THIS book denies all true sense of what sin is; that men must be born again; and the cross, as Christ bearing our sins. We die as He died; and that is all. And, I judge, there is more\ behind which he says, aping Paul, he cannot utter (p. 75).
I should add that guilt is never thought of or recognized, nor Christ's work as meeting it in any way.
The book is written in the form of a letter to a friend. On page 2 he says, "Your difficulty is, How are we, as believers in Scripture, to reconcile its prophetic declarations as to the final restitution of all things with those other statements of the same Scripture which are so often quoted to prove eternal punishment?" There are no such prophetic declarations as to the restitution of all things absolutely. He leaves out, as all such do, the words " which God hath spoken by the mouth of all His holy prophets since the world began" (Acts 3:2121Whom the heaven must receive until the times of restitution of all things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the world began. (Acts 3:21)), "Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, so that the times of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord, and He shall send Jesus Christ, who before was preached unto you: whom the heavens must receive until the times of the restitution of all things which God hath spoken by the mouth of all His holy prophets since the world began " (Acts 3:20,2120And he shall send Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto you: 21Whom the heaven must receive until the times of restitution of all things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the world began. (Acts 3:20‑21)). The all things refers solely to those things of which the prophets have spoken. The reading of the passage dissipates the notion based on it by leaving out the end.
Again, "Scripture, you say, affirms that our God (whose?) is a Savior full of pity towards the lost, seeking their restoration; so loving that He has given for man His Only Begotten Son, in and by whom the curse shall be overcome, and all the kindreds of the earth be blessed; and yet that some shall go away into everlasting punishment, where their worm dieth not and their fire is not quenched. How is it possible, you ask, to reconcile all this? Are not the statements directly inconsistent?" No. There is nothing to reconcile, no opposition whatever. Suppose He has been rejected-found none to answer? "He that believeth not the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him " (John 3:3636He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him. (John 3:36)). Those in hell are not kindreds of the earth.
Nature and Providence are said to veil as much as they reveal. " We must confess to some veil or riddle here. It is precisely the same riddle which we find in every other revelation.... Providence surely is a revelation of God; and yet is it not, like Nature, a veil quite as much as a revelation?" Why so? All this is confusion and error. Nature and Providence are under the effects of the fall, and the fruits of sin are there. If these last are in the word, I must cull out what is and what is not. But the word is perfect as Christ was. It is want of intelligence in me-unbelief in me-that hinders my understanding it, not the effect of sin in it. It is quite wrong then to say that " Scripture, as it appears to sense, makes out God to be just as far from what He really is as Nature and Providence seem to make Him."
Again, " Even so it is with those other two revelations which, much as they have been gainsaid, the church has received and yet believes in, I mean the flesh of Christ and Holy Scripture." "The church:" what church? He quite treats it all through as some known adequate authority.
What he concludes regarding Nature, Providence, and Scripture at page 14 is all false as we have just shown; and the esoteric referred to has been discovered by him!
That God was willing, in revealing Himself, to seem inconsistent by giving the law is utter nonsense and confusion. There was no seeming inconsistency, for the law was the just measure of what the child of Adam ought to be, so as to convict him of sin; not the revelation of what God was at all; " If men are in the flesh, God comes to them in flesh," etc: All are in the flesh (not disembodied) when God comes to them. All this section (pages 14, 15) is a denial of the truth where it is not pretty nonsense. "Why have men always heard God first speaking in law before a gospel dawned on them? Why must it be so, or at least why does He allow it? Is it a mistake of His which we must avoid when we attempt to make Him known, etc.?" We may use law to convict of sin; but all up to Christ was a testing of man, not a revealing of God, save promise and prophecy. Then, in the fullness of time, God was revealed in Christ; light shining in darkness, and no man received Him because men were darkness. Then grace wrought to lead to it.
The concluding sentence of this paragraph is totally false; for God never revealed Himself till Christ came. "It was needful that He should show Himself under the forms and limitations of that creature in and to whom He sought to reveal Himself, that is, by shadows before light, by law before gospel, by a letter before a quickening spirit-in a word, by the humiliation of His eternal Word stooping to come out of man's heart and in a human orm." Where? Nowhere in 'Scripture. When he says this " could not be done without Truth " stooping " to come in human form, out of the heart of man, even as Christ came forth from Mary," we ask, Is man's heart the birthplace of truth, as Mary's womb of Christ? Man's heart indeed! And yet he says "this Word is no stranger to me!" Also " knowing that it has many things to say which we cannot bear at first." Who? The disciples before. Pentecost (John 16:1212I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now. (John 16:12)), or the little children whose sins are forgiven, who know the Father, and have an unction from the Holy One and know all things (1 John?
At page 19 he begins to consider the question, " What then does Scripture say on this subject? Its testimony appears at first sight contradictory... there are direct statements as to the results of these [law and gospel] which at first sight are apparently irreconcilable." He first states the results as to law and condemnation, and at the close says: " Words could not well be stronger. The difficulty is that all this is but one side of Scripture, which in other places seems to teach a very different doctrine. For instance there are, first, the words of God Himself, repeated again and again by those same apostles whom I have just quoted, that in Abram's seed all the kindreds of the earth shall be blessed (Gen. 12: 3; 22: 18; Acts 3: 25; Gal. 3: 8); words which St. Peter expounds to mean that there shall be a restitution of all things;' adding, that God bath spoken of this by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the world began '" (Acts 3:2121Whom the heaven must receive until the times of restitution of all things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the world began. (Acts 3:21)). This is utterly false, and a deliberate misquotation of Scripture. It is ἄχρι χρόνων ἀποχαστάσεως πάντων ὡν ἐλαλησεν ὁ Θεός. Then our author quotes more passages, but Paul in Col. 1:1616For by him were all things created, that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things were created by him, and for him: (Colossians 1:16) leaves out τὰ χαταχθόνια, the "things under the earth" They are neither re-headed, reconciled, nor delivered. This is introduced in Phil. 2:1010That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth; (Philippians 2:10), where bowing to Jesus' name is spoken of. The whole created scene is to be restored, but what is cast out of it is left out.
But the deliverance of a groaning creation in Rom. 8 is at the revelation of the sons of God. The liberty of glory the creature will have part in, not the liberty of grace (Rom. 8:2121Because the creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God. (Romans 8:21)). And when he quotes, " through death to destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the devil," it is all right, but not to restore him. When he quotes, " God was in Christ reconciling the world unto Himself," mark was; but the world, instead of being reconciled, hated both Him and His Father, and showed their incorrigible enmity by crucifying Christ. The passage from Rom. 5:1515But not as the offence, so also is the free gift. For if through the offence of one many be dead, much more the grace of God, and the gift by grace, which is by one man, Jesus Christ, hath abounded unto many. (Romans 5:15), (" If by the offense of one [the] many be dead, much more the grace of God and the gift by grace which is by one man, Jesus Christ, bath abounded unto [the] many,") when quoted as now given, proves the contrary of Mr. Jukes's doctrine. It is the many connected with the one respectively. "The many" connected with Adam are all his race; " the many" connected with Christ all His race-that is, all believers. The English translation of verse 18, as he gives it, is wholly false. It should be: " So then as (it was) by one offense towards all men for condemnation; so by one righteousness towards all men for justification of life." He says: "To another church he states the same doctrine, that ' as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive.'" I do not accept the use made of the words. I have no doubt it is all in Adam, and all in Christ, at any rate " the same doctrine." It speaks of the resurrection of the body. The reading of the passage will dissipate his view of 1 Cor. 15:24-2624Then cometh the end, when he shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father; when he shall have put down all rule and all authority and power. 25For he must reign, till he hath put all enemies under his feet. 26The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death. (1 Corinthians 15:24‑26): "The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death;" and this is at the resurrection of the wicked, so that no enemy is destroyed after it. He quotes further Eph. 1: 9, 10, " That.... He might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven and which are in earth, even in Him."
But in Phil. 2:1010That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth; (Philippians 2:10) there is a third class. And this gathering together is in the millennium, " the fullness of times," when confessedly the wicked are not restored. "That at (or in) the name of Jesus (that is, Savior) every knee should bow," etc. The gloss, " that is, Savior," is wholly unwarranted in the passage noted. Again he quotes, " Who is the Savior of all men" (1 Tim. 4:1010For therefore we both labor and suffer reproach, because we trust in the living God, who is the Saviour of all men, specially of those that believe. (1 Timothy 4:10)). But mark two things: 1st, " Is the Savior;" and, 2d, it is providentially Savior, as the passage plainly proves.
Again, "will have all men to be saved." No doubt θέλει, but that is now in the day of salvation
(1 Tim. 2). It is all wholly a present thing. That Christ was a ransom for all, I believe. As to Rom. 11, "that He might have mercy upon all," is, as he quotes it, the merest abuse of words. The Jews are come under mere mercy as Gentiles by rejecting Messiah and the promises. " That the world through Him might be saved " it is too bad in the author to quote for his purpose, for that passage distinguishes believers as alone profiting, and the rest judged. " He is the propitiation.... for the whole world." So He is. "The Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world." So He will. " That He might destroy the works of the devil" So He will; but all this proves nothing at all as to the rejection of rejectors. Destroying the works of the devil rather implies the devil stays where he was, and that as a result " there shall be no more death," etc.; and then without are " the fearful and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars," etc., who " shall have their part in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the second death" (Rev. 21:88But the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the second death. (Revelation 21:8)). His quotation for universal salvation of John 6:37-39;12. 32, is too bad. The first passage spoken of carefully teaches that only those will be saved whom the Father has given Him. Look at verse 36, and indeed the whole chapter. The other passage-" draw all men unto me "-is the present effect of the cross in contrast with a Messiah to the Jews.
After giving several sets of passages, with the confusion indicated in the few we have remarked upon, he asks:-" Now is not this apparent contradiction, few finding the way of life, and yet in Christ all made alive? God's elect a little flock, and yet all the kindreds of the earth blessed in Abraham's seed? mercy upon all, and yet eternal punishment? the restitution of all things, and yet eternal destruction? the wrath of God forever, and yet all things reconciled to Him? eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels, and yet the destruction through death, not of the works of the devil only, but of him that has the power of death-that is, the devil? the second death and the lake which burneth with fire, and yet no more death. or curse, but all things subdued by Christ, and God all in all?
What can this contradiction mean? Is there any key, and if so, what is it, to this mystery?" The conclusive answer is, There is no " contradiction," no " mystery." The above references are all falsely cited apart from their context. This makes the apparent contradiction. Then he mentions the common answer, "That some are saved and some are lost forever;" that therefore the words, " in Christ shall all be made alive," only mean that all who are here in Christ shall be made alive; that the Lamb of God, though willing to be, is not really, the Savior of the world, but only of those who are not of the world, but chosen out of it; that, instead of taking away the sin of the world, He only takes away the sin of those who here believe in Him; that all things therefore shall not be reconciled to God;
and that "the restitution of all things," whatever it may mean, does not mean the reconciliation to God of all men.
This (he says) is the approved teaching of Christendom; this is the orthodox solution of the mystery; the simple objection to which is, that in asserting one side of Scripture it is obliged not only to ignore and deny the other side, but to represent God in a character absolutely opposed to that in which the gospel exhibits Him (pp. 26, 27). The Lamb of God is "the taker-away of the sin" (not sins, a very different thing), true in the new heavens and the new earth. "All things " here are the thing's spoken of by God through the prophets—hence things on the earth. Mr. Jukes then affirms that " the truth which solves the riddle is to be found in those same Scriptures which seem to raise the difficulty, and lies in the mystery of the will of our ever-blessed God as to the process and stages of redemption.
" First, His will by some to bless and save others; by a firstborn seed, the firstborn from the dead' (Col. 1:1818And he is the head of the body, the church: who is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead; that in all things he might have the preeminence. (Colossians 1:18)), to save and bless the later born." This is pure invention. Christ alone and
the church are spoken of, in contrast with general restitution of the state of things.
His will therefore to work out the redemption of the lost by successive ages or dispensations, or to use the language of St. Paul, 'according to the purpose of the ages "' (Eph. 3:1111According to the eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord: (Ephesians 3:11)). This, too, is mere imagination. We have only to read the passage to see that there is not one word about it. Nor has the " therefore " any ground, for he is concluding from his own fancy, and not from Scripture. Eph. 3:1111According to the eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord: (Ephesians 3:11) is speaking solely of the church now.
Lastly, His will (thus meeting the nature of our fall) to make death, judgment, and destruction the way to life, acquittal, and salvation; in other words, through death to destroy him that has the power of death, that is, the devil, and to deliver them who through fear of death were all their life-time subject to bondage' " (Heb. 2:1414Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took part of the same; that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the devil; (Hebrews 2:14)). But this is through Christ's death, and as to sin, ours with Him. All is confusion. We have only to read the passage to see it. The power annulled is not that which dies.
