Category Archives: Help and Food

Help and Food for the Household of Faith was first published in 1883 to provide ministry “for the household of faith.” In the early days
the editors we anonymous, but editorial succession included: F. W. Grant, C. Crain, Samuel Ridout, Paul Loizeaux, and Timothy Loizeaux

A Short-hand Note From A Late Address.

What a revelation we have in this third John, beloved! – how wonderful it is! Though so familiar to us, it grows greater and fresher as the Spirit of God gives us to understand more the depths of its meaning. Fresh from the lips of the Son of God Himself, it, burst forth upon the darkness of this world:"God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son"! Think of it!-the whole world lying under the power of Satan,-in the darkness of distance from God; in the misery brought in through sin and the solemn judgment of God upon it,-then it is these blessed words burst forth from the lips of the Son of God Himself, like the light of a glorious sun, breaking forth upon the darkness of this world:"God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life." Precious, wonderful revelation! yet how received by man? We were singing a while ago,-

"When we see Thee as the victim,
Nailed to the accursed tree"-

The Son of God nailed to the tree!-yes, by man whom He had come to save! Is not this another wonder, declaring under what power of Satan and depths of darkness man was fallen in rebellion to God? Yet this declaration comes to the whole world:"God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son."

Is it not, beloved, a wonderful revelation?-this break of a glorious light upon this benighted world.

Bless God for it, all ye who know Him! My soul worships and blesses God for it.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

Answers To Correspondents

Ans. 26-John 10:27-29 is plain as divine love would make it. The Lord gives unto His people eternal life, and they shall never perish. There is no condition here, and we must make none. If, as people say, they could pluck themselves out of His hands, then they would perish; but He says they shall not. There is no other Scripture that clashes with this in the least. Falling from grace in Galatians, is abandoning it as one's ground before God, as the Galatians were doing,-adding the law to the gospel,-the very thing those do who urge the text so much. Let us take "Scripture as it stands, and we shall be safe; where it speaks of conditions, insist on them; where we find a glorious unconditional promise, receive it simply.

Ans. 27.-Acts. 2:18, like 21:9, shows undoubtedly that women might have prophetic gift, and i Cor. 11:5 prescribes as to its use. i Cor. 14:34 shows that it was not to be in the public assemblies where the whole church came together. There is nothing to forbid a women's prayer-meeting, but they must do nothing un-suited to the modesty becoming women, or the place which nature gave them (comp. 11:14).

Ans. 28.-Heb. 13:17 should be as in the margin "those who guide you." Of course this must be by the Word, or it is not real guidance.

Ans. 29-We must surely take care in whatever we put our hand to that we have the authority of Scripture for it. If in any thing we do, or in the way we do it, we violate Scripture to secure what we suppose greater good, we do indeed adopt the terrible principle, " Let us do evil that good may come." On the other hand, our hearts are not right if they do not own and delight in what is of God wherever we may find it, though it may be mixed with much that we could not ourselves take part in. Our prayers, at least, are every-where due, and often we can be free to give practical help to what on the whole we can believe to be of God, while sorrowing over and refusing for ourselves what may be mixed up with it. Here we need to be much before God in order to find our way in times so difficult as the present.

Ans. 30.-As to Deut. 33:12, another has said of these blessings, that they show " the relationship of Jehovah with the people as in possession of the land;" and as to the verse in question, that "it would seem that the place of Benjamin, in relation with Jehovah, was in his favor, being kept near Him, as has been the case with that tribe within whose limits was Jerusalem."

Ans. 31.-In Isa. 26:19 it should read "My corpses shall arise." The word for "corpses" is a "word without a plural, but frequently used in a plural sense, as in chap. 5:25," says Delitzsch. The passage is to be interpreted, no doubt, as Ezek. 37:and other passages, of Israel's resurrection as a nation. God claims them, dead as they are, as His, and quickens them from the dead.

Ans 32.-In Matt. 24:28, the "eagles" are the executioners of divine judgment, which find the corrupting object wherever it may be (comp. Luke 17:37). "They shall gather out of His kingdom all things that offend, and them which do iniquity."

Ans. 33.-In Jno. 2:17, the "zeal of Thine house" is surely Christ's zeal for what was the habitation of Jehovah.
Ans. 34.-2 Tim. 2:12 is a general principle, and of wide application. In the full sense the denial of Christ would be apostasy, and the " us " take in all that profess to be Christians; but there are important applications to those that are truly Christians, who, in proportion to their open confession of Him or not, find correspondingly or not His open countenance. I do not doubt that the boldest confessors are (if they be real) the happiest possessors (comp. i Pet. 4:14).

Ans. 35.-" Eternal life " in Rom. 2:7 is not a principle of life possessed here, but a state into which men go finally as in Matt. 25:46. It is a life which they will live, not the life by which they live it.

Ans. 36.-Luke 14:26:"If a man come to Me, and hate not his father and mother," simply means that he must be prepared to act as if he did this; there was to be no balancing between Christ's claims and those of the very nearest relationship.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

“The Mysteries Of The Kingdom Of Heaven”

2. THE KINGDOM IN THE HANDS OF MEN.

The kingdom in its present form is established and ruled by the word of an absent King. Being absent, it is clearly His Word which speaks for Him,-which represents His authority. His kingdom is a kingdom of truth, according to His own words to Pilate, who asks Him, "Art Thou a king, then?" And He answers, "Thou sayest that I am a king. To this end was I born, and for this cause came I into the world, that I should bear witness unto the truth. Every one that is of the truth heareth My voice." (Jno. 18:37.)

" Master "-or " Teacher "-" and Lord " are necessarily associated in thought. "Ye call Me Master and Lord; and ye say well, for so I am." (Jno. 13:13.) "Master" implies, of necessity, an authority, in Him absolute:and in this full sense He says to His disciples, "One is your Master, even Christ." (Matt. 28:8.) To receive His word is thus to bow to his authority:His word is, as in the parable (Matt. 18:19), "the word of the kingdom." His subjects are thus nothing else than His disciples, and discipling is now into the kingdom of heaven-" every scribe which is instructed into the kingdom of heaven," in the end of the same chapter (5:52), is literally, "discipled."

In the parables of the kingdom thus we find pictured the sphere of discipleship, embracing true and false alike. There are tares and wheat, fishes good and bad, wise and foolish virgins, guests that have not on the wedding-garment, servants that have never truly served at all. The end declares the difference; and in the end the Son of Man purges out of His kingdom all things that offend and them which do iniquity. Till the harvest (which is "the end of the age"-not "world"), the tares and wheat, the good and the evil, are found together.

The kingdom, then, covers the whole field of profession. Those in it may be or may not be what they assume to be; and thus blessings of it are conditional accordingly. People may enter it in two ways; there is an outer and an inner sphere, as it were, in the kingdom itself. There is a mere outward belonging to it, not in heart:there is an inward and real entering in, to which salvation attaches:"Whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved." It is here, of course, not merely a " Lord, Lord," but a true subjection of soul to Him.

All this will come out more as we go on with our subject. Yet it is well to realize it at the outset; for it makes simple much that otherwise would be dark and difficult enough. The conditionality of every thing is in accord with the general idea of a kingdom, where government, though it be gracious, is not yet pure grace; and where grace is shown, not in setting aside requirement, but in enabling for its fulfillment. This is how the children of God, as subjects of the kingdom, manifest themselves; and there is a whole class of passages in Scripture which, speaking in this manner, are often misread alike, yet in two opposite ways, by those who would maintain and those who refuse the full reality of divine grace toward men. The one class would take Paul's expression, " I keep under ray body, and bring it into subjection, lest after having preached to others I myself should be a castaway," as meaning only that his service might be disapproved; while the other will have it that Paul fears here for his ultimate salvation. Neither view is correct:the term "castaway" is that translated "reprobate" in 2 Cor. 13, and it is of himself he speaks, and not his service. While the New Testament assures us, in its whole testimony in many concurrent lines of careful teaching, that true Christians "are not of them that draw back to perdition, but of them that believe to the saving of the soul" (Heb. 10:39).

The kingdom of heaven, then, in the form in which we are now considering it, is a kingdom of the truth, by subjection to which its true disciples are manifested. We are now to look at it as committed into the hands of men, the Lord being absent. It is plain that He uses men to minister "the word of the kingdom," and that a certain administration of its affairs is intended in the words, " whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven," " whose sins ye remit, they are remitted to them." The nature and limit of these assurances we shall have to inquire into immediately, but that the disciples are in some sense commissioned to represent their Lord, is clear and unequivocal.

The first of these we find for the first time in a promise given to Peter, when in the midst of nearly universal unbelief he confesses his faith in Christ as the Son of the living God:" Blessed art thou, Simon bar Jonah," replies the Lord, " for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but My Father which is in heaven. And I say unto thee that thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My
Church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven" (Matt. 16:17-19).

The keys of the kingdom are symbolic of authority over it; and almost the same language the Lord uses of Himself in the address to Philadelphia-" He that hath the key of David; that openeth and no man shutteth, and shutteth and no man openeth." The Pharisees He denounces for shutting up the kingdom of heaven against men:"Ye neither go in yourselves, neither suffer ye them that are entering to go in" (Matt. 23:13). And to the lawyers He says similarly (Luke 11:52), " Woe unto you, lawyers! for ye have taken away the key of knowledge:ye entered not in yourselves, and them that were entering in ye hindered."

All this agrees with what we have before seen-that the kingdom is a kingdom of the truth:thus the key speaks of entrance into the kingdom, and the entrance into such a kingdom is by the key of knowledge. The key speaks thus really, if not exclusively, of the power of discipling.

The power of binding and loosing, according to the Rabbinical writings, belonged to and described the office of a teacher. " The Rabbi set apart to 'loose or bind' might authoritatively declare what was binding on the conscience and what not; and in Talmudical writings, the phrase continually recurs by which a teacher or a school is said to loose or to bind,-1:e., to declare something obligatory or non-obligatory." Edersheim's " History of the Jewish Nation," p. 405. It is plain, then, that if the
power of the keys speaks of entrance or admission into the kingdom,-of discipling,-that of binding and loosing applies to the regulation of the conduct of those already admitted or discipled, whatever may be the limits of this power. The latter naturally connects itself with the former, and follows it.

There remains the question, Was the power of the keys personal to Peter only? The Romanist, it is well known, not only makes him the rock upon which the Church is built, but gives him in a special way the keys of heaven. The Church is, however, as distinct from the kingdom as the kingdom of heaven from heaven itself. With the former we have nothing to do just now:as to the latter, it is well to remark that the promise itself limits itself to earth as the sphere of this binding or loosing. "Whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth" does not mean " whatsoever thou, being on earth, shalt bind," but just what it says. The earth is where only the binding applies; and "shall be bound in heaven" means simply that heaven being for the kingdom the seat of authority, it would confirm the act of its representatives on earth. On earth,-for earth,-alone is there power, though he who rebels against it rebels against the authority of heaven. It is as where the Lord says, " He that receiveth you receiveth Me " (Matt. 10:40). The delegated power on earth represents the authority behind it.

But even for Rome, the keys belong not simply to Peter. There are successors to his chair. And the Protestant view, in which they represent the power of administrating the Word and sacraments, must of course admit others as participants in this. Nor need there be a doubt that as Peter's faith was but the faith of the other disciples, so they as well as he participate in this promise. No doubt as his energy makes him foremost in confession, so also he retains a foremost place throughout; and so at Pentecost he opens the kingdom of heaven to the Jews, as afterward he is chosen of God to open it to the Gentiles in the person of Cornelius. But we can scarcely think of these two instances as being the only use made of the keys of the kingdom. The power of binding and loosing which is here also explicitly promised to Peter, we find in the eighteenth chapter of the same gospel (5:18) extended to others also; and if the power of the keys be the power of administration or of discipling into the kingdom as we have seen, then the commission in the closing chapter explicitly extends this also:"And Jesus came and spake unto them, saying, All power is given unto Me in heaven and earth,"-the kingdom was just ready to begin,- "go ye, therefore, and teach" (or, as the margin and the Revised Version now, " make disciples of") " all nations." And that here successors are contemplated is plainly taught in the closing words:" Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world."

Thus the administration of the kingdom is committed to men. They are to initiate and receive others into it; they are to regulate it for and under Him. So completely is it intrusted to their care, that in the gospel of Mark the Lord represents the kingdom of God to be "as if a man should cast seed into the ground, and should sleep and rise night and day", and the seed should spring and grow up, he knoweth not how" (chap. 4:26, 27). Not, of course, that His care over His people sleeps; but outwardly things happen in that which is. professedly in subjection to Him without any open interference on His part. " But when the fruit is brought forth " (or " ripe," in the Rev. Ver.) "immediately He putteth in the sickle, because the harvest is come." So will He presently put in the sickle; for, spite of man's doing, the harvest comes in its due season.

Yet in the meanwhile the kingdom takes strange shapes, and because it is true that He will have His harvest, and because it has been forgotten that the seed springs and grows up He knoweth not how, it has been taken for granted that if the kingdom of heaven is in the Word of God said to be "like" such and such things,-"like" mustard-seed, or "like" leaven in a woman's hand,-this decides that all is according to His mind. In fact, it is far otherwise; for this expression, "He knoweth not how," if it does not mean to convey, as we know it does not, any real ignorance, then does certainly imply that the growth spoken of is strange, irregular, as if He knew not. So it is said, " The Lord knoweth the way of the righteous, but the way of the ungodly shall perish " (Ps. 1:6). And if it be the fact of course that He knoweth the proud, yet to distinguish it from this approving knowledge it is added, " The proud He knoweth afar off" (Ps. 138:6).

So of the growth of His kingdom in man's hand it may be truly said, He knoweth it not, or He knoweth it afar off; no new thing, alas! of that which comes of man's responsibility; here the words of the Psalmist surely apply, if any where, "Man being in honor abideth not" (Ps. 49:12). Dispensation after dispensation has illustrated this rule:none have confirmed it more signally than the present.

Thus in the second parable of Matt. 13:it is "while men slept, the enemy came and sowed tares among the wheat" (5:25). Thus, " while the bridegroom tarried," the whole company of professed watchers, wise as well as foolish, "all slumbered and slept" (Matt. 25:5). But the history of this declension we shall look at, if the Lord will, at another time. We have yet more precisely to see first how the kingdom of heaven is entered, and what are the divine regulations for it. To appreciate the disorder, we must learn first of all the order; for it is plain that God has not committed it to man's mere will, but to his charge. He is to bind and loose, not despotically, but as himself in subjection to the will of Another. We must return, therefore, now to the subject of the keys.

(To be continued.)

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

Current Events. The Resurrection Of The Nations,

The prophecy of a millennium we find only in the final book of the New Testament, the book of Revelation ; but for the detail of the blessing with which the earth is to be filled at that time, we must go to , the prophets of the Old Testament. And here we find, as the apostle of the Gentiles assures us, Israel's promises (Rom. 9:3), as in the New Testament we find the Christian ones. As we are " blessed with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places" (Eph. 1:3), so Israel has as to the earth by the sure word of God, whose gifts and calling are without repentance, the adoption as first-born among its families (Ex. 4:22). Hence, wherever the picture of earthly blessedness is presented by the prophets, Israel is in the forefront of it. The destination of the Church is to heaven, but Israel is to " blossom and bud, and fill the face of the earth with fruit." (Isa. 27:6.) And "out of Zion shall go forth the law, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem " (chap. 2:3).

The blessing of the world is thus bound up with the blessing of Israel; and while Israel is an outcast from her land, and under the rod of the divine displeasure, the world also waits, and the prophetic history is suspended. The whole present time is a gap in Old-Testament prophecy, in which God is doing no doubt a more wonderful work, and in which the "mysteries of the kingdom of heaven" bring out "things kept secret from the foundation of the world." (Matt. 13:II, 35.) When these shall be finished, and the fullness of the Gentiles now gathering for heaven be come in, then the broken-off thread of this history will be resumed, and followed to its completion.

In the present time, Israel is thus as it were dead and buried, and when she appears again, her appearance is spoken of as a resurrection from the dead. " Behold, O my people, I will open your graves, and cause you to come up out of your graves, and bring you into the land of Israel ; and ye shall know that I am the Lord, when I have opened your graves, and brought you up out of your graves, and shall put My Spirit in you, and ye shall live, and I shall place you in your own land :then shall ye know that I the Lord have spoken it, and performed it, saith the Lord." (Ezek. 37:12-14.)

But not only does Israel come up again as by a resurrection; the same thing is true of the nations of the earth with which she was in connection when her obliteration from the map of the world took place; they too have had their decay and dissolution, and been succeeded by others in the field in which they flourished ; and they too are to revive and take their place again as of old, and with Israel receive their judgment and their blessing from God. This it is important to understand, as ignorance of it is leading many into confusion, in applying to the physically dead these figures of national resurrection. Thus God says to Israel by Isaiah :" Thy dead shall live, My corpses* shall arise. *"Nebelah:a word without a plural, but frequently used in a plural sense, as in chap. 5:25, and so connected with" the plural verb.- (Delitzsch.)* Awake and sing, ye that dwell in dust; for thy . dew is as the dew of herbs, and the earth shall cast out the dead" (chap. 26:19).

So also Hosea:"After two days He will revive us:on the third day He will raise us up, and we shall live in His sight" (chap. 6:2).

So Ezekiel, in the passage just now quoted ; and so Daniel, who is perhaps of all most commonly misunderstood :"And many of those that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake; some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt."
It is not my purpose now, nor needful to it, to prove the application of these scriptures or fix their meaning. It is not of Israel that I purpose now to speak, but of the nations in historic association with Israel when as yet she held her place among them. And it is not a question of the symbols under which in Scripture their revival is spoken of, but of the fact of the revival itself as Scripture declares it. A comparison here of Daniel and Revelation will very quickly show that it is a fact, parallel to and synchronous with that of that revival of Israel in the latter days, of which, it cannot be denied by any simple reader of it, that scripture speaks.

The theme of Daniel is evidently the " times of the Gentiles,"-that is, of their domination over Israel. It begins with the Babylonish captivity, and the setting up of the first of the four Gentile empires, and predicts their course until the setting up of the kingdom of the Son of Man, and the subjection of all to Him under whom Israel will yet find deliverance and blessing. The second and the seventh chapters, in the visions of Nebuchadnezzar and the prophet himself, span this whole period. The second chapter shows us the image in its continuance until the stone cut without hands smites and destroys it, and then fills the earth. The seventh yet more plainly shows the fourth beast existing till the Son of Man comes in the clouds of heaven, and supreme and everlasting dominion is given to Him.

Now a great difficulty here seems to present itself as to the application of this. The fourth or Roman empire, according to this, lasts until the coming of the Lord in the clouds of heaven. Yet if we are to take this in its simple apparent meaning, it might well be asked how this can be shown to be consistent with the fact. Christ is not so come, and yet the Roman empire is in fact passed away; and that not smitten in its height with a sudden blow, but after a long process of corruption and decay. How shall we account for this, then ? For the Word of God is perfect, and "Scripture cannot broken:" heaven and earth shall pass away, but His glorious Word shall never pass away.

The gap in Old-Testament prophecy, of which we have spoken, is not, of course, revealed by the Old Testament itself. We must look to the New Testament for it. And here it is the book of Revelation comes in to supplement the book of Daniel. No one doubts, or can doubt, that the first beast of Rev. 13:, found again in 17:, is in fact the fourth of Dan. 7:Yet there is this that at first sight would seem inconsistent with it, that in Revelation the prophet, writing in the times of the Roman empire, sees it yet as rising once more from the sea. This, it may be said perhaps, is but a glance back at its original beginning:the seventeenth chapter, however, negatives this, while it explains the apparent anomaly; for here, the beast as seen by the prophet is identified with its own eighth head, while he yet recognizes what seems to be again a contradiction to this, that he is under the sixth head. " The seven heads are seven mountains on which the woman sitteth. They are also seven kings:five are fallen, and one is"-the sixth,-"and another is not yet come; and when he cometh, he must continue a short space. And the beast that was, and is not, even he is the eighth, and is of the seven, and goeth into perdition."

Thus the empire that he sees is a future form of one then existing; and not only so, but it is also one which "was, and is not" but which appears of course again, as it is stated in the eighth verse :"And the beast that thou sawest was, and is not, and shall ascend out of the bottomless pit, and go into perdition; and they that dwell on the earth shall wonder, whose names are not written in the book of life from the foundation of the world, when they behold the beast that was, and is not, and shall come." (R.V.)
The matter is fully cleared, then. The Gentile empire which had enslaved and scattered Israel itself breaks up and falls into ruin, but, with Israel, also revives in the latter day. Then indeed in a new form, and as the instrument of the enemy, so that it revives but to go into perdition. This I do not follow out now. It is enough to have shown that the time of the end is marked by the restoration of the Roman empire.

In the eighth chapter of Daniel, we have a similar prophecy as to the third of the Gentile beasts, continuing its history also to the coming of Christ. Imperial rule indeed passes from it, but the kingdom of Alexander has its representative among the notable powers of the latter days. The prophecy has been applied, indeed, to Antiochus Epiphanes, but can only apply to him as a type of a greater, for he who interprets the prophet's vision declares distinctly it is for the "time of the end;" and this is emphasized by repetition:-"Understand, O son of man, for at the time of the end shall be the vision." And again, "Behold, I will make thee know what shall be in the last end of the indignation, for it belongeth to the appointed time of the end' (5:19, R. V.) He too, like the last head of the Roman empire, stands up against the Prince of princes ; and like him also is "broken without hand."

This, there need be no question, is the last "king of the north" in the eleventh chapter, a Grecian king throughout, whose course and end are just like those of the king of the eighth chapter. Zechariah also refers to Greece as in conflict with Israel, when God at last interferes for His people "(chap. 9:13).

But here also the gap in prophecy prepares us for a lapse and revival, similar to what we have seen with regard to Rome; and history already affirms both the one and the other.

The revival of the Roman empire we do not yet see :a remarkable note of preparation has been sounded, however. Rome is once more the capital of a united Italy:and this national resurrection has been witnessed by the present generation ; so sudden and unexpected also was it as to manifest the hand of God in a remarkable way. In but ten years from the commencement of the movement, the disunited states, sundered for centuries, and in continual conflict with one another, had come together. The "swift and comparatively bloodless conquest of the Two Sicilies is one of the most extraordinary incidents in modern history." Venice was gained from Austria; the papal states from the pope. Bone had come to bone, and sinews and flesh covered them, by what might well be deemed a resurrection from the dead.

The revival of Greece, though as yet but partial, had already taken place. Greece had been for a much longer period in a state of utter prostration. From nearly a century and a half before the Christian era, when it succumbed to Rome, for almost two thousand years her history had been but that of her conquerors. Yet Greece is again a kingdom, free, aggressive, growing, and yet to have an eminent though still dependent position in the time near to come :"his power shall be mighty, but not by his own power" (Dan. 8:24).

These two witnesses, Greece and Italy, should be enough by themselves to show us that the time of the end is fast approaching ; but our Lord in the gospel of Luke carries us further, and extends indefinitely this principle of the revival of nations as a sign of this. Not only does He say here, " Behold the fig-tree," as in Matthew,-words of which we have already seen the significance,-but He adds, "and all the trees:" "Behold the fig tree and all the trees ; when they now shoot forth, ye see and know of your own selves that summer is now nigh at hand; so likewise ye, when ye see these things come to pass, know ye that the kingdom of God is nigh at hand." (Luke 21:29-31.)

Inasmuch, then, as we have seen that the fig-tree is the figure of the Jewish nation, and its putting forth leaves speaks of its awakening, as it is awakening out of its sleep of centuries; the shooting out of all the trees can only intimate a general outburst of national life and feeling, especially in the lands which come directly into view in Scripture,-the prophetic earth. Is there any thing answering to this, then, to be found among the nations of the present day? If so, in proportion to the breadth of the field of view will be the significance of the sign.

And just now it is not difficult to trace this written in broad characters right across the face of the political heavens. To a united Italy succeeded with scarcely an interval a united Germany, under the leadership of German-Prussia, instead of the less than semi-German Austria. On the other hand, Belgium had some time before seceded from her union with Holland on the same principle:Belgium being Celtic, and Holland Saxon. And the same under-current is at work in the claim of "home-rule " in Celtic Ireland, the cry of "Ireland for the Irish!" already waking up a faint echo of "Wales for the Welsh ! "

Lastly, Russia aims (and has almost attained) to be the head of a Slavonic union, a people whose settlements extend from the Elbe to Kamtchatka, and from the Frozen to the Adriatic Sea, the whole of eastern Europe being mainly occupied by them.

Assuredly, then, the trees are putting forth their leaves; and this spirit of the age will doubtless operate in restoring Israel to her full place among the nations. A foreign element every where, they do not assimilate with the populations among which they sojourn, while their land providentially lies vacant for them. The Word of God assures us of the issue, and it cannot be far off.

The rise of Russia seems not an example of the resurrection of the nations. It is the development of a new power, as significant as any resurrection, and if not known among the nations of the past in Scripture, it is known in the prophetic vision of the future. More and more are interpreters constrained to recognize in Russia the power depicted as coming up against restored Israel in Ezek. 38:and 39:. It is now widely admitted that we should there read (as the Septuagint and lately the Revised Version), " Gog, of the land of Magog, the prince of Rosh, Meshech, and Tubal." The connected names in the passage speak for themselves. " Rosh " we have modernized in Russia; "Meshech," in Moscow, Muscovy; "Tubal," in Tobolsk. Of other nations in Gog's company, Persia and Armenia (Togarmah) at least are plain :we need not, for our purpose, examine the rest. How plainly the rise, so late in the world's history, of this last enemy of Israel- spreading down continually nearer toward the " land of unwalled villages," as it is,-is depicted in the challenge, "Art thou he of whom I have spoken in old time, by My servants the prophets of Israel, which prophesied in those days many years, that I would bring thee against them ?"

This fact, that Gog is spoken of not merely here by one, but by the prophets of many years, necessarily leads us to look for him under another name in their writings. Accordingly it is believed by some that he is that power which represents the old Assyrian (as in Isaiah and Micah,) in the last days. As to his position, he may well fill it, and it is even claimed that the title "czar " is "Assyrian." If this be so, Russia also is an example of the resurrection of nations. But we cannot pursue this topic here.

But, at any rate, the indications of the "time of the end " are plain. The trees are putting forth leaves. The winter of the world may struggle fiercely yet, but it is doomed. We know, blessed be God! that "summer is nigh" ! But for this the summer's sun must come. The world's winter is arctic,-winter and night in one; but Christ as the Sun of righteousness shall arise with healing in His wings ; and then the Sun shall not withdraw itself; the days of darkness shall be ended.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

Present Things, As Foreshown In The Book Of Revelation.

THE ADDRESSES TO THE CHURCHES, (Continued.)

Sardis:Sleeping Among the Dead. (Rev. 3:1-7.-Continued.)

But is not here the history of the churches of the Reformation-of Protestantism, in fact,- during the three centuries of its existence? Is not this the true account of its divisions, for which it is reproached ? The Spirit of God is not, indeed, the author of confusion, but of peace,-of unity, and not disunion. But when people talk of schism, they should remember to what that term applies. As found in Scripture, it is " schism in the body" that is reprobated, and the body of Christ is not a national church. When men have joined together the living and the dead,-when they have subjugated consciences to formularies instead of Scripture,-to hierarchies instead of God, or to hierarchies in the name of God, what have they forced the blessed Spirit to do but to draw afresh the line they have obliterated between the living and the dead, between man's word and God's, between human authority and divine?

