:::i:::A:::M:::the:::Truth:::
For the Royalty of the Heavens is with the
Service of all Men and Women by the Grace of our Lord. For all Kingdoms
of the Earth in the Truth are in the Kingdom of this Heaven as the
Earth is in this Heaven:
:::Thy:::Will:::be:::done:::on:::Earth:::as:::it(Earth):::is:::in:::Heaven:::
For the Kingdom of Our Lord is
for the visible-establishment on this Earth. For the Kingdom of Our
Lord is as the ONE: TRUE: visible-establishment of this Earth. Nothing
is made that is not made by our Lord. All that is real and good comes
from God and belongs to God.
This is the day that God has made.
Let us rejoice and be glad. For the separation and loss of :::The:::Heaven:::
by the governors of the world is for the false claim: "Royalty
of this"
The Kingdom of God is the subject-matter
of the Gospel of of Our Lord and of His Apostles.
Testimony:
"And Jesus went about all
Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of
the kingdom" (Matt. iv, 23).
"And Jesus went about all the cities and villages, teaching in
their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom" (Matt.
ix, 35).
"Now after that John was put in prison, Jesus came into Galilee,
preaching the gospel of the kingdom of God" (Mark i, 14).
"He (Jesus) said unto them, I must preach the kingdom of God
to other cities also; for therefore am I sent" (Luke iv, 43).
"And it came to pass afterward, that he went throughout every
city and village, preaching and shewing the glad tidings of the kingdom
of God" (Luke viii, 1).
"Then he called his twelve disciples together, and gave them
power and authority over all devils, and to cure diseases. And he
sent them to preach the kingdom of God" (Luke ix, 1, 2).
"And he took them, and went aside privately into a desert place
belonging to the city called Bethsaida. And the people, when they
knew it, followed him; and he received them and spake unto them of
the kingdom of God" (Luke ix, 10, 11).
The ministers and clergy of the present day believe that they preach
the gospel in setting before the people the death of Christ. The death
of Christ, in its sacrificial import, doubtless becomes an element
in the apostolic testimony of the gospel; but in considering whether
this was the whole gospel of first century preaching, we must remember
that Christ and his disciples preached the gospel three years before
the crucifixion. Not only so, but we have evidence that the apostles,
while so engaged--while they "went through the towns, preaching
the gospel" (Luke ix, 6) --were not aware that Christ had to
suffer. Christ told his disciples that he should "suffer many
things, and be rejected of the elders and chief priests and scribes,
and be slain, and be raised the third day" (Luke ix, 22); but
it is said, "They understood not this saying, and it was hid
from them, that they perceived it not" (Luke ix, 45). The fact
that, while in this state of ignorance concerning the sufferings of
Christ, they "preached the gospel," is proof of the most
positive character that the gospel, as preached by them, must have
been something very different from the gospel of modern times, which
consists exclusively of the death of Christ on the cross. The difference
is manifest in the foregoing testimonies, which tell us they preached
"THE KINGDOM OF GOD."
The following passages prove that
the Kingdom of God was also preached by the apostles after Christ's
death, resurrection, and ascension, and that it, therefore, continues
a valid and essential element of the gospel to this day :
"But when they (the Samaritans)
believed Philip PREACHING THE THINGS CONCERNING THE KINGDOM OF GOD,
and the name of Jesus Christ, they were baptised, both men and women"
(Acts viii, 12).
"He went into the synagogue, and spake boldly for the space of
three months, disputing and persuading THE THINGS CONCERNING THE KINGDOM
OF GOD" (Acts xix, 8).
"He expounded and testified THE KINGDOM OF GOD, persuading them
concerning Jesus, both out of the law of Moses, and out of the prophets"
(Acts xxviii, 23).
"And received all that came in unto him, preaching THE KINGDOM
OF GOD, and teaching those things which concern the Lord Jesus Christ"
(Acts xxviii, 30, 31).
"Among whom I (Paul) have gone PREACHING THE KINGDOM OF GOD"
(Acts xx, 25).
NOW, Paul was exceedingly zealous that the same gospel which he himself
preached, should continue to be preached to the end of the world.
"If an angel from heaven," said he, "preach any other
gospel than that which we have preached unto you, let him be accursed"
(Gal. i, 8). Hence the gospel, of which he said it was the power of
God unto salvation to everyone that believeth (Rom. i, 16), embraces
the doctrine of the Kingdom of God, whatever that may be; for he himself
continually preached it to both Jews and Gentiles.
What, then, is the Kingdom of
God? Different answers will be given by different classes of people.
Some conceive it to consist of the supremacy of God in the hearts
of men--a sort of spiritual dominion existing co-extensively with
secular life. Others recognise it in the ecclesiastical organisations
of the day, styling them, as a whole, Christendom, or the kingdom
of Christ, while a third party behold it in universal nature, continuing
from generation to generation.
The holders of the first idea
find a sanction for their belief in the words of Christ' "The
kingdom of God is within you" (Luke xvii, 21). They overlook
the fact that these words were addressed to the Pharisees, of whom
Jesus said, "Ye outwardly appear righteous unto men, but WITHIN
ye are full of hypocrisy and iniquity" (Matt. xxiii, 28). This
is not the state of mind that exists where the kingdom of God is supposed
to dwell; and the fact that the statement in question was addressed
to men of this character, shows that it had not the significance generally
claimed for it. If the reader will examine any marginal Bible, he
will find that "among" is given as the true rendering of
the word translated "within "; which alters the significance
of the verse. What Christ meant to intimate was his own presence among
them as "the Royalty of the heavens," in answer to the mocking
enquiry of the Pharisees.
Romans xiv, 17, is also quoted
"The kingdom of God is not meat and drink; but righteousness,
and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost "; but this only affirms
one truth, without destroying another. It is true the kingdom of God
when established, will be characterised by the qualities enumerated
by Paul; but it does not therefore follow that the kingdom of God
will not be a real and glorious manifestation of God's power on earth
through the personal intervention of His Son from heaven.
The second idea, that the Kingdom
of God is to be found in the religious systems of the day, as "the
visible church," is without even the semblance of Scriptural
foundation. Its existence is traceable to the times succeeding the
overthrow of Paganism, in the beginning of the fourth century when
Constantine delivered Christianity from its persecutors, and exalted
it for the first time to the throne of prosperity and power. In the
joy of the great change, the bishops said the Kingdom of God had come
in the establishment of the Church. But we must go to the New Testament--not
to ecclesiastical historians --for a Scriptural idea of the Church.