The author's simplicity is rare. He adds: " These truths throw a flood of light on Scripture, and enable us at once to see order and agreement where without this light there seems perplexing inconsistency." " Truths!" They are no truths at all, but false " therefores " from falsely-used passages. His questions a little farther on-"What was the object of the incarnation?.. What was intended to be accomplished by the first and second death? " etc., are all presumptuous folly, not revelation. When he writes, " inquire " what is the breadth and length, and depth and height " of their heavenly Father's purpose." It is not of this. Of what it is, is not said in Scripture; but it is very certain it is not " the restitution of all things," as Mr. Jukes interprets that phrase. Again, we have a misuse of 1 Tim. 4:1010For therefore we both labor and suffer reproach, because we trust in the living God, who is the Saviour of all men, specially of those that believe. (1 Timothy 4:10), when he says: " By this light we see more fully God's purpose in Christ, and how He is the Savior of all men, specially of those that believe;" for it is obvious that it means nothing about the future at all, but that Paul labors and suffers reproach because, as a present thing, God is providentially caring for all, but specially for " those that believe; " as says the Word, " The eyes of the Lord are over the righteous, and His ears are open to their prayers" (1 Peter 3:1212For the eyes of the Lord are over the righteous, and his ears are open unto their prayers: but the face of the Lord is against them that do evil. (1 Peter 3:12)). But our author is caught with the mere sound of a passage, regardless of the sense; or uses a mere change of sleight of hand to effect his purpose, as when he says: " While others not partakers of the first resurrection are only brought to God by the resurrection of judgment; that is, by the judgment of the coming age of ages." "That is," etc., is a mere gloss of his; entirely outside of all Scripture. It is very tedious to " look in order at each of these three points," when one has proved they are mere fancies. But it will only show his false use of Scripture. "(1.)First, the purpose of God by the first-fruits or first-born to save the later-born. This, which is in fact the substance of the Gospel, like all God's secrets, comes out by degrees; scarcely to be discerned in the first promise of the woman's seed; then in thy seed shall all the kindreds of the earth be blessed;' for the seed in which all the kindreds of the earth are blessed must be distinct from, and blessed prior to, those nations to whom, according to God's purpose, in due time it becomes a blessing." All clearly false; unless it be Christ, and then the whole argument fails. As a Scripture the contrary is here-the elder serves the younger; the Gentiles come in before the Jews. But the " seed " is declared to be Christ (Gal. 3:16), not "some " as he has said, " His will by some to bless and save others" (p. 27). The reference to Rom. 11: 16 will show what is spoken of and what is done. Again, " Christ, says the apostle, is the promised seed (Gal. 3:16) and the first-born (Col. 1:1818And he is the head of the body, the church: who is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead; that in all things he might have the preeminence. (Colossians 1:18)), and in and through Him endless blessing shall flow down to the later-born." But this says nothing to his purpose. Believers are the seed in Him: not unbelievers (Gal. 3)
When he says " Christ, as Paul shows, is first-born in a double sense: first-born from above, first out of life," etc., it is all false. Nor is Christ ever called " first-fruits of the creature." When he says, "All things are of God; but it is no less true that all things are by man, as it is written, Since by man Came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead;' therefore, as by one first-born death came into the world, so by another first-born shall it be forever overthrown," it is not true that all things are by man. Where is it so said? What he says is not " written." The resurrection came by man; it is nowhere said by a firstborn. When he says of Christ, " who by a birth in the flesh has come into our lot," it looks like positive error. When he speaks of its being "ever the first-born from the grave that the law speaks of ' (where?) and that it is the woman's, not the man's first-born, the whole thing is a rhapsody of nonsense. But the only proof he alleges is false; Christ is not called " first-fruits of the creature." All things are not by man; He who makes all becomes a man.
Again, "According to the law the first-born had the right, though it might be lost, of being priest and king; that is, of interceding for, and rifling over, their younger brethren." Quite false. They might be offered to God and redeemed, but had no rights as such. It is totally false about being priests. Aaron and his family alone had the right of being priests. In the passages quoted or referred to-Ex. 13:2;24. 5; Num. 3:12,13;8. 16; 1 Chron. 5:1,21Now the sons of Reuben the firstborn of Israel, (for he was the firstborn; but, forasmuch as he defiled his father's bed, his birthright was given unto the sons of Joseph the son of Israel: and the genealogy is not to be reckoned after the birthright. 2For Judah prevailed above his brethren, and of him came the chief ruler; but the birthright was Joseph's:) (1 Chronicles 5:1‑2)-there is not a word about the matter! It is all a rhapsody in pages 32-33, spun out of the writer's own mind, even when quoting Scripture. When he says " God's purpose is by the first-born from the dead to save and bless the later-born," Scripture says they are quickened by Him.
" But the truth goes farther still; for there are others beside. the Lord who are both `first-born' and Abraham's seed,' who must, therefore [why.2] in their measure share this honor with and under Christ, and in whom as joint-heirs with Him' [God's heirs?] the promise must be fulfilled that in them shall all the kindreds of the earth be blessed.
As if Christ and his body only should be saved, instead of rejoicing that they are also the appointed means of 'saving others." Saving others! What does that mean? He applies the promise in. Christ to us. It is folly, or it would be blasphemy. Ministers of blessing we may be; but does he mean to say that we, quickened and redeemed, when in glory shall shed our blood for them? Was ever such stuff? Again, the references he relies on and gives on p. 33 are all false; that is, there is nothing about a first-born in them. " Even of the elect few see they are elect to the birthright, not to be blessed only but to be a blessing; as first-born with Christ to share the glory Of kingship and priesthood with Him, not only to rule and intercede for their younger and later-born brethren, but to avenge their blood, to raise up seed to the dead, and in and through Christ, their life and head, to redeem their lost inheritance." It is all utter stuff. "Later-born:" how born? How " avenge their blood?" "Redeem!" What is raising up seed to the dead " to redeem their lost inheritance? " Nobody did this, or had to give it up in the jubilee. Mr. Jukes dwells on "first-fruits," and affirms that the sheaf at Passover, and the other at Pentecost in the form of cakes, were both called first-fruits. "Both in the law are distinctly called first-fruits,' though they are distinguished by a separate name, the ears at Passover being called Reeshith, the leavened cakes at Pentecost Bicourim." This is inexact; both are called Reeshith, both Bicourim, but Reeshith Bicourim is applied to the sheaf only. Reeshith is put first. But the words give no ground for the alleged analogy. The church or assembly of the first-born calls us simply "first-born." Christ only is called " the first-fruits of them that slept." It applies solely to the resurrection, and only Christ's are spoken of. " They that are Christ's." The wicked will be raised; but the passage has to do with resurrection only, and has nothing to do with any general restitution-not even with wicked men. It is " the resurrection of the just." The parties are Christ, the first-fruits of them that slept, and they that are Christ's at His coming; none else. "The offering of the first-fruits to God being accepted as the sanctification and consecration of the whole coming harvest." What "harvest?" At the " harvest" our Lord refers to (Matt. 13:4040As therefore the tares are gathered and burned in the fire; so shall it be in the end of this world. (Matthew 13:40)) the tares are cast into the fire. Scripture knows of no " harvest" in Mr. Jukes's sense, or general restoration. " Who share the honor with and under him of being the Pentecost first-fruits." "With" is not said, but " they that are Christ's." " Who with Christ are through Christ Abraham's seed? " Gal. 3 says believers baptized to Christ; those sealed with the Holy Ghost. Nothing he says of Scripture can be trusted; not even when he says in a note-" Saul, whose name means death or hell." It is not so; t and i are not the same. Saul means "demanded."
He goes on to say that the conversion of the nations will be accomplished by Israel, " who at their conversion, converted, like Paul, who is their type, not by the knowledge of Christ in humiliation, but by the revelation of His heavenly glory, shall, like Paul, become apostles to the Gentiles, priests to the Lord and ministers to our God' to all the earth." This is a mistake.
The testimony goes out before to both, and the remnant then own Christ coming in glory. Paul in his conversion is a type of the Jewish remnant, but there is no ground for the exclusion of others; he was one of the pre-trusters. When he says (p. 38), " The church is also Abraham's seed," it is not so. We are, as Christ's; not in our church character. He adds: " To the church, therefore, belongs the same promise as first-fruits with Christ." The church is not " first-fruits with Christ." In the first-fruits of the day of Pentecost there was leaven. When he speaks of the church with Christ being a blessing in its own heavenly and spiritual sphere, the statement is without foundation. The leaves of the tree, of which we eat the fruit, are for blessing down here. Full of his own thoughts, he mistakes when he says the church will act as priests; for a priest is for those out of the way to minister to those who are out of the way; for a priest did not minister to any but for accepted blood-washed ones.
"This is the church's calling... with Him to be both prophet, priest, and king; and this not here only, in these bodies of humiliation, but when changed in His presence to bear His image, and do His works with Him." But we are never said to be prophets then. Priests and kings we are. But Christ Himself must give up the mediatorial kingdom. We reign over the earth, and, as priests, offer up the prayers of the saints (Rev. 5) At the end the wicked are " without."
It is a fable, as it is nowhere written in Scripture, that believers' "death and resurrection shall only introduce them to fuller and wider service to lost ones, over which the Lord shall set them as His priests and kings, until all things are restored and reconciled to Him." There is not a hint of such a thing in Scripture; it is a stupid romance. " To whom, I ask, shall the church after death be priests?," We answer, In resurrection to those on earth. Not to those " who have departed hence in ignorance," nor "to spirits in prison' such as those to whom after His death Christ Himself once preached." It is said in Rev. 5 as kings we reign over the earth; as priests we present the prayers of the saints. We are not to be prophets then. All the rest is yarn-spinning. When Mr. Jukes says, " The words distinctly assert that our Lord went and preached unto the spirits in prison, who once had been disobedient in the days of Noah," we affirm that they certainly do not; that is, it is not said He preached in prison.' Not only so, but God declares, in Gen. 5, His Spirit should yet strive but those 120 years. And yet they would tell us that with these only He strove afterward. He speaks as if we comfort the lost where they are, in Gehenna! How they pass the " great gulf fixed " he does not say! (Luke 16)
" I may add here, that this same truth that the first-blessed must save others is set forth, though in a slightly different form, in the kindred law of redemption touching the firstlings of beasts, whether clean or unclean. When he speaks of the two leavened cakes being offered up together in " that great coming Pentecost," we ask, Which is that? and surely in glory they will not be leavened cakes' at all. When he says, " Oh glorious day, when our Lord and Head shall give of His treasure to His First-born, that they may with Him redeem all lands and all brethren!" we say, It is infamous to link them and the Lord in redeeming. " Then shall the laver be multiplied into ten lavers,' till the water of life become a sea of crystal' large enough for even Babylon the Great to sink into it, and be found no more at all forever." This is senseless sentiment dissipated into mere air, when we ask, Who were cleansed in the lavers? Only actual priests, already consecrated; being washed! So when we ask, Where is such a sea as he describes into which Babylon could sink? There is no such sea. The " sea of glass" was solid, and there was no sinking into it, and no purifying (Rev. 4. 15. 21.) Were it so, this is the kingdom given up, while " without " are the wicked? Then we have quotation from the Apocrypha, which has nothing to say to the matter either; "Then shall the elect run to and fro as sparks among the stubble." And when he romances about " Christ's members judging the world with Him, and consuming the evil with that same fire which Christ came to cast into the earth, and with which He is yet pledged to baptize all nations," we ask, Where is He so pledged? The Spirit is not for the world. No doubt the fire is, but it is " everlasting fire!" It is mere assertion that the first-born, though first delivered from the curse, have a relation to the whole creation, which shall be saved in the appointed times by Christ and His body, for there is no Scripture; and to end the sentence with bring about " the restitution of all things," is false quotation, as is also what follows; for Eph.1: 3-10 has not a word about it, nor has Eph. 2:4-74But God, who is rich in mercy, for his great love wherewith he loved us, 5Even when we were dead in sins, hath quickened us together with Christ, (by grace ye are saved;) 6And hath raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus: 7That in the ages to come he might show the exceeding riches of his grace in his kindness toward us through Christ Jesus. (Ephesians 2:4‑7). Eph. 1:33Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ: (Ephesians 1:3) is falsely connected with verse 10, and this is given up too. " The church, like Christ its Head, is itself a great sacrament," etc. This is all romance and nonsense! So when he says the blessing of the elect is " but the means and pledge, as the apostle says, of wider blessing," it is not true, and the apostle does not say it! The reading of 1 Cor. 1:27,2827But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty; 28And base things of the world, and things which are despised, hath God chosen, yea, and things which are not, to bring to nought things that are: (1 Corinthians 1:27‑28) will show that he misuses it for the future when it means the present. And so is it to utterly confound the day of salvation and the day of judgment to say that when He comes in judgment on persons, it is " a priestly work of judgment and purification by fire which must be accomplished that all may be subdued' and reconciled.' " All this is before the " fire" save as " the perdition of ungodly men." Then it is clearly not purification. What he says of Moloch is blasphemy, and as applied to us monstrous!
" But Scripture never says that these only shall be saved, but rather that in this `seed' whose portion as the first-born is double, all the kindreds of the earth shall be blessed.' " This is a shameful abuse of Scripture. Christ is the " Seed," and specifically one, and the blessing is of " the kindreds of the earth; " not of the lost in Gehenna.