And His mode of doing this has been constantly to bring out of the inexhaustible treasure of His Word some fresh or forgotten truth, which would do that which the popularized truth in the creed had almost ceased to do-would test the souls of His people as to whether they were indeed the descendants of those who confessed Him of old, whose tombs they built, and whose memories they had in honor. The fresh truth calls for fresh confession; costs, and is meant to cost, something; brings its confessors into opposition to the course around them, and separates them at once from those whose only desire is to go with the stream, and with whom the profession of Christ and the cross are widely separate.

Doubtless the division may separate between true Christians themselves; and this is in itself an evil, that true Christians should be separated; but! the responsibility rests with those who are not quick-eared enough to hear God's call when it comes,-not single-eyed enough to discern the path in which the Lord is leading His own. We are bound, by the honor we owe to Him, to maintain that He cannot possibly be leading His own in contradictory paths-cannot possibly refuse the needed light to walk aright, however simple or ignorant the soul may be. No one strays and no one stumbles because God denies him light. But "the light of the body" practically "is the eye"- the inlet of it, and there the hindrance is. Thus a severance, sorrowfully enough, is made between real Christians; but the sin of it is not with those who separate from that which God has shown then to be evil, but with those who remain associated with the evil which is. forcing out the true in heart. Separation from evil, so far from being a principle of division, would, if honestly followed, make for unity and peace, as leading upon a path where God's Spirit, ungrieved, could really unite arid strengthen His people. With evil He cannot unite; and this, indeed, therefore, wherever admitted, is a principle of division.

I am not, therefore, upholding or making light of schism. The divisions of Protestantism are its shame, and to glory in them is to glory in one's shame. Error is manifold, contradictory, schismatic. Truth, however many-sided, is but one. Sects, in their multiplicity, may accommodate, no doubt, the religious tastes of man; but that only would show how purely human they are, how little divine.
The unity of the Spirit may be maintained, and allow indeed for growth in knowledge, and in unity of judgment as to many things. The Church of God has room for all that are God's, of whatever stature-fathers, young men, and babes. It can allow of-nay, insists upon the largest charity for those who differ from us in aught that would not link the name of Christ with His dishonor. But that is a very different thing from what is implied in a creed, and indeed I may say, is its fundamental opposite. For the creed defines, in a way that, if rigidly adhered to, shuts out toleration as to points of confessedly minor importance, where the Spirit of God would teach, not indifference, indeed, but the largest charity,-forcing its definitions upon all in a way most felt by the most conscientious. It is as necessary, as far as the creed goes, to believe in a child's being regenerate when baptized as it is to believe in the Son of God Himself. I grant there may be practical laxity, but for a soul before God that does not do. For such an one, with his eyes open, the subjection to human institutions in the things of God is just what he cannot and dare not yield.

"Schism in the body" then, is always wrong. Separation from evil, at all costs, is a necessity, and
always right. And from this have been gathered the freshness and power which have plainly characterized so many movements of this kind at the beginning. They began in self-judgment and devotedness. The evil at least they saw, and were exercised about, and the measure of truth they had was held in power. It was soon systematized, and in that proportion its power began to fail. The founders, if you look at their lives, were men of faith and power, suffering and enduring. The manners of the adherents were chastened, simple, primitive. Organized, popularized, with a large following, the freshness waned; and in the third or fourth generation, another sect had taken its place among the many, boasting of a history which it did not discern to be a satire upon its present condition.

The organization, the creed, are to preserve the truth. But did these give them the truth they are anxious to preserve? Surely not, as they must own. God in His love, God in His power, has given what man had proved his incompetency to retain. They cannot trust Him to retain it for them, after He has given it. He has used His Word to minister it; they turn round and use, for that blessed Word of His, a creed of their own manufacture to preserve it. The generations after follow their fathers' creed, and not the Word. The truth popularized is gone as " Spirit and Life." God has to work afresh and outside of what a little while ago He had Himself produced.

And the spiritual life of the time has come more and more to manifest itself in "revivals," which, so far as they are really such, are the protests of the Spirit of God against prevailing death continually
creeping over every thing; and oftentimes connected with fresh statements of truth, when the old have lost their power. The Lord's warning to Sardis points out this constant tendency to death. " Be watchful, and strengthen the things that remain, which are ready to die." " Remember therefore how thou hast received and heard, and hold fast and repent."

It is scarcely too much to say that every true revival, whatever the blessing for individuals,- nay, I might even say, in proportion to the blessing for individuals,-weakens the national system; and this for reasons we have been considering. The Spirit of God must needs work in opposition to the death produced by the system, and therefore against the system which produces the death. Souls quickened by the Spirit of God cannot go on contentedly under deadly and unchristian teaching, comforting themselves with the assurance of the article that "the evil" who sometimes "have chief authority in the ministration of the Word and sacraments" do yet "minister by Christ's commission and authority;" nor will they always be able to accept the ecclesiastical "yoke with unbelievers," because the system requires "every parishioner" to communicate, irrespective of any other security as to his conversion than his baptism and confirmation may imply.

It will be no marvel, then, to find, what any one with spiritual understanding must own, that at least the large proportion of those who could be said to "have not defiled their garments" in the history of Protestantism have been in some way or other dissenters from the national system. The first generation of English reformers were dissenters from Rome, and Rome did her best to keep them pure, in the fires she kindled for them. In the second and third generation from these, a people began to be separated, who from their honest endeavor to be right with God were nick-named " Puritans." I need not tell you what great names, which after-generations have learnt to love and honor, are found among this class,-a class with whom fine and pillory and imprisonment were familiar things. Every body knows that Bedford gaol was the " den " in which John Bunyan dreamed his memorable dream. In Scotland, the attempted enforcement of prelacy gave a succession of martyrs and confessors to the Presbyterian name, with whom, as elsewhere, their time of persecution was their time of real blessing, while the Episcopalian-ism which was riding rough-shod over them had gone already more than half way back to Rome.

With the movement under Wesley and Whitefield, nearer to our own times, we are naturally still more familiar; and that which issued in the Free Church of Scotland is still within the memory of a generation not yet passed away. All these, and many others, will exemplify the truth of what I have been saying; until, in our own days, the national systems are showing evident signs of decrepitude and breaking up; and Romanists and infidels are beginning their pagans on the downfall of Protestantism. We who are able to see it all in the light of Scripture can easily understand why all this is, and see only the truth of God's Word more and more manifested in it. Christianity flung as a cloak over a corpse can surely not warm it into life. Corruption will go on underneath, eating away the form of life, the only thing it ever had, until at last the cloak will more or less fall off, and what was all along true become apparent.

When the Protestant churches shall be gone altogether, or gone as such, their protest will not be gone, but only transferred to another court. Heaven will take up what they have dropped. Babylon the Great will fall under divine judgment; and apostles and prophets, and God's people every where, will rejoice at her fall.

(To be continued.)

  Author: Frederick W. Grant         Publication: Help and Food

A Hymn Of Pre-reformation Times

O praise Him in the dance ! O glorious day !
The pilgrim journey done-
No more press forward on the weary way,
For all is reached and won.

His hand at last-the hand once pierced for me-
Forever holdeth mine ;
O Lord, no songs, no harps of heaven will he
Sweet as one word of Thine !

Lord, altogether lovely, then at last
High shall the guerdon be ;
Thy kiss outweigh the weary ages past
Of hearts that brake for Thee.

Yet now I know Thee as the hidden Bread,
The Living One who died ;
Who sitteth at my table-by my bed-
Who walketh by my side.

I know Thee as the fountain of deep bliss
Whereof one drop shall make
The joys of all the world as bitterness,
My Lord, for Thy sweet sake.

Lord, Thou hast loved me ; and henceforth to me
Earth's noonday is but gloom ,
My soul sails forth on the eternal sea,
And leaves the shores of doom.

I pass within the glory even now,
Where shapes and words are not;
For joy that passeth words, O Lord, art Thou,
A bliss that passeth thought.

I enter there, for Thou hast borne away
The burden of my sin ;
With conscience clear as heaven's unclouded day,
Thy courts I enter in.

Heaven now for me-forever Christ and heaven-
The endless now begun :
No promise, but a gift eternal given,
Because the Work is done.

Henry Suso.
From " Three Friends of God."

  Author: Henry Suso         Publication: Help and Food

Paul's Shipwreck.

(Acts 27:)

We have in this chapter the prisoner become the savior. The vessel goes to pieces. The lives of all are preserved. But it was not the vessel, but the promise that preserved the travelers. They had been committed to the ship ; but the ship breaks asunder, and the promise, not the ship, becomes their safety. All stewardships fail, and prove unfaithful. The Church as the witness, or candlestick, is broken and removed; but that which is of God Himself-His truth, His love, His promise-survives, as fresh and perfect as ever ; and none who trust in Him, and in Him alone, shall ever be confounded. The voyage may end in complete wreck,-the dispensation may end in apostasy; but all who hang on the promise of God through God's Messenger, though man's Prisoner, are brought safely through. Some swim, others float on planks. Some may be strong, and work their way more in the solitary strength of the Spirit; others, weaker, may hang about fragments that float around on the surface here and there inviting the timid and the unskilled :but whether they swim, or rest on the planks, all-strong and weak together, reach the shore. They cannot perish, for the God of the promise has them in His hand, and no wind or wave can dash them thence.

This is not Paul's voyage only, but ours. It is the safety of wrecked mariners,-the safety of all believers who trust in the promise-the God of the promise, the covenant sealed and made sure, the purchased as well as promised blessing and security of a poor ruined, helpless, and tossed soul who has by faith found his way and taken refuge in the sanctuary of peace, though all props and stays here fail him. Cisterns may be broken, but the fountain is as fresh and full as ever. Chorazin and Bethsaida may disappoint Jesus, but the Father does not. Hymenaeus and Philetus may disappoint Paul, but God's foundations do not. "All men forsook me," says he on a great occasion, "but the Lord stood by me." And the Psalmist in triumph exclaims, " If the foundations be destroyed, what shall the righteous do ? The Lord is in His holy temple !" Yes, the way to magnify our security is, to see it in the midst of perils and alarms. The very depth of the waters around honored the strength and sufficiency of the ark to Noah; the ruthlessness of the sword in passing through Egypt glorified the blood that was sheltering the first-born of Israel; and the solemn terrors of the coming day of the Lord will but enhance the safety and the joy of the ransomed, whether with Jesus in the heavens, or as the remnant in their "chambers" in the land.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

Fragment

It is well to be poor, when the knowledge of our poverty serves but to unfold to us the exhaustless riches of divine grace. That grace can never suffer any one to go empty away. It can never tell any one that he is too poor. It can meet the very deepest human need; and not only so, but it is glorified in meeting it."

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

Revelation 5

The countless multitude on high,
Who tune their songs to Jesus' name,
All merit of their own deny,
And Jesus' worth alone proclaim.

Firm on the ground of sovereign grace,
They stand before Jehovah's throne ;
The only song in that blest place
Is, " Thou art worthy ! Thou alone ! "

With spotless robes of purest white,
And branches of triumphal palm,
They shout, with transports of delight,
Heaven's ceaseless universal psalm.

Salvation's glory all be paid
To Him who sits upon the throne ;
And to the Lamb, whose blood was shed,
"Thou! Thou art worthy ! Thou alone !"

For Thou wast slain, and in Thy blood
These robes were washed so spotless pure;
Thou mad'st us kings and priests to God,
Forever let Thy praise endure.

While thus the ransomed myriads shout,
"Amen ! " the holy angels cry ; "
Amen ! amen ! " resounds throughout
The boundless regions of the sky.

Let us with joy adopt the strain
We hope to sing forever there,-
"Worthy's the Lamb for sinners slain !-
Worthy alone the crown to wear."

Without one thought that's good to plead,
Oh what could shield us from despair
But this :though we are vile indeed,
The Lord our righteousness is there !

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

A Sermon In Strasburg In The 14th Century.

You know, dear children, that if you want fresh, pure water, you can get it best from the spring. The water that runs away in the pipes becomes warm and muddy.

God is the fountain-head of the true and living stream, and to Him alone can we go to drink our fill of the pure, bright water. " The king has brought us into His banqueting house, and His banner over us is love."

Oh, children, well and wisely does He order all for us, leading us by strange wild ways, to bring us at last into the great depth of love, unto Himself, the unfathomable blessedness. And that which there we learn to know is beyond all imagining and all understanding-the foretaste of eternal joy.

All that He does for us, and all the hidden ways of God which no eye can see, are in order that He may bring us into the holy and blessed delight of His presence.

Hear how He calleth with His mighty voice, " Whosoever is athirst let him come and drink of the water of life freely."

Children, the thirst is first in Him; He thirsteth for the souls that are athirst for Him, and when He findeth us, He giveth us to drink so gloriously, so freely, and so fully, that from us there floweth the living water, a spring of everlasting life.

It is not reading of God, or hearing of Him, or knowing Him by sense or reason that will satisfy us, but it is receiving Him, drinking deeply of the blessed fountain that springs from the eternal depths-drinking from Himself where He is, and no other.

You know what a spring is, children, and what a cistern is. The cisterns become foul and dry, but the spring leaps up, and sparkles, and flows freely, fresh and sweet and pure.

Thus does the soul know God in a nearer and a better way than all masters and teachers can tell of Him. He is a good teacher who tells you to go straight to the school where the Holy Ghost is the schoolmaster. He loves to find the scholars there who are waiting to receive the high and blessed teaching that flows forth from the Father's heart.

If we hindered not His blessed work, how gladly, how fully would the tide of life and joy flow down, as a mighty rain filling the valleys and the depths, as the blessed rain for which Elijah prayed, when the earth was dry and thirsty, so that naught could grow and blossom.

Children, it is the dry and thirsty land that calls for the great rain. And it is because we seek to satisfy our thirst with other things that the Holy Ghost is hindered.

Do you find that your heart is dry and barren? If you do, see that you do not run off to your confessor, but flee to God. and confess to Him. And He will lay His divine hand upon your head, and make you whole.

Oh how great, how inexpressible, how blessed, how immeasurable, is the gift of the Holy Ghost! Were you to compare a point, which has no dimensions with the whole world, the difference would be as nothing to that of heaven and earth and all that therein is, compared with the gift of the Spirit of God. The least that we can conceive of the Holy Ghost is a thousandfold more than all created things.

The Holy Ghost prepares the house in which He comes to dwell. And He fills the house with Himself, for He is God. Every chamber, every corner is filled with His presence, though often we are not aware of His presence and His work, because we are taken up with outward things, and He will not let us know the sweetness of His presence till we have closed the doors, and sit down in the stillness of rest, to listen to His voice. The disciples shut the doors for fears of the Jews.

Ah, dear children, beware of the dangerous Jews, who would take from you the secret of the Lord, and the sweetness of the company of God the Holy Ghost. The Jews in the disciples' clays could only hurt their bodies, but this present evil world will hurt the soul, and take from you the blessed intercourse of the heart with God. Go into company and join amusements where God is not and His honor is disregarded, and then will the presence of the Holy Ghost be lost to you, and His gifts will be powerless in your hand.

Do you say, " I only go to harmless amusements! I mean no 99:I must have pleasure and enjoyment at times " ?

O God, Thou blessed, Thou precious, Thou eternal God! how can it be that Thou art not to the souls Thou hast created, the sweetest, the most beloved-the most glad and blessed joy? And rather than enjoy Thee will the soul turn to the sad, dark, polluting, deadly pleasure and enjoyment of this poor world, there to find peace and joy!

You say, it does you no harm? Go and say that to God; for, if that is true, your case is sorrowful indeed. It is that you have no delight in Him, and see no beauty in Him that you should desire Him.

In three ways, dear children, did the beloved Lord attract to Himself the heart of John.

First, the Lord Jesus calls him out of the world, to make him an apostle.

Next, did he grant to him to rest upon His loving breast.

Thirdly, and this was the greatest and most perfect nearness, when on the holy day of Pentecost He gave to him the Holy Ghost, and opened to him the door through which he should pass into the heavenly places.

Thus, children, does the Lord first call you from the world, and make you to be the messengers of
God. And next, He draws you close to Himself, that you may learn to know His holy gentleness and lowliness, and His deep and burning love, and His perfect unshrinking obedience.

And yet this is not all. Many have been drawn thus near, and many are satisfied to go no further. And yet they are far from the perfect nearness which the heart of Christ desires.
St. John lay at one moment on the breast of the Lord Jesus, and then he forsook him and fled.

If you have been brought so far as to rest on the breast of Christ, it is well. But yet there was to John a nearness still to come, one moment of which would be worth a hundred years of all that had gone before. The Holy Ghost was given to him-the door was opened.

Do you ask, "Have I gone further than John had gone when he had reached the second nearness?" I answer, "None can go beyond the person of the Lord Jesus Christ. But you may ask the question in another way. " Have you passed beyond all that is your own? all that has its sweetness in your enjoyment of the sweetness?"

For there is a nearness in which we lose ourselves, and God is all in all. This may come to us in one swift moment,-or we may wait for it with longing hearts, and learn to know it at last. It was of this that St. Paul spake, when he said that the things which the eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor the heart conceived, God hath now revealed to us by the gifts of the Holy Ghost.

The soul is drawn into the inner chamber, and there are the wonder and the riches revealed. And truly he who beholds them often must spend many a day in bed-for nature must sink beneath the exceeding weight of the great glory. John fell down as dead before Him. Paul knew not whether he were in the body or out of the body, when the door into this inner glory was opened, and he saw the face of Christ.* * These are the words of a Dominican monk, Dr. John Tauler, of whom Mrs. Bevan has told the story in her hook lately published, " Three Friends of God :Records from the lives of John Tauler, Nicholas of Basle, and Henry Suso." We need not recommend the work more to those who value communion with God, and the memorials of His work in His own in the darkest days.*

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

Wilderness Fruits.

The wilderness is yet to "bud and blossom as the rose."This is to be a literal fact, no doubt. Like all other such it conveys to us also an assurance that is full of comfort. The wilderness is the familiar type for us of the world in its present aspect, which the history of Israel has made our own in a multitude of precious lessons never to be forgotten. Who would blot out that inimitable record which Exodus and Numbers give first, and then Deuteronomy recapitulates, for practical wisdom when the land at last is reached, and the people of the Lord enjoy their heritage?

True, it is a record of difficulty, danger, and privation; of weakness, failure, and defeat. Little there is to minister to the pride of man. From Marah to Abel-shittim, the road is marked with monuments and sepulchers of those whose carcasses had fallen there. Every hand, from infancy to feeble old age, seems to have been writing only epitaphs with this inscription:" Cease ye from man!" But this is the first necessary lesson for us, and the only painful one. Once we have put our seal to this, we need not carry the crape of the funeral any longer. "Out of death life "is the voice of all nature round us. " Let the dead bury their dead," utters a greater Voice:" Go thou, and preach the kingdom of God."

Then look again at this wilderness, and see how on its barren sands you can every-where trace the pathway of the power of the Almighty. Day by day, the utter weakness manifests and glorifies the unfailing Strength. Everlasting arms are round about. The guiding Pillar, always nature's opposite, shuts out the scorching rays of midday,-lights up at night into a blaze of glory,-that by day or night they may go forward at its bidding. And all this not merely to meet need ; that could be done with such economy of power as in general God's wise and holy government displays:but here with a lavish miracle which witnesses of One meaning to make His people know His nearness and His transcendence over nature. "In all their affliction He was afflicted, and the angel of His presence saved them; in His love and in His pity He redeemed them; and He bare them, and He carried them all the days of old." (Isa. 63:9.)

How precious all this, when we learn that all this amazing forth-putting of power in their behalf "happened to them for types, and is written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the ages are come"! As type is less than antitype,-as the natural pales before the spiritual,-so the wilderness, for the eye that can take it in, must be for us a scene of wonderful unvailing of the divine glory indeed! and the meanness of our lives, with what significance it is invested! For faith-for faith- this is how God is with us! how He seeks to make known to us His presence and His love.

A celebrated philosopher undertook to show that this world, notwithstanding the sin and evil of it, is the best of possible worlds. We may say that for its purpose it is surely the best. None other could so exhibit the weakness of the creature in contrast with the omnipotent love of the Creator. In no other could it have been so said, " We have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us." (2 Cor. 4:7.) And this same earthen vessel has given to the bird of heaven a capacity for suffering and death (Lev. 14:), in which the grace of God has found its only adequate expression.

Here is the great example of matchless obedience that has been given us, "that we should walk in His steps;" and what angel might not covet the opportunity to do so? In what other world could all the graces of Christian life be so exhibited, where power is manifested in renunciation and self-sacrifice? Read the list in Colossians (chap. 3:12-16), and see how this spirit characterizes it:" Put on, therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, bowels of mercies, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness, long-suffering; forbearing one another, and forgiving one another:. . . even as Christ for gave you, so also do ye."How little reason have we to complain, if God has given us an opportunity to develop and exhibit such things, and in this follow and glorify our common Master! Trial this means, of course:what else? But the trial of a faith more precious than of gold, that it may be found to praise and honor and glory at the appearing of Jesus Christ. A trial which now works patience, and patience experience, and experience hope.

The world is a wilderness; and just the good of it is that it is a wilderness. To the men of the world it is not that, but an Egypt, through which the judgments of God sweep indeed and desolate it, but leave it Egypt still. To the redeemed it is a wilderness; but as that, not orderless, not meaningless, not unfruitful; but whose harvests are reaped for eternity, and whose harvest-song is sung in heaven.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

The Practical Uses Of A Weekly Laying By.

" Upon the first day of the week, let every one of you lay by him in store, as God hath prospered him, that there be no gatherings when I come." (i Cor. 16:2)

The text before us refers no doubt to a certain collection for the poor at Jerusalem, and may seem, and has seemed, to many, on this account, to speak simply of what was suited to a particular occasion, and not at all of an habitual custom to be observed. There is just so much truth in this as to make the deception easy; and yet it is but a deception. Why observe the first day of the week? Why break the bread then rather than at any other time? Why break it so often as once a week? There is no law about any of these things:nothing more than what might seem a casual statement of what the disciples at such a place did at such a time. Here, in fact, people have found, and find, occasion to object, and will find. The Christian has no positive law about such things as these. The thing God values is not enforced observance of rites and days, but a heart that prizes opportunities of service and the privileges of His love. For such, there are guidance and encouragement:he who requires more is not in the spirit to serve or to enjoy.

For surely these words, as all else in Scripture, are " written for our learning." They are not mere records of the past, but the voice to us of the Living One, present with us as with those in the apostles' days. We are by grace Christians as they were. In all the principles which govern our path eighteen hundred years can make no difference.

And the word before us is no mere arbitrary or reasonless injunction. It contains principles of very great importance, which bear upon our spiritual life, which we cannot without loss neglect, and that a loss which it would be hard to estimate. He who has forbidden idle words, Himself speaks none. It is my purpose now to show, as He enables me, how great significance there is in these.

For those to whom this epistle came, it is plain that there was a direct apostolic injunction, leaving much indeed to the conscience of the individual, but bringing him face to face with his responsibility before God; making him view it also in the light of the grace shown him. " Upon the first day of the week"-the day in which Christ rose again from the dead for our justification,-he was to consider how God had prospered him, and estimate what would be a proportionate return to Him, such as would manifest his sense of the divine goodness shown him. How healthful a thing to be brought to consider this, and to be called in a practical way to show at what we value the grace that has visited us!

Is it too much to express a fear that many and many a child of God never does face seriously his accountability in this way? and that few there are indeed who habituate themselves to such a reviewing again and again of benefits received, and of response invited to? In a loose way it may be easy to say, "We give what we can afford;" but who without such a reckoning with himself, seriously carried out, can undertake to say what he can afford? And how profitable this summoning before one, from time to time, of receipts and expenditure, in view of our stewardship! What sort of a steward is he who keeps no particular account?

The question must be thus raised, not merely, How much have I in hand out of which to lay by for Him to whom all belongs; but rather, How. How does He who looks upon all my life here as elsewhere view it all? Would I have Him the Auditor of all these accounts,-the income and the outgoing? What a time for these questions, the day of rest and quiet in His presence, the day of remembrance of my Lord's immeasurable outlay, giving Himself a ransom for my soul!

Seriously this is to be weighed and decided. Am I giving [not what others give, not what many would think right, or perhaps a great deal; but] to please Him really,-what with an honest, upright, and thankful heart I can put into His hand, and count upon Him to receive at mine?-a hand anointed with the blood of sacrifice?

Seriously,-not hastily; not under sudden im-pulse:"that there be no gatherings when I come." Yet how much the apostle's presence might quicken the spirit of giving among them! How much in the present day is known to depend upon the presence and exhortation of some one of recognized power and influence, and the oratorical appeal to human sensibilities? All this the apostle disclaims. For it he substitutes the power of the divine presence, and the deliberate purpose of heart derived from realization of God's wondrous grace. The common mode today shows, alas! wise calculation, if the amount of a collection from a promiscuous audience be the thing under consideration. We may reckon upon the stirring of man's emotional nature under outside influence brought to bear upon him. He to whom the earth belongs, and the fullness of it, values but the fruit of His own Spirit in the heart of him who is a worshiper in truth.

This laying by week by week is not, then, the response merely to some appeal pressingly urged, and affecting me emotionally; but the effect of recognized principle, and a heart weighing things in the presence of God. And this alone is the true guard against being betrayed by mere emotion, while it will leave us only the more open to be affected by every holy and right one.

The casual appeal, moreover, may easily find one really unprovided, if we have not, as a matter of principle, taken care to make provision.

Little by little, with constant and steady increase, we may easily come to possess what, except in this way, would be entirely beyond us. And this without exhaustion or distress. Men pay easily in regular, small installments what in one sum, apart from this, they would never have competency for. And the apostle has in mind, as he tells the Corinthians elsewhere, that they shall not be burdened. On the other hand, on this very account, how many small sums, thought little of because small, slip away from us in mere self-indulgences, which in the aggregate would be an amount to startle us, or, put into the treasury, might be a matter of how much thankfulness to God!

At the best, he who gives casually gives fitfully, and in general scantily enough, even though often he may be lavish. On the other hand, the store laid by from week to week soon makes itself felt as a call to wise economy. The Lord's fund is to be managed and dispensed in the sense of stewardship, which it will surely foster in the soul. It will not be then the question merely how to relieve some need which is at hand, and which looks perhaps on this account larger or more imperative than it really is, but how to put out what is intrusted to us in the best possible way. The wisdom that is from God will in this way come to be habitually sought more also, and surely found.

A store, such as we are speaking of, instead of being reserved for casual demands upon it, comes itself to demand channels for its outflow. Instead of merely being sought by the occasion, we should become seekers of it. And having tasted the joy of this, the heart becomes enlarged:"he that soweth bountifully shall reap also bountifully"- or, as the word is, "in blessing." Enlargement of heart will surely find enlarged opportunities. Active sympathies will become practical activities. And to him that is with God, God's power will manifest itself. This will be found a path on which if one has truly entered, there will be no turning back; one of those ways in which men go from strength to strength. But how few have entered it!

The tithes in Israel were not all that God demanded from His people of old. The rest of the sabbatic years was another large demand upon a faith in which He would have them practiced. Beside all this, there were various offerings upon special occasions, while voluntary offerings were encouraged beyond these. How poor, in comparison with all this, is in general the scale of giving among Christians! a mere fraction out of superfluity often, and in no recognized proportion at all! An uncertain, intermittent, dribbling out from a half-choked spring. The very freeness of the giving-"every man as he is disposed in his heart"-taken as a permission for withholding even! with no account made of what this speaks of the heart that can thus abuse God's precious grace; no consideration given to the balancing truth so solemnly urged by the apostle, " But this I say, he which soweth sparingly shall reap also sparingly,"-no care about the harvest in this field!

