The Dispensation of the Kingdom of Heaven: Matthew 13

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I would say a few words on this chapter or collection of parables, in the deep feeling of the imperfectness with which any of us understand “the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven;” and this, not merely from personal feelings as to individual weakness, but from the scope and extent of the divine wisdom in them; a wisdom knit up with and developing the whole of the divine counsels: a wisdom therefore, not to be acquired in mere detached passages, but in the comprehension of the mind of God which flows from the abundance of the Spirit exercised in spiritual application to scripture, Nevertheless, I feel that our portion as believers, is to be given to know them—our blessed portion; and we may be allowed, in the confidence of His love, to breathe out, also, what we may have apprehended of the mind of the Spirit, and to present it to the judgment of our brethren. With this feeling of confidence in the Lord, I shall open out what appears to me to be the order and power of this collection of parables. Their detailed meaning may, perhaps, be the subject of some subsequent observations. I would remark, then, in the first place, that the phrase “kingdom of heaven,” and also, “kingdom of your or their Father,” is peculiar to Matthew, expressions manifestly not unimportant in force. The only exception at all, is the use of the latter expression, by implication in the instruction to pray, in Luke 11 an exception not without interest, but which I can dwell on here only to observe, that the kingdom in every instance, we are taught to pray for, is the Father’s kingdom. In these parables we have both—the term “kingdom of heaven” being common to all save the first; that of “kingdom of your Father” being found in the explanation of the second of the parables. The importance of the former expression is seen, not only in its being the positive subject of the parables, except the first, but from the emphatic declaration of our Lord; “every scribe instructed into the kingdom of heaven, will bring forth out of his treasure, things new and old.”1 The scribe being well taught in the law of Moses, who could therefore, bring forth the old things; and being “instructed into the kingdom of heaven,” could bring forth out of his treasures, therefore, new things. He was to have, indeed, new things, but he was not to give up the old; what he had learned as a scribe, they were treasures in the estimation of Christ, to be brought forth by the scribe “instructed into the kingdom of heaven.” I consider these parables, then, as a full prophetic statement of the character and detail of the circumstances in which the kingdom of heaven would be placed. There are seven parables in all—a circumstance of common perfectness in prophetic statements, as the attentive reader of Scripture cannot fail to observe; of these, six are similitudes of the kingdom of heaven—the first, not. The act described in the first, being art act as incidental to the Son of man before His ascension, and its results, also, such as might be exhibited in individuals before as well as after it. This parable declares the agency of the kingdom and its particular results; the others, the dispensation of the kingdom. To recur to things new and old, the fact of “the kingdom of heaven” might well be called an “old thing;” one conversant in Daniel, with the hopes of the old law, might well have looked for such a thing. The order of its development and position, “a new thing,” which was to be revealed consequent upon the manifestation, and we must add, though not here developed,2 the rejection and resurrection of Christ the Son. The fact absolutely revealed in prophetic testimony, was the giving of a kingdom to the Son of man. The learning that the heavens do rule, was a lesson to be taught in the expected suppression, and setting aside of Gentile domination. Yet an earthly dominion in the Jewish people was an expectation which every Jew, taking prophecy literally, as every Jew must, because he was a Jew, must have justly held upon belief in the prophetic declarations. In the midst of these, perhaps confused, yet just, and in one sense, believing apprehensions, our Lord came in with a definite declaration, that “the kingdom of heaven was at hand.” That “the kingdom of heaven” was merely the true invisible Church of God, is an explanation which cannot for a moment be maintained consistently with a single statement of these parables and of analogous ones. That it was merely the visible Church of God, is neither consistent with what we find in this chapter nor any adequate representation of the matter, as is manifest from the parables of the treasure and the pearls. The rule of heaven is the simple force of the expression “the kingdom of heaven.” Earthly dominion was exercised by the Gentiles unrighteously—earthly dominion was expected by the Jews, and expected, though true, unrighteously; as was shown by their rejection of the “the Holy One of God,” who came from heaven— “the Son of man” – “the King of the Jews.” Most important then, and a point of sustaining faith, to one who might think that it had been “He who should have redeemed Israel,” was it to recognize in this word “the kingdom of heaven,” that a resurrection Lord might hold its power; and anomalous