His reference to the church ordaining " All-Souls' Day" as well as "All-Saints' Day," and thus "may have been teaching more than some of her sons may yet have learned from her," and that " she believed that, like her Lord, she is truly linked to all, and with Him is ordained at last to gather all," we ask, Where did she learn it? and to keep days? (Gal. 4:10,1110Ye observe days, and months, and times, and years. 11I am afraid of you, lest I have bestowed upon you labor in vain. (Galatians 4:10‑11)). And to deduce such a conclusion from the unscriptural action of the church can only impose on those who are willing to be deceived by gratuitous assertion. But it were positive wickedness, if it were not absolute nonsense, to say " only by the Cross can the change be wrought in us which conforms us to Christ and His image-which makes us, like Him, lambs for the slaughter, and as such fitted to bless and serve others." His misapplication of Scripture is very painful. He says, "And, indeed, so narrow is the way and so strait is the gate that leadeth to the life and glory of the first-born, who follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth," etc., a misapplication of what is wholly unconnected.
(2.) "I pass on to show that God's purpose by the first-born from the dead to bless the later-born-as it is written, so in Christ shall all be made alive,' is fulfilled in successive worlds or ages; or, to use the language of St. Paul, according to the purpose of the ages,' so that the dead are raised not all together, but every man in his own order. Christ the first-fruits, afterward they that are Christ's at his coming; ' which latter resurrection, though after Christ's, is yet called the resurrection from among the dead,' or the first resurrection." All this about God's purpose is false. Scripture states no such purpose. If " so in Christ shall all be made alive," be the true translation, which I do not think, it is resurrection. But what does "raised" mean, as applied by Mr. Jukes to " the dead"? Does it not mean restoration in his sense of all? But mark the eras of resurrection as given by St. Paul in 1 Cor. 15 (1) Christ the first- fruits; (2) Afterward they that are Christ's at His coming; (3) Then cometh the end, γέγονε, when there is a within and a " without " as Rev. 21:8,27; 22: 14, 158But the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the second death. (Revelation 21:8)
27And there shall in no wise enter into it any thing that defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination, or maketh a lie: but they which are written in the Lamb's book of life. (Revelation 21:27), clearly teach. At the " end " the wicked are " without." The dead are not " raised" but to, "judgment; " the result of which is not blessing, saving, and restoration, but to " be cast into the lake of fire" (Rev. 20:11-1511And I saw a great white throne, and him that sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and there was found no place for them. 12And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God; and the books were opened: and another book was opened, which is the book of life: and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works. 13And the sea gave up the dead which were in it; and death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them: and they were judged every man according to their works. 14And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire. This is the second death. 15And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake of fire. (Revelation 20:11‑15)). This is the express testimony of Scripture.
It is vain to reason that, because Christ was raised before the members of His body-also called first fruits-" who will not be all gathered till the (fancied) great Pentecost," that it is plain the purpose of God is wrought not all at once but through successive ages, and that this fact gives us a hint of further mysteries, and some key to " the ages of ages." First- fruits, and the morrow of the Passover Sabbath, or Christ's resurrection (Lev. 23:9-229And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, 10Speak unto the children of Israel, and say unto them, When ye be come into the land which I give unto you, and shall reap the harvest thereof, then ye shall bring a sheaf of the firstfruits of your harvest unto the priest: 11And he shall wave the sheaf before the Lord, to be accepted for you: on the morrow after the sabbath the priest shall wave it. 12And ye shall offer that day when ye wave the sheaf an he lamb without blemish of the first year for a burnt offering unto the Lord. 13And the meat offering thereof shall be two tenth deals of fine flour mingled with oil, an offering made by fire unto the Lord for a sweet savor: and the drink offering thereof shall be of wine, the fourth part of an hin. 14And ye shall eat neither bread, nor parched corn, nor green ears, until the selfsame day that ye have brought an offering unto your God: it shall be a statute for ever throughout your generations in all your dwellings. 15And ye shall count unto you from the morrow after the sabbath, from the day that ye brought the sheaf of the wave offering; seven sabbaths shall be complete: 16Even unto the morrow after the seventh sabbath shall ye number fifty days; and ye shall offer a new meat offering unto the Lord. 17Ye shall bring out of your habitations two wave loaves of two tenth deals: they shall be of fine flour; they shall be baken with leaven; they are the firstfruits unto the Lord. 18And ye shall offer with the bread seven lambs without blemish of the first year, and one young bullock, and two rams: they shall be for a burnt offering unto the Lord, with their meat offering, and their drink offerings, even an offering made by fire, of sweet savor unto the Lord. 19Then ye shall sacrifice one kid of the goats for a sin offering, and two lambs of the first year for a sacrifice of peace offerings. 20And the priest shall wave them with the bread of the firstfruits for a wave offering before the Lord, with the two lambs: they shall be holy to the Lord for the priest. 21And ye shall proclaim on the selfsame day, that it may be an holy convocation unto you: ye shall do no servile work therein: it shall be a statute for ever in all your dwellings throughout your generations. 22And when ye reap the harvest of your land, thou shalt not make clean riddance of the corners of thy field when thou reapest, neither shalt thou gather any gleaning of thy harvest: thou shalt leave them unto the poor, and to the stranger: I am the Lord your God. (Leviticus 23:9‑22)), is all one period. Moreover, it is not said that the saints share Christ's glory as heirs of God, in subduing all things unto Him. This is nowhere said; nor that " all have been made alive in Him by His resurrection," but only all in Christ, all believers, and Christ gives up the kingdom when the wicked are "without," as we have already pointed out. And there is no Scripture for their being " subdued." It is also false to affirm that there is " nothing in the gospel the figure of which is not in the law, nor anything in the law the substance of which is not found in the gospel," for there was only a shadow, not the image (Heb. 9); and the church was " hid in God " (Eph. 3:99And to make all men see what is the fellowship of the mystery, which from the beginning of the world hath been hid in God, who created all things by Jesus Christ: (Ephesians 3:9)). As to Pentecost and Tabernacles (p. 50) we say, no doubt; but it is now or the age to come.
Where is it said that the " mystic periods are all different times for cleansing and blessing men; sevens and seven times seven; the former of which are figures of the ages, the last of the ages of ages in the New Testament?"
We ask for proof of this, or where it is so said, and why so? It is mere imagination. When he says of those who could not go free as some did at the sabbatic year, that they might at the year of jubilee " regain what had been lost, and find full deliverance," he ignores, what makes it wholly fallacious, that they were already the rightful heirs, are restored to their own inheritance. What he says of the jubilee is totally false (see Lev. 25:1616According to the multitude of years thou shalt increase the price thereof, and according to the fewness of years thou shalt diminish the price of it: for according to the number of the years of the fruits doth he sell unto thee. (Leviticus 25:16)), so that the proof is exactly of the contrary. "Not of persons only," it was not of persons at all. To what is Acts 1:77And he said unto them, It is not for you to know the times or the seasons, which the Father hath put in his own power. (Acts 1:7) applied? To what is quite different from that to which our Lord applied it. The Scriptures are everywhere pressed out of their express and obvious meaning in order to have some show of Scripture for the creation of his own fancy.
Besides, one grows sick of exposing nonsense like the following: "For the woman is our nature, which if it receive seed- that is, the word of truth-may bring forth a son, that is, the new man.'" Our nature brings forth the new man! "In which case nature, or the mother which brings it forth, is only unclean during the seven days of this first creation." Here again all is false. The old man must die. " And then in the blood of purifying till the end of the forty days, which always figure this dispensation." Always? Gen. 7 is not the figure of it: Moses in the mount is not: Ezek. 4 is not. It is all imagination. "But if, instead of bearing this new man,' our nature only bear its like, a female child," etc. Bears it through the quickening word! Miserable trifling! "To those too who believe that the church was divinely guided in the order and appointment of the Christian year," etc., the apostle's word is, "I stand in doubt of you" (Gal. 4:8-208Howbeit then, when ye knew not God, ye did service unto them which by nature are no gods. 9But now, after that ye have known God, or rather are known of God, how turn ye again to the weak and beggarly elements, whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage? 10Ye observe days, and months, and times, and years. 11I am afraid of you, lest I have bestowed upon you labor in vain. 12Brethren, I beseech you, be as I am; for I am as ye are: ye have not injured me at all. 13Ye know how through infirmity of the flesh I preached the gospel unto you at the first. 14And my temptation which was in my flesh ye despised not, nor rejected; but received me as an angel of God, even as Christ Jesus. 15Where is then the blessedness ye spake of? for I bear you record, that, if it had been possible, ye would have plucked out your own eyes, and have given them to me. 16Am I therefore become your enemy, because I tell you the truth? 17They zealously affect you, but not well; yea, they would exclude you, that ye might affect them. 18But it is good to be zealously affected always in a good thing, and not only when I am present with you. 19My little children, of whom I travail in birth again until Christ be formed in you, 20I desire to be present with you now, and to change my voice; for I stand in doubt of you. (Galatians 4:8‑20)). The statements as to the incarnation are, to say the least, extremely hazarded, and bear the stamp of some of the worst current errors, and the fact is quite false. The new man does not spring out of the weak nature into which the eternal Word is come; if, indeed, there is any sense in the passage. At the end of this purification of women he adds: " There is like teaching in every time and season of the law, and its days and years figure the ages ' of the New Testament; " but he gives no proof, but expects, I suppose, " that there is some teaching here, though he cannot understand it!"
When he refers to such nations as Moab and Ammon being ejected in an earlier age and saved in a later, it is true of them no doubt, but what proof is there that it is a figure of others? And when he adds: "For them also must there be hope in the new creation according to the promise, Behold I make all things new; ' for Christ, who, being put to death in the flesh, but quickened in Spirit, went in Spirit and preached to the spirits in prison, which sometime were disobedient, when once the long-suffering of God waited in the days of Noah," is " Jesus Christ (that is, Anointed Savior)2 the same yesterday, to-day, and forever; " we must remind our readers that it is at the time when He makes all things new,-this part of his statement is not honest—that Scripture tells us that the wicked " shall have their part in the lake of fire " (Rev. 21:88But the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the second death. (Revelation 21:8)). His allusion to Christ passing over the sea and healing the man possessed with devils fails utterly; for they would not have Him It is a picture of the world's rejection of Christ when some were healed. It gives no countenance to his notion that Chris " casts out devils also on the other side of the deep waters.
" Such is the light which the law and prophets give us as to God's purpose of salvation through successive ages! "
Creation and regeneration are next referred to, and said to " tell no less clearly, though more secretly, the same mystery." " In creation each day has its work to bring back some part of the creature, and one part before another, from emptiness and confusion, to light, and form, and order." This is utterly false; for so it was not creation, but bringing back something; reconciliation rather than creation. When he continues: " These first works act on the rest, for of God's will this heaven' is a fellow-worker with God's Word in all the change which follows, till the whole is very good; we ask, Where is that? His note from Parkhurst, in which he says that "heavens " means the " arrangers," because the heavens have been the great agents in disposing all material things, shows us that Parkhurst had about as much childish fancy as Mr. Jukes. He was a strong Hutchisonian, and held this interpretation. It is all stuff.
It is equally false to say, as he does, that the quickening of the body will be in any way effected by our quickened souls.
Scripture says (Rom. 8:1111But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you. (Romans 8:11)), ωοποιήσει χαὶ τὰ θνητὰ σώματα ὑμῶν, διὰ τὸ ἐνοιχοῦν αὐτοῦ Πνεῦμα ἐν ὑμῖν. "For our spirit is to our body what the spiritual are to this world " is distinctly false- and the conclusion false. " So surely shall the quickening and manifestation of the sons of God end in saving those earthly souls who are not here quickened." This is not only imagination, but deadly false doctrine.
But he is as unhappy in pressing "forever" and "forever and ever," into his service, and telling us that the word is literally " for the age," or " for the ages of ages." 'εις τὸν αἰῶνα does not mean "for the age," nor is αἰώνιος not eternal. 2 Cor. 4 What is seen is πρὸς χαιρὸν, what is not seen is αἱῶνιος. It is definitely what is opposed to for a time in its absolute proper sense. "Ages" no one denies. But, when he says that " God's wisdom was ordained before the ages to our glory," means God's bringing glory to the fallen creatures, accomplished through successive ages, we reply, Nothing of the kind. It was the mystery Paul preached ordained for our glory, and which he states to be what is now-not in the future (Eph. 3:10,1110To the intent that now unto the principalities and powers in heavenly places might be known by the church the manifold wisdom of God, 11According to the eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord: (Ephesians 3:10‑11)). Then he says " We are told distinctly of the ' purpose of the ages,' showing that the work of renewal would only be accomplished through successive ages; " it shows nothing of the kind. Paul writes the wisdom of God in the church χατὰ πρόθεσιν τῶν αἰώνων. "By the Son, God made the ages" (Heb. 1:22Hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son, whom he hath appointed heir of all things, by whom also he made the worlds; (Hebrews 1:2)) is quite false, even as to translation; and the reason given is also invented and false- that each age was made by what the Word gave of God's mind. It is " worlds," not " ages," also in Heb. 11:33Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God, so that things which are seen were not made of things which do appear. (Hebrews 11:3). It means in both places the universe. When he quotes "the end of the ages," and that on us " the ends of the ages are met," it does appear strange to say " words which... seem to imply that other ages are approaching their consummation." How so, if it is σνντελεια τῶν αἰώνῳν the "end of the ages "? It is positively the contrary: we are in the συντελεία (the end), though the things are not fulfilled till Christ comes. And when he speaks of God's showing His grace in the " ages to come," there is no restoration spoken of-but solely and expressly His kindness " towards us."