Brethren, has God need of us and our money ? " If I were hungry, I would not tell thee," He says. Yet this is of divine grace to the heart that God is attracting to Himself,-as to the woman of Samaria from the lips of love incarnate," Give Me to drink!" What answer shall the bride give to the voice of her Beloved when He seeks the pleasant fruits of His garden? Have we given Him His answer- fitting answer? Or when shall we give it Him?

My persuasion is, that if we would be really right with God, we must return to the apostolic rule in this matter. And also that in proportion as we do return heartily to it, we shall find how God has cared for us also, in seeking this from us. The voice of another dispensation still speaks to us:"Bring ye all the tithes into the storehouse, that there may be meat in My house; and prove Me now herewith, saith the Lord of Hosts, if I will not open the windows of heaven, and pour you out a blessing, that there shall not be room enough to receive it."

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

Present Things,

AS FORESHOWN IN THE BOOK OF REVELATION.

THE ADDRESSES TO THE CHURCHES, (Continued.)

Sardis:Sleeping Among the Dead. (Rev. 3:1-7.)

In the address to the Church at Thyatira, we have found the Lord announcing His coming, and bidding His saints wait to share with Him then the authority which the false church was assuming to have already. Thyatira presents us thus with a phase of things which goes on at least till the Lord comes for His saints; not, indeed, till the rising of the Sun of Righteousness upon the world, but until He comes as the Morning-Star, the herald of the day before the day appears.

In Sardis, we have, therefore, not a development of the Thyatira condition, but in many respects, as it is easy to see, what is in entire opposition to it. Thyatira, or popery, is the last phase of the church in its Jewish hierarchic and ritualistic growth; and although there has been all through a remnant different in spirit, and becoming finally more or less distinctly separate, even outwardly, as among the Waldensian and kindred bodies, yet up to this point there has been in fact a certain unity:it could claim to be, before the eyes of men at least, the Catholic church.

True, there had been already a separation; not now of others from it, but of this latest development itself from others. Rome had separated herself from the churches of the east-the Greek and Syrian churches, which remained in the condition we have traced at Pergamos. The Catholic church of the west had become the Roman Catholic. Yet, in character, the system was the same throughout; here more, there less, developed-that was all. But now we come to a new thing,-a breach and a new beginning. There is now in Sardis, not the claim of infallibility, not (as what is prominent) corruption of doctrine, not persecution of the saints, not the exercise of authority in the same sense,- none of these things characterize Sardis. What characterizes is sufficiently definite in the Lord's charge here:it is lack of spiritual power,-nay, in the body as such, of life itself. " Thou hast a name to live, and thou art dead."

Yet they had " received and heard," and are bidden to "hold fast" this, "and repent." Just as Ephesus had been, at the commencement of decline, called back to remember their first state, so here there has been a fresh beginning in God's grace, a recovery of His word and truth, a new beginning, from which (alas!) already there is decline. Again, they have not answered to His grace, and those things which remained among them from this revival were languishing and ready to die. And no wonder, when the charge against them is considered. The body addressed is a professing but unconverted one:with a name to live, it is dead.

There is but too little difficulty in applying this. A breach with Rome, a restoration of the Word of God, a fresh revival of truth, ending, however, in a system or systems characterized by a fatal defect of spiritual power, and churches with an unconverted membership, God's saints being scattered through the mass,-living themselves, but unable to vitalize it:such are the characteristics, easily to be read, of the national churches which sprang out of the Protestant Reformation.
Let it be well understood:it is not the Reformation itself that is depicted here. So far as it was this, the Reformation was the blessed work of God, and the Lord does not judge, and can never need to judge, His own work. He refers to what His grace had done for them-to what they had received and heard. Their responsibility was, to take heed to it, and hold it fast; and already they had failed in doing so. This was therefore the ground of judgment.

Notice how Christ is represented here. He has "the seven Spirits of God, and the seven stars." There is no failure in the fullness of spiritual energy on His part, no possibility of failure in His love and care for His people. Yet this power is not found practically in that which has sprung out of the seed sown by the Reformation. With more pretension than before, for they have now a name to live- name assumed to be in the book of life, the actual condition of the mass is that of death:not feebleness merely, but death.

Yet there are exceptions:not simply those alive, but still more-that have not defiled their garments; and of these the Lord speaks in the warmest terms , of praise. " They shall walk with Me in white, for they are worthy." Indeed, these are only "a few names." Others may be alive, but in a scene of death (and the defilement which results from contact with the dead is emphasized in the symbols of the Old Testament) the many of those alive even are defiled. But the mass are dead altogether- dead, with a name to live.

In His promise to the overcomer, the Lord further refers to this:"He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment, and I will not blot his name out of the book of life." The book of life is understood by the majority of people to be only in the Lord's hands, and all the names written in it to be written by Himself. Hence, those ignorant of the gospel stumble over this blotting out of the book of life, as supposing it is the blotting out of the names of those once saved. But there is no such thought here. There is not the slightest hint that those mentioned ever had life at all:they had a " name to live "-only a name.

On the contrary, you find in Rev. 13:8 the very opposite thought as to those " written," as we ought to read it, with the margin of the Revised Version, " from the foundation of the world in the book of the Lamb slain." There, this fact of their being written in the book from the foundation of the world is given as their security from being deceived by and worshiping the beast. Sovereign grace, that is, is their only and sufficient security.

Here, on the other hand, the book has got into man's hand, and he writes names in it as he pleases. It is a figure, of course, all through. The Lord, in His own time, corrects the book, and then He blots out the names of those to whom only the name belongs.

Now the " name to live " has a very special meaning in connection with Reformation times. The putting people's names into the book of life (while here on earth) is in no way characteristic of popery. Saints, for them, are only the dead, and not the living. The living she warns that " no man knows whether he is worthy of favor or hatred," and that it is not safe to be too sure. Her pardons, indulgences, sacraments, only show by their very multiplicity how difficult a thing she believes salvation is. Darkness is the essence of her system, and she thrives upon it.

On the other hand, the Reformation recovered the blessed gospel, and the word of reconciliation was preached with no uncertain sound. The doctrine of assurance was maintained with the utmost energy, and was stigmatized by the Council of Trent as " the vain confidence of the heretics." They even pushed it to an extreme, asserting (at least, some of the most prominent reformers did,) that assurance was of the very essence of saving faith itself, and that unless a man knew himself to be forgiven, he might be sure that he was not forgiven.

It is plain, then, that Protestantism put a man's name in the book of life in a way that popery did not at all.

Two immense things the Reformation gave us, which have never since been wholly lost,-an open Bible, in a language to be understood; and on the other hand, the gospel, at least in some of its most essential features. These are inestimable blessings, which would that we had hearts to value more.

Of the men, too, who were the dear and honored instruments in handing them down to us we cannot speak with enough affection and esteem. God honored them-how many!-taking them to Himself in fiery chariots, from which their voices come, thrilling us with the accents of the heaven opening | to receive them. Those who disparage them will have to hear, one day, their names confessed and honored by Him they served, as those of whom the world was not worthy.

But on the other hand, we must not make, as many are doing, the Reformation the measure of divine truth. They are not loyal to the Reformation really who accept any thing beside Scripture as the measure and test of this. The broken and conflicting voices which are heard the moment it is a question no longer of the gospel but of the church and its government, assure us that if here Scripture has spoken, the churches of the Reformation do not in the same sense convey to us its utterances. Lutherism is not Calvinism, the Church of England is not the Church of Geneva here. We must needs, whether we will or not, take Scripture to decide amid claims so conflicting; and when we do so, we find, with no great difficulty, that no one of these takes us back to the Church as it was at the beginning-the body of Christ, or the house! of living stones-at all.

Instead of this, as is well known, the churches of the Reformation were essentially national churches Not in every country, of course, able to attain the full ideal,-as in France, where Rome retained its
ascendancy by such cruel means,-but always of that pattern. Rome had herself prepared the way for this. The nations of Europe were already professedly Christian nations, and it was not to be expected that those who escaped from Jezebel's tyranny would give up their long hereditary claim to Christianity. The adoption of an evangelical creed did not and could not change the reality of what they were. They learned the formula, put their names upon the church-books as Protestants, learned to battle fiercely for the gospel of peace, and how could you deny their title to be Christians? Yet, as to the many, it was but the "name to live."

We must learn to distinguish two elements in the ecclesiastical revolution of those times. There was, first of all, a most mighty and most manifest work of God. The Scriptures, released from their imprisonment in a foreign tongue, began to speak to responsive human hearts with the decision and persuasiveness that the Word of God alone can have. Christ began once more to teach as one – having authority, and not as the scribes. The blessed doctrine of justification by faith every where brought souls held fast in bondage into liberty and the knowledge of a Saviour-God. The ecclesiastical yoke could not hold any longer those whom the truth had freed; and where Christ had become thus the soul's rightful Lord, the yoke of Rome was but the tyranny of Antichrist.

This was the first and most powerful element in Protestantism; not a political movement, but a movement of faith. Luther, solitary at Worms, in the presence of the mightiest political power in Europe, was the testimony that the work was of Him. His strength was manifest in human weakness. Had that place of weakness been retained all through,-had but God been allowed to show that power was of Him alone, how different would have been the result! And it is due to the foremost name of Protestantism to acknowledge that, as far as carnal weapons were concerned, Luther would have rightly refused them a place in a warfare which was God's. At any rate, to think of Protestantism as essentially a political movement is to do it glaring injustice, and to contradict the plainest facts.

On the other hand, we cannot ignore the political element which so soon entered into it. Rome had made the nations every where feel the iron hand of her despotism, and the national reaction against her was the natural result of her intolerable and insolent oppression. The notorious wickedness of her chiefs had long destroyed all real respect. Her power stood now in an excessive and degrading superstition. She lived upon men's vices and their fears; and where the light fell and removed the darkness, the fears were removed also, where the vices were not. Men learned to look upon the power they had cringed to with contrary feelings, deep in proportion to their depth before. Their interests, political and otherwise, coincided with the spiritual movement which divine power had produced. Soldiers, politicians, governments, made common cause with the men of faith. It was hard not to welcome such apparently God-sent allies, when on every side persecution raged. The movement increased in external power and importance, but its character was in just that proportion lowered and perverted.

And now there was need of defined principles to give cohesion to elements which the Spirit of God no longer sufficed to bind together. Outside, there was the pressure of Rome, a compact and immensely powerful body, armed, drilled, and intensely hostile. Organization was soon a necessity; of what or whom? To proclaim the true Church would have been to cast off their allies, to insure the continuance of persecution and reproach, to leave Rome unchecked, triumphant, I do not say that the true thought of the Church ever dawned upon them; but I do say that their alliance with the world was a sure means of hindering their seeing it. There were formed instead national churches, with evangelical creeds, used as pieces of state-craft, and political power to back them, not divine.

ft is simple enough, that if a creed had been a necessity for His Church, the wisdom of God could easily have given us an infallible one, and His love could not have failed to do so. On the contrary, He has given us that which He testifies to as able to furnish the man of God thoroughly unto all good works, but which people feel at once to be as different from a creed as can be.

Why do people want a creed ? As something more plainly and easily read than Scripture. Scripture is infinite:the need must be definite. Of Scripture, every one makes what he likes; what is wanted is something different-something that shall not be capable of two meanings, plain to all-spiritual and unspiritual, Church and world alike.

It has been before contended that Scripture is clearer, plainer really, than any word of man; and so indeed it is; beside being, in divine wisdom, written so as to meet, as nothing else can meet, with perfect foresight of the future, all the thoughts of men. It is thus the only sufficient guard and protection against heresy to the end of time. And yet it is no contradiction to this to own that there is some truth from the point of view taken by those who contend for this, between the creed and Scripture.

From their point of view. For the apostle's words limit us somewhat when we speak of the intelligibility of Scripture. "All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness,"-but for what?-"that the man or God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works."

So that Scripture, profitable for doctrine as it is, does need a certain state of soul for its proper apprehension. It needs not indeed great attainments, human learning, deep research,-although all these have their use, and are not despised by it; but it absolutely requires (what may be found in the lowest and poorest just as well,) devotedness-that we be God's men:what by possession and profession all Christians are, but alas! not what all, even of true Christians, always practically are. This is the single eye, which we must have for the body to be full of light.

But this being so, we can easily see that the Bible is not just the book for a court of law, and it is not the suited thing for a national creed. The truth is not meant to be accessible to the merely natural mind. Nay, ''the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God; for they are foolishness unto him; neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned."The Bible is not crystalized for us into doctrines, but it’s truths are exhibited and only known as living realities to those who are in the true sense alive. It is so essentially unlike a creed, that we may be assured that nothing like a creed was in God's design. He did not mean to give what might serve as a motto for political partisanship, or a banner for any other than spiritual warfare.

Nationalism, then,-the union of the living and the dead-was never in His mind. He meant spirituality to be a first necessity, and an absolute one, for the discernment of His thoughts:and men, when they substitute in this respect the blessed word of God for their plainer creed, show really that herein they are at cross purposes with Him.

" Thou hast a name that thou livest, and art dead,'' is the exact moral description, as it is the plain condemnation of nationalism. Of more this, no doubt, but still of this. It is not the idea of the Church of God at all, but a Christianized world, with Christians scattered through it:a place so defiling, that but few indeed can keep their garments undefiled. Connected with the truth, as popery is not, such a system betrays the truth which it professedly upholds. The character of the last days is developed by it:"Men shall be lovers of their own selves, covetous, proud, blasphemers," the retaining all that is natural to them under the garb of Christianity; "having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof."The direct command is, "From such, turn away."

This is the effect of popularized truth,-popularized as God never meant His truth to be. Of course this is to be distinguished from the preaching of His truth, than which nothing assuredly is more in accordance with His mind. His gospel is to go forth to every creature, and the blessings of an open Bible we could scarcely exaggerate. But by "popularized truth" is meant, what we have already been speaking of, truth made into a party badge, so as to be accepted by those with whom Christ is not; for He was never really popular, and still is not.
Popularized truth means, truth that has lost its power. It may be that for which martyrs died, and which when first given of God, or when afresh given, was full of quickening power. Popularized, it is so far lifeless. No exercise of soul in receiving it; no cross in professing it; men have got from their fathers what their fathers got from God:to their fathers it was shame, to them it is honor. There is nothing to test conscience, nothing to make them ask, Dare I take this without human sanction to commend-nay, in the face of all human discountenance? Yet only thus have we got it truly from God. The martyrs they talk of took it thus and suffered for it:they take it from their fathers-a principle which would have condemned the martyrs; and they take it without the slightest thought of being martyrs.

Truth is proclaimed as powerless by the unholy lives of its professors, while unholiness is recommended by the practice of those who are orthodox as to truth. And thus truth tends to die out of itself, as valueless, remaining all the while in the national creed, embalmed as a memorial of the past. " Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain, which are ready to die; for I have not found thy works perfect before God." This has been long experienced with regard to all national systems too manifestly to need more than a bare allusion.

It is a system designedly adapted to worldly minds, and to be worked by political machinery. The Word of God is no necessity to it, except, it may be, to furnish a table of lessons; for the authoritative standard is the creed. The Spirit of God is not necessary to it; for colleges can manufacture preachers, and ecclesiastics ordain and send them forth apart from this. Christians are not necessary to it; they are too uncertain as a constituent part of a nation or its government to be capable of being reckoned on; nor is there any means of certainly determining who they are. A sacrament,- baptism or the Lord's supper,-takes here the place of less manageable tests.

And the grieved and insulted Spirit may be besought to breathe upon the lifeless mass, and fill the sails of the ship of state. But He must keep within the bounds prescribed by ritual, hierarchy, and parliament, or He will be treated as schismatical. And it must be remarked how often in this case a schism springs out of a large and manifest revival. Souls brought near to God, and made to feel the value of His Word, are not made thereby the more docile servants of a state-religion. The new wine will not be held in the old bottles. Statesmen are not thus favorable to such fresh enthusiasm, and no wonder:it divides the house which it is to their interest to keep as one.

(To be continued.)

  Author: Frederick W. Grant         Publication: Help and Food

'the Mysteries Of The Kingdom Of Heaven,”

4. THE BREADTH OF THE KINGDOM.

There is no need to produce further proof that the kingdom covers the whole profession of Christianity. A glance at the parables should settle this. But we have to see yet that it goes beyond even what we can properly call profession; that discipleship goes beyond this; the kingdom being indeed exactly commensurate with this last,-ideally, with the whole of the baptized. And here I am reminded that in what I shall have to say I must speak contrary to the convictions of many beloved brethren, and seem, perhaps, even in speaking, to make light of these. I do not in the least, but sympathize fully with the strength of their feelings regarding the dishonor done to Christ, and the injury done to men's souls by views widely current as to baptism. Babylon the great has been built up by the use of bricks for stones, and slime for mortar,-the substitution of human manufacture for divine creation,-of a "sacramental host, of God's elect" for those "baptized by one Spirit into one body." And in the hands of these builders baptism has been made to build up a "great house " with vessels to dishonor, from which we are called to purge ourselves if we would be "vessels unto honor" (2 Tim. 2:20, 21). Protest against this false ritualistic system can hardly go too far or be too strongly maintained.

The baptism of water has been confounded with the baptism of the Holy Ghost, and infants have been supposed to be regenerated by it, and made partakers of a life that gave no sign, and bore no fruit for God, and but deluded those who trusted in it. Then, as they could not say that every one so baptized was fit for heaven, they had to send a large part of these man-made children of God to hell, and most of the rest to purgatory to be purified by fire there. While yet, without this baptismal regeneration, not even a little babe could go to heaven.

The fundamental error here is twofold:first, in confounding, as already said, the natural and the spiritual spheres. Water cannot cleanse a soul, nor impart spiritual life. It may be "an outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace," but not "a means whereby we receive the same." Secondly, in confounding heaven and the kingdom of heaven, or again, the kingdom of heaven and the Church. And from these last two, Protestantism has not in general, any more than Rome, escaped. The distinction between the two leaves a place of privilege and conditional blessing, which is not the Church, and yet which is not the world either, save as it is untrue to its character, and the principles of the world may leaven it. And this is what Scripture attests would happen, and history shows has happened.

But man's unbelief cannot make the faithfulness of God without effect. The kingdom of heaven, with its message of peace and reconciliation, remains the testimony of a love which goes out to all, and would gather in to God wherever the will of man is not hardening itself in opposition. We do not, in fact, in Scripture meet with that long delay of baptism, and that preparation of catechumens, which came in as baptism itself came to be looked upon as reception into the Church, and the symbol of the full Christian state. In the New Testament the catechumens were inside, not outside, the sphere of discipleship. Instead of being kept waiting at the threshold, the applicants were met with a generous and unsuspecting welcome. Three thousand were baptized on the day of Pentecost:how much preliminary instruction had they? And if, as at Samaria, a Simon Magus were received, with his heart not right in the sight of God, his reception had not defiled those tender arms of mercy which had been flung around him, and from which he had, as it were, to burst, to pursue the headlong path to everlasting ruin. I say, it is evident upon the face of Scripture, that baptism was not then fenced round, as many now would fence it round. It was a door, not carelessly, but readily and with a full heart, opened to the applicant for it. No question of Christ's heart, no "if thou wilt" was to be permitted.

But notice also, no hint of the Church of God is connected with this, its occurrence even in Acts 2:47 in the common version being a copyist's error. The doctrine of the Church was revealed to Paul much later, and he who "received of the Lord" (i Cor. 11:23), as to the institution of the Supper, had no commission to baptize (chap. 1:17). In the first is involved the question of communion; in the second, the responsibility is only individual.

This wider character of the kingdom we see further in our Lord's words as to the little children brought to Him. "Suffer the little children to come unto Me, and forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven," are words which become very plain when we have seen what the kingdom is. In these little ones is no resisting will, and divine love would lay hold upon them for its own. Once see that the kingdom is not heaven, but a sphere of discipleship on earth, you can no more stumble at the thought of baptizing them than of taking them into your Sunday-schools. They belong, the Lord says, to His school at all times, and here He would meet them, put His hands on them, and bless them, as when on earth He did. The great arms of the Redeemer will not wait even for their final choice of Him to be made manifest, but would win them, prevail upon them by their tender clasp, mark them as His in His will, whatever even in the end may be their own. How precious is this thought of His, which then He turns to us to help carry out:"Bring them up," He says, "in the nurture and admonition of the Lord" (Eph. 6:4).

They are His disciples, taken into His school, and to be brought up for Him. And who would, as such, reject them? Is it not because of the superstition which has been connected with the thought, and the confusion between the kingdom and the Church, that so many now reject the baptism of infants as a popish figment, while they would do for them gladly the very thing which baptism implies, and rightly think it any thing but popish?

Let them remember that baptism is not to take them to heaven as a charm, but to mark them as belonging to Christ's school on earth; that, as far as it goes, it is "baptism unto death" not life; burial, the putting the dead in death, where they belong; but in that touching confession of their need, baptizing them " unto Christ," " to His death," looking for all to come to them, not from the water, but from Christ, through His work for them, which we thus own. Find me in this one shred of popery or superstition, any one that will. It is only the sweet and suited, open and apparent action of One who says in it what He says of old:" Suffer the little children to come unto Me, and forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven":words that charm our hearts, beloved brethren, and command our allegiance.

This character of the kingdom, then, is a beautiful one, that it represents to us the very character of Him who is on the throne of it,-the grace that casts out none that come, that would fain receive all, even those who break away at last from its shelter. Yes, such is the love of Jesus; and to me, while I own the difference of the dispensation, and do not want to press uncertain analogies, yet it seems only the more suited that He, who in the days of law recognized the children of His people in the mark of circumcision, should now, in the grace that is come in with Christianity, not leave them without some corresponding, mark. I am assured He has not done so ; and the confusion and evil in His kingdom cannot affect the grace of it, or make it less certain that His kingdom it is. And when the limit of His patience has been reached, love it will be still that will act, the rod of iron will be the Shepherd's rod.

But we must now consider more attentively the distinction between the kingdom and the Church.

( To be continued.")

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

Present Things, As Foreshown In The Book Of Revelation. (continued.)

HE ADDRESSES TO THE CHURCHES, Laodicea:What Brings the Time of Christ's Patience to an End. (Rev. 3:14-22.)

We come now to the solemn close of these addresses, the Lord's last word to the churches; and it is very striking that we come to that close here, just after that epistle to Philadelphia, in which we have seen recognized a certain real return of heart to Christ, and a true revival by His Word and Spirit. Now, there are, on the contrary, procrastination and collapse:and the most serious thing is that these are the infallible signs of the failure on the part of Philadelphia itself. Laodicea springs out of Philadelphia. The blessing there leads to the judgment here.

In the states of the professing church which these addresses have already pictured, there is not only historical succession, but development. Even Protestantism sprang out of the bosom of Romanism, as Philadelphia out of Protestantism. In neither case is the one absorbed into the other, however. Romanism continues, outside the Reformation. The signs of a remnant are unmistakable in Philadelphia. Moreover, "overcomers" are implied in each case until the coming of the Lord. In Thyatira, thus, they are exhorted to "hold fast till I come; and he that overcometh, and keepeth My works unto the end, to him will I give power over the nations." In Sardis, " If therefore thou shalt
not watch, I will come upon thee as a thief." In Philadelphia, " I come quickly." In this way, Protestantism, springing out of Romanism, runs henceforth side by side with it to the end. Philadelphia springs out of Protestantism, and similarly accompanies it. And so Laodicea, we may conclude, springs out of Philadelphia, and runs its course parallel with the rest.

But there is more positive proof. For if in Sardis there has been the absolute coldness of death, in Philadelphia, the glow of revival, in Laodicea there is the fatal lukewarmness which shows at once the effect (and the limited effect) of one upon another. And this is why the cold of Sardis itself is preferable to the lukewarmness of Laodicea. All God's grace has been spent in vain upon it.

Laodicea gives us, then, the failure of Protestantism, as Thyatira of that which assumes to be the Catholic Church. It is the complete failure of Christendom the second time; and now, in the full light of an open Bible, and after repeated intervention of God in wide-spread and protracted revival and blessing. The full end of patience has at last been reached, and the time to display also the results of the divine work, which no failure or opposition of man can in any wise hinder.

But before entering upon the details of this address to Laodicea, let us inquire as to the name itself. It was given to a city by Antiochus II., after his enlargement of it, in honor of his wife Laodice, and is a compound of two words-laos, "people,"and dike. "Dike" is given by the dictionaries as having the three meanings, closely connected together, (i) of "manner, custom, usage;" (2) of " right;" (3) of " requirement," and so " vengeance," punitive justice. We have thus three possible meanings:"custom of the people," "people's right," "judgment of the people." And these three things have equally plain and solemn connection with one another.

For it is indeed the "people's custom" that is here unfolded. If under popery it is rather the usurpation of the leaders that is the question, in Protestantism, with its open Bible, the people are tested as never before. The earliest ages of Christianity, dependent upon the toilsome labor of copyists for the multiplication of copies of the Word, had in no wise the privileges of which the Reformation, with its providentially furnished printing-press, at once came into possession. Hence, also, responsibilities as great, and brought home to the door of every man. People may still be ignorant, but it is now assuredly a willing ignorance. They may still seek to cast responsibility upon others, and blindly follow still leaders as blind, but this has necessarily now another character from what it had before. Hence it is the people who are now being manifested,-their way which is being made apparent; and judgment, however delayed, must at last follow with proportional energy. Thus two significant applications of this word "Laodicea" are made evident.

But again, and connected with this, there is a feature of the last days which Scripture puts prominently forward,-the self-assertion which indeed on man's part has never been lacking, but which now pervades, in a manner not before seen, the masses of the population. That Protestantism has favored this, is one of the reproaches of the Romanists. And it is undeniably true that in one
sense it has favored it. The breaking of ecclesiastical yokes,-the yoke of a tyranny more prostrating than any other,-with that awaking of the mind of man which is ever found where the light of the Word of God has penetrated,-has produced a state of things in which, if Christ's yoke be not accepted, man's will assuredly assert itself as never before. And so it has proved; and so Scripture long before declared that it would be. " Laodicea," in its third sense, as "people's right" has become, morally, spiritually, and politically also, the watchword of the times. On the one hand, there is an immense march of civilization, a predicted running to and fro, and increase of knowledge; on the other, an uprise of what threatens civilization, and is ominous of an approaching end of the whole state.

"People's right!" The rights of the masses! and which the masses themselves mean to define and pronounce upon. Here is that condition of things which Hobbes, more than two centuries since, declared to be the national condition, and which he rightly said meant universal war. For who is to judge as to these conflicting interests? and who is to enforce the judgment? Class will disagree with class,-nay,.individual with individual:every man's hand will be against his brother; might will make right upon a scale the world has never seen, until out of this surging sea a power rises strong enough to command once more. Then they that will be lords shall have a lord, and they that will not receive Christ shall have Antichrist. So the Word of God declares. For this ominous watchword, "people's rights," in the end of centuries of divine long-suffering, is a terrible claim in the ears of a God, strong, if yet so patient, and who is provoked every day.

It is a claim which denies the fall, and the sentence confirmed by countless individual sins,-the claim of a world which has refused and crucified the Son of God come into it in simplest loving mercy;-which would take the earth out of its Maker's hand, and enrich itself at His cost and to His dishonor. What wonder if they should quarrel over the spoils of victory, and the nations be quaking, as they are, over the success of their policy of liberty and equal rights? When democracy meant only the curbing of the despotic power of rulers, when it meant still respect for wealth and rank, and law and order, they could rejoice over it, and cite it as the evidence of morally improved times. Arbitrary power only was to be restrained:there was to be equal justice, and quietness and assurance as the effect of righteousness. Certainly the abuse of power had been great enough to provoke reprisals, and make the downfall of absolutism an apparent real advancement. But man was and is the same; and the mistake has been ever to suppose that alterations of this kind could really heal or touch a moral state which was the essence of the trouble. The leprosy, skinned over here, would only break out elsewhere, for it was deeper than the surface,-in the blood, in the vitals of humanity itself.

