There can exist no more serious question for the soul than this: where shall I find righteousness before God? We have said that the law raised this question. It is of importance to see the position it takes when the law is given.
From the first existence of man on the earth, the question between responsibility and grace was placed at issue. In the earthly Paradise, there was the tree of life which only communicated life, and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, to which the responsibility of man was attached. As to the tree of life, man did not eat of it; and once become a sinner, the mercy of God, as well as His righteousness and the moral order of His government, closed against him the way of this tree. An immortal sinner on the earth would have been an insupportable anomaly in the government of God. Besides, man had deserved to be shut out of the garden. On the other hand, man failed in his responsibility. Before his fall, he did not know sin, but he was in the relation of a creature towards God. There was no sin in eating of the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, except inasmuch as this had been forbidden.
When man fell, the seed of the woman, the last Adam, was immediately announced: the hopes of the human race are thenceforth placed upon a new ground. The deliverance presented does not consist in something which would have been but a means of raising up again founded on the moral activity of man already in a fallen condition, but another person is announced, who, while of the human race, should be a source of life independent of Adam, and who should destroy the power of the enemy; a person who should not represent Adam, but replace him before God, should be the seed of the woman, which Adam was not, and should at the same time be an object of faith for Adam and for his children, an object which, being received into the heart, should be the life and salvation of whoever should receive it. The first Adam was made a living soul; he was lost: the last Adam, the second man, is a quickening spirit. Until the coming of Christ, the promise only was the source of hope; it alone, through grace, begat and sustained faith. We believe in its accomplishment. When God called Abraham, He gave him (Gen. 12) the promise that in him all the nations of the earth should be blessed. Afterward (chap. xxii.) this promise was confirmed to his seed. The one who was to be the seed of the woman was also to be the seed of Abraham. Thus the ways of God towards man were established on an indefectible promise. It was without condition, a simple promise, and consequently it did not raise the question of righteousness nor of the responsibility of man.
Four hundred and thirty years afterward the law comes, and, as we have said, raises the question of righteousness, and that, on the footing of the responsibility of man, by giving him a perfect rule of what man, the child of Adam, ought to be. Now, observe it well, he was a sinner. This law had a twofold aspect, a kernel of absolute truth, which the Lord Jesus was able to draw from its obscurity—supreme love to God and love to one's neighbor. It is the perfect rule of the blessedness of the creature as a creature. The angels realize it in heaven. Man is as far as possible from having accomplished this law on earth. But this rule is developed in the details of relative duties, which flow from the relation in which man finds himself, as a fact, before God, and from the relation in which he finds himself placed as towards others in this lower world. Now, in the circumstances in which man found himself, these details necessarily had reference to the moral state in which he was, supposed sin and lusts, and forbad them. As the law of God applying itself to the actual state of man, it necessarily condemns sin on the one hand, and necessarily proves it on the other. What can a law do in such a case, but condemn; be, as the apostle says, (2 Cor. 3) a ministry of death and of condemnation? It demanded righteousness according to a rule which the conscience of man could not but approve, and which at the same time proved his guiltiness. It is in that, in fact, that the usefulness of the law consists: it gives the knowledge of sin. God never gave it to produce righteousness. In order to this, an inward moral power is absolutely necessary. But the law on the tables of stone is not this power. The law requires righteousness of man, and pronounces the just judgment of God, makes sin exceeding sinful, and brings the just anger of God. No law produces a nature. Now, the nature of man was sinful. The commandment demonstrates that he will seek to satisfy that nature, in spite of God's forbidding it. The law is thus, and because it is just and good, the strength of sin. It entered that the offense might abound. Those who are of the works of the law (these are not bad works: the apostle speaks of all who walk on this principle,) are under the curse it has pronounced on such as disobey it. The flesh is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be. The promise of God remains sure. Man is put to the proof, so that it may be made manifest whether he can produce a human righteousness.
The law was presented to man under a twofold aspect—the law pure and simple, and the law mingled with grace, that is to say, given to man after the intervention of grace, but leaving man to his own responsibility after a forgiveness accorded by grace. The history of the law in the first point of view is very short. Before Moses came down from Mount Sinai, Israel had made the golden calf. The tables of the law never entered the camp. They never were able to form the basis of the relations of man with God. How reconcile the commandments with the worship of the calf of gold? Subsequent to this sin, Moses intercedes for the people, and they receive the law anew, God acting in mercy according to His sovereignty and proclaiming Himself merciful and gracious. The relationship of the people with God is founded on the pardon which God grants, and established no longer as an immediate relationship with God, but on the ground of Moses' mediation. The people, however, are put under the law, and everyone is to be blotted out of God's book through his own sin, if be render himself guilty. At the same time the law is hidden under an ark, and God Himself is hidden behind a veil, within which the sprinkling of blood was to be made on the mercy-seat which formed, together with the cherubim, the throne of God.