and apparently failing as their position might have been to learn, not only new spiritual things, but that the kingdom of heaven was that which, even in dispensation, was the mind and order of God’s counsels. Hence we find it so especially referred to in Matthew, the gospel more particularly of dispensation and prophetic testimony. It would manifestly carry me into too large a subject here, to enter farther into this most interesting point of the distinct character of the gospels, the evidences of which, in three, are prominent; in the other arise from a number of minute particulars. I mention the distinction here, as showing the ground on which “the kingdom of heaven” and “the kingdom of their Father” appear to be used in Matthew’s gospel alone. It was a gentle unfolding, though full declaration, that the dispensation now coming in, was of its own character, maintaining the hope given as coming from God; one which in result, indeed, we know to be founded in the resurrection, but which in its testimony then claimed repentance only on the part of the Jew. The connection of which shall never find its manifested accomplishment, till the millennial glory in the risen saints, and the repentant Jew, gathered together in one, in Christ, sustaining in resurrection life and power, the blessings of the Jews on earth, and its consequences; at the same time being the companion and the servant too, of the joy of the saints, risen into fellowship with Him in His Father’s house, as sons. Our Lord, however, in this chapter, unfolds its actual characters, and we must endeavor to bring in “the new things” of “the kingdom,” to understand fully the ground on which the kingdom of heaven now stands. We have here two other kingdoms — “the kingdom of their Father,” i.e. of the righteous; and “the kingdom of the Son of man.” In neither of these, properly speaking, are we now. The Son of man shall do so and so, and “then shall the righteous,”3 &c.
These kingdoms are the full development of that which now rests in an anomalous and ambiguous state, (glorious and blessed, indeed, but still ambiguous4 as regards its manifested results,) to wit, “the kingdom of God’s dear Son,” the kingdom of the Son of God as sitting upon the Father’s throne. This is not the kingdom of the Son of man—it is not the kingdom of the Father—but the kingdom of the Son of God sitting on His Father’s throne; the Lamb rejected, slain, sitting in the midst of the throne. I believe this to be—“to him that overcometh will I grant to sit down with Me on My throne, even as I overcame, and am set down with My Father on His throne,” where no saint ever sat, none but He whose right it is.
This principle or glorious truth of the Son sitting on the Father’s throne, as the present subject of faith will be found to run through the whole of our Lord’s language in John, and give the character of the whole dispensation. Hence the Spirit is said to be sent down from the Father, because it was to bring us, not only into fellowship with Jesus, but into the understanding of sonship with the Father, in whose house and kingdom the righteous were to dwell and shine forth. Now these parables in Matthew, are just the showing forth of the planting and results of this kingdom of heaven, in the sitting of Jesus on the throne of God in power unseen, and ministration of the Spirit according to the Father’s will, “a Lamb as it had been slain,” yea, and in the midst of the throne, but in which He had not taken the earth as His actual portion.
There is another connection which will illustrate the language of these parables—I mean the development of the hope of Israel in Psa. 78, compared with the application of verse 2, with the 35th verse of this chapter. There was no riddle simply in historical facts, but there was a most important lesson and mystery in the total failure of Israel; the Israel of God in the earth totally failing in the midst of all deliverances and blessings, and then set up in stability in David their king, it was the kingdom of David connected with the Jew, But there were other riddles, (Psa. 78:11<<Maschil of Asaph.>> Give ear, O my people, to my law: incline your ears to the words of my mouth. (Psalm 78:1)) חידוֺח מכּי קרס κεκρυμμενα άπὸ καταβολῆς κοσμου (Matt. 13:3535That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet, saying, I will open my mouth in parables; I will utter things which have been kept secret from the foundation of the world. (Matthew 13:35).) κατα αποκαλυψιν μυστηριου χριονοις αἰωνοις σεσιγημἔνου, (Rom. 16:25,2625Now to him that is of power to stablish you according to my gospel, and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery, which was kept secret since the world began, 26But now is made manifest, and by the scriptures of the prophets, according to the commandment of the everlasting God, made known to all nations for the obedience of faith: (Romans 16:25‑26); Col. 126Even the mystery which hath been hid from ages and from generations, but now is made manifest to his saints: (Colossians 1:26). 26.; Eph. 3:55Which in other ages was not made known unto the sons of men, as it is now revealed unto his holy apostles and prophets by the Spirit; (Ephesians 3:5))the great riddle of the kingdom of heaven in its present dispensation— “things new,” (besides David’s reign of Christ over the Jews) to wit, that “the Gentiles should be fellow heirs.”