The Church, we find to be composed of the heirs of the Kingdom, in
probation for coming exaltation. They are not the Kingdom itself.
We refer, for proof, to the argument to follow in the present and
succeeding lectures.
The third view, which regards
the universe as "the kingdom of God," has more of truth
in it than the first or second, and yet we shall find as much of error.
Nature is certainly the dominion of the Deity in a very exalted sense;
but it is not that which in the Scriptures is spoken of as "the
kingdom of God." We are bold to make the assertion, because of
abundant Scriptural testimony forthcoming.
In endeavouring to ascertain the
meaning of this phrase, "The Kingdom of God," we cannot
do better than look at it in its origin. It is a Bible phrase, and
originates there. We find it used in contrast to "the kingdom
of men," which occurs three times in Daniel iv,--see verses 17,
25, 32. The "kingdom of men" consists of the aggregate of
human governments. It is an appropriate designation for them all.
They are all the embodiment of one principle--namely, the rule of
man by himself. Whether it be the despot or free Parliament, the same
is ex-emplified-self-government. This has been the alpha and omega
of all political faith, since man was first sent forth an exile from
Eden to take care of himself. Its form has varied in different ages
and countries, according to the views and inclinations of men, but
men have agreed with marvellous unanimity as to the mainspring of
the system. There has been no difference between the bitterest factions
as to the source of the power they respectively claimed to exercise,
namely, the will of man--whether royalist or republican, despotic
or constitutional.
The will of man is the cornerstone
of every political edifice that exists--the foundation of the vast
system of nations that covers the face of the earth. No one ever questions
the legitimacy of human authority as politically embodied. The fact
is, the world knows of no other authority. If it believe in God, a
false theology has excluded Him from any influence in the minds of
men in things practical. They confine His jurisdiction to "spiritual
things," to which an artificial significance has come to be attached;
and even in these they only yield him a constrained and occasional
deference, In .reality, they acknowledged Him not. They own no higher
authority than themselves. They assert the right to be their own masters,
to dispose of this world's wealth as they think fit, and to make such
laws as they please.
This. spirit is embodied in all the kingdoms of the world. It is the
germ from which they are developed; so that in a particular and emphatic
sense, human government, as multifariously manifested on the face
of the globe, is THE KINGDOM OF MEN. It is the presumption of man
politically incorporated, the organised enforcement of human dictate,
irrespective of the authority of God. It is permitted of God as, in
the circumstances, a necessary evil; and He overrules it with a view
to His future purposes. "The Most High ruleth in: the kingdom
of men, and giveth it to whomsoever He will" (Dan. iv, 32).
This conception of the present situation of things prepares us for
the apprehension of
THE KINGDOM OF GOD
Jesus taught his disciples to
pray "Thy kingdom come." It is not yet fully come. If it
were, the kingdom of men would not be in existence, for "the
kingdoms of this worm "are to cease when the kingdom of God comes.
They are to become His; and the prophets show us that when this comes
to pass the government of the world will no longer be in the hands
of unauthorized, ambitious, erring kings and rulers. When the kingdom
of God comes, it will displace and overthrow every power in the world,
and visibly establish God's power on the earth, by the hand of Christ
and his saints.
For a general view of the subject, we cannot do better than turn to
the second chapter of .Daniel. To advise the general reader to do
this is to provoke a smile, perhaps, as if referring him to Daniel
.were like referring him to Jack the Giant Killer. Few people realise
as they ought, that Daniel is a prophet whose authority rests on no
less a sanction than that of the Lord Jesus himself. Christ said to
his disciples, "When ye shall see the abomination of desolation,
spoken of by Daniel the prophet, standing where it ought not (LET
HIM THAT READETH UNDERSTAND)," etc. (Mark xiii, 14). Not only
does Christ specifically endorse the divinity of Daniel in this way,
but he recognises it in the general appeals to the Scripture as the
word of God, which, he said, "cannot be broken" (John x,
35). Daniel was a part of this Scripture, and therefore partakes of
every confirmation given to the whole. In view of this, let us address
ourselves, without the least reservation, to the reading of the chapter
referred to.
It is a revelation of the most important kind. It is, in fact, the
history of the world condensed in the form of a prophecy into a single
chapter. To understand its bearing, we must transport ourselves into
the past by upwards of a score of centuries, and take our stand, in
imagination, with Nebuchadnezzar, the representative of the first
great Babylonian dynasty. Taking him as he appears in the chapter,
we find the monarch in reverie. He is thinking of his past achievements;
of his brilliant career, and the fame and the dominion which he has
established. While reviewing the past, his mind turns to the future.
"Thy thoughts," says Daniel, "came into thy mind, upon
thy bed, what should come to pass hereafter."
Should the great empire, which he had founded, be a haven for nations
throughout all generations? or should some one rise after his death,
and cause disruption and ruin? What would be the fate of the usurper?
Should his power continue? or should it share a similar fate to his
own? Should the world be a constant battle-field? Should history be
an eternal record of strife and bloodshed? Should mankind for ever
be cursed with the rivalries of potentates, and the devastations caused
by military ambition? In this frame of mind, the monarch falls asleep;
and while his slumbers are upon him, a dream is impressed upon the
tablets of his brain by the Great Artificer, who hath the hearts of
all men in His hands. The dream is for the purpose of answering the'
questions which had started in his mind, and of enlightening future
generations as to the purpose of the Almighty.
The king awakes; the dream imparted was instantly withdrawn. It is
gone. The king only knows that he has had a dream of unusual impressiveness,
but cannot recall its faintest outline. He' is distressed. The dream
has left behind it the impression that it was no ordinary dream, but
by no effort can he bring it back. In his distress he has recourse
to the magicians of his court, who, according to the traditions of
their order, ought to be able to tell him the dream and the meaning.
But the demand is beyond their resources. They confess their inability
to supply information which was beyond everyone's reach. The king
is irritated: regards their inability as evidence of imposture, and
issues a decree for their death.
This decree involved Daniel, who was a royal captive at Nebuchadnezzar's
court, and who had been assigned an honorary position among the king's
wise men, because of his capacity and culture. Daniel, hearing of
it and the cause, asks respite, in the hope of obtaining a knowledge
of the king's secret from God. That night, he and certain fellow captives
made it the subject of special request and prayer, and that night
Daniel was communicated a knowledge of the king's dream and the meaning.