Who can say where the movement for men's rights shall stop? If they be rights, must it not be unrighteousness to stop any where? Who can say to the restless, resistless, surge of the sea, Come no further! here shall thy waves be stayed? There were, there are, most real and gigantic evils,-tyrannies which no form of government yet devised has taken into account, or probably can take. What does every man's right to his own imply? What is " his own "? How can you take from wealth the power which wealth implies? or allow power without allowing the abuse of it? Settle all inequalities, make one general plain of all the mountains upon earth, you have stopped the fertilizing rivers also which the mountains roll over the plains and in the valleys which you deprecate, but for whose benefit, spite of all, they rise.

Rights! what scale have you of rights? Listen to the voices from a lower level than you desire, which will interpret for you, and enforce their interpretation,-socialism, communism, nihilism,- dread names, not merely for the monarch, but for the man of property also, and for the law-abiding citizen. People's rights are already in terrible conflict with one another, and in their name how many wrongs may be inflicted yet! This Laodicea of politics is destined to be the rock upon which all governmental reform will end in anarchy and chaos. He who can read the great typical book of nature may read the scriptural presages upon a scroll written with lamentation and mourning and woe:"And there shall be signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in the stars; and upon the earth, distress of nations, with perplexity; the sea and the waves roaring; men's hearts failing them for fear, and for looking after those things which are coming upon the earth:for the powers of the heavens shall be shaken" (Luke 21:25, 26).

But the removal of the things that can be shaken will only make way for a kingdom, not such as they anticipate, absolute beyond all the tyrannies of old, a "rod of iron," which shall break as potsherds all the opposing powers of man, yet be the shepherd's rod under which the poor of the flock will lie down at last in peace, and none shall make them afraid. How refreshing to turn from what has been engaging us to contemplate such a rule as the world has never seen!

" He shall judge Thy people with righteousness, and Thy poor with judgment. The mountains shall bring peace to the people, and the little hills by righteousness. He shall judge the poor of the people; He shall save the children of the needy, and break in pieces the oppressor. … In His days shall the righteous flourish, and abundance of peace as long as the moon endureth. He shall have dominion also from sea to sea, and from the river to the ends of the earth. All kings shall fall down before Him; all nations shall serve Him" (Ps. 72:2-4, 7,8, II).

But, it may be objected, this is altogether political:what has this to do with Laodicea as a condition of the churches ? It would have little indeed to do with it if only the Church realized its separation from the world. As it is, it has very much indeed to do,-so much, that in Christendom a political Laodicea involves, as a matter of course, an ecclesiastical one. The world and the Church are so allied, so mingled, so permeate each other now, that ideally alone will they endure separation. And as a matter of fact, "people's rights" has become scarcely less an ecclesiastical than a political watchword. In this sphere, the masses are rising up against the long rule of their spiritual leaders, and claiming their rights at their hands. The oldest and best established oligarchies are accepting popular methods and forms upon all sides. The few must yield to the many. They choose their pastors as they choose their lawyer or their doctor, and insist upon having what they pay for. What can be a better "right" than that? Thus, however, it is clear, they "heap to themselves teachers," if you must not assume that they have "itching ears." But, in truth, the ear it is that is largely consulted; and necessarily so, where the very idea at the bottom is a commercial equivalent, and popular majorities rule, as quantity instead of quality. Even in the Church, and at its best, most spiritual have never been the larger number. How much less in churches demoralized by heterogeneous mixture, competing for power and popularity!

Think of it, however, as we may, there is no doubt that, in church as well as state, "liberal" thoughts are prevailing,-democratic forms are succeeding to the old aristocratic ones. And here certainly Philadelphia has prepared the way for Laodicea. Distinctive priesthood, and the vested rights of clerisy, have in measure yielded to the free evangelization going on, and the equality of Christian brotherhood, and it is impossible not to rejoice that this should be so. But yet who can doubt that the overthrow, such as it is, of these ecclesiastical superstitions has favored claims that are no more of God than they? The laity may dispossess the clergy, and dominion pass from one class to another without reverting to the hands to which it really belongs. Christ is alone Master, not clergy, and not people. Ministers are indeed servants, as the very name imports, yet not servants of men,-a thing against which the apostle so vehemently contends. " Ye are bought with a price; be ye not the servants of men:if I yet pleased men, I should not be the servant of Christ." Thus these two things are in essential opposition. Christ needs to be in His true place,-a thing which so marks Philadelphia, but from which Laodicea excludes Him as does Thyatira. Bring Christ in, and the ministers are His servants. Bring Christ in, and the people are His people. His service, on the part of all alike, is true and equal freedom at once to all.

But the spiritual phase of Laodicea we are now to follow. May we do it honestly, with hearts open to receive rebuke; remembering that, not ecclesiastical place, but spirit, is in question. It is an old deceit to pride one's self on possession of the truth, while yet the sanctification by the truth is unknown. And this indeed makes a large part of the character of what is before us.

The Lord presents Himself here as the One who amid the general failure is " the Amen, the faithful and true witness:" He has not failed.

He is the Amen:"For the Son of God, Jesus Christ," says the apostle, " who was preached among you by us, even by me and Sylvanus and Timotheus, was not yea and nay, but in Him was yea. For all the promises of God in Him are yea, and in Him Amen, to the glory of God by us" (2 Cor. 1:19, 20). No uncertainty, no doubtfulness, is there in Christ or His Word. He is always simple, positive " Yea," speaking one thing, absolutely to be depended on. If we have but a word of His, it is a blessed reality, given us in God's infinite love, which we may rest our souls on for eternity, and which can never fail us. This is a resource which the denial of verbal inspiration would completely take from us; but His own assurance is, "Scripture cannot be broken" (Jno. 10:35). If it be a question, as in the case which the Lord is speaking of here, of but a title applied by an inspired writer to a certain class of men, there must be perfect suitability and divine wisdom in the application. " If he called them gods to whom the word of God came, and Scripture cannot be broken." How precious is this assurance! Coming where it does, is it not itself a significant warning, this claim of His as "the Amen, the faithful and true Witness" to such a generation as the present? Does He not in it challenge the unbelief so common all around us?
But this presentation of Himself as a true and faithful Witness is in contrast with the failure of the Church, which has been any thing but that. He is just about to remove the candlestick because it has been unfaithful and untrue. But His people's shortcoming is not His own. Infidelity may seek to justify itself by the failure of Christians; and even Christians, alas! are almost capable of taking it as in some sort a reflection upon Himself. But "if we are unfaithful, he abideth faithful," as the Rev. Ver. rightly puts it now (2 Tim. 2:13). And He is just ready to rise up and bring in that day in which, with the revelation of all things, this faithfulness of His will appear abundantly. In the general wreck, this only now remains to Him.

He proclaims Himself with this:"The Beginning of the creation of God." The old creation, spoiled by sin, is passing away; its history is nearly completed; its judgment has been long since pronounced in the cross, and in Christ risen from the dead is begun all that God owns as really His,- first and always in His thought, and for which the ruin of the old only prepared the way.

When the Psalmist lifted up his eyes to heaven, and in view of God's glorious handiwork there exclaims, "What is man, that Thou art mindful of him? or the son of man, that Thou visitest him?" the answer is, " Thou hast made him a little lower than the angels; thou hast crowned him with glory and honor; Thou madest him to have dominion over the works of Thy hands; Thou hast put all things in subjection under his feet." But of whom is he speaking? As the apostle in the second of Hebrews assures us, not of the first, but of the Second Man. " We see Jesus, who was made a little lower than the angels for the suffering of death, crowned with glory and honor." It is Christ in whom the true ideal of man is realized, and of whom the first Adam was but the fleeting image, and in many respects the contrast.

Now in Laodicea, with Christ outside, it cannot be the new creation in which their riches are. Yet they say they are rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing. Thus there are things which are gain to them which they have not counted loss for Christ.

It is an exceedingly solemn thing that the very truth which with all its grace judges and sets aside man most thoroughly is the very truth which he is prone to take and use for the purpose of self-gratulation. Take the law:God gave it "that every mouth might be stopped, and all the world become guilty before God" (Rom. 3:19). But how has man used, and how is he using it? Always to establish his own righteousness by it. The large part of the Christian world, so called, to-day is taking the "strength of sin" (i Cor. 15:56) to accomplish holiness by it, and are taking salvation itself to be, "not" indeed "by the merit of works, but" yet "by works as a condition."

So, exactly, with Christianity:God has brought in the truth of new creation, the world before Him lying under death and judgment. Yet man takes the blessed truth of Christianity to patch up the world with it, and make it better if he can. And in the very presence of the ruin and break-up of things on every side, men are vaunting the success of the effort. On the eve of judgment, they are fulfilling the Scripture-portents of such a time by their smooth auguries of prosperity and peace.

No doubt God's Spirit is really and largely working; but His end and man's thought are diverse, in that, while He is converting souls to " deliver them out of this present evil world," man's thought is an improved world, a Christian world:the effect of which is, to amalgamate Christians and the world, and spoil the scriptural character of Christianity altogether.
But in these last days God has given many to recognize the truth of the Word as to this. He has revived the truth of new creation, and revealed to us the practical and fruitful consequences which result from a place in Christ, where He is, in the heavens. But the question for us is, What are we doing, then, with the truth we recognize? Shall we talk of being in Christ a new creation, old things passed away, and all things become new, and yet cling to what has in it all the moral elements that make up the world-"the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life"? Is it theory with us, or practical reality, to have " put on the new man, who is renewed in knowledge after the image of Him that created him:where there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision, barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free; but Christ is ALL, and in all"? Has the Lord need to appeal to us as the One who is " the Beginning of the creation of God"? If so, is not Laodiceanism with us in that proportion?

To Laodicea, as to the rest, He says, " I know thy works" Here is the test,-the only true one. " I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot:I would that thou wert cold or hot. So, then, because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spew thee out of My mouth." This is the certain and near end of professing Christendom. Of course He will not spew His own beloved people out of His mouth. He must take these first of all to Himself before He can reject the whole mass as nauseous. And we have already seen, in the address to Philadelphia, that the Lord tells them He will keep them out of the hour of temptation which shall come upon all the world:-not merely out of the temptation; He might hide them in the desert so, but out of the hour of it. For this, He must take them out of the world altogether. And that is what the " I come quickly " connected with this also intimates.

Here, then, we have the brief, solemn pause before the Lord takes His people to Himself. He must do this before the professing body can be spewed out of His mouth. He cannot so reject even the poorest, weakest, most wayward of His own. And it is important to insist upon this, because there is abroad a view according to which only a class of better than ordinary Christians will be taken up when the Lord comes, while the rest will be left upon earth to go through the tribulation which follows this, when the earth is enduring the vials of His wrath. They point to the promise to Philadelphia as in this way the promise to a special class; and the ten virgins of our Lord's parable they maintain to be all Christians, as they bring forward the fact of their being "virgins" to prove;- only foolish ones, unwatchful and unready, with indeed the oil of the Spirit in their lamps, but no extra supply in their " vessels." Thus their lamps, which had been burning, cease to burn at last, and the fresh supply of oil they get is obtained too late for admission to the marriage. The Lord rejects them only as the bride:they lose their place in this, and are shut out to be purified by tribulation, and made ready for the kingdom afterward.

But how many precious realities must be denied in order to hold this view! Is it our faithfulness, then, that gives us a place among those who are admitted to the dignity of the bride of Christ? Is the Lord when He comes indeed going to discriminate in this way between less and more faithfulness? -between ordinary and extraordinary Christians? What an engine is this for turning the blessed and purifying hope into a means of self-occupation and despair! If things are so, where is the line of acceptance to be drawn? and on what side of it are we? Is my joyful expectation of this blessed time to be based on the belief in my own superiority to many of my brethren? What comfortable Pharisaism, or what legal distress must such a view involve!
If true, why should such a discrimination be made between the living saints alone? Why should
it not equally affect the dead? And then, is there to be a purgatory to purify these?

As to Scripture, the support it gives to any such view is only apparent, and results from an interpretation of single passages, which is at issue with its whole doctrinal teaching. The coming of the Lord to remove His saints is not in Scripture ever connected even with our responsibilities and their adjudication, but with the fulfillment of the hope with which grace has inspired us. Our responsibilities and the reward of our works are connected with that which is called the "appearing" or "manifestation" or "revelation of Christ,"-His coming with His saints, not for them. At the door of the Father's house to which He welcomes us when He comes, no sentry stands, no challenge is required. We go into it as purged by the precious blood of Christ, and in Christ. Already are we not only entitled, but " meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light."

When He comes to the world, and His people take their places with Him as associated with Him in government, then dignities, honors, rewards of work, will find their place. It will be " Have thou authority over ten"-"be thou also over five cities." But salvation, righteousness, the child's place with the Father, membership of the body of Christ, our relationship to Christ as His bride,-nay, even our being kings and priests unto His God and Father, are things which, as they are not gained, so they are not lost by any work of ours at all. Christ has procured them for us, and grace bestows them,- grace, and grace alone.

When, therefore, the Lord descends from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel and
the trump of God, is there discrimination among those in Christ?-of the dead who shall be raised? of the living who shall be changed? Nay, but the " dead in Christ shall rise first, then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air; so shall we be ever with the Lord." Blessed words! how they pierce and scatter the chilling fogs of legalism, and make the "blessed hope," not a means of sorest perplexity and doubt, but hope indeed!

Nor are the passages which these writers build upon in contradiction with this at all. The promise to the overcomer at Philadelphia is one of a class which, as the eye runs over them throughout these apocalyptic addresses, show plainly that they apply more or less to every true believer. Take the promise to him at Ephesus, and ask, Will any believer not "eat of the tree of life which is in the midst of the paradise of God"? Take that to Smyrna, and ask, Will any " be hurt of the second death"? And so on through the remainder. Their special significance in relation to the overcomer in the cases there pointed out is not in the least diminished by their general application to all believers.

Again, as to the ten virgins, it is a mistake to suppose that in that character (according to the par-able,) Christians are represented as espoused to Christ at all. Those who go forth to meet the bridegroom are not the bride; and to make them this, disjoints the parable. According to the whole tenor of the prophecy in these chapters, the Jewish people and the earth are in the foreground, and the parable of the virgins only parenthetically brings in the connection of Christians with these.
According to the common language of the Old-Testament prophets, the Lord is coming to take a Jewish bride; and on His way to do this, His people of the present time are called up to meet Him and return with Him. So much is implied in the expression in the Greek. It is thus when He is come to earth that the foolish virgins are rejected, and cast out of His kingdom altogether. The parable is a parable of the kingdom; and the kingdom, in all the parables, speaks of earth, not heaven, and of the whole field of profession. "Virgins," "servants," and the like titles, merely intimate responsible profession, not necessarily the truth of it. He was a servant who had laid up his lord's money in a napkin, and never really served at all. He was a servant, but a wicked one; and so with these "foolish" virgins.

Oil they are explicitly stated not to have; and though their lamps are only represented as "going out," when the cry is raised, "Behold, the bridegroom!" this is the constant style of these parables, in which the inner thoughts of the soul are mirrored and exposed, not dogmatic truth taught. In their own imaginations, the Pharisees were the "ninety and nine just persons who need no repentance; "not in dogmatic reality. Moreover, the Lord's words of rejection, " I know you not," are decisive from One who " knoweth them that are His," and can never disown them.

No, He cannot spew His own out of His mouth, but must have them with Him out of the world before the first drops of the storm of judgment fall. Even then it will be made manifest, before He rejects the public professing body, that they have on their part rejected Him. Christendom ends in
open apostasy. The day of the Lord will not come except there come a falling away first, and the man of sin be revealed. Popery, evil as it is, and anti-christian too, is not the last evil, nor the worst. It is the sinful woman, not the man. It has been revealed over three hundred years as this, and the day of the Lord is not yet come. The Antichrist will deny the Father and the Son alike.

(To be continued.)
"THE MYSTERIES OF THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN."-186

I. WHAT THE KINGDOM IS.

'There is perhaps no term in Scripture so largely used and so little understood as that of "the kingdom of heaven." Yet its importance must be (in some measure at least,) proportionate to the frequency of its use. It is only, indeed, one book-the gospel of Matthew,-in which it is found, though there thirty-one times; but the kindred expression, " the kingdom of God," is used much more extensively, and in some parables in other gospels is found in its stead. Taken together, these expressions have a very large place in the New Testament, and their interpretation will correspondingly affect a great deal of Scripture. I propose, therefore, a serious examination of the doctrine of the kingdom as covered by these terms, and to inquire as to the practical bearing of the doctrine also, which assuredly there must be, for "all Scripture is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness."

"The kingdom of heaven" is a New-Testament term, then; but it has its roots in the Old Testament. The idea is found in the germ in Daniel, in the prophet's words to Nebuchadnezzar, who, effectually humbled by his durance among the beasts, should learn by it that "the heavens do rule" (chap. 4:26). This is expanded afterward into the thought that "the Most High ruleth in the kingdom of men, and giveth it to whomsoever He will" (5:32). Here we have but the idea, however,-the rule of God, supreme necessarily over men. Here there is no thought of a special, limited, dispensational kingdom. This " dominion," as the king himself says, "is an everlasting dominion, and His kingdom is from generation to generation " (5:34).

But the book of Daniel carries us further than this in the direction we are seeking. Historically and prophetically both, it has for its scope "the times of the Gentiles," of which the Lord speaks (Luke 21:24),-that is, of Gentile supremacy over Israel. But this is the consequence of her sin, and of God's controversy with her, and it means the interruption of His own dwelling in her midst, as of old He did, and as He yet will do. For Jerusalem shall yet be, saith the Lord, "the place of My throne, and the place of the soles of My feet, where I will dwell in the midst of the children of Israel forever." (Ezek. 43:7.)

The "place of His throne" had been given up before Nebuchadnezzar could lay waste the city and the temple, and a notable change, therefore, is found in the Old-Testament books which give us the history of that solemn and important time. The ark had been the symbolic throne of Him who "sitteth between the cherubim;" and as "the ark of the covenant of the Lord of all the earth " it had passed through Jordan to take possession of the land. (Josh. 3:11.) Now the glory had left its dwelling-place on earth, as Ezekiel had seen (chap. 10:18; 11:23), and the very decree which ordains the rebuilding of the temple is that of a Persian king to whom the " God of heaven has given all the kingdoms of the earth."(2 Chron. 36:23 ; Ezra 1:2.)

This is no mere casual expression. It is characteristic of the books of the captivity-of Ezra, Nehemiah, and Daniel. Although the eternal throne of God can never be given up, yet a dispensational throne is now removed; and this is what characterizes the times of the Gentiles,-a responsible throne on earth which is set up by God, and yet not God's throne, not the kingdom of God. For the kingdom of God men must wait, but in hope; for the kingdom of God shall come.
Daniel accordingly shows us the end of these Gentile empires, and beyond them all a wholly different one:"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 forever." (Chap. 2:44.)

This is in Nebuchadnezzar's vision, but the features of this final kingdom he is not able more distinctly to see. The vision granted later to the prophet (chap. 7:) develops, as we may easily see, the spiritual significance both of the Gentile powers and of that which supersedes them. For the king, the image has the form of a man, though with no breath of life in it; and there is brilliancy enough, though increasing degeneracy. But to the prophet's eyes there is no human form, no unity; plenty of life and vigor, but bestial. On the other hand, as to the final kingdom, though not much is seen as to detail, one feature newly given is of the sweetest encouragement. It is that the government is in the hands of One like a son of man, under whom the saints too possess the kingdom.

Here, then, is a " kingdom of heaven "-a heavenly rule on earth,-a final world-wide triumph of righteousness and peace. We recognize it as that of which all the prophets speak, the expansion of the first prophecy of the victory of the woman's Seed, -the unforgotten goal and purpose of the ages.

Old-Testament prophecy soon comes to an end after the voice in Daniel has uttered itself. There is a long pause of expectancy, and then one more than a prophet takes up the burden of those many years past, and announces the kingdom of heaven as at hand. But the people are not ready:and the voice is of one crying in the wilderness, a priest who has forsaken the sanctuary, and stands apart from men. The baptism of repentance must precede the remission of sins. The mountain must be leveled with the plain, that the way of the Lord may be prepared.

Then there is another Voice, and He who was announced is come. The kingdom is presented, now with the signs and powers which make good its claim, and are ready to establish it among men. Nothing is wanting, except, alas! the loyal hearts that should greet their divine King; but here is a lack that nothing can compensate for. The more fully manifested, the more fully He is rejected. He finds in a Gentile the faith He cannot find in Israel. (Matt. 8:10.) And thereupon declares that many shall come from the east and the west, and sit down with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven, while the children of the kingdom shall be cast out into outer darkness, with wailing and gnashing of teeth.

The steps of His rejection it is not necessary here to trace. The twelfth chapter of Matthew already shows it complete. His mighty works, instinct with the power and love of God, they ascribe to Beelzebub, and He warns them that for blasphemy against the Holy Ghost there is never forgiveness. They sought signs, but none should be given them but the sign of the prophet Jonas, the Son of Man three days and nights in the heart of the earth. The chapter ends with the solemn disowning of natural ties:whosoever did the will of His Father in heaven, the same was His brother and sister and mother.

This introduces the thirteenth chapter, in which seven parables give us the prophetic character of the kingdom of heaven as it now is, the King rejected and away. Instead of finding fruit in His vineyard, He goes forth to sow the seed of fresh fruit among the Gentiles. Speaking in parables, because hearing they heard and understood not, He instructs His disciples in the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven" (5:11),-that is, in things not forming part of what had been revealed in Judaism, things which had been kept secret from the foundation of the world (5:35).

We see, in fact, in these parables that while the essential idea of the kingdom of heaven is preserved, the form of it is widely different. It is still a kingdom of heaven, and in the hands of the Son of Man; not yet, however, established in power, but committed into the hands of men, and of men who fail in the administration of it. Thus there is disorder, and a possibility of evil even in" high places,-purging and rectification needed when the King comes in power. " He shall send forth His angels, and they shall purge out of His kingdom all things that offend, and them which do iniquity." The mysteries of the kingdom terminate thus in its manifestation. The kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ (Rev. 1:9) looks on to His kingdom and glory (i Thess. 3:12), when the fruits of the present sowing-time are husbanded.

These two forms of the kingdom of heaven need to be distinguished carefully. The Lord's address to Laodicea very plainly distinguishes them:" Him that overcometh will I give to sit with Me in My throne, even as I also overcame, and am set down with My Father on His throne." It is as Son of Man He is seen in these addresses; His own throne, therefore, is clearly what is His as Man, in contrast with the Father's throne, the divine one. It is plain at once that while His saints are promised to sit with Him upon the one, none but One Himself divine could sit upon the other.

The Lord has, then, a present kingdom; but in it we can serve only and not reign. We are "translated into the kingdom of God's dear Son." (Col. 1:13.) The time for Christians to reign cannot be yet; cannot be till He takes the kingdom in the form in which the Old Testament shows it,-comes as Son of Man, and reigns publicly.

It is with His present kingdom we are now occupied. This is established in a very different way, namely, by the sowing of the seed-"the Word of the kingdom." The kingdom extends no further than as this is, in some way, "sown in the heart." Yet it may not be savingly. It is the sphere of profession and privilege that is before us. The devil may take away that which was sown in the heart. The man may have no root in himself, the heart being a " heart of stone." Or the springing up of what is native to the soil may choke the good seed so that it is unfruitful. By and by, among the wheat also the enemy sows tares. All this is a picture of the kingdom.

There may be other aspects of it, and there are. We may be called, as in the last three parables of this series, to look at the divine plan and purpose, which cannot fail of accomplishment; but from the human side there cleaves to it ever the idea of condition, of possible failure, of a mixture of evil with the good, of coming judgment needed to rectify this. If the idea of mercy come in, it is still conditional, never pure grace, as witness the parable which closes the eighteenth chapter of the same gospel.

The King is away, the administration in the hands of man in the meantime:this accounts for most of the characters we are considering. It is the distinctive, fundamental feature of this " mystery "form; and as such, we must now examine it more attentively.

(To be continued.)

  Author: Frederick W. Grant         Publication: Help and Food

The First Epistle Of Peter.

INTRODUCTION

In Peter's first epistle the heavenly inheritance in its holy and imperishable character is announced to Jewish Christians, to whom, as the apostle of the circumcision, he was appointed to minister, and whose earthly national hope had faded before their eyes, however sure to be revived in the last days. Those whom he addresses are spoken of as " sojourners of the dispersion " in five provinces of Asia Minor, – that is, they were away from their proper home and center – Jerusalem and the land of their fathers.

This is their humiliation ; but the resurrection of Christ, whom their nation had crucified, gave these believers, by that cross and resurrection, a new and living hope that could never fade. The character of the ministry in both these epistles is of a kind foreshadowed in the words of the Chief Shepherd to Peter, "Lovest thou Me?" – "Feed My lambs." – "Tend," "feed my sheep;" but this first epistle has its own rich and peculiar character in leading the soul by the still waters, and in green pastures. There is an absence of the defense of doctrine against corrupters, and an absence even of the development of doctrine compared with the consolations and encouragements, with of course needed exhortations as to holiness and the fear of God.

In John's first epistle, and in the epistle of James, there is an entering almost at once upon warnings and tests of false profession and seducing doctrine ; and as to almost all Paul's epistles, their breadth
and compass in meeting and arming the saints against an incoming tide of evil is well known.

Excepting this first epistle of Peter, and Paul's epistle to the Ephesians, may we not say there is no other epistle in which evil within the Church is not more or less dealt with. But in those, though they are warned, as those ready or liable to fail, evil is not treated as having made headway within. The storm is without:they are sheltered within- a place of soul-rest. The enemy is shut out, and is to be withstood, in his wiles in the one case, and as a roaring lion in the other.

In the Ephesians, we are led on by a victorious Leader to enjoy the fruits of the heavenly land; and in the epistles of Peter, we are watched over of the Shepherd, and incited to diligent progress through the wilderness. And this comparison suggests a parallel comparison between the addresses to Smyrna and Philadelphia. In these alone of the seven churches is there a company addressed to whom no failure is imputed; and in the latter, " Hold fast that which thou hast, that no one take thy crown," reminds us of the Ephesians " Be strong in the Lord;" and in the former, " Be thou faithful unto death " suggests or calls to mind the "fiery trial" in Peter;-again the wiles on the one hand and the roaring lion on the other.

It is worthy of note that it is in the gospel of John, in which the Lord is presented as the Good Shepherd, that we find recorded the commission to Peter to feed the sheep. In the other gospels, we have the commission to preach the gospel; but in John, the absence of such a commission, and this special one to Peter introduced, by which he was specially appointed to feed and care for the flock.
Let it be noted too that it is in that gospel that speaks of the Lord as Shepherd that we are told throughout of His divine glory and power. He is the Good Shepherd, and lays down His life; but He lays it down of Himself-no man takes it from Him-and He takes it again, having given up His spirit when all was accomplished and He had said, " It is finished." He is the Shepherd and Overseer of our souls. It is very precious to us that the divine glory and power should especially shine out in that gospel that tells us,-nay, in which He Himself tells that He is the Good Shepherd. "All things were made by Him" is recorded in that gospel. He that dwells in the bosom of the Father -such an one is our Shepherd. We may well say, "I shall not want!" and rest fully in Him.

