|
What's This World
Coming To?
|
The brutal
terrorist attacks on the U.S. World Trade Center and Pentagon
buildings were like thunderclaps of a gathering storm—such as
there never was. What do these and other ominous rumblings of
society portend? Is there any hope for the world on the other
side of this trouble which will certainly climax in a furious
storm?
After the cold
war ended with the collapse of communism, Third World Nations
became armed camps of instability that pose a continual threat
to world peace. The United States entered the new millennium
with a record debt and a staggering world recession. Of the
world’s 6 billion people, 1.3 billion live in poverty on $1 a
day or less, and 1.1 billion are malnourished. Hunger and
starvation shape their lives. Thousands more eat canned pet
food. Three million Americans live on the streets. The top ten
billionaires have wealth equivalent to the rest of the world
according to the U.N. Human Development Report, 1998.
Most
historians now agree that since World War I our world has been
coming to an end. Not the destruction of the planet earth, but
the end of our social order—our civilization. Rowse states,
"If ever there was a year that marked the end of an era and
the beginning of another, it was 1914. That year brought to an
end the old world with its sense of security and began a modern
age whose chief characteristic is insecurity on a daily
basis.’’ (Rowse, Oxford Historian and Biographer,
June 28, 1959.)
From 1914 to
1918, World War I shook Europe to its foundations. The 1920s
witnessed the overthrow or demise in power of the centuries-old
church-state ruling houses of Europe, in which kings claimed to
rule by "divine right." The Thirties offered the Great
Depression; the Forties, World War II. The Fifties saw the
communist takeover of more than one third of the world, while
the Sixties were terrorized by race riots and the youth revolt.
In the
Seventies, corruption in government reached its zenith with the
forced resignation of Vice President Agnew and then President
Nixon. Crime and violence continued to spiral. The sex
revolution began the eroding of long accepted moral standards of
our society. The Eighties became the "decade of
greed." Junk bond manipulation, S&L corruption and bank
mismanagement helped bring the economy to a grinding halt. These
combined with the AIDS time bomb and the pollution countdown
made the 1990s a "decade of uncertainty.’’
Is it any
wonder so many ask, "What is this world coming to?’’
Some reason further, "If there is a God who cares, why does
He permit all of this trouble, evil and suffering?’’ Not
finding reliable answers to this question, many have abandoned
religion.
Growing
Materialism…Shrinking Faith
The failure of
traditional churches to answer the many questions facing modern
man has divided the western world into two camps—the
non-religious "materialist camp" and the religious
"Christian camp." The materialist camp is composed of
atheists, agnostics, humanists, and existentialists.
Materialists like to think that observable facts and provable
theories are the only bases of their thoughts and actions. But
as William James, the noted philosopher, observed, all
materialists have one thing in common with the Christian—and
that is faith. An atheist cannot deny the existence of God by
scientific fact and, therefore, must assume his premise by
faith. The agnostic accepts the premise that there are many
concepts that cannot be proven, but even his premise is
unprovable. All schools of philosophy are based on faith.
Though the
Christian camp can agree that there is a God, Christians
disagree on almost everything else. No doubt, this fact is one
reason so many have joined the materialist camp today. Space-age
man—staggered by the complexity of the universe—complains
that he is "turned off" by the traditional churches
when he receives religious answers that are museum pieces from
the "Middle Ages." To modern religious groups like
Seventh Day Adventists, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Mormons, etc.,
the materialist cries, "Your God is too small!" as
they seem to imply that only their group will be saved. Thank
God, His love is broad enough to include everyone—Catholic and
Protestant, the modern religionist as well as the materialist.
Lacking an
explanation and solution to man’s dilemma, the materialist
taunts the Christian camp to come up with answers.
Unfortunately, most Christians are unable to meet the challenge.
However, there have been notable exceptions. Since the late
1800s diligent students of Bible prophecy warned that the
Twentieth Century would be devastated by political, social,
economic and religious upheavals. This unprecedented trouble
would destroy what the Bible refers to the "present evil
world" or social order. Galatians 1:4.
A Remarkable
Prediction
The August 30,
1914, issue of The World Magazine in a feature article
about Bible Student predictions reported:
"The
terrific war outbreak in Europe has fulfilled an extraordinary
prophecy. For 25 years Bible Students have been proclaiming to
the world that the Day of Wrath prophesied in the Bible would
dawn in 1914.
"The
Bible speaks of a "time of trouble such as never was since
there was a nation.’’ This prophecy of Daniel Bible Students
identify as the "Day of Wrath," the "Time of the
Lord," and the so-called "End of the World,"
references which are plentiful in the Scriptures."
How
Historians View Current Turmoil
The following
is a part of the record:
"Looking
back from the vantage point of the present we see that the
outbreak of World War I ushered in a twentieth-century
"Time of Troubles" … from which our civilization has
by no means yet emerged. Directly or indirectly all the
convulsions of the last half century stem back to 1914: the two
World Wars, the Bolshevik Revolution, the rise and fall of
Hitler, the continuing turmoil in the Far and Near East. the
power-struggle between the Communist world and our own. More
than 23,000,000 deaths can be traced to one or the other of
these upheavals..." (Edmond Taylor, The Fall of
Dynasties, Doubleday, N.Y., 1963, p. 16.)
"A world
mesmerized by Science and Progress mocked the mysticism of
religious sects which had long predicted that the world would
end in the year 1914; fifty years later the world isn’t so
sure that it didn’t end in 1914..." (The Great Ideas
Today, 1963, Britannica Great Books, Encyclopedia
Britannica, Inc., pp. 107, 108.)
Historians
mark 1914 as the ending of a world. The convulsions since are
both the processes of its disintegration and the birth pangs of
a new world. Britannica editors, as noted, observed that a
religious group (actually known as Bible Students) predicted
1914 would mark the ending of a world in just this manner.
Thus, whatever this world is
coming to, assurance and even comfort lie in knowing that the
Word of God predicted today’s phenomenal happenings
beforehand.
|
|
Today's Headlines Written
Nearly 2,000 Years Ago
Many Bible
prophecies predict the conditions and events of our day as signs
of the end of the world—today’s headlines written nearly
2,000 years ago. Consideration of these prophecies establishes:
(1) that the Bible is indeed the inspired Word of God; (2) that
we are living in unprecedented times prophesied in Scripture as
the "end of the world"; and (3) that man is standing
at the threshold of lasting peace and economic
security in a pollution-free earth.