Daniel is called in, and the king's difficulty is at an end. Now,
let us take notice of Daniel's first statement to the king: "There
is a God in heaven that revealeth secrets, and maketh known to the
king Nebuchadnezzar what shall be in THE LATTER DAYS" (chap.
ii, 28). This is to be noted. It shows that the vision goes up to
and finds its culmination in the "latter days,"--a phrase
employed in Scripture to describe the closing period of human affairs.
This gives it a special interest to us, as affecting our own and future
times.
Daniel described the dream. The royal dreamer beheld a towering image
of great size and imposing appearance. As the beholder looked, a second
independent object appeared. A stone hewn by mysterious agency from
an adjoining mountain came whizzing through the air; struck the great
image on the feet with such violence, that the image was overturned,
and fell in fragments. The stone growing larger,. rolled among these
fragments, and ground them to powder, which the wind carried away.
Then the stone went on enlarging until it became a great mountain,
filling the whole earth.
Thus the vision consisted of two objects--separate and in-dependent--and
one appearing before the other. It is well to realise this. The image
is first seen towering in its metallic splendour, then the stone is
revealed, not as a passive co-existent, but as a directly antagonistic
body. There is no affinity between the two things; the stone does
not move softly up to the image, and gradually incorporate itself
with its substance. It dashes at it with violence, and at once brings
it to the earth in ruins; and when the wind has cleared away the atomic
residuum, the stone grows into a great mountain, to the filling of
the whole earth. In doing so, it does not appropriate any of the substance
of the demolished image, as that has all been driven away; but grows
by its own inherent force.
Now, the things signified are explained by Daniel, and bear the same
mutual relations as the symbols :--
"Thou, O King, art a king of kings: for the God of heaven hath
given thee a kingdom, power, and strength, and glory... Thou (or thy
dynasty) art this head of gold. And after thee shall arise another
kingdom, inferior to thee, and another third kingdom of brass, which
shall bear rule over all the earth. And the fourth kingdom shall be
strong as iron, forasmuch as iron breaketh in pieces and subdueth
all things, and as iron that breaketh all these shall it break in
pieces and bruise. And whereas thou sawest the feet and toes, part
of potter's clay and part of iron, the kingdom shall be divided; .
.. it shall be partly strong and partly broken. . . And in the days
of these kings shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom, which shall
never be destroyed, and .the kingdom shall not be left to other people,
but it shall break in pieces and consume all these kingdoms, and it
shall stand for ever. Forasmuch as thou sawest that the stone was
cut out of the mountain without hands, and that it brake in pieces
the iron, the brass, the clay, the silver, and the gold."--ii,
37-45.
Before considering these statements, it will be of advantage to take
into account the 7th chapter of Daniel, where the same things are
revealed in another form. If the reader will take the trouble of reading
the chapter through, he will be rewarded by a clearer comprehension
of the scope of the argument. It narrates a vision seen by Daniel
himself, and interpreted to him by the angels. In the vision, beasts
are substituted for Nebuchadnezzar's metals, and the stone finds its
counterpart in the "judgment that shall sit, and consume and
destroy the fourth beast unto the end."
In the two, we have a double representation of the same thing. Their
great prophetic teaching is, that there were to arise in the earth
four successive phases or forms of universal government, and that
the whole should be superseded at last by an everlasting kingdom,
to be established by God. The visions are of the broad and comprehensive
type. They deal not with local manifestations. They take the civilised
world as a whole, and present us with a general view of the great
successive political changes of the world's history, without touching
upon the. infinitude of detail which constitutes the material of historical
writing. They were given to gratify the profitable curiosity that
seeks to know the ultimate of history, and the destiny of the human
race. The revelation was made in almost the earliest historic age,
viz., during the reign of Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Babylon. That
is now twenty-five centuries ago; and it is our privilege to be able
to trace its verification in the course of history, and thereby be
prepared to look with confidence for its glorious consummation.
The empire established by Nebuchadnezzar was in existence at the time
of the visions; we recognise it in the golden head of the image, and
in the eagle-winged lion of Daniel's dream, both of which are appropriate
symbols of the Babylonian power--the one representing the splendour
and magnificence of the empire, the other its supremacy among the
nations.
"After thee," said Daniel, "shall arise another. kingdom
inferior to thee," and, therefore, represented by the inferior
metal--silver. This prediction was fulfilled. An insurrection took
place under Darius the Mede, in the days of Nebuchadnezzar's grandson,
which resulted in the complete overthrow of his dynasty, and in the
establishment of the Medo-Persian empire. Darius died in two years,
without a lineal successor, and the vacant throng was peacefully filled
by Cyrus the Persian, the rightful heir. The Persian phase continued
204 years and nine months, so that the Persian phase of the silver
empire was of a very much longer duration that the Median phase of
the same empire. This is signified by the bear in the second vision
raising itself up on one side; and in Daniel viii, by a ram with two
unequal horns, of which it is said (verse 3), "one was higher
than the other, and the higher came up last that is, the Persian phase
of the second empire, which was the longer, was last in order. The
reader is referred to the chapter itself for further detail. The bear,
which in Daniel's vision is chosen to represent the Medo-Persian empire,
is said to have had "three ribs in the mouth of it, between the
teeth of it." The political peculiarity symbolised by these ribs
is thus identified, it is--
"It pleased Darius to set over the kingdom an hundred and twenty
princes, which should be over the whole kingdom, and over these PRESIDENTS,
that the princes might give accounts unto them, and the king should
have no damage" (Dan. vi, 1, 2).
Darius Codomanus, the last occupant of the Medo-Persian throne, was
defeated by Alexander, the Macedonian, otherwise "the Great,"
who entirely overthrew the power of the Persian empire. Then came
the rule of the brazen-coated Greeks: Alexander became the sole emperor
of the world, establishing "the third kingdom of brass."
His dominion did not long remain intact. It had been written in explanation
of another vision seen by Daniel (chap. viii, 21-22): --
"The rough goat is the king of Grecia, and the great horn that
is between his eyes is the first king. Now that being broken, whereas
four stood up for it, four kingdoms shall stand up out of the nation,
but not in his power."
The same thing had been predicted in the following words (Daniel xi,
3, 4):--
"A mighty king shall stand up, that shall rule with great dominion...
and when he shall stand up his kingdom shall be broken, and shall
be divided toward the four winds of heaven, and not to his posterity,
nor according to his dominion which he ruled."