But this mixture of grace and law could not, any more than the unmingled law, serve to establish between God and man relations capable of being maintained. It could serve to demonstrate that, whatever might be the patience of God, man, responsible for his conduct, could not obtain life by a righteousness which he himself should accomplish. Also, the impossibility in which man finds himself of subsisting in presence of the exigencies of the glory of God, however feebly it may be revealed, is presented to us in a remarkable figure, which the apostle makes use of in 2 Corinthians. The people prayed Moses to cover his face, which still shone with the reflection of the glory of Jehovah, with whom be had been in communication on the top of Mount Sinai. Man cannot endure the revelation of God when God demands of man that he should be what he ought to be before Him. The veil disclosed, at bottom, the same truth. God must hide Himself. The way into the holiest of all was not yet made manifest. A law was given on God's part to direct man's life, a priesthood established to maintain the relations of the people with God, notwithstanding the faults of which they became guilty; but man could not come nigh to God. Sad state, in which the revelation of the presence of God, the only thing which can really give blessing, necessarily repelled the one who needed the blessing! We shall see that, in Christianity, exactly the contrary takes place. The veil is rent.
But let us pursue the ways of God with man under the law.
We have already seen that, in the system we are considering, life was proposed to man as the result of his faithfulness. Whatever may be the patience and grace of God, all depends on this faithfulness; and not only is the responsibility of man completely at stake, but all depends on the way in which he meets this responsibility. God, no doubt, had patience, and manifested His grace. He bore with Israel in the desert, and introduced them into the land of Canaan, in spite of all sorts of unfaithfulness on the part of the people. He put the people in possession of the country, giving them victories over their enemies. He raised up judges to deliver them when their unfaithfulness had subjected them to their powerful neighbors. He sent them prophets to recall them to the observance of the law. At length, with a goodness which would not judge them without using every means to gain their hearts, He sent His Son to receive the fruit of His vine, on which He had expended all His care, and on which He had lavished so many proofs of love. But His vine yielded only wild grapes, and those who cultivated it, those to whom He had entrusted it, rejected His servants the prophets, and cast His Son out of the vineyard and killed Him. Such was the end of the proof to which man was put under the law—all the grace and all the patience of God having been employed to induce them to obey and maintain them in obedience: all was useless.
There is the history of man under the law. If we examine the bearing of the law on the conscience, we shall find that it brings condemnation and death as soon as it is spiritually understood; but the aim of this article is to consider the ways of God. Nevertheless, I cannot leave this subject without entreating my reader to weigh well what is the bearing of the law, if it be applied to his conscience and his life before God, if he be responsible—and he surely is—if all he can do is to recognize the justice and excellence of that which the law demands. If he sees that he ought to avoid that which the law condemns, and that the two commandments which form the positive part of the law, are the two pillars of the blessedness of the creature; if he finds that he has constantly done and loved that which the law and his own conscience condemn, and that he has entirely failed in that which his conscience must acknowledge as being the perfection of the creature: if all that be true, where is the life which is promised to obedience? How escape the condemnation pronounced on the violation of the law, if he places himself on the ground of his own responsibility, and has to be judged according to a rule which he himself acknowledges as perfect? Another law could not be found. If he is without law, good and evil are indifferent, that is as much as to say that man is more than wicked, even natural conscience is ruined, good does not exist, and man is unbridled in evil, save by the violence of his neighbor or the just judgment of God displayed in an event like the deluge. No; the law is just and good, and man knows it, his conscience tells him so. But, if the law is good and just, man, on the ground of his own responsibility, is lost. The life which it promises to obedience, man has not obtained; the judgment which will make good the authority and justice of the law awaits the one who has disobeyed it, and will at the same time be pronounced against all the shamelessness of an unbridled will. All the guilty will be reached. As to the law, as the apostle expresses it—happily for the awakened conscience—that which was ordained to life, man finds it to be unto death.