Daniel 12:1
and 4 give four signs that mark the "time of the end,"
or end of the world:
(1) A time of
trouble such as never was since there was a nation;
(2) Many shall
run to and fro;
(3) Knowledge
shall be increased; and
(4) Your
(Daniel’s) people (Israel) delivered.
Unprecedented
Trouble—Daniel 12:1
That the first
sign, unprecedented trouble, is the hallmark of our time is
confirmed by historians. True, the world has always had trouble,
but never before has it been in such staggering proportions.
Wars:
In the 20th Century over 100 million lives were lost through
war. From 1990 to 1995, 70 states involved in 93 wars killed 5.5
million people. Forty wars were waged in 1999. The unprecedented
terrorism of September 11 marked 2001.
In his book Out
of Control, Zbigniew Brzezinski, former National Security
Advisor and professor of American Foreign Policy at John Hopkins
University, notes that the 20th century began amid great hope
and promise, but became the century of insanity. In elaborating
on his observation of 175 million slaughtered in the name of the
"politics of organized insanity," he says:
"Contrary
to its promise, the twentieth century became mankind’s most
bloody and hateful century of hallucinatory politics and of
monstrous killings. Cruelty was institutionalized to an
unprecedented degree, lethality was organized on a mass
production basis. The contrast between the scientific potential
for good and the political evil that was actually unleashed is
shocking. Never before in history was killing so globally
pervasive, never before did it consume so many lives, never
before was human annihilation pursued with such concentration of
sustained effort on behalf of such arrogantly irrational
goals."
The population
explosion and industrialization of Third World nations
accentuate the oil crunch. Nations will go to war for oil. Many
Third World nations have the poor man’s bomb—chemical
warfare, and are working on actual nuclear warheads. Such
volatile weaponry in the hands of these regimes spells trouble.
The economic and political instability of the Soviet Union could
result in a military coup.
Population
Explosion: Before 1650 A.D. the population doubled every
1,000 years. In 1804 A.D. the population was one billion. It
doubled in 1927 (123 years later). And doubled again in 1974
(only 47 years later). In 1990 the world population was 5.5
billion. By 2000 A.D. it increased one billion.
Up to 15
million people die of starvation annually. There are 40 million
refugees worldwide and 100 million homeless. Each day 40,000
babies die of starvation in Third World countries, while
Americans spend over $900 million yearly feeding dogs and cats.
Pollution:
The U.S. has 4.6 % of the world’s population, but annually
disposes of 290 million tons of toxic waste, uses 26% of the
world’s oil, 26% of the world’s coal, and 27% of the
world’s natural gas; releases 26% of the world’s nitrogen
oxides; and produces 25.5 % of the world’s carbon dioxide
emissions. Air pollutants from car exhaust and industry spawn
disease. Deaths from respiratory disease double every five
years. Skin cancer and cataracts caused by ozone depletion are
increasing. From 1950 to 1980 melanomas increased by 500%.
Solid wastes,
radioactive and toxic chemical wastes are contaminating our
rivers, lakes and oceans. In the last 200 years, the U.S. has
lost 50% of its wetlands, 90% of its old-growth forests, and 99%
of its tall-grass prairie. The world is losing tropical forests
at a rate of almost 42 million acres per year, an increase of
50% from a decade ago. At the current rate, tropical forests
will be gone within 115 years. Rain forests cover only 7% of
Earth’s surface, but contain over 50% of its species. Acid
rain is destroying our forests, which in turn will produce
"global warming.’’
Global Warming:
"Except for nuclear war or a collision with an asteroid, no
force has more potential to damage our planet’s web of life
than global warming." (Time Magazine, April 9, 2001)
The 1990s were the hottest decade on record. Over the 20th
century, Earth’s average temperature rose approximately one
degree. Warmer climates have widespread effects on the
environment.
The sea level
will rise as oceans absorb heat from the atmosphere and expand.
Polar ice caps will melt. Increases in sea level will flood and
erode coastal areas inhabited by half the world’s population.
Tropical storms will become more frequent and intense. Weather
patterns will become extreme, causing flooding. Soil moisture
will decrease impacting crop failures and life-threatening
droughts. "Breadbasket farmland" (like our Midwest)
will become barren desert. Markets and food supplies will be
disrupted. Severe food shortages will result.
Time is
running out, according to Lester R. Brown, president of the
highly respected Worldwatch Institute. "Preceding
generations have always been concerned about the future, but
ours is the first to be faced with decisions that will determine
whether the earth our children inherit will be
inhabitable."
Scientists are
now concerned that the population explosion could hasten and
increase the effects of global warming. Drastic climate changes
resulting in economic disaster in many nations could trigger
wars for survival.
Drugs:
We are losing the drug war because the huge profits are too
corrupting. There are 2.2 million hard-core drug users in the
United States. While one out of forty persons in New York City
is hard-core, nationally one out of one hundred are hard-core
users. The number of casual users is substantially higher. Is it
any wonder the crime rate is spiraling? Seventy percent of New
York City’s drug users are affluent. One thousand drug
addicted babies are born every day.
Economic chaos:
The U.S. entered 2000 with a staggering debt of $5.6 trillion
and a perilous foreign trade imbalance. The nineties were the
"decade of uncertainty." Outstanding consumer credit
debts have increased from $349.4 billion in 1980 to $1,395.4
billion in 1999.
Indeed, our
generation is experiencing a "Time of Trouble such as never
was since there was a nation."
Increased
Travel—Daniel 12:1
The second
sign is increased travel. Transportation has expanded rapidly
because of the automobile. Selden made the first automobile in
1877. Today there are over 600,000,000 cars. Through numerous
modes of transportation millions are crossing and recrossing
each other’s paths around the world. In the past 100 years,
man has increased his travel from 30 mph to 25,000 mph off the
planet to the moon.
Knowledge
Increased—Daniel 12:1
If the
increase of knowledge from the dawn of history to the 1880s is
given a value of one, then knowledge has doubled 16 times within
the last 10 years. One hundred years ago, 90 of the world’s
population could neither read nor write. Today, 40% of the
world’s population can read and write, and in the Western
world literacy has reached nearly 90%.
