as relating to Israel — turned out to be marvelously exact in this detail also.

Bible students will readily recognize the importance of Israel, and especially Jerusalem, to God’s purpose. The Old Testament was written by Hebrews, for Hebrews, about Hebrews, in the land of the Hebrews, and in the language of the Hebrews. And the New Testament, though spread across the Roman world in Greek, was also written — predominantly — by Hebrews and about Hebrews, and in language rich with allusions to the Old Testament Hebrew Scriptures.

So the image which Daniel saw and interpreted began with Babylon, not because Babylon was the first “world empire”, but because Babylon was the first Gentile power to rule over God’s people in Jerusalem. The Persians were the second, but they did not “conquer” Jerusalem — they inherited it from a distance, simply by defeating the Babylonians. And similarly with the Greeks: their rule of Jerusalem came with the defeat of the Persians at a place quite remote from Jerusalem, in what is now Turkey.

And then there was Rome. Jerusalem passed into the possession of the Romans in their annexation of the Seleucid portion (called ‘the king of the north’ in Dan. 11) of the Grecian empire, in what is now Syria.

In proportion?

If we assume that the components of the image refer to the Gentile kingdoms during the times when they ruled over a Jewish Jerusalem, then a remarkable proportion becomes apparent:

  1. Babylon conquered and trampled down Jerusalem in the days of Nebuchadnezzar (c 609 BC.). The time during which Babylon was destined to rule over Jerusalem was scripturally designated, as 70 years (Jer 25:12; 29:10). The prophet Daniel, while in captivity in Babylon, understood by reading Jeremiah’s writings that the period of “70 years” was coming to an end (Dan 9:2).

  2. True to Jeremiah’s prophecy, Cyrus of Persia conquered Babylon in 539 BC, ending the Jewish captivity in Babylon. Ezr 1:1 refers to this event as the fulfillment of Jeremiah’s prophecy. Some Jews returned to their land, and Persian rule over Jerusalem continued until Alexander crushed the Persian army at Issus, and moved southward through Jerusalem in 332.

  3. After the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC, control of Jerusalem alternated between the Seleucids of Syria (the “king of the north”) and the Ptolemies of Egypt (the “king of the south”) for another 160 years. Eventually, a revolt broke out among the Jews because the Grecian “king of the north”, Antiochus Epiphanes, deliberately desecrated the Jewish temple in 167 AD. In 161 AD the Jewish leaders, the Maccabees, sought a Roman alliance for protection.

Thus, the first three portions of the image endured, respectively, 70 (the head), 206 (chest and arms), and 170 years (belly and thighs) — give or take a couple of years! This is just about perfectly proportional to the human form.

Now comes the hard part! We can assign the Roman portion of the image a starting point of 161 BC, but where does it end? Some historians consider that the Roman Empire endured until 565 AD — a total period of 726 years. But such a period for the fourth portion of the image (the legs, from knees to feet) would yield, in proportion, legs almost twice as long as all the rest of the body: something like a circus clown on ridiculously long stilts!.

But consider the alternative, as suggested earlier: that the Roman empire should be of consequence only when it was ruling over God’s people in Jerusalem. This would yield a period of 230 years (161 BC through 70 AD — when Jerusalem was trodden down by the Romans, and the Jews were scattered); such a shorter period would restore the whole image to proper perspective .

The “gap” in the image

Finally, what about the toes of iron and clay? If we remain true to our assumption (ie, that the “kingdoms” enumerated in Daniel 2 are those that bore or will bear rule over Jews in Jerusalem), then — after the fall of Jerusalem in 70 AD — there can/could be no fifth and final part of the image until there are/were Jews back in the Land again. And so we are compelled, by this assumption, to allow for a sizable “gap” between the first four parts of the image and the last and most crucial part, the feet and toes.

Such a gap certainly appears to work against the congruity of the image in its time perspective, and might be construed as a point against this view. However, it must be admitted that a similar “gap”, of almost 2,000 years, is by far the most reasonable interpretation of the Olivet prophecy (Mat 24; Mar 13; Luk 21), which clearly contains elements already fulfilled in 70 AD and elements yet to be fulfilled in the Last Days. And, likewise, the Book of Revelation (with its oft-repeated ‘I come quickly… shortly… or soon’, but also with prophecies plainly about the Last Days) is most easily reconciled by a “gap”, or “deferment”, hypothesis.

[The “deferment” theory — put simply — differs from the “gap” theory in this: The “deferment” theory is of an initial but partial fulfillment of the whole of a prophecy, to be followed by a final and complete fulfillment of the whole — thus involving some repetition. (For more information, see WRev 259-273.)]

And, in each case, the gap (or deferment) in prophetic fulfillment is for the same reason: During that period, the Jews were not in their Land or in possession of Jerusalem. It is not stretching the point too far to say that the Divine “clock” seems to stop when the conditions in the Middle East are not immediately favorable to the fulfillment of God’s purpose.

Who are the toes?

These “toes” must refer to ten powers, some strong, some weak, who oppress the Jews when they are finally back in the Land of Israel, and who subdue Jerusalem once again. Daniel provides the clue for their identification: “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 [ereb] 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 [ereb] with baked clay, so the people will be a mixture [ereb] and will not remain united, any more than iron mixes [ereb] with clay” (Dan 2:41-43).