The presence, however, of the Son of God in this world had not alone for its object the seeking, on the part of Jehovah, fruit from His vine. This task was even the smallest part of the object of His coming, necessary, no doubt, in order to make evident the state in which man was, as a child of Adam, responsible before God, but not at all the object of God's counsels in His coming, nor even the principal thing which was revealed by His manifestation in flesh. Moreover, neither did the fact that man did not render the fruit which God had the right to expect, bring to its full height the sin of man. God has been manifested in the flesh; He has appeared, He is love, love then has been manifested. He has been manifested in relation with the wants, the weakness, the misery, the sins of man. He was divine in His perfection, but He showed this perfection while adapting Himself perfectly to the state in which man was found. It was a love which was above all our miseries, but which adapted itself to all our miseries and did not weary itself of any of them. The Lord Jesus has manifested in His life here below a power which destroyed entirely the power of Satan over men. He healed all the sick, cast out devils, raised the dead, gave to eat to those who were hungry. He had, as man, bound the strong man and spoiled his goods. And not only that, but what was still more important, the human being who was the most abandoned to sin found in Him a way by which he could return to God. God Himself was come to seek him, God, who was showing that no sin was too great for His love, no defilement too repulsive for His heart. Satan had ruined man by destroying his confidence in God; God neglected nothing to re-establish it, but with a perfect condescension; perfect, because His love could not do otherwise; perfect, because it was the true expression of His heart, which found in the miseries, the faults, the weakness of man, the occasion of assuring them that there was a love on which they could always count.
We see, in effect, in the case of the woman of bad life and in the one whom the Lord met at Jacob's well, how the Savior's love attracted the heart, when once the awakening of the conscience had created in the heart the want of His goodness. There was then produced a confidence which revived the heart, turned it aside from evil, a confidence which no human being knows how to inspire and which delivers the soul from the evil influence which surrounds and possesses it, as well as from the fear of man, to turn it towards God with a sincerity which demonstrates that it is in the light with God, but which demonstrates also that the goodness of God has found its way to the heart, in such sort that it has no desire to get out of a position in which all the evil that is found there is manifested, but manifested where all is love, and where one can rest because all is known. It is a love which inspires confidence, because, when all is known, God remains always love. Here is the divine character of Christ, to be the light which makes all manifest, the love which loves when all is made manifest, which knows all beforehand, which produces perfect uprightness in the heart, because it is a comfort that such a heart should know all.
Such was Christ on earth. One was with God. The sinner who would have been ashamed to show himself to man could hide his face in the bosom of Jesus, sure of not finding a reproach there. Not a sin allowed, (if there had been, confidence would not have been established, because He would not have revealed the holy God,) but a heart which, through the midst of the sin, received the sinner in His arms; and it was the heart of God. Christ was all that in this world, and He was much more than my poor pen could tell: and man rejected Him. He was all that, through opposition, hatred, outrages, and death; but all was in vain as regards man. It is this which has definitively demonstrated the state of man. It is not only that he is a sinner, that he has violated the law and refused to hear the appeals of the prophets; but when God Himself appeared as goodness, man would not have Him; his heart was entirely hostile to God fully manifested, not in His glory which will crush all that shall rise against Him, but with the attraction of a perfect goodness.
All the gravity of man's condition consists not in that God has driven man out of Paradise, but rather in that man, so far as it depended on him, has driven from the earth God come in grace into a world such as the sin of man had made it. “Wherefore, when I came, was there no man? when I called, was there none to answer?” “The carnal mind is enmity against God.” At the commencement of His ministry, we remarked, Christ had bound the strong man, and had spoiled his goods. But the result of the exercise of this ministry was that man did not want even a deliverer-God, did not want God at any price. Man, the child of Adam, was entirely condemned in the death of Jesus. There no longer remained anything; there no longer remained any resource to God Himself, any means to employ in the hope of awakening the desire for good in the heart of man. Not only was be a sinner, but nothing could bring him back to God. Everything had been tried, save the exceptional mode founded on the intercession of Jesus on the cross (intercession which the Holy Spirit answers by the mouth of Peter in saying that, if even now Israel repented, Jesus would return). But Israel refused this appeal also. God exhausted all the resources of sovereign grace; He exhausted them, and the heart of man repelled them all.