Ninety percent
of all scientists who have ever lived are alive today. Fifty
percent of the world’s inventions have been created in the
last decade.
Sophistication
in communications allows man to see and hear throughout the
world instantly. U.S. homes with telephone answering devices
jumped from 31% in 1990 to 74% in 2000. Cordless telephones
jumped from 25% in 1990 to 78% in 2000. In 1989 there were 3.5
million cellular telephone subscribers; by 1999 there were 86.0
million. In 1990 there were 9.9 million pagers; by 1999 there
were 53.5 million.
In 1995, 31.7%
households had personal computers; by 2000, 53%. In the last
decade, 66.3 million computers were sold. In 1993 there were 3
million Internet users; by mid 1999 there were nearly 200
million; by 2000 there were 332.7 million.
The noted
historian, Barbara Tuchman has observed,
"Man
entered the Nineteenth Century using only his own and animal
power, supplemented by that of wind and water, much as he had
entered the Thirteenth, or for that matter, the First. He
entered the Twentieth with his capacities in transportation,
communication, production, manufacture and weaponry multiplied a
thousandfold by the energy of machines." (The Proud
Tower, Foreword, xvi)
Unprecedented
travel and increase of knowledge marks our day at the "time
of the end."
Israel
Becomes a Nation—Daniel 12:1
The fourth
sign which marks us at the "time of the end" is that
the Lord will stand up for Daniel’s "people," the
Jewish nation. If we are living in this "time of the
end," we should expect dramatic evidence of God’s favor
on behalf of the Jewish people.
Against this
background, Matthew 24 becomes meaningful. "What shall be
the sign of your coming [Greek, parousia], and of the end of the
world [age]?" Matt. 24:3
Matthew
24:32-34 gives the deliverance of Israel as one of these signs.
"Now learn a parable of the fig tree; When his branch is
yet tender, and puts forth leaves, you know that summer is nigh:
So likewise you, when you shall see all these things, know that
it is even at the doors. Verily I say unto you, This generation
shall not pass, till all these things be fulfilled."
Israel
Restored
Students of
prophecy from many denominations generally recognize that the
fig tree is pictorial of the nation of Israel. (See Jeremiah,
Chapter 24). In Matthew 21:19, Jesus cursed a fig tree because
he found no fruit on it. As a result of his cursing the fig tree
withered.
Several days
later Jesus applied the lesson of the withered fig tree. He
proclaimed judgment on the nation of Israel, "Behold, your
house is left unto you desolate" (Matthew 23:38) because it
had not borne fruitage to God. Israel was subsequently scattered
and persecuted.
Israel’s
restoration is an outstanding sign of the end of the age. The
fig tree coming back to life and putting forth leaves represents
Israel coming to life as a nation, and receiving God’s
increasing favor. Historians agree that Israel’s rebirth is a
miracle of history. Never before has a nation been destroyed,
its people dispersed to the ends of the earth and then—nearly
2,000 years later—its descendants regathered to their homeland
and re-established as a nation.
Compare Luke
21:29-32 with Matthew 24:32-34. The restoration of Israel means
the kingdom is at hand.
"And he
spoke to them a parable: Behold the fig tree, and all the trees;
when they now shoot forth, you see and know of your own selves
that summer is nigh at hand. So likewise you, when you see these
things come to pass, know you that the kingdom of God is nigh at
hand. Verily I say unto you, This generation shall not pass
away, till all be fulfilled." Luke 21:29-32.
The generation
that witnesses Israel restored as a nation will also witness the
complete end of the world or age, and the full establishment of
the Kingdom of God.
Scriptures are
charged with signs that have become the headlines of our day:
Jerusalem is no longer trodden down by Gentiles (Lk. 21:24).
Many new nations have gained independence (Lk. 21:29,30). Evil
is exposed as never before (I Cor. 4:5). Most people, even the
professedly religious, lack faith (Lk. 18:8). Men love
themselves, have no respect for parents, and have no natural
affection (2 Tim. 3:1-5). Turmoil grows between labor and
capital (Jas. 5:1-4). Wars and war preparations intensify (Joel
3:9-11). All the while men proclaim "peace" (I Thess.
5:2,3). Men’s hearts fail for fear (Lk. 21:36).
One more sign
bears consideration.
Nations
on the Run —
Another Remarkable Prophecy
"Woe unto
you that desire the day of the LORD! to what end is it for you?
the day of the LORD is darkness, and not light. As if a man did
flee from a lion, and a bear met him; or went into the house,
and leaned his hand on the wall, and a serpent bit him."
Amos 5:18,19,20
In Amos’
prophecy the fleeing man represents the world’s experiences in
this dark "time of trouble." At the dawning of our
era, Great Britain ruled the most expansive empire on earth. The
lion in this prophecy, Britain’s national symbol,
appropriately illustrated the mighty nation that devoured
(colonized) weaker nations. Colonialism’s suffocating grasping
led to the world’s fleeing to another form of government.
The man in
Amos 5:20 escaped the lion only to meet the bear—a form of
government diametrically opposed to the grasping greed of
colonialism—communism! The former Soviet Union, the
"bear" of Amos’ prophecy, offered man another hope
for safety in this time of trouble. Communism’s failure to
rescue man was underscored by its precipitous fall. Nations are
now seeking another hope of security—nationalism.
Entering the
"house" of nationalism has been anything but
comfortable for the nations of the world. Bosnia, Serbia,
Germany and other nations seeking safety in nationalism have
suffered civil war, economic malaise, the rise of new "hate
groups" and other ills. While in the supposed security of
ultra-nationalism (will church and state reunite?) the people
place their hand on the wall. Seeking rest in the supporting
structure of human government will result in being bitten by the
serpent. That old Serpent, the Devil and Satan, which once
deceived the nations to think that they were Christ’s Kingdom
(Revelation 12:9) will bite them again. Then the nations will
feel the rebuke of Jehovah in the great time of trouble.
All of these
prophecies mark the time when the present evil world is being
destroyed. God is now revealing Himself as never before in
history, a revelation which will climax with the establishment
of the Kingdom of Christ on earth.