We have, then, in these epistles, the Chief Shepherd speaking to us through a chosen and prepared under-shepherd-one who was instructed, disciplined, chastened, matured by years of suffering, and now ripe for martyrdom. Such an one subject to God, the Spirit of God uses in his old age, as it were, leaning upon the top of his staff to pronounce a blessing on his brethren-to tell us of the exceeding great and precious promises, and of the gospel preached to us with the Holy Spirit sent down from heaven.

Peter, as well as Paul and John, like Caleb, maintains vigor in old age, bears fruit and flourishes.

For these examples, these witnesses to the power of God through faith, let us give thanks and glory to God, and take courage, and follow in their steps. It is not necessary to decline in the Christian course. We know it is not, but we fail, and see it all around; but let us, therefore, dwell upon these precious examples, that we may show diligence, and have renewed strength as the journey lengthens.

The new position in Christ prominent in Paul's writings is only referred to by Peter in the benediction at the end of the first epistle. It does not appear as a doctrine in Peter, nor resurrection with Christ and being in Him in heavenly places; nor do we get here the indwelling of the Holy Spirit in the believer and in the Church; nor the doctrine of the Church as the body of Christ, of which Paul was the minister specially (Col. 1:25); nor the doctrine of eternal life.

Even the term "forgiveness of sins" does not appear in Peter's epistles, while of course the fact is always present in his doctrine.

These differences and omissions are interesting to note-deeply interesting to the devout mind- as showing the overruling hand of the Spirit in leading the writer to record only that which was consistent with his own voice of ministry and subject.

However well versed he was in kindred truths, they are not introduced by him; they are found elsewhere. This shows the hand of God, and is precious to contemplate. The writer communicates only what God gave him to communicate. Therefore each part agrees with the whole in divine precision, and fits into its place like the stones in the temple.

Peter ministers the salvation spoken of by the prophets of old (chap. 1:10), while Paul, beside this, ministers also about the Church-a mystery not made known before to the sons of men-a new revelation (Eph. 3:4-10). Naturally, in Peter's as well as in Paul's epistles we have the heavenly inheritance and the hope of eternal glory. It is not higher truth in Paul and lower truth in Peter, but divinely perfect parts of a perfect salvation-a perfect whole; it is deep and high and broad. "To know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge" (Eph. 3:19) is a deep experience; so also in Peter, " Whom having not seen, ye love ; in whom, though now ye see Him not, yet believing, ye rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory.

According to the character of the epistle, there are numerous references to or quotations from the Old Testament (verses 2, 10, 11, 12, 16 of chap, 1:, and so on throughout), and the last verse of chap. 2:peculiarly indicates what class of people are addressed. " For ye were as sheep going astray, but are now returned unto the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls." Even when astray, they are spoken of as sheep,-that is, nominally the people of God; not Gentiles, but Jews. Gentiles were not as sheep going astray. We do not find such a mode of address in Paul; they were simply afar off, and without God, and without hope; but as to the Jews (as of all Israel), relationship is acknowledged even when they are afar from God, as in Luke 15:both the Pharisees and the publicans and sinners are compared to sons in a family-the elder and the younger,–while both classes depicted refer to the unconverted state.

To the flock, Peter speaks of the Shepherd; to the elders, of the Chief Shepherd, who would reward the under-shepherds. Paul, in addressing the uncircumcision, no where speaks of the Shepherd, only in the Hebrews again appropriately the Shepherd is mentioned in closing the epistle.

As we have the Shepherd in Peter, so also the roaring lion,-the one caring for the sheep, the other seeking to devour. In the New Testament, we are warned to contend against Satan, not in the Old. This again is an interesting feature, and shows, what appears more and more, the distinctness of character of the New Testament from the Old. In the New Testament, God's people are, as it were, full-grown men-soldiers in conflict in the field- the world subject to Satan as its god-Christians called out from it, witnesses for their absent and rejected Leader. The world was not stamped with its character in the Old Testament as it is now. One nation was chosen, and put on trial by the law, as in a sense representing all men-not yet condemned, but under trial,-the verdict not yet rendered. But now it is otherwise. The trial is ended, the law broken, and the Son of God put to death on the cross. Satan, who was behind the scenes, is brought to the front; the world is marked for judgment. It has chosen its leader; and the world, the flesh, and the devil are ranged against the follower of Christ.

Surely, in the Old Testament as now, Satan was against the saint, and the saint armed against him by the Word; but now "all is out," so to speak,- all publicly declared, sides taken, and an increased power, no doubt, of Satan in the world; and an increased energy called for in the saint, and supplied by the presence and power of the Holy Spirit. .

Naturally, therefore, in such a world, the followers of Christ become strangers (sojourners) and pilgrims, as was the Lord Himself. Before the eyes of the Jewish saints, their nation's hope for the time had faded and gone, the nation at large persecutors of the faithful, their city about to be destroyed, the wrath was come upon them to the utmost; but these were begotten again,-such is the force of the term ; collectively begotten again to a new hope, a living hope, by Christ's resurrection, which would never fade. The hope of an inheritance in heaven replaced the earthly national hope, which however sure to be revived in the last days, yet for the time, and on the ground of human responsibility, had utterly perished. It was what Stephen specially realized when he saw the people stoning him to death, and the heaven opened above him.

One feature of Stephen's address may be appropriately mentioned in this connection. In his brief outline of the history of the nation, he says, " our fathers," associating himself with the nation as a matter of fact; but when bringing home the charge against them at the close, he significantly changes the pronoun, and says," As your fathers did, so do ye," – that is, he takes his place outside the nation, who were the religious people of the earth, the chosen people of God. He goes forth to Jesus, outside the camp, bearing His reproach. Immediately he beholds the opened heavens-the glory of God, and Jesus standing at the right hand of God.

This we find it hard to do-to give up what we have been brought up in, and which has become as it were a part of ourselves. So Samuel found it hard to give up king Saul, and yet the one after God's heart is soon persecuted and hated by Saul, the self-righteous misuser of power, while the true king is an outcast in rejection. So Paul found it hard to give up Jerusalem, and yet Jerusalem had crucified the Lord, and scattered His lowly followers, and had the brand of Cain. So Abraham found it hard to give up Ishmael and Hagar, and yet Ishmael was a mocker of the son of promise, and Hagar was of Egypt, the country that was to set itself up against God, to keep the promised seed from liberty and groaning in bondage.

Abraham, Samuel, Paul, cling to that which proves to be enmity against God,-and with devout religious intent, and themselves true children of God. Alas for the best of men in themselves! How utterly should we distrust ourselves and our feelings and attachments, religious and otherwise, and diligently seek grace that we may not be deceived, but be ready to forsake all and follow Christ-to go forth to Him again and again if called to-from that which tends to cluster round us and more or less to shut out Christ (Rev. 3:20) while bearing His name!

Such the suggestions of the term "begotten again" to the living hope of the inheritance in heaven.

In comparing the first epistle with the second, we find in the first the Father's government of His children, judging without respect of persons (1:17); judgment in the house of God (4:17); and in the second, God's judgment of the world-of the ungodly. Therefore in the first epistle the flood is mentioned as a type of salvation (" saved by water "), and in the second as a type of judgment ("the world . . overflowed with water, perished"), and used as a premonition of " the day of judgment and perdition of ungodly men."

So also in the second,-excepting the reference to the testimony of Christ on the mount, the name of the Father is not mentioned:it is " God " and "the Lord." E. S. L.

(To be continued.)

  Author: E. S. L.         Publication: Help and Food

A Faithful Witness.

A WITNESS for God is the most uncompromising man on the face of the earth. He never lowers the flag. He never adapts his testimony to altered circumstances. General unfaithfulness only nerves him-braces him up to a more complete surrender to his Master's interests. No surrender of the truth is ever thought of. He 'may die, death alone being the check to the course and testimony of the witness, but he will never sacrifice one iota of his testimony. He is a man who counts not his life dear to him if he may but finish his course with joy. A witness is essentially a martyr, the word for both being the same in the Greek. " God, and His glory!" is his watchword. Would you be a faithful witness for God-another Antipas, "one against all"? Then you may have to seal your testimony with your blood, as Stephen in the midst of religious Israel, or Antipas amongst the professing people of God. (Acts 7:and Rev. 2:13.) A true servant of God never defends his character-that the Lord takes care of-and woe be to the man who wantonly takes liberties with the character and ways of God's witness. He enters into a controversy with God, as Num. 12:solemnly intimates. A witness for God is a man who meekly bears reproach, suffering, and distress, but is consumed-yea, burns when the glory of his Master is in question (Ex. 32:). May the Lord lead to increased and unswerving faithfulness to the Master and His mission.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

“Things That Shall Be:”

AN EXPOSITION OF REVELATION 4-22

PART I. Introductory.

(i) Prophecies leading up to these.

Our title to the following pages indicates our adherence in some sense to the interpretation of the book of Revelation which makes the body of it-the nineteen chapters upon which we are entering-apply to what is still for us future. Those who so apply it, whatever differences in detail there may be among them, are on this account called "futurists," in contrast with the large school of " Presentists" or " Historicalists," who find in it a progressive history of the Church from the beginning, and interpret it naturally by that history.

They are usually and strongly opposed to one another, as might be expected, although there is no necessary opposition in the views themselves. Both may be held, and have been held together, by some who hold that there is an incipient, real, though incomplete fulfillment of divine prophecy, as well as a final exhaustive one; the first being often an assurance and help to the meaning of the latter. And this I accept for myself as at least generally true, and true in the case before us, and that (to use the words of another) "they are both alike practically wrong who have slightingly rejected the one or the other [application], and thus respectively deprived the Church of each."

But while I thus would keep in mind and seek to profit by this double interpretation, the latter is what I desire, as God may enable me, to develop and insist upon, and this for more reasons than one, but especially just because it is that which is alone complete and final, and still lying in the future for us; whereas the historical interpretation occupies us largely with the past,-a past still fruitful for us assuredly, but less full of personal appeal. This will indeed be questioned, and it is not yet the time to answer the question.

Clearly the first point now is to prove, if it can be proved, the futurity of the fulfillment of the prophecies which we are to examine,-that such fulfillment is required by the inspired language of the book itself, and by a comparison with other Scripture. This ascertained, we can look better at objections which have been made to it, and realize also the profit of what is to engage us.

The first principle to be got hold of is that given us by the apostle Peter, that " no prophecy of the Scripture is of any private interpretation" (2 Pet. 1:20). It is prophecy that is in question here, not, all Scripture, as the Romanists would apply it. But also "private interpretation" is literally "its own interpretation." No single prophecy must be read alone,-as if it stood apart from the rest; but in connection with the whole plan of it in the Word. " For prophecy came not in old time by the will of man,"-is not therefore the expression of the many minds of men; "but holy men of God spake as the ' were moved by the Holy Ghost:"-there is One perfect mind throughout it.

Now the violation of this will be found to be largely the cause of the failure of expositors. They neglect a rule which the apostle emphasizes as of first importance -"knowing this first." It is comparatively easy to find some plausible application of a single passage; it is quite another thing to make this fit with a general prophetic-testimony. Comparison of passage with passage on this subject is what we are invited and compelled to therefore, if we would have truth instead of theory, realized certainty rather than conjecture. What we hold must be tested and retested by the application of similar Scripture, so that at least " in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word" may "be established."

Moreover, it will be plainly of importance to find some comprehensive prophecy connecting itself with some fixed point, or points, on Scripture, with which others may be then securely connected. Such prophecies we may find again and again in the book of Daniel, a book in the closest relation also to the book of Revelation, as all expositors of whatever school are agreed absolutely. Turn we, then, in the first place, to the second of Daniel.

We have here Nebuchadnezzar's vision of the four Gentile empires under the symbol of a great image, which is brought to an end by the sudden descent of a stone cut without hands out of a mountain; the stone becoming then a great mountain which fills the whole earth. This stone is interpreted for us as the kingdom of God, which is seen thus in victorious opposition to the kingdoms of the world, suddenly and totally destroying them. It is after this only that it grows and fills the earth. The world-kingdoms are not pervaded or "leavened" by the kingdom of God, but run their course first, and are then at once destroyed by it. This fall of the stone is one of those fixed points for which we are looking, and it is future without doubt.

In the seventh chapter the prophet has a vision of these same four empires, now seen very differently as four wild beasts, while the kingdom of God is introduced by the coming of the Son of Man in the clouds of heaven. And here it is, if possible, still more plain that this kingdom only commences with the destruction of the former ones. There is no possibility of any side by side development. Of the "little horn" of the last beast it is said :" And he shall speak great words against the Most High, and shall wear out the saints of the Most High, and think to change times and laws, and they shall be given unto his hand until a time and times and the dividing of time; but the judgment shall sit, and they shall take away his dominion, to consume and destroy it to the end. And 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, whose kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and all dominions should serve and obey Him."

Thus it is evident that the kingdom of God here is that which will be set up only when the Lord returns in the clouds of heaven; that till then the kingdoms of the Gentiles continue, and then they are once for all broken and set aside. In connection with the last beast, moreover, we have just before the end the rise of a power which shows itself a blasphemous and persecuting one, and which by this brings judgment down upon itself and the beast, or empire, with which it is connected. This horn lasts, moreover, (in this character) just three and a half prophetic times, and then the judgment sits, and his dominion is taken away.

Carrying, then, these things with us, let us now go on to the ninth chapter, a prophecy which, for intelligence in the general plan of divine wisdom, is central in importance, and, interpreting as little as we can help, let us put this in connection with what we have already seen.

It is the well-known prophecy of the seventy weeks. In it we have an answer to Daniel's confession of his sin, and the sin of his people Israel, and his supplication for the holy mountain of his God; and he is told :-

"Seventy weeks are determined upon thy people and upon thy holy city, to finish the transgression, and to make an end of sins, and to make reconciliation for iniquity, and to bring in everlasting righteousness, and to seal up vision and prophecy, and to anoint the Most Holy."

The meaning should be plain, that at the end of seventy determined weeks. Jerusalem's transgression would be finished, and her sins would be at an end, her iniquity being purged (kapper, with the simple objective, speaks of atonement taking effect upon the object), and everlasting righteousness brought in for her; and her holy place, now desecrated, be once more anointed. At the same time vision and prophecy would be sealed up* by a fulfillment in which it would reach its end and disappear. This last statement alone is enough to show that we have to do with what is future still. "

*The figure of sealing is regarded by many interpreters in the sense of confirming, and that by filling up, with reference to the custom of impressing a seal on writing for the confirmation of its contents; and in illustration these references are given:1 Kings 21:8, and Jer. 32:10. 11, 44. But for this figurative use of the word to seal, no proof-passages are adduced from the Old Testament. Add to this that the word cannot be used here in a different sense from that in which it is used in the second passage. The sealing of the prophecy corresponds to the sealing of the transgression, and must be similarly understood." (Keil.) To "make an end of sins" is literally to "seal up sins." The words "vision" and "prophecy" (literally "prophet") Keil says, " are used in comprehensive generality for all existing prophecies and prophets. Not only the prophecies, but the prophet who gives it,- 1:e. not merely the prophet but the calling of the prophet must be sealed. Prophecies, and prophets are sealed when, by the full realization of all prophecies prophecy ceases, no prophets any more appear." (Keil on Daniel.)*

The angel goes on to give Daniel more in detail the events of these seventy weeks. "Know, therefore, and understand that from the going forth of the commandment to restore and to build Jerusalem unto Messiah the Prince, shall be seven weeks and threescore and two weeks :the street shall be built again, and the wall even in troublous times."

There is no need for our purpose to inquire for the exact beginning of this time. We are not tracing exactly its fulfillment. It is enough for us that the prophecy itself assures us that at the end of sixty-nine weeks, Messiah shall come. The weeks must be weeks of years, therefore, as almost all orthodox commentators agree,- all, in fact, who recognize in them any real specification of time at all.* *Keil regards the numbers as to be symbolically interpreted, which I do not doubt, while this does not in the least affect their chronological character.* And with year-weeks the Jews were, as we know, perfectly familiar. The whole period is thus ten jubilees.

Four hundred and eighty-three years, then, from the commencement of this period Messiah comes, and but seven years remain in which the full blessing should come in. It is this which has doubtless stumbled many as to the fulfillment to Israel and Jerusalem which the first words of the angel yet so clearly promise. Startling it is to have to recognize a break of over eighteen centuries in a period of time which seems so strictly defined. The next verse, however, prepares us for this, and accounts for it. Messiah comes to His own, and His own receive Him not. Thus the blessing is delayed, although, of course, the purposes of God are unrepenting.

" And after the threescore and two weeks"-as the Hebrew reads,-" shall Messiah be cut off, and shall hare nothing:" so rightly the margin and the R. V. give. Instead of reception by a willing people, He finds rejection and a cross, does not therefore yet receive the promises. The city is not restored, but desolated :" And the people of the prince that shall come shall destroy the city and the sanctuary." All agree here that there is the destruction of the city by the Romans; most, therefore, assume that Titus is the " prince that shall come," but against this there are many reasons. For why in this case should the people be mentioned at all ? Would it not be enough to say that the prince shall destroy-it being a matter of course that it would be through his people? Is it not plain that while the people and the prince are both emphasized for us, it is the people alone that are said to do this, only they are the people of the prince that shall come?

What importance attaches to Titus that he should be given this prominence, and in so concise a prophecy, in which every word seems measured out with greatest economy? Certainly no where else does he appear at all. Why, too, the " prince that shall come " ? against the city ?but this would be strange tautology for the word of God ! Of course if he were a leader of the host he would come against the city. 'But the expression is the very one which would be used to point out some great person predicted to arise, of whom Daniel had heard before.

But there is another mark attached to this person:"And his end shall be in tin:Hood." Here our common version has indeed " the end thereof." But the end of what then ? Not of the destruction of the city ? Not of the city, for this is feminine in Hebrew, and would not agree with the pronoun. Not of the sanctuary, which could not be detached from the city in this way. Moreover, the article with flood-" the flood," as it should be- speaks again of some definite and known catastrophe. The whole passage is to be regarded as some relative clause, and connected with "shall come:" "the people of the prince that shall come and find his destruction in the flood." (Keil.)

This, of course, it is impossible to apply to Titus. Let us see how it does, in fact, apply.

The "people of the prince that shall come" we know historically as the Romans; the fourth beast or empire of the seventh chapter, it is conceded by the mass of interpreters; and susceptible of the most abundant proof, was also Roman. And now, looking at the prophetic history of the empire, surely it is not difficult to recognize in the little horn, whose actions bring judgment upon the beast, the prince that shall come whose end is in the flood. The closing statements in the chapter seem as if they should make doubt as to this really impossible.

We return for a moment, however, to what characterizes the rest of the period. The R. V. renders it well :"And even unto the end shall be war; desolations shall be determined."

The last verse of the prophecy now gives us in connection with the doings of this little horn the last of the seventy weeks:"And he shall confirm a covenant with the many for one week; and in the midst of the week he shall cause the sacrifice and oblation to cease; and on account of the wing of abominations there shall be a desolator; even until the consummation, and that determined shall be poured upon the desolate."
I have made in the translation some small and yet important alterations, which will be justified as we proceed. The first point to notice is that the last week is here divided in half, and that a half week of years-three and a half years-gives us another link which seems decisive with the history of the little horn. For "a time, times, and the dividing of a time" are times and laws given into the hands of this blasphemous and persecuting power, and here he causes sacrifice and oblation to cease for what is evidently this very period. This surely is a striking example of how times and laws have been given into his hands. And as the whole seventy weeks are determined upon Israel and Jerusalem, we see that the sacrifices must have been restored there. This naturally carries us back to the previous clause :" He shall confirm a covenant with the many for one week." It is not the covenant but a covenant:the definite article, misplaced here, has made people think of God's covenant with His people, and thus given aid to a false conception of its being Messiah that confirms it. But the antecedent to the pronoun "he" is certainly "the prince that shall come" as every other mark points in the same direction. On the other hand the article does stand before " many," making it "the many,"- 1:e., the mass of the Jewish people. The covenant becomes thus a political agreement with the mass of the Jewish nation for seven years; but in the week he breaks it, changes times and laws, and his tyranny begins.

Why he makes sacrifices and oblation to cease is easily seen from the seventh chapter. Every detail fits in the most exact way possible. The little horn speaks great words against the Most High, and wears out the saints of the Most High. It is as sacrifice to God that he stops the Jewish service. And in perfect agreement we read here:"And on account of the wing of abominations there shall be a desolator." This is quite literal, as our common version is not. The R V. differs from it by translating "upon the wing," which is the more usual rendering of the pronoun, my own being simply the equivalent of "for" in that with which we are familiar, " For the protection of idols" is, I do not doubt, the sense sufficiently. A desolator comes in consequence of idolatry introduced, and this lasts until the decreed time expires-until the full end of the seventy weeks.

Notice another point where the seventh chapter not only confirms but explains the ninth. We have seen that the latter declares that at the end of the determined time the blessing comes for Israel. But the details of the seventy weeks show nothing but disaster and evil, right down to their expiration. How the blessing comes it does not show; but this the seventh chapter already supplies. The horn prevails against the saints for the three and a half times or years of either prophecy; but this is "till the Ancient of Days" comes (5:22), which in a moment changes all. Let the reader only turn to Zech. 14:, and see how, in the very midst of Israel's distress, the Lord appears :" For I will gather all nations against Jerusalem to battle; and the city shall be taken, and the houses rifled, and the women ravished; and half of the city shall go forth into captivity, and the residue of the people shall not be cut off from the city." And why? "Then shall the Lord go forth and fight against those nations as when He fought in the day of battle. And His feet shall stand in that day upon the Mount of Olives, …. and the Lord my God shall come, and all the saints with Thee."

We see, then, how, as in a moment, the desolation ends. There is entire harmony thus far, and this in itself is one of the most convincing arguments for the truth of that which unites and harmonizes these different statements. But we have not yet completed the review of Daniel's testimony, for in the final prophecy (chap, 10:-12:) we have what again in the clearest way supplements and confirms what has been gathered from the previous ones. We take it indeed from the long prophetic history with which it is connected, as yet not able even to glance at this, but trusting to the clearness of its own evidence for the relation it bears to what we have just been looking at:-

" And arms shall stand on his part, and they shall pollute the sanctuary of strength, and shall take away the daily sacrifice, and they shall place the abomination that maketh desolate" (chap. 11:31).

"And I heard the man clothed in linen, which was upon the waters of the river, when he held up his right hand and his left hand unto heaven, and swore by Him that liveth forever that it shall be for a time, times and a half; and when he shall have accomplished to scatter the power of the holy people, all these things shall be finished.

" And from the time that the daily sacrifice shall be taken away, and the abomination that maketh desolate set up, there shall be a thousand, two hundred and ninety days. Blessed is he that waiteth and cometh to the thousand, three hundred and five and thirty days. But go thou thy way until the end be, for thou shalt rest and stand in thy lot at the end of the days" (chap. 12:7, "-13).

Here it is clear that we have an equal period to the time, times and a half, if taken as three and a half years, as we have already taken them;* that first thirty and then forty-five days more are added successively to this period; the twelve hundred and ninety days date from the setting up of the abomination, and therefore we may conclude that the twelve hundred and sixty also do this; and that at the end of the longest period Daniel stands in his lot, implying surely that the resurrection of the saints has taken place. *The year, of course, is to be calculated according to the Jewish reckoning at 360 days.* Thus all of these dates are connected with the end as were the former ones-with the coming of the Lord, and the setting up of His kingdom.

And the taking away the daily sacrifice and setting up the abomination of desolation which is connected with these dates, interprets clearly the causing sacrifice and oblation to cease, and the desolation on account of the wing of abomination, of the ninth chapter. It is a confirmation of what has already been our conclusion from the previous prophecy alone, which one may well believe irresistible to any unprejudiced mind. And yet it is far from all that Scripture has to give us with regard to a period to which evidently it attaches the very greatest importance.

( To be continued.)

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

Answers To Correspondents

Q. 20.-"What is the meaning of Rom. 8:12, 13?" Ans.-It is the same enforcement of the practical fruit of faith which we find so often in these chapters. " Faith, if it have not works, is dead, being alone." So, whatever the orthodoxy professed, "if ye live after the flesh, ye shall die." On the other hand, "If ye through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live." This is not putting a legal condition into the gospel, but showing the necessary consequences of its reception:" for as many as are led of the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God."

The beautiful way in which this is stated is worthy of admiration. There is in the Greek a double form of the future, and both forms are used here. The first statement is not "ye shall die," but "ye are about to die":for grace might at any time take one off this road, and save a soul from death. On the other hand, "If ye through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live :" here the certainty of the result is assured. There is no doubt whatever that those who are upon this road will reach the goal they seek.

As with all these conditional statements we must remember that they apply to professing Christians as such. We are not to say, " Oh, but we are true believers, and this does not apply to us." Only if you take in all that profess, both true and false, could it be said. For, suppose you say to true believers, singled out as that, " If ye live after the flesh, ye shall die," you make a doubt as to their security. And again, if you say to mere professors, "If ye mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live," this is law, and impossible. Take in all professors alike, and then say it, and you are but showing how the true are distinguished from the false. And so, we have seen, the apostle uses it.

Q. 21.-"Will you explain i Cor. 14:27?" Ans.-Only two or three were to speak, for more would be unprofitable, and so the prophesying is restricted also (5:29). And they were to speak in turn, without confusion.

Q. 22.-"Does the Greek word, ekklesia, used for 'church' in the New Testament, signify, ' called-out ones' ? I had supposed it signified an 'assembly,' and might be used for a gathering of unsaved, as well as of saints."

Ans.-The last is surely so :it is used for the riotous meeting at Ephesus dismissed by the town clerk. But the other is also true. Archbishop Trench says, " The word by which the Church is named is itself an example-a more illustrious one could scarcely be found-of the gradual ennobling of a word. For we have 'ekklesia' in three distinct stages of meaning,-the heathen, the Jewish, and the Christian. In respect of the first, ekklesia, as all know, was the lawful assembly in a free Greek city of all those possessed of the right of citizenship, for the transaction of the public affairs. That they were summoned is expressed in the latter part of the word ; that they were summoned out of the whole population, a select portion of it, including neither the populace, nor yet strangers, nor those who had forfeited their civic rights, this is expressed in the first. Both the calling and the calling out are moments to be remembered, when the word is assumed into a higher Christian sense, for in them the chief part of its peculiar adaptation to its auguster uses lies." (Synonyms of the New Testament, vol. i, pp. 17, 18.)

Q. 23.-"What difference is there between these expressions in Ps. 119:, 'commandments,' 'precepts,' 'testimonies,' 'statutes,' 'judgments'?"

Ans.-"Commandments" speak of the authority of the Law-giver; "precepts," of a charge or deposit committed to man ; "testimonies," of God's witness in them concerning Himself; "statutes," of their definiteness and stability; "judgments,"of their moral nature. "Ordinances," in ver. 91, should be "judgments," and is elsewhere in general a translation of one of the other words, generally that for "statutes" or for "judgments."

Q. 24.-"What is the meaning of 'their inventions' in Ps. 99:8?"

Ans.-Simply "their doings," as the Revised Version now renders it.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

Present Things, As Foreshown In The Book Of Revelation. (continued.)

THE ADDRESSES TO THE CHURCHES.
Philadelphia:the Revival of the Word of Christ, and the Brotherhood of Christians. (Rev. 3:7-13.)