Our Lord as the prophet of Israel, and the kingdom and the Church of God takes two positions in these parables, or rather, string of prophecies, which are the two parts of prophecy filled up in Him in whom every office was fulfilled. The Church in order, Jewish or Gentile, required no prophecy. In disorder the prophetic testimony had two offices—the testimony of that disorder and the methods of God’s purposes as paramount to human disorder; judgment against the one, and the method of God’s plans of grace, the purposes of God in their moral character and wisdom of counsel. Both are assumed or recognized by the Spirit, as exhibited by our Lord in this chapter. The first we have exhibited in the great prophetic mission of Isaiah, 100:6 where the seeing the full revealed glory of Jehovah, necessarily involves those not seeing that glory being revealed in the consequences of judicial blindness. This was fulfilled in our Lord there was the full glory of Jehovah and the Spirit of revelation, and the word, therefore, of judicial blindness applied directly; and tie speaks this to them in parables. A comparison of the language both of Ezekiel and Zechariah, will much confirm this observation; “Then shalt thou know that the Lord of hosts hath sent me unto thee.” (Zech. 2:1111And many nations shall be joined to the Lord in that day, and shall be my people: and I will dwell in the midst of thee, and thou shalt know that the Lord of hosts hath sent me unto thee. (Zechariah 2:11).) “In that day thy mouth shall be opened to him that is escaped.” (Ezek. 24:2727In that day shall thy mouth be opened to him which is escaped, and thou shalt speak, and be no more dumb: and thou shalt be a sign unto them; and they shall know that I am the Lord. (Ezekiel 24:27).) This prophetic character is attached to the parables in verse 13—the other prophetic character is opening out to the remnant by these very riddles, the mysteries of the kingdom, understood when the Spirit has revealed Christ according to the measure of that revelation. “Unto you it is given to know”—this declared in Psa. 7827He rained flesh also upon them as dust, and feathered fowls like as the sand of the sea: (Psalm 78:27) is adverted to in v. 35. Note here, the Lord’s acts on the measure of blindness in judgment, as on the measure of light in giving more—a very awful consideration, yet sure.
Thus we see the character of the whole chapter—to wit, Christ’s prophetic testimony upon the rejection of His word by the Jews: the order of the divine kingdom during the absence of the Son of man consequent upon His rejection and assumption to the throne of the Father, until His assumption of His own throne—the ministration of power in the hands of the Son of man, with the closing scene of that order—the assumption of the righteous into the Father’s kingdom in the brightness “of the sun,” i.e. Christ Himself—the purging out the Son of man’s kingdom—the field in which the tares were—the declaration of the intrinsic excellence and value with the beauty of the kingdom, and the judgment of the visible Church—the net—full gathered out of the sea.
I would now follow a little, the order of the parables or prophetic declarations themselves. The first, I have observed, is no similitude of the kingdom at all; but the sowing of the seed, by which its ministration was carried into effect, a general parable—the general instrument—and, therefore, stated previously to the judicial blindness of the Jews, and not made a similitude of the kingdom of heaven, but the word of the kingdom, the details of the operation or hindrance of which, are most blessedly and beautifully marked.5
The following six parables are similitudes of the kingdom of heaven, but there is a marked distinction in them; the explanation of the first, and the last three of these parables, are addressed to the disciples alone; the former three being addressed to them and the multitude at large. The first three contain the ostensible position and result of the kingdom in the world, of which men might be more or less cognizant, or which might be addressed to them. The latter three, and the explanation, are either the result in full development—the result in God’s hands—or the intrinsic character and value of it as in the mind of the Spirit, developing the mind of the Lord, and this was addressed to the disciples especially. Farther, I would remark, as the first three are the kingdom as seen in the world, and the last three as known in the mind of God, so is the contrast between them more definite still. The first is the sowing abroad in the world, the last is the separative process of the actual net—full (the quantum gathered out of the sea) now dragged to shore. The two intermediate ones of the first three are—one, the external organization into which the kingdom grows up into the world; the other—the diffusion of doctrine over the mass, which the Lord characterizes as leaven, the import of which is given elsewhere. The two intermediate ones of the latter three are, the first, the value of the hidden treasure in the field, the real glory of the Church, as known by the mind and discovery of the Lord, though not now brought out, for which he was content to buy the field—to take the world in its present worthless condition. The application of this is most important. And the second the moral beauty of its grace in the eye of God, meeting the mind of the merchantman seeking goodly pearls, the estimate of the grace in the Church by Christ, and the Spirit of Christ, I believe, also, the first of the former two, answers to or is the contrast of the first of the latter two, and the latter of the latter. The last parable manifestly discloses the judicial process on the body gathered to shore, a question quite distinct from his judgment of the world.