Take
heart—even though things must get worse before they get
better. It is the unprecedented severity of world problems
(Matthew 24:21) and the paralysis of hopelessness (Luke 21:25)
that mark us at the threshold of the great Kingdom blessings
which God has in store for man.
Just as urban
renewal requires the demolition of old structures, so the full
establishment of Christ’s Kingdom requires the removal of our
corrupt civilization (Hebrews 12:28). The present generation
will see the Kingdom in all its glory (Luke 21:21-32).
|
|
Why God Permits Evil
Justifiably,
the question arises as to why God has permitted man to suffer
for thousands of years, and then, only when Christ returns and
establishes his Kingdom is all changed? The question of
suffering and evil has always been an enigma to man.
Philosophers of all times and ages have pondered the question to
no avail. But the Scriptures provide a logical answer to this
question which leaves one in awe.
Webster
defines evil as "that which produces unhappiness; anything
which either directly or remotely causes suffering of any
kind."
God desires
mankind to live in peace, harmony and happiness. He knows this
will only happen as each practices the principles of
righteousness and love. Otherwise evil will result with its
consequences of suffering and unhappiness.
Here we are
faced with what can be referred to as the "dilemma of
God"—the planetary systems move in mechanical obedience;
the animal creation is driven mainly by instinct; but God
desired the human race to have a free will and to "worship
him in spirit and in truth" (John 4:24). God could have
programmed the ideal man and utopia would have been inevitable,
but man would be no better than a robot, nor would he be happy.
Further, it is impossible to worship only "in truth,"
to obey truth and righteousness for what you can get out of it
without having the "spirit" or appreciation of
righteousness.
Out of sheer
appreciation of the principles of righteousness — worshiping
in spirit—God desired man to live in harmony with both his
Creator and fellow man. God knows it is only as man is fully
motivated by the principles of righteousness, that he can really
attain happiness for himself and be in that attitude of cheerful
concern for the happiness of his fellows.
The problems
of free has a built-in dilemma. Man can rebel against his
Creator. The Lord was willing to bestow free will, fully
cognizant that it would cost Him dearly before man became fully
responsible to this freedom. What an awesome power! Man can
stand in stiff-necked rebellion against his Creator. He can
refuse to submit to God’s authority. He can refuse to accept
God’s favor. He can choose to avert the mercy of God and
adamantly stand upon his decision against God. For by free will,
man is man, created in the image of God, and neither an animal
nor a machine.
Put yourself
in God’s place to appreciate this dilemma. A parent will tell
his baby not to touch the stove because it is hot. But, what
does a baby know about being burned? The anxious parent knows
the inevitability of the baby touching the stove before learning
the consequence of heat. A wise parent will create a controlled
experience with heat—lightly and quickly touching the
child’s hand where the heat is not too severe. And all through
life parents will admonish their children, knowing that they
will only learn certain lessons the "hard way"—by
experience.
As our Father,
God knew man would not comprehend His warning about sin,
disobedience and their dire consequences. So God formulated a
plan whereby man, through his own choice, might first experience
evil and then righteousness (in God’s kingdom). This
contrasting experience will demonstrate the beauty and
righteousness of God’s law and the dire consequence of its
violation as no other process could.
The recovery
from sin is called redemption in the Bible. Redemption simply
means the release from sin and death through the payment of a
price. The thought is similar to the releasing a person from
prison when a benefactor pays the fine the prisoner couldn’t
afford. This release through the death of Jesus is often
considered as an afterthought of God to salvage some of the
human race. But the depth of God’s wisdom is shown by His
foresight in devising a plan that provides for man’s free
choice and experience with evil, redemption through Christ and
ultimate eternal happiness. Thus Isaiah 46:9-10 speaks of God
knowing and declaring the end from the beginning.
Eden: Actual
History
The third
chapter of Genesis is the divinely provided history of man’s
free will choice. God instructed man that if he practiced
righteousness, he would live forever. If he disobeyed, then
"dying he would die." Death would be a process of
sorrow and suffering culminating with the grave. Note well that
death, not eternal torment, is the penalty for sin (Genesis
2:17; Psalms 146:4). Like the child and heat, man did not know
what suffering and death were. He disobeyed. God is now giving
man a controlled experience with evil. We read in Ecclesiastes
1:13 and 3:10, "This sore travail hath God given to man to
be exercised therewith." Man’s travail with evil is for a
purpose, that he might be exercised or taught certain lessons by
it.
Some will say,
"Don’t tell me you still believe in original sin! Just
because Adam and Eve were disobedient, the whole human race are
sinners?" In I Timothy 2:13,14; I Corinthians 15:21,22;
Romans 5:14; and John 8:44, both Jesus and the apostles refer to
the event in Eden as a real time-space situation. What better
proof can we have that the Genesis account of Eden was actual
history? Unfortunately, the logic of this concept has been
obscured by Dark Age superstitions that have been attached to
it, such as "hell fire," with a vindictive God who
must be placated. Modern man is rightly repelled by the
superstitions contained in some church theology, but these
superstitions are not taught in the Bible. Shorn of Dark Age
theology, there is no better explanation of man’s miserable
plight than the Scriptural teaching of original sin.
Another Look
at Sin
Not too long
ago, sin was treated lightly. It was called
"ignorance," only a growing pain of the human race.
Give man a bit more education, let him become a little more
civilized and he will evolve out of his sin, leaving evil behind
him. But now we are not so sure. The heinous events of World War
II (12 million murders, leveled cities, gas chambers), followed
by the continuing senseless acceleration of war, crime and
violence (old people killed for kicks, 70-year-old women
molested) and other immoralities, have forced man to take a
second look at the problem of evil.
A fresh look
at sin is pointedly reflected in the words of Dr. Cyril E. M.
Joad, a noted Professor of Philosophy and Psychology at the
University of London, and listed by the editor of The
American Weekly as one of the world’s great scientists.