We come now to a phase of the Church's history of the deepest interest and of the greatest possible importance to us. How great it must be to realize a condition which the Lord can commend and only commend ! For in this address to Philadelphia there is no word of reproof throughout. Warning there is, and of this we shall have to take special note; but reproof there is none! How blessed a condition to be in, when the " Holy " and the " True " can smile upon us thus with not a cloud to obscure His love! It should be, of course, the condition of Christians always; and sweet it is to remember that thus, all through the ages of its course, when as a phase of its history Philadelphia yet was not, the Church had its Philadelphians nevertheless. Manifestly it had when John was instructed to write this epistle; and if the general character of things around, even in an apostle's days, did not answer to this, only the greater would be the Lord's approbation of the few who were thus faithful. Overcomers they are whom He is commending; and the adverse condition of things around can never, let us mark it well, be really adverse to the overcoming. They furnish, rather, some of the conditions of it. If we have but the spirit of the overcomer, all the evil, whether in the world or in the Church itself, will only make us this the more.

Before we take up the details of the address before us, let us seek to get hold of the character of the church in Philadelphia. And for this we must remember in the first place what we have seen to be represented by that in Sardis. Sardis undoubtedly stands for the national churches of the Reformation, in which masses of peoples, Christianized externally, not truly, possessed a "name to live," and yet were " dead." Among these, indeed, though few comparatively, were those not only living, but faithful,-men who walked in spirit apart, and did not defile their garments;-men of whom their Lord says, " They shall walk with Me in white, for they are worthy." Yet their presence did not alter the general character of that in which they were-in it, but not of it.

Sardis, then, is the world, Christianized as far as possible to be still the world, with Christians scattered through it. Philadelphia stands with its principle of " brotherly love," in essential contrast with it as that in which the brotherhood of saints is found and recognized. It represents the movement of the Spirit, therefore, to recover the true Church, lost amid the confusion of Sardis, uniting the members of Christ together in one, outside the mere profession. This, if once fairly considered, will be evident. It is not meant, however, by this that this movement has any proportionate success as might seem thus assured. It is one of our strange and sorrowful yet familiar experiences, that Christians can grieve, limit, quench, the Spirit in its action, and all the history of the Church that we have been examining is the reiterated assurance of this. Moreover, in the address to Philadelphia itself we have a very impressive warning to the same effect.

It has been already said, and is plain enough in it, that the Lord's message in this case contains no rebuke, but the sweetest possible sanction and encouragement. Not that there is Pentecostal energy or blessing indeed."Thou hast a little strength" negatives such a thought, if we were disposed to entertain it. Still this is commendation, and not blame, and blame there is none. On this very account there seems a difficulty, which presses for solution. For the final blessing is assured, in this as every other of these epistles, to the overcomer :" Him that overcometh will I make a pillar in the temple of My God, and he shall go no more out." And here the reference is plainly to such pillars as Jachin ('' He shall establish ") and Boaz (" In which is strength ") in the temple of old, and on the other hand to the "little strength" before ascribed to Philadelphia. He who has little strength becomes in the end a pillar of strength, and the true Philadelphian (it is inferred here,) is in fact the over-comer. Philadelphia is but the company of such.

But then it returns upon us with double force, what can be this overcoming? For in every case beside, but one, throughout these churches, it is plain that the overcoming is of things inside the church:in Ephesus, the failure of first love; in Pergamos, the settling in the world; in Thyatira, the doctrines and deeds of Jezebel; in Sardis, defilement with the dead; in Laodicea, the lukewarm condition. In Smyrna, indeed, though there is a Judaizing party there, yet the direct promise seems to refer more to the threatening of death from without, although it cannot be denied that the Judaized Christianity found easier escape from this, and Satan's open violence might therefore well drive many (it can hardly be doubted, did,) into his secret snare.

But in Philadelphia, rich with the Lord's approval, yet with no such front of persecution to endure, it does require answer,-Where, then, the overcoming? By which, moreover, every true Philadelphian seems as much to be characterized as every Smyrnean was. Not every Ephesian was this, still less every one at Pergamos, or Thyatira, or Sardis, or Laodicea. The Philadelphian was such, as he overcame. But what peril then, or difficulty, or opposition? The answer is only one; the question admits no other.

There is nothing but commendation in the address,-that is, no blame. But there is warning, and in this warning is pointed out the danger that threatens. It is the only danger pointed out, and therefore clearly makes known to us what is to be overcome. The warning word is, " Hold fast that which thou hast, that no man take thy crown." Here, then, must be the overcoming. The danger is, of letting slip the Philadelphian character. And it is a real and pressing danger,-so pressing, that upon the mastery of it all blessing is suspended. It is the point of peril.

Philadelphia represents the Spirit of God working in living energy to deliver from that which is engulfing the people of God in a flood of worldliness. Alliance with the world is the forfeiture of
Christian position practically, and of enjoyed privilege. So the Word of God definitely declares. The unequal yoke,-the yoke with unbelievers,- must be refused, or the unclean thing forbids the Lord Almighty to be to His people the Father that He is (2 Cor. 6:17, 18). Separation from the world is not any the more schism because this has been falsely called the Church; nor will "the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life," its moral characteristics, be purged out by the adoption of the Christian name. Thus the state religions are directly accountable for the divisions which have always marked them from the beginning of their history. Every revival tends to break them up. Where there is none, there we find continual gravitation to a lower level, which no orthodoxy of the creed can really avert.

The work of the Spirit, then, will necessarily bring about dissent from the national church. And it will be found that, at their beginnings at least, such movements have been very largely marked by a new fervency of spirit, a zeal and earnestness which have made their first generations men of power. The movement, purified by the opposition it has necessarily to endure, discovers and brings together the most spiritual. Consciences are exercised, the Word is felt and opened, Christ's presence becomes more necessary and more real, the fellowship of saints is valued. In a word, the character of the movement manifests itself as Philadelphian.

It is the voice and person of Christ which are here controlling, and he who is thus controlled is upon a path of unlimited progress and unspeakable blessing. The clue-line is in his hand which will lead him out of all entanglements, from truth to truth, from strength to strength. There is but one condition here, and that is, manifestly, that he " holds fast" the chic-line. If he drops this, progress is at an end, his path becomes devious. Alas! is it a rare thing for those who have begun in the Spirit to be made perfect by the flesh?

Asshur went out from Babylon,-so far, well; but only to found Nineveh, Babylon's rival and counterpart. And this is the history of much that was spiritual in its beginning, and since has grown great. At first there was simplicity and faith, and Christ the Leader of true pilgrims. Now they are but conservators of a tradition of the past, and their glory is a golden age gone from them. They are often in this case earnest in holding fast, but not to a living Leader:they have dropped the clue of progress, and lost their crown to others. No wonder, then, at the emphasis laid upon this warning in the epistle.

This, then, is, in brief, what Philadelphia is. The application in particular may and will be differently made according to what we are and where we are ourselves ; and we have special need of care to test ourselves truly by it. For to test ourselves is surely the use that we are called to make of so solemn and yet so blessed a word as this is. We are bound to ask, Are we such as keep Christ's word and do not deny His name, and who keep also the word of His patience? Blessed, thrice blessed for us if we are!

Let us look, then, with something like suited care, into the details of the Saviour's message,

(To be continued.)

  Author: Frederick W. Grant         Publication: Help and Food

A Bright Sunset.

"Not a cloud above, not a spot within."

"Let me die the death of the righteous," said Balaam of old, "and let my last end be like his." (Num. 23:10.)And who knows but that there was a measure of sincerity in the words of the hireling prophet, as from the "top of the rocks" he beheld the thousands of God's people encamping in divinely prescribed order around that cloud-capped tabernacle?

No wonder, either, that even this poor money-loving prophet should at that moment give vent to such an expression; for Israel was indeed a blessed people. Jehovah Himself was in the midst of her, at once her Saviour, her Defender, and her Guide.

Yet, what a moral contradiction it was to hear this lover of the "wages of unrighteousness" saying, " Let me die the death of the righteous, and let my last end be like his."

Well, reader, I know neither your course of life nor your state of soul. God knows both. But I dare venture to say that the substance of Balaam's prayer has been the burden of your thoughts, aye, many a time. Now I want to ask you to think a little more of those three monosyllables, " my last end"! Repeat them over to yourself again and again,-" MY last end." Take a pencil and write them down, if you will; but weigh well their meaning, I pray you, so that at least one of God's desires may be realized in your case. " O that they were wise, that they understood this, that they would consider their latter end! " (Deut. 32:29.)

Life's journey will come to a close some day. That is certain. You may even now be very near the end. A long eternity is before you, and, whether you like it or not, you are inseparably linked with it. I solemnly ask you, therefore, as you look beyond all earthly plans and pleasures- beyond earthly friendships and earthly ties- beyond life's latest hour, What are your prospects ? What shall the end be ?

But I have a bright tale to tell you, and I want your attention. The happy subject of it, Richard H–, was for years a valued personal friend and fellow-laborer. From boyhood's days he known and loved the Lord, and from that time to the "home-call" his deepest delight was to serve and follow Him.

But it is of his end I desire to speak particularly. Shortly before he passed away, and after a visit from the doctor who attended him, he expressed a particular wish to know what he thought of his physical state. On being told that "departure" was soon to be looked for, he burst forth into quite an ecstasy of joy, saying, " Good news! good news from the far country! Set the bells a-ringing. Hoist a flag outside, to announce that I, a sinner of the earth, washed in Christ's blood, am going into the heavens; and going by a work that has glorified God. Good news! good news!" he again exclaimed, "it's like breaking up school, and going home."

It was a few days after this when, for nearly the last time on earth, I was privileged to see him. Physical weakness, through the rapid inroads of consumption, seemed to be increasing. But, oh, while things seen and temporal were gradually fading away, how strong ft grip had faith got of that which is "unseen and eternal!"

After a warm, familiar greeting, he said, and said in such a way as it is impossible to describe on paper, "You haven't come here to see death, Georgie. Death isn't here-not a bit of it. It's regions behind me, and He is before me." Then, looking up to heaven, he said, as if in some deep, happy reverie, "Holiness! the more holiness the better; the more righteousness the better; the brighter the glory the better. They can but bring out to my soul the value of my title."

What a bright sunset! What a peaceful close to life's short day! Death, with all its accompaniments, was nothing to him. Nay, he would n't have it that he was dying, but only going home. And I shall not be a bit surprised, unsaved reader, if you tell us that you would fain have your last end like his.

But, mark, let your wishes be what they may, depend upon this, that to live without Christ is the surest method you could possibly adopt of dying without mercy. Oh that the Spirit of God might awaken you this moment!

But let us inquire what was the real secret of such a victory as the one just referred to. He had n't a word to say, or a thought to bestow, upon his good works or pious life; though I may safely say that all who knew him can testify of his self-denying, heavenly-minded devotedness, both to Christ and His people, and that for many years ere he was called home. But it was Christ Himself, his own gracious Saviour, who covered his vision and filled his heart, so that every thing else -grim death itself not excepted-was, as he so graphically expressed it, "regions behind him."

Once, no doubt, like thousands more, he had turned his eye inward upon himself to find something which he thought God might accept as a ground for blessing him, and something, therefore, which he too might rest his hopes upon. But, when weary and disappointed in such a search, the Spirit of God had turned his longing gaze to One in whom God could and did delight, whose finished work at Calvary He had accepted. Yes, reader, it is the look without that brings the peace within. " Look unto Me, and be ye saved," is the message from a Saviour-God to guilty men. (Isa. 45:22.)

Notice, now, it is not " Look at yourself till you feel you are saved."

That may be man's gospel, but it certainly is not God's.

God is not looking at you, dear reader, to see whether you are worthy of His confidence. He knows you are not, and has told you so. Your heart, He declares, is without its match for treachery-" deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked." (Jer. 17:9.)

God's eye rests with delight and satisfaction upon His beloved Son. He thinks every thing of Jesus. He has highly exalted Him ; enthroned and crowned Him ; put every thing into His hands and under His feet,-yea, given Him power over all flesh. God has intrusted Him with the giving of eternal life, with the dispensing of His righteous judgment. He is to be the Head of heavenly government-"King of kings,"-in that bright millennial day; "for He must reign" says the Holy Ghost, and we who love Him say, " Alleluia! Alleluia!" The once-despised and hated Nazarene, God's King in Zion! How it makes the heart well over with joy to think of it!

"He shall reign from pole to pole,
With illimitable sway;
He shall reign till, like a scroll,
Yonder heaven shall pass away."

Well, then, I repeat, the gospel does not ask you, clear troubled soul, whether or not you are sufficiently worthy for God to trust you ; but it brings the blessed welcome news that His Son is sufficiently worthy for you to trust Him; that in turning away from all thoughts of your bad self, as well as from all your vain efforts to establish a good self, and, reposing the confidence of your heart in the worthy Son of God as your Saviour, everlasting life is yours. Listen to the highest of all authorities:"Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that believeth on Me hath everlasting life." (Jno. 6:47.)

Oh, let me ask you, then, " What think ye of Christ?" It was this blessed Saviour, this crowned, honored, exalted, beloved Son of God, and Son of Man in heavenly glory, that was before the happy soul of this dear departing disciple.

" But," says one, " how was it that the holiness and righteousness of God,-yea, the very brightness of the light of the glory of God seemed friendly to him?"

Friendly to him! Yes, as friendly as the cross, as we shall see. But let us first listen to the words of Him who hung upon that cross,-" God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son" -gave Him to be "lifted up" as a victim for sin. On this ground the believing sinner stands before God, free from all condemnation.

Faith can say, " If the righteous Son of God was delivered for my offenses; and if God has accepted that sacrifice, I must be delivered from my offenses."

But then God has not only given His Son to be delivered up to death and judgment for us, He has given Him in resurrection-life and glory to us.

" For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life in Jesus Christ our Lord." (Rom. 6:23.) "He made Him to be sin for us" (2 Cor. 5:21); but He has also made Him "wisdom, and
righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption" to us. (i Cor. 1:30.)

Bear in mind, too, that this is not Christian attainment. It is the common portion of all that believe in Christ. The Holy Ghost speaks of them as created in righteousness and true holiness (Eph. 4:24), and of course creation is not attainment. It is what God has made them in Christ.

The old creation is said to be by Christ (see Col. 1:16), while the new creation is in Christ (see Eph. 2:10.) Now this happy young Christian had learned, not only to look from self to Calvary's Victim for the righteous discharge, and therefore the full forgiveness, of his many sins, but also to look off from self to Christ, the heavenly Victor for perfect acceptance before the throne of God. With childlike simplicity he believed what God told him in His Word, not only that the work of Christ on the cross was accepted for him, but that he too was "accepted in the Beloved." (Eph. 1:6.)

Thus, you see, he knew from God's Word that Christ was his righteousness, and Christ his sanctification; and as to the glory of God being friendly, why, the effulgent brightness of that glory shines in the very face of the very Man who once "bore our sins in His own body on the tree." (2 Cor. 4:6.)

What a trumpet-tongued witness is this, that those sins are forever put away from before the eye of God!

Well, dear Christian reader, this same Lord Jesus is soon coming again, and then once more shall we meet our dear brother shining in the fair beauty of Christ Himself. Oh, what a prospect! No wonder the believer's heart leaps within him at the thought of it.

But "what shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel?" "If the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear?" Oh, reader, as the Lord liveth, and as thy soul liveth, there may be but a step between thee and death. And don't forget that if death finds thee in thy sins, judgment also will find thee in thy sins, and an eternity in the lake of fire will be the never-ending end of thy guilty history. As God is true, hell is the certain doom of the unrepentant. Oh, why will ye die? God waits to be gracious still. Geo. C.

  Author: G. C.         Publication: Help and Food

Present Things, As Foreshown In The Book Of Revelation.

THE ADDRESSES TO THE CHURCHES. (Continued)

Thyatira:the Reign of the World-Church. (Rev. 2:18-29.-Continued.)

Rome it surely is, drawn with the few bold strokes of a master-pencil,-Rome as the Lord Himself sees and judges it. Good it is, and necessary, to take our estimate of her from the Word of God itself rather than from the judgments of men, shifting and unstable as they have ever proved. The judgment of God abides, and the day that is coming will only affirm its decisions, unutterably solemn as indeed they are. How dare we indulge the false liberality so common in this day in presence of the awful threatenings of the passage before us ?

" And I gave her space to repent of her fornication, and she repented not. Behold, I will cast her into a bed, and them that commit adultery with her into great tribulation, except they repent of her deeds. And I will kill her children with death; and all the churches shall know that I am He that searcheth the reins and hearts; and I will give to every one of you according to your works."

Thus the pitiless persecutor of God's people shall find sure doom from His hand at last; and with that judgment all heaven will be in sympathy:"I heard as it were the voice of a great multitude in heaven, saying, 'Halleluiah! Salvation and glory and power unto the Lord our God, for true and righteous are His judgments; for He hath judged the great whore, which did corrupt the earth with her fornication, and hath avenged the blood of His servants at her hand.' And again they said,' Halleluiah !' And her smoke riseth up forever and ever."

No true charity can possibly soften down the terms of divine judgment here pronounced, but will rather echo the call of mercy in the meantime:" Come out of her, My people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues."

Yet it is quite possible to judge Rome without hesitation, and to partake, nevertheless, in what are the works of Rome. We must remember, therefore, that Rome is the " mother of harlots and abominations of the earth." Principles can be received and followed which are essentially Romish, while we reject the full development of them in the canons of the Council of Trent or the creed of Pope Pius IV. The features of popery, if carefully noted here, will often be found under the guise of Protestantism. And there is a tendency in them to reproduce themselves together. Take Irvingism, in which, in the most startling manner, all the doctrines of popery (without the pope) have sprung up into a precocious maturity:and here, even the claim of infallibility is found though the pope is not:there is the voice of the woman calling herself a prophetess, whether the woman's name be " Jezebel" or not.

But in modified forms, the features of Rome may be found where there is no pretension to infallibility, and none at all to worldly supremacy for the Church as such. Wherever the teaching of the Church is maintained as authoritative, though it be over a body of Christians who make no claims to catholicity, or to succession after the Romish manner, and who do not propose to add to the Word of God, but to be guided by it,-still, even here the voice of the woman is heard, although the woman's name be certainly not " Jezebel." Yet here, not only the churches of the Reformation, but all churches almost, stand. Nay, it is considered even that there is no sure guarantee for orthodoxy where this is not so. And indeed it cannot be denied that the abolition of creeds has been very often loudly urged by those who desired latitude as to the most positive doctrines of the Word itself. The deniers of eternal punishment have contended for it; the men who put the inspiration of Scripture on the same footing with the inspiration of Shakespeare; the people who to retain Christianity must leave out Christ. All these, in their various pleas against the stiffness of a creed that they refused, have furnished the most convincing arguments for its necessity. Nor do I now propose to deal with these arguments ; they will come before us properly elsewhere. It is nevertheless true that, according to Scripture, the Church never teaches. God teaches by His Spirit, and the one authoritative teaching is that of the inspired Word,-truly authoritative, because absolute truth itself. This much is true in Jezebel's false claim, that infallible teaching alone can demand obedience, as alone it can implicit faith. Allow that the guide may lead astray, and how can you require men to follow her? " If the blind lead the blind, shall they not both fall into the ditch?"

But the creeds are to be submitted to because they may be proved by Scripture, " by most certain arguments," it is said. Well, if Scripture be so certain and so authoritative, what need of any thing else? I believe indeed that it is certain and all-sufficient, and thus the argument proves too much. Why seek to make certain what is already so, or give authority to what is already and only authoritative? In so doing, Scripture is dishonored in the very method by which you would honor it. Its own testimony is, that it is "given by inspiration of God, and profitable for doctrine, for correction, for reproof, for instruction in righteousness; that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works." But the authoritatively imposed creed actually takes away the appeal to Scripture, becoming itself the only permissible appeal. If there be error in the creed, it will have to be maintained as carefully as the truth in it. If there be defect in the creed, the Scripture cannot be allowed even to supplement it. It is, in short, completely displaced from its rightful supremacy over men. The conscience is not allowed to be before God, and the most godly are just those who will be forced most into opposition against the human rule thus substituted for the divine.

This we shall have to look at further at another time, however. But it is evident that Jezebel is right thus far, in that she connects her right of rule over the people of God with the infallibility of the prophetess. She displays, however, the falsity of her pretension by her refusal to submit her claims in this respect to be judged by that which she owns herself to be the Word of God. Her infallibility must not be tested, but received:whereas Scripture itself, with a claim no less absolute, on that very account submits to every possible test, assured that the more complete the test, the more will this claim be manifested and made good. The true coin fears not the test which would at once expose the counterfeit. Faith in Rome is credulity and superstition only:faith in Scripture is intelligent, reasonable, and open-eyed.

In Scripture, the Church does not teach at all. The prophets speak, and the rest "judge." The Word itself is the rule by which all is judged, and the conscience is kept directly in the presence of God Himself. All are exercised as to what is spoken:they are to take heed what they hear, as well as how they hear. This exercise is necessary to maintain the soul in vigor and in dependence. Vigilance, the constant habit of reference to God, and walking before Him are to be ever emphasized and insisted on. We tend continually to follow human authorities and traditional teachings, which God has continually to break through for us, sending us afresh to His Word, that our faith may not stand in the wisdom of men, but in the power of God. Thus alone true spiritual health is realized and preserved.

Church teaching is one mark, then, of what in Rome has only come to full maturity. The seed is scattered widely, and found in the most diverse places. Another thing often to be met with independently is yet, quite similarly to this, the germ of what is fully developed only in Rome. This is, the claim for the Church of rightful supremacy over the world.

In Rome, it is outspoken and defiant. Jezebel reigns as a queen, and is no widow, and shall see no sorrow. With her foot upon the necks of kings, she can apply to herself the words which belong to Christ,-" Thou shalt tread upon the lion and the adder; the young lion and the dragon Thou shalt trample underfoot." This needs, of course, no comment ; but how many are there, on the other hand, who sincerely believe that Christians should have their place in the government of the world,-nay, should control it! Who, in fact, so fitted? and what could be so desirable for the world itself?

They do not see that the world is never to be subject to Christ until He take possession of it with the rod of iron; that Satan is its prince and god, never to be cast out until the Lord comes Himself from heaven; that the world remains, therefore, in steadfast opposition to what is of God, and Christianity, if it root itself in it, only becomes corrupted by it, and not its purifier. The yoke with unbelievers, which these principles of necessity bring about, is what at the start forfeits for the child of God the enjoyment of the child's proper place. " For what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? or what communion hath light with darkness ? or what concord hath Christ with Belial? or what part hath he that believeth with an unbeliever ? and what agreement hath the temple of God with idols? For ye are the temple of the living God, as God hath said,' I will dwell in them and walk in them, and I will be their God, and they shall be My people. Wherefore come out from among them, and be separate; and touch not the unclean thing, and I will receive you, and will be a Father to you; and ye shall be My sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty.' "

In Jezebel, the full maturity of these principles is reached, and the Church attains its rule over the world; but in so doing, it has entirely changed its character. It is no longer the true Church, but the false, although in historical succession with the true. The world's principles have leavened it; it shelters the unclean "birds of the air," the followers of the " prince of the power of the air;" the true followers of Christ are hunted down and destroyed ; and their only hope is here the coming of the Lord Himself, which now for the first time in these addresses becomes the Star of promise. " But unto you I say, even unto the rest in Thyatira, as many as have not this doctrine, and which have not known the depths of Satan, as they speak; I will put upon you none other burden:but that which ye have already hold fast till I come. And he that overcometh, and keepeth My works unto the end, to him will I give power over the nations:and he shall rule them with a rod of iron; as the vessels of a potter shall they be broken to shivers; even as I received of My Father. And I will give him the morning star."

Here is, plainly, the attitude of faith declared in contrast with Jezebel's claim of rule. Rule! yes, we are to have it when the Lord comes,-not before. The reign of the saints is to be with Christ, and although it is true that He now reigns, it is upon the Father's throne-a throne which cannot be shared with men. It is impossible, therefore, that Christians can reign now. When as Son of Man He takes His own throne, then indeed they shall be associated with Him. This is in the promise to the overcomer in Laodicea:"To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with Me in My throne, even as I also overcame, and am set down with My Father in His throne."

It is in that day the rod of iron will be in His hands, which, as we see here, He promises to share with His people. This is a direct reference to the second psalm, where Christ is seen, as in the purpose of God, "set" upon the "holy hill of Zion." It is not a heavenly, but an earthly, throne. And thereupon Christ's own voice is heard declaring the decree which establishes Him in possession of the earth:" I will declare the decree; the Lord hath said unto Me, ' Thou art My Son, this day have I begotten Thee. Ask of Me, and I will give Thee the heathen for Thine inheritance, the uttermost parts of the earth for Thy possession.'" This is often quoted to show the gradual spread of the gospel over the earth, but how, in fact, is Christ's claim upon the nations to be made good? "Thou shalt rule them with a rod of iron; Thou shalt dash them in pieces like a potter's vessel."

This is plainly not the grace of the gospel. It is as plainly the exercise of the power in which He associates the saints with Himself. It is again referred to, when in the nineteenth chapter of this book the white-horsed Rider, whose name is called the Word of God, comes forth from heaven, attended by His armies, to the judgment of the nations banded still, as in the second psalm, "against the Lord and against His Christ." " And out of His mouth goeth a sharp, two-edged sword, that with it He should smite the nations, and He shall rule them with a rod of iron, and He treadeth the wine-press of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God."

Thus the time of this rule is fixed definitely, and its character it would seem impossible to mistake. Till then, "overcoming" is in patience and long-suffering, keeping Christ's works unto the end.

But the promise of the morning-star goes beyond this, even; and we must look at it with corresponding attention. We have here the Lord's own interpretation, and in the same book. When the whole roll of prophecy has been unfolded and come to an end, He returns to explain to us this significant word. "I Jesus have sent Mine angel to testify unto you these things in the churches. I am the Root and the Offspring of David, and the bright and Morning-Star" The Revelation, and thus the New-Testament as a whole, closes with this announcement. It is striking, therefore, to find the Old Testament closing, in Malachi, with a contrasted announcement, which yet applies to the same glorious Speaker, who thus takes His place in connection with the promises of both parts of the Word. The Old Testament, with its earthly promises, closes with this:" Unto you that fear My name shall the Sun of Righteousness arise with healing in His wings." The New Testament, with its heavenly promises, speaks, not of the Sun of Righteousness, but of the Morning-Star.

The Old-Testament promise may seem the fuller thing. It is more to have the sun rise, surely, one would say, than the morning-star,-to have the day than the promise of the day. And this is true from the Old-Testament point of view:the star shines out of heaven, does not brighten the earth at all; but in its own sphere it is bright nevertheless. And this is the key to its New-Testament use. The Star shines its welcome for us out of those heavenly places in which our blessings as Christians are. Christ is coming to bring the day to the whole earth. The glory of the Lord, like the solar radiance, is going to cover it, as the waters cover the sea. It shall rise upon Israel, and the Gentiles come to the light, and kings to the brightness of its rising. But before this, our eyes shall have beheld Him; and when this comes, our higher, better place shall be already with Him. For His promise to us is, " I will come again, and receive you unto Myself, that where I AM,"-in His own eternal home,- "there ye may be also."