The “mixed”, or “ereb”, peoples are of course the Arabs of the Middle East (cp also the same Hebrew word in 1Ki 10:15; Jer 25:20,24; 50:37; Eze 30:5; Neh 13:1,3). These are peoples of mixed ancestry, descended variously from Ishmael, Esau, Lot, the Philistines, and others. They have never “remained united”, always quarrelling and falling out among themselves… except in one particular: they are almost always solidly united in their hatred of Israel!

Thus, Nebuchadnezzar’s vision, fully authenticated so far, suggests an Arab conquest of Israel in the not too distant future. This is exactly in line with what is evident in many other Bible prophecies.

However, just as the toes take up only a small amount of space in the human figure, so also it may be expected that the Arab domination will last for only a very short while. And the Bible gives us that time period also: 3 1/2 years… 42 months… 1,260 days (Dan 7:25; 9:27; 12:7,11,12; Rev 11:2,3; 12:6; 13:5). Such a period — if taken literally — would preserve the perfect proportion of Nebuchadnezzar’s image.

Roman, or European, “toes”?

There is, of course, another and very different view of things held by some prophecy students, as follows: The feet and toes of Daniel’s image, being extensions of the legs, have often been equated with the “divided Roman empire” that followed the decline and fall of Rome herself in the sixth century AD. It is suggested that this “divided” state of Europe corresponds to the feet and toes of the image, the last part of the image.

Beginning in the late 1950s, it was for some time popular to interpret the “ten toes” as the European Economic Community. The nations of the EEC were, according to this view, the last vestige of the old Roman Empire, and would be the final part of the Kingdom of Men. (It is generally forgotten that there are about 50 nations in existence today, many of them not even in Europe — including most of the Arab nations — that occupy territory formerly held by the old Roman Empire. So any of these other nations could also be considered “successor nations” to Rome.)

But, as the member nations in the EEC climbed to 12 and then 14, and with more almost certain to be admitted as of this date, this interpretation has fallen on hard times.

There is another problem with the “European toe” interpretation. If all the divided states of Europe, from approximately 565 AD to the present and beyond, are represented by the feet and toes of the image, then our image is grossly out of proportion. Not only does the image look like a man on ridiculously tall stilts, but he is standing on “feet” with seven or eight toes each, which are now more than half again as long as the rest of the body, including the greatly elongated legs!. The absurdity of this figure is a good reason for rejecting the interpretation which suggested it.

Sudden destruction

In the vision a stone cut out of a mountain without human hands (ie, a divinely-appointed “stone”!) comes flying through the air and crashes into the feet of the image, completely pulverizing them; the image crashes to the ground, and every bit of it is similarly ground to powder; then a mighty wind blows the whole out of sight, while the stone grows and grows until it becomes a mighty mountain filling all the earth (Dan 2:34,35,44,45).

The “stone” is clearly Jesus: the Son of God is the precious stone, the stone which the builders rejected, the stone of stumbling, but also the stone which God will make the chief cornerstone in His eternal temple (Psa 118:22; Isa 8:14,15; 28:16; Mat 21:44; Mar 12:10,11; Luk 20:17; 1Pe 2:4-8).

A different kingdom

This “great mountain” which grows from a little stone will be a Kingdom set up by God Himself, which will last forever (Dan 2:44). When the Arab “toes” overrun Israel and trample down Jerusalem once again (as did the Babylonians and the Romans before them), then they will themselves be smashed swiftly by the coming of Christ in power and glory.

Where will this kingdom begin?

Hoping not to belabor an obvious point, we must nevertheless ask the question: Where will this eternal Kingdom begin? All Scriptures point to Jerusalem (Psa 2:6; Isa 2:2-4; 24:23; Jer 3:17; Mic 4:1,2; Joel 2:32; Oba 1:17; Zec 14:1-4; etc, etc).

So, working backward, if Jerusalem is where the Kingdom of God will begin (ie, where the “little stone” will begin to grow into a “great mountain”), then Jerusalem must also be the place upon which that stone falls in the first place.

And if this is so, then where will the feet of the image be standing when they are struck by that little stone? Jerusalem again. Jerusalem, the center of Bible prophecy — not Rome or Europe!

Daniel, overview

Author: Daniel

Time: 605 – 535 BC

Summary: The book of Daniel predicts the destiny of two opposing powers: The Kingdom of Men and the Kingdom of God, stressing that “the Most High rules in the Kingdom of Men”. Daniel’s prophecies generally deal with the nations that control Israel, from Daniel’s day until the return of Christ.

Key verse: “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 for ever” (Dan 2:44).