A new nature was needed, and redemption; a justification available for a sinner before the throne of a righteous God; and a righteousness which should render man acceptable, without there remaining on some other side any sin which God must occupy Himself with in judgment, and which should do more still—which should make man perfectly acceptable in the eyes of God, fit for the glory which God had prepared for him. There needed an altogether new state, which should leave to man before God no trace of his previous state of sin. There needed a state which should satisfy the glory of God, and render man perfectly capable of enjoying it.
According to the doctrine of Christianity, the question of man's responsibility is entirely disposed of. This doctrine fully recognizes this responsibility, but declares that man is lost. It is a message of pure love, but of a love which finds the basis of its exercise in the fact that man has been already put to the proof and that he is lost. Christianity announces that “The Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost.”
The day of judgment, which will execute the just judgment of God, has been anticipated, for faith, by the clear and distinct declaration of the gospel. “The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who hold the truth in unrighteousness;” but “the righteousness of God is also revealed on the principle of faith for faith.”
It is the death and resurrection of Jesus which reveal to us these things. His death terminates the history of responsible man; His resurrection begins anew the history of man according to God. His death is the point at which evil and good meet in their full strength for the triumph of the latter. His resurrection is the exercise and the manifestation of the power which places man in the person of Christ who has triumphed, and, by virtue of that triumph, in a new position, worthy of the work by which Christ has gained the victory, worthy of the presence of God. In this new state, man is clear of sin, and outside its empire and the reach of Satan:
In the position in which the resurrection of Christ has placed us, we see man living in the life of God, where redemption, purification, and justification have placed him, and fit for the state in which the counsels of God intend to place him, that is, for the glory which is attached to this resurrection. Man is also pleasing to God as the new creation of His hands, the fruit of the work in which God has perfectly glorified Himself. Let us examine this a little more closely.
I have said that good and evil met in all their force in the cross. It is well to seize this fact in order to understand the moral importance of the cross in the eternal ways of God. The cross is the expression of the hatred, without cause, of man against God manifested in goodness. Christ, the perfect expression of the love of God in the midst of the wretchedness that sin had brought into the world, had brought in the remedy for this wretchedness wherever He met it. In Him, this love was in constant exercise, notwithstanding the evil; He was never wearied, never thrown back by the excess of evil, or by the ingratitude of those who had profited by His goodness. Sin, disgusting as it was, never arrested the course of Christ's love: it was but the occasion of the exercise of this divine love. God was manifested in flesh, attracting the confidence of man by seeking him, sinner as he was; by showing that there was something superior to evil, to misery and defilement. This was God Himself. Christ, perfectly holy, of a holiness that remained always unfailingly intact, could carry His love into the midst of evil, so as to inspire the wretched with confidence. If a man touched a leper, he was himself defiled; Christ stretches forth His hand and touches him, saying, “I will, be thou clean.”
Man, who might fear to approach God, on account of his own sin, found in grace, which was seeking the sinner in perfect goodness, which made of sin an occasion for the testimony of God's love towards man, that which was fitted to inspire confidence in his heart. It could relieve itself by unburdening the load of a guilty conscience into the heart of God, who knew all. All was of no avail. The cross was the recompense of this love. Man would have none of God.
But there are other sides of this power of evil, which are shown in the cross. The effect of evil—death—reigns in it. I say “reigns in it.” It is true that this is shown more in Gethsemane than in the cross, but it is only another part of the same solemn scene, and the anticipation of the cross itself in the soul of Jesus. “My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death.” Death, as the power of evil, was pressing with all its force on the entire being of Jesus. Death is the present judgment of man in the flesh, wielded by the power of Him who thus has the power of it; but it implies the sin of man, and the wrath of God against sin. This is what Jesus met. It is true that, in yielding himself entirely to the will of His Father, He accepted the cup at His hand in a perfect obedience, which left Satan no place. But that was His perfection. He was fully put to the proof. Death was the power of Satan over man on account of sin, but at the same time it was the judgment of God. It was also the weakness of man even to naught as regards his existence in this world. If we enter into details, we find evil develop itself under the power of Satan in this hour of his power. If a man is a judge, he condemns the innocent, washing his hands as to it. If he is a priest, whose duty is to plead for those who are out of the way, he pleads against the innocent and just person. If it be a question of friends, one betrays, another denies, the rest forsake, Him who had shown unceasingly the abundance of His affection. In men, no fear of God, no compassion for man. The Savior went low enough for a wretched thief, suffering the punishment of his crimes, to insult Him in death.