"Now, what is this `purpose of the ages' which St. Paul speaks of," etc? St. Paul states it expressly to be the church (Eph. 3:10,1110To the intent that now unto the principalities and powers in heavenly places might be known by the church the manifold wisdom of God, 11According to the eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord: (Ephesians 3:10‑11)). Our author answers: " The ages are the fulfillment or substance of the `times and seasons' of the sabbatic year and jubilee under the old law." And we have seen that the Gentiles remained slaves forever (Lev. 25:4646And ye shall take them as an inheritance for your children after you, to inherit them for a possession; they shall be your bondmen for ever: but over your brethren the children of Israel, ye shall not rule one over another with rigor. (Leviticus 25:46)). Again: "They are those times of refreshment from the presence of the Lord, when he shall send Jesus Christ." But that brings in the end. It is strange to read that then cleansing and rest will be gained by those who now are without their rightful inheritance. What made it their rightful inheritance? Is God bound to save the lost? When he affirms that in " the ages," and in no other mystery of the gospel do we find those good things to come, of which the legal times and seasons were the " shadow; " we must say that it is quite differently applied in Hebrews. One has to come as to fulfillment: for this (the church) is not one (p. 59). When he identifies those ages to come with " times and seasons which the Father hath put in his own power," we ask our readers to turn to Acts 1:77And he said unto them, It is not for you to know the times or the seasons, which the Father hath put in his own power. (Acts 1:7), and read the passage. It speaks of restoring the kingdom to Israel, and not of saving those who died impenitent. What he says of the book of Revelation is entirely false. It does not speak of these " ages of ages," but the contrary. It goes through judgment; then says " It is done." There is no opening out of the processes and stages of the great redemption. But when the end comes, all is done (γέγονε); and sinners (as has been already noted) are "without" There is no redemption of those who are judged.
Mr. Jukes's quotations or references are not to be trusted. He says the book of Revelation, more than any other, speaks of the ages, and he refers us to Rev. 1: 6,18; 4: 9, 10; 5: 13, 14; 7: 12; 10: 6; 11: 15; 14: 11; 15: 7; 19: 3; 20:10; 22: 510And the devil that deceived them was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone, where the beast and the false prophet are, and shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever. (Revelation 20:10). Look at them; never believe a quotation or reference till you do. Paul does no such thing as speak of " the ends " of some; but absolutely "the ends of the ages," τὰ τέλη τῶν αἰών.
When he says Christ's mediatorial kingdom, which is for ages of ages, is one delivered up, he refers to a passage which only upsets his argument as to ages. The kingdom of the world, of our Lord and Savior, is come" (Rev. 11).
It is one state or dispensation showing the vague general use of ages (p. 61): He says the inspired writers, " when they had in view a greater or more comprehensive age wrote εὶς αἰῶνα αἰῶνων, that is, " to the age of ages." We ask, Where but in Eph. 3? " When they intended the longer age' alone, without regard to its constituent parts, they wrote εἰς αἰῶνα ἀιῶνος = to an aeonial age; ' this form of expression being a Hebraism exactly equivalent to εἰς αἰῶνα αἰώνων, like liberty of glory' for glorious liberty' (Rom. 8:2121Because the creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God. (Romans 8:21)) and body of our vileness' for our vile body' (Phil. 3:2121Who shall change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body, according to the working whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himself. (Philippians 3:21)). When they intended the several comprehensive ages' collectively, they wrote εἰς τοὺς αἰῶνας τῶν αἰὠνων, that is,
to the ages of ‘ages.' Each varying form is used with a distinct purpose and meaning." This is all wrong: αἰῶα αἰὠνων would be only one age so characterized. " Glorious liberty " does not give the sense; it is liberty of glory in contrast with liberty of grace, of which the mere creatures, not even our body, could not partake; and it is "body of humiliation," not "humble body." God lives, εἰς τ. α. τ. α. Does this mean "ages" collectively? The whole scheme of precision is a delusion. Εἰς τὸν αἰῶνα by itself is " forever," " eternal." There is an object in the change, but very often just borrowed, as Heb. 1:88But unto the Son he saith, Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever: a sceptre of righteousness is the sceptre of thy kingdom. (Hebrews 1:8), from the LXX. le olden vead. His quotations are incorrect, leaving out the articlə which is most commonly inserted. The only place where εἰς τὸν αἱῶνα τοῦ αἰῶνος, is I believe in Heb. 1:88But unto the Son he saith, Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever: a sceptre of righteousness is the sceptre of thy kingdom. (Hebrews 1:8), and he quotes without the article to make it " an age," which is quoting it falsely in words and sense. εἰς τοὺς αιῶνας τῶν αιῶνων is said of God (Rev. 4:1010The four and twenty elders fall down before him that sat on the throne, and worship him that liveth for ever and ever, and cast their crowns before the throne, saying, (Revelation 4:10), and elsewhere), "'who liveth," ε.τ.α.τ.α Does God only
live for the comprehensive ages? Is that what the passage means? The saints reign ε.τ.α.τ.α. In Daniel we have (7: 10) εἰς αἰωνα τῶν αιῶνων.In Kaldee, " unto [the] age, and age of ages. What does that mean? There is, according to Mr. Jukes, glory to Christ in the church for certain collective ages viewed as one, but that is all. He compares 1 Cor. 15-Christ giving up the kingdom-and Rev. 11:1515And the seventh angel sounded; and there were great voices in heaven, saying, The kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign for ever and ever. (Revelation 11:15). But he forgets that the last enemy which shall be destroyed is death, and Satan is cast into the lake of fire with the beast and false prophet, and they are tormented for ages and ages; but the next thing to the resurrection of the saints is (εἶτα τὸ τέλος) the end. So the rest of the dead lived not again till the thousand years were finished. Then the wicked dead are raised, and Christ gives up the kingdom- the saints having lived and reigned with Christ a thousand years; and when the dead are raised and cast into the lake of fire it is the end, it is γεγονε So that his confounding the ages of ages and the giving up of the kingdom denies plain Scripture. There is one thing singular that Mr. J. never alludes to the commonest and simplest form of expression εἰς τὸυ αἰςνα an expression which, according to him, must mean the age. Now, with " this," it may mean age; but when used abstractedly, it constantly means simply " forever." The fancy that Alpha and Omega seems to imply an end of the peculiar manifestation of Christ as King and Priest, under which special offices revelation shows Him, because there will be an end of lost ones to be saved, is all a delusion (comp. Isa. 44:66Thus saith the Lord the King of Israel, and his redeemer the Lord of hosts; I am the first, and I am the last; and beside me there is no God. (Isaiah 44:6)). He thinks it would have been more respectful to the word of God if our translators had been content to give the exact meaning of the words they render " forever," or " forever and ever," but which are simply "for the age," or "for the ages of ages." But I deny it to be the exact sense. (See Rev. 4:1010The four and twenty elders fall down before him that sat on the throne, and worship him that liveth for ever and ever, and cast their crowns before the throne, saying, (Revelation 4:10), and other places; and the passage 2 Cor. 4) Does Peter (2 Peter 3: 1) wish Christ glory " for an age?”
It is important to hold them fast on these proofs, that their statements as to it are false. The note on p. 62, as to 2 Peter 3:1818But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. To him be glory both now and for ever. Amen. (2 Peter 3:18), is quite false. Εἰς ἡμέσαν αἰῶνος is not an exact literal
translation of the words in Mic. 5:22But thou, Bethlehem Ephratah, though thou be little among the thousands of Judah, yet out of thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be ruler in Israel; whose goings forth have been from of old, from everlasting. (Micah 5:2), עולם םיםי, and which in our authorized version are translated "from everlasting." n is not εἰς, not "to," but "from," and "days," not " day." But if they were, what do they mean? The passage is, on the contrary, a proof of the use of aim) for eternity, in contrast with time. "The ages' therefore, are periods in which God works." "Therefore:" why? His conclusion is drawn without any solid reasoning, as has been shown. The end is next after the first resurrection, as Rev, proves (p. 63). It is totally false to say that " Christ, by whom all things are wrought in the ages, goes back to the glory which He had before the age-times,' that God may be all in all,' for the Son Himself is then subject " (1 Cor. 15:2828And when all things shall be subdued unto him, then shall the Son also himself be subject unto him that put all things under him, that God may be all in all. (1 Corinthians 15:28)). Nor does " Jesus Christ" mean Anointed Savior, but Jehovah the Savior, the Anointed, or Christ. To apply Heb. 13:88Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever. (Hebrews 13:8) to prove salvation through the ages, translating " forever" for the ages, is very bad. And the Scripture gives another reason for the name, which exactly sets aside this, " for He shall save His people from their sins." Thus Mark 11:1414And Jesus answered and said unto it, No man eat fruit of thee hereafter for ever. And his disciples heard it. (Mark 11:14), or Matt. 21:1919And when he saw a fig tree in the way, he came to it, and found nothing thereon, but leaves only, and said unto it, Let no fruit grow on thee henceforward for ever. And presently the fig tree withered away. (Matthew 21:19); John 4:14; 6: 51-58; 8: 35, 51, 52; 10: 23; 11: 2614But whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst; but the water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life. (John 4:14). So εἰς τοὺς αἰῶας-Rom. 1: 25; 9: 5; 11: 36; 16: 27. Now these, and many others, it is absurd to say means ".ages," as if God was to be glorified only for certain ages. So Phil. 4:2020Now unto God and our Father be glory for ever and ever. Amen. (Philippians 4:20); 2 Tim. 4:1818And the Lord shall deliver me from every evil work, and will preserve me unto his heavenly kingdom: to whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen. (2 Timothy 4:18).
The same may be said of " It will, I think, too, be found that the adjective founded on this word, whether applied to life,' punishment," redemption," covenant," times,' or even God Himself, is always connected with remedial labor, and with the idea of ' ages ' as periods in which God is working to meet and correct some awful fall " (64). Rom. 16 shows, with other passages, exactly the contrary. There were
aeonial times" in which God was testing man till he rejected Christ. " Now," says the Lord, " is the judgment of this world," and the συνελεία τῶν αἰώνων is come on us. But all is not fulfilled Christ came in the end of the world to offer Himself, and then the things are reported by the gospel preached with the Holy Ghost sent down from heaven, and we wait for them to be brought when Christ is revealed (1 Peter 1:12,1312Unto whom it was revealed, that not unto themselves, but unto us they did minister the things, which are now reported unto you by them that have preached the gospel unto you with the Holy Ghost sent down from heaven; which things the angels desire to look into. 13Wherefore gird up the loins of your mind, be sober, and hope to the end for the grace that is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Jesus Christ; (1 Peter 1:12‑13)). Of that the prophets spoke. When He gives up that kingdom "it is done." And it is false to say that eternal life is aeonial life: " but the end everlasting life:" "this is life eternal:" and as to God Himself " who liveth forever and ever." There is nothing about the " ages; " and his assertion, "ages during which Jesus Christ is the same, that is, a Savior," is a mistake. The word is unto, είς, not during: Yesterday, to-day, and forever, εἰς τὀν αἰῶνα. Mr. Jukes's statement is wholly unfounded.
Forever does not mean aeonial (65): " The aeonial God,"—the God who works through these " ages." Instead of this, it is in contrast with temporal or repeated workings. And so of the rest, "redemption," " Spirit," " fire," or " inheritance," all which in certain texts are called " aeonial." All false! So again: " As the context of Rom. 16 shows God as working through aeonial times." How? There is not the smallest allusion to it. Redemption was by a work done once in the end of the world (σθντελεἰα τῶν αὶώνων), or He must often have suffered (Heb. 9) It was the Father our Lord addressed when He said, " This is eternal life, that they might know Thee the only true God." The rest is not there-that this marks the renewed life peculiar to the ages. It astonishes by its rashness to read " ئonial or eternal life therefore is not, as so many think, the living on and on forever and ever," when we read in Scripture that Christ "is the true God and eternal life-that eternal Life which was with the Father. He that hath the Son bath life: he that
hath not the Son of God hath not life." When he gives as the Lord's explanation of the word eternal, a life that has to do with a Savior, and is part of a remedial scheme, we ask where? "2Eonial is simply of the ages" (p. 66). That is the question. "And the ages,' like the days of creation, as being periods in which God works, witness not only that there is some fall to be remedied, but that God through these days or ages is working to remedy it." Creation proved nothing of the kind: I wholly deny it as a universal proposition. " The adjective aeonial or age-long cannot carry a force or express a duration greater than that of the ages or aeons which it speaks of." If it means it! But the positive use of it in Scripture confutes all this. It is not even said they are partakers of Christ's endless life: their life is only and always carom, and if, for whatever reason this means endless, then αἰωνια does mean endless duration, for that is the word always used for this life, as it is exactly in the same position for punishment. " By death, and by death only, that He destroys," etc. Whose death? His citation and use of John 12:2424Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone: but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit. (John 12:24) is the grossest misapplication. It is fruit in others, the saving of souls by the death of Christ, as He who gave His life a. ransom for many. He could have had twelve legions of angels. " Advance " of what, and of what character, was it in Christ? (69). Christ has shown us the way, we are told. He has shown us we must take up the cross and follow Him, though to do it till He had dried up the swollen waters of Jordan was impossible. But is that the meaning of Christ's death bearing fruit? that we have to tread the same path. The elect yield themselves to the same great law of progress; and this he calls salvation, the way they are saved. This a fatal denial of the truth of God and Christ's glory.