Outline

1. Prologue: the setting: Dan 1
a) Daniel and his friends taken captive: Dan 1:1-7
b) The young men are faithful: Dan 1:8-16
c) The young men are elevated to high positions: Dan 1:17-21
2. The destinies of the nations that rule Israel: Dan 2-7
a) Nebuchadnezzar’s dream of a large statue: Dan 2
b) Nebuchadnezzar’s gold image: Dan 3
c) Nebuchadnezzar’s dream of an enormous tree: Dan 4
d) Belshazzar’s and Babylon’s downfall: Dan 5
e) Daniel’s deliverance: Dan 6
f) Daniel’s dream of four beasts: Dan 7
3. The destiny of the nation of Israel: Dan 8-12
a) Daniel’s vision of a ram and a goat: Dan 8
b) Daniel’s prayer and his vision of the 70 “sevens”: Dan 9
c) Daniel’s vision of a man: Dan 10:1-11:1
d) Daniel’s vision of the kings of the south and the north: Dan 11:2-45
e) The end times: Dan 12

Background

In 605 BC Prince Nebuchadnezzar led the Babylonian army of his father Nabopolassar against the allied forces of Assyria and Egypt. He defeated them at Carchemish near the top of the Fertile Crescent. This victory gave Babylon supremacy in the ancient Near East. With Babylon’s victory, Egypt’s vassals, including Judah, passed under Babylonian control. Shortly thereafter that same year Nabopolassar died, and Nebuchadnezzar succeeded him as king. Nebuchadnezzar then moved south and invaded Judah, also in 605 BC. He took some royal and noble captives to Babylon including Daniel, whose name means “God is my judge” or “God is judging” or “God will judge” (Dan 1:1-3), plus some of the vessels from Solomon’s temple (2Ch 36:7). This was the first of Judah’s three deportations in which the Babylonians took groups of Judahites to Babylon. The king of Judah at that time was Jehoiakim (2Ki 24:1-4).

Jehoiakim’s son Jehoiachin (also known as Jeconiah and Coniah) succeeded him in 598 BC. Jehoiachin reigned only three months and 10 days (2Ch 36:9). Nebuchadnezzar invaded Judah again. At the turn of the year, in 597 BC, he took Jehoiachin to Babylon along with most of Judah’s remaining leaders and the rest of the national treasures including young Ezekiel (2Ki 24:10-17; 2Ch 36:10).

A third and final deportation took place approximately 11 years later, in 586 BC. Jehoiakim’s younger brother Zedekiah, whose name Nebuchadnezzar had changed to Mattaniah, was then Judah’s puppet king. He rebelled against Babylon’s sovereignty by secretly making a treaty with Pharaoh Hophra under pressure from Jewish nationalists (Jer 37; 38). After a two-year siege, Jerusalem fell. Nebuchadnezzar returned to Jerusalem, burned the temple, broke down the city walls, and took all but the poorest of the Jews captive to Babylon. He also took Zedekiah prisoner to Babylon after he executed his sons and put out the king’s eyes at Riblah in Aramea (modern Syria; 2Ki 24:18 — 25:24).

Scope

Daniel, the main character from whom this book gets its name, was probably only a teenager when he arrived in Babylon in 605 BC. The Hebrew words used to describe him, the internal evidence of Dan 1, and the length of his ministry seem to make this clear. He continued in office as a public servant at least until 538 BC (Dan 1:21) and as a prophet at least until 536 BC (Dan 10:1). Thus the record of his ministry spans 70 years, the entire duration of the Babylonian Captivity. He probably lived to be at least 85 years old and perhaps older.

Writer

There is little doubt among conservative scholars that Daniel himself wrote this book under the Holy Spirit’s guidance. Probably he did so late in his life, which could have been about 530 BC or a few years later. Several Persian-derived governmental terms appear in the book. The presence of these words suggests that the book received its final polishing after Persian had become the official language of government. This would have been late in Daniel’s life. What makes Daniel’s authorship quite clear is both internal and external evidence.

Internally the book claims in several places that Daniel was its writer (Dan 8:1; 9:2,20; 10:2). References to Daniel in the third person do not indicate that someone else wrote about him. It was customary for ancient authors of historical memoirs to write of themselves this way (cf Exo 20:2,7).

Language

Daniel is written in two languages, not just one. The Book is written in Hebrew and in Aramaic:

  • Dan 1:1 through 2:4a: Hebrew language

  • Dan 2:4b through 7:28: Aramaic language

  • Dan 8:1 through 12:13: Hebrew language

There are a number of theories why two languages were used. One reason may be that the Spirit of God was indicating that the message of this book was for both Jews and Gentiles. Thus, the Hebrew portions would get the attention of the Jews, while the Aramaic portion would have the attention of the Gentiles.

Daniel, taking a stand for God

Dare to be a Daniel.

The integrity of the prophet Daniel is sometimes overlooked in the excitement of understanding the prophecies written in the book that bears his name.

Dan 2 unfolds the fascinating interpretation of Nebuchadnezzar’s awesome image (see page 4 of this issue). Dan 7 contains an equally intriguing vision and explanation about four beasts, a little horn, the saints, and the Kingdom of God. Dan 8 presents a comparable intrigue between a ram, a he-goat, their horns, and the people of the saints. As a response to Daniel’s impassioned prayer, chapter 9 ends with the multi-aspected, far-reaching “seventy weeks prophecy”. The remaining chapters unfold an angel’s story meant to “make you [Daniel] understand what is to befall your people in the latter days. For the vision is for days yet to come” (Dan 10:14).

Yet even Daniel didn’t understand all that was revealed to him (Dan 12:8). But he did believe in his God! So the book rightly ends with a key message of the book — the ultimate reward for Daniel’s integrity:

“But go your way till the end; and you shall rest, and shall stand in your allotted place at the end of the days” (Dan 12:13).

Daniel will “stand” at the end-time (when God judges men by Jesus Christ) because he consistently made his stand for God during his lifetime.