In a word, good had been fully manifested in Jesus, and evil attained its moral highest pitch in the rejection of the Savior. Jesus dies, but He is dead to sin. He never admitted it into His nature, but now He has left the life in which He has sustained the combat. He leaves all relation with the order of things in which sin is found, breaking it by death which destroys this relation. There is no longer for Christ any link with man in flesh. That is what Paul means, (2 Cor. 5,) not even an outward link, or the likeness of sinful flesh. Man has severed every link between himself and God; and Christ has done with those relations in which He never suffered sin to enter His holy nature, but in which He had to do with sin and man. There was an end of man and sin. Man is left in sin so far as in flesh; and there is a risen man, a man completely outside the condition of the children of Adam, dead, not existing in relation with the state in which man was found, but to live to God outside sin.
Immense truth! Christ, (who had a perfect life, who was life, and who, tempted in all things, like unto us, passed through this present life in obedience and faithfulness, who manifested naught but the power of the Holy Ghost in His walk, and looking only to God, and who passed through all the power that the enemy had over man in soul and body by death,) has closed the history of man in ceasing to exist in relation with him, man led by Satan, having consummated his wickedness by putting Him to death. Nevertheless, it was Christ who offered Himself. Moreover, for Him it is the path of life, and He rises beyond the scene of the power of Satan, whether as tempter, or as having the power of death.
Let us now see good manifesting itself in all its perfection, and as superior to evil. First, the life of Jesus has shown the obedience of man by the Spirit through a world of sin, and in spite of all the temptation by which the enemy can try a soul. His life was according to the Spirit of holiness—His death perfect obedience. All we have spoken of, as the power of evil, only heightened the character and value of the obedience. But there is more than this. Man is now, by death, absolutely set free from evil. He dies to sin. Death breaks his relation with evil, because the nature, which can be in relation with evil, no longer exists, at least if there is life. We have seen that Christ, although in the likeness of sinful flesh, never for a moment admitted sin into His being; but death ended, and ended for us, all relation with the scene where sin exists, with all this sphere of existence, and ends it in Christ in a life which is holy. Christ dies, and we die in Him by the power of a life which is divine.
Besides this, perfect love has been manifested, and when man rejected it, it did not weaken, but it accomplished, the work necessary for the reconciliation of those who were enemies. Good, love, God showed Himself superior to evil, in such sort that, in the act in which the hatred of man against God was fully manifested, in which the iniquity of man's heart came to its height, the love of God in Christ triumphs in the act which sin, come to its height, accomplishes. It is the death of Christ. The greatest sin of the world is, (on the part of God and of Christ who offers Himself as a sacrifice for sin,) the propitiation made for sin.
Thus, for the one who is in Christ, for the believer, the sin of the old nature is entirely blotted out, and he lives as raised in Jesus—in a new life in relationship with God. What wisdom of God! We are dead to sin by the act which manifested this sin in the highest degree; and the love of God is declared in that which is the expression of man's hatred. And observe, is it in permitting evil? No; the just judgment of God is also manifested. If His Son takes sin upon Himself, if He is made sin for us, He must suffer. The justice of God is executed against sin in His person, and grace reigns through righteousness magnified in Christ. If evil has ripened and borne all its fruits, good has triumphed with a divine perfection. All blessing and all glory are but the effect of this work, the moral center of all the relations of God with man in judgment and in grace.
It remains for us to trace its fruit in the ways of God.
The death of Christ had fully glorified God and shown His love. It had glorified Him in the obedience of man, had glorified Him in respect of His righteousness, and, in the judgment pronounced against sin, in respect of His holy wrath against sin. And at the same time the perfect love of God had been shown in it by the gift of His Son, His only begotten, for poor sinners, given to bear the sins of all those who shall believe on Him to the end.
What are then the effects of this work and of this love, free now to exercise itself, because what glorified love exalts righteousness?
In the first place, Christ raised by the glory of the Father, all that is in the glory of the Father, (that is, the revelation of His nature, love, righteousness, the relationship of the Father with Christ as Son, His good pleasure in the life of the Savior down here, His satisfaction in that He had glorified Him, and rendered the accomplishment of His counsels morally possible, and in particular the glory of His own among the children of men) all that was in the heart of the Father answered to the excellence of the One who lay in the tomb, was engaged in the resurrection of the Son of man. The first-fruits of the power of God, in answer to this work in which good triumphed at the expense of Christ, is the resurrection of Christ. Here, as we have already seen, an entirely new position is taken by man. Yes, entirely new. Death is left behind. Sin, so far as separating us from God, exists no longer. The divine life is the life of man. Righteousness is manifested in the acceptance of man, not in his condemnation. And man subsists not in the weakness of his own responsibility, and mortal, but as the fruit of the power of God who has been already glorified in respect of His righteousness.