The fulfilment of these predictions was very remarkable. On the death
of Alexander, his empire was divided among his four generals, and
became established in four independent divisions, "not in his
power," as the angel had foretold; for his power was not perpetuated
by descendants, but shared among strangers.
The fourth kingdom is predicted--"strong as iron, breaking in
pieces, and bruising." In one case, it is represented by the
iron legs, feet, and toes of the image, and in the other by a fourth
beast with ten horns, which Daniel describes "dreadful and terrible,
and strong exceedingly, with great iron teeth, devouring and breaking
in pieces, and stamping the residue with its (brazen-clawed) feet."
Here again, history supplies an entire verification of the prophecy.
The Roman empire rose into powerful existence, and vanquishing the
power of Greece became mistress of the world, extending her dominion
beyond the limits of any former empire, and establishing one of the
strongest despotisms the world has ever seen. Her political qualities
corresponded in every respect with the strong figures employed. She
was "strong as iron," and "great, and dreadful, and
strong exceedingly." The sagacity of her rulers, the rigour of
her imperial administration, the military skill of her generals, the
discipline of her army, the strength of her laws, and the unlimited
extent of her resources, combined to make Rome the strongest piece
of political machinery the world has ever seen. Her strength, however,
though great and prolonged, was not everlasting. The language of the
vision required that days of weakness should come. "Partly strong
and partly broken;" this is the prediction, and so the days of
universal Roman power passed away.
Then came the "partly broken" state. Strong first, as signified
by the iron legs of the image, and the corporate strength of the fourth
beast of Daniel's vision, she entered in her later stages the phase
represented by the clay-sand-iron mixed ten-toed feet of the image,
and the antagonistic horns on the head of the fourth beast. Broken
at last by the repeated blows of the barbaric invasions from the north,
we behold her now in a state of weakness and division. The European
nations as we see them today are the latter-day divided phase of Roman
power. The old imperial strength has gone. Rome no longer rules the
world. She no longer sways the destinies of mankind with the most
formidable of despotisms. She is broken, divided, weakened, a ricketty,
disjointed, system of nations, which hardly holds together for very
weakness: a mixture of iron and clay of brittle cohesion, destined
ere long to be smashed to atoms by the invincible stone from heaven.
Rome has never been superseded. She has been changed by many vicissitudes.
She still lingers in weakness. The present political arrangements
on the continent of Europe are but a prolongation of her existence
in another form, corresponding to the requirements of the vision.
They exhibit to us the last stage of the fourth kingdom, and tell
us that we approach the time when a change will come over the world--when
the fifth kingdom shall be manifested in destructive antagonism to
all human power.
This suggests the consummation. The exactness with which this prophetic
revelation has been verified in history supplies a clue and inspires
entire confidence with respect to the unfulfilled part of the vision.
History has brought us to the feet of the image, and the last of the
four beasts; that is, to the close of the fourth great dominion, which
it was predicted should arise in the earth. But what lies beyond?
Let any one sit down and peruse the second and seventh chapters of
Daniel attentively, and see if he do not, as a matter of self-evident
testimony, come to the conclusion that the next step in the march
of events is the visible interposition of divine power in human affairs.
Consider the stone: it is hewn from its bed by miraculous agency;
it appears on the scene after the image has attained complete development;
it descends upon the feet of the image with violence, and reduces
the human-like structure to atoms, which are taken away by the wind;
and THEN the stone expands into earth-occupying dimensions. Now, what
is the interpretation of all this? We could almost work the problem
unaided, so unmistakable is the evident significance of the symbolism.
But let the plain language of divine explanation decide (Dan. ii,
44):--
"In the days of these kings shall the God of heaven SET UP A
KINGDOM, which shall never be destroyed; and the kingdom shall not
be left to other people; but it shall break in pieces and consume
all these kingdoms, and it shall stand for ever."
Can there be any difference of opinion as to the meaning of this language?
It is addressed to us as an interpretation; therefore, it is not enigmatical.
It is a plain and literal statement, declaring the purpose of God
to set aside the existing arrangement of things on earth, and this
not in an unseen, quiet, gradual manner, such as the expected spread
of a spiritual millennium; but with the visibility, violent destructiveness,
and suddenness of the stone's descent upon the image. The four kingdoms
have destroyed each other; but inasmuch as they were of the same (human)
stock, they are not represented in the vision of the image as separate
conflicting objects, but as part and parcel of the same body politic.
Yet they violently and completely superseded each other, though no
violence is signified in the symbol.
The only violence represented is in connection with the crisis that
has not yet arrived. It is employed by the stone toward the image,
as representing the entire system of human government. This would
lead us to anticipate violence of an unprecedented kind, when the
event signified comes to pass; and the reader will see that the wording
of the interpretation is strictly corroborative of this legitimate
inference. "The God of heaven shall . . break in pieces and consume
all these kingdoms." Herein is predicted the entire disruption
of all systems of human government, the complete and violent suppression
of "the powers that be." This is not a "notion"
or a "crotchet" founded upon an ambiguous symbol, but a
simple reiteration of the unmistakable language of inspired interpretation.
The same purpose is distinctly intimated in other parts of Scripture.
For instance, in Psalm ii, Christ is addressed in the following language
(verses 8, 9):--
"Ask of me, and I shall give thee the heathen for thine inheritance,
and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession. Thou shalt
break them with a rod of iron, and thou shalt dash them in pieces
like a potter's vessel."
Again, Psalm cx, 5, 6, where it is also the subject of inspired song:
--
"The Lord at thy right hand shall strike through kings in the
day of His wrath... He shall wound the heads over many countries."
Again, Isaiah, portraying this same divine interference, says (chapter
xxiv, 21-23) :--
"It shall come to pass in that day that the Lord shall punish
the host of the high ones that are on high, and the kings of the earth
upon the earth. They shall be gathered together as prisoners are gathered
in the pit, and shall be shut up in the prison, and after many days
shall they be visited (marginal reading 'found wanting'). THEN the
moon shall be confounded, and the sun ashamed, when the Lord of Hosts
shall reign in Mount Zion, and in Jerusalem, and before his ancients
gloriously."