Remember the first time Daniel took a stand for God? He was a Jewish teenager in Babylonian exile. Taken from his royal/noble life in Judah for the express purpose of being indoctrinated with the culture and lifestyle of the Chaldeans, Daniel refused to eat the food offered to him — probably because it had been dedicated to pagan gods and/or categorized as ‘unclean’ by the law of Moses.

“But Daniel resolved that he would not defile himself with the king’s rich food, or with the wine which he drank; therefore he asked the chief of the eunuchs to allow him not to defile himself” (Dan 1:8).

And his resolution for personal integrity and God-honoring behavior was rewarded:

“God gave Daniel favor and compassion in the sight of the chief of the eunuchs” (Dan 1:9).

Blessed with understanding and wisdom ten times better than anyone else in Babylon, Daniel was suddenly ‘on the hook’ to explain Nebuchadnezzar’s mysterious dream — or else he would be killed along with the other ‘wise men’. In addition to his prudence and discretion in answering this challenge (Dan 2:14), Daniel immediately went to his God-fearing comrades and “told them to seek mercy of the God of heaven concerning this mystery…” (Dan 2:18). Because Daniel made it absolutely clear that only God in heaven could provide the right interpretation to the king’s vision (Dan 2:27-30,45), he was again rewarded by God via Nebuchadnezzar:

“Then the king gave Daniel high honors and many great gifts and made him ruler over the whole province of Babylon, and chief prefect over all the wise men of Babylon” (Dan 2:48).

When Nebuchadnezzar asked Daniel about another dream, the man of integrity gave it to the king straight from the shoulder: “…O king, let my counsel be acceptable to you; break off your sins by practicing righteousness, and your iniquities by showing mercy to the oppressed, that there may perhaps be a lengthening of your tranquillity” (Dan 4:27). The outcome of this warning was a remarkable ‘conversion’ of Nebuchadnezzar and an even more remarkable distributed statement exalting and praising the Most High God (Dan 4:1-3,34-37).

The significance of these declarations is twofold. Nebuchadnezzar had already been mightily impressed with the stand taken by Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego, Daniel’s three comrades who likewise resolved to honor God even at the cost of their lives (Dan 3:16-18). Consequently, Nebuchadnezzar had issued a decree extolling the God of Israel, and rewarded the three men appropriately (Dan 3:28-30). So this was the second time that an empire-wide decree was made telling people about the wonderful God of Israel!

Unfortunately, Nebuchadnezzar’s grandson king Belshazzar did not learn from the example of his grandfather. Shocked sober by the divine handwriting on the wall, he implored Daniel to explain the words. (Chapter 5 of Daniel’s book tells this dramatic story of the prophet’s continued integrity.) Daniel had refused to take part in the king’s revelry and debauchery, which pointedly mocked the God of Israel. He also refused any reward from this vain and unrepentant king. In the midst of a party dedicated to the praise of the gods of gold and silver, bronze, iron, wood and stone, Daniel took his stand for the living God and declared the end of the Babylonian empire to its badly-shaken ruler! And so Babylon fell to the Persian army that very night.

Fortunately, the next king Darius the Mede (who had commanded the Persian army) did understand the value of a man like Daniel, as demonstrated by his keeping him on from the old regime. Now well on in years, Daniel did not fail to pray three times a day to his God. The result of this dedication was reflected in his service to the king who, like the monarchs before him, rewarded such distinguished behavior:

“Then this Daniel became distinguished above all the other presidents and satraps, because an excellent spirit was in him; and the king planned to set him over the whole kingdom” (Dan 6:3).

Tricked into having his top administrator thrown into the lion’s den, Darius “set his mind to deliver Daniel, and he labored till the sun went down to rescue him” (Dan 6:14). Unable to undo the ‘law of the Medes and Persians’, Darius went with his man to the den of lions and said to Daniel, “May your God, whom you serve continually, deliver you!” (Dan 6:16). Triumphantly, God did! Darius was so thrilled that he issued an empire-wide decree surpassing even those of Nebuchadnezzar in the praise and exaltation of the God of Daniel (Dan 6:25-27). Because one man took a stand for God, “all the peoples, nations, and languages that dwell in all the earth” would hear about “the living God, enduring for ever; his kingdom shall never be destroyed, and his dominion shall be to the end.”

See then how the lifestyle of Daniel was as important as his prophecies and interpretation-capabilities. Two monarchs were greatly impressed, resulting in two empires being given a prophetic message of the most fundamental kind: know who God really is, and serve Him (cp Heb 11:6)! Warning the wayward, encouraging the faithful, and vindicating God were — and are — three key purposes of Bible prophecy.

The New Testament teaching is the same. Two passages illustrate the need for disciples of Christ to get their strength from God so that they can withstand the evil days and be found still standing for Christ when he returns:

“Finally, be strong in the Lord and in the strength of his might. Put on the whole armor of God, that you may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil… Therefore take the whole armor of God, that you may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand” (Eph 6:10-13).

“But take heed to yourselves lest your hearts be weighed down with dissipation and drunkenness and cares of this life, and that day come upon you suddenly like a snare; for it will come upon all who dwell upon the face of the whole earth. But watch at all times, praying that you may have strength to escape all these things that will take place, and to stand before the Son of man” (Luke 21:34-36).

Cloud, clouds in the New Testament

Out of 25 occurrences of “nephele”, all but three plainly mean the Cloud of the Shekinah Glory. The student should work his way through the entire list. Acts 1:9 and 1Th 4:17 are specially instructive.