Joad said:
"For
years my name regularly appeared with H. G. Wells, Bertrand
Russell, and Aldous Huxley as a derider of religion.... Then
came the war, and the existence of evil made its impact upon me
as a positive and obtrusive fact. The war opened my eyes to the
impossibility of writing off what I had better call man’s
‘sinfulness’ as a mere by-product of circumstance. The evil
in man was due, I was taught, either to economic circumstance
(because people were poor, their habits were squalid, their
tastes undeveloped, their passions untamed) or to psychological
circumstances. For were not psycho-analysts telling me that all
the regressive, aggressive, or inhibited tendencies of human
nature were due to the unfortunate psychological environment of
one’s early childhood?
"The
implications are obvious; remove the circumstances, entrust
children to psycho- analyzed nurses and teachers, and virtue
would reign.
"I have
come flatly to disbelieve all this. I see now that evil is
endemic in man, and that the Christian doctrine of original sin
expresses a deep and essential insight into human nature."
As Dr. Joad,
society is taking another look at evil. It can no longer be
considered a growing pain. It is too deadly a disease to be
explained away by environment.
Speaking
collectively of the human race, the Psalmist said, "In sin
did my mother conceive me." (Psalms 51:5) The Apostle Paul
in Romans 5:12 says, "By one man sin entered the world and
death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all
have sinned."
Since father
Adam sinned, justice required that he die. Before he died, Adam
had children who were born in sin. They inherited Adam’s
imperfections. Thus, the whole human race is born dying. This is
how it is learning the consequences of evil. But the permission
of evil is a brief controlled experience when compared with
eternity. And what are some of the grim lessons? God permits
evil to demonstrate that man without God results in:
Science and
possible extinction through the H-bomb or pollution;
Affluence
that spends $900 million a year in the U.S. for pet food while 5
million humans starve to death;
Religious
Institutions whose
assets total billions of dollars while millions live in poverty;
Technology
and its deadly tentacles of pollution encircling the globe;
Towering
Cities that are
concrete jungles of crime and violence, filled with faceless
people experiencing life without meaning and terrible
loneliness.
God permits
evil to prove that man without God can only result in man’s
inhumanity to man. What is this world coming to? An
understanding of what results when man is separated from God.
The Problem
of Communication
In our era of
permissiveness, the justice of God seems to be an offense to the
rationalist. But perhaps the problem is one of communication,
which can be shown in the simple illustration of an argument.
All of us at sometime have been engaged in an argument in which
we really never objectively listened to the other party. We were
too busy thinking of our answers to hear their logic. The
rationalist is carrying on a debate with God. If he would only
stop and listen to what God has explained in the historic
account of Eden (Genesis 3), he would catch a glimpse of the
wisdom and justice of God which becomes man’s guarantee of an
eternity of happiness.
Is God’s
Justice Severe?
Some question
the severity of God’s justice in the death penalty. Could not
some other penalty than death have been a just recompense for
Adam’s disobedience? No doubt some other penalty would have
been just; however, God chose this penalty because it best
suited His overall plan for mankind. Once Adam was informed that
death was the penalty for disobedience, then the penalty was
fair.
A basic fact
to always remember is that God in His foreknowledge knew that
Adam would disobey, therefore, long before the creation of Adam,
God’s wisdom devised a plan of recovery and ultimate happiness
for the human race that would require the death of His only
begotten Son. Thus I Peter 1:19-20 and Ephesians 1:4-7 speak of
the blood of Christ as foreordained before the world began for
the redemption of mankind. The Creator used the time-space
situation in Eden to demonstrate the dependability of His
justice. It is vital that man knows that "justice and
judgment [just decisions] are the habitation of your [God’s]
throne"—Psalms 89:14. Justice is the foundation of the
government of the universe, the basis of all God’s dealings.
Judgment is also spoken of as part of this foundation. The
Hebrew word here means "a just decision." We can take
comfort in the realization that throughout eternity all of
God’s decisions will be just.
Man was placed
in the Edenic paradise to thoroughly enjoy the love of God.
Suppose that after Adam and Eve had lived obediently for a
while, God changed His mind and chased them out of the garden
condition into the thorns and thistles of the unfinished earth.
His love would be worthless, whimsical, because it was not based
on justice. It would be changeable.
Another
hypothetical situation: If when Adam disobeyed, God said,
"Oh, I will overlook your disobedience this time, I will
not punish you as I promised to do." Adam might say,
"Wonderful! I am surely glad God is more loving than
just."
Wonderful? No!
This would be whimsical, capricious, arbitrary. The Creator and
Ruler of the universe could never be trusted throughout
eternity. At any time, in any place, with any order of
intelligent creatures, God might at the slightest whim change
His mind and turn on His creatures. Eden proved the
unchangeableness of God’s justice. God declares in Malachi
3:6, "I am Jehovah, I change not." James 1:17 states,
"The Father of lights in whom there is no variableness,
neither shadow of turning."
How
unchangeable is God’s justice? So unyielding that God’s
court of justice required the payment of the costliest fine ever
stipulated in a court of law. What judge has been willing to
give up his own innocent son to death in order to cancel the
debt of crime of the defendant?
Another
Problem of Communication
Our Creator
wants us to know the depths of His love, that He is the most
loving Being in the universe. How can God communicate this to
our finite minds? In human relationships words of love can be
quite meaningless. Actions speak louder than words. How did God
show His love? With tender Fatherly emotions of sorrow, God took
the dearest treasure of His heart, His only Begotten Son, and
sent Him to earth to suffer and die at the hands of man. At
great cost to Himself, the wisdom of God formulated a plan which
reveals that He is both just (unyielding justice) and the
justifier (benefactor) of mankind (Romans 3:25-26).
The simple
events of Eden and Calvary tell so much about our God. Calvary
is the greatest manifestation of love and mercy in the history
of the universe. The combination of Eden and Calvary stand as a
pledge throughout eternity that there is no variableness,
neither shadow of turning in God’s justice.
The world is, therefore, by
experience coming to an understanding of God’s ways.
|
|
A Ransom
For All
The Scriptures
are explicit that not just a few, who call themselves Christians
or who believe a certain way, but all mankind will benefit by
the death of Jesus. Hebrews 2:9 states, "Jesus Christ by
the grace of God tasted death for every man." God’s
justice demands that all mankind, living and dead, before and
after the death of Christ, will experience the benefits of
Christ’s death.
The following
scriptures unfold the beautiful logic of God’s justice in this
matter: I Timothy 2:6 speaks of Jesus’ death as "a ransom
for all to be testified in due time." The word
"ransom" is a translation of the Greek word anti-lutron
which means corresponding price. Father Adam, perfect, sinned.