Again, Hannah, on the occasion of Samuel's birth, uses the following
words in her song (I Sam. ii, 10):--
"The adversaries of the Lord shall be broken to pieces; out of
Heaven shall He thunder upon them. The Lord shall judge the ends of
the earth, and He shall give strength unto His king, and exalt the
horn of His anointed (or Christ)."
Again (Haggai ii, 21-22):--
"I will shake the heavens and the earth, and I will overthrow
the throne of kingdoms, and I will destroy the strength of the kingdoms
of the heathen."
There are many other statements of a similar .import throughout the
Scriptures; but these are sufficient to show that the teaching in
the book of Daniel is not isolated or exceptional, but coincident
with the general tone of prophetic testimony. That testimony destroys
the popular idea of a millennium to be brought about by evangelical
enterprise. It precludes the theory of gradual enlightenment and amelioration
by human agency. It shows that all expectations of a day of perfection,
consequent upon the ultimate triumph of Christianity in the world,
are visionary as a dream, destined to receive effectual dissipation
in the awful judgments by which the powers of the world will be overthrown.
Returning to Daniel, we find that there is not only a work of demolition,
but a work of upbuilding and restitution. This is the most glorious
feature of the divine purpose; "the God of heaven shall SET UP
a kingdom which shall never be destroyed, and the kingdom shall not
be left to other people... and it shall stand for ever." Now,
let us consider, for a moment, what the setting up of a kingdom means,
and we shall understand this statement better. A kingdom is not an
abstraction. It is not any single thing; it is an aggregation of certain
elements which go to make it up. A 'king in himself is not a kingdom;
neither is a country, or people, or laws, separately; it requires
them all combined to constitute a kingdom. This must commend itself
to every man's judgment. A kingdom consists of, first, a king; second,
an aristocracy; third, a people; fourth, a territory; and fifth, laws.
Now, to set up a kingdom is obviously to arrange and combine these
elements. To appoint a king is not to set up a kingdom: David was
anointed years before he ascended the throne: but the kingdom of David
was not established until David actually became king over the realm.
To portion out a territory is not to set up a kingdom; a land without
a king or inhabitants is no kingdom. To set up a kingdom is to put
together with various parts that make one. Now, in the testimony before
us, we have it declared that it is the purpose of the Almighty to
do this very thing--to organise a kingdom of His own in place of those
which now occupy the earth, after they shall have been swept out of
the' way. Hence, we are led to expect, as the inevitable result of
testimony believed, that when the fourth kingdom, now existing, shall
have been abolished of God, a new order of things shall visibly arise
in the earth, in which there shall be a God-appointed king, a God-constituted
aristocracy, a God-selected people, a God-chosen land, and God-given
laws--altogether constituting a kingdom of God' on the earth. Accordingly,
we find that each of these elements is separately provided for in
the course of prophecy. On the subject of the king, we need not go
out of Daniel, chapter vii, 13, 14: --
"I saw in the night visions, and, behold, one like THE SON OF
MAN came with the clouds of heaven... and there was given him dominion,
and glory, and a kingdom, that all people, nations, and languages
should serve HIM. His dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall
not pass away, and his kingdom that which shall not be destroyed."
Here we have an explanation of chapter ii, 44. But the main point
to be noted is that Daniel supplies us with the first element of the
kingdom, viz., the king, styled in chapter ix, 25, "Messiah the
Prince." This is Jesus Christ, spoken of in Revelation xix, 16,
as the "King of kings, and Lord of lords." This is a subject
capable of much enlargement; but as a whole lecture will be devoted
to it, we at present desist.
Daniel also supplies us "with the aristocracy of the coming kingdom.
We find them in the following verse from chapter vii :--
"The kingdom and dominion, and the greatness of the kingdom under
the whole heaven, shall be given to the people of the SAINTS of the
Most High" (verse 27).
These are referred to by Peter (I Peter ii, 9), as "a chosen
generation, a royal priesthood, an holy nation, a peculiar people
"; and in Revelation v, 10, they are prospectively represented
as singing, "Thou hast made us unto our God kings and priests,
and we shall REIGN ON THE EARTH." In these, we recognise the
brethren of Christ who are faithful to the end, and counted worthy
to inherit the kingdom of God. Writing to such, Paul says, "God
hath called you unto His kingdom" (I Thess. ii, 12); and, again,
"Do ye not know that the saints shall judge the world?"
(I Cor. vi, 2). Thus the aristocracy of the future age are neither
more nor less than the poor men and women of this and all past ages
who do the will of God, and hope for His salvation. They are "taken
out from among the Gentiles as a people for His name." They are
"called to His kingdom and glory," and "their citizenship
is," therefore, "in heaven." They have here "no
continuing city: they seek one to come." They are not known or
recognised by the world. They walk in obscurity; they are among the
humble of the earth; they are without name, standing, or wealth, but
they are, nevertheless, the greatest among the sons of men. They are
destined to be the rulers in a perfect age that shall be without end,
the possessors of all the wealth that great men are now piling up
with such diligence. They are monarchs of more illustrious degree
than any of "the rulers of the darkness of this aion (age)."
The time hastens when the Almighty. will "put down the mighty
from their seats, and exalt them of low degree." What a privilege
to be among the latter, even if it does involve present obscurity
and defame!
Next, the subjects of the kingdom; they also are plainly identified
with the Jews to whom Moses said (Deut. vii, 6):--
"The Lord thy God hath chosen thee to be A SPECIAL PEOPLE UNTO
HIMSELF, above all people that are upon the face of the earth."
The Jews are now in a scattered and afflicted condition; but they
are to be gathered from their dispersion, and reinstated in their
land as a great nation, there to constitute the subject-people of
the Messiah when he returns. This is a subject by itself, and will
be treated in a separate lecture. Meanwhile, it is necessary to make
this passing mention of the subject, in order to complete the picture
of the kingdom of God. It is necessary to add, In order to prevent
misconception, that the subject-inhabitants of the earth in the future
age are not restricted to the Jews. They also comprise "all people,
nations, and languages." Yet there is a distinction to be marked.
"The kingdom of God" is distinct from the "all people,
nations, and languages," which it rules; just as the kingdom
of Great Britain is distinct from Canada, New Zealand, and her other
colonies. The Jews will Be to the kingdom of God what Englishmen are
to England, and other nations will form so many dependencies subject
to, but not constituting, the kingdom of God, so that while all are
the subjects of the kingdom, yet the Jews are so in a proper and exclusive
sense. Hence we read, Zech. viii, 23 :--
"In those days it shall come to pass that ten men shall take
hold out of all languages of the nations, even shall take hold of
the skirt of him that is a Jew, saying, We will go with you, for we
have heard that GOD IS WITH YOU."