But there are three of the twenty-five which do not so readily conform to this general usage:

In 2Pe 2:17, false teachers are referred to as “clouds carried with a tempest”. Jud 1:12 (ref to the above) calls them “clouds without water”. In each of these instances the Shekinah Glory idea is not out of sight. Here were men claiming divine authority for their message (as Ezekiel with his Eze 1), but in fact they were not borne along by the Holy Spirit (2Pe 1:19) but by a tempest, sweeping them away to their own destruction. Differently, Jude’s “clouds without water” implies that these men brought no true Holy Spirit blessing.

But what is to be said about the words of Jesus?: “When ye see a cloud rise out of the west, straightway ye say, There cometh a shower; and so it is.” Besides the simple literal meaning, a commonplace experience in the Holy Land, Jesus may have meant allusion to the Holy of Holies at the western end of the sanctuary enclosure (cp Psa 103:12) — the Shekinah Glory of God appearing there would be the certain herald of heavenly blessing: “a shower”.

It is important to observe that the “so great cloud of witnesses” (Heb 12:1), referring to the multitude of the faithful in Heb 11, uses a different word: “nephos”. Thus, it is not permissible to use this passage to interpret 1Th 4:17.

Col, overview

Author: Paul

Time: AD 61

Summary: The letter to Colosse was written in response to heresy that had been brought to Paul’s attention. The major errors that had crept into the church seemed to have been: (1) the exaltation of angels or other “elemental spirits”; (2) the emphasis on ascetic or liturgical practices thought to produce spirituality; and (3) claims to a special knowledge beyond that found in the Gospel of Christ. Paul states that these are philosophies based on human tradition and are therefore worthless. He teaches love, humility, submission to authority, and finally prayer to establish a believer in the wisdom of God.

Key verse: “See, to it that no one takes you captive through hollow and deceptive philosophy, which depends on human tradition and the basic principles of this world rather than on Christ” (Col 2:8).

Outline

  1. Introduction: Col 1:1-14
  2. The supremacy of Christ: Col 1:15-23

  3. Paul’s labor for the church: Col 1:24 — 2:7
  4. Freedom from human regulations through life with Christ: Col 2:8-23

  5. Rules for holy living: Col 3:1 – 4:6

  6. Final greetings: Col 4:7-18

Collapsed time

Rather than concluding that ‘the judgment’ cannot be taken literally (because of time constraints), perhaps the meaning of time will be collapsed around the Lord’s return. Thus, the descriptions of the judgment can still be taken on a literal level. For example, we are taught that we must each appear personally before the Lord Jesus at the judgment, and have some kind of two-way dialogue with him (Rom 14:10; 1Co 4:5; 2Co 5:10; 2Ti 4:1). If we must each appear personally before the Lord Jesus, we have two options: (1) Either time is collapsed so that we all appear before Christ individually — in what might seem to outsiders to be the merest moment of time, or (2) We appear before him in real time, in which case there must be some kind of queue, and a period of several months at least. (Some have suggested a number of years — up to 40! — for such an individual judgment.) This “judgment in real time” creates many Biblical and practical problems: ie, (1) where will thousands of waiting responsible be housed, and fed?; (2) will they be “mortal”, or in danger of dying again?; (3) will they be able to sin?; (4) will they be able to repent?… to pray?…; etc.

Thus “judgment in real time” ought to be rejected in favor of the idea that the meaning of time will be collapsed at the Lord’s coming.

Indeed, it seems that the whole process of resurrection, gathering, judgment and immortalization may take place in a split second, although it will seem far longer. If we could break this split second into real time, there would be: (a) emergence from the grave, (b) judgment involving a period of time, (c) then the righteous being grouped at Christ’s right hand, and (d) finally they would all be immortalized together.

“Come… inherit the Kingdom” is spoken to the whole group of sheep; we will be immortalized together, at the same time. If we are all judged individually in real time, this is impossible. Some would be immortalized months or years before others.

This collapsing of time at the Lord’s return would explain why “the resurrection” is sometimes used as a description of the whole process of resurrection, judgment and immortality. This was how Paul saw it (Rom 8:11; 1Co 15:42-44,52; Heb 11:35). Likewise he saw the trumpet blast as the signal of both the call to judgment (1Th 4:17) and also the moment of glorification (1Co 15:52).

A collapsing of time would also mean that the place of judgment is irrelevant. There are practical problems with the idea of judgment either in Jerusalem or Sinai. If it all happens in real time, Christ would come, raise the responsible dead, take us to (perhaps) Jerusalem, assemble us there for several months or years, and one by one grant us immortality. There seems no space for this in the Biblical description of events on the Last Days. Christ comes with the saints to save Israel from their enemies. Unless there is a secret coming of Christ to gather and judge the saints, after which he is revealed to the world, then this just isn’t possible. And the idea of a secret coming of the Lord of glory just cannot be reconciled with the clear descriptions of his coming in the New Testament. The coming of Christ in glory with the saints to establish the Kingdom is the coming of Christ.

Depending how one reads the Heb text of Zec 14:6,7, this idea of collapsed time at the Lord’s return is Biblical: “It shall come to pass in that day, that it shall not be clear in some places, and dark in other places of the world; but the day shall be one, in the knowledge of the LORD, not day, nor night… at evening time it shall be light” (AV mg).