Death passed upon him and the prospective human race yet in his
loins. Deliverance from death required the payment of a
corresponding price, the death of a perfect man. No member of
the sinful, imperfect, human race could pay this price. Only
Jesus, who was "holy, harmless, separate from sinners"
could (Hebrews 7:26).
The perfect
man Jesus died for Adam’s sin, thereby redeeming Adam and his
offspring, the human race, from death. Paul in Romans 5:17 says,
"Therefore as by the offense of one [Adam], judgment came
upon all men to condemnation; even so by the righteousness of
one [Jesus], the free gift came upon all men unto justification
of life."
The question
is sometimes raised, does not the providing of a ransom for
man’s escape from death prove that the death sentence was
unjust or too severe, and therefore God changed His mind? The
very fact God provided so expensive a ransom price proves that
His justice is unbending. In courts of law, several forms of
punishment may be equally just for a specific crime; for
example, five years’ imprisonment or twenty thousand dollars.
Say we were penniless and received such a sentence. After
serving half a year, a complete stranger came along and took an
interest in our case and paid the twenty thousand dollars, would
we not feel indebted to him for the rest of our lives!
The Scriptures
reveal that the ransom price, as a satisfaction for justice, was
coexistent as an alternative to the death sentence. Thus, Jesus
is spoken of as "slain from before the foundation of the
world" (I Peter 1:19-20; Revelation 13:8). The Psalmist
also states that no man could give a ransom for his brother
(Psalms 49:7).
For man’s
eternal good, God permits him to experience the effects of the
death sentence. Then He applies the alternative means of
satisfying justice, the ransom price. When mankind becomes fully
aware, they will be eternally indebted to their Redeemer, the
one who paid the fine to the court of the universe for their
release from the prison-house of death.
Why Jesus
Suffered
Not only did
Jesus die to provide the fine, a perfect human life that will
eventually release the human race from death, but during his
lifetime he suffered at the hands of his fellow man so that he
could fully sympathize with their every need.
The Prophet
Isaiah anticipated Jesus’ suffering. "He is despised and
rejected of men; a man of sorrows acquainted with grief....
Surely he has borne our grief, and carried our sorrows.... He
was wounded for our transgressions… and with his stripes we
are healed." Isaiah 53: 3-5.
Hebrews 4:15
tells us that Jesus is a sympathetic high priest who can be
touched with a feeling of our infirmities. Jesus continually
permitted himself to be afflicted through contact with sinful
man. Every time Jesus healed, it was at the expense of his own
strength. We read that "virtue [strength] went out from
him" (Mark 5:30) as he healed the blind, the lame, the
deaf, the lepers. He was expending his own strength so that he
might be touched with a feeling of our infirmities.
Further, Jesus
was mocked. He experienced brutality, violence and murder at the
hands of his fellow men. As a Jew, he tasted the racial scorn of
the Romans. He identified himself with poverty, drudgery and
obscurity. Full of compassion, his heart was moved for the
mentally ill, the physically sick, the lame, the deaf, the
blind. Why? So that in his Kingdom Christ will know just what
lessons mankind will need. "Who can have compassion on the
ignorant, and on them that are out of the way; for that he
himself also is compassed with infirmity." (Hebrews 5:2)
Jesus assumed upon his shoulders the ills of what this world is
coming to. Indeed, he has compassion on the ignorant and them
that are out of the way. Those whom he ransomed, he will know
how to restore.
The Call of the Church
Jesus died nearly 2,000 years ago. The
question naturally arises, Why the long delay before setting up
his Kingdom for the blessing of all mankind? One thing is clear
throughout the Bible: God has not been attempting to convert the
world since Jesus’ death and resurrection.
The Scriptures speak of God dealing
with only a few for a specific purpose. Christ’s followers are
spoken of as a little flock. "Fear not, little flock; for
it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the
kingdom" (Luke 12:32). God is only calling a few; a
representative of every type of the human race is being called
into the church of Christ.
The Greek word for church is ecclesia
which literally means "called out ones." These called
out ones, the little flock, will share with Christ when he
establishes his Kingdom for the blessing of all mankind. Thus
Paul says, "Know you not that the saints shall judge the
world?" (I Corinthians 6:2).
The Revelator discloses that the
followers of Jesus will live and reign with him during his
Kingdom, during the time that the benefits of Jesus’ death are
bestowed upon the world of mankind (Rev. 20:4).
Jesus’ words in Mark 4:12 show that
God is not presently interested in converting even the majority
of mankind. "Unto you it is given to know the mystery
[secret] of the Kingdom of God, but unto them that are without
all these things are done in parables: that seeing they may see,
and not perceive; and hearing they may hear, and not understand;
lest at any time they should be converted, and their sins should
be forgiven them." This scripture might seem strange to
some, but it gives us an insight into what God has been doing
between the death of Jesus and the return of Jesus to set up his
Kingdom upon the earth.
Have you ever wondered why the Bible is
difficult to understand? By divine intent it has been written in
parables, dark sayings and symbols so that it would not be
easily understood. Why? So that the majority would not bother
and consequently would not be converted. During the Christian
Age, the Lord is only converting a few, a "little
flock," "who by patient continuance in well doing seek
for glory, honor and immortality"—Rom. 2:7. These are
elsewhere symbolically referred to as the bride of Christ.
After Christ returns, these believers
will be united with him and then the conversion of the world
will begin. Revelation 22:17 prophesied of that time: "And
the Spirit [the returned Christ] and the bride [the true church]
say, Come. And let him that hears say, Come. And let him that
thirsts come. And whosoever will, let him take the water of life
freely."
This sequence of the call of the
church, the establishment of the kingdom, then the blessing of
the remainder of mankind is also corroborated by Acts 15:14-17.