How beautiful this reminder, then, here, where the glitter of earthly rule and dignity seeks to attract and ensnare the saints of God! Like the Lord's words to the seventy when they returned to Him again with joy, saying, " Lord, even the devils are subject unto us through Thy name! " With His face toward the very scenes of which we have been speaking, He replies, " I saw Satan as lightning fall from heaven! Behold, I give you power to tread on serpents and scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy; and nothing shall by any means hurt you. Notwithstanding,"-and here is the parallel so complete,-"in this rejoice not, that the spirits are subject unto you, but rather rejoice because your names are written in heaven"

Though our reign be over the earth, and when He appears we shall appear with Him in glory, yet our " mansions"-our abiding-places, as the word means,-are not on earth, but in the Father's house, of which the temple, with its "patterns of things in the heavenlies," was the type and presentation upon earth. "My Father's house" was Christ's name for the temple. This had its temporary apartments for the priests, as they came up in their courses to fulfill their service at Jerusalem. And is it not in designed contrast that our Lord designates our places in the Father's house above, not as temporary, but abiding-places? To "abide," "continue," is one of the characteristic words in John's gospel, and it is in perfect harmony with the gospel of Christ's deity that it should be so; all that belongs to Deity abides ; and _here, in the place of the presence of God, are our not temporary but eternal abodes.

But " the Morning-Star " is more than our abode. The abode we shall have, to enjoy it, but Himself it is we are called to enjoy, "I am the bright and Morning-Star." "Father, I will also that those whom Thou hast given Me be with Me where I am; that they may behold My glory, which Thou hast given Me; for Thou lovedst Me before the foundation of the world."

How blessed to be forever where this glory is displayed, and where the eye will be perfect to let in the light! " We know that, when He shall appear, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is." And in order to see Him as He is, we must be like Him. The passage is often read the reverse way; as if it were the sight of Him that would change us into His likeness:but I do not believe that to be the thought. The truth is, that as we must have the divine nature to know God, so we must be in Christ's moral image to apprehend Him. Man knows man by reason of the common nature; here, where all obstruction is at last removed, and we enter into life as our abiding and exclusive condition,-the " body of death" gone forever,-here we shall be at last face to face with Christ indeed. And this will seal and perfect the blessedness of a life always in us essentially dependent. We shall still and ever, now with no inner obstruction to prevent its realization, be "complete" (or "filled full") "in Him."

The Morning-Star anticipates the day, and we shall be gathered up to Christ before He appears for the judgment yet deliverance of the earth. Then, those who have suffered will reign with Him. When judgment shall return to righteousness,- the rod, no longer a serpent, returns to the hand of that great Shepherd of whom Moses was but the fore-shadow,-we shall be with Him, to take joyful part in that" restitution of all things " which He comes to effect. When the Sun of Righteousness arises, " then shall the righteous shine forth as the sun, in the kingdom of their Father." The rod will then be the irresistible " rod of iron," but how beneficent shall be its sway! " Then, judgment shall dwell in the wilderness, and righteousness remain in the fruitful field; and the work of righteousness shall be peace; and the effect of righteousness, quietness and assurance forever. And My people shall dwell in a peaceable habitation, and in sure dwellings, and in quiet resting-places." For now, as never yet, " a King shall reign in righteousness, and princes shall rule in judgment. And a Man shall be as a hiding-place from the wind, and a covert from the tempest; as rivers of water in a dry place, as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land."

The word, then, to the overcomer is, " Hold fast till I come!" The night-watch is not over; nor will the failed Church recover itself. The watchword of comfort is, " Until I come." The true are but a remnant, and Rome's catholicity is but a decisive proof of the general departure. Revivals there may be, but no return. Good it is for those who accept humbly the lesson, which stains forever the glory of man. "The corruption of the best thing is the worst corruption." We have had God's "best thing" nearly two thousand years in hand:what have we done with it? Shall we do better now? It is easy to judge Rome; to judge, in Rome, our own utter and ruinous failure, is that to which God calls, and in which alone blessing is. Then, blessed be God, the Morning-Star rises in the darkened sky:"At midnight there was a cry made, ' Behold, the Bridegroom! go ye out to meet Him.'" " He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches!" F.W.G.

  Author: Frederick W. Grant         Publication: Help and Food

Present Things, As Foreshown In The Book Of Revelation.

THE ADDRESSES TO THE CHURCHES, (Continued)

Pergamos:the Church united with the World. (Rev. 2:12-17.)-Continued.

It will be a relief to turn to Scripture, and to examine what we have there upon this subject. It is very simple; There was no organized machinery for supporting churches ; none for paying ministers; no promise, no contract upon the people's part, as to any sum they were to receive at all. There were necessities, of course, many, to be provided for, and it was understood that there was to be provision. The saints themselves had to meet all. They had not taken up with a cheap religion. Having often to lay down their lives for it, they did not think much of their goods. The principle was this:" Every man as he is disposed in his heart, so let him give; not grudgingly, or of necessity; for God loveth a cheerful giver." It was to be to God, and before God. There was to be no blazoning it out to brethren, still less before the world. He that gave was not to let his left hand know what his right hand was doing.

It is true there were solemn motives to enforce it. On the one side, "he that soweth sparingly shall reap also sparingly, and he that soweth bountifully shall reap also bountifully;" but on the other side, most powerful, most influential of all, was this:" Ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, who, though He was rich, yet for your sakes became poor, that ye through His poverty might become rich."

Such was the principle, such was to be the motive. There was no compulsory method of extraction if this failed. If there was not heart to give, it was no use to extract.

So as to the laborer in the Word,-it was very clearly announced, and that as what God had ordained, that " they which preach the gospel should live of the gospel," and that "the laborer is worthy of his hire." But although here also God used the willing hands of His people, it was not understood that they " hired " him, or that he was their laborer. What they gave, it was to God they gave it, and his privilege was to be Christ's servant. His responsibility was to the Lord, and theirs also. They did not understand that they were to get so much work for so much money. They did not pay, but "offered." There is a wonderful difference; for you cannot "pay" God, and you do not "offer" (in this sense of offering,) to man. The moment you pay, God is out of the question.

Do you think this is perhaps a little unfair on both sides? that it is right that there should be something more of an equivalent for the labor he bestows,-for the money you give? That is good law, bad gospel. What better than simony is it to suppose after this fashion-" that the gift of God can be purchased with money "? Would you rather make your own bargain than trust Christ's grace to minister to your need? or is it hard for him that he who ministers the Word should show his practical trust in the Word by looking to the Lord for his support? Ah, to whom could he look so well ? and how much better off would he be for losing the sweet experience of His care?
No; it is all unbelief in divine power and love, and machinery brought in to make up for the want of it. And yet if there is not this, what profit is there of keeping up the empty profession of it? If God can fail, let the whole thing go together; if He cannot, then your skillful contrivances are only the exhibition of rank unbelief.

And what do you accomplish by it? You bring in the Canaanite (the merchantman) into the house of the Lord. You offer a premium to the trader in divine things,-the man who most values your money and least cares for your souls. You cannot but be aware how naturally those two extremes associate together, and you cannot but own that if you took the Lord's plan, and left His laborers to look to Him for their support, you would do more to weed out such traffickers than by all your care and labor otherwise. Stop the hire, and you will banish the hirelings, and the blessed ministry of Christ will be freed from an incubus and a reproach which your contracts and bargainings are largely responsible for.

And if Christ's servants cannot after all trust Him, let them seek out some honest occupation where they may gain their bread without scandal. In the fifteenth century before Christ, God brought out a whole nation out of Egypt, and maintained them forty years in the wilderness. Did He? or did He not? Is He as competent as ever? Alas! will you dare to say those were the days of His youth, and these of His decrepitude?

So serious are these questions. But the unbelief that exists now existed then. Do you remember what the people did when they had lost Moses on the mount awhile and lacked a leader? They made a god of the gold which they had brought out of Egypt with them, and fell down and worshiped the work of their own hands. History repeats itself. Who can deny that we have been looking on the counterpart of that?

Is there any measure, it may be well to ask here, of the Christian's giving, for one who would be right with God about it ?

The notion of the tithe or tenth has been revived, or with some two tithes, as that which was the measure of an Israelite's giving. Jacob has been propounded to us as an example, as he stood before God in the morning after that wonderful night at Bethel, when God had engaged to be with him and to be his God, and to multiply his seed, and bring him again into the land from which he was departing. " If God will be with me," he says, " and will keep me in the way that I go, and will give me bread to eat and raiment to put on, so that I come again to my father's house in peace; then the Lord shall be my God; and this stone, which I have set for a pillar, shall be God's house, and of all that Thou shalt give me, I will surely give the tenth unto Thee."

God's ways are so little like our ways, His thoughts so little like our thoughts, it is not very wonderful man does not understand them. But surely Jacob does not here enter into the blessedness of God's thoughts.

I need not dwell now upon his case, but only notice it to say that for a Christian at least the whole principle is a mistake. You are not to ransom nine-tenths from God by giving one. You are bought with a price-you and yours. In a double way, by creation and redemption too, you belong, with all you have, to God. Many people are acting upon the perfectly wrong idea that whether as to time, money, or whatever else, God is to have His share, and the rest is their own. They misunderstand the legal types, and do not realize the immense difference that accomplished redemption has brought in with it.

Before " Ye are bought with a price " could yet be said, it was impossible to deduce the consequences that result from this. Grace goes beyond law, which made nothing, and could make nothing, perfect. The very essence of the surrender of the life to God is that it must be a voluntary one. Like the vow of the Nazarite, which was a vow of separation to the Lord, and which reads, " When any one will vow the vow of a Nazarite," that surrender must be of the heart, or it is none. Nor is it a contradiction to this that there were born Nazarites-Nazarites from the womb, as Samson and the Baptist. We are all born (new-born) to Nazariteship, which is implied and necessitated (in a true sense) by the life which we receive from God. But the necessity is not one externally impressed upon it; it is an internal one. "A new heart will I give you," says the Lord; but the new heart given is a heart which chooses freely the service of its Master.

A legal requirement of the whole then would have been unavailing, and a mere bondage. " Not grudgingly, or of necessity," is, as we have seen, the Scripture-rule. But that does not at all mean what people characterize as " cheap religion." It does not mean that God will accept the "mites" of the niggard as the Lord did those of the woman in the Gospels. Christ does not say now, Give as much or as little as you please:it is all one. No:He expects intelligent, free surrender of all to Him, as on the part of one who recognizes that all is really His.

If you will look at the sixteenth chapter of Luke, you will find the Lord announcing very distinctly this principle. The unjust steward is our picture there,-the picture of those who are (as we all are as to the old creation) under sentence of dismissal from the place they were originally put in, on account of unrighteous dealing in it. Grace has not recalled the sentence, " Thou mayest be no longer steward." It has given us far more, but it has not reinstalled us in the place we have thus lost. Death, in fact, is our removal from our stewardship, although it be the entrance, for us as Christians, into something which must be confessed " far better."

But grace has delayed the execution of the sentence, and meanwhile our Master's goods are in our hand. All that we have here are His things, and not ours. And now God looks for us to be faithful in what is, alas! to men as such (creature of God as indeed it is,) "the mammon of unrighteousness,"-the miserable deity of unrighteous man.

Moreover, grace counts this faithfulness to us. We are permitted to " make friends of this mammon of unrighteousness" by our godly use of it, whereas it is naturally, through our fault, our enemy and our accuser. It must not be imagined that the " unjust steward " is to be our character literally all through. The Lord shows us that this is not so when He speaks of "faithfulness" being looked for. No doubt the unjust steward in the parable acts unjustly with his master's goods, and it must not be imagined that God commends him, it is " his lord " that does so,-man as man admiring the shrewdness which he displayed. Yet only so could be imaged that conduct which in us is not injustice but faithfulness to our Master,-grace entitling us to use what we have received, for our own true and eternal interests, which in this case are one with His own due and glory.

But then there are things also which we may speak of as "our own." What are these? Ah, they are what the Lord speaks of as, after all, " the true riches." " If ye have not been faithful in the unrighteous mammon, who will commit to your trust the true riches? And if ye have not been faithful in that which is Another's, [not 'another man's,' but of course God's,] who will give you that which is your own ? "

Thus our own things are distinct altogether; and I must not tell Christians what they are. I need only remind you that if you have in your thoughts as men down here, a quantity of things, your own possessions, to be liberal with or to hoard up,-in both cases you misapprehend the matter. You have as to things here your Master's goods, which if you hoard up here, you surely lose hereafter, and turn into accusers. On the other hand, you are graciously permitted to transfer them really to your own account, by laying them up amid your treasure, where your treasure is-" in heaven."

The rich man in the solemn illustration at the end of the chapter was one who had made his Lord's " good things " his own after another fashion, and in eternity they were not friends, but enemies and accusers. "Son," says Abraham to him, "remember that thou in thy lifetime receivedst thy good things." That was all, but what a solemn memory it was! How once again the purple and fine linen and sumptuous fare met the eyes they had once gratified and now appalled! Lazarus had been at his gate, but it was not Lazarus that accused. And oh, beware of having things your own down here! There was a man who had " his good things " here, and in eternity what were they to him ?

I know this is not the gospel. No, but it is what, as the principle of God's holy government, the gospel should prepare us to understand and to enter into. Have you observed that the most beautiful and affecting story of gospel grace, the story of the lost son received, is what precedes the story of the unjust steward? The Pharisees who in the fifteenth chapter stand for the picture of the elder son are here rebuked in the person of the rich man. Will not the prodigal received back to a Father's arms be the very one who will understand that he owes his all to a Father's love? Is not "Ye are bought with a price" the gospel? But then "ye are bought:ye are not your own."

Put it in another way. You remember that when God would bring His people out of Egypt, Pharaoh wanted to compromise,-of course by that compromise to keep the people as his slaves. Three separate offers he makes to Moses, each of which would have prevented salvation being, according to God's thought of it, salvation at all. The first compromise was, " Worship in the land."

"And Pharaoh called for Moses and for Aaron, and said, 'Go ye, sacrifice to your God in the land.'"

And still the world asks, "Why need you go outside it? You are entitled to your opinions, but why be so extreme? Why three days' journey into the wilderness? Why separate from what you were brought up in, and from people as good as you?" Ah, they do not know what that three days' journey implies, and that the death and resurrection of Christ place you where you are no more of the world than He is! Egypt,-luxurious, civilized, self-satisfied, idolatrous Egypt,-and the wilderness! what a contrast! Yet only in the wilderness can you sacrifice to God.

Then he tries another stratagem:-

"And he said unto them, ' Go, serve the Lord your God; but who are they that shall go ?'

"And Moses said, ' We will go with our young and with our old, with our sons and with our daughters, with our flocks and with our herds we will go; for we must hold a feast unto the Lord.'

"And he said unto them, ' Let the Lord be so with you, as I will let you go and your little ones:look to it, for evil is before you. Not so:go now ye that are men, and serve the Lord; for that ye did desire.'"

By their little ones he had them safe, of course,- a perfectly good security that they would not go far away. And so it is still. How many are brought back into the world by the children they did not bring with them out of the world!

One last hope remains for Pharaoh:-

"And Pharaoh called unto Moses, and said, ' Go ye, serve the Lord; only let your flocks and your herds be stayed; let your little ones also go with you.'"

"Leave your possessions," he says; and how many leave their possessions! Themselves are saved:but their business, their occupation, these are still not sacred things, they are secular; what have these things to do with the salvation of the soul?

But God says, No:bring them all out of Egypt:yourselves, your families, your property,-all are to be Mine.

And in point of fact, His it must be if we would ourselves keep it, for we cannot keep it of ourselves. The man out of whom the devil went is our Lord's own illustration of the fact that an empty house will never lack a tenant. The sweeping and garnishing and all that, will not keep out the devil, but perhaps only make him more earnest after occupation. Nothing will save from it but the positive possession of it by another, who will not and need not give it up. So we must bring Christ into every thing, or by that in which He is not we shall find we have but made room for another,-Christ's Opposite. The parable has application in many ways and in many degrees to those who are Christ's people, as well as to those who are not. Our really idle hours are not idle. Our useless occupations have a use, if not for Christ, then against Him. Our so-called recreations may be but the frittering away of energy, as well as time, and not only distraction, but the seed of worse distraction.

We are in a world where on every side we are exposed to influences of the most subtle character; where corruption and decay are natural; and where all thus is not permeated by divine life, it becomes the necessary and speedy subject of decay and death. To a beleaguered garrison, a holiday, may be fatal. We cannot ever here ungird our loins or unbuckle our armor. It is not enough to withstand in the evil day; but having done all, still you must stand. So if you leave Christ at the door of the counting-house, you will have to contend alone with (or give place to) the devil within the counting-house.

Does this startle you? does it seem to require too much? It requires that you should be with Christ in constant companionship, at all times and on all occasions. Is that narrow,-a rigid, an uncomfortable view of matters? Does it distress you to think of giving Him such a place as that? There are those who believe that he is the picture of a converted man, who complains he never got a kid to make merry with his friends. Do you realize that? Do you sympathize with such a view? Have you friends that you would like to run away to for a while out of Christ's scrutiny or company? Beloved, when you think of heaven, is it of a long monotony of being " ever with the Lord" ? You startle at that suggestion; and no wonder. But if you will find eternal joy then, and now can think of it as that, to be ever with Him there, is it less happy to think of being always with Him here?

At any rate, you cannot alter the reality by all your thoughts about it. None of our thoughts can change the nature of things. You cannot find in all this world a clean corner in which you can be apart from Christ and yet apart from evil. And if you could, the very idea of being so would of itself pollute it with evil. No; Christ must be a constant Savior as to every detail of our walk and ways. Communion with Him is the only alternative of communion with evil. The wisdom that has not Him in it, will be " earthly, sensual, devilish ;" if it come not from above, come it will from below.

Thus you see how important it is to be right here. It is not a mere question of points of detail; it is a question of truth of heart to Him, which affects every detail,-the whole character and complexion of our lives indeed. So you must not wonder at a question of cattle being concerned with a deeper question of "salvation" itself; looking at salvation as not merely being from wrath and condemnation, but of salvation from the sin also which brings in these. God gives it us thus in the typical picture here, and it is not a blot or deformity in the picture, but rather an essential part. Be persuaded of it, beloved friends, that only thus can we find, in the full power of it, what salvation is.

We have been looking at this from the side of responsibility. Surely it is good to look at it also from the side of salvation. Until you are clean delivered in these three respects, you cannot be happily with God, nor even safe. Of course I am not talking about reaching heaven; you may be safe in that respect. But whatever you have that is not Christ's, that is the world's still, and it will drag you back into the world. You are keeping it back from Him; you have a divided interest; how can this but affect all your intercourse, all your happiness (or what you ought to have) with Him?

Can you go to your business and shut the door upon Him and He not feel it, and you not feel it? Can you say to Him, "Lord, Sunday is Yours and Monday is mine," or "Lord, there is Your tenth, and these nine are mine," and feel perfectly satisfied that all is right with Him?

And practically, it gets to be much less. He gets a part of our superfluity, and that is all. We must dress like our neighbors, live up to our rank of life, put a little by for a " rainy day," and something for our children. " We must be just before we are generous," we think. And then, with some reserve for recreation, and some for miscellaneous trifles, all the rest shall be the Lord's. It may be but a " mite," but did not He accept a mite? So the very narrowness of our dole to the Lord who has saved us links us with her who had His special commendation.

Better keep it all back than give it in that fashion. For the amount given just hinders from realizing where we are. We give it ungrudgingly, perhaps:we think it has the Lord's approval therefore. We do not think how much it is that we can give ungrudgingly.

Ungrudgingly it must be. Love it must be. Though I give all my goods to feed the poor, except it be love that does it, it will be utterly contemned. But if our love is measured by what we give to Him, how serious is the question raised!

In this great world of sorrow and of evil, Christ has interests dear to His heart,-how dear, no one of us has perhaps a notion of. Souls lie in darkness to whom His Word would give light, and in bondage to whom it would bring deliverance. He says to us, " I count upon My people to do this." How can we answer to Him for this confidence He has placed in us? Shall we say, "Lord, I have had to keep up with my neighbors, to provide for the future, to do a great many things, which I thought of more importance"? or shall we say, "Lord, Thou art so great, so high, so powerful, Thou surely canst not want my help in a matter like this!" or, again, "Lord, Thou art so gracious, I am sure Thou wilt accept any thing I may bring:I would not suppose Thee a hard Master, to want me to bring Thee much" ? Alas, what shall we say? Shall we not rather own with broken hearts how little we have valued Him ?

The "doctrine of Balaam" thrives upon the heartlessness of God's own people. Do not let us imagine, because we denounce the mercenary character of what is current all around, that we can have no share in upholding what we denounce. It is far otherwise. If we have given cause, are giving cause, to those who sneer at the advocates of "cheap religion," we are giving it the most effectual possible support. In words, you denounce ; in deeds, you justify. You tell them that it is vain to trust to the power of Christ's love in Christians,-that your own barn is practically dearer to you than all God's house; and they can point to you triumphantly as proof of the necessity of all that they contend for.

Beloved, I have done. I have spoken out my heart, and I must pray you bear with me. Who that looks around with a heart for Christ upon all the abominations practiced in His name but must be led to ask, Did not all this evil spring out of the failure of His own people-of those who at heart loved Him? And further, how far are we perhaps now unsuspectingly helping on the very evils we deplore? Do we not pray for Him to search out our hearts? and shall we shrink from having them searched out? If the search detects nothing, we need not fear it:if it shows us unanticipated evil, it is well to realize that the truthful judgment of the evil is ever the truest blessing for our souls. It will cost us something, no doubt, to walk in what is ever a narrow way. A race, a warfare, call for energy and self-denial. But ah, beloved, it will cost us more, much more, to have Christ walk as a stranger to us because our paths and His do not agree. How few, when they speak of cost, put this into their balance-sheet! Yet, " if I wash thee not," He says, " thou hast no part with Me." Are there not many trying to keep up appearances, when that is the inward trouble of their souls ?

But the door is open, beloved, to came back. He has never shut it. The one thing so greatly lacking now is whole-hearted integrity;-so few without some secret corner in their hearts that they would not like to have searched out by Him. That corner must be searched out, for He must be a Savior after His own fashion; and if we would not have it, we can have little apprehended the fullness and reality of His salvation. Not alone does He save from wrath:He saves from sin. It is in subjection to His yoke that we find rest. From our own will and ways and thoughts, in His blessed will, His thoughts, His love.

God grant it to us for His name's sake, even now. F.W.G. (To be continued.)

  Author: Frederick W. Grant         Publication: Help and Food

Fragment

The Word Of God is adapted to man, though he be hostile to it-adapted in grace (blessed be God!) as well as in truth. This is exactly what shows the wickedness of man's will in rejecting it. And it has power thus in the conscience, even if the will be changed. This may increase the dislike of it, but it is disliked because conscience feels it cannot deny the truth. Men resist it because it is true. Did it not reach their conscience, they would not need to take so much pains to get rid of and disprove it. Men do not arm themselves against straws, but against a sword whose edge is felt and feared.- J.N.D.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

Rewards.

No part of Scripture can be overlooked, we know, without loss. And if a wrong principle is imbibed,-as, for instance, that it is selfish and legal to think of rewards,-the scriptures on that subject are robbed of their power for us, in some measure at least. Not altogether so, for we are happily inconsistent often with our own theories; but in some degree we must be losers if in any way we are unprepared to submit, take heed to, and profit by every side of Scripture.

But we do not suppose that any really deny that rewards are mentioned in Scripture. They are too prominently mentioned to be overlooked, but is it not a line of truth that has been a good deal slighted amongst us? and are not many under law against using and profiting by such scriptures at all rather than in danger of a wrong use of them? I think we shall see that the danger of wrongly using them is less than that of slighting them altogether.

Now, when once we have known grace in the soul, there is no longer confusion as to the place that belongs to good works before God. I need not dwell upon that point for those for whom this is specially written. Not to win heaven and glory and escape judgment do we serve (a hard bondage that!), but to please Him and to obey Him in all things who has chosen us. But nevertheless we must acknowledge on every side there is danger, and so here,-that in our service, self-sufficiency, self-seeking, and assumption creep in and turn the heart from simplicity; and hence the jealousy, no doubt, of many lest the dwelling upon rewards should serve to develop this too natural tendency.

But when we look more carefully at the subject, what presents itself? In the first place, and above all, as already necessarily suggested, Scripture has spoken-God has spoken, and it is for us to submit, not to be wise above what is written. The Lord has not feared (if we may use that term,) to hold forth rewards; we, then, need not hesitate to be heartily occupied with them,-nay, we are bound to be so, as a matter of obedience, as well as of liberty and joy.

And in the second place, when we consider the exercises of the heart natural to us in this connection, is it not comparing ourselves with ourselves and with others, walking in the sight of men, and seeking honor from them, that is our constant snare, rather than the thought of rewards in the day of Christ? Indeed, it at once occurs to the mind that the thought of reward from the Lord is that which indeed truly corrects the other tendency, and puts to flight selfishness, assumption, legalism, and all the sadly common and evil tendencies that so readily spring in our foolish hearts when walking before men. Let it be a small thing to us to be judged of men and of man's day, for we are seeking reward from Christ. What will His "Well done!" be in that day. What will it be to have His approval, the holy and the true One, who says, "I know thy works"? But it may be said, "All will agree that we are to seek His approval." Yes, but let it be definitely before the heart that rewards are held forth, and encouragement to seek to win them. Let their character be what they may, they are to be considered as such, and to be sought for as such. Consider the effect of this doctrine upon us at any time,-to make it definite, say to-day,-I have been occupied with service (and our whole life is that, of course,) this morning, and the scripture comes to mind, " The Lord will reward His servants," "knowing that whatsoever good thing any man doeth, the same shall he receive of the Lord." (Eph. 6:8.) What is the effect upon me? Very often I would be checked by the thought, and the heart would confess that the service had not been so much for the Lord as in some subtle way for myself, or, what is perhaps very common with us, in a mere cold and legal round of daily doing;-sadly common and truly sad condition! so dishonoring to Christ, and so different from the patient joy of true service! Or, I might be found doing something that the thought of reward from the Lord would cause to appear in its true color, and show it to be something that I ought to have done with if I would seek His approbation and not the satisfaction of self-will or the approval of others as unspiritual as myself; "for if a man strive for masteries, yet is he not crowned except he strive lawfully "-a solemn while sweetly solemn scripture to test many and all of our doings! It will be a sharp pruning-knife in that day, and it is meant to be such for our own use now, in the soberness and simplicity of honest and God-fearing self-judgment.

But if our service is found to be truly to the Lord, as far as we have light to judge, then the heart is truly gladdened and preciously encouraged in the way; and the knowledge that He has "eyes as a flame of fire" is welcome to the deeper instincts of the heart; and the thought of receiving from Him the " white stone," and the new name written in it known only to the receiver,-what can we say about it? Shall we say we are not to be occupied with rewards after such a promise? What can we do but bow our hearts and seek grace to honestly and joyfully respond to such a solemnizing and heart-filling encouragement from the One whose side was pierced?

Is it not clear, then, that the thought or truth of definite rewards, whatever our tendency to misuse every truth, (and may we be always on our guard,) -nevertheless, is it not clear that this truth is emphatically one that really guards against the very legalism and assumption that a superficial consideration might lead us to think it would produce.

The twenty-third chapter of second Samuel presents a striking illustration of this subject of differing rewards in the names and deeds of those recorded in the roll of honor of David's mighty men. Even the differences between those who all greatly excelled is carefully noted. There were three mighty men who broke through the host of the Philistines for David's sake. They had had a previous training and previous victories, and now they join with one mind to take their lives in their hands for their master. It was "keeping his words," for he had but breathed a desire, and they sprang forward to fulfill it. It was intimacy with their master that enabled them to know his desire, and love led on to service. But note what follows. "And Abishai, the brother of Joab, . . . was chief among three. And he lifted up his spear against three hundred, and slew them, and had the name among three. Was he not most honorable of three? therefore he was their captain:howbeit he attained not unto the first three. And Benaiah, . . . had the name among three mighty men. He was more honorable than the thirty, but he attained not to the first three."