I have now, I believe, distinctly traced the order and structure of the parables; an attempt at their interpretation remains. shall only remark on those which are the likeness of the kingdom. of heaven, and only by way of heads. Of the first, we have our Lord’s own interpretation, in which I have only to direct the attention to the simple force of the terms upon which the Spirit of God must throw its light for our understanding “this word of the kingdom.” We have seen, generally, that the first three are its position or character in the world; so we have here, “the field is the world,” and nothing else; nor does the judicial process refer to the judgment of even the nominal Church, that is subsequently in the last parable. Christ sowed the good seed of the kingdom, in the world; and the devil sowed tares there with craft amongst it while men slept, “perverse men” “ordained to this condemnation.” The power of extermination was not given (to wit, out of the world) to the Church—the servants of the householder. They must “both grow together until the harvest.” It was no service of Christ then to kill a heretic; the rude hand of a servant might destroy a saint, in attempting to preserve the purity of the crop, by that which was reserved for other hands. The ripening of both was the present process, ripened together in the world. The Church would never become a system to purify or set right the world. The providential power of God in the ministration of the Son by His angels,6 would clear out of His kingdom into bundles, in the field—in the world—the tares to be burned; and thereupon the righteous would shine forth as the sun, not in the kingdom of the Son, not in the kingdom of the Son of man, but in the kingdom of the Father. In a word, we have the clearing of the world—the field, by providential interposition, by a judicial process in the hands of the Son of man sending His angels. The righteous of the kingdom, i. e, those who had been righteous while the world was evil, shall be as the sun. We know who “the sun of righteousness” is, and “when He shall appear we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is;” but it is in the kingdom of their Father. What followed in the kingdom of the Son of man we know not hence, only that He gathered all that offend out of it, and that the earthly “kingdom of our Lord and His Christ was come;” but this was not the subject of a similitude of the kingdom of heaven, This mixed and ambiguous system was closed, or, rather accomplished in the separation of the Father’s kingdom of glory (the righteous, as the sun of righteousness, being together in it, to the praise of the glory of His grace by what is passed, and of His glory then:—compare Eph. 1:6-126To the praise of the glory of his grace, wherein he hath made us accepted in the beloved. 7In whom we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of his grace; 8Wherein he hath abounded toward us in all wisdom and prudence; 9Having made known unto us the mystery of his will, according to his good pleasure which he hath purposed in himself: 10That in the dispensation of the fulness of times he might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven, and which are on earth; even in him: 11In whom also we have obtained an inheritance, being predestinated according to the purpose of him who worketh all things after the counsel of his own will: 12That we should be to the praise of his glory, who first trusted in Christ. (Ephesians 1:6‑12).) and the kingdom of the Son of man now purged judicially-the earthly kingdom being now brought in, of which we know from other sources, the Jews to be the imperial power in Christ. The second parable I have already spoken of as the external organization in the world, of the power and influence of the kingdom. The attentive reader of scripture must be most familiar with the symbol of a tree as external protective power and eminence, as in Nebuchadnezzar, Pharaoh, and many other passages, making the analogy most definite. This, then, was the worldly power of the system, Now when the kingdom of the Son of man comes in, there may be something analogous, though not tantamount to this; but such7 a system must be a system of sovereign righteousness, forbidden by the previous parable to the Church, or it will be an association or system of evil. The third is the spreading of nominal doctrine to whatever measured extent God had assigned or appointed. So also in another system this might have another character, but it cannot be recognized in grace properly here, for the whole is leavened, a thing again expressly negatived as a fact in grace, in the first parable. The explanation to the disciples of the First we have spoken of as fully as our limits allows us here. Of the fourth, it is evidently the purchase by Christ of the world, for the sake of the treasure—the Church, the treasure of God hidden in it, to be brought out in due time. The fifth is the positive discriminated beauty and excellency of the