"God for the first time did visit the Gentiles to take out
of them a people for His name [the true church]. And to this
agree the words of the prophets; as it is written, after this I
will return and will build the tabernacle of David which is
fallen down; and I will build again the ruins thereof, and I
will set it up: that the residue [remainder] of men might seek
after the Lord.…"
Note these points: A small group,
"a people for His name" is first selected out of the
Gentiles. Then the tabernacle of David, which was an Old
Testament type or illustration of the Kingdom of Christ, is set
up again. Why is the church first called? Why is the Kingdom
(tabernacle of David) then set up? "That the residue [all
that remain] of men might seek after the Lord, and all the
Gentiles." First a choice group is called out of the
Gentile nations so that afterwards, by it the rest of the
Gentiles—the vast majority—may learn to call upon God’s
name.
Remember 1 Timothy 2:6, speaking of
Jesus, said, "Who gave himself a ransom for all to be
testified in due time." The "due time" for the
true church to learn of the ransom is now during the Christian
Age, but the "due time" for the rest of mankind to
understand the ransom is yet future. Mankind will be re-educated
by the church.
Since the vast majority of the human
race went into its graves without hearing or understanding the
"ransom for all," the Kingdom will require the raising
of the dead. This is just what Jesus tells us in John
5:28."Marvel not at this, for the hour is coming in the
which all that are in their graves shall hear his voice and
shall come forth; they that have done good to a resurrection of
life and they that have done evil unto the resurrection of
judgment" (RSV).
Note again the same pattern of sequence
we have seen in other scriptures. All will be raised from the
dead—first, "they that have done good ." This refers
to the true church. During Christ’s return they will be raised
to spiritual life and united with their heavenly Lord. Then will
follow the resurrection of the "evil class," all the
remainder of men.
They will come forth to a
"resurrection of judgment." The King James Bible,
translated in A.D. 1611, grossly mistranslated the word
"judgment" with the word "damnation." The
American Revised Version in 1881 used the word
"judgment," and no translation since has used the word
"damnation."
The Greek word in the text is krisis
and it actually denotes "a crucial testing time." This
Greek word is the source of our English word "crisis."
And it has the same meaning. A doctor might say, "The
patient will reach his crisis tomorrow morning." This does
not mean that the patient will die tomorrow morning. Rather, the
crisis of an illness is that period when the patient will take a
turn for the better or for the worse.
The "crisis" or trial time
for the church is in this present life, but the
"crisis" or trial time of the remainder of mankind
will be at the resurrection in the Kingdom. Billions of mankind
before and after Jesus’ earthly ministry died without
receiving the light of Jesus. Yet John 1:9 states that Jesus is
the light that "lights every man that comes into the
world."
A further Scriptural confirmation that,
for most, truth enlightenment will require an awakening from the
dead. The world has yet to come to this momentous experience.
Why the
Church Is Called First
Why is the true church
first selected to share with Christ in the Kingdom work of
blessing mankind? There are a number of reasons given in the
Scriptures.
One reason can be
illustrated by the noble work of Alcoholics Anonymous. An
essential step of AA therapy is to assign a former alcoholic to
each alcoholic that comes for help. The victim being driven by
alcohol will not readily accept help or advice from just anyone.
How could anyone know his agony, his depression, his desperation
if he has not shared the same experience? But the alcoholic will
accept help from a former alcoholic because he knows that this
person can understand his agony. And this former alcoholic
stands ready at any time to come to his side, to plead with him.
It requires a former alcoholic to rehabilitate an alcoholic.
When mankind comes
forth from the grave in Christ’s Kingdom, they will be
informed they have been purchased with the precious blood of
Christ and they will be made aware of the fact that they are now
under the reign of Jesus Christ and his church (I Corinthians
6:2). What confidence they will have that the church will know
just how to enter into their problems! Why? Because the church
also were once sinners. This plan for rehabilitation will work.
The majority will gladly receive the instruction, the
disciplining, the nurturing necessary to
The
Kingdom of Christ
The prophecies considered in
Chapter One indicate that we are at the end of the age,
therefore the selection of the church is nearly
completed. The great time of trouble foretold in Daniel
12:1 and Matthew 24:21 is upon us. Haggai 2:7 contains a
thrilling promise that we should cherish in these
troubling times.
Speaking of this "Time of
Trouble" Haggai prophesied, "And I will shake
all nations and the desire of all nations will
come." How comforting! The legitimate desires of
all nations or peoples shall come. The Scriptures show
that one of the reasons for the "Time of
Trouble" is that the various segments of society
are demanding both just and fancied desires from each
other. And nations are superimposing their desires upon
other nations. The result is the disintegration of our
present evil world. But all people have legitimate
desires that God will fulfill after the tribulation
demonstrates that selfish man cannot establish his own
utopia.
What are some of these desires
the Kingdom will fulfill? If we asked the working man
struggling to keep his head above water, "What is
your desire?" his answer would be, "If only we
had economic security." Speaking of the Kingdom,
Isaiah 65:21-23 says, "They shall build houses and
inhabit them; they shall plant vineyards and eat their
fruit. They shall not build and another inhabit. They
shall not plant and another eat. They shall not labor in
vain nor bring forth for trouble."
There will be no unemployment
problem, fear of automa-tion, inflation, depression or
any economic problem. In the Kingdom, all will have
economic security as symbolized by these words of
Isaiah.
If we stopped a man on the
streets of Harlem and asked him what he desired, he
would reply, "Why, if the needs of the poor and
minorities were only understood, and if we could only be
assured of justice, then life could be beautiful."
The Kingdom will satisfy these desires. Then "He
[God] will defend the cause of the poor, deliver the
needy and crush the oppressor." (Psalms 72:4) And
Isaiah 9:7 again tells us, "Of the increase of his
[Christ’s] government there will be no end.... It will
be established with justice and righteousness
forevermore."
If we asked one of our elderly
in our crime ridden cities what is his desire, he would
probably reply, "If only there were no more crime
and violence." This desire will also come, for in
the Kingdom we read, "They shall not hurt nor
destroy in all my holy mountain [Kingdom], for the earth
shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the
waters cover the sea" (Isa. 11:9).
What would be the desire of
patients in hospitals? Of course, they would say,
"If only there were no sickness and crippling
diseases, no cancer, multiple sclerosis, muscular
dystrophy. If only the blind could see, the deaf could
hear and the crippled walk." Oh! Thank God! These
desires will be fulfilled! Of the Kingdom we read in
Isaiah 33:24, "And no inhabitant will say I am
sick." Isaiah 35:5— "Then the eyes of the
blind shall be opened, the ears of the deaf unstopped,
then shall the lame man leap like a deer, and the tongue
of the dumb sing for joy."
