Tag Archives: Volume HAF26

The Language Of Nature. Water-clouds.

(Continued from Vol. 25, page 332.)

Scientific investigation has lately shown that if there were no dust, or germs of disease, in the air, not a drop of rain or a snowflake would fall on the earth, and no clouds or fog would ever form. The moisture must have something small as a nucleus to start with before it can form into drops, and dust and germs fill this very important place in the economy of nature. This is claimed as modern discovery, within the last fifteen years, but it is stated in Nah. 1:3, " the clouds are the dust of His feet"; and that was written over 600 years B. C.

The dust and disease germs that we so deplore and try to get rid of, which lie in the streets and the fields, and which the wind blows in our eyes and into our houses, often carrying disease and death,-this same worthless dust, carried along and upward by the wind until it meets a cooler stratum of moist air, is seized upon by the waiting moisture, which builds upon it, as a nucleus, a drop of water or a snowflake, and sends it back in blessing to the earth, the place of the curse from whence it came.

Dust and moisture are thus fitted for each other, and the need is mutual, as it is imperative. But for the wind, the dust would lie in the street and on the ground forever; so the wind is an important factor. Moisture, or water, is a type of the Word. It was said to Adam, "Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return" (Gen. 3:19; Ps. 103:14). Dust, then, is the type of worthless, helpless, insignificant, fallen man-in the streets and lanes of the city, and in the highways and hedges of the country, the places where men are found (Luke 14:16-24). The two- men and the word of God-are perfectly fitted for each other; and the need, as in the type, is mutual and imperative. The Word is specially fitted for fallen man, adapted to his needs and nature, and addressed to him (Prov. i:20, etc.; 8:i, etc.; 9:i; Isa. 55:i); but for the Spirit of God, we would remain forever in our fallen condition, satisfied with the street and the earth-this present evil world (John 3:19; Gal. i:4).

But God has a faithful and efficient servant for just such a work (Luke 14:17). Only one is equal
to it-the Holy Spirit; and with Him at work no other is needed; so we have but one, the number of supremacy and independence (John 3:5-8; 14:16, 17, 26). See also Abraham's servant (Gen. 24:2-4).

Hydrogen, as a chemical element of water, seems to set forth, as we have seen, the Holy Spirit's part in providing the Word for man; and here, the wind, His active part in behalf of men, bringing them within reach of the Word. As a result of the wind, we have clouds; and what can the antitype be but the people of God gathered up by the Holy Spirit ? Look on the day of Pentecost. There was the crowd of men-the dust ; a rushing, mighty wind-the Spirit; and the water-the word of God by the mouth of Peter. A heavenly cloud was formed, so full of rain that it could not but "empty itself upon the earth "; there was such a shower of blessing that 3000 were converted that day. That cloud of blessing has been hanging over this world ever since; and however few the showers, and however long the periods of drought have been, still, what would the world have been without it ? The only reason for the present spiritual drought must be that God's people are not filled with His Word (Eccl. 11:3).

Clouds belong to heaven. They are made up of very many drops of water, each having for a nucleus a tiny particle of dust, worse than worthless-a germ of disease and death. For example:one such germ, a deadly microbe, on his way to Damascus, breathing out threatenings and slaughter, was met by the word of God; he was taken up, filled, and sent back into the world for blessing (Acts 9; i Tim. i:2-16).

The particle of dust is so small as to be invisible to the naked eye in the drop, so blessing to the earth lies in the water, not in the dust; God makes much of His Word; the man who ministers it is used in the measure in which he is little (2 Cor. 12:9, 10). This is just the reverse of men's thoughts:they make little of the Word, and much of the man; but a little water and much dust make mud, and this accounts for much of the unhappy condition of Christendom. The remedy is also manifest. In keeping with this' thought, "Paul," which means "little," was the one, above all others, who ministered the Word for blessing, and the one who said he was less than the least of all saints (Eph. 3:3-8). T. M.

(To be continued, D. V.)

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF26

Correspondence

Editor Help and Food :

I was much gratified to see your remarks as to the offering box at the Lord's table, in answer to Question 7 of the March number of your esteemed paper. For the furtherance of the object you had before you in those remarks, and to encourage the timid or poor in their giving, permit me to relate what occurred very recently in my own experience.

One Lord's day morning I found myself, when the box came round, with but sixteen cents' change in my pocket. I had also a two-dollar bill, and had to make choice between giving it or the sixteen cents. I thought I could ill spare the two-dollar bill, as I have no regular income of any kind whatever, and during the last few months expenditures in the household had considerably overbalanced receipts. But I had just been recalling the grace of Him who, though rich, had for our sakes become poor, and given up all, even His life, for us. And I thought, Surely sixteen cents would be a mean, a miserably small offering to give immediately after our sweet, symbolical reminder (in the bread and wine) of what everlasting and immeasurable obligations I was under to Him. So, freely, though not without some faint misgivings, the two dollars went to the box. Now, see how the Lord rebuked my doubt and hesitations:The very next morning the first mail brought a letter from a distant land, in which was folded a ten-dollar bill. As I opened it before my wife (who knew what I had done the day before), she exclaimed, "There, see how the Lord has at once restored us fivefold ! " The skeptic would, perhaps, smile at this, and say, "Only a remarkable coincidence"; but we who know Christ's tenderness and grace, that condescends even to the weakness and questionings of our wavering minds in reference to the giving of a few cents, less or more, to His cause, can see in it a lovely manifestation of His interest in the collections, who still, as of old, sits " over against the treasury." ONE OF HIS OWN

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF26

Extract.

What is important is not "The Brethren," but the truth they have. . . . God could set them aside, and spread His truth by others-would, I believe, though full of gracious patience, if they be not faithful. Their place is to remain in obscurity and devotedness :not to think of Brethren (it is always wrong to think of ourselves), but of souls, in Christ's name and love, and of His glory and truth only-not to press Brethrenism, but to deal with each soul according to its need, for Christ's sake. . . . Unworldliness, nonconformity to the world, self-denial, abnegation in love to others, is what is called for. . . . Let them walk in love, in the truth, humble, lowly, unworldly, and also for Christ; as little (and content to be little) as when they began, and God will bless them. If not, their candlestick may go (and oh, what sorrow and confusion of face it would be after such grace!) as that of others . . . doing the work of evangelists, making full proof of their ministry, lowly, devoted, and simple; because devoted in heart, and separated to Christ. As regards also the activity outside them, it is one of the signs of the times, and they should rejoice in it. … But it does not give their testimony at all. … I do not believe attacks on anything to be our path, but to be superior, and for the truth, in grace. . . . Self-defense is every way to be avoided. The Lord will answer for us if we do His will. . . . God has no need of us, but He has need of a people who walk in the truth, in love and holiness. "I will leave in the midst of thee an afflicted and poor people, and they shall trust in the name of Jehovah."… The gospel we may, and must, rejoice in, yet it only makes the testimony of Brethren outside the camp more necessary than ever; but it must be real. . . . If Brethren fall in with the current Christianity inside the camp, they would be another sect with certain truths. J. N. D.

  Author: John Nelson Darby         Publication: Volume HAF26

Epigram.

The ungodly man but once is born;
But when he feels the life-strings sever,
Then twice he dies, and angels mourn
A spirit lost, that dies forever.

Twice born, the godly die but once,
The second death enduring never:
His life through endless ages runs;
He dies to live, and lives forever.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF26

Important Differences.

"I am fearfully and wonderfully made," wrote the I Psalmist of the material body (Ps. 139:14). "God's most wonderful creature," wrote an eminent servant of God. Surely man is; and when, in our consideration of his complex organism, we take in account the various moral and spiritual elements encompassed in the individual we each call "I," we are lost in a morass of inextricable confusion, aside from the word of God. Every natural man has body, soul and spirit, flesh, mind, conscience, instinct. If he be converted, we must add divine life, with its new nature, and the Holy Spirit dwelling in him. Upon this wonderful being light pours from the pages of Scripture, if we " rightly divide the word of truth." We then begin to understand this " I," who speaks in a circle-"my" spirit, "my" conscience, " my " soul, "my "body. But our purpose is not abstruse questions:others have searched them out. We would now only consider briefly a few differences which may perplex, but which the Bible makes very plain.

I. The Difference between Nature and the Flesh.

It is very great; for nature is in itself quite good and right, whilst the flesh is wholly evil.

Hunger, thirst, the family and its natural affections, are right and good, and there is no sin in gratifying them in the limits of God's appointment. All that has been created is good, and every institution of God in nature is good. '' Without natural affection " is a sign of man's deepest downfall. "Forbidding to marry" is one of the signs of the apostasy. Casting reproach on the use of anything which God has created for food is proof of '' departing from the faith, and giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils." What is of nature in man, therefore, and in all the creation around him, in which God has made provision for all his natural needs, is good in itself:indeed, it all testifies of the goodness of God. Had not man's fall led him into all manner of abuses, what a lovely life his would be here, in the hallowed gratification of the various senses given him, for which God has made such varied and abundant provision in creation! What variety for sight, for hearing, for smell, for taste, for touch!

But he is fallen; he has corrupted himself; and by so doing he has made his every member an instrument of unrighteousness. Experience proves this from one end of the earth to the other, and Scripture affirms it plainly and fully in the first chapter of Romans. His highest and noblest instinct, which would have made him turn to the blessed God, his Creator and Benefactor, led him now to make himself gods which suited his passions, that is, idols. "Wherefore God also gave them up," and down he went into the revolting depths described in the word "against nature."

There is no corruption, no violence like that which comes from perverted instinct; and its vices eat out everything naturally noble. If a man steals because he is hungry, he sins; but he is not despised, for he does no violence to nature; but even fallen man, if not a heathen, revolts at unnatural sins. Thus Romans teaches us negatively what we are taught positively in i Cor. 11:14:" Doth not even nature itself teach you ?" From Romans we learn that to sin against nature is to be outside the pale of civilization-a dark, benighted heathen. From Corinthians we learn that children of God are not to ignore the instincts of nature, but to respect her when she speaks; for though her claims be natural and not spiritual, yet are they not evil, but good.
The difference between nature and the flesh is great. Nature teaches affection between parent and child. The flesh is "without natural affection " in either. Nature teaches modesty-the covered place -to women; to men, the open, public, ruling, protective place. The flesh denatures both. Nature teaches reverence for higher powers, for age, for special merit. The flesh puts everything down to one common level.

Yet though nature is to teach us, and her instincts are to be obeyed; though sins against her be the blackest of all sins, grace may rise above nature, and set aside her most imperious demands. The apostle Paul was both hungry and thirsty, naked and cold, for Christ's sake, and the gospel's. He could say, moreover, "I take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions, in distresses, for Christ's sake." I know some now who deny themselves the ordinary comforts and necessaries of life to seek after the souls of their fallen and degraded fellows. The Church of God will be forever indebted to one known to many of us, who, for the Lord's sake, refused the ties and comforts of domestic life. And the Scriptures speak of fasting; but these mortifications of the lawful and natural deeds of the body must be "through the Spirit," in order to life. Self-will may renounce all it please, and a strong will may renounce much; but if renunciation is not "through the Spirit," one becomes a Pharisee, and, so far, a Papist. The flesh is very subtle, and never more deceptive than when it becomes religious. It can be excessively pious when it plays the pious role.

There is being "dead to sin" in Scripture, but no being dead to nature, though, as we have seen, a power is brought in which is above it, and out of its sphere. Dying to it is utterly unscriptural and false. It is what God owned, and what He still maintains and owns, as of Him. He asserts it, and even denounces as of Satan what does reject it as created by Him. "Every creature of God is good"-wine and water, meat and marriage; "for it is sanctified by the word of God and prayer" (i Tim. 4:4. 5).

II. The Difference between the Body and the Flesh.

"It is a most important truth," said Mr. Darby of this; yet there is the greatest confusion in the minds of many in regard to it. We learn from Col. 2:23 that we owe the body a certain honor. Men taught the Colossian Christians to treat it harshly, and this the apostle condemned. "The tendency of bodily austerities, instead of being to really subdue and mortify the flesh, is to satisfy and exalt it. Supposing I were to fast seven times a week :-well, I think myself better than the man who does it only six times:it is satisfying the flesh. Supposing it is prayer:-I need not say prayer is the most blessed privilege a man has; but if he says so many prayers, the one who says five is better than the one who says only three:it is satisfying the flesh, though neglecting the body." (J. N. D.) We are to present our bodies "a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God;" for, "know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own ? " (i Cor. 6:19). On the contrary, the evil principle called "the flesh" is not to be honored in any way, and it is to have "no provision" made for it. Instead of presenting it to God, we are told, "they that are in the flesh cannot please God" (Rom. 8:8); and, far from being a temple of God, " no good thing dwells in the flesh " (Rom. 7 :18). " The body may be sanctified to God-may be nourished and used for God-may glorify God; the flesh, never. The body may be the servant of the spirit; not so the flesh, for it is essentially opposed to God." This does not contradict what Paul said, " I keep under my body " (i Cor. 9:27). Whatever offended conscience in another he was ready to abstain from. He could deny himself anything for the sake of blessing to others. Such a mind must needs lead to great control over the body, and prevent all tendency to making it an idol.
III. The Difference between Flesh and the Flesh.

We must distinguish also between the two meanings of the word " flesh," for the same word is used in Scripture for the evil principle dwelling within us (Rom. 8:7-9), and for the body (John i:14). "The Word became flesh," we read, "and dwelt among us." "God sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh;" and "of whom, as concerning the flesh, Christ came." "To abide in the flesh," wrote the apostle, "is more needful for you " (Phil, i; 24). This is the outward man, "our earthly tabernacle-house" (2 Cor. 5:i), to which moral qualities do not attach, but is a condition which passes away. Our Lord partook of this (Heb. 2:14). It is therefore needless to say there is no sin in it.

In the following verses-"They that are in the flesh cannot please God" (Rom. 8:8); "make not provision for the flesh" (Rom. 13:14); "ye shall not fulfil the lust of the flesh" (Gal. 5:16); "the flesh lusteth against the Spirit" (Gal. 5:17); "when we were in the flesh " (Rom. 7:5)-the word "flesh " refers to that principle of evil within which was once the governing principle of our lives, but which governs them no longer (Rom. 8:9). Its whole entity is most loathsome.

In it dwelleth no good thing (Rom. 7:18).

With it the law of sin is served (Rom. 7:25).