This collapsing of time would also explain why it is impossible to construct a chronology of events in real time for the coming of Christ; the various prophecies of the Last Days just don’t seem to fit together in chronological sequence. If indeed time is collapsed, this would enable all these prophecies to come true, but not in real time. The events around Christ’s return were prefigured by those at the time of Joshua’s conquest of the land. Some of the records of his campaigns require a huge amount to have been achieved by his soldiers within a short time. “The sun stood still” may well mean that time was collapsed (Jos 10:12,13; cp Isa 28:21).

To appreciate God’s timeless perspective is one of the fundamental battles of faith; what God said has happened (our redemption is the supreme example). The ‘gap’ between His fiat and its fulfillment is only a perception of time-bound mortals. In the Kingdom, eternal life will be life without time, without these ‘gaps’, rather than life that ‘lasts’ for unending time. Understandably, given our nature, we tend to see the events of the Lord’s coming, and the Kingdom itself, from a far-too-real time-perspective. We find it hard to escape the paradigm of time, and therefore we often attempt to force God’s timeless revelation (e.g., concerning the events associated with the judgment) into our time-bound view.

An interesting possible corroboration is found in the KJV of Rev 10:6,7, where the mighty angel of God stands upon the sea and the earth and swears that “there should be time no longer (the NIV reads: ‘no more delay’)… but… the mystery of God should be finished.” And Peter, when speaking of the time leading up to the return of Christ, tells us, “With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day” (2Pe 3:8). Even now, our standard references of time are meaningless to God, because He supersedes time! In the words of Isaiah, He “inhabiteth eternity” (Isa 57:15, KJV). How much more evident will it be to us in the future when Christ returns, that God and His family exist above and outside and beyond the reach of time!

So… as a side point: it might be noted that, for the glorified saints, the reward will not only be living forever, but also escaping time altogether!

[This article is a follow-up to one written by AH, which appeared in The Christadelphian Watchman (edited by GB and NF), Sept 1995 (see Article, Judgment seat, unresolved problem).It includes correspondence from DH, originally published under “Judgment seat: a response” in The Watchman, Nov 1995 — as well as additional thoughts by GB.]

Collyer miscellany

On Writing: “There is a tendency to condemn an author as shallow or superficial if his writings are perfectly clear. And conversely, a writer will sometimes gain a reputation for profundity simply because no one can quite make out what he means.”

On Faith: “Unless a man is prepared to affirm that he knows nothing, believes nothing, and harbours no opinions, unless he is prepared is prepared to condense all his positive belief into one solitary affirmation of his own ignorance, he must of necessity be in some sense a man of faith.”

On Doctrine: “We frequently hear men say that they do not attach much importance to doctrine; they concentrate attention on the living of a good life. Such sentiment only emanates from a very shallow brain. It is as if a child should enter a garden, and seeing the gardener planting bulbs, should say, ‘I do not care for those ugly bulbs, I like the beautiful flowers.’ The living of a good life without a foundation of good doctrine is impossible, just as it is impossible to grow flowers without roots.”

On Societal Pressure: “It is always difficult to resist fashions, whether in clothes or theology, and when we think we are quite unmoved by the stream, it often only means we are lagging a little way behind.”

On Evolution and Morality: “When a modern thinker accepts the doctrine of evolution and repudiates revelation, how can he give us an authoritative moral code?”

On Sin: “The depth of a man’s guilt is determined, not by reference to the degree of harm he does to other men, but by the degree of deliberateness with which the law is violated. In other words, sins of presumption are always worse than ‘sins of infirmity.'”

On Disciplining Children: “Nothing could be more demoralizing than for children to be taught that disobedience did not signify [ie, count] so long as no evident harm was done. Yet how often we see parents taking a course which will inevitably give this impression. A child is perhaps meddling with some ornaments which should not be touched. The mother commands him to leave them alone, and comes away. The mandate has to be repeated several times, perhaps with threats, and it may be some kind of bribe. The child is not punished though richly deserving. But now, on the other hand, suppose that, without any deliberate disobedience of this nature, the child turning to come away at the first command, chances to break one of the most precious of the ornaments. The parent becomes a perfect fury, and the erring child is punished with the utmost severity.”

On Self Examination: “This work is necessarily an individual matter, and herein lies the difficulty. A man is his own accuser, his own defender, and his own judge. With the most complete facilities for knowing the full measure of his guilt, he unites a most unjudicial bias in favor of the accused. He perhaps possesses all the knowledge necessary to draw up an unanswerable indictment; but his talent is mainly employed to find extenuating circumstances. He has all the skills of a defending counsel to raise a false issue, but lacks the impartiality of a judge to expose the pretense.”

On Feigned Purity: “Close observers of mankind always feel rather suspicious of those who make a profession of superhuman purity. When frail human nature pretends to have grown more refined than God originally made it, we generally find that the profession is a mere cloak to cover exceptional depravity. Those who have been most successful in subduing the flesh have always been the most honest in describing it.”

On Intentions: “We shall not have the praise of God simply for good thoughts which we have instantly dismissed, neither shall we be condemned for evil thoughts, which we have instantly repudiated. But a solid intention to perform a good work is counted for well doing, even though circumstances should prevent the consummation; and, on the other hand, a deliberate harbouring of evil thoughts is counted for sin, even though lack of opportunity prevents the sinful act.”