We are speaking in an abstract manner of the position. In applying some of these expressions to Christ, it would naturally be necessary to modify them. Christ has acquired this position for us, we enjoy it as a new position. He is in it Himself, the divine life was always in Him. When in responsibility He was not weak. He was, even in the flesh, born of God. At the same time, His own position was very different from what it now is. He was, before His death, in the likeness of sinful flesh; He was not in it after His resurrection. He lived in flesh and blood before His death, He did not live in them after His resurrection. He has been really dead, although it was impossible that death should hold Him; now He dieth no more. He is the first who entered into the position He has gained for His own. Now that the Holy Spirit has been given to us, this position and even the glory, are already the portion of those who believe in Him, by faith and by the possession of divine life and of the Spirit. As to the actual fact, we are still in our mortal bodies.
But although the resurrection placed the Savior, and us in Him, in a position which is the fruit of the power of God, not of the responsibility of man, and which at the same time, by virtue of the work of Christ, is the result of the exercise of the righteousness of God; and although Christ was thus declared to be the Son of God with power, according to the Spirit of holiness, this did not constitute the whole result, even as to His person. He must needs be glorified to immediate nearness to God, and glorified with the glory of God. Wonderful fact! transcendent divine righteousness! a main is in the glory of God—is seated at the right hand of God on His throne.
In placing Himself there, Christ takes personally the place which was due to Him according to the value of His work on earth. “Now is the Son of man glorified,” (morally, in accomplishing the work on the cross,) “and God is glorified in him. If God be glorified in him, God shall also glorify Him in Himself, and shall straightway glorify him.” “I have glorified thee on the earth; I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do. And now, O Father, glorify thou me with thine own self, with the glory which I had with thee before the world was.” That which Christ demanded, He received. The words “Sit thou on my right hand, until I make thine enemies thy footstool,” place the Lord at the right hand of God to execute the judgment that will put an end to evil. Looked at as entered into the glory of the Father, Christ makes sure to those who know Him there, all the fullness of blessing which is connected with it.
But here we have an immense fact: a man, the Son of man, is seated at the right hand of God in the divine glory.
We may, before pursuing the consideration of the consequences, verify the bearing of this fact. On the one hand, we see the first Adam, responsible, fallen, and in sin; afterward the law and judgment. On the other, we see the Son of God, the supreme God, come down from heaven and become man in grace, and, after having manifested the perfect grace of God toward man, (grace much more abounding where sin abounded,) and, after having accomplished the work of propitiation for sin, and glorified God with regard to the position in which man was found, ascend, according to the righteousness of God by virtue of this accomplished work, to the right hand of God; so that man is placed in the glory of God. On the one hand, the responsibility of man and judgment; on the other, the grace of God, the work of God, salvation and glory, the righteousness of God for us as well as His love, and this righteousness of God ours also, by virtue of the work of Christ.
Hereupon the door is opened to every sinner, and God, by virtue of the blood of Christ, which has glorified His love, His righteousness, His truth, His majesty, all that He is, can receive him to Himself.
Man has entered into His place in glory according to the counsels of God, to be the head of everything that exists. (Psa. 8:3-7 Cor. 15:25-27; Eph. 1:20-23; Heb. 2:5-9.) Compare Col. 1:15, &c. There is the truth in its full largeness. Christ, as man, is established head of all things in heaven and earth. In this respect the first Adam was only a figure of the last. At the same time, as for the first Adam there was an help who was like himself; it is the same with Christ. Eve did not form part of the inferior creation of which Adam was lord. Neither was she lord; she was the spouse and companion of Adam, in the same nature and the same glory. It will be thus with the Church when Christ shall take the dominion over all things into His hands. Compare Eph. 5:25-27, and the passages already cited. But, at the present time, He is seated at the right hand of God, and His enemies are not yet subjected to Him. But it remains to point out the various parts of the dominion He will exercise. The angels (1 Peter 3:22) are made subject to Him. (Compare Eph. 1:10.) But His dominion must also be extended over the earth. Now this dominion over the earth is subdivided with respect to the human race. The Jews are to be subjected to Him, and the Gentiles also. King of the Jews is His indefectible title; He must also reign over the nations, and in Him shall the Gentiles trust. Every creature is also subjected to Him; (see the passages referred to;) they sigh after His reign. (Rom. 8:21.) At the same time, all judgment is committed to the Son, because He is the Son of man. (John 5:27.) He has power over all flesh, (John 17:2,) and judgment is committed to Him, that all men may honor the Son even as they honor the Father. In this judgment there is the judgment of the living and the judgment of the dead. The first connects itself with the government of God on the earth, while at the same time it is final as far as individuals are concerned. The other is the boundary of all the revealed ways of God, when the secrets of heart of all the wicked, and their hidden motives, shall be brought into light.