As to the passages quoted page 69, "goes from strength to strength" and "from glory to glory," neither of them applies to death or any like change. " Christ has shown us all the way down from" the lowest parts of the earth, "from the virgin's womb," etc. This is all donner la change saw la parole! "The
elect yield themselves to the same great law of progress through death." Then Christ did not go through death for them; they do the same! " Others may think they will be saved in another way than that Christ trod:" to save whom did He die if all save themselves by going through the path Christ trod! All this contains abominable false doctrine, and denial of real Christianity. "Nature and sin must be judged and die." Judged in whom? Scripture says it was condemned when Christ was [a sacrifice] for sin. Mr. Jukes complains of some "seeming to think that Christ died that we should not die, and that their calling is to be delivered from death, instead of by it and out of it; because the meaning of Christ's cross is not understood but rather perverted, and therefore death is shrunk from instead of being welcomed as the appointed means by which alone we can be delivered from him that has the power of death, who more or less rules us till we are dead, for sin reigns unto death, and only he that is dead is freed from sin; because this, which is indeed the gospel, is not received, or if received in word is not really understood. Even Christians misunderstand what is said of that destruction and judgment which is the only way for delivering fallen creatures from their bondage, and bringing them back in God's life to His kingdom." First, Christ's death for us, as guilty, is ignored. Next, that sin in the flesh was condemned in Christ's death. Next, sin must reign, more or less, till we actually die, and our own dying is the Gospel, not Christ's dying for us. That we reckon ourselves to be dead in the power of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus, and so are delivered as crucified with Christ; and Christ living in us, is equally ignored. We are delivered by our own death, and sin reigns till we die. Christ has not made the Jordan dry for us, destruction and judgment delivering us by our going through them ourselves. I may add freed, though we are made free then, 8: 2, 3, is not the true word in the passage cited, it is justified. This is very bad. Whose "destruction and judgment"? That we reckon ourselves dead to sin because Christ died is true. But if we examine Scripture and compare the contexts, we shall find the whole scheme, giving the clue to all the judgments of Him who killeth and maketh alive, Mr. Jukes's fancy, and confuted by the connecting of the passages with the Lord's coming and reign, and " Then cometh the end." But it is a doctrine worse than mere fancy. He adds: " As this is a point of all-importance, lying at the very root of the cross of Christ and of His members, and giving a clue to all the judgments of Him who killeth and maketh alive,' I would. show, not the fact and truth only, that for fallen creatures the way of life is and must be through death, but also the reason for it," not that Christ died for our sins and to sin on the Cross, and we reckon ourselves dead to sin as well as justified, but the cross of Christ and ours. Now, if we weigh this linking " the cross of Christ and of His members," he shows that he has no thought of the atonement-guilt is ignored; but as He died thus, they die and so live. This he says is "the root of the cross of Christ." He then goes on to say why this is. The cross is not a fact only, but power-God's power and God's wisdom, to set heart and mind free! Scripture says He was crucified in weakness, but liveth by the power of God; and it is not said that the cross is God's wisdom and power, but that Christ is. He ascribes peace, propitiation, forgiveness, to the cross, of which Mr. J. says nothing. What Mr. J. says it does not. Finally, we do not actually die. We have not to die to sin, but to reckon ourselves dead, then to mortify, and carry about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus. Death is ours, and gain. The whole system is unscriptural and false. "For both to head and heart life is a terrible riddle, which neither Greek nor Jew, the head and heart of old humanity, could ever fully solve.... To both God's answer was the cross of Christ, which gave to each, to head and heart, what each was longing for: power to the one to escape from that which had tied and bound it, for by death with Christ we are freed from the bondage of corruption, and from all that hinders the heart's best aspirations; wisdom to the other to see why we must die, or what is the reason of all present suffering." Is this all that the cross is? Is there no thought of guilt which is met by it? No craving of the conscience of convicted sinners? The very reading of such a quotation will deliver the simple that know what the cross is. The way to life is not for fallen man through judgment, or he is condemned (page 72). His teaching of the cross is only dying with Christ, of which Scripture always says as to believers they have died, not that as He died so we die-as the same path of life. There is no dying for us in his perfect cross. Here are his texts-Matt. 16: 25; Gal. 2:2020I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me. (Galatians 2:20); Rom. 6: 3, 4; 2 Tim. 2:11,1211It is a faithful saying: For if we be dead with him, we shall also live with him: 12If we suffer, we shall also reign with him: if we deny him, he also will deny us: (2 Timothy 2:11‑12); Rom. 8: 12, 13. This is significant; atonement there is none. " Why is the way of life for us through the cross?" Whose? He says that the way man got away from God must be retraced, if by grace we come back to Him. But Scripture says No: it is " by a new and living way " (p. 73). He says "... poisoned and destroyed the divine life in man's soul." What divine life? Equal nonsense is talked about Eden being the paradise called by Paul the third heaven. Did Paul go back to Eden? " It was by death to God we fell out of God's world" (p. 74). We did not fall out of God's world. Man was a guilty transgressor and driven out by God. Though we reckon ourselves dead to sin by Christ's death (Rom 6.), all our author says is hollow. What " spiritual world " are our souls living in? All is vague and loose. " Christ died this double death for us, not only to sin,' but also to the elements of the world' And to be free we also must die with Him to both." I repeat Scripture says we have died; and was He in nature and in the world of darkness?
On p. 75 all is nonsense about. quickening God's life again in man. " As the life of hell was quickened by a lie, so the life of God is quickened by the truth." What is that? " Even by the Word of God, who came where man was to raise up God's life in man, in and by which, through a death to sin and to this world, man might be freed perfectly." " In Christ the work has been accomplished." What work? He adds-" In Him by God's word and Spirit God's life has been again raised up in man," etc. God's life was not in man at all. There is the life, a new one, when man has received Christ, and he reckons himself dead as crucified with Christ; but for all that, all that Mr. Jukes says is false, as " God's life " and living in the heavenly paradise are spoken of as to Adam.
The note to p. 75 is also a mistake. He says, " Not without a deep and wondrous reason is בשר both goodness and flesh in Hebrew." It is nothing of the kind. Besorah is good news, from Basar, to bring good news. Basar is flesh. If he applies it to Christ, as it would seem he does, it is yet worse. What does he mean by " again raised up in man in Christ "? In Him was life. He was eternal life come down. There are things concealed here which, as he says, " it is not lawful for a man to utter ": he is concealing thoughts he dares not state. "Come basic out of darkness." Is that of Christ? What work " in Christ " does he mean on p. 76? " Die to that which keeps him far from God." Was that so of Christ?
There is the most absurd misapplication of passages of Scripture, using them in a sense they do not bear: " Kills to make alive," " turneth man to destruction, that He may say, Return, ye children of men." This is God's judgment to bring about the death to that which keeps man far from God! Satan's double lie was that God grudges and is untrue, and that by self-will man may be as God, and God's two methods, law and gospel, meet this state of things. " By the one God's life is quickened in man;" What is that again? It is not a new one then, ἄνωθεν;by the other, through present or future judgment, " the hellish and earthly life is slain and overcome." I ask: What judgment? for if saints were crucified with Christ, and no longer live, they have not to die, but to reckon themselves dead. " Is man as God? The law settles this." It does not; it settles that he is not as man ought to be. " The law "... " to be abolished": this he quotes as if Scripture, but Scripture does not say "to be " but " is abolished" (Heb. 10:99Then said he, Lo, I come to do thy will, O God. He taketh away the first, that he may establish the second. (Hebrews 10:9); 2 Cor. 3:13). "He taketh away the first." His use of Scripture is not to be trusted; his whole book is built up out of a misuse of it. His reference to promise to Abraham not being disannulled by the intervention of law to prove that, though men are judged, condemned, and sent to hell for their sins, the judgment thus endured " cannot disannul the previous covenant," is a specimen of this absurdity (p. 78). And law is not judgment but death and condemnation (2 Cor. 3). " But this killing is to make alive." There is no such thought or expression in Scripture. Where is it so written? His theory requires such a passage, and there is none, and yet this for him is the whole point; for he is going to make damnation do it. " Judgment therefore (?) must end in blessing." Why? " God our Father judges to save." Scripture tells us (the Lord Himself says), " The Father judgeth no man." It is a name of grace and relationship; and Christ the Son, to whom judgment is committed, does not judge to save. The Father judges in chastising His children here (1 Peter 1:1717And if ye call on the Father, who without respect of persons judgeth according to every man's work, pass the time of your sojourning here in fear: (1 Peter 1:17)). Christ died to save. Mr. J. says: " He only saves by judging what is evil." Is that true, as fully judging it in the persons guilty, and if by that means, what did Christ do for them? " The evil must be over' thrown; and through death God destroys him that had the power of death." Whose death? The devil's? For in Mr. J.'s system it is the death of him in whom the power of the evil is. This is utter perversion. " A new creation, which is only brought in through death, is God's remedy for that which through a fall is held in death and bondage" (p. 79). This is totally false, confounding two distinct truths; Ephesians and Romans. A new creation is not brought in through death, or it is not a new creation. When we were dead in sins, says Ephesians. Romans teaches us to reckon ourselves dead to sin because Christ has died. When he says we die more quickly to sin through the burdens and infirmities of " this vile body," than those will who reject God's judgment here, and meet it in a more awful form in the resurrection of judgment, it is all totally false, both as affirmed of us and them; for Scripture nowhere teaches that believers die to sin, in their own proper persons: Christ died to sin because He had none.
" Such is the reason for salvation by the cross." Is it that Christ had to be saved through dying? Or whose death or cross does he speak of? If we are dead to sin by Christ's cross, all his system denies the truth. Whose is he speaking of? And note how guilt and bearing sins are left out. " But the great illustration, here as elsewhere, is to be found in the law, that appointed shadow of good things,' which in all its varied forms of sacrifices asserts the same great truth, that only by the fire of God and through death can the earthly creature be changed, and so ascend to God" (p. 80). But these sacrifices were the substituted death of a victim for others. How can this apply to those who have rejected salvation, and for whom the Scriptures tell us there is no more sacrifice for sins? Hence for Mr. J. it is personally dying to sin, which Scripture never speaks of, -save as to Christ; carefully the contrary. As to the sacrifices showing that the creature cannot be changed through death, were they not types of Christ, and therefore spotless? Had He to be changed? What he says of the sacrifices is all wrong as to fact. Only very rare ones were burned; most were eaten. The fat only of some was burnt: as a whole the sacrifice did not " perish in its first form to rise in another as pillars of smoke before God. "If then all this was the pattern of things in the heavens,' we have another witness that a transformation wrought by fire is yet being carried on in the true heavens, that is, the spiritual world." There is no such witness. They prefigured Christ, and no one else. There is no question of " our nature not being spared any more than the animal was not spared by the priest." Mr. J. tells us that " no divine change can be wrought even on God's elect, save by passing through the waters and through the fires." They are born with a wholly new life. He says:-The Lord "fulfilled the types of suffering, so will He fulfill the same in the bodies of those who are His members." How so? we ask. Are they to do that same work which Christ did? Or what was He doing in dying? anything as to Himself? All he says on p. 81 of the uniting power of fire and of fires for the elect is idle and false. And his use of Scripture, as of casting fire into the earth, and salting with fire being the baptism of the Holy Ghost, and fire which Christ desired to be kindled, mingles the most opposite thoughts together, so as to make falsehood and error of all. What is united?; Bathing with fire is not baptizing with the Holy Ghost and with fire. The baptism with the Holy Ghost took place on the day of Pentecost. Fire is always judgment. Christ does not say He desired the fire to be kindled. His theory is salvation by chastening; and a denial of divine life given, and atonement for sin. But chastening is another matter. There must be life and relationship for that. And reconciliation is not transmutation of our nature "by the fire of God into partakers of Christ's flesh and blood." And what is "partakers of Christ's flesh and blood?" Is there no new life? " In and through Christ we have received this transmutation; and through His Spirit, which is fire, is this same change accomplished in us." Same change with what? Says Scripture, " Through whom now we have received the reconciliation," and χαταλλαγὴ (Rom. 5:1111And not only so, but we also joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom we have now received the atonement. (Romans 5:11)) is not " transmutation," but an entirely different thought and thing. And the footnote to page 82 completes the absurdity, where, founding his remark on a false reading of the Hebrew, he affirms-" His purpose to the creature is through destruction to perfect it, and by fire to make it a bride to the Lord."
How unlike His purpose as expressed in God's word Eph. 5! " The Christ has loved the church, and delivered Himself up for it, in order that He might sanctify it, purifying it by the washing of water [not fire] by the word, that He might present it to Himself a glorious church, having no spot or wrinkle or any such thing; but that it might be holy and blameless."
"And as with, the first-fruits, so with the harvest." (" This same change!") Was Christ really changed? " The world to be saved must some day know the same baptism." Will it be saved? For " the Lord," Mr. Jukes adds, " will come by fire," and " by fire and by His sword will He plead with all flesh, and the slain of the Lord shall be many." It is also mere trifling with words to affirm, as he does, " The promised baptism of the Spirit must be judgment, for the Spirit cannot be poured on men without consuming his flesh to quicken a better life." But the Spirit is given only when we believe. As to " consuming his flesh to quicken a better life," whence is the life thus quickened, and what is quickening a life? Is it a life already there in embryo? Besides, Christ says, the world " cannot receive " the Holy Ghost. Where in Scripture do we read that God's " warfare and wrath... works both righteousness and life?"