And what would be the desire of
youth? One of their many idealisms is, "Can’t
there be a world without war? And why can’t the
billions of dollars and the cream of technology that is
wasted on the armament race be harnessed for peace and
human needs?" In the Kingdom we read in Isaiah 2:4,
"They shall beat their swords into plowshares and
their spears into pruning hooks. Nation shall not lift
up sword against nation neither shall they learn war
anymore."
If we went to the sub-Saharan
drought belt of Africa where over a million have starved
to death in a recent six-year period, and ask,
"What is the one desire in life you
want?"—with one accord they would say, "Oh,
if only the rains could be depended on, so that we could
be assured that the land could bring forth food to feed
our children." The climatic conditions in the
Kingdom will be ideal. The earth will bring forth in
abundance. In Isaiah 35:1,7, we read, "The desert
shall blossom as a rose.... And the parched ground shall
become a pool and the lands springs of water."
Think of the countless millions
who have lost loved ones in death. Their one desire is
the return of these dear victims. And in the Kingdom
they will be united with their loved ones. Speaking of
all that died, Hosea 13:14 says, "I will ransom
[deliver] them from the power of the grave; I will
redeem them from death: O death, I will be your plagues;
O grave, I will be your destruction." Is it any
wonder Jesus taught us to pray, "Your Kingdom come,
your will be done on earth as it is in heaven"?
Is
Man Too Selfish?
Well, someone
might say, God will wonderfully bless mankind in the
Kingdom, but there is still the problem of man. If
history has taught us anything, it is that man is too
selfish to permit an ideal society. This has been true,
but the reason the Kingdom will work is that God intends
to change man’s selfish heart of stone into a heart of
love. We have seen in the chapter on the permission of
evil that the basic lesson God is now teaching man is
the exceeding sinfulness of sin. Man alienated himself
from God by disobeying and man without God results in
selfish havoc.
The Kingdom of
Christ will rule in righteousness; the knowledge of the
Lord will cover the earth as the waters cover the deep
so that all will know the Lord (Isaiah 11:9). Satan will
be bound so that he cannot deceive the people
(Revelation 20:1-3). The love of God will abundantly
bestow blessings of life, peace and happiness upon all.
The very spirit or influence of this Kingdom arrangement
will have an overwhelming transforming effect on the
hearts of men.
Of this mighty
working of the spirit we read in Ezekiel 11:19-20,
"And I will give them one heart, and I will put a
new spirit within you; and I will take the stony heart
out of their flesh, and will give them a heart of flesh.
That they may walk in my statutes, and keep mine
ordinances, and do them: and they shall be my people.
and I will be their God."
The
Iron Rule
For many an
iron rule will at first be required in order to change
their heart of stone into a heart of flesh. The laws of
the Kingdom of Christ will be far more exacting than
those of any previous government and the liberties of
the people will be restricted to a degree that will be
galling indeed to many now clamoring for an increase of
liberty without responsibility.
Liberty to
deceive, to misrepresent, to overreach and to defraud
others, will be entirely stopped. Liberty to abuse
themselves or others in food or in drink, or in any way
to corrupt good manners, will be totally denied to all.
Liberty or
license to do wrong of any sort will not be granted to
any. The only liberty that will be granted to any will
be the true and glorious liberty of the sons of
God-liberty to do good to themselves and others in any
and in every way. Nothing will be allowed to injure or
destroy in all that holy kingdom. (Isaiah 11:9; Romans
8:21)
That rule will
consequently be felt by some to be a severe one,
breaking up all their former habits and customs, as well
as breaking up present institutions founded upon these
false habits and false ideas of liberty. Because of its
firmness and vigor, it is symbolically called an iron
rule, "He shall rule them with a rod of iron."
(Compare Revelation 2:26, 27; Psalms 2:8-12, and 49:14.)
Thus will be fulfilled the statement, "Judgment
will I lay to the line and righteousness to the plummet.
And the hail [righteous judgment] shall sweep away the
refuge of lies, and the waters [truth] shall overflow
the hiding place," and every hidden thing shall be
revealed. Isa. 28:17; Matt. 10:26.
Some will feel
rebellious against that perfect and equitable rule. Now
under the influence of Satan, they lord it over their
fellow men. In the Kingdom, these will attempt to live
wholly at the expense of others without rendering
compensating service. This present life of
self-indulgence and gratification will naturally demand
and receive many and severe disciplines under that
reign, before such will learn the lessons of that
Kingdom-equity, justice, righteousness. Psa. 89:32; Luke
12:47,48
But, blessed
thought! When the Prince of Life has put in force the
laws of righteousness and equity with an iron rule, the
masses of mankind will learn that "Righteousness
exalts a nation, but sin is a reproach to any
people." They will learn that God’s plan and laws
are best in the end for all concerned, and ultimately
they will learn to love righteousness and hate iniquity.
(Psalms 45:7; Hebrews 1:9) All under that reign who have
not learned to love the right, will be counted unworthy
of lasting life and will be cut off from among the
people. Acts 3:23; Rev. 20:9; Psa. 11:5-7.
Revelation 21:4
beautifully sums up the work of the Kingdom: "God
shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there
shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying,
neither shall there be any more pain: for the former
things are passed away."
At the end of
the thousand-year Kingdom of Christ, as mankind stands
at the threshold of eternity, they will look back upon
this present life of suffering, sickness and sorrow.
Though this experience seems dark and interminable at
present, then, by contrast with eternity, it will seem
trifling. With this grand perspective, what this world
is coming to now is seen as only a necessary bridge that
passes over into life everlasting.
Men will thank
their God for this experience with sin and evil, and at
that time all creatures in heaven and every creature on
earth will raise their voices in that grand Hallelujah
chorus recorded in Revelation 5:13, "Blessing, and
honor, and glory, and power, be unto him [God] that sits
upon the throne, and unto the Lamb [that was slain] for
ever and ever." Amen.
The
world, for whom Christ died (John 3:16), is about to embark on
an Age which will realize all humanity’s deepest longings
(Rom. 8:20, 22; Isa. 25:9).
|

|