Then the man Christ, when He shall have subjected all things and set all in order, will yield up (1 Cor. 15) the kingdom to the Father, and God shall be all in all. The yielding up the kingdom makes no change in His divinity, be it carefully observed. Man up to that time had possessed the kingdom according to the counsels of God. This mediatorial kingdom comes to an end. Christ is neither more, nor less, God. He was God on the earth and in His humiliation; He will be so in the glory of the kingdom which He will hold as man. He will be so when, as man, He shall be subject unto God, the firstborn eternally among many brethren, in the joy of the family of men eternally blest before God.
Some remarks remain to be made concerning the ways of God which are destined to bring in this blessed result, and to establish the mediatorial glory of the Christ.
During the time that the Savior is seated at the right hand of God, God gathers the Church by the action of the Holy Ghost on earth. The glad tidings of grace are announced in the world in order to convince the world of sin, and in particular of sin in that it has rejected the Son of God. (John 16:7-9.) It is not the tidings that sin is forgiven, and that this has to be believed; but that the world lies in wickedness, the grand proof of which is, that it has rejected the Son of God, and at the same time that the blood is on the mercy-seat, and that all men are invited to come to God who will receive them according to the value that blood has in His eyes.. (1 Peter 1:12; 2 Cor. 5:20; Col. 1:23; Mark 16:15; Luke 24:47; 1 Cor. 15:3; and a host of passages.) But other precious truths proceed from this descent of the Holy Ghost from heaven. Observe that He comes in virtue of the fact that Christ has gone up to heaven. (John 16:7.) Divine righteousness is exercised and manifested in that man (Christ) is at the right hand of God, because of His having glorified God, and of a perfect propitiation having been made for sin. (John 13:31, 32; 17:4, 6; Phil. 2:8. 9.)
Now, He glorified God by His work accomplished for those who believe in Him. The Holy Ghost, then, descends on those who already believed in Him. (John 7:39; Luke 24:49; Acts 1; 2,) and announces through their means this glorious salvation; announces to all men, that the blood is on the mercy-seat, and invites them to draw near. But, besides that, He gives, as dwelling in the believer, the assurance that all his sins have been borne by Christ; (1 Peter 2:24;) and are blotted out forever (Rev. 1:5; Heb. 1:3; and other passages;) that he, the believer, is made the righteousness of God in Christ. (2 Cor. 5:21.) For the righteousness of God must accept and glorify the believer, otherwise the work of Christ has been done in vain, and God's righteousness is not put in exercise with respect to it; God does not recognize the value of this work, does not render to Christ that which He in every way deserved: which is absolutely impossible. Next, the Holy Ghost is in the believer, the seal for the day of redemption, (Eph. 4:30,) that is to say, for his entering actually into the glory of Christ; then, He gives to the one in whom He dwells the consciousness that he is with Christ, in Christ, and Christ in him; (John 14:16-20;) that he is the child of God, and His heir, joint-heir with Christ; (Rom. 8:16, 17; Gal. 4:5-9;) finally, He takes of the things of Christ and shows them to him, while leading him through the wilderness by the path that leads to the glory. (Rom. 8:14.)
All that is for the individual. But there is only one Spirit in all believers, and He unites them all to Christ, and consequently all together as one body, (Rom. 12:4, 5; 1 Cor. 12 &c.,) the body of Christ, head, as we have seen, over all things. It is the Church united to Christ, His body, and Christians members of Christ and one of another, the Bride of the Lamb. (Eph. 5:25, &c.) The Holy Spirit thus causes her to wait for her Bridegroom, for the marriage of the Lamb. (Rev. 22:17; 19) But this Can only be in heaven. Believers, by the Spirit, are there already (Eph. 2:6; Phil. 3:21,) united by Him to the One who is there, having a heavenly calling, and detached from the world in order to look on high. Thus, they go up to meet Christ in the air, (1 Thess. 4:15-17,) Christ who has come to take them according to His promise, changing or raising them, and in order to have them with Him in His Father's house, where He Himself is. (John 14:2.) Thus they are forever with the Lord. (1 Thess. 4:17.) Believers, who have suffered, are children of the Father in the glory, and together form the Bride and body of Christ.