How precious the love and grace that so carefully notes the devotedness of poor failing followers ! Devoted to the master who was their shelter when, discontented and in debt, they had fled to him for refuge and consolation.

But Abishai, though having honorable mention beyond many, yet attained not to the first three. Perhaps no scripture presents in a more striking way the truth of rewards and distinctions of rewards in the day of Christ, the true David. Love -devotedness to David was of course the motive that led to these mighty deeds; but the Scripture bids us know-keep in mind-that for every good thing that a man doeth, that shall he receive of the Lord. " But he that doeth wrong shall receive for the wrong which he hath done; and there is no respect of persons." But the Lord's estimate will be different from man's, and much that has a name to-day will have none in the day of Christ. Joab, who commanded David's armies in the victory over Absalom while David was an outcast from Jerusalem, gained no reward from David in the day of his return to his throne and power; but the king kissed Barzillai (2 Sam. 19:39), an aged and infirm man who loved David, and had provided sustenance for him in the day of his rejection.

Let the thought of His love and of His reward encourage and sustain us in the path of willing obedience and diligence of spirit. Self-indulgence, unholiness, covering of sin, serving selfish interests, running unsent, seeking great things before men abroad but ourselves a stumbling-block at home, mere routine of work without heart, will all appear such then, but every deed of love, however little noted now, will have its reward. E.S.L.

  Author: E. S. L.         Publication: Help and Food

Present Things, As Foreshown In The Book Of Revelation.

The Style and Character of the Book. (Chap. 1:4-8.)

We now come to the opening words of the book itself. It is in form a letter from the beloved apostle to "the seven assemblies which are in Asia." This Asia was the Roman province called by this name, being the west coast of what is now, for the sins of Christendom, Turkey in Asia. The churches in it were even then, though traditionally the scene of John's as in the Acts of Paul's labors, already departing from the faith and spiritual power of Christianity; and this, as we may see more hereafter, gives at once a certain character to the book. Whoever they were of whom Paul in his very last epistle says, "This thou knowest, that all they which be in Asia are turned away from me, of whom are Phygellus and Hermogenes," it is clear that Asia was thus the scene of a revolt from that "apostles' doctrine and fellowship" which it was a marked feature of the bright Pentecostal times to maintain.

The salutation shows at once the style of the book. It is not "grace and peace from God the Father, and our Lord Jesus Christ," but "from Him who is, and who was, and who is to come; and from the seven Spirits which are before His throne; and from Jesus Christ, the faithful Witness, and the First-born* of the dead, and the Ruler of the kings of the earth." *As there are many (smaller or greater) inaccuracies in the common version of the book of Revelation, I take advantage of the difference here (though not a textual one,) to say that I follow, wherever it is possible, the new revision. Wherever I may not be able to do this, I hope to note the fact, and my reasons.* Here, it is evident, we are not in the intimacy of children, but in the character of servants, according to what the previous verses have announced. The book is the book of the throne-of divine government; and that, not merely of the world, but of Christians no less. Indeed, where should divine government be more exemplified and maintained than among the people of God. " You only have I known of all the families of the earth," says God to His people of old; "therefore will I punish you for your iniquities." It is true that toward us now grace is fully revealed, and the throne is a"throne of grace," but its holiness is none the less inflexible. Would it be grace if it were not so? or do we desire to be delivered from the conditions of holiness, or from the sovereignty of God? No; grace enables for the conditions,-does not set them aside; and it sets God fully on the throne for us, makes the "shout of a King" to be in our midst. Children with the Father, where should there be whole-hearted, unreserved obedience if not among these ?

The throne here is Jehovah's throne, for " who is, and was, and is to come" is just the translation of the covenant-name of Israel's God. " Grace and peace " salute us from this unchangeable One-this eternal God. The new revelation has not displaced, nor mended, (as rationalism would have it,) the God of Israel for us! It has declared Him:displaced shadows, filled in gaps, perfected the partial and fragmentary into the glorious God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! taught us to see in the older Scriptures themselves a fullness of meaning of which those who wrote them could have no possible perception. Do David's psalms yield us less than they yielded to faith of old ? And if the New Testament has no corresponding book, is it not because, now that the Spirit of God is come, our psalmody is to be found in every book, which for us He has combined into one harmony of praise and triumphant joy?

Yes, the One who is was, and is to come. Our present God is He who from first to last abides, in every generation, amid all changes changeless; sitting on high above all water-floods; whose kingdom is an everlasting kingdom. What a resting-place for faith! "Lord, Thou hast been our dwelling-place in all generations!"

But not only are grace and peace breathed from this ever-living One, but also "from the seven Spirits which are before His throne." We all recognize at once that these seven Spirits stand for the plenitude of the Holy Spirit; and in the fourth chapter they are represented as seven lamps of fire burning before the throne, while in the fifth they are the "seven eyes" of the Lamb, "sent forth into all the earth." This, again, evidently connects with Isaiah xi, where these seven Spirits are seen to be energies of the Spirit which are found in the Man, Christ Jesus, as reigning over the earth.

"Grace and peace," then, from these-how blessed ! All the ministries of divine government upon the earth working in blessing toward us; all the course of things as guided and controlled by God, spite of all hindrances, all puzzles and perplexities, still working in one harmony of grace and peace toward His own. How easy to be bold and patient both, if we believe this!

Then also " from Jesus Christ, the faithful Witness, and the First-born of the dead, and the Ruler of the kings of the earth." "Faithful" is emphasized here, for our encouragement surely, if grace and peace are from such an One, but yet in contrast with other witness too, as that of the Church, so little faithful. Is it not a needed word for those oppressed with the sense of failure,-almost ready to give up what are His principles, because of the break-down of those who have undertaken to carry them out? In such a case, how good to remember that on the one hand we are servants and not masters, with no liberty to dispense with one even of His commandments, and on the other, that we serve One who Himself is faithful, however we have failed. Shall we go to Him and say, Master, Thy principles are impracticable for a world and a time like this"? or shall we lack in courage when results are in His hand who has never failed, and never will, while He oftentimes submits to apparent defeat. Such was the cross, the victory of victories, and we must submit, here as elsewhere, to the rule of the woman's Seed. To this are we not in fact brought in the next words? "The First-born of the dead " unites us with Him as the later-born, and resurrection is the mode of His triumph over apparent defeat. But it is divine triumph, in which not alone evil is vanquished, but God is manifested in His resources and in His grace.

Grace and peace are ours from One who is conqueror over death, and who brings us into the place into which as Forerunner He has entered, while already He is, as risen, and on the Father's throne, Ruler of the kings of the earth,-the scene through which in the meantime we are passing. In a little while, when He takes His own throne, we shall share also in this.

Thus are we furnished at the outset for present service. Placed before the living and eternal God, the energies of His Spirit ministering to us, the Captain of our salvation cheering us on with the joy of already accomplished victory, the pledge of certainty as to our own. Now for the response of our hearts to this before we start:without our hearts are in tune, and we can go cheerily into the battlefield-for it is a battlefield into which we go, and not as spectators merely,-we should only expose ourselves there to our shame. The singers must be in the forefront of the Lord's army, as in Jehoshaphat's of old, and then there will be good success. So the saints' answer to their Captain's voice here is with a song:-

" Unto Him who loveth us,
And hath washed* us from our sins
In His own blood,
And hath made us a kingdom,
Priests to His God and Father,-
Unto Him be glory and might
Unto the ages of ages.
Amen."

*" Washed us," I believe, is right. The Revised Version puts it, however, into the margin, and " loosed us " into the text. Most of the modern editors agree with this, and it has the weight of the oldest MS. authority in its favor, although the great mass of MSS. give " washed." The latter seems more in the apostle's manner as 1 Jno. 1:7; Rev. 7:14 (though in the latter case it is not persons, taut robes).*

This is a sweet response of loyal hearts on the edge of the battlefield. It is the good confession of His name, and of the debt we owe Him, which has made us His own forever. Good it is, the open joyful maintenance of this, which at once separates us from the world that rejects Him, and puts us in the ranks of His witnesses and followers. "By Him therefore let us offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually, that is, the fruit of our lips, confessing His name." No such wholesome, invigorating, gladdening work as is confession.

" Unto Him who loveth us," not "loved us," as the common version reads. It is a present reality, measured only aright by a past work-" and hath washed us from our sins in His own blood." Let us take care we measure it ever so! Not by our own changeful feelings or experiences, as we are so prone to do, but by the glorious manifestation of itself thus:an infinite measure of an infinite fullness ; for who knows aright the value of the blood of Christ?

" And hath washed us from our sins:" what an encouragement for those who have to go into a world full of temptation and defilement! We have known sin as sin-known it as needing the precious blood of Christ to cleanse us from its guilt, and known ourselves too as thus cleansed. If we are "idle and unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ," it can only be because we have " forgotten that" we were " purged from" our " old sins."

But more:He has " made us a kingdom,* priests to His God and Father." *All authorities, upon the warrant of the three oldest MSS. and some ancient versions, give this instead of the ''kings and priests" of our common one. The reference to Exodus 19:is plain, but I do not see how in either passage we have the equivalent of the other reading. A " kingdom of priests " does not convey the thought of "kings and priests," which we have, however, undoubtedly, in chap. 5:10. Is it not rather a people who own God's sovereignty, instead of being a rabble of independent and rebellious wills, as once ? Well may we praise Him who has done all this for us ! Internal criticism, however, as opposed to authorities, might suggest the defensibility of the "Received Text." The MSS. are evidently here also in some confusion.* Israel was promised, conditionally upon obedience, " Ye shall be unto Me a kingdom of priests, and a holy nation." (Ex. 19:6.) They failed in obedience, and Levi's special priesthood was the consequence of their failure, while, as part of this failed people, not even the priesthood could pass within the vail. Grace has now given us as Christians that access to God to them denied, and to God fully revealed as the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. He who has thus revealed God has given us our place in His presence-a happy, holy place of praise and intercession. " To Him be the glory and might unto the ages of ages!"

An "Amen " is added here, that we may as individuals join our voices to the voice of the Church at large. It is a blessed thing to be part of the innumerable company who have a common theme and a common joy; but it is also blessed to have our own distinct utterance and our own peculiar joy. . The more distinct the better. Would the apostle have felt it the same thing to say, "Who" loved us, and gave Himself for us," true as it might be, as to say, "Who loved me, and gave Himself for me"?Assuredly he would not. The "chief of sinners,"realizing himself that, had something which was individual to himself, and which would not be lost or overlooked in the general song. And we have, each one of us surely, special experiences to call forth peculiar praise. Note, too, that the power of the life lived to God is associated by him with this individualization:" The life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself for me."

Thus, then, the heart gives out its response to its beloved Lord. Now, then, it is qualified for testimony to Him. " If we be beside ourselves, it is to God; if we be sober, it is for your cause." The soul in company with Christ turns necessarily to the world with its testimony of Him:the Enoch-life is joined with the Enoch-witness. For it was he of whom it is written, "he walked with God, and he was not, for God took him," who "prophesied, saying, 'Behold, the Lord cometh with ten thousands of His saints, to execute judgment upon all.'" The Church it is who is called, like another Enoch, to walk here with Him whom she is soon to be called away to meet and be ever with; and the next verse in Revelation puts into her mouth her similar testimony:-

" Behold, He cometh with clouds, and every eye shall see Him, and they also which pierced Him, and all the tribes of the earth shall wail because of Him."

This is evidently not the Church's hope, but the Church's testimony. It takes up the theme of the Old-Testament prophets, with direct appeal even to their prophecies; for Daniel saw of old the Son of Man come with the clouds of heaven, and Zechariah declares how Israel look upon Him whom they have pierced, and how the tribes of the land mourn" for Him, as one mourneth for his only son, and are in heaviness as he that is in heaviness for his first-born." (Dan. 7:13; Zech. 10:10, 12.)

I do not doubt that, while the words in Revelation repeat the very language of the older prophets, -for " kindreds " in the common version is literally "tribes," and "earth" and "land" are, both in Hebrew and Greek, but the same word,-yet that in the passage before us a wider application is to be made than this. Not only shall they see who have pierced Him, but" every eye." Naturally, therefore, not the tribes of the land only, but of the earth at large, shall wail on account of Him. The testimony is neither to nor of Israel only, though including these. And while the mourning in Zechariah is unto repentance; the word here is large enough to admit of the wail of despair as well as of repentance.

The Church's testimony is addressed to all. Christ is coming; the day of grace running out; judgment nearing with every stroke of the hour. A testimony which we know from Scripture, as we may realize every day around us, wakes only the scorn of " scoffers, walking in their own lusts, and saying, Where is the promise of His coming? for since the fathers fell asleep all things continue as they were from the beginning of the creation." Whose, then, is this Voice which here solemnly confirms the testimony of approaching judgment? It is surely none other than the voice of God Himself:-

" Yea, amen:I am Alpha and Omega, saith the Lord God, which is, and which was, and which is to come, the Almighty."

The "Yea, amen," are not, as our books give them, part of the seventh verse, but commence the verse following; and the words " I am Alpha and Omega, the Eternal, the Almighty," exhibit fully the One with whom men's unbelief brings them into controversy. He challenges all unbelief. Is He not doing so to-day, when on every side signs political, ecclesiastical, moral, and spiritual warn men, if they will but attend, that the Lord is at hand? Why, the cry itself is a sign-" Behold the Bridegroom!" Can they deny it has gone forth? Call it a mistake; call it enthusiasm; call it high treason to the world's magnificent and immense progress; still it stands written,-

" And at midnight there was a cry, ' Behold the bridegroom! go ye forth to meet him!' . . . And as they went to buy, the bridegroom came."

He who speaks is Alpha and Omega, whose word is the beginning and end of all speech:all that can be said is said when He has spoken; at the beginning, who spoke all things into being, and whose word, " It is done," will fix their eternal state.

He who speaks is Jehovah, the covenant-keeping God, unchangeable amid all changes, true to His threats and to His promises alike.

And He who speaks is the Almighty, lacking no power to fulfill His counsel. This is He who says, " Yea, amen," to the testimony that He who was crucified in weakness shall come again in power, and every knee shall bow to Him, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father. F.W.G.

  Author: Frederick W. Grant         Publication: Help and Food

Profits Of Afflictions.

We are told that the Lord "doth not afflict willingly, nor grieve the children of men." It is certain, however, that all those who have been raised up to excel in any thing good, and to be useful among men, have always had an uncommon portion of trials, reproaches, persecutions, and sufferings. But what would have been the consequences to themselves and others had they not experienced these things, or had a less portion of them fallen to their lot? How little of that goodness found in them would have existed had they not had these trials! and how much less useful would they have been to others! Not a particle of trouble or affliction was appointed to them, or permitted to come upon them, but what was necessary for their well-being, or that would turn to their benefit and advantage.

Why was it that the apostle Paul underwent so great afflictions? and why was it that a thorn was given to him in the flesh, the messenger of Satan, to buffet, or (as it signifies) to strike him with the double fist? which was so painful and annoying to him that he "besought the Lord thrice that it might depart from him." The apostle tells us the reason why this grievous trial was permitted to him. "Lest" says he "I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of the revelations." How good and beneficial, then, was this affliction to the apostle, though painful and distressing to him in the extreme. And so it will be with every trial and affliction that shall come upon a sincere person. They all tend to his benefit and advantage, and are permitted to come upon him only for his furtherance in what is right, and are but evidences of the Lord's gracious and merciful intentions toward him. No truth is more certain or more fully supported by scriptures than this. " For whom the Lord loveth" says the apostle, " He chasteneth ; " and he tells us, moreover, that He chastens us "for our profit, that we may be partakers of His holiness." Hence it is that the Scriptures so repeatedly speak of the blessedness of trials and afflictions, and so many under the New-Testament dispensation have been enabled to rejoice in them. " My brethren," says the apostle James, " count it all joy when ye fall into divers trials, knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience. But let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing." The apostle Paul also exhorts to be "patient in tribulation," and in writing to the Romans says, " We glory in tribulation also; knowing that tribulation worketh patience; and patience, experience; and experience, hope."

The apostle Paul, after he learned for what reason the messenger of Satan was permitted to buffet him, says in reference to it, " Most gladly, therefore, will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me. Therefore, I take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions, in distresses for Christ's sake; for when I am weak, then am I strong." (2 Cor. 12:10.)

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

Prayer.

The more spiritual the soul is, the more prayer-ful it will be, because it is then the most occupied in heart and desire about the things of God. Our prayers will be few and feeble if our walk with God be of a low character. If we have narrow views of God and His purposes, our prayers will be also narrow and confined. If we are unstable, unbelieving, and unspiritual, our prayers may return unanswered. Faith, a good conscience, a large heart, knowledge of the mind and will of God, and a sense of our utter weakness, are the proper prerequisites of prayer. Not many words are needed:the desires of the Spirit in our hearts, with groanings that cannot be uttered, God will attend to. He that searcheth the heart, and knoweth the mind of the Spirit, will give heed to the feeblest cry. It is far more important to consider the condition of our souls, and the truthfulness of our requests, than the mode of utterance or form of speech. In prayer, we have to do with the divine ear, and not with man's.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Help and Food

One Touch.

One touch-one little, scarce-felt touch-
Amid so many! 'Twill only be as though
A leaf had fluttered down upon His robe
From one of these tall sycamores,-as though
One snowflake more had fallen noiselessly
Upon those far, calm heights of Lebanon,
So light, so gentle !And for me-for me
It will be life! The Master will not know;
And I shall lay aside this weight of woe,-
This vestiture of hopeless suffering,
Which hath been mine so long, and shall be whole.
I will not wait, methinks, to kneel to Him,
Till the great multitudes have passed away;
Though in the twilight, when the shadows fall,
Unnoticed I might creep unto His feet;
Nay, I will touch His sacred raiment now;
How many have been straightway healed thus !
It may be with that touch I shall be whole.
The Master will not know that one so vile,
So sin-defiled, is near. I need not fear-
The quivering palm-leaves will not tell Him,
Nor the sycamores which grow beside the way:
I think God set them there lest the hot sun
Should smite upon His Servants's face to-day."

So she came nearer-mingled among those
Who followed closest round Him in the crowd.
A moment more, and her worn hand had touched
The border of His robe :its azure hem
Lay for one moment 'neath those fingers frail,
Which came in contact with its wondrous blue
So quick, so tremblingly !And then she knew,
With one wild throb of joy, that she was whole !
But straightway wonderingly the Master turned,
And looking on the eager, restless crowd
Which pressed around His sacred form,
He asked, "Who touched My clothes?"
Then, heeding not their words,
Nor yet the questionings of those He loved,
He sought her where she stood, and looked on her
With one sweet look, which told her He knew all;
And bade her, irresistibly, to rise
And come to Him. Yes, He knew all. As well
Might mother be unconscious that the babe,
O'er which in speechless agony she bent
To see it die, was given back to her
By God ; as well might she not heed its smile,
Nor yet the first light touch upon her cheek
Of the small baby-fingers. So she came-
Rejoicingly, yet tremblingly, she came-
And, kneeling low at His dear feet, she told
How great had been His grace. And then, in words

Which breathed naught but tenderness, He filled
Yet fuller to the brim her cup of joy-
Sealing her trembling gladness with His word,
" Thy faith hath made the whole :go in peace."

J.S.P.

  Author: J. S. P.         Publication: Help and Food

Worldliness Of The Professing Church, And Its Responsibilities.

*An extract from a pamphlet entitled, " Christ and the Church," published by Loizeaux Brothers, 63 Fourth Avenue, New York. Price, 8 cents.*

The last view we have of the Church in Scripture is where her attitude and desire as the bride of Christ are expressed in those memorable words, " The Spirit and the bride say, 'Come.' And let him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come; and whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely." (Rev. 22:17.) Assuming that it is to Christ, the Bridegroom, that the first invitation is addressed (and to whom should the bride say, "Come," but to the Bridegroom?) what a view does this passage afford us of the proper attitude and desire and hope of the Church! As actuated by the Spirit, she cries to her Lord and Bridegroom, "Come," She calls on any who may hear-individual saints, really part of the Church, but not knowing as yet the Church position and relationship-to join in the cry. But then, as already indwelt by the Spirit, and set to testify the grace of her absent Lord, she invites any who are athirst-yea, and whosoever will, to come to those waters of life and refreshing which flow so freely from the Head, through the members, to any poor thirsty souls who may be drawn to Jesus by the ministry of reconciliation with which she has been intrusted. The Church as here presented has but one object-Christ. Whether she invites Him to come, or invites poor parched and thirsty souls to come to Him, He, He alone, is her object. But this may well lead us to consider, a little more minutely and attentively, the responsibilities of the Church connected with and flowing from all that has now been passing under review. The Lord grant us a lowly spirit and a tender conscience in turning to this practical view of the subject.

One remark it may be requisite to make, to prevent misapprehension. While it is impossible that any but those who are vitally united to Christ, as His body, by the Holy Ghost, should live and walk as becometh the Church, the responsibility to walk thus may be shared, and is shared, by all who profess to be the Church. None but those who have really been quickened and raised up together with Christ, and made to sit together in heavenly places in Him, can manifest the heavenly spirit and walk suited to such a position. But then this is the position of all true Christians; and whole nations, alas ! profess to be such, and thus place themselves under responsibility to live and act according to this profession. How unspeakably solemn, in this point of view, is the present state of the professing world-of what is popularly designated ''Christendom"! As to all who really compose the Church, the fact of their being a part of it,-that is, of their being one body and one spirit with Christ, makes their final salvation sure; still, what cause for shame and humiliation and self-reproach have all such, that there should be such a total failure to manifest the real place and portion and character and object of the Church ! It is not as being less guilty than one's brethren that one ventures to give expression to such thoughts. Far from it. But is it not our place to ask ourselves-the place of all who really know the Saviour-Are we fulfilling the end for which we have been called of God into such nearness to Himself ?

What is the first great responsibility of the Church? Surely it is to keep herself for Christ! Is she not betrothed to Him as His bride ? Has He not loved her, and given Himself for her, that He might present her to Himself, a glorious Church, unspotted, and without wrinkle or blemish ? When and where is this presentation to take place? Where is the One to whom she is betrothed-the One who has loved her, and washed her in His own blood ? Ah, He is not here, but in heaven. Rejected by the earth, the right hand of God is where He waits, till His enemies are made His footstool. But is it only for the subjugation of His foes that He waits ? No ; He has gone to prepare a place for His Church, His bride; and He waits for the moment when He is to present her to Himself unblemished and complete. " Father, I will that they also, whom Thou hast given Me, be with Me where I am, that they may behold My glory, which Thou hast given Me." Is such the language of our Lord? Enthroned above all height, the object of heaven's deepest homage, His heart still yearns to have with Him and beside Him, in the glory, the Church that He has purchased with His blood! And what is the response, my brethren, which He receives from us? Heaven, where He is owned and worshiped, suffices not for Him till we are there, to behold His glory and share His blessedness. But does it not often seem as though earth would satisfy us ? Stained though it be with the blood of Jesus, characterized though it be, to this hour, by the haughty, scornful rejection of His claims, the contemptuous neglect of His dying love-how do our treacherous hearts still linger amid its delusive scenes! What a fearful power there is in its false glitter and glory to arrest our attention and to detain our hearts ! Alas ! for us, to make such returns to our heavenly Bridegroom for all His self-consuming, self-sacrificing love to us !

What is the Church's place? How the Holy Ghost provides an answer to this question in the yearnings of the heart of the apostle over the saints at Corinth, who had been the fruit of his ministry and the seal of his apostleship !-" For I, am jealous over you with godly jealousy; for I have espoused you to one Husband, that I may present you as a chaste virgin to Christ." (2 Cor. 11:2.) Could any language more touchingly express the deep, devoted, single-hearted affection for Christ, and weanedness from all else, which constitute the only fitting response to the love wherewith He has loved the Church in espousing her thus to Himself ? Ought even a converted world, if He were not personally present in it, to satisfy the heart of the one who is thus espoused as a chaste virgin to Christ ? How do the laborious efforts, even of sincere, devoted Christians, to show that what is before us is a spiritual millennium, without Christ's personal presence, make manifest the condition into which the Church has sunk! Can any thing but her Lord's presence satisfy the heart of the faithful spouse ? Then see the effect of this our departure in heart from the true scriptural hope of the Church as the spouse or bride of Christ. Adopting for our object, as the Church at large has done, the rectification of the world in the absence of its rightful Ruler and our Lord and Bridegroom, we naturally avail ourselves of all the means and influences within reach to bear upon our object; and hence the strange-the anomalous sight of the professed bride of an earth-rejected Lord possessing, using, and seeking still further to possess and use, the appliances of worldly rank and authority and wealth and learning and popular influence, to hasten on, as is affirmed, the epoch of the world's regeneration. The Church forgets her own calling-to wait as a widowed stranger in the world whence her Lord has been rejected, and where He is still dishonored and disowned ; and soon, instead of thus keeping herself for Him, she is found in guilty dalliance with the world whose hands are yet stained with His blood! "She proposes, indeed, to convert the world; but it is the world that has converted her. To comfort her and sustain her heart amid rejection by the world, her absent Lord assures her that when He reigns she shall reign with Him-that when He triumphs she shall share His triumph. But alas ! the world holds out the bait of present power, present influence, present glory,-yea, and consents to adopt Christ's name, and allow, and even patronize, an outward, superficial regard for that name, as an inducement to the Church to enter into the unholy compact. And has she accepted the unhallowed proposals? My brethren, has she not? We know that the false church says, (and, alas! to what an extent the true is mingled with the false !) " I sit a queen, and am no widow, and shall see no sorrow." Let us never forget that it was in the true Church the mystery of iniquity began to work ; and how soon it had assumed this character of self-glorification and living deliciously, contented and at rest in the present state of things! " Now ye are full, now ye are rich, ye have reigned as kings without us ; and I would to God ye did reign, that we also might reign with you." (i Cor. 4:8.) That is, the apostle longed for the time to come when, as saints, they should really reign with Christ; for then, he knew, he should reign with them. But until then, he was content with his Master's portion here. And if at so early a period he could say to the Corinthians, with how much more emphasis might he now have said to us, " For I think that God hath set forth us the apostles last, as it were appointed to death:for we are made a spectacle unto the world, and to angels, and to men. We are fools for Christ's sake, but ye are wise in Christ; we are weak, but ye are strong ; ye are honorable, but we are despised "! If, my brethren, he could institute such a contrast then, between the results of faithfulness to Christ in himself and the other apostles, and the commencing indications of departure from Christ in the worldliness of the Corinthian saints, what could he have said to us in the present day? Who so realized as the apostle Paul what the true place of the Church is, in fellowship and union with Christ ? And what was the present result in his earthly condition ? " Even unto this present hour we both hunger and thirst, and are naked, and are buffeted, and have no certain dwelling-place ; and labor, working with our own hands ; being reviled, we bless; being persecuted, we suffer it; being defamed, we entreat:we are made as the filth of the world, and are the offscouring of all things unto this day." If the opposite of all this among the Corinthians called forth from the apostle such a pathetic warning- " I write not these things to shame you, but as my beloved sons I warn you,"-what must he have said to us, I would again inquire, in the present day? If these things were not written to shame them, they surely do shame us! The tide of worldliness which then was setting in has since rolled on with such resistless force-it has so swept away all the old landmarks, and effaced every vestige of the Church's separation from the world-that now, saints are diligently taught to use every lawful effort to improve their circumstances, and raise themselves in the social scale; while he is deemed the best Christian who seems to approach the nearest to the practically giving Him the lie who has said, "Ye cannot serve God and mammon."W.T.

  Author: W. T.         Publication: Help and Food