On page 84, while he rejects the Annihilationist doctrine, " that those who abuse their day of grace will be utterly annihilated," he asserts that God's plan is, with regard to man, " out of, and through the fall, to raise him to higher and more secure blessedness, as it is written, As in Adam all die, so in Christ shall all be made alive;' not all at once, but through successive ages, and according to an appointed order, in which the last, even as the first, shall be restored by the elect," etc. Read the passage " as in Adam," etc., and see of what and of whom it speaks. There is not a word of all this in Scripture, but the contrary (as we have shown already). It is the same blasphemous nonsense I have already spoken of in which he makes us save others as Christ did. As to 1 Cor. 15, it is altogether about the righteous dead.
Page. 85, the answer Mr. Jukes gives to What is conversion? is all false. It is not at all, as he says, " a change involving a death unto sin," etc. He has purposely made it vague or false. Where do the condemned get their new life, and when? " There is but one way to bring seed out of the earth... Nothing is done without the waters and the fires." But the life is already in the seed, to be quickened and eventually ripened. " Conversion is only wrought through condemnation." All is fundamentally false here. Instead of conversion being through condemnation, condemnation of self is through conversion. "The law condemns and slays us, not to annihilate, but to bring forth a better life." How? Law did not, and could not, give or bring forth a better life. To confound (page 86) my spiritual judgment of sin and self with God's judgment of guilty sinners, is stupid and senseless. The way in which Christ's passing through death, which he calls the baptism which awaits Him, and a baptism of the same kind for us, so that we may say, too, " How am I straitened till it be accomplished," is as unscriptural as it is shocking, and disgraceful trifling with Scripture. We are baptized to His death, and we have only to read Acts 2 to see that his appropriation of baptism for the remission of sins is the grossest abuse of words to suit his purpose. Christians are baptized to Christ's death, have died and have received the Holy Ghost. " And that therefore, and to the same end, those not so baptized here must know the last judgment." Who says this is to be to " the same end"? It is the folly of confounding dying to sin and God's final judgment. " Judgment which is to meet the greater hardness and impenitence of the reprobate." Miserable I Not an idea of Christ and of a new life, nor of peace through grace! " It is, therefore, simply because God is what He is, that He is, through love, and because He is love, the curse and destruction of the impenitent" (page 87). Was it love, we ask, that Christ experienced on the cross when He was made a curse for us? He was made sin for us that we might be the righteousness of God in Him All this and bearing sins is wholly left out; and also wrath revealed from heaven. Christ went by the cross, and so got the blessing, and so must we; and so must the wicked for themselves!
No, one denies chastisement, but we are chastened that we should not be condemned with the world. Paul does not tell the church to deliver to Satan. " Souls are taught not to blaspheme by being delivered to Satan;" why withhold "for the destruction of the flesh"? " What does this not teach us as to God's purpose towards those whom He also delivers to Satan and disciplines by evil, since they will not learn by good." He does no such thing. Satan is there then himself! In page 88, " for man's form bears God's image " is never said in Scripture. 1 Cor. 11:77For a man indeed ought not to cover his head, forasmuch as he is the image and glory of God: but the woman is the glory of the man. (1 Corinthians 11:7) is man contrasted with woman. The rest is utter nonsense. In the judgment of the great white throne, Rev. 20, there is not the smallest intimation of salvation or recovery. The judged go into the lake of fire, the second death. And in quoting Rev. 21:5-85And he that sat upon the throne said, Behold, I make all things new. And he said unto me, Write: for these words are true and faithful. 6And he said unto me, It is done. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end. I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountain of the water of life freely. 7He that overcometh shall inherit all things; and I will be his God, and he shall be my son. 8But the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the second death. (Revelation 21:5‑8), why does he leave out γέγονε-is done? The becoming is over. "What does He say here but that all things shall be made new?" It is contrast with the former state of things, and all is finished, γέγονε, and the wicked, in contrast with overcomers, are in the lake of fire. But He does not say so, but " I make." He says their " part " is there. The accomplishment of the earthly promise to Abraham is past, and the promise does not refer to that time when γέγονε by his own showing is there (p. 90)
As to Paul's two passages, "wished himself accursed for them," and have " hope," not fear, " that there should be a resurrection of the dead," etc. The first has no connection with the subject. He had loved them as Moses, who had said, " Blot me, I pray thee, out of the book which Thou hast written." Then he also says that the saints are said to have died to sin, " that is, the dark spirit world;" we ask, Where is this said? As to the second, he expresses his convictions and hope of resurrection, adding, as part of it, this important fact, "both of the just and of the unjust." The rest are within the limits of that dark and fiery world, the life of which, p. 91, is the life of their spirit-a strange idea, whose value is to show that he feeds on German notions, which can identify clairvoyance and animal magnetism with the life of Christ in man as man, owning withal his fall.
They get out of the dark world by the second death! " Even if we have not light to see this, ought not the present to teach us something as to God's future ways; for is He not the same yesterday, to-day, and forever "? Why " forever" here, when elsewhere only "for the ages"? " We know that in inflicting present death His purpose is through death [whose?] to destroy him that has the power of death, that is, the devil." Not at all. Christ became a man to do it. This is totally false, and it confounds, as elsewhere, Christ's dying for us and the person's getting free through his own death. Our reckoning ourselves dead to sin with Christ is, for him, the same thing as the judgment of sinners by God in wrath! " How can we conclude from this that in inflicting the second death' the unchanging God will act on a principle entirely different from that which now actuates Him?" On whom would the second death in order to save be inflicted? On Christ? It must be so to have any show of truth, for that it was in the first case. Or shall the greater foe (the second death) still triumph, while the less, the first death, is surely overcome "? Satan, the great foe, does not, but is judged and in the lake of fire. Being judged is not " triumph." The resurrection of the wicked is the destruction of death, " the last enemy." Who has taught us to limit the meaning of the words, " Death is swallowed up in victory?" Scripture: Then shall come to pass that which is written. It is at the resurrection of the just (1 Cor. 15)
" Is God's will to save all men?" (1 Tim. 2:44Who will have all men to be saved, and to come unto the knowledge of the truth. (1 Timothy 2:4)). The word used for " will " in Greek does not mean purpose. " His appointed means for our deliverance" is not our death, as he speaks of it, but Christ's. The last sentence of page 92 is filled with dishonest quotations, for the passages which he cannot but know refer to the Lord's coming are dishonestly applied to another time. Why not add, " of which the prophets have spoken " to " the restitution of all things," and thus honestly declare that it refers to this earth? " He shall save His people" is the scriptural application of the name of Jesus, his last reference.
As to freeing bondsmen and debtors, as a type it proves the contrary. Only Israelites were set free (p. 93); as to the heathen the bondage was forever. It is therefore the contrary to what Mr. J. says, " Fallen still are his children." They are not. Scripture says, we are the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus (Gal. 3) Where there is no faith, there the person is not a child of God. " A larger mercy from our Father in heaven." Whose Father? All this on p. 94 denies sin and guilt, judgment and righteousness. And judging sin is not being overcome of evil. And the whole of his closing remarks are without one word of sins, guilt, responsibility, or righteous judgment! His whole system is a mere dream of his own imagination, outside of Scripture and against its plainest teaching. His view of Job, too, is wholly wrong; but I do not pursue the question here. His " testimony of Scripture " we have now examined, and next come to his examination of " popular objections."
" POPULAR OBJECTIONS."-It is said that this doctrine is opposed to the voice of the church, to reason, and above all to holy Scripture. " For the rest, if the church speak with God, woe to those who disobey her." What is the church? Who set her to teach? And where is her teaching? " Where then, I ask, and when, has the Catholic church ever authoritatively condemned this view of restitution?" Who set her to do it? What council had any warrant? The church teaches, not. " It (the doctrine of endless torments) can never be classed under Quod serape; quod ubique, quod ab omnibus." Nor can anything else. All that he says of the Fathers east or west I leave. What matters it who held it or who did not? Is it in Scripture? is the question. Mr. Jukes appeals to this, and asks, " What does this prove if the doctrine is really taught in Scripture?" Nothing, assuredly. If it was from the beginning, it would.
But what he says immediately after is unfounded. " Many things have been hid in Scripture for ages. Paul speaks of the revelation of the mystery which had been hid from ages and generations, some part at least of which, though hidden, had been spoken by the mouth of all God's holy prophets since the world began." Utterly unfounded, or Paul was all wrong. This is ignorance, but I fear I must say willful ignorance. " But when have God's people as a body ever seen or received any truth beyond their dispensation?" Only Mr. Jukes, then, we are to believe. The ways of Israel are not examples to us. The things happened to them for ensamples (p. 98). The doctrine of the union in one body is never spoken of The call of the Gentiles is expressly spoken of in the Scripture, which Paul uses. It is a false suggestion of Scripture's silence where it speaks plainly. That is, Scripture spoke plainly, and Paul used it. It was absolutely silent on another point, and it required a positive revelation to declare it. Both were the word of God. God's unerring word is final. " But when I see the church's blindness," etc. (p. 99). Where is the church's teaching now? " For if the flesh that bore Christ was not ours, His incarnation does not profit us." I thought there was something at bottom as to this. I quite think " that the church's judgment cannot decide a point like this, if that judgment be in opposition to the word of God." But the church is a mere deception—where is it? For Mr. Jukes, the papal system "is its widest branch." And who gave her authority to teach? God teaches finally as to doctrine in the holy Scriptures.
The church has nothing whatever tο do with even the teaching of the truth. It is not hers to teach, but to be taught. What is truth is all in the Scriptures. But it is natural, with what he makes of the church, to flatter it (p. 100). " Transubstantiation is a mistake built on Christ's very words, and the doctrine of endless torments is a like misunderstanding." Poor work is this! Did He wish His disciples to believe that lie held Himself in His hands when He took the bread, as indeed Augustine says we must, in a manner, believe, and when He was not crucified? But the words were used when He was alive in the body, so that the disciples could not have mistaken Him. So much the more when we think of His saying " My blood," and even, " This cup is the new covenant." They could not have misunderstood Him then; no more could any now who were not willfully ignorant. The words which declare everlasting punishment are, if possible, plainer still.
Then, on pp. 101-2, he takes up the objection that " this doctrine militates against the atonement, for if men shall at length be saved, God became man to redeem from that which is equally remedied without it." But how " saved?" According to Mr. Jukes they are saved by their own suffering and death. Atonement in its Scripture sense is everywhere left out; and guilt too. Salvation is only the change of a nature by dying. His teaching as to the fall and its consequences is not scriptural. God drove out the man. Guilt and judgment are ignored. Here, too, we have this German semi-infidelity: " In this fall God pitied man and sent His Son, in whom is life, to be a man in the place where man was shut up, there to raise up again God's life in man, to bear man's curse, and then through death [whose?] to bring man back in God's life to God's right hand," etc. Was He in the distance, away from God, dead in sins, raising up God's life in man in His own person? Or did He go into man's place and suffer death as made sin, bruised for our iniquities? " Obtain the life by which these shall rise." Not so. They do not rise by that life. They are raised. Of what was Christ the first-fruits? Of those that are Christ's. "But how does it follow hence (from this doctrine) that those who are not first- fruits, if saved at all, are saved without Christ's redemption?" God's word could quicken and deliver us out of the horrible pit, that we might be first-fruits of His creatures; why should we say He cannot bring back others out of death though they miss the glory of being first-fruits?" Redemption by bearing sins in death and forgiveness are wholly ignored 1 Mr. Jukes uses the Bible terms in another sense than they mean in Scripture: even hell is used in another sense (p. 103). " The other part of the objection that none believe in redemption who do not believe in hell, is true:" but this is donner la change. Hell is used in another sense from the objector's. So going to hell is not delivery to Satan-he is in it himself. It was prepared for him.
The second objection, "It is further argued that, if grace does not, judgment cannot, save man. How can damnation perfect those whom salvation has not helped? Can hell do more for us than heaven? The answer to this lies simply in what has been said above as to the reason why the way of life for us must be through judgment... judgment therefore to show us that what we are is as needful as grace," etc. Then we must all go to hell, and that by judgment. But life- giving and judgment are contrasted, and those who have life do not come into judgment (zpian). "If we want further examples, Nebuchadnezzar shows us how judgment does for man what goodness cannot. The remedy is to make him a beast." This begs the whole question, in making the chastening of the living the same as the final judgment of the adversaries of God. Besides chastening itself does not change the heart unless grace work.
" Let the nature of the fall be seen, and the reason why we are only saved through judgment is at once manifest." This is utterly false to say "only," and the whole question remains, by whose stripes we are healed, how peace was made. So the statement, "The first-fruits from Christ to us are proofs that by death, and this alone, our salvation is perfected," raises the question-By whose death, Christ's in atonement, or our's in judgment? That this is his meaning appears from his saying, " unbelievers who will not die with Christ are lost because they are not judged here." But suppose that " by the ministry of death and condemnation in another world the work of judgment to salvation were accomplished," what puts away their sins? For unbelievers die in them, and there is no more sacrifice. He has perfected that work, and He came to do it once. The 9th and 10th of Hebrews are urgent on this point. It was in the end of the world He appeared, once, to put away sin. He dies no more. Mr. Jukes makes our death and condemnation here what saves us, and so of the lost afterward.