On Motives: “It is possible for even the noblest work to be spoiled by an improper motive at the foundation. We have no right to judge the motives of others, but it is a duty to judge our own.”

On Joy: “The most genuine joy is to be found among the servants of God, and the most complete misery and discontent is to be found among the most thorough servants of sin.”

On Suffering: “The whole history of mankind does not constitute a fraction of eternity. The realisation of this fact helps us to see something of God’s point of view, and we can understand why that which seems like the most awful suffering to us can be described as a ‘light affliction which endureth but for a moment.'”

On Our Thoughts: “Every deliberate act is the outcome of deliberate thought, and it therefore follows that control of thought must be the mainspring of every virtue right up to that bridling of the tongue which is placed by an apostle as the supreme test of a man.”

On Doubt: “To summarize the difference between ancient and modern doubt, we may suggest that in olden time men saw superhuman beings in every shadow, and so in time of trial they supposed that their God was only one of many. But in modern times men seek a prosaic and ordinary explanation for everything, and so in time of trial even [the one true] God is explained away.”

(Islip Collyer)

Collyer on Controversy

It seems clear that man is by nature a fighting animal. Wars recur between nations as soon as the people have recovered sufficient strength, and have had time partly to forget the horrors of the last struggle. The men who succeed in business are the men who love the fight of it. Politicians turn their disagreements into fights with as much unfairness and injustice as in actual warfare. Even games are all struggles, and most men cannot understand the pure pleasures of artistic achievement without any contest as to who wins.

This being the natural tendency of the flesh it is not surprising that the same fighting spirit is found in connection with religion. It need occasion no surprise if men who do not fight either with guns or fists, and who take no part in the struggles of politicians, are apt to be especially violent. It is certainly true that religious disputes have often resulted in a bitterness and uncharitableness more sinful than the errors which caused the strife to begin.

It is important therefore for us to remember the principles laid down in scripture for our guidance in these matters. If brethren could saturate their minds with the perfectly clear principles stated and reiterated in the Word, it might put an end to nearly all the destructive disputing, merely by the removal of all unnecessary provocation.

The first point to emphasize is the fact that strife and debate are treated as essentially evil things. Thus in writing to the Corinthians the apostle took the fact that there was envying, strife and division in the Church, as clear evidence that the members were still carnal minded: “For ye are yet carnal; for whereas there is among you envying and strife and division are ye not carnal and walk as men?” (1Co 3:3).

In writing to the Galatians the same apostle includes strife in a list of evil things summarising the works of the flesh: “Now the works of the flesh are manifest, which are adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lasciviousness, idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies, envyings, murders, drunkenness, revellings, and such like: of the which I tell you before, as I have also told you in time past, that they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God” (Gal 5:19-21).

TruIy the word strife appears here in a terrible list of evils with a terrible penalty threatened. We do well to make a very critical examination of our own conduct to make sure that any variance, wrath and strife existing in the ecclesias now, shall not be aggravated by any wrong action or wrong words of ours.

In writing to Timothy the apostle Paul again denounces strife. He refers to the evils which come from strife of words and perverse disputings (1Ti 6:3-5). Then in the second letter he gives this positive instruction: “But foolish and unlearned questions avoid, knowing that they do gender strifes; and the servant of the Lord must not strive, but be gentle unto all men, apt to teach, patient, in meekness instructing those who oppose themselves” (2Ti 3:23-25).

If anyone should raise the question how we can avoid strife in view of the wrong attitude taken by others, we surely have the answer in this positive instruction. If we are convinced that those who oppose us are doing wrong and that in faithfulness to the Truth we must contend with them, we have ready to hand a splendid test of our discipleship. We have an opportunity to be gentle, patient and meek in instructing those who oppose themselves. If these qualities could be cultivated all round it might soon be found that there was no need for any further argument. Wrongdoing would accept the necessary reproof and wrong thinking would be corrected. The apostolic method would remove all the fuel that feeds the destructive fire. The railing, striving and impatient disputing, the personal hits and retorts of the carnal mind, continuously add fuel to the fires of wrath until even some who try to obey the teaching of the Word may perish in the flames.

The apostle Paul gave us example as well as precept. After the position of the Gentiles had been determined there was still much prejudice among the Jews, causing difficulty for disciples who feared the criticism of men. The apostle Peter was at fault in withdrawing himself from some of the Gentile believers apparently as a concession to the prejudices of certain Jews who had recently come to him. The apostle Paul “withstood him to the face.” Fortunately we are told what he said: “If thou being a Jew, livest after the manner of Gentiles, why compellest thou the Gentiles to live as do the Jews?”

Here was the essence of the argument forcibly but gently expressed. It truly showed an aptitude for teaching and meekly instructing, and it had the right effect.

It would have been possible to have brought a formidable indictment against the apostle Peter if one had cared to use carnal methods. He might have been reminded that he at one time had spoken against the idea of Christ dying at all, and had called forth a rebuke from the Master. At a later period he used the sword and had to be reproved again. Later still he forsook the Lord and denied him even with an oath. If in addition to the undoubted facts of Peter’s weakness all derogatory reports regarding him and his associations had been collected, it might have seemed to the fleshly mind a crushing blow to the influence of Peter and all his connections.