And again, Micah iv, 8 :--
"And thou, O tower of the flock, the stronghold of the daughter
of Zion, unto thee shall it come, even the FIRST DOMINION; the kingdom
shall come to the daughter of Jerusalem."
But all this will be made more
apparent in another lecture. The fourth element of the kingdom--THE
LAND--is also frequently mentioned in the Scriptures, and often in
such a way as directly to identify it with God's future purpose. It
is repeatedly spoken of as "my land." For illustration of
this, the reader is referred to Ezekiel xxxviii, 16: xxxvi, 5; Jeremiah
xvi, 18: ii, 7; Isaiah xiv, 25, etc. Moses says of it (Deut. xi, 12),
"It is a land which the Lord thy God careth for; the eyes of
the Lord thy God are always upon it, from the beginning of the year
even unto the end of the year." This was Palestine, "that
lieth between the river of Egypt and the great river Euphrates "--the
land promised as a personal everlasting possession to Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob (Gen. xiii, 14: xxvi, 3: xxviii, 13). The Jews occupied
it under divine covenant for many centuries, but were ultimately expelled
from it in shame, because they defiled it. At present the land is
desolate and desecrated by every species of Gentile abomination: but
we are told of a time (Deut. xxxii, 43) when God "will be merciful
unto His land and to His people." Of that time it is written
(Zech. ii, 12) :--
"The Lord shall inherit Judah, His portion in THE HOLY LAND,
and shall choose Jerusalem again."
Again (Ezekiel xxxvi, 33, 35) :--
"Thus saith the Lord God; In the day that I should have cleansed
you from all your iniquities, I will also cause you to dwell in the
cities; and the wastes shall be builded, and the desolate land shall
be tilled, whereas it lay desolate in the sight of all that passed
by. And they shall say, THIS LAND THAT WAS DESOLATE IS BECOME LIKE
THE GARDEN OF EDEN; and the waste and desolate and ruined cities are
become fenced, and are inhabited."
As to the laws, it is written in Isaiah
ii, 3, 4 :--
"And many people shall go and say, Come ye, and let us go up
to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob; and
He will teach us of His ways, and we will walk in His paths; for OUT
OF ZION SHALL GO FORTH THE LAW, AND THE WORD OF THE LORD FROM JERUSALEM.
And He shall judge among the nations, and shall rebuke many people;
and they shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears
into pruning hooks. Nation shall not lift up sword against nation,
neither shall they learn war any more."
Here then is a summary of the Scripture testimony, in which the five
constituent elements of the kingdom of God are made clearly manifest.
It is needless to say that this kingdom is not yet in existence: such
a proposition is self-evident. Its existence does not commence till
human government is entirely abolished. Not until the great image--now
standing upon its ten-toed feet in Europe--is broken to pieces, and
"driven away like the chaff of the summer threshing-floors,"
shall the stone expand to the filling of the whole earth. That stone
has not yet descended; Jesus Christ has not yet returned from the
far country whither he has gone, to receive for himself a kingdom
(Luke xix, 12-27). He is waiting for the appointed time. When that
arrives, he will be made manifest as "the stone which the builders
rejected, become the head of the corner; on whomsoever it shall fall
it will grind him to powder." He will go forth "to make
war against the kings of the earth and their armies" (Rev. xix,
11, 20); having overcome them, "the kingdoms of this world shall
become the kingdoms of our Lord and of His Christ" (Rev. xi,
15).
Then will commence a glorious
reign, outdistancing, by infinitude, the most perfect government that
has ever been conceived by man. One king at the head shall possess
wisdom equal to all the exigencies of universal dominion--his mercy
untainted by selfishness and unblemished by weakness, and his power
omnipotent for the enforcement of his will. AN IMMORTAL KING, no apprehension
of death will haunt his court or mar the joyous confidence of the
rejoicing peoples who will thank God for his righteous sway. His government
will be firm, direct, and absolute--no vacillation--no circumlocution--no
doubtfulness and indecision. "The spirit of the Lord shall rest
upon him; the spirit of wisdom and understanding; the spirit of counsel
and might; the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord; and
shall make him of quick understanding in the fear of the Lord. And
he shall not judge after the sight of his eyes, neither reprove after
the hearing of his ears; but with righteousness shall he judge the
poor, and reprove with equity for the meek of the earth. And he shall
smite the earth with the rod of his mouth, and with the breath of
his lips shall he slay the wicked" (Isaiah xi, 2-4).
Absolute authority, backed by
omnipotence, will rule mankind with simplicity and vigour. Righteous
law, emanating from its legitimate Source, will be enforced with resistless
authority. Innocence will be protected, poverty banished, rapacity
restrained, arrogance brought down, and the rights of all secured
in everything. The King's government will be administered by the King's
associates, his immortal, incorruptible, perfected brethren, who having
undergone previous moral preparation in circumstances of great trial,
will have been fashioned like unto the glorious body of their Lord
and Master. The power will be permanently in their hands, not by popular
suffrage, but by royal commission of the true type. The power of the
people will be a myth in those days. All assertion of political birthright
will be suppressed. An iron administration, with superhuman powers
at their command, will vigorously put down rebellion in every form,
and maintain the only government that will have blessed the world
with peace and righteousness in the name of divine right. Then shall
the glory of the Lord cover the earth as the waters cover the sea.
Then shall be fulfilled the words of the angels: "Glory to God
in the highest, and on earth peace, goodwill toward men."
For the Gospel and Kingdom
are for Our Redemption and Salvation.
NOW, we made it evident to start with, that this glorious purpose
was announced in the gospel preached by Jesus and his apostles; it
was proclaimed for belief. "Go," said Jesus, "into
all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature. He that believeth
and is baptised shall be saved." Thus belief was made the first
condition of salvation, that is, belief in the things set forth in
the proclamation to which the commission had reference. These things
comprised the doctrine of the kingdom. Hence, no man believes the
gospel who is ignorant of the prophetic disclosures concerning the
kingdom of God. Be it observed, Paul preached the kingdom of God out
of the prophets. PROOF :--
"He expounded and testified the kingdom of God, persuading them
concerning Jesus, both out of the law of Moses, and OUT OF THE PROPHETS"
(Acts xxviii, 23).