Its lusts war against the soul (i Pet. 2:11).

Its works are corruption and violence (Gal. 5:19).

Its harvest, corruption (Gal. 6:8).

To continue in it is to die (Rom. 8:13).

To be in it is to be in the standing of the old Adam; but by grace, through faith, we are taken out of it and given a new standing in Christ. The flesh remains in us "as the old stock in the grafted tree, as a thing hostile to the Spirit, for exercises and humbling profit, so that we may overcome, and have our senses exercised to discern good and evil." It was this, and not wine (which our Lord in the days of His flesh made and drank), that caused Noah's intemperance, and all intemperance since Noah's day (John 2). It was this that made Cain murder Abel; and it is this that has caused every murder since. It was this that sanctioned dishonor to parents, not in children, but in men (Mark 7:10-13). Every form of evil lies at its door.

IV. The Difference between the Old Man and the Flesh.

We must distinguish also between the flesh and the old man; for, while both are irremediably bad,
the flesh remains in us, while the old man we have put off. The Greek word "old" is the same as in Luke 5:37. Old bottles are for old wine, and the laws and ceremonies of the old dispensation were for the old Adam-man in his old estate. But now there must be a new man in Christ to receive that which He brings. The word "old" means worn out, ancient, fit only to be put off and thrown away Every little babe born into the world, with the exception of "that holy thing" born of the virgin Mary; every babe from Cain down to the newest baby, is a reproduction of the first Adam. This ancient Adam, this old man, repeated and repeated down through the centuries, is always the same:"Adam . . . begat a son in his own likeness."

"The old man corrupts itself according to the deceitful lusts " (Eph. 4:22). He is to be put off, and the new man is to be put on. This brings us to

V. The Difference between the New Man and Christ.

The new man is not Christ, though Christ is said to dwell in our hearts by faith; for this "new man … is created" (Eph. 4:24). It is a new beginning " in righteousness and holiness of truth." "If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature "-a new creation.

Let me illustrate :In the city of St. Louis, in August, 1894, a young man disappeared. Suddenly, without warning, he ceased to be seen in any of his accustomed places, by any of his familiar friends. He had been a pleasant, popular young fellow, and his disappearance caused consternation and regret among his gay companions. He had been very fond of the theater, but he was never seen at the theater any more-not even on first nights; not when his favorite player came to town; not on Sundays or week-days; not on holidays; not at matinees; not in the evening. His seat was empty, or filled by some one else. He never came any more.

He had been a convivial young gentleman, but now he could not be found in his old haunts. His friends sought for him; but seek as they would, in all the familiar places, they could never find him. He had disappeared as completely from his old associates and old rendezvous as if he were literally dead.

Just at this time a new young man appeared at the meeting-place of an assembly of Christians. A new young man was making inquiries about Christian walk and the word of God. A new face was seen at the gospel meeting, and a new voice was raised in testimony, prayer, and praise. It was as if a man had suddenly been added to the earth full-grown, and had placed himself in association with this company of Christians.

This was the same individual, body, soul and spirit; but when his soul was saved, he put off the old man with his deeds, and put on the new man which had been created in Christ Jesus. He entered upon a wholly new sphere of existence. A man was lost to the wine-room, the card-table, the music-hall; a man was gained to the fellowship of worshipers, to the gospel meeting, to the prayer-meeting. "But," you say, "suppose a Christian were to go to a wine-room, were to play cards, to attend the theater. Is not that the old man come back ?" No; he cannot come back. If a man is a Christian, he has put off once and forever the old man with his deeds (Col. 3:9). But a Christian may, alas, get out of communion with God, and allow again the flesh in him to act; and we know that the flesh in the Christian is the same as in the unbeliever. It will take pleasure in the same things, whether the individual in which it is be saved or lost. But there is this great difference:there is in the child of God a new nature, a desire for holiness, a love of the Father, a life that is not happy and at home away from God. So when the flesh is allowed to act, the believer is not at rest; his conscience is uneasy, his spirit is disturbed ; he is sad at heart, the Holy Spirit is grieved; and, after a longer or shorter time in sin, and perhaps painful discipline, he is restored to God.
An unconverted man is at home and happy in the world-worldliness never disturbs his conscience. He may acknowledge that covetousness is unphilosophical, but only a Christian judges it as a sin to be classed with idolatry and drunkenness (i Cor. 5:11).

With the old man we are to put off its deeds-anger, wrath, malice, blasphemy, vile language, and lying. With the new man we are to put on its deeds too-mercies, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness, long-suffering, and charity. We are to be transformed (Rom. 12:2); and our transformation is by the renewing of our mind:"We all, looking on the glory of the Lord with unveiled face, are transformed according to the same image, from glory to glory" (2 Cor. 3:18).

'' I am always the conscious ' I' forever; yet an I which does not think of I, but of God, in whom its delight is. It is a wonderful perfection-an absolute delight in what is perfect, but in what is perfect out of ourselves, so that self is morally annihilated, though it always is there personally to enjoy."
E. V. W.

  Author: E. V. W.         Publication: Volume HAF26

“Jesus All-sufficient”

Lonely? No, not lonely
While Jesus standeth by.
His presence always cheers me;
I know that He is nigh.

Friendless ? No, not friendless,
For Jesus is my friend.
I change, but He remaineth
True, faithful to the end.

Tired ?No, not tired
While leaning on His breast;
My soul hath full enjoyment
Of His eternal rest.

Helpless ? Yes, so helpless !
But I am leaning hard
Upon the arm of Jesus,
And He is keeping guard.

Waiting? Oh yes, waiting;
He bids me watch and wait.
I only wonder often
What makes my Lord so late.

Happy ?Yes, so happy,
With joy too deep for words;
A precious, sure possession,
A joy that is my Lord's.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF26

An Open Letter To The Editor.

Dear Brother:-It is on my heart to send you a few words concerning our brother Easton's article on "The Seventh and Eighth Days," in a late number of your magazine.

As to what may be said on the subject on this side or on that, I have nothing to say here, nor has our brother advanced anything we did not know before, and which had not been well considered when different thoughts were put forth.

If any desire to make a fuller examination of the subject, they will find it in "Genesis in the Light of the New Testament," by F. W. G.; also, in a chart and key, and a pamphlet entitled "Sabbath Rest," by A. E. B.

What urges the few words I have to say now is one point in our brother Easton's article which I believe an unsafe principle:he assumes that the typical application of the creative days must be to "this" earth. Why, he does not tell us. I believe it is laying down a principle by which we are denied the application to new creation. Let us carry out the principle elsewhere, and we will deny there is any typical application of the Old Testament to heavenly and eternal things. We could not consent to this.

We assume that natural things typify spiritual things; that the work in the old creation typifies the work in new creation. If the seventh day of Gen. i and 2 is taken as typical of the millennial reign, then we do not have new creation work finished:it is left sadly incomplete.

Another thing, we are all familiar with what we call secondary applications. Now I have ever believed in a secondary application of the seven days' work to Israel and the world; but secondary applications never give us the full truth of the passage we are applying. So I believe there is truth in the application of the seven days our brother Easton makes; but it is not the full truth. It does not, and can not, embrace the full mind of the Spirit in the picture He sets before us. Only the primary or fundamental application can do that.

Again, we need the primary application to protect us against an abuse of the secondary. How often secondary applications have been made without regarding the limits within which the application is true! Necessarily, a secondary application is a limited application. It should only be used within its proper limits. Yours very truly,

In our Lord.

C. Crain

  Author: C. Crain         Publication: Volume HAF26

Answers To Correspondents

QUES. 10.-What shall we do with a son of ours-a boy of sixteen years-who has been accustomed to obey, but who of late has acquired ideas of independence, and refuses to submit to parental government?

ANS.-First of all, "Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, . . . casting all your care upon Him ; for He careth for you." It is discipline upon yourselves from Him; and this needs to be first of all acknowledged and bowed to. Ask Him also to show you why this is needed. Then show your son that they who refuse to submit to God, He finally casts into the outer darkness; those who refuse to submit to the government of any business house must go out of their employ; and, in the same way, those who desire to live with their parents must of necessity submit to the government of their parents; for a house without government is a house without salt; and a house without salt means corruption.

QUES. 11.-What is "the book of Jasher," or "upright," in Josh. 10 :13 and 2 Sam. 1:18?

ANS.-Does not the name itself, "upright," show that "the book of Jasher" was a faithful account of historic facts which, though not inspired, was trustworthy, and commended by inspiration? God has put in His Word only what is needful for His purpose. He is, however, quite free to commend anything that is true outside of it.

QUES. 12.-Are the "sons of God " in Gen. 6 and Job 1 the same order of beings, and does Jude 6 refer to Gen. 6:2?

ANS.-There is much in those Scriptures which might make one say "Yes" to your question. But our Lord's statement in Mark 12 :25 concerning angels seems to make impossible the thought of connecting Jude 6 with Gen. 6, unless it be by demon possession.

QUES. 13.-Is it devotional to repeat divine names many, many times in prayer?

ANS.-We fear it is not always devotional-too often, habitual; sometimes arguing a want of that deep reverence that should ever characterize the use of His holy name.

Utilizing in prayer that we are speaking to God Himself-not to those around who listen to us-will prevent our falling into mere habits of expression.

We have public prayer in Neh. 9 ; private, in Dan. 9 ; taught by the Lord, in Luke 11; the Lord's own prayer, in John 17. We may in them learn the manner of utterance in addressing God.

QUES. 14.-Will you please explain the meaning of the 29th and 30th verses of the 5th chapter of Matthew, and Mark 9 :43? Also tell me if a Christian can join the United States Navy, and honor Christ by so doing.

ANS.-In the Lord's "sermon on the mount," it is not the Saviour among sinners, preaching the gospel to them :it is not the grace by which we are saved. It is Christ the King, telling His subjects the things which become His kingdom. In it, also, He gives to the Law its full import. So far, it had been applied only to the actions of men. Now He makes it to reach the very thoughts and intents of the heart. Verses 27 and 28 show this. Then, in verses 29 and 30 He turns its light upon sin in man, and declares the awful consequences of it. If it is better to cut off our members, to pluck out our eye, than to sin by them, what must be the heinousness of sin in His sight! for what is dearer to a man than his members ? We repeat, it is not the Saviour here, as in John 4, telling out the grace of His heart to a poor, needy sinner. It is the King telling what suits His presence. It is that which, read in our families, will teach our children what suits God, what solemn consequences sin has, what a need they are in of a Saviour. It is that which, also, will exercise the hearts of those who are saved, in whom Christ ever labors to form in them the character He loves. Mark 9 :43 is the same line of things.

As to "joining the United States Navy," if a Christian belongs to the world, he may please Christ in joining it; but if he does not belong to the world, as John 17:14-16 shows, then be cannot please Christ in joining it. Indeed, he must go against all that is dearest to Christ in doing so. The Navy is for killing men, which may be of absolute necessity sometimes in the affairs of state and of this world; but Christ is not of this world, and He came not to kill, but to save."Follow Me" He says to His own.

QUES. 15.-Is 1 Cor. 13 :1-3 translated correctly ? If so, how is it possible that a man could do all that is mentioned there, and not have charity ?

ANS.-It is rightly translated. It does not say that a man might do all the things mentioned there and yet be without love. That is not the subject. The subject is, that all those things, great as they are, are nothing apart from love. Love is what gives them what value they have. There were some who preached Christ "even of envy and strife" (Phil. 1:15), and great gifts may be possessed and not always be used in love. "God is love," and all He does is with an ultimate end of good. So love in us labors, not for self, but for others. It is the essence of true Christianity ; it will be the essence of heaven when all gifts will have passed away with the need they were intended to serve.

QUES. 16.-What is it to deliver one to Satan, as Paul did in 1 Tim. 1:20?

ANS.-It is, by one who has authority and power so to do, to put another into the hands of Satan to do to him the evil which Satan aches to do to them who belong to the Lord Jesus Christ. We have an example of it in Job. Only, there it is God Himself who delivers Job to Satan, and in no case does God allow Satan to go beyond the limits which He puts upon him. Men like Paul, who were wholly devoted to the interests of Christ and the welfare of His people, might also have this power to deliver a grievous or hardened offender to Satan.

It has been said by some that when an assembly puts one of its members under discipline for sin, it thereby delivers him up to Satan. We do not believe this; for, alas, too often it has been found that assemblies themselves have greatly erred in their discipline, which shows they have not sought Christ's interests alone. Yet it may he found that such as have been put under discipline by the assembly have, besides, been also delivered up to Satan by God Himself. It is a dreadful thing. May we, each one, watch, lest we should require to be put through such an ordeal, and be "sifted as wheat."
Its object is plain-"that they may learn not to blaspheme." Similarly in 1 Cor. 5 :5-" to deliver such a one unto Satan for the destruction of the flesh, that the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus." "God is love," and all His dealings with His children, severe as they may be, have ends of love.

QUES. 17.-Please explain John 13 :14 ; also, 1 Tim. 5 :10, that clause, "If she have washed the saints' feet." Is washing the feet to be taken literally? A neighbor of mine who is an aged Christian thinks it should be. I would like a word on the subject through your magazine.

ANS.-John 13 :7 plainly shows it cannot be taken literally, but that there is a lesson in it which Peter would know later on :for if it were to be taken literally, there would have been no need to learn afterward what the Lord meant by it. There are certain actions among men which have a moral in them. For instance, when Pilate wanted to show that he was guiltless of the blood of Christ, but merely surrendered to the demand of the Jews in crucifying Him, "he took water, and washed his hands before the multitude, saying, I am innocent of the blood of this just person."

So the washing of feet has a moral to it:it represents service. The Lord served us in dying for us. He serves us still day by day in our journey through this world. If we sin, He makes intercession for us as He did for Peter, that his and our faith may not fail. If we suffer, He sympathizes with us, and thus comforts and strengthen us. If we are hard and callous, He pierces our conscience by the power of His word. We are ignorant and needy-He sends us His servant, a book, a tract, to convey the truth to our souls. He loves His own "to the end," and ever serves them. This is what the washing of feet means, and it makes plain the meaning of 1 Tim. 5 :10. To be honored as a " widow indeed," she is to have, among other qualifications, that "she have washed the saints' feet"; that is, that she have kept her house open to the people of God, and served them in their necessities. Rom. 16:1-4 gives two lovely examples of this ; and in the midst of declension and growing selfishness, it is most refreshing to find still such women of God here and there.
"MY BELOVED"

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF26

Rest

[Lines found under the pillow of a soldier who was lying dead in a hospital near Port Royal, South Carolina.]