We simply cannot imagine the apostle Paul using such methods. He was ever ready to remember his own dark past but not that of others. When it was necessary to reprove the brethren he did so with gentleness and patience. Though he had authority such as none of us possess, he “besought them by the mercies of God” (Rom 12:1). He “besought them” to follow him (1Co 4:16). He besought them by the meekness and gentleness of Christ (2Co 10:1). He said: “I will very gladly spend and be spent for you, though the more abundantly I love you the less I be loved” (2Co 12:15).

This was in writing to an ecclesia which was very faulty, and against which a very formidable accusation might have been made.

The whole tenor of the apostle’s teaching is as outlined in the fifth and sixth chapters of the letter to the Galatians. We must overcome the flesh and all its works; we must bring forth the fruit of the spirit; but we must at the same time remember that we are all sinners who can only be saved through grace. Those who are spiritually minded must thus be ready to restore offenders in the spirit of meekness; considering themselves lest they also be tempted; bearing one another’s burdens, and so fulfilling the law of Christ (Gal 6:1,2).

There is further instruction regarding necessary controversy in the writing of the apostle Peter: “Finally, be ye all of one mind, having compassion one of another, love as brethren, be pitiful, be courteous: not rendering evil for evil or railing for railing: but contrariwise, blessing” (1Pe 3:8,9). “Be ready to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear” (1Pe 3:15).

“All of you be subject one to another and be clothed with humility” (1Pe 5:5).

Such instructions require emphasis in time of controversy, for then it is that we are in the greatest danger of forgetting them. We may be stung by an unfair criticism and we think of a crushing reply. The flesh would call it a righteous reproof, but Scripture calls it rendering railing for railing.

We are perhaps in a position to quote from a past utterance of an opponent, a cutting criticism of one of his present supporters. The quotation would not help or guide anyone a fraction of a degree in the right direction; but it might tend to cause division among those who do not agree with us. The flesh would call such a quotation skilful tactics; Scripture calls it sowing discord among brethren.

It is easy for men to deceive themselves into thinking that unrighteous and unjust extremes are simply the evidence of their zeal for truth. Even a readiness to listen to the accused is regarded as weakness. Such extremists cry shame on the very effort to be fair, and in their determination to have no compromise with error they sometimes exaggerate faults, and so grossly misrepresent the objects of their attack that they become guilty of offences worse than all the error against which they are trying to fight.

We must not fall into the mistake of taking an extreme view even of the extremist. God has been merciful to such men in the past, and we must be merciful now even in our thoughts. We may state most emphatically, however, that it is wrong to exaggerate the faults of anyone or to find ugly and misleading names with which to label those who do not quite see eye to eye with us. It is quite possible to be valiant for the Truth and zealous for the Lord without being unfair even to those who are mistaken, and it is always wrong to be unfair. In faithfulness we must point out the danger that in great zeal for the jots and tittles of the law men may lose sight of the foundation principles. All their faith and works may become valueless through lack of charity.

The need for a clear perception of the scriptural principles governing controversy is shown by the tendency toward unrighteous exaggeration even on the part of those from whom better things would be expected. A few days ago we read some words written by a critic who has usually shown a sense of responsibility in the use of words. Yet there are exaggerations which tend to foster strife without the slightest suggestion as to the restitution of the offenders. It declares that the belittling of the commandments among us had become an open sin.

This is a very definite and severe judgment, which presumably includes the present writer in its sweeping condemnation. What does it mean? Is there any effort or desire to restore us “in the spirit of meekness”, or are we too evil for that? If we “belittle the commandments of Christ” to the point of “open sin”, what hope can we have of forgiveness unless we can be restored? I have just recently been through the four Gospel records in an attempt to classify all the commandments of the Lord Jesus and apply them to present experience. It is easy to find commands which are very imperfectly observed. The repeated command to love one another even as he has loved us (Joh 13:34) has been repeatedly broken. The commands not to lay up treasure on earth and not to seek the riches of the Gentiles are so foreign to the spirit of our age that we only grasp them with great difficulty, and so far no one has been found to rend the ecclesias on this issue. It is quite certain that our critic does not mean these matters. He probably refers to the vexed question of a decision as to where to draw the line between reproving, rebuking or withdrawing from an offender. Is there anything in the commands of Christ to suggest that one who takes too lenient a view of his brother’s offences is to be condemned and repudiated? I know of no such command. There are plenty of warnings that those who take too severe a view of a brother’s offences will themselves be dealt with severely. There are warnings against judging and against the natural tendency to see the defects in the eye of a brother while remaining unconscious of greater defects in ourselves. If some among us err in their unwillingness to take the most severe of all measures against offenders, if they carry too far the commands to be patient and to restore offenders in the spirit of meekness, it cannot in fairness be described as “belittling the commandments of Christ.”

The use of this expression is to be explained in the same way as the many far worse attempts at argument which we sometimes hear. It is a natural emanation from strife and debate.

It is not fair, it is not true; but it has the doubtful merit of being severe, and therefore it is made to serve. It is so easy to be led into the use of such expressions, and we must not make any man an offender for a word, but we do well to sound a warning. Be pitiful, be courteous, be gentle, be meek, be honest. Cultivate charity and love, and remember that for every idle word that you speak you shall give account in the day of judgment.