"I continue unto this day, witnessing both to small and great,
saying none other things than those which THE PROPHETS AND Moses did
say should come" (Acts xxvi, 22).
"So worship I (Paul) the God of my fathers, believing all things
which are written in the law AND IN THE PROPHETS" (Acts xxiv,
14).
"Paul, as his manner was, went in unto them, and three Sabbath
days reasoned with them out of THE SCRIPTURES" (Acts xvii, 2).
(There were no other Scriptures at the time than the Old Testament.)
Previous to the death of Christ, the crucifixion formed no part of
the Gospel. Subsequently, however, it came to be preached as a supplement
to the things concerning the kingdom of God. This appears from the
distinction observed in the phrases by which the preaching of the
apostles is designated at these two different periods. In the gospel
narratives, the proclamation is described as simply relating to "the
kingdom of God "; whereas, in the Acts of the Apostles, the phrase
runs, "the things concerning the kingdom of God, AND the name
of Jesus Christ." Now, the things concerning the name of Christ
comprehend the doctrinal teaching as to how the sons of Adam may put
on that "one name which is given under heaven, whereby men may
be saved." This involved the teaching concerning Christ's sacrifice;
for had he not died for our sins, and "risen again for our justification,"
it would have been impossible for us to have "put on his name,"
since his name would not otherwise have been provided. This element
of "the mystery of godliness," then, was super-added to
the things concerning the kingdom of God, in order to make them of
practical value. The glad tidings of the kingdom would have been no
gospel to us unless a way had been opened up for our personal participation
in the glory to be revealed.
This way was opened in the death and resurrection of Christ; and the
announcement of this fact, with explanation as to the manner in which
we might enter this "way," naturally became a constituent
part of the glad tidings. One part was incomplete without the other.
The only difference between the gospel preached by Christ before his
death, and that proclaimed after his ascension, was that the latter
comprehended the teaching concerning the name of Christ, in addition
to the subject matter of the other. There was no alteration; there
was simply addition. The kingdom was presented for belief and hope;
the sacrifice, for faith with a view to the hope. Both went. together.
They were never disjointed. United, they constituted the one gospel
preached to the world by the apostles of Christ, as the means of human
salvation. Disjoined, each is inefficacious to enlighten any man unto
salvation.
Now, it is a remarkable fact that, in this century of boasted Christian
knowledge, we hear nothing. at all, in pulpit preaching, about the
first and main element of the gospel--the kingdom of God. If it is
spoken about at all, it is with a significance totally different from
that which it possesses in the Scriptures. As used by the commonalty
of religious people, it means different things in different mouths,
but never refers to that glorious manifestation of divine power on
earth, which is destined shortly to upset the whole system of human
misgovernment, and establish a glorious kingdom in the earth, in which
God will be honoured and man happy. Furthermore, with whatever meaning
the phrase may be used, the kingdom of God is never spoken of to the
people or preached about as in any way forming a part of the good
message from heaven, which men must believe unto salvation.
Thus there has been a great departure from the original example. As
the Jews of ancient times would only receive the doctrine of the kingdom,
and that in a carnal and corrupted form, so the Gentiles of modern
times, full of boast and confidence, will only hear of a suffering
Messiah, whom they contemplate with perverted gaze. Thus we have two
extremes--equally far from the truth. The Bible lies between them:
and before any of them can be in a safe position they must meet in
the blending of "the things concerning the kingdom of God, AND
the name of Jesus Christ. At present there is a great and vital lack
in popular preaching. The people are led to hope for translation to
heaven at death as the great object of a religious life, and as the
great burden of the promises of God, when, indeed, such a hope is
utterly delusive, having no place at all in the Scriptures; while,
on the other hand, the glorious gospel of the blessed God is hid from
their eyes.
If we look into the practical teaching of the New Testament, we shall
find that it is thoroughly interlaced with the doctrine of the kingdom
of God. We begin with the exhortation of the great Master himself--
"Seek ye first THE KINGDOM OF GOD and his righteousness"
(Matt. vi, 33). Here are plain words. We hear nothing like them in
the religious teaching of this age; no such counsel ever falls from
the lips of clergy or ministers. With all their zeal for the dissemination
of the truth of Christ in the world, they actually neglect the inculcation
of its first principle as expressed in the words before us. They never
tell men to "seek first the kingdom of God "; they don't
even tell them that such a thing is coming. The fact is, they are
ignorant on the subject themselves; for surely, otherwise, they would
speak of it. They exhort their hearers to seek "mansions in the
skies," to "prepare for death," to "fit themselves
for heaven," and save their immortal souls from the torments
of hell; thus proclaiming fictitious doctrine, while in all their
preachings they make no mention of the great central prospective truth
relating to the kingdom of God. They thus disprove themselves to be
the ministers of truth and light.
Christ not only warned men to "seek first the kingdom of God,"
but he taught his disciples to pray for its coming, saying, "THY
KINGDOM COME; thy will be done in earth as it is done in heaven."
No prayer like this ascends from the pulpits of our churches and chapels.
It is true that in the churches the "Lord's Prayer" is repeated
as a form of devotional exercise; but when the occupants of the pulpit
are left to frame their own petitions, they breathe no requests that
the kingdom of God may come. True, they pray for "the extension
of the Redeemer's kingdom "; but by this they mean "the
propagation of the visible church," which is a very different
thing from the establishment of the Almighty's (not now existing)
divine kingdom on earth, for the glorification of His own great name,
and the blessing of humanity. Such a prayer is, in fact, a tacit declaration
of unbelief in the coming kingdom of God's revealed purpose, because
it assumes that kingdom to be already in existence; and, ignoring
His future plans, asserts a system to be the kingdom of God, which
is only the ecclesiastical embodiment of error and opposition to His
truth.
Christ has said, "Whosoever shall not receive the Kingdom of
God as a little child, shall in no wise enter therein." (Luke
xviii, 17). This is a solemn statement, deserving, nay, demanding,
most attentive consideration. It is a certain decree of exclusion
against all who do not humbly and joyfully believe in the glad tidings
concerning' the kingdom of God. It is fatal to the sceptic, whatever
be his excellence of character. It shuts out the man who is so engrossed
in the business and pleasures of this life, as to be indifferent about
the future, blindly trusting that all will be right if he pays twenty
shillings in the pound. It debars the pseudo-liberal man of the world,
who, in the supreme wisdom of a scientific cramming, talks contemptuously
about "theology."