(3.) "But it is further objected that this doctrine gives up God's justice; for if all are saved there will be no difference between St. Peter and Nero, virgins and harlots, saints and sinners." The objection, if so made, and the answer ignore Christ's atoning death. His error is not that he saves the condemned without redemption; he denies all redemption as Scripture states it, though the word atonement may be thrown in to blind people. Christ's own case he is afraid to utter (see p. 75). It is absurd, he alleges, to say, " God's justice is given up because He saves by judgment." But do we get what our sins deserve from justice? We do not come into judgment. He says " the elect being first quickened by the word, and then judging themselves in this world, or being judged by a death to sin are freed from Satan." Even death to sin was Christ's (Rom. 6) We reckon ourselves dead, and if all are freed by our own dying, what, then, did Christ 'do for them? But Mr. Jukes goes farther. " What Scripture teaches is that man is saved through death... that others not so dying (as the elect) to sin remain in the life and therefore under the curse and power of the dark world, and are therefore delivered to Satan to be punished, to know, since they will not believe, their fall and their need of God's salvation.
But all this simply asserts the justice of God."... This is dreadfully bad, and sets aside Christ's work altogether, save as the first dier! It is, in fact, a purgatory which does the whole work.
As to " no distinction," he asks, " Is there no distinction between reigning with Christ, and being cast out and shut up in hell with Satan"? But then that is all; and in the long run one is saved as much as another, only in another world, having rejected Christ. Receiving a wholly new life and guilt are both ignored in Mr. Jukes's notions. He falsely uses and indeed translates the ix, of Romans. And it is merely slurring over the real question to talk of an outwardly pure and blameless life needing the blood of the cross.
(4) The fourth objection he answers is from analogy-that, as many creatures in this world fail to attain their proper end and perfection, so thousands of our race may miss their true end, and be forever cast away. This is mere reasoning with which I do not meddle. Assertion may be met by counter-assertion; but where Scripture is claimed for anything, it needs to be examined. But when he says:-" Why not go further, and argue that death, and not life, must be the final ruler of the universe?" It is so through sin of this present world. Nor does he deny it, but declares apparent death is only a change of form, the change being a witness of present imperfection but not of eternal bondage in that form, nor of destruction or annihilation when that form perishes. He insists on change, and that analogy shows that what appears worthless or destroyed may contain what is precious. But all this remains the same nature. But Christianity depends essentially on our receiving a new life, ἄνὠθεν, not a mere change, which in mere nature may take place (pp. 108-9). We know there is nothing precious. " I know that in me, that is in my flesh, dwelleth no good thing." And " he that believeth not the Son shall not see life."
(5)"The greatest difficulty of all is that which meets us from the existence of present evil." " Was He not infinitely wise, and holy, and powerful, when the earth was without form and void? Why, then, should this state ever have been changed by Him till all was very good?" Here creation is ignored, and whatever judgment brought it into the ruined state. No recognition of sin bringing in the misery and evil of the
present state. Then, on p. 3 he speaks of the " Day of Judgment, and the promised Times of Restitution." Judgment is not restoration, and there are no promised times of restitution of the wicked, as he makes it. It is positively false, and not in Scripture; and it is equally false, as he means it, that the Father will go on working till all things are made new, and everything is very good. When God makes all things new, He leaves the wicked " without," and " everything very good " is never said but at creation.
As to Rom. 8:20,2120For the creature was made subject to vanity, not willingly, but by reason of him who hath subjected the same in hope, 21Because the creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God. (Romans 8:20‑21), he has quoted it falsely in saying " through Him." It is on account of him who has subjected [it] διὰ τόν. It was not the creature's own will, but on account of another; and Adam, not God, is the " him" referred to. And " the creature unto the liberty of glory of God's children," has nothing to do with restoring the wicked spiritually, for which Mr. J. falsely uses it; and the deliverance of the creature is when the children are glorified and judgment is on their adversaries. Evil subserving some good purpose, otherwise God would never have permitted it, or, say, " I form peace, and I create evil," just shows the false use he makes of Scripture. He does not create moral evil: it is temporal evil as contrasted with peace-not with good. Again, " Prophecy announces a day when there shall be no more curse or death, but all things made new. In this witness we may rest, spite of the fact and mystery of present evil." This is before the final judgment; a settled fallacy that runs through the book. "No curse" is the millennial state (Rev. 22:33And there shall be no more curse: but the throne of God and of the Lamb shall be in it; and his servants shall serve him: (Revelation 22:3)); " all things new" after it, and then the wicked are without, outside the scene where there is no more crying, pain, or death (Rev. 21:1-81And I saw a new heaven and a new earth: for the first heaven and the first earth were passed away; and there was no more sea. 2And I John saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. 3And I heard a great voice out of heaven saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and they shall be his people, and God himself shall be with them, and be their God. 4And 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. 5And he that sat upon the throne said, Behold, I make all things new. And he said unto me, Write: for these words are true and faithful. 6And he said unto me, It is done. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end. I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountain of the water of life freely. 7He that overcometh shall inherit all things; and I will be his God, and he shall be my son. 8But the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the second death. (Revelation 21:1‑8)). " Curse" is not spoken of as no longer the question. In Rev. 21:1-41And I saw a new heaven and a new earth: for the first heaven and the first earth were passed away; and there was no more sea. 2And I John saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. 3And I heard a great voice out of heaven saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and they shall be his people, and God himself shall be with them, and be their God. 4And 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. (Revelation 21:1‑4) are new heavens and new earth, and in 5-8. These passages prove just the contrary of what Mr. Jukes affirms.
(6.) He says truly, " What saith the Scripture?" is the only question on this subject. Mr. J. speaks of sin creating an antagonistic world. Sin creates nothing. It is always enmity. It is judged; this is not equal power. " Willed" is falsely used; and will in this passage is not purpose. " And all this (antagonistic world) in opposition to the word of God, which says that God's Son ' was manifested that He might destroy the works of the devil,' who, if the so-called orthodox views be right, will succeed in destroying some of the works of the Son of God forever." So the Son of God does. He destroys the works of the devil. The judgment of Satan is not Satan's work, nor that of wicked men. He has morally destroyed them already. On p. 115 he tells what his reason concludes, as to those being punished for their sins with everlasting punishment. He gives no Scripture for it, but exculpates the sinner as much as possible, speaks of weakness, the tempter, strong passions, conscience not helping him, failing to avail himself of mercy. The Lord says " They have both seen and hated both Me and My Father; " and Paul, of the least enlightened, "that they are without excuse." There is no true sense of sin; no power of the word of God in the conscience. " I cannot say my reason would conclude on his ground," and this is the root of all these reasonings. " Once God's child," he says. Only in nature and at the outset, as His created offspring, and that is exactly what makes it eternal misery. " Even nature teaches... to act more generously." That is " nature " is to judge God, instead of having a sense of sin deserving judgment! As one said, " God condemned men for eating an apple." The truth is, man gave up God for an apple, believing Satan, not God!
Mr. Jukes represents man only as unfortunate, like a child who has hurt itself, and God as indulgent. But God is a holy and righteous judge, which is all left out (p. 116), for death and hell are only to save-not judgment of sin or exclusion of evil; his statements are a mere expression of natural human kindness, as it may be found in an animal, and a totally false representation of both God and man; nature's reasoning, but not the Holy Ghost's. A child falling or hurting itself is all his thought of man's sin, and human pity for man's misery is all his idea of God. All this is nothing but the absence of the just sense of guilt. Have we deserved to be forsaken of God? or why was Christ? He thanks God we have revelation. Thank God we have, but he adds, " That word declares man's final restitution." Not so; it does the contrary-. It says, " Hath never forgiveness," and Rev. 21, as already quoted. God seeks the lost till He find them is the grace of the present time; and the elder brother did not go in, and did not get in.
(3.) " But it is said," he says, "certain texts of Holy Scripture are directly opposed to the doctrine of universal restitution. We have already seen that, taken in the letter, text clashes with text on this subject." I do not admit it. To say that all those texts which speak of " destruction " and " judgment " have been explained by what has been said by him above as to the way of our salvation, is simply lying against the truth. What he says (p. 117) of Rom. 2:1212For as many as have sinned without law shall also perish without law: and as many as have sinned in the law shall be judged by the law; (Romans 2:12)-that it is the state of all by nature -is utterly false. It is expressly said, in the day when God shall judge the secrets of men's hearts. It is very bad thus to pervert God's word. Again, 2 Cor, 4: 3 refers to those who are being lost in contrast to being saved-,ἀπολλύμενοι-σωξοένοι those to whom the gospel is hid when preached, not their mere common natural state. In all the quoted texts, it is so. In Luke 15 and 19. it is ἀπολωλὸς. Or ὡς. There is actual state, so that the force of the passages against his argument is very strong. " For the Good Shepherd must go after that which is lost until He find it." Where is this said? It is according to him God's duty, and the point of the parable is that it is His sheep. Page 118, " By faith Isaac," etc., is a temporal prophecy.
When he affirms (p. 119) that " there is scarcely a doctrine of our faith which, at first sight, does not seem to clash more or less with some other plain Scripture," we reply, only when man's mind is at work. After much more human reasoning, he speaks of a superior intelligence overruling all, according to a scheme of perfect love; a statement never made in Scripture, which tells of judgment of sin, not of overruling in result. But when perfect love was manifested, for His love Christ had hatred: " They have both seen and hated both Me and My Father."
The texts chiefly relied on as teaching the doctrine of everlasting punishment are then looked at by Mr. Jukes. The first is what is said of the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost: " shall not be forgiven neither in this world nor in that which is to come" (Matt. 12:3232And whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of man, it shall be forgiven him: but whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost, it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this world, neither in the world to come. (Matthew 12:32); Mark 2: 29; Luke 12:1010And whosoever shall speak a word against the Son of man, it shall be forgiven him: but unto him that blasphemeth against the Holy Ghost it shall not be forgiven. (Luke 12:10)). Of these he says that, so far from teaching that sin not never be forgiven, can never be forgiven, they teach the opposite: " first, all sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men; secondly, that some sins can be forgiven as against the Son of man in this age; and thirdly, that other sins against the Holy Ghost cannot be forgiven either here or in the coming age, which last words imply that some sins, not here forgiven, may be forgiven in the corning age, the sin or blasphemy against the Holy Ghost not being of this number. This is what the text asserts." As to what he says in the note (p. 120), the words, two ages being specified, prove that the passage could have only an absolute sense.
But the whole statement is all a blunder. This age is before Messiah, " the coming one " when He is revealed; but two only are admitted in the passage. It is Olam, ha ze and Olam ha vo. Certainly in Messiah's age there was forgiveness larger than under the law. What does he mean by saying, " Man cannot reject or speak against the Spirit until the Spirit comes to act upon him?" There is no question of rejecting the Spirit. They blasphemed in saying Christ cast out devils by Beelzebub. The Spirit did not act on them but by Christ. In Stephen's case (Acts 7) it did act on the Jews; the conscience reached with the will unchanged led to his stoning by them. "To reject this last (the Spirit) cuts man off from the light and life of the coming world." His whole statement as to the Spirit convincing the heart, and then being rejected, is false. "This sin, therefore, is not forgiven, neither in this age nor in the coming one. But the text says nothing of those ages to come, elsewhere revealed to us; much less does it assert that the punishment of sin not here forgiven is never-ending." It says it is not forgiven under the Messiah-hath never forgiveness, οὑχ ἕχει ἄφεσιω εὶς τὸω αὶῶνα shall not be forgiven unto men absolutely. This age and the coming being mentioned, the words show the absolute force of εἰς τὸν
With two ages specified, it could have no sense but as absolute. As to the ages to come, all is unfounded and hypothetical, In Eph. 3, it is expressly " His kindness towards us "-not others, that we read of.
It is all fancy and false on p. 122 about the mystic seventy weeks. One is amazed at the utter absurdity. Daniel's prophecy of "the seventy weeks" is quite clear, and so is what it refers to, ending with the Lord's coming, and applying to Jerusalem. There is nothing about a jubilee. "I believe in the forgiveness of sins even to the end, as long as God is a Savior." And when He is a judge? Are to be sentenced and to be forgiven the same thing?
(2.) A second text, " The wrath of God abideth on him." His plea is that it says that " Man, so long as he is in unbelief, cannot see life," "but an unbeliever, though while he is such God's wrath abides upon him, may pass by faith out of the wrath to life and blessedness." It is not a question of nature, but that, when in the state of sin and ruin by nature, and. Christ presented to them in grace, they rejected Him and grace; then they should not see life. Christ does not say cannot, but " shall not see life," etc. Nor does it say so long as he is in unbelief. It is a broad statement that he who does not believe "shall not see life," and the Son is referred to as having all in His hands. The wrath of God (for there is wrath) abides on him (John 3:3636He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him. (John 3:36)). " If it were not so, all would be lost," he says. This is a proof that all is false. It is totally untrue that, if this text bears the meaning we affirm it does, an unbeliever could not have any hope of life or deliverance, for it puts the turning-point on faith, and he that does not believe shall not see life (compare 1 John 5:1212He that hath the Son hath life; and he that hath not the Son of God hath not life. (1 John 5:12)). The text is as plain as possible. Some do believe; some do not. If not, they shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on them.