I lay me down to sleep
With little thought or care
Whether my waking find
Me here or there:

A weary, aching head,
That only seeks to rest
Unquestioning upon
Thy faithful breast.

My good right hand forgets
Its cunning now :
To march the weary march
I know not how.

I am not eager, bold, or strong,
All that is past;
I'm ready not to do,
At last, at last.

My half-day's work is done,
And this is all my part,
I give my patient God
A patient heart:

And grasp His banner still,
Though all its blue be dim :
These stripes, no less than stars,
Lead after Him.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF26

Just As Thou Art.

Just as thou art, O child of God,
Thy wandering steps retrace;
For though thy Father use the rod,
He will not hide His face.
Yea, bare thy heart-
Just as thou art.

Just as thou art, thy wrong confess:
He will not turn away.
He knoweth well thy soul's distress;
Then haste, make no delay.
He'll take thy part,
Thou weary heart.

Just as thou art-for His dear sake,
His glory, and His name-
He'll still thy heart's persistent ache;
He'll fan its feeble flame. Come as thou art,
Thou broken heart.

Just as thou art:oh, do not wait
To make thyself more meet,
But rid thy soul of this great weight;
Thy Lord will wash thy feet,
And soothe the smart
Of thy poor heart.

Just as thou art, He will restore,
And by the waters still
He'll lead thy willing feet once more;
And thou shalt take thy fill With Him apart,
Thou poor starved heart.

Just as thou wast, thy sin-bound heart
Thou gav'st Him, long ago.
Then, as a wayward child, why not
Come to Him now-just so ?
Though cold thou art,
He craves thy heart.

Just as thou art:He pleads His love,
His cross, His care for thee,
The place He has prepared above,
His coming soon to be.
Just make the start;
He'll warm thy heart.

Just as thou art-'tis not too late,
Although the little while
Doth hasten on, there still doth wait
His loving, sad, sweet smile.
Just as thou art,
Come home, dear heart.

H. McD.

  Author: H. McD.         Publication: Volume HAF26

Lack Of Power.

We often complain of lack of power; we seldom, as a rule, seek to find out the cause of it; yet how needful to do so, in order to prevent its recurrence! A forcible illustration was brought home to me some little time ago. We had been to a meeting, and on our return made our way to the trolley to take the car for home; but, to our surprise, all was dark and silent-no cars were running. Something had gone wrong at the power-house, and every here and there, as we walked home, we passed cars standing there in darkness and helplessness. The whole system was disarranged and helpless simply because something had gone wrong at the powerhouse. It was not the fault of the cars, it was something wrong at the source of power-the powerhouse.

We could not help remarking, "Thank God, nothing can ever go wrong at our power-house." There need never be such a sight as a stranded, dark and helpless Christian in this world; for nothing can ever go wrong with our source of power-never ! We may get the trolley-pole off the wire, as it were, and lose the connection for the time being; but that is our fault:the power is there all the same. All power for praise, for worship, for service, and all emergencies, is ever there:nothing can go wrong with the Holy Spirit. How blessed this is ! and He is the power for us and in us.

The Holy Spirit dwells in each one of the Lord's people (i Cor. 6:19), and we are told, "Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption " (Eph. 4:30). Alas, that is just what is so often done! We are to be "strengthened with might by His Spirit in the inner man " (Eph. 3:16), and "strengthened with all might, according to His glorious power" (Col. i:11). The point is, do we cherish this power ? or, careless in our daily life, do we grieve the Spirit who gives it ? If a believer is in the dark, or helpless, it is because he has lost touch with Christ; and the Holy Spirit being grieved, He cannot operate through him. Confession is needed to get into touch again. How necessary, then, to be in constant touch with that glorified Christ on high, ever abiding in Him! and then, and then only, can we be lights in the darkness, and a power in the midst of the weakness and sin around us. Christian, keep the trolley-pole on! Wm. Easton

New Zealand

  Author: W. Easton         Publication: Volume HAF26

Work Out Your Own Salvation.

A young sister writes thus of her instructor in college :"Our principal is a very good man, and he frequently quotes the Bible to us, especially the verse, ' Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling.'He tells us we must work out our own salvation, and that if we lead honorable, upright lives we need not be afraid of what comes after death. But I know that is not the right application of this verse ; because salvation is ' not of works, lest any man should boast'; but I do not know what it really does mean."

It is not unlikely that there are many young Christians into whose hands this paper may fall who are in the same difficulty with the writer of the above. Therefore it may be profitable to notice a few things in connection with the passage in question.

And first, it may help greatly to realize that the apostle Paul addressed the exhortation, "Work out your own salvation," not to unconverted souls, ignorant of God's way of peace and blessing, but to earnest, devoted Christians who had known the Lord for a number of years, and of whose ultimate salvation to eternal glory he was absolutely assured. This, the first chapter of his letter (Philippians) makes plain. He was confident that He who had begun a good work in them would perform it until the day of Jesus Christ (ver. 6). The salvation of their souls was a settled thing, and of the salvation of their bodies he was likewise assured. See chapter 3:20, 21.

What, then, was the salvation they were to work out with fear and trembling ?

This is one of the many instances in Scripture where the context needs to be carefully weighed in order to prevent a misconception as to the subject spoken of. Let us, then, read verses 12 and 13 of chapter 2:" Wherefore, my beloved, as ye have always obeyed, not as in my presence only, but now much more in my absence, work out your own salvation with fear and trembling:for it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of His good pleasure."

These verses, carefully weighed, will be seen to have a far different subject in view than salvation from hell-the salvation of the soul. The apostle had labored at Philippi for some weeks. See Acts 16. When there he sought to care for each young convert as a father cares for his children. His loving and wise counsels had been valued and obediently followed by them. As a result they had been saved from many mistakes and pitfalls which might have greatly hindered their progress in the ways that be in Christ. Could he have always remained with them, how invaluable would have been his pastoral care, as he thus worked out their salvation from so many snares and difficulties.

But this might have caused them to depend too much upon him, and too little upon God. So he is taken away from them. Still, he can guide them in measure by his advice and admonitions. But now he would cast them more directly upon God, so he bids them work out their own salvation-not in their human strength, but in reliance upon Him who worketh in them to will and to do of His good pleasure.

He is not telling them to work for salvation. That would be to contradict all his previous instruction. But they are not to depend upon him as children on a father, but to act for God as mature saints, getting His mind from His word, and thus growing in grace and in knowledge, to work out deliverance for themselves from the hindrances and snares that beset the feet of all saints in their journey through this evil world.

The college professor was clearly ignorant of the gospel of grace, and evidently had no insight into the things that are spiritually discerned. Blind leaders, alas, are still, as of old, the ruin of many. Well was it for the young sister alluded to that she had been instructed by parents who knew more of God and of His Word than the principal of the college. Thus was she preserved from error. Thus, too, was the way paved by one truth for another, making the path of the just to shine brighter and brighter unto the perfect day. H. A. I.

  Author: Henry Alan Ironside         Publication: Volume HAF26

Notes.

" No man hath seen God at any time; the only begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the Father, He hath declared Him." John 1:18.

Thus are we wholly shut up to the testimony, the character, life, words, of our Lord Jesus Christ for the knowledge of the true God. Every conception of God which does not flow out of what was manifested in Jesus is but human and heathenish. In four narratives, therefore, does God hold up for our contemplation the blessed person of His Son here on earth. Each time, He appears in a new character; but in each character, every event, every word, proclaims, "This is the true God, and eternal life." All Scripture flows out of these four Gospels, whether it was spoken before or after them, for Jesus is the center of all Scripture, holding it all in one as the hub of a wheel is the center of all its parts, and makes them one united whole. Thus, no man can rightly understand Genesis apart from the Gospels; and what is the Apocalypse but the claims of Jesus of Nazareth made good ?

It is the facts concerning Jesus in the Gospels which, received in childlike faith, impart eternal life to the soul, transform the sinner into a saint, and constrain the proudest will to fall at His feet, adoringly crying, " My Lord and My God! " And when, at the end, the redeemed are gathered around the throne of God, it will be in the measure in which they have apprehended, valued and loved the glories of Jesus as revealed in the Scriptures that they will know the eternal God who sits on that throne. Lord Jesus, draw the hearts of Thy people to Thyself, that we may know God, and be worshipers '' in spirit and in truth "!

"Every place that the sole of your foot shall tread upon, that have I given unto you. Josh. 1:3.

These were the words addressed to Joshua after Moses the servant of the Lord had passed into his heavenly rest. Joshua takes the command of that great host to lead them into the land of promise. Egypt and the great wilderness were both behind them, and the land flowing with milk and honey lay before them to go in and possess. What a suited word to encourage them this was! Enemies were there to be dispossessed and driven out, as the land could not be possessed without conflict and battle; but Jehovah's promise was, "Every place that the sole of your foot shall tread upon, that have I given unto you." They needed now to add to their faith virtue -soldier-valor-and press on. The after-chapters show that for a time they made good progress, but later on their energies relaxed; they did not continue to add to their faith courage; they ceased, therefore, appropriating and enjoying that to which they had the fullest right and title; so, after a long time, when Joshua was well advanced in years, it was said, "There remaineth yet very much land to be possessed" (Josh. 13:i), and that wonderful leader felt constrained to exhort them in these words:"How long are ye slack to go to possess the land ?" (Josh. 18:3).

These lessons are for us today. The heavenly possessions which God has given us lie before us. They are ours by divine title, and we have but to put our foot upon them. But it takes holy courage to confess and practice the truth in a world of opposition like this. The land flows with milk and honey, for faith; but the prince of this world never ceases to oppose our enjoyment of it. Let us take fresh courage this year, and press on, being assured at each step that "every place that the sole of your foot shall tread upon" shall be ours. A. E. B.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF26

Answers To Correspondents

QUES. 3.-Can it be right for one to say, " Jesus might have had it easier if He had not had man's nature to fight against, besides His own nature "? Had Jesus two natures?

ANS.-From eternity to eternity Jesus is God, the eternal "I am." At His incarnation He became man as well. He was therefore, is now, and forever will be, both God and man united in one person-a mystery which God alone can fathom, which is deep as eternity, but which is the foundation and delight of faith. As to having "man's nature to fight against," not only it is not right to say such a thing of our Lord, but it is serious error and sin against Him. We, have two natures-a sinful one by natural birth, and a holy one by new birth. This causes conflict in us, but not so in our glorious Lord. His incarnation was by the Holy Spirit. It was therefore said of Him, "That holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God " (Luke 1:35). To speak of our Saviour as having "man's nature to fight against" is blasphemy. It destroys, moreover, the possibility of His being a Saviour to us at all; for had there been in Him the least taint of sin, His blood would not have been "the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot," and could not have cleansed us from sin.

We would call your special attention to the letter on our Lord's temptations published in the previous number of this magazine. Pass it to your friend who used the painful expression you mention. If he is a Christian, he will sooner or later own his sin. Everywhere now blasphemous and antichristian doctrines are abroad and the Lord's people must "earnestly contend for the faith which was once delivered unto the saints."

QUES. 4.-"A Seeker sifter Light."

ANS.-We can scarcely here discuss in full the questions which your letter raise?. One passage of Scripture, however, answers much of what yon ask. It is Jer. 15 :16-19.

Our present times in the Church are much like his were in Israel, and the same ways of God apply. If our eye is single, and we approach God in all our ruin and need, His word molds and fashions us for Himself, and guides our feet in the path which is consistent with all truth. It would then be a serious thing, after having been thus guided, to let the loneliness and difficulties of that path tempt us to make compromise. " To him that overcometh" are eternal rewards promised.

Were we where you are, we would identify ourselves without hesitation with a company of God's people who assemble within easy reach of you. The Lord Jesus Christ has His rightful place among them, we believe, and the word of God free from end to end. We have not their address by us just now, but you can easily obtain it from our Publishers. Our heart goes out after you, dear young brother, and bears you up before the throne of grace.

QUES. 5.-How could a guest get in to the wedding without a wedding garment on, as we read in Matt. 22 :11, 12, since it is the Lord Himself who gives that garment to let them in, as we read in Luke 15?

ANS.-The verses preceding Matt. 22 :11,12 show that the gathering of guests is going on now by the preaching of the gospel. All who profess to receive the gospel take their place among the guests. The sifting of the unreal from the real will be at the coming of the Lord, as we see in Matt. 25 :1-13.

QUES.-What is the meaning of John 6:53, " Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of Man, and drink His blood, ye have no life in you"?

ANS.-Verse 63, "The words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life," shows plainly that the Lord's words, of which you inquire, are not to be taken in a material sense. The eating and the drinking of which He speaks is not done with the mouth; nor has it the least reference to the Lord's Supper, where we eat bread and drink wine, though in eating and drinking these we profess to be of those who have eaten the Saviour's flesh and drunk His blood.

It is faith, and faith alone, which, in the power of the Holy Spirit, can and does eat His flesh and drink His blood. Flesh and blood separated means death. Feeding on the death of Christ by faith is what the poor sinner does when he realizes himself guilty and condemned. The substitutional death of Jesus thus received brings him life. Apart from this, the Lord has said, " Ye have no life in you.''

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF26

Practical Reflections On The History Of Jonah.

CHAPTER TWO.

(Continued from page 97.)

When the scribes and the Pharisees hypocritically requested a sign that they might know for certain of the Lord's Messiahship, He significantly replied, ' ' An evil and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign ; and there shall no sign be-given to it, but the sign of the prophet Jonas:for as Jonas was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish ; so shall the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth. The men of Nineveh shall rise up in judgment with this generation, and shall condemn it:because they repented at the preaching of Jonas; and, behold, a greater than Jonas is here" (Matt. 12:39-41). In these solemn words He does two important things for us. He authenticates the story of Jonah, and He unfolds a marvelous typical line of truth set forth in that record, which we might otherwise have overlooked. Jonah's experience is sober history. We have the word of the Son of God for it. Moreover, the prophet's entombment in the great fish and his subsequent deliverance were intended as a sign to the Ninevites, and a type of the death and resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ. It is true that Jonah found his suffering in the path of disobedience, and in Christ we contemplate with adoration the ever-faithful One who suffered only as He did His Father's will ; but this is only a proof of the fact that God ever causes the wrath of man to praise Him, and what would not do so He restrains. To the Ninevites Jonah was a man who had passed through death. In this he portrays the glorious mystery of the gospel. He who is now set forth as the object of faith, is the One who was delivered for our offences and raised again for our justification. He went into death, but could not be holden of it. In a far fuller sense than Jonah ever knew, He could say, "The waters compassed me about, even to the soul." But God has raised Him from the dead, thereby testifying His satisfaction in the work of His Son. This is the only sign now set before men. All who trust in the resurrected Saviour are forever delivered from wrath and judgment-that judgment so rightfully theirs.