Church as ordained and set by God, and which the Spirit of Christ, the anointed one, recognizes and sees in its beauty, so as to “love the Church and give Himself for it,” as seen in the mind of God’s love. in proportion as we have the mind of Christ, we shall of course, enter into the mind of Him who is the head of the kingdom, whose Spirit is thus described, fulfilled in Him perfectly. In the last. we have evidence of the result that the nominal Church shall not gather in the world. There were many fishes in the sea—the mass of the unheeded world pursuing their own ways—not drawn into the net, but the net was filled, and there was gathered of every8 kind out of the sea, and there was also of bad and good. “The fullness of the Gentiles was come in,” and being full it was drawn to shore; and the judgment of the Church commenced, and the bad are cast away. The details of these parables I do not enter into further here. Depth of instruction may be gathered, but it forms a distinct subject of positive instruction, perhaps opportunity may be offered of entering into it. For the present, I close, trusting that He who spake them may cause our discussion of the order and structure of the parables, as referred to the Church of God, to be applied to the conscience of the Church in its present need, and bring it the rather into the mind of God.
I state synoptically what has been followed out as the subject arose. The kingdom of heaven we have as a state of things during the period when the Son is sitting on the Father’s throne. During this period the children are in the Son’s, but heirs of the Father’s kingdom—a period during which the world is not ordered according to the righteous judicial power of the Son of man’s kingdom—the interval between the rejection of the Son of man upon earth, and His reigning upon earth, in which the saints are sustained by the Spirit, in the midst of the world—by the Spirit sent of the Son by the Father, the witness of His exaltation there. Of this state of things, this chapter is the full prophetic announcement. The external character which it assumes in the world, being the first three, the real blessing and value and the judgment of its results, its internal character in God’s sight, the last three of the six parables. It closes in the setting up of the Son of man’s kingdom upon earth, and the assumption of the righteous during its continuance, to the Father’s kingdom in the heavenlies: The first parable is the word of the kingdom. The expositions and internal view of the Church or kingdom are given to the disciples—the judicial blindness of the Jews is declared, and the special privilege of the saints—and the parables are spoken distinctively as the “utterance of hidden things from the world,” which the Spirit reveals to those “who have ears to hear.”
 
1. I would remark on this expression, we are taught to hold the continuing value of Jewish prophetic expectation, of all that a scribe in the law of Moses would have drawn from the Old Testament, and that distinct from the expectation introduced by the gospel.
2. The kingdom of God is a distinct expression from the kingdom of heaven; although in many respects so identified, that the same things could be affirmed about it; thus it could be said that the kingdom of God was at hand; that was most true, as it could be also said the kingdom of heaven is at hand. But at the same time they were of very distinct import, for it was matter of faith to know, that the “kingdom of God was come amongst them.” εφθασεν εφ υμας (Luke 11:2020But if I with the finger of God cast out devils, no doubt the kingdom of God is come upon you. (Luke 11:20). 17: 21.) so the Lord says εντος υμοων εστιν, expressions never used of the kingdom of heaven-to know that the kingdom of heaven was not, but was “at hand,” “ηγγικε (Matt. 4:1717From that time Jesus began to preach, and to say, Repent: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand. (Matthew 4:17).) ηγγικε γαρ η βασιλεία των ουρανων, whereas the same Evangelist, or rather the Spirit of God by him, in speaking of the kingdom of God, immediately changes his phrase to the one noticed in Luke, εφθασεν εφ υμας η ωασιλεια του θεου. (Matt, 12:29.) The kingdom of God was necessarily there when the Son of God was there; in a word, when God was there. The kingdom of heaven as the development of God’s purpose, could not be there while He was there; it resulted from the Lord’s going away into heaven. That, abstractedly, the kingdom of God could have been set up as the kingdom of heaven, had Messiah been received-the righteous saints being raised as Lazarus, I do not deny; but this though involving most interesting understanding of our Lord’s person, as having quickening power and title intrinsically when in life, as well as in resurrection, (demonstrated in Lazarus to the Jews, though declared in the resurrection of Himself for the world) would not, of course, have been the full development of God’s purposes, nor opened the mystery