Another text: " Where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched" (Mark 9:42-5042And whosoever shall offend one of these little ones that believe in me, it is better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and he were cast into the sea. 43And if thy hand offend thee, cut it off: it is better for thee to enter into life maimed, than having two hands to go into hell, into the fire that never shall be quenched: 44Where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched. 45And if thy foot offend thee, cut it off: it is better for thee to enter halt into life, than having two feet to be cast into hell, into the fire that never shall be quenched: 46Where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched. 47And if thine eye offend thee, pluck it out: it is better for thee to enter into the kingdom of God with one eye, than having two eyes to be cast into hell fire: 48Where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched. 49For every one shall be salted with fire, and every sacrifice shall be salted with salt. 50Salt is good: but if the salt have lost his saltness, wherewith will ye season it? Have salt in yourselves, and have peace one with another. (Mark 9:42‑50)). "For every one shall be salted with fire," etc. That is, all shall be judged-the saints, that they may not be condemned with the world-the rest by final judgment; but salt, separation from evil, belonged to sacrifices thus given to God. "And every sacrifice must be salted with salt." Those who were consecrated to God, whose life was an offering to Him, should not lack the power of holy grace which binds the soul to God, and inwardly preserves it from evil. Mr. Jukes' explanation of it from the law really shows nothing but a total want of spiritual understanding. Making the meat-offering duty to one's neighbor, when it was a sacrifice by fire to God, and Christ's leavenless person shows a mind away from all truth.
Page 126 is all wrong from beginning to end in every point. The bodies of the sin-offering were not burnt as unclean; nor, generally, were they burnt at all. Only very particular ones referring to the people or the high priest were. Those parts which were not burnt were eaten. What does he mean by " worm," alluding to the consumption of those parts? They were eaten. On p. 127 we have a continuance of the same absurdity. It would seem the altar was hell; and yet he says the sin-offerings were burnt outside! It is all conflicting nonsense. The fire never being quenched " typifying the preservation of that spiritual fire, which it is Christ's work as priest to kindle and keep alive."
That is in hell! The passages he quotes just state that nothing should intervene to stop or arrest, the judgment; the fire would not be put out. The words "the fire never shall be quenched" have the same sense in Mark as in all the rest-that nothing shall avert or suspend the judgment of God. It was not chastening but final judgment. In Isaiah it refers to the valley of the son of Hinnom, hence Gehenna, where the fire was kept up continually to consume the filth of Jerusalem, and the carcases of the rebellious remained a constant spectacle. Was the burning of the sin-offering without the camp a fire never quenched? (p. 128). Was ever greater nonsense?
(4.)All that he says about everlasting, as not being never- ending in Matt. 25: 46, proves that he has nothing to say. Nor does the word translated "punishment" ever mean in the New Testament a corrective discipline, as he alleges. It is only twice used; and the verb twice (p. 129). If the bliss of the righteous be eternal, so must the punishment of the wicked. If Scripture be examined, there remains no question as to the word χόλασις, that it is judicial torment, or torment, where the verb is used-never correcting. The other place where the word is used is 1 John 4:1818There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear: because fear hath torment. He that feareth is not made perfect in love. (1 John 4:18)-the verb in Acts 4:21; 221So when they had further threatened them, they let them go, finding nothing how they might punish them, because of the people: for all men glorified God for that which was done. (Acts 4:21) Peter 2: 9, in neither of which is there any other thought than "punishment."
(5.)Another text: " Good were it for that man if he had not been born." As to what was said to our first parents, it was only what came on earth. If Judas' fall end in the restoration of the fallen one to more secure blessedness, then it would have been good for him to have been born-the highest witness of grace. What he says, " It is surely significant that one and the same awful prophecy is by the inspired writers of the New Testament applied to Judas and Israel," is not the case. Psa. 69 and Psa. 109 are both quoted in Acts 1:1616Men and brethren, this scripture must needs have been fulfilled, which the Holy Ghost by the mouth of David spake before concerning Judas, which was guide to them that took Jesus. (Acts 1:16), but the part of the prophecy used in Romans is not that quoted in Acts. That Israel came under the same judgment as Judas in this world is quite true; but this has nothing whatever to do with what the Lord says of him. This is a mere come off. The words, "Let his habitation be desolate," are founded on Psa. 69, and Israel never will be restored as they stood on the old covenant. They are cursed as the fig-tree was, never to bear any fruit. What is said of Judas is absolute-good not to have been born. And to say that Luke 19:4242Saying, If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day, the things which belong unto thy peace! but now they are hid from thine eyes. (Luke 19:42) is in substance the old man and the new is tampering with the Lord's words. Is that what the Lord means? Page 134 is too gross perversion of the Lord's words. Good not to have been born, means better through this very wickedness!
" For all that rose in Adam falls in Christ, even as all that fell in Adam rose again in Christ." Where is this in Scripture? The quotation of Psa. 37: 35,36, is an absurd use of it. " I sought him, but he could not be found." That is, he rose again, and was blessed 1 His interpretation of the Rich man and Lazarus is all wrong. It shows a change of dispensation, and the introduction of eternal and unseen things, as to which Christ withdraws the veil, in contrast with earthly things; and to say that the gulf was impassable for man, but that Christ might pass, is trifling with the word of God. Abraham says, " they that wish cannot pass," but this only means they can pass in another way not named. Dives did not so understand it; that is, the Lord who makes him say, " I pray thee," etc. " It is no use," says Abraham; "if the word will not do it, a man going from the dead won't." Yet we are to believe it can be done after all, and saying that because man cannot make himself good, it does not follow God cannot. He does not change the flesh, but gives a new life, and the unbeliever shall not see life.
He next takes up the objection (p. 140) that it is opposed to the obvious sense of Scripture, and Scripture being written for simple and unlettered men, the simplest sense must be the true one. There is no such testimony in Scripture as that all death shall be done away; it is never said of the second death, which is the whole point. On this point Scripture contains no " apparent contradictions."
He quotes Rom. 5:14-2114Nevertheless death reigned from Adam to Moses, even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adam's transgression, who is the figure of him that was to come. 15But not as the offence, so also is the free gift. For if through the offence of one many be dead, much more the grace of God, and the gift by grace, which is by one man, Jesus Christ, hath abounded unto many. 16And not as it was by one that sinned, so is the gift: for the judgment was by one to condemnation, but the free gift is of many offences unto justification. 17For if by one man's offence death reigned by one; much more they which receive abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness shall reign in life by one, Jesus Christ.) 18Therefore as by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation; even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life. 19For as by one man's disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous. 20Moreover the law entered, that the offence might abound. But where sin abounded, grace did much more abound: 21That as sin hath reigned unto death, even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord. (Romans 5:14‑21), and then asks what is the obvious meaning of these words: " Can a partial salvation exhaust the fullness of the blessing which St. Paul declares so unequivocally?" Certainly. It is carefully stated to be " the many" connected with the obedient One. " Why, then, not receive the teaching in its plain and obvious sense?" This is just what we have to do; only one verse in our English version is utterly mistranslated: " Therefore, as by one offense toward all men to condemnation, even so by one righteousness toward all men to justification of life" (Rom. 5:1818Therefore as by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation; even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life. (Romans 5:18)). This is what has happened for justification of life, and so reigning in life which he admits they lose. " The many," not " all," are constituted righteous. This passage, instead of teaching Mr. Jukes' doctrine, carefully teaches the opposite. All connected with Adam have sin, condemnation, and death, and are lost; all connected with Christ have righteousness, justification, and life, and are saved. Surely we need the Spirit to understand the revelation; but it is not Scripture, that the death we see, and this only, is the way to fuller blessed life: we shall not all die. He takes up this objection next: "If you indulge the hope of the final restoration of all men, why not lost spirits also? Why should not the judgment of angels be their restoration?" "Why," he asks, " if He died for all, that by His death He might destroy that evil nature, and deliver them?" Through all this he drops atonement, and only looks for change, for which he absurdly quotes Heb. 1.11, 12. I answer, the thought sets aside Christ's work. He did not take up angels at all; He did not take up their cause. The flesh is never changed.
Mr. Jukes says, after giving more than two pages to it, " I confess I cannot see that God would be dishonored by such a conclusion of the great mystery." And on his principles the restoration of devils is necessary; and then we have this rhapsody: " When I see that man contains all worlds, and is indeed the hieroglyphic of the universe,... but hell and heaven, and the life of each in him!"
How is the life of heaven in him? "Ye are of your father, the devil," said our Lord. " Lucifer and Adam, the two first great offenders, the one in his male, the other in his female property 1" Simple truth is worth a good deal of this kind of trash. That "the hellish life can be transformed," he says. It never is. All these interpretations and answers to objections only show that scriptural proof is against him, and his answers are the best proof that he is wrong. As to the case of Jonah, p. 148, grace individually, without promise, has nothing to do with natural judgments.
4. " CONCLUDING REMARKS."-" Then cometh the end" settles the question as to receiving truth beyond our dispensation; it is error we reject-not truth. " It is humbling to proud spirits that all their pride and rebellion must be overthrown." Are they saved, not being born again? "For teachers to learn is to unlearn!" No doubt ye are the men 1 " We are saved by hope," not by fear (p. 150), is an entire abuse of the words of Scripture perverted by what he adds. We are saved ἐν ἕλπίδι, not we are saved διὰ. "I rather believe that, if the exactness of final retribution were understood, if men saw that so long as they continue in sin they must be under judgment, and that only by death to sin are they delivered, they could not pervert the gospel as they now do, nor abuse that preaching of the cross, which is indeed salvation." As to "exactness of final retribution," we ask, exact to what measure? And his statement leaves out the gospel, or rather sets it aside. " God consigns," he says, all but a few to endless misery (p. 150). They are enmity against God, and have rejected His love; both seen and hated both Him and His Father.
" Can such a doctrine be true? If it be, let men declare it always, and in every place " (p. 153). So they do, and it is a powerful means of conversion. " If we think Him hard, we become hard." Does he think he deserves to be shut out from God? " The Gospels," he says, " show that God is love," and that as manifested in Christ. But when Jesus came, how was He received? " Wherefore when I came, was there no man?" He came in the fullness of grace, reconciling; but they drove Him out of the world; they killed the Prince of Life, and preferred a murderer! " Because we were in the flesh, He came in the flesh." He expatiates on his grace coming " to bear our burden, break our bonds, and bring us back in and with Himself to God's right hand forever," but never one word of His bearing our sins.
" How He did it, with what pity, truth, patience, tenderness, and care, no eye but God's yet sees fully." But what effect had all this? Christ's own testimony is, "Now they have both seen and hated both Me and My Father." Of what he says, p. 156, " Will the coming glory change all this? "-seeks the lost. The reply is,-Christ as a judge is different from Christ as a Savior in what He is to others, in what He is doing in bearing sins, and judging men for them. The grace manifested did not change men, nor does it now without quickening grace. And " Behold, now is the accepted time. Behold, now is the day of salvation." When judgment comes on men, it is not the time of saving them, (See Heb. 6 and 10). Christ cannot then die for their sins; it is too late. And who says that " with Christ in heaven believers will look upon the torments of the lost in hell?"
(p. 157.) It is not true that those who know the love of God are indifferent to the case of the lost. Known love acts as love; but there is no great need if all are to be saved at any rate. But Christ, through an unwearying love when on earth, did not win men to God. For His love He had hatred. All this denies the need of being born again.
It is wretchedly false to say, " With their views they can only judge the evil." This is not true-they can serve in grace. " They do not believe it (evil) can be overcome by good." Nor can it. " Salvation through the cross-that is, through dissolution, above all in the face of Jesus Christ, tells out the great
truth that solves the great riddle, and shows why man must suffer while he is in sin, that through such suffering and death he may be brought back in Christ to God, and be remade in His likeness."
I pray the reader to mark this passage; it shows clearly what Mr. Jukes' system is, and propounds a gospel wholly different from and subversive of the gospel of God. It is through a man's suffering while he is in sin he is brought back in Christ to God. Christ's dying for our sins, His atoning work, is left out, as is our receiving a new life in Him. All that constitutes the gospel and truth of God as our salvation by grace, and God's gilt of eternal life in Him; and we are saved by our own suffering death while we are in sin. Nothing can be worse. " The cravings abroad," of which Mr. J. speaks, are not "the work of God's Spirit," but of man's restless mind, and those which the Spirit of God does produce cannot be met by Mr. Jukes' speculations, which contradict the word of God.
On the page (159) where he says, " I conclude as I began. The question is, What saith the Scripture?" He misuses and misapplies Scripture, as he has done from the beginning. He says " the question is, in fact, whether God is for us or against us; and whether, being for us, He is stronger than our enemies? " This is set aside by asking, Of whom is Paul speaking-believers or unbelievers? All this is heedless of truth.
"POSTSCRIPT."-The extract from William Law (pp. 161-168) denies what is said of God in Scripture: " Vengeance is mine, I will recompense, saith the. Lord." There is not one word either in Jukes or Law of guilt,, bearing sins, forgiveness, justification by faith, or of the blessed Lord Jesus' work for us. A work in us both speak of in the same way.
"APPENDIX," Note A," attempts to give the Scripture use of the words " death" and " destruction," in order to combat annihilationism. This deadly and anti-scriptural doctrine, which upsets atonement, repentance, and responsibility, I repel more absolutely than Mr. Jukes; but this is not the place to go into the question.