But in Jonah's experiences we likewise have to trace God's dealings with his own soul; and this has a moral lesson of the deepest importance for us. There is also, as previously intimated, the fact that Israel, the unfaithful witness-bearer, refusing the thought of grace going out to the Gentiles, is here pictured. Their present condition answers to this second chapter, as declared by the apostle Paul when he writes of "the Jews, who both killed the Lord Jesus, and their own prophets, and have persecuted us; and they please not God, and are contrary to all men:forbidding us to speak to the Gentiles that they might be saved, to fill up their sins always:for the wrath is come upon them to the uttermost" (i Thess. 2:14-16). By and by their deliverance shall come, when they are ready to own that salvation is of the Lord, all undeserved by them. In that day they will become the messengers of the same boundless grace to heathen millions, once hated and despised.

But we turn now to trace out, as intimated above, the exercises of the prophet's soul when in his living tomb.

In his affliction he cries to Him from whom he had been seeking to hide. Divine life, like water, seeks its proper level, or sphere. Because, whatever his failings, Jonah is a child of God still, he turns instinctively to the very One he had been grieving in the hour that he is brought to realize that he is the subject of divine discipline. A man is a long way on the road to recovery when he is ready to own the righteousness of his chastening, and when he sees that he is under the hand of God. Having already acknowledged to the mariners that such is the case, he now cries to Him who hears him even " out of the belly of hell."

The floods have compassed him about, even to the soul; the weeds are wrapped about his head; all God's waves and billows have gone over him; yet he will look again toward Jehovah's holy temple (vers. 1-5). It is blessed indeed when the soul does not faint beneath the discipline of the Lord, nor yet despise it, but looks up to God and counts upon His grace, however the sense of merited affliction may press upon the conscience.

But for deliverance there must be more than this, and for a time Jonah seems to fail to attain to it. He goes down to the bottom of the mountains, but is able in the anticipation of faith to say, '' Yet hast Thou brought up my life from corruption, O Lord, my God." His soul would have fainted within him, but he remembers the Lord, and is assured that his prayers shall be heard, and shall penetrate His holy temple. He is here in the place that the future remnant of Israel shall be in, in their experience; afar off, yet, in accordance with the prayer of Solomon, looking towards the temple of Jehovah, though in ruins, as in the day that Daniel opened his windows towards Jerusalem (vers. 6, 7).

He exclaims, "They that observe lying vanities forsake their own mercy." He had forsaken his own mercy when he sought to flee from the presence of the Lord. He knows therefore the condition of the heathen by his own experience. Now, however, he is confident that he will wander no more; though, as we well know, his confidence was as yet misplaced. His. heart was no more to be trusted in after he had been in the belly of the fish than before. When he cries, "I will sacrifice unto Thee with the voice of thanksgiving"; and when he adds, " I will pay that I have vowed," there is still no response on the part of God. He is not yet at the end of himself. As in the conversion of a sinner, so is it with the restoration of a saint:he must get to the end of himself before the Lord will undertake his case. The sinner must learn that he is without strength, and the erring saint must learn that in himself he is not a whit better or stronger than other men, ere God can manifest His grace.

So it is here, that after prayers, pledges and vows have availed nothing, the crisis is reached when he simply owns "Salvation is of the Lord"! Then, and not till then, "the Lord spake unto the fish, and it vomited out Jonah on the dry land " (vers. 8-10). Jonah has thus, in figure, passed through death and resurrection. He is now ready to go to the great and godless city of the Ninevites and declare the word of God to them.

That he has not yet fully done with self is evident later on; but he is now in God's school, and he will have a patient and gracious Teacher. H. A. I.

(To be continued, D. V.)

  Author: Henry Alan Ironside         Publication: Volume HAF26

“Out Of” And “into”

In a previous paper we were looking at the terms "this age" and "that age," and saw that the expressions applied, not to mere dispensations or periods of time, but to moral spheres:one away from God and at enmity with Him; the other where He has His rightful place, and man in reconciliation enjoys His presence and love. It is of immense importance to see this, for eternal issues depend upon our relation to one or the other of these two spheres.

We may now look at some other terms which are applied to them, and we shall doubtless find that, although the names differ according to the line of truth being unfolded in the context, yet the spheres are the same two, ever in sharpest contrast with each other.

In Matt. 13:38 we have at one glance the world and the two spheres in it, composed of "children of the kingdom" and "children of the wicked one," where the former will be easily recognized as belonging to the "coming age," their characteristics being detailed in the " Sermon on the mount "(chaps. 5 to 7).

There is a similar contrast in John 8:23, "Ye are from beneath; I am from above, ye are of this world, I am not."

In John 5:24 we have the terms "out of death unto life," where death is but another name for "this age," so-called, because in John's Gospel Christ's presence among men as " the Life " shows all else to be dead. '' Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink His blood ye have no life in you " (John 6:53).

In Acts 26:18 we have "from darkness to light," from "the authority of Satan to God." If death characterizes "this age" as under sentence from God, darkness characterizes it no less as separated from God, who "is light." In the very beginning of man's history as a fallen creature, he departed from God and submitted to Satan,* hence the apostle's mission "to turn from darkness to light, and from the authority of Satan to God ":agreeing with Eph. 6:12. *This formed the two spheres, of which, in the one, Satan is the god (2 Cor. 4 :4) and the prince (John 14 :30), and in the other Christ is the center, and life, and hope. In the one or the other we all are. If unsaved, under Satan as our god and prince in the one; if saved, under Christ the true God and true Prince in the other.* "For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against authorities, against the world-rulers of this darkness, against spiritual powers of wickedness in the heavenlies" (R. V.).

Rom. 5:12-21 affords another contrast," In Adam " and "In Christ." "In Adam " is death and condemnation-but another mode of expressing what is true of "this age." "In Christ" is life and righteousness.

Rom. 8:5-9 gives still another, "In the flesh" and " In the Spirit." " In the flesh " is to be " unable to please God," "not subject to His law, nor indeed can be," and " in the flesh " all certainly are who are not Christ's (ver. 9). Hence "in the flesh " is but another term for "this age." " In the Spirit" is the other sphere, where all are who are Christ's; where the Holy Spirit, dwelling in each individual, makes known the riches of the grace which is in Christ Jesus.
2 Cor. 6:14-16 plainly applies to the two spheres -to wit; "believers," "unbelievers"; "righteousness," "lawlessness";" light," "darkness"; " Christ" "Belial"; "temple of God," "idols."

Eph. 2:2, 3 is another instance:"children of wrath," "sons of disobedience," designate the class of " this world," whilst "we "who are "saved by grace " designate the other.

" Old man" is another term, used in Eph. 4:22, to express that which formerly characterized one as belonging to "this age," now "put off " and another "put on," corresponding to the new creation inside.

Chap. 5:8 is in the same line, "sometimes darkness, but now light in the Lord:walk as children of light."

In Col. i:13 we have:" Who delivered us from the authority of darkness, and hath translated us into the kingdom of the Son of His love." This is far more than mere contrast, since it shows that these believing ones, once under "the authority of darkness," had not only been delivered from such authority but placed in the light under other authority, 1:e., the authority of the One who, as man, was the perfect expression of light (John i:4), and of the love of God, who is both "light "and "love"; brought now into this "kingdom," where " light" and "love" have their full development; and praise goes up, even now, to Him who has taken them out of the one into the other.

James ever looks at the practical side of things, and in chap. 4:4 he shows the enormity of being still linked with the world; it is nothing less than "enmity with God"! Alas, that this is so lost sight of to-day, even among the people of God. In i Pet. 2:10 the primary reference no doubt is to the sentence "Lo-ammi" ("not My people ") passed upon God's ancient people in Hosea for their sins, but that sentence was passed upon them, because, with all their religiousness, their Bibles, and all God's gracious dealings and pleadings with them, they remained but a part of "this age," hence He will not allow that they are a people at all, until they have accepted Christ, when they will not only be "a people," but ''God's people."

Thus it is plain that there is and has been from the beginning, before God, a sphere which is utterly at variance with Him, at enmity against Him, having its origin in a daring attempt to dethrone Him, and that sphere includes all who of the human family stand in mere fallen nature. Close our eyes to the fact we may; educate, cultivate, make strides in art and science we may. but the stern, cold fact remains that "all have sinned and are short of God's glory" (Rom. 3:23). Savage or civilized, rich or poor, old or young, moral or immoral, the sovereign upon his throne or the slave in his cabin, all belong to "this age " who have not been taken out of it. None can enter the "coming age" without being washed (see Rev. i:5, 6). No way of escape but by the blood of Christ. "For the life of the flesh is in the blood:and I have given it to you upon the altar to make an atonement for your souls:for it is the blood that maketh an atonement for the soul" (Lev. 17:11).

The sentence of death is upon "this age" and all who belong to it. The death of a Substitute is the only gateway out of it and into "the coming age." The skin-covering God put upon our first parents is an acknowledgment of this; it is the proof that death has been gone through on their behalf, and for them ended the old status. The fruit of that death covers them. Abel owns this by presenting himself through a slain lamb. Cain refuses it; and in them the awful chasm between the two spheres we are considering is clearly marked.

To Noah and his house, and all the world of their day, the ark was the dividing line between the two spheres. The Deluge figures the awful baptism of judgment our Saviour passed through on the cross. It saves all within the ark, but it is the sure condemnation of all who are without.

Abram was the first man called upon to carry out the distinction between these two spheres in practical life, being called to "get out of thy country, kindred, and father's house." Hence he is to put the badge of condemnation upon his flesh and upon that of his household. Therefore they call him now "the Hebrew," 1:e., "he who has crossed over."

When Jehovah came down to execute judgment upon all the gods of Egypt and deliver His people, every house had to do with death-the houses of Israel as well as the houses of the Egyptians. In each case it was the representative of the house which was slain. Among the Egyptians it was the first-born; in Israel it was an innocent substitute. Death was against the Egyptians, so that they exclaimed, ''we be all dead men." Death saved Israel, and its sign was put upon the house. In this connection, how the enormity of Moses" sin in not circumcising his child comes out! (Ex. 4:24-26.) He the leader, the lawgiver, would lead God's people to liberty, without the badge upon his own child of the only principle upon which deliverance was possible.

How beautiful and simple is Christian baptism in view of what we have been looking at! The Christian puts the badge of the same thing upon himself and his house; only of course it goes as much farther than circumcision as Christianity goes beyond Judaism. The full truth as to man's condition is out now. The, promised "Seed" came and "died for all;" therefore "we thus judge, that if one died for all, then were all dead " (2 Cor. 5:14). Thus all, by that death, proved to be dead, burial is now in order; not self-entombment, nor burial to one's own death, but to His death-"buried with Him by baptism unto death " (Rom. 6:4).

Peter, "the apostle of the circumcision," familiar with Old Testament types and the lessons they were designed to teach, saw clearly the connection between the ark of Noah and baptism. "The like figure also now saves us, even baptism" (i Pet. 3:21, 22). Baptism is the fitting symbol of putting out of sight the "first man," and all that springs from him, and at the same time the badge of the new sphere whose Head has "gone into heaven, and is on the right hand of God:angels and authorities and powers being made subject unto Him." God is not cultivating any other ground; He is long-suffering, but He is not looking for fruit from any source save from the "True Vine." There must be connection with Him for fruitfulness, and there can be no link with Him save on the other side of death. "Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone." "Yea, though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now from henceforth know we Him no more. Therefore, if any man be in Christ, he is a new creation" (2 Cor. 5:16, 17); and baptism is the badge of this new sphere. "As many of you as have been baptized unto Christ, have put on Christ" (Gal. 3:27), in figure now introduces to that new sphere where the distinctions mentioned in ver. 28 are obliterated. And if the promise to the believer be, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house," he puts this badge upon his household, in acknowledgment that salvation is for them, not because they are his household, but because of the death of Christ-the only hope for them, as for any. "Therefore we are buried with Him by baptism unto death " (His death).
Beautiful badge, showing the full testimony of God as to man's lost estate, and God's remedy. Christ's death-precious death-the only ground of blessing. But those who believe need to realize that their sphere is one not yet manifested. It cannot be manifested until "the Lord the Spirit" of it is manifested (compare 2 Cor. 3:18, literal, and Col. 3:4). It is yet "the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ" (Rev. i:9). In whatever measure we are seized with the glory and blessedness of what is really ours, to be entered upon and enjoyed by faith now, in that measure the glare of "this age "will shrink up into its own nothingness, and the heart go out in deep pity for those who are of it, and have only sorrow beyond it. J. B. J.

  Author: J. B. Jackson         Publication: Volume HAF26

The Bible And Recent Discoveries.

Substance of an Address to Young Men, by H. P. B.

(Read Jeremiah 36 :14-25.)

My object on this occasion is to deal with the way the Scriptures have been criticized and attacked on the one hand, and gloriously vindicated on the other. But I shall be sorry if our talk has no further result than to remove doubts and difficulties from your minds. That in itself is a great thing, but something more is to be desired. For a man may believe the Bible in a general way without necessarily being a true believer in Christ. No one by the mere acknowledgment that the finger-post is right can reach the place it indicates. One may talk about a finger-post, and be willing, to defend it, but the object of the finger-post is not attained unless the man who seeks direction from it treads the road to which it points.

And the Bible is like a finger-post. We may have to defend the accuracy of its statements, and contend for the truth of the revelation that it brings to us, but let us see that we not only admire it and defend it, but follow its directions, and turn to the blessed Saviour to whom it bears witness from beginning to end. Unless our faith in the Scriptures leads us to living faith in Him who is their theme and topic, our belief will have been in vain.

II.

We are not now concerned to combat, the infidel notions of the Paines, Voltaires, Ingersolls, and Bradlaughs. Views such as are commonly associated with their names do not prevail today to nearly so great an extent as they did fifty years ago. Their arguments may still appeal to a certain set of ignorant people, but, on the whole, those who read and think do not need to be warned against the blatant and blasphemous assertions of rank atheism.