This does not establish the kingdom, but gathers the co-heirs who are to reign with Christ, and gives their place to them with Him, infinitely above all reign, whatever it be, over the earth; although the latter be the necessary, blessed, and glorious consequence of it. Satan is cast out of heaven, where he will never again enter. (Rev. 12:12; 16:13, 14; 17:13, 14; 19:18, &c.) Afterward the saints return with Christ (Rev. 19; Col. 3:4; Jude 14; Zech. 14:5,) and the power of the enemy is destroyed on the earth set free from evil. Satan, cast into the bottomless pit, (Rev. 20:1-3,)—not yet into the lake of fire—is no longer the prince of this world. Even the angels no longer govern it as administrators on God's behalf. Christ and those who are His own—man is established according to the counsels of God, (Psa. 8 referred to 1 Cor. 15; Eph. 1; Heb. 2; over all things, over all the works of God's hands. (Comp. Col. 1:16-20.) Christ appears in glory, the saints also appear with Him. (Comp. John 17:22, 23.) It is the kingdom of God established in power. (Comp. Matt. 16:28, and xvii.; Mark 9; Luke 9) Righteousness reigns, and men, the world, are in peace. (Eph. 1:10.) There is, in this state of things, fruit of the reign of Christ, the realization of all that the prophets have spoken of peace and blessing on the earth. Blessed time, in which war and oppression shall entirely cease, and in which all shall enjoy the fruits of God's goodness, without passions inflamed by the enemy impelling men to snatch from each other the objects of their lusts. Christ will maintain the blessing of all: if evil appear, it will be at once judged and banished from the earth.
Some accessory facts have to find their place here. The kingdom of the Son of David is to be established. All the promises of God with regard to Israel shall be accomplished in favor of that people; the law being written on their hearts, the grace and power of God shall accomplish the blessing of the people, blessing which they could not obtain when it depended on their faithfulness, and when they were placed on the principle of their own responsibility. At the same time, the dominion over the Gentiles will be in the hands of the Lord, while they will be subordinate to Israel, the supreme people on the earth. Thus, all things will be gathered together under a single head—Christ; angels, principalities, the Church in heaven, Israel, the Gentiles; and Satan will be bound.
But before the introduction of this universal blessing, the wicked one will be in open and public rebellion against God. The Jews will be joined to him, at least the great majority of the people, and the Gentiles will gather themselves together against God. This rebellion will bring in a time of extraordinary tribulation on the land of Judah, and in general there will be a temptation which shall put to the proof all the Gentiles. But the testimony of God will go throughout the world, and the judgment will come and will be executed upon the apostates from among Christians, upon the rebellious Jews, and upon all nations which shall have rejected God's testimony. This will be the judgment of the quick, the first resurrection having already taken place. The fullness of times begins at this period.
A few words will complete our sketch. Satan will be loosed from the abyss, after the inhabitants of the earth have long enjoyed the repose and blessing of the reign of Christ, and have seen His glory. When the temptation shall come, those who are not vitally united to Christ fall; and Satan leads the world against the seat of God's glory on the earth (Jerusalem,) and against all those who are faithful to the Lord. But those who follow him are destroyed.
Then comes the judgment of the dead and the eternal state.
There is a new heaven and a new earth, in which dwells righteousness. The kingdom having been delivered up to God the Father, Christ, who will have already subjected all things, is Himself subjected as man; a truth so precious for us, because He remains eternally the First-born among many brethren. Moreover, I do not think that the Church loses its place as the Bride of Christ and the habitation of God. (See Eph. 3 and Rev. 21) The kingdom only, the existence of which supposed evil to be subjugated, will have an end.
All things will be made new, and God will be all in all. We shall enjoy Him in perfect blessedness, and we shall know Him according to the perfection of His ways already developed in the history of humanity. His Son will be the eternal expression of His thoughts, and the First among those who are eternally blessed through His means—blessing founded on the value of His blood, which never loses its worth in the constantly fresh remembrance of the blessed.
(Concluded from page 176)