of the Church set in the heavenlies, in resurrection with the Lord Jesus; nor should we have similarly known our Lord, as on the glory of the Father’s throne, as now, The kingdom of God is the exercise or exhibition of the ruling power of God under Any circumstances, in the wisdom of God. The kingdom of heaven then morally includes the heavenly character of the kingdom of God. In dispensation this is set up by the rejection of the king of God’s kingdom by the world; and while it ought to have been known, even while He was upon earth, by faith, is known to faith by Jesus the head-the Lamb slain, sitting on the throne of the Father. The kingdom of God therefore was amongst the Jews, when He the Son of God-Jesus was there, and they ought to have known it-and the kingdom of heaven was at hand. By the earthliness of men, however, instead of gathering the Gentiles to the Jews, the Messiah being recognized, it was known only (as in God’s counsels and wisdom meant to be) by the rejection and exaltation to the place “where He was before” of the Son of man, who was the Lord from heaven and Lord in heaven; and the kingdom of heaven (His kingdom was not of this world) was set up, continuing as regards the Church, till the time when the saints, in the Father’s kingdom, raised as With Jesus at His second coming, shall know the blessedness of the rule of the ‘Son of God and man, in the whole scene which once rejected Him, now brought under His sway, and theirs, (still in that sense, the kingdom of heaven to those below) when they witness the blessedness of heavenly rule, while they dwell “kings and priests unto God,” in the quiet and secure fullness of the Father’s house—sons with Him. This too more properly is the kingdom of man; (compare Dan. 717These great beasts, which are four, are four kings, which shall arise out of the earth. (Daniel 7:17)) for under the exalted man and His saints all things are put. Had Jesus not been rejected, it would have been the kingdom of God, (still it is surely so in character, for He is God and it is God’s kingdom) for He would have been righteously subject, “having taken upon Him the form of a servant,” and as such come, “not to do His own will, but the will of Him that sent Him.” And it is thus I apprehend the Son shall be subject, when God, not the Father, which would be confounding everything, and not be what the word teaches,-but “God shall be all in all,” Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; but the rule taken out of man’s hands, into which it had been put, through the obedience of Christ. Therefore it is not until after the resurrection that He says “All power is given unto me in heaven and earth,” &c. All things are delivered unto Him as the Son of God, for the mystery of redemption, mediation, and the revelation of the Trinity, and the glory of God. But “all power is given unto Him” as the appointed man, according to the glorious mystery in Which, as the Son, for whom (and by whom) all things were made; He took it up as the Redeemer in the person of Jesus, but the power was given to Him as the obedient man.
3. This gospel is properly the Jewish gospel of Messiah, and the saints are therefore called by the term “ righteous” or “ just.” Saints, is more properly speaking, a Gentile name, as separated out of the mass, though both true of either. It is a revelation to the then believing Jew, it being, of course, true still, that in consequence of the rejection of Christ, and the purpose of God contained therein, the believer’s portion would not be in the Son’s kingdom upon earth, but in the Father’s.
4. This I believe to be the real subject of the Revelation, and the first chapters to exhibit this; to clothe within itself, indeed, the glorious result seen through by faith, but to be that by which we can understand the anomaly of present circumstances, intermediate between the rejection of the Son of man, and His manifestation in the irrefutable glory of His own kingdom, when the righteous also shall be in the Father’s. Understand and be patient till He takes to Him His great power and reigns.
5. Some thoughts on this parable have been given in No. 1, p. 47.
6. Formally, that is, in the actual assumption of acquired power as man, I believe the angels became the servants of the Son of man when He had overcome Satan-as ministers of the Jewish position of which He had become the redeeming Head-as the agents of God’s providential power in the world, which was now shown to be in His hand, because Herd vanquished (in obedience and faithfulness) the prince of it. We read, accordingly, in Matthew, this gospel of dispensation, “ Then the devil leaveth Him, and behold angels came and ministered unto Him.” So we find in that marvelous passage in St, Luke, chap. 22. “ And there appeared unto Him an angel from heaven strengthening Him.”
7. The power over evil in the world being forbidden to the Church, its having power in the world necessarily involves it in the recognition or allowance of evil.