On the other hand, attacks upon the Bible, and upon Christianity itself, are to be found not only in the secular press, but in religious journals and in the writings of "reverend" professors and divines. Pulpits, once the strongholds of orthodoxy, are now the high places of an anti-christian propaganda. Their occupants (wolves in sheep's clothing) are doing far more to undermine the faith of men than all the wild talk of the Paines and Ingersolls.

King Jehoiakim, of whom we have read, may be called the leading "higher critic" of his day. There was much that was distasteful to him in the roll that Baruch had written at Jeremiah's dictation, so, seizing the document, he cut it to pieces with his knife, and finally flung it into the flames. There were not found wanting men who besought the king to treat the word of God with more reverence. Let us mention their names with respect:Elnathan, Delaiah, Gemariah; but their entreaties were of no avail.

There are many Jehoiakims in our day, who cut and slash at the Scriptures. It is not difficult to discern the reason. The Bible is like a mirror. In it the portrait of men is seen, drawn by an unerring hand. It shows them the blackness of their hearts, and tells them plainly what is going to become of them if they do not turn to God in repentance. This is more than they can tolerate; so, as they cannot destroy it, they cry, Impugn it! Criticize it! Deny its accuracy! Affirm that it is only the work of erring men! Anything to get rid of its unpalatable statements!

Depend upon it, there is a moral reason for the persistent efforts to detract from the force and value of the Scriptures.

III.

Sometimes it is asked:"Why may we not treat the Bible as we treat any other book ? It comes to us just as Homer, or Virgil, or Shakespeare, or any other classic, ancient or modern; comes to us, with certain claims as to its authorship, etc. Why not subject the Bible to the same canon of criticism? Why not make it run the gauntlet of competent investigation as other books have to do ? "

I do not think we could object to that, however sorry we might feel for those who sit down to criticize the word of God instead of letting it criticize them.* * In Heb. 4 :12 we read that the word of God is a critic (κριτικός) of the thoughts and intents of the heart. That is the best kind of criticism! Let it criticize us!* But let us ask the critics their own question. Why do they not treat the Bible as they do other books ? Why vent their venom upon it so persistently ? Why judge the Bible by a different criterion ? The usual principles of literary and historical research are fair enough. Why, then, should they not conduct their examination of the Scriptures in accordance therewith ?

IV.

There are three parts of the Bible which more than any others have been made the subject of desperate and repeated attack. They are, the Pentateuch (1:e. the first five books), Daniel, and Jonah. In former days the New Testament came in for its share of opposition, but on the principle of "once bitten twice shy," it is now comparatively unassailed. Having burnt their fingers severely, the critics leave it well alone. The Gospels, Epistles, etc., have been shown to stand upon a foundation, as to their genuineness and their authorship, that cannot be overthrown. So in recent years it is the Old Testament that has become the battle-ground, and my desire is now to show how wonderfully the spade of the excavator and the discoveries of the explorer have come to our help. The critics have been beaten on their own ground; their sophistry and ignorant assertions have been exposed, and the testimony of Scripture has been confirmed in an altogether unexpected way-indicating that God's hand has been in it.

It is worthy of remark that these discoveries have been made at the right time. Why were not the tablets and cylinders, the sculptures and inscriptions, which have done such valiant service in the cause of truth, brought to light long years ago ? Why were they not unearthed in the eighteenth century, or the seventeenth ? Why did not men discover them hundreds of years back, when those eastern lands were nearer the center of civilization, and therefore more accessible to the explorer than they are today ?

We may surely trace the hand of God in this. For it is only during the last century that the school of criticism has arisen, basing its inferences and deductions upon imaginary history. The archaeological relics of bygone times in Babylonia and Assyria would have been mere subjects of academic interest if they had been discovered two hundred years ago. But now they are weapons, effectual to the pulling down of the strongholds of rationalism and unbelief. Is it not wonderful that God, in His providence, should keep all this invaluable evidence buried beneath the surface of the ground, and cause it to have a marvelous resurrection just when it can be of most use ?

V.

There is another very noteworthy fact. The three parts of the Old Testament most bitterly assailed are the three parts most emphatically confirmed and authenticated by Christ Himself in the Gospels!

Take the writings of Moses, the books known to us as Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy. It is sometimes asked :"After all, what does it matter whether Moses wrote these books or not ? Suppose that some scribe wrote them a thousand years after Moses had died, what difference does it make ? The books are in our hands, and they bring us their message all the same, whoever wrote them. Why make all this fuss about their authorship ? "

There is a very grave reason, however, for laying stress on the Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch. The Lord Jesus Christ, speaking of Moses, distinctly said, "He wrote of Me" (John 5 :46). If Moses did not write the books ascribed to him, then the omniscience and deity of Christ are at once impugned.

Of course, the force of this argument has been felt. To weaken it men have invented the blasphemous doctrine of what they call the Kenosis.* *The term is derived from the word έκέvωσεv (Phil. 2:7), translated "made [Himself] of no reputation," or "emptied [Himself]." But this refers to the Lord's divesting Himself of the outward majesty of the Godhead, and appearing in humility as man. It affords no basis for the profane assumption that He laid aside any of His inherent qualities such as omniscience.* They say that the Lord voluntarily curtailed His knowledge and spoke from the standpoint of an ignorant Galilean peasant, often saying that which was incorrect and untrue. See to what lengths the theories of " higher criticism " lead! You cannot give them a place in your mind without derogating from the glory and majesty of the person of Christ.

The book of Jonah also is authenticated by the Lord Himself. Skeptics ask:"How could Jonah be in the whale's belly for three days and nights? Impossible!" But the Lord Jesus emphatically says:"Jonah was three days and three nights in the great fish's belly" (Matt. 12:40) Who are these men who dare to discredit what is so distinctly affirmed by the Lord Jesus Christ?

So, too, with Daniel. None can call that book in question without casting a slur upon Christ. For He calls him "Daniel the prophet," and quotes from the book that bears his name, stamping it as the genuine writing of that selfsame Daniel (Matt. 24:15).

VI.

Now we come to the subject of the recent discoveries in the East, and the way they confirm the accuracy of the Scripture records.

Upon what do the adversaries of the Bible base their assertion that the Pentateuch was not and could not have been written by Moses ?
To put their reply in a nutshell, it is this:At that early stage of the world's history when Moses lived, fifteen hundred years before Christ, the art of writing had not been invented, or, at all events, had not attained such perfection as would make the writing of the Pentateuch possible. The Israelites of that day, they tell us, were a mere horde of illiterate nomads, and could neither read nor write. And if there were no writers and no readers, it is clear that Moses could not have written the books that bear his name. They must have been the production of some scribe hundreds of years later.

When all this was affirmed, as if it were established fact, believers in Christ and in the Scriptures hardly knew what to say. They knew it was all wrong. They would rather believe the Lord Jesus Christ when He said that Moses wrote these books than all the learned professors of the day. But they could not say people could read and write fifteen hundred years B. C.

Ah ! but we can say so now. Recent discoveries have brought to light a world of scribes and readers, of books, libraries, and schools, which stretches away into a past that was already remote in the days of Abraham. The world into which Moses was born has proved to be one of high literary culture, and the wonder would be, not that he should have known how to write, but that any one in his position should not have been able to do so.

M. de Sarzec, a French excavator, has discovered at Tel-loh, in Southern Chaldea, a whole library of tablets, more than thirty thousand in number. This library dates back hundreds of years before Moses. The inscriptions upon these tablets are in the most ancient language known to men, and they show conclusively that even in the remote past almost everybody could write and read. There are letters written by soldiers and merchants. Others were written by women. Even boys and girls could write; they went to school and had clay "copy-books."

In the light of all this, what becomes of the assertion that writing was the invention of a much later age ?

Moses did not, of course, live in Chaldea, but in Egypt. The Egyptians did not write on baked clay like the Chaldeans, but on papyrus, a much more perishable material. In spite of this, however, certain very ancient Egyptian writings have been discovered. One of them is a treatise on mathematics dating from the age of Abraham; there is also a collection of model letters, and a description of a traveler's adventures in Palestine, written in the time of Moses!

Yet learned professors, who ought to be ashamed ever to show their faces again, have sought to shake the faith of believers in the Holy Scriptures because, forsooth, nobody could write or read so long ago as the days when Moses lived ! Recent discoveries have amply and finally refuted such wild statements. But what of those who have been robbed of their confidence in the word of God thereby ?

VII.

What have the Jehoiakims of today – the gentlemen who cut and slash-to say about the book of Daniel ?

They tell us, first of all, that it could not possibly have been written by Daniel. It may have been written by almost anybody else that you like, and at any later date that you please, but it could not have been written in Daniel's day.

When we ask why they make these assertions, they give us several reasons which seem, to be very convincing. But the violence of their hostility makes us suspect that Daniel is particularly obnoxious to the critics.

And such is, indeed, the case. The reason is not far to seek. Of all the books of the Bible, Daniel contains the most detailed and minute prophecies, not only of times yet future, but of events which were near at hand when the book was written. These latter prophecies in due time were fulfilled to the letter. So evident is this that Porphyry, an anti-Christian writer of the third century (a. d.), declared that Daniel was history and not prophecy; that is, that it must have been written after the events prophesied of had happened. Certainly the prophecies and the subsequent history fit into one another like a hand into a glove.

"Oh,"cry the critics, "nobody could foretell things in such a marvelous way. It would be a miracle! " Now, miracles these learned gentlemen will by no means believe in. Nor do they credit such a thing as inspired prophecy. How, then, can they account for the wonderful accuracy of the predictions in Daniel, save by assuming that the book was written at a date subsequent to the events referred to ? So they fixed its date at about 160 b. c-that is, about two hundred years after Malachi, the last of the prophets. Thus they eliminate prophecy and have history in its place.

Unfortunately for these fine theories, they do not square with certain well-established facts. The reader probably knows that, unlike most other books in the Bible, the book of Daniel was written in two languages Broadly speaking, half of it is in Hebrew, the sacred language of the Jews; the other half is in Aramaic (otherwise known as Syriac, or Chaldee). There are spiritual lessons to be learned from this fact; but it is with the fact itself that we are now concerned, as affording a very clear refutation of the theory that would date the book about 160 B. C.

We have scriptural proof that prior to their captivity in Babylon the Jews did not understand the Aramaic language. For when Rabshakeh shouted out his abusive words in Hebrew, in the ears of the people on the wall, he was requested to desist, and to speak in Aramaic (or Syriac), which certain nobles could understand, but which was unintelligible to the people generally (2 Kings 18:26).

Scripture also shows that after their captivity in Babylon the Jews had lost to a large extent their own language, Hebrew, and for the most part only understood Aramaic. When Ezra read the law in the hearing of the assembled people, certain Levites had to interpret it. The sacred Hebrew had become a dead language to many of the Jews who had returned from Babylon (Neh. 8:7).

Now, the book of Daniel, though full of instruction for us, was written primarily for the comfort and encouragement of God's people who lived in his day. If it had been written, as the critics affirm, about 160 years B. C., then it would have been written at a time when about half of it would be quite unintelligible to many who were intended to profit by it. The only date in the whole of Jewish history when the book of Daniel could be read in its entirety by the Jewish people was the period of their captivity before they had lost their own language, and after they had begun to speak the language of their conquerors. Thus the fact of the two languages being used proves the book to have been written during the Captivity;" that is, at the time when Daniel lived.

VIII.

The two chief objections to Daniel on the part of the "higher critics" are in connection with what they call (1) the Belshazzar difficulty, and (2) the musical instrument difficulty. Modern discoveries, however, have utterly overthrown and discomfited the objectors.

The "Belshazzar difficulty," briefly, is as follows :The Bible states that on the night when Babylon fell, its king, Belshazzar, was slain (Dan. 5 :30). " But," say the critics, " we know Babylonian history well enough to say that no king named Belshazzar ever reigned over Babylon. The fall of the city is an historic event, but when it took place the reigning king was Nabonidus, not Belshazzar. Moreover, he was hundreds of miles away from Babylon, and we read of him afterwards as a prisoner in the hands of the Persian conqueror." Here was a clear case of conflict! Christians knew not what to say. They could only wait. Nor have they waited in vain.

In 1854 Sir H. Rawlinson discovered in the ruins of the ancient city, Ur of the Chaldees, some terra- cotta cylinders containing an inscription by that very King Nabonidus, who was reigning at the time when Babylon fell. In this inscription he speaks of "Belshazzar, my eldest son." This proves two things :

(1) There was a royal person named Belshazzar.

(2) He was son of Nabonidus,* and therefore lived at the very time that Daniel says he did. *He is called in Scripture the son (or grandson) of Nebuchadnezzar. There is ground for believing that Nabonidus married a daughter of Nebuchadnezzar. In that case Belshazzar would be rightly spoken of as son, or grandson, of Nebuchadnezzar, though actually the son of Nabonidus.*

In 1876 Sir H. Rawlinson discovered more than two thousand tablets upon the site of Babylon itself. One of these contained an account by the Persian King Cyrus of the invasion and capture of Babylon. Nabonidus is mentioned as having fled and been made a prisoner. Mention is also made of a certain night when "the king" died.

It appears, then, that there were actually two persons who at the same time were kings of Babylon. Nabonidus, the supreme monarch, was absent from his capital city, and it seems that he had left his eldest son, Belshazzar, in Babylon as a deputy king, or regent, during his absence. So that in very truth Belshazzar was "the king," the only king that could possibly have been slain on that terrible night of Babylon's capture.

This fact throws light on a statement in the Bible which otherwise is somewhat difficult of explanation. It was not uncommon in ancient times for signal services to be rewarded by exaltation of the man who rendered them to a place in the kingdom second only to the king himself. Thus Joseph was rewarded by Pharaoh, Mordecai by Ahasuerus, Daniel by Nebuchadnezzar. But in Daniel 5 :29 Belshazzar commands that Daniel should be, not the second, but the third ruler in the kingdom. Why the third ? Sir H. Rawlinson's discoveries enable us to answer this question. Belshazzar himself, though king in Babylon, was only the second ruler; Nabonidus his father being the first. Hence the highest place that he could offer Daniel was that of third ruler.

How accurate, then, is the language of Scripture! How the attacks of the critics recoil upon themselves! How the book of Daniel comes unscathed and triumphant out of the ordeal to which it had been subjected! May God give repentance and self-judgment to the men who have set themselves to discredit and belittle His word!

IX.

There yet remains the question of the musical instruments, upon which the critics have laid great stress.

When Nebuchadnezzar set up his golden image in the plain of Dura, all kinds of musical instruments are said to have been employed (Dan. 3:5). "But," say the critics, "four of these instruments-the harp, sackbut, psaltery, and dulcimer -were of Greek origin, and could not have been in use in Babylon at such an early date. This shows that the book of Daniel is the production of a much later age." So reason Dean Farrar and others of the rationalistic school.

Unfortunately for their theories, Strabo, a geographical writer who lived at the beginning of the Christian era, distinctly states that two of these instruments, the harp and sackbut (κιθαρις and σαμβυκη), were not Greek, but Asiatic, in origin. The pages of Strabo were as accessible to Dean Farrar as to any one. ' He could read Greek with facility. What excuse had he for remaining in such ignorance of the subject upon which he wrote ?

But what about the other two instruments, the psaltery and dulcimer ? They are very possibly Greek in origin, as is asserted. But about fifty years before the time of Daniel, the great Assyrian monarch, Assurbanipal, built a huge and splendid palace for himself. This palace, with the sculptures upon its walls, has been laid bare by the spade of the excavator. In one of the designs there has been found a representation of one of those very Greek instruments which we are told could not possibly have been known in Babylon until five hundred years later!

The fact is, it is conclusively proved that a brisk trade was carried on between Greece and Babylon long before Daniel's time, and opportunities were abundant for instruments of music to find their way from one country to the other.

So, once again, the critics are convicted of bearing false testimony ; and the Scriptures are cleared of the aspersions which have been cast upon them.

It is impossible to acquit the "higher critics" of the charge of showing bias and prejudice in their handling of the sacred writings. Their methods deserve the sternest condemnation. Nor are they to be commended who condone their conduct by remaining in church-fellowship with them.

The path of the Christian, who desires to be loyal to Christ and the Scriptures, is clear. He is not to bid God-speed to any who bring not the doctrine of Christ. He is to have no manner of fellowship with such, and is not even to receive them into his house (2 John 10, 11).

My earnest counsel to you is never to sanction by your presence the preaching of any "higher critic," no matter how great his name. Retain no link with congregations who tolerate them in the pulpit. Contribute to no societies which accept their patronage. Be clear, at all costs, of this great evil. You may find yourself in a small minority. Never mind. Better to be few in number and loyal in heart than to march shoulder to shoulder with traitors in the ranks of the majority.

To any reader that has fallen under the influence of anti-scriptural theories let me say a word in closing. Do not believe that the critics have a monopoly of learning. Men as learned as they have considered their theories, and have deliberately cast them aside, not only as unscriptural, but as unhistorical and unphilosophical. Men of the greatest scholarship have been, and are, devout and enthusiastic believers in the verbal inspiration of the Bible. If they find no difficulty in this, why should you or I ?

"The wise men are ashamed, they are dismayed and taken:lo, they have rejected the word of the Lord; and what wisdom is in them ? " (Jer. 8:9).

  Author: H. P. B.         Publication: Volume HAF26

In Obscurity.

(Rom. 12 :16.)

We do not crave a shining sphere
In which to win the world's applause:
We crave that loyal love sincere
Which swerves not from a righteous cause:
In all our conscious need we ask
For fitness for our daily task.

Where self expires, true life begins :
From dying seed comes golden grain:
Unselfish love the victory wins;
And those who serve are those who reign:
For each day's task we therefore plead
To have the fitness that we need.

T. Watson

  Author: T. Watson         Publication: Volume HAF26

Our Hope.

*This paper is the last from the pen of our beloved departed brother, who has often been heard through our pages. It reached us about the time of his death, with the request that the extract from the Numerical Bible which follows this be published in conjunction.-Editor.*

"And I John saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven. . . . And I heard a great voice out of heaven saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and He will dwell with them, . . . and be their God."-Rev. 21 :2, 3.

As the heavenly saints are the "tabernacle of God," does this scripture teach that their final abode is to be on the earth ?

The following considerations have to be weighed. Must not such a scripture be interpreted in the light of the doctrine of the Epistles-like types, parables, and historical events ?

The Epistles teach that heaven is our portion, our inheritance, our eternal destiny; while there will also be redeemed ones on earth in the Millennium, and in the eternal state.

Col. i tells of the '' hope laid up for us in heaven "; and John (chap. 14) gives us the Lord's assurance that the Father's house, where He is, shall be our home. Peter tells us of an "inheritance incorruptible, undefiled, and that fadeth not away, reserved in heaven for you"; and in Matthew we are told "great is your reward in heaven." Also, in Eph. 1 the heavenly hope and the earthly are put side by side, and distinguished:"That in the dispensation of the fulness of times He might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven, and which are on earth."

That the heavenly glory will shine upon the earth, and be in close association with it, is prefigured by the scene on the mount of transfiguration, and also by the "ladder" of Jacob's vision. And so the heavenly Jerusalem will shine upon the earth-but it does not say that it comes to the earth.

If the heavenly saints-"the tabernacle of God," "the new Jerusalem"-are to be brought down to earth for their final, eternal home, then the earth will be God's dwelling-place forever – which, of course, could not be. Heaven is His throne, and His dwelling-place.

Heaven is not the earth, and the earth is not heaven. They are distinct spheres in time and in the eternal state.

Christ was "received up into heaven," and we shall be with Him there "forever." E. S. Lyman

  Author: E. S. L.         Publication: Volume HAF26

Editor’s Notes

"Perilous Times."

We have received of late several communications from men whose souls are stirred within them at the proofs they see all about them of the actual presence of the "perilous times " which are to mark "the last days" (2 Tim. 3:1). The "last days " of what ? Of Christendom, of course; which, after it has fully apostatized, and been swept off the earth by the judgment of God, will be followed by another dispensation altogether different from this.

The "perilous times," then, refer to those things which are the issues of corrupted Christianity. Perilous times at sea refer to the dangers to ships and their cargoes. There may be perilous times in finances, in national affairs, in the lives of men through plagues and diseases; but they have to do only with the things of time. Christianity has to do with eternal things, and loss here means loss that can never, never, never be repaired. Is it a wonder, then, if men who love, who feel an interest in all Christians, and in all men, should raise their voice when they plainly see the perils resulting from falling away from the truths of Christianity ?

One writes, " My mind has been led much lately to i Tim. 4:i:'The Spirit speaketh expressly that in the latter times some shall apostatize from the faith, giving heed to deceiving spirits and teachings of demons.'How can one be passive in view of the exceedingly frequent appearance of heretical teachings of late, from the aggravated forms of Judaizing t he gospel in various shades, to the full renouncing of the truth and substituting heathenism! Prominent among the latter is Theosophy, which raises its head high here where we live, boasting of multitudes of converts, and among them persons of high and responsible places in Christendom. With the Laodicean indifference now so manifest on all sides, and with which, alas, many of the Lord's own are contaminated, one can easily see how soon the triumph of Antichrist can take place. May we cling to the Lord, and watch against 'the dust of evil which settles so easily and without giving alarm, yet quickly dims the mirror of conscience." We need the Lord's ministry with the water and towel, not only when conscious of it, but also unconscious."

Another correspondent sends us a series of articles by a " Rev. —-," who publishes his views about "The Mission of Jesus," and "The Divinity of Man," and formulates "A Christian Creed"; all of which shows that he knows no more of Christ and His mission than a poor heathen. What is dreadful to think of, however, is that such a man, and a host of others now rising up everywhere, are not poor, ignorant creatures who talk without knowing how ignorant they are. They are traitors; they kiss, only to more easily betray; they yet profess Christ, only the better to destroy Christianity. Jude says of them:"These are spots in your feasts of charity, when they feast with you, feeding themselves without fear:clouds they are without water, carried about of winds; trees whose fruit withereth, without fruit, twice dead, plucked up by the roots; raging waves of the sea, foaming out their own shame; wandering stars, to whom is reserved the blackness of darkness forever."

Rome, conscious that the Scripture condemns it, has kept it out of the hands of the people. These are bolder servants of the devil; the Scriptures condemn them, so they labor to destroy the Scriptures. They affect piety, and thus waylay the simple; they affect superior knowledge, and thus capture the crowd of proud minds; they boldly revolt against God, and rebels flock to them. They teach the people from the pulpit, and the people's children from professors' chairs; they destroy the fear of God, of eternal judgment, of government, of parents, in the masses; and the results are ripening fast. Murder, suicide, fornication, adultery, divorce, robbery, covetousness increase as the teaching of Theosophy, Christian Science, Higher Criticism, Unitarianism, Seventh-day Adventism, Millennial Dawn-ism, and the like, prevail. And why should men restrain their passions, if God is too kind to cast them into hell fire? Why should they repent, if there is no such thing as sin ? Why should they be held by the authority of Scripture, if Scripture is so untrustworthy, so full of errors? Why should they submissively flee for shelter beneath the atoning blood of Jesus, if there is no wrath to come ? Why should they not enjoy sin in this life, since they are to have another opportunity for salvation in the time to come ? Men are not slow to catch at what offers them freedom without repentance-a place in heaven without having bowed at the feet of Jesus, confessing Him "my Lord and my God."

Ye that fear God; all ye that yet value your souls, be afraid of these men, and of lending them your ear. The poor drunkard, the thief, the fallen, are not half so pitiable as those who become imbued
with "modern theology." The burden q£ their sins leads to the Saviour, but the "advanced" teaching of the day destroys that Saviour, as far as man's apprehension is concerned, and the soul of its poor dupe becomes a miserable, hopeless chaos. Alas for those who have closed their Bibles, and are now "seeking truth" in the absurd and foolish talk which abounds in newspapers and magazines, and many books. Let God's people cling more than ever to their Bibles, exercising sincere faith in every word of it, prayerfully and perseveringly seeking to understand the will of God revealed therein. Stand fast; the coming of the Lord is near.

To depart, and to be with Christ; which is far better" Phil. 1:23.

A few days ago (Feb. 7), at Plainfield, N. J., our brother R. Hutchinson passed out of our midst to be with Christ. Through many ups and downs, he had attained the great age of ninety-four years, yet was possessed of all his faculties to a marked degree. Many will remember him as the author of the pamphlet, " Death is Ours," which sheds a bright light on that subject. Various leaflets of his are also in circulation, one of which, "A Dry Way through Jordan," is among the gems of truth in verse.

Before passing away, he left in our hands various unpublished MSS., some of which will, D.V., appear in future numbers of our magazine.

What a wonderful provision of the grace of God that poor, sinful men who have fled to Christ for their refuge should have, and know they have, a home of rest, and peace, and love, prepared for them with God their Father, and Christ their Saviour, in the glory where they dwell! May we who are still left here use faithfully for our Lord what remains of our days.

" This book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth; but thou shalt meditate therein day and night." Josh. 1:8.

A very valuable lesson is here for us, as well as for God's people of old. We do not get in the passage the lesson of diligence in preaching the Word to others, although that is an important exercise, especially when the great need around us is discerned This exhortation is rather to be in constant occupation with the word of God, finding in it our present joy and delight. "Thy testimonies are my delight" (Ps. 119:24). Thus it becomes our daily food. Thus, too, streams of heavenly light are poured into the soul, illuminating both the path of daily life and our future destiny. It "shall not depart from thy mouth." How infinitely better than our own are the thoughts and the words of God! Truth and wisdom are they, with power in themselves to prove whence they come (John 7:17). They give "understanding of the times," as had the men of Issachar(i Chron. 12:32). They furnish the man of God thoroughly for all good works (2 Tim. 3:16, 17). They enable us intelligently to give an answer to every one that asketh us a reason of the hope within us (i Peter 3:15).

Oh that this exhortation might fall upon the hearts of God's people to-day with divine power! Then we would be sanctified, built up and transformed by its influence, and fitted to represent as well as honor and serve Him, our Lord and Saviour. A. E. B.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF26

The Resurrection Of The Lord Jesus And Its Consequences.

One of the leading and fundamental truths of Christianity is the resurrection of the Lord Jesus; so much so, that it is written, "If Christ be not raised, your faith is vain; ye are yet in your sins. Then they also which are fallen asleep in Christ are perished" (i Cor. 15:17, 18). The living and the dead are left without hope if Christ be not raised. But at the very start we can with triumph say, "But now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the first fruits of them that slept" (ver. 20).

The resurrection of the Lord Jesus is established as a great historic fact. A great number of competent witnesses are prepared to testify to His actual resurrection. The apostle Paul says in i Cor. 15:3, 4, " For I delivered unto you first of all that which I also received, how that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures; and that He was buried', and that He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures." Were His death and burial realities ? If so, then His resurrection was a reality also, for the Scriptures declare all three.

But where are the witnesses ? It is instructive to notice how God has placed on record the witnesses of the Lord's resurrection, for man will question everything in connection with God. Some are active in Satan's service to-day who deny the actual resurrection of Christ. 'No one knows what became of His body," they say; "most likely it went off into its different gases," and, as a spirit-being, was "exalted to the divine nature."

But the witnesses are too many, and their testimony too conclusive for any one truly subject to Holy Scripture to accept such blasphemous statements.

1st. "And that He was seen of Cephas."

2d." Then of the twelve."

3d. "After that, He was seen of above five hundred brethren at once," the most of whom still lived to bear witness when this was written.

4th. " After that, He was seen of James."

5th." Then of all the apostles."

6th. "And last of all He was seen of me also, as of one born out of due time" (i Cor. 15:5-8).

So, at least, here are 513 witnesses of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus. Of course, there are many more, such as Mary Magdalene, and others, but these will suffice as establishing the great historic fact of our Lord's resurrection.

In the preaching and teaching of the apostles of our Lord, His resurrection occupied a very conspicuous place for obvious reasons. We read, "With great power gave the apostles witness of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus:and great grace was upon them all" (Acts 4:33). As the Holy Spirit filled them, their constant testimony was, "Him, being delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by wicked hands have crucified and slain:whom God hath raised up, having loosed the pains of death:because it was not possible that He should be holden of it " (Acts 2 :23, 24). Again:" This Jesus hath God raised up, -whereof we all are witnesses. . . . Therefore let all the house of Israel know assuredly, that God hath made that same Jesus, whom ye have crucified, both Lord and Christ" (Acts 2:32-36). Again:"But ye denied the Holy One and the Just, and desired a murderer to be granted unto you; and killed the Prince of life, whom God hath raised from the dead; whereof we are witnesses" (Acts 3:14,.15).

It was this that brought conviction to the hearts of the listening multitude, and brought forth the Cry, "Men and brethren, what shall we do ?" (Acts 2:37.) Three thousand souls accepted the divine testimony, and owned their allegiance to the risen and exalted Jesus. A little later, enough more to make five thousand. With such power did the apostles give witness of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus.

When our Lord was here, the uppermost thought in His mind was the glory of God; and the night before His betrayal, after Judas had gone out, He said, " Now is the Son of Man glorified, and God is glorified in Him. If God be glorified in Him, God shall also glorify Him in Himself, and shall straightway glorify Him " (John 13:31, 32).

The Lord had undertaken the. work by which God should be glorified about sin, in putting it away by the sacrifice of Himself. And His resurrection is the proof of God having been glorified, for " He was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father " (Rom. 6:4). "If God be glorified in Him, God shall also glorify Him in Himself, and shall straightway glorify Him." The very glory of the Father demanded the resurrection of Him who had glorified God about sin, and put God in a position where He could righteously act according to the desires of His own heart. That which straitened Him before, was removed by the death of the cross, and now love can have its own way in the blessing of man. To this the Saviour alludes when He said, "I have a baptism to be baptized with; and how am I straitened till it be accomplished!" (Luke 12:50). What that "baptism " was we learn in such scriptures as John 12 :27, 28; Luke 22 :39-44; Matt. 26 :45-50. His sufferings were a deep that no creature could fathom. God only could sound the depths of the sorrows of the divine Sufferer, or fully appreciate the work accomplished by Him when under His afflictive hand. One need hardly say, not for His own sins did He suffer, for His manhood was as sinless as His divinity, but He had taken the sinner's place, and suffered because of our sins.

"Oh groundless deep,
Oh love beyond degree !
The Offended dies,
To set the offender free ! "

When our Lord rose from the dead, it was a proof to the universe that God was glorified about sin. "And shall straightway glorify Him." His place at God's right hand, as a glorified Man, proves that God has been glorified, and that His nature and character and attributes work in righteous harmony for the blessing of man. God having been glorified is the joy of the Christian's heart.

But more:when Christ came forth from the tomb, when He rose, it demonstrated the fact that Satan was a defeated foe. "Now shall the prince of this world be cast out" had the Lord said in John 12:31, in view of His approaching death. And the Holy Spirit, commenting upon the incarnation and death of the Son of God, in Heb. 2:14, 15, says, "Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, He also Himself likewise took part of (in) the same; that through death He might destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the devil; and deliver them who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage."

As Goliath had marched up and down the valley of Elah for forty days, terrifying the hearts of Israel, so had Satan for forty centuries held over the consciences of men the terrors of death; and as David went down into the valley of Elah and slew the giant, and with his own weapon cut off his head, and came up out of the valley with the head of the giant in his hand, so did our Lord enter the dark domain of death, Satan's last stronghold, and with his own weapon, death, overcame him – destroyed, or annulled, him who had the power of death, and rose, the mighty Victor, "and delivered them who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage." Glorious victory! Blessed and eternal deliverance! To Him be the praise and glory forever! His resurrection then is the proof of Satan being a defeated foe, and that death is no longer "the king of terrors" for the humble believer, but falling asleep in Jesus and waking up in Paradise. How mighty the change! Now it is " to depart and be with Christ, which is far better" (Phil, i:23); "absent from the body, and present with the Lord" (2 Cor. 5:8); and, " Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord" (Rev. 14:13). "Death is ours," and waits upon us, and becomes the door of exit from this pain-stricken body, and the door of entrance into the presence of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. " There is not a smell of death here," said a dying and suffering saint. '' There is no dark river here," said another dying saint. "Are you not afraid to die ?" was asked an aged, dying saint. '' The character of God is between me and all fear of death," was her happy reply. She was in the present good of the victory gained by her Saviour on the cross. '' What is your passport into heaven ? " was asked of another dying saint. "Victory through the blood of the Lamb," was his immediate and blissful reply. He was enjoying the fruits of the. victory of a once dead but now risen and glorified Redeemer.

We should always remember that Satan is a defeated foe, and that Christ risen and glorified is the proof of it. We have only to look up into the face of that glorified Man at God's right hand to be assured that Satan is defeated, and that we are delivered from the fear of death. The risen and glorified Christ has the keys of hades and of death (Rev. i:17, 18).

But more:when our Lord was here, He met all the hatred and rejection of a hostile world. He was "a Man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief." " He was despised and rejected of men." " His visage was so marred more than any man, and His form more than the sons of men" (Isa. 52:14; 53:1-4). He could say, "They that hate Me without a cause are more than the hairs of My head." " Because for Thy sake I have borne reproach, shame hath covered My face." "They that sit in the gate speak against Me; and I was the song of the drunkards." "Thou hast known My reproach, and My shame, and My dishonor:Mine adversaries are all before Thee. Reproach hath broken My heart; and I am full of heaviness:and I looked for some to take pity, but there was none; and for comforters, but I found none. They gave Me also gall for My meat; and in My thirst they gave Me vinegar to drink" (Ps. 69:1-21).

Yet man took advantage of His voluntary humiliation, of His patient, unresisting, lamb-like character, to persecute and afflict Him. He not only "saw no beauty" in Him, who in God's estimation was the expression of every perfection, but' the hostility of his heart toward God was awakened, and vented itself upon Him who had come from God to bear witness of Him. "He was despised and rejected of men." Sad exhibition of man's nature, that had through sin become polluted and alienated from God! And yet man, in spite of his treatment of the Son of God, can speak of his goodness, and "go about to establish his own righteousness ! "

Nor was this the case with Israel only; but the whole world was involved in the matter. " God . . . who by the mouth of Thy servant David hast said, Why did the heathen (nations) rage, and the people imagine vain things ? The kings of the earth stood up, and the rulers were gathered together against the Lord, and against His Christ. For of a truth against Thy holy servant Jesus, whom Thou hast anointed, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles and the people of Israel, were gathered together, for to do whatsoever Thy hand and Thy counsel determined before to be done" (Acts 4:24-29). "The princes of this world crucified the Lord of glory" (i Cor. 2:7, 8) Oh, how sinful and depraved the condition, how desperately wicked his heart, and how opposed to all that God is, when man, because He resisted not, could nail to the cross of wood the Son of God, the Lord of glory, the rightful Heir of all, and send the answer back to heaven, "We will not have this Man to reign over us"! (Luke 19:12-14).

But what has God done with the One that man so deeply dishonored ? Has He not vindicated Him? Yes, indeed. If the cross of shame was man's estimate of God's Son, the highest place in glory is God's estimate of Him. If man put upon Him all the shame, contempt and ignominy that his wicked heart could devise, exulting in His shame, sorrow and suffering, God took Him from the tomb where man put Him, and exalted Him to the right hand of His Majesty. As He ascended to heaven, God said to Him, "Sit Thou at My right hand, until I make Thine enemies Thy footstool" (Ps. no:i; Acts 2:32-35).

Thus the resurrection and exaltation to the right hand of God is God's vindication of the Lord Jesus; all power, and all things, and all judgment, being committed to His hand (John 5:17-29). Man put upon His blessed brow the crown of thorns. God has put upon it the crown of glory. All this shows how matters stand between man and God, and where they will end if man does not repent and believe the gospel. How awful will be God's retribution in the day that is fast hastening, when the earth-rejected One will take to Himself His great power, and reign!

The question of the believer's justification is settled by the resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ, as it is written, "He was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our justification. Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ" (Rom. 4:25; 5:1).

To any who are troubled, and cannot see that they are justified, this is of the greatest value. Was He delivered for our offences ? Yes, blessed be His name, He was. Then it is equally true that "He was raised again for our justification." A risen Christ is the proof that every believer is justified. Could we have a more striking proof ? Look at a risen and now ascended Christ, and you have the proof of your justification. The glory of God shines in His face, and shows that your sins are gone, and gone forever. The stone was rolled away from the sepulcher, not to let the Saviour out, but to let us in to see that He was risen. " He is not here, but is risen," said the angel. " Come, see the place where the Lord lay" (Matt. 28 :5, 6). An empty tomb and an occupied throne in heaven prove beyond question the believer's justification. On the ground of Christ's death and resurrection God declares Himself "just, and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus" (Rom. 3:26). He is gloriously consistent with His holiness and justice in justifying those who trust His beloved Son. See Acts 13:38, 39. The Holy Spirit says, "And their sins and iniquities will I remember no more" (Heb. 10:17).
E. A.

(To be concluded, D. V., in next issue.)

  Author: E. A.         Publication: Volume HAF26

A Few Remarks On 1 Peter 3:19, 20.*

*With the doctrine of this article the Editor is in full agreement, believing it surely to be what this passage of Scripture teaches. The translation of the Greek is another matter.*

To many this passage offers real difficulty. Others, apparently taking advantage of its obscurity, have made wrong use of it. But the obscurity of this passage does not lie so much in the inspired language as in the difficulty of getting a translation that correctly conveys its true meaning. Our English Bible commonly used in this country (which has, due to its many undoubted excellences, won a warm place in the heart of English-speaking Christians) completely falsifies the sense of this important passage. And the Revised Version only strengthens the erroneous reading.

Men do not like a present responsibility, and consequently welcome anything that offers itself as an excuse for setting it aside. A hope after death is that which, of all things, soothes a guilty conscience, and encourages the wicked to continue in their evil course and finally perish in sins-without God and without hope. It is hard to overstate the bad effects of this idea upon the conscience of the unsaved. The effect of error is to deaden the conscience and (which is its final end) blind the soul to every claim of God upon it. The truth of God's living word is powerful to effect just the opposite-arouse the conscience, and make it feel its responsibility to God.

Knowing then something of the evil of error and the value of truth, let us look with care at the passage before us.

"Quickened by the Spirit:by which also He went and preached unto the spirits in prison; which sometime were disobedient, when once the long-suffering of God waited in the days of Noah," is not what the passage says, as we shall show. As read above, " which sometime were disobedient" refers to "the spirits in prison." Now this is entirely incorrect. For this to be the thought, it would be τoς έv φυλακη πvεύμασιv……τoις άπειθήσασιv πoτε which is not the sense. The construction is this:τoις έv φυλακη πvεύμασιv….άπειθήσασιv πoτε which is to be translated "to the spirits when they were once disbelieving," etc., not "who were once disbelieving." The difference is that in the first it says He went and preached to the spirits when in prison, while in the second it says that He went and preached to them when they were disbelieving, or disobedient, in the days of Noah. He preached by the Holy Spirit in Noah; άπειθήσασιv πoτε, and not τoις άπειθήσασιv πoτε, is clear and decisive.* *For those who are able to look the matter up for themselves, I refer them to their Greek grammars, merely stating that the rule under which this passage is grouped is that the article is often repeated after its noun to introduce some attributive word or phrase, and that when the defining clause is a participle, with the article it qualifies the noun, and when without the article it implies a predicate. I do this to avoid undue references to the Greek which could not edify, but may confuse.*

The passage then should read, " In (or, by) which (Spirit) also having gone to the spirits in prison when they once disbelieved, preached, when once the long-suffering of God waited in the days of Noah, while the ark was preparing," etc. This is not only the correct translation of this passage, but it brings out its truth, as the other does not.

Had these spirits heeded the preaching of Noah, they could not now be in prison. Noah preached a faithful testimony of God's long-suffering patience and of His righteousness, but it was disregarded; it fell upon deaf ears and contumacious hearts. They died in their sins, and are now in prison, awaiting that awful day of wrath. After death is the judgment (Heb. 9 :27), not repentance. Now is the time to repent (Acts 17:30). The time to have repented was when Noah was proclaiming by the Spirit of Christ the goodness of God that leadeth sinners to repentance. No, my reader, there is not one word in Scripture giving the slightest ground for hoping to be saved after death if you perish in your sins. None can entertain such a hope from God's faithful word. It is a fatal delusion of Satan. It would be senseless to preach to persons after death if judgment, and not repentance, is the lot of spirits in prison.

The passage rightly understood brings out the grace of God to sinners-yes, to those very ones who are morally guilty of the death of His Son. When man's wrath and hatred to God were at their greatest, God's love and grace shone brightest.

This is indeed encouragement at the present time, so much like the days of Noah. And we may rest assured that God will be glorified in the faithful proclamation of His patience and grace to sinners. Christ cannot be truly preached without unfolding that precious grace which freely forgives and blesses. The Holy Ghost who preached in Noah is He who now preaches to a world that has not changed one particle for the better; and if it pleased God to have made known His goodness then, it pleases Him to have it declared now.

Every stroke of Noah's hammer told off a few precious moments never to be regained, and brought the rebellious, nearer that awful prison mentioned in i Peter 3 :19. Should not these solemn thoughts stir us all up to our responsibilities toward the lost around us on every hand ?-cherishing the hope that some will heed the gracious message, and assured that in any event God will be eternally glorified in the making known the riches of His grace through Christ. F. H. J.

  Author: F. H. J.         Publication: Volume HAF26

The Judgments Of The Lord.

To God the Judge of all" have we come (Heb. I 12:23). This is a wholesome way to think of God, and to know that "the Judge of all the earth " will do right. This is immense rest to the soul, and settles a thousand and one questions that fill the minds of men to-day. "God is judge Himself" (Ps. 50:6). Into no other hand will He allow it to pass. " He is the Rock, His work is perfect:for all His ways are judgment:a God of truth and without iniquity, just and right is He" (Deut. 32:4).

All along God has asserted Himself in an unmistakable way as the "Judge of all the earth." The angels that rebelled have realized the same awful fact, and their abode in the lake of fire will demonstrate its awful verity, as we are taught in Jude 6 and Rev. 20:1-3, 10.

The prophetic books of the Old Testament are full of His judgments. Man himself, driven forth from the garden of Eden, was an expression of that judgment. The flood in the days of Noah, and the blotting out of Sodom and Gomorrah, demonstrate the same. The destruction of the Assyrian, Babylonian, Grecian, Roman, and other empires, as well as cities in detail, declare that God is Judge Himself, and has not given up His claim as such, however much man may have forgotten Him. And in our own time what proofs we have of this! Who can deny that the earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and tidal waves, that have swept away their thousands, are the judgments of the Lord, though brought about in what may be called a natural way ? Could not He who permitted them have restrained them, if they had not been sent as expressions of His judgments ? And still yet more terrible will be His future judgments, for He will "arise to shake terribly the earth." He will yet assert His claim as the "God of the earth"; and those who dispute His claim will be made to realize the terribleness of His judgments. The judgment of the living nations, as set forth in Matt. 25 :31-46; Rev. 19 :11-16; and lastly, the judgment of the wicked dead in Rev. 20:11-15, shows what that judgment will be, and the inflexibility of the holiness of Him who will execute that judgment. "The Lord of hosts shall be exalted in judgment, and God, that is holy, shall be sanctified in righteousness" (Isa. 5:16).

Thank God, the true believer "will not come into judgment, but is passed from death unto life " (John 5:24); that judgment having been borne by his divine Substitute, who will soon come and take His people to the Father's house, to be forever with the Lord (John 14:1-3; i Thess. 4:15-18). Yet, notwithstanding this, He will enter into the judgment of their ways, and reward them accordingly. "Every man's work shall be tried by fire " declares that fact. "If a man's work abide which he hath built thereupon, he shall receive a reward. If a man's work shall be burned, he shall suffer loss:but he himself shall be saved; yet so as by fire " (i Cor. 3:13 -15). There are also the crown of life (Rev. a:10), the crown of righteousness (2 Tim. 4:8); the crown of glory (i Pet. 5:1-4), given as rewards for special service and suffering here. There are also rewards spoken of for the overcomer in Rev. 2:7, u, 17, 26, 27; 3:5, 10, 12, 21. Also, Matt. 25:19-23 ; 2 Cor. 4:5. How, then, we should endeavor, that whether present or absent, we may be agreeable to Him in our ways, for in that day all will be manifest, and a righteous Lord will judge according to His unerring wisdom, and then each shall receive His praise of God. Blessed will it be "in that day" to get from His own lips the "Well done, good and faithful servant; thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over many things:enter thou into the joy of thy lord " (Matt. 25:23).

Thus, while salvation is by grace through faith, and not of works, lest any should boast; yet rewards, and places in the kingdom, when our Lord reigns, will be according to the measure of our devotedness here. The Lord, the righteous Judge, will see to it that every act of devotedness, every expression of self-surrender, every bit of service, prompted by love to Him, shall meet its reward in the day of His manifestation and glory. Everything then should be looked at in the light of the day of manifestation, when the fire will try every man's work, of what sort it is, and the Lord's judgment alone will prevail. May our service be to Him, and in the light of that day when the secret counsels of the heart shall be manifested and each shall receive his praise of God! E. A.

  Author: E. A.         Publication: Volume HAF26

Answers To Correspondents

QUES. 34.-When does "the marriage of the Lamb" take place? Is it before, or after, the saints "appear before the judgment-seat of Christ?"

ANS.-It is no doubt after. Rev. 19 :6-9 is where we find "the marriage of the Lamb." Immediately following it is the appearing of the Lord in glory with the armies of heaven. This would seem to leave no room for the judgment-seat of Christ between the marriage and the appearing, at which time the saints will surely have received their rewards. But Rev. 22 :12 leaves no doubt as to it:" Behold, I come quickly; and My reward is with Me, to give every man according as his work shall be." The passing our lives in review will likely be well-nigh simultaneous with the rapture. As the sun, rising in the east and shining upon the scene, reveals everything as it really is, so the presence of the glorious Lord shilling upon every one of us and all our pathway from end to end, will in a moment of time declare and fasten His judgment upon every action and detail of our individual history. How conscientious and careful we ought to be, therefore, that our daily life be acceptable to the Lord ! How thankful we ought to be too that, sheltered by the blood of the Lamb under which we have fled for refuge, no question of guilt can be raised against us in that day !

Did we realize how solemn that day will be nevertheless, how obedient we would be to all the word of God ! which is indeed the judgment-seat of Christ already set up among us. All true and honest obedience to it here, will be approved there; as also every disobedience and violation now, be disapproved then.

QUES. 35.-Will you kindly say what "immortality" means in these texts:2 Tim. 1:10; 1 Tim. 6:16 ; 1 Cor. 15 :53 ; Rom. 2:7?

One has argued with me, about the immortality of the soul, that souls are not immortal at birth, for Jesus holds out the gift of immortality ; and if we had it already, we should not need it to be given.

ANS.-In 2 Tim. 1 :10 and Rom. 2 :7 the word in the original is not immortality (athanasia) at all. It is incorruptibility (aphtharsia). It is the same word rendered sincerity in Eph. 6 :24 and Titus 2:7. It has no reference to immortality. The idea, therefore, that Jesus is holding out immortality to us, which annihilationists have invented and foisted upon the ignorant by means of this faulty rendering, has no Scripture foundation whatever.

In 1 Cor. 15 :53 and 1 Tim. 6 :16 the word is immortality (athanasia). In the first it is purely a question of the body, which we know is sown in corruption, and is mortal, but is going to be raised in incorruption, and immortal. To bring in the soul here is to " corrupt the word of God " and do it violence, as all annihilationists do.

In the second (1 Tim. 6 :16) the subject is God in His essential nature. Essentially He alone has immortality, and He is the only Potentate ; men aud angels have immortality and are potentates only derivatively-as bestowed upon them by God. To deny by this passage that man has an immortal spirit would as well deny the same of angels, as also that there are any potentates among men or angels, which Scripture affirms in many places, and demands that we recognize (Rom. 13 :1).
QUES. 36.-What is the meaning of Rom. 2:7, especially the last clause, " eternal life " ? also, Rom. 6 :22?

Also, is there any difference between John's teaching and Paul's concerning eternal life?

ANS.-The two passages about which you inquire place eternal life at the end of the Christian course, and as the result of that course. It is the sphere in which all true Christians are going to dwell when they pass out of this one.

If you will consider a few passages in John's writings, such as John 3 :15, 16, 36 ; 5 :24 ; 10 :28; 1 John 5 :11, 12, 13, you will easily see that it is the actual present possession of every believer in Christ. It is, in fact, that which makes us children of God, and without which one is no child of God at all.

Thus, as in Paul eternal life is generally used for the hope of the saints-the promise of God to those who walk with Him here-so in John it is generally used for the life which Christ communicates to the sinner the moment he turns to Him in simple faith (John 20 :30, 31). It is a new, a divine life, " the gift of God " at new birth; its nature, therefore, is holy, and makes its possessor shrink from sin, enabling us to love God and all His people, and is our very link with God as our Father, and with Christ as Head of the new creation.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF26

Are There Two Spheres Of Blessing In Eternity,one In Heaven,the Other On Earth?

Before the face of Him who sits upon the great white throne "the earth and the heaven fled away, and there was found no place for them " (chap. 20 :11). We have now a complementary statement:"And I saw a new heaven and a new earth." It is clear, therefore, that an earthly condition abides for eternity. It is a point of interest, as to which Scripture seems to give full satisfaction, whether this new earth is itself a "new creation," or the old earth remodeled and made new. At first sight, one would no doubt decide for the former; and this was the view that at one time almost held possession of the field-the new earth scarcely being regarded by the mass as " earth " at all. Practically, the earth was simply believed to exist no more; and in contrast with it, all was to be heavenly:the double sphere of blessing, earth and heaven, was lost sight of, if not denied.

Lately, for many, reaction has set in, and the pendulum has swung past the point of rest to the other extreme. The prophecies of the Old Testament rightly understood as to be literally taken; and delivered from the glosses of a falsely called " spiritual" interpretation, seem to agree with the apostle Peter and the book of Revelation in making the earth to be the inheritance of the saints-the earth in a heavenly condition, brought back out of its state of exile, and into true relation with the rest of the family of heaven, not alienated from their original place. Contrast between earth and heaven as an eternal existence was again, but from the other side of it;, denied.

The whole web and woof of Scripture is against either of these confusions:the point of rest can only be in accepting the distinction of earthly from heavenly as fundamental to all right understanding of the prophetic Word. The Old Testament "promises" which have in view the earth as a sphere of blessing, are, as the apostle declares (Rom. 9:1-4), Jewish, not Christian. The New Testament emphasizes that the blessings of the Christian are in " heavenly places " (Eph. 1:3); nor can this last possibly apply to the earth made heavenly. The Lord has left us with the assurance (John 14) that in His Father's house are many mansions – permanent places of abode; that He was going to prepare a place there for us; and that He will come again to receive us to Himself, that where He is, there we may be also. As well assure us that the Lord's permanent abode is to be on earth and not in heaven as that our own is to be here, not there.

Each line of truth is to have its place if we are to be "rightly dividing the word of truth." The heavenly "bride of the Lamb" is not the earthly; "Jerusalem which is above " is not the Palestinian city; the "Church of first-born ones who are written in heaven" are not that "Israel" declared God's "firstborn " as to the earth; the promise of the " Morning Star " is not the same as that of the " Sun of Righteousness," although Christ is assuredly both of these. Discernment of such differences is a necessity for all true filling of our place and practical rendering of Christian life.

Let us look now, however, at the question of continuity between the earth that flees away and the earth that succeeds it. At first sight we should surely say they cannot be identical. The well-known passage in the epistle of Peter would seem to confirm this (2 Peter 3:10, 12). There we learn that "the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat; the earth also, and the works that are therein, shall be burned up." And it is repeated, and thus emphasized by repetition, that "the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat."
Yet, as we look more closely, we shall find reason to doubt whether more is meant than the destruction of the earth as a place of human habitation. In the Deluge, to which it is compared (vers. 5-7), "the world that then was perished;" yet its continuity with the present no one doubts. Fire, though the instrument of a more penetrating judgment, yet does not annihilate the material upon which it fastens. The melting even of elements implies rather the reverse, and dissolution is not (in this sense) destruction.

Yet the heavens and the earth pass away-that is, in the form in which now we know them; or, as the apostle speaks to the Corinthians, "the fashion of this world passes away " (i Cor. 7 :31); and that this is the sense in which we are to understand it, other scriptures come to assure us.

A new earth does not necessarily mean another earth, except as a "new" man means another man -"new "in the sense of renewed. And even the words here, "there was no more sea," naturally suggest another state of the earth than now exists. This fact is a significant one:that which is the type of instability and barrenness, and condemns to it so large a portion of the globe, is gone utterly and forever. At the beginning of Genesis we find the whole earth buried under it; emerging on the third day, and the waters given their bounds, which but once afterward they pass. Now they are gone forever, as are the wicked, to whom Isaiah compares it:"The wicked are like the troubled sea when it cannot rest, whose waters cast up mire and dirt." This last is the effect of chafing against its bounds, as "the mind of the flesh" is "not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be" (Rom. 8:7).

These analogies cannot fail to illustrate another which the Lord Himself gives us, when He speaks of the millennial kingdom as the "regeneration"- " ye who have followed Me, in the regeneration when the Son of man shall sit on the throne of His glory, ye also shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel" (Matt. 19:28). Here let us note that it is the Lord's kingdom that is the regeneration of the earth. That reign of righteousness which is the effectual curb upon human wickedness, not the removal of it, answers thus to what "regeneration " is for him who is in this sense in the Lord's kingdom now. Sin is not removed; the flesh abides even in the regenerate; but it has its bound-it does not reign, has not dominion. In the perfect state, whether for the individual or the earth, righteousness dwells, as Peter says of the latter:sin exists no more. How striking does the analogy here become when we remember that the change, perhaps dissolution, of the body comes between the regenerate and the perfect state, just as the similar "dissolution " of the earth does between the Millennium and the new earth! Surely this throws a bright light upon the point we are examining.

The new heavens are, of course, only the earth-heavens, the work of the second of the six days. They are of great importance to the earth which they surround and to which they minister. More and more is science coming to recognize how (in natural law at least) "the heavens rule." Yet, who but an inspired writer, of the time of Peter or John, would have made so much of the new heavens ? And these only, as Peter reminds us, develop a much earlier "promise." This we find in Isa. 65 and 66, a repeated announcement, the second time explicitly connected with the continuance of Israel's "seed" and "name":"For as the new heavens and the new earth which I will make shall abide before Me, saith the Lord, so shall your seed and your name remain." Thus, even in the new earth there will be no merging of Israel in the general mass of the nations. The first-born people written on earth will show still how "the gifts and calling of God are without repentance," as will the "Church of the first-born who are written in heaven." These different circles of blessing, like the principalities and powers in heavenly places, are quite accordant with what we see everywhere of God's manifold ways and ranks in creation. Why should eternity efface these differences, which of course do not touch the unity of the family of God as such, while they are abiding witnesses of divine mercy in relation to a past of which the lessons are never to be lost ?

Earth then itself remains, but a "new" earth; and, as the seal upon its eternal blessedness, " I saw," says the prophet-evangelist, "the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. And I heard a great voice out of the throne, saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and He shall tabernacle with them, and they shall be His people, and God Himself shall be with them, their God." Here is the promise in Immanuel's name made finally good to the redeemed race:and he who is privileged to show us the glory of the Only-begotten of the Father, tabernacling among men when the Word was made flesh, is the one who shows to us the full consummation. Of the new Jerusalem we have presently a detailed account; here, what is emphasized is, that it is the link between God and men; God Himself is with men, in all the fullness of blessing implied in that.

Num. Bible (Rev., ch. 20)

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF26

Grace Upon Grace.

Heir of Glory! can it be
God has destined this for me –
Through the work that Christ has done,
I, receive the place of son ?

Yes, the rich One poor became,
Bore that death of pain and shame ;
I, the poor one, thus to be
Rich to all eternity.

Oh the riches of His grace
Thus to give me such a place !
And to be in that blest home,
Heir with Him upon His throne.

Then, if such ray future be,
Now I would be pleasing Thee ;
In Thy ways my steps be found,
Steadfast in Thy work abound,

Till Thy glorious shout we hear,
Bidding us from far and near,
Rise to meet and praise the Lamb,
He the ever great "I Am."

F. E. M.

  Author: F. E. M.         Publication: Volume HAF26

Nearing The Shore Of The Homeland.

So near the shore, I strain my ear
To catch the accents sweet
Of one dear voice I long to hear
And hope ere long to greet.
That voice more sweet indeed to me
Than anything of earth could be.

So near the shore, I strain the eye
For e'en a distant sight
Of one Face which shall welcome me
With grace and glory bright.
A Face once marred ; but glorious now –