But it is equally fatal to another class, who think they have nothing
to fear. What do professing orthodox Christians say to it? How does
the Churchman, the Independent, the Baptist, the Methodist, stand
related to this principle? What say they to the kingdom of God? Do
they receive it as a little child? Let them be told about the purpose
of God to send Jesus
Christ to earth again. (Acts iii, 20), to raise again the tabernacle
of David that is fallen down, and to build it as in the days of old
(Amos ix, 11); to pull down the mighty from their seats, and exalt
them of low degree (Luke i, 52); to humble all kings of the earth,
and compel the homage of their peoples (Isa. xxiv, 21; Psalm lxxii,
8-11; Dan, vii, 14; Psalm ii, 9); to establish Him in the city of
Jerusalem, as universal king on earth (Isaiah xxiv, 23; Jeremiah iii,
17; Micah iv, 2-7); to give power to His accepted people, as royal
co-rulers with Him of the nations of the earth (Rev. ii, 26, 27; v,
9, 10; Psalm cxlix, 5, 9; Dan. vii, 27).inLet them be told of the
mission of Jesus Christ to raise up the tribes of Jacob, and to restore
the preserved of Israel (Isaiah xlix, 6); to gather again the children
of Israel from all nations among whom they are scattered, and to bring
them to the land of their fathers, now waste and desolate (Ezek. xxxvii,
21, 22); and there to constitute them a glorious nation, served and
honoured by all, even as they are now oppressed and despised (Zeph.
iii, 19, 20; Isa. lxi, 5, 7; lx, 10, 14).
Let them be told of all these things, which are plainly written in
the word of truth, and what will they say? What do they say? Do they
receive them as a little child? Do they not rather reject them with
scorn, and throw all the ridicule which their mouths can frame upon
those who direct their attention to these things? Let them beware
lest they come into condemnation, and realise the words addressed
by Jesus to the Pharisees: "Ye shall see Abraham, and Isaac,
and Jacob, and all the prophets, in the kingdom of God; and you then
yourselves thrust out shall come from the east and the west, and from
the north and the south, and shall sit down in the kingdom of God."
Wiser far will it be to receive the kingdom of God with the meekness
and gratitude of a little child, that at the end of the days, they
may hear the words of welcome addressed to them, "Come, ye blessed
of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation
of the world."
We read in Acts i, 3, that Jesus was seen of his disciples forty days
after his passion, speaking unto them THE THINGS PERTAINING TO THE
KINGDOM OF GOD. Here is an example for our religious teachers. The
Great Master considered the things of the kingdom of so much importance,
that he devoted his last days on earth to their exposition. How much
then does it behoove those who profess to be his ministers to instruct
the people therein.
In Matthew vii, 21, we find the following words: "Not every one
that saith, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but
he that doeth the will of my father which is in heaven." (Note--The
Kingdom of heaven and the kingdom of God are the same thing; because
God who sets it up is the God of heaven, and the kingdom when established
will be a kingdom that will have come from heaven to earth.) Wordy
profession will not avail anything in securing an entrance into the
kingdom of God. A mere assent to Christian doctrine--an intellectual
recognition of gospel truth--will not qualify a man for that high
honour. Belief must be accompanied by a hearty performance of the
will of God, as made known in the preceptive department of the truth;
and this is what few men are equal to. The moral courage that is not
frightened at singularity is a scarce thing, especially in matters
of principle. Men will rather wink at tricks in trade, and conform
to dishonourable practices without end, than boldly avow conscientious
conviction, and be considered "soft." Fashion, reputation,
and other influences at work in society, briefly summarised by the
apostle John, as "the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes,
and the pride of life," are too powerful with the common run
of mortals, to allow of many entering the kingdom of God. "The
unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God" (I Cor. vi,
9). "Strait is the gate and narrow is the way, and few there
be that find it." Again, in Mark x, 24, we read, "How hard.
is it for them that trust in riches to enter into the kingdom of God."
James presents the other side of the picture in chapter ii, 5: "Hearken,
my beloved brethren, hath not God chosen the poor of this world, rich
in faith, and heirs of the kingdom which He hath promised to them
that love him "? Riches come not alone to a man. They surround
him with circumstances which are unfavourable to spiritual perception.
For this reason, a rich man has very little chance of ever becoming
an heir of the kingdom of God; not from the simple circumstance of
his happening to have riches, but because he becomes subject through
them, to many influences of an unfavourable character. It is different
with the poor. They may take comfort. To them pre-eminently the gospel
is preached; and to them it cannot fail to present many more attractions
than to the rich man, because in this life they have little to comfort
them. Their days are spent in labour. They manage with difficulty
to "provide things honest in the sight of all men," and
are strangers to the elegances and luxuries by which the rich sweeten
their lives. They are held in small reputation, have few friends and
few pleasures. To them the gospel is glad tidings indeed: it promises
them deliverance from all the imperfections and drawbacks of the present
life, and possession of riches and honour in the kingdom of God--far
greater and more enduring, and certainly not less real than those
which are now inherited by the great men of the earth; and in the
affectionate belief of this promise, and the moral elevation and spiritual
improvement which the contemplation thereof induces, he is blessed
with the peace of God that passeth all understanding--a peace that
the world knoweth not of--a peace that the world cannot give and cannot
take away.
From what has been advanced it will be manifest that the gospel of
Jesus Christ, as made known in the New Testament, is not preached
in our churches and chapels. To account for such a state of things,
it would be necessary to say more than the limits of this lecture
will allow; but there is a certain prediction of Paul's which may
throw some light on the subject. It will be found in II Tim. iv, 3,
4 :
"The time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine,
but after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers,
(they) having itching ears; AND THEY SHALL TURN AWAY THEIR EARS FROM
THE TRUTH, AND SHALL BE TURNED UNTO FABLES."
This prediction requires no comment. We observe its fulfilment in
the present state of Christendom, and the warning voice to every earnest
mind is, in the words of Peter, "Save yourselves from this untoward
generation." Like the Christians of old, "Gladly receive
the word and be baptised." Steadfastly continue in the apostles'
doctrine and fellowship, in the breaking of bread and in prayers;
and when the time appointed arrives, "an entrance shall be ministered
unto you abundantly into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ" (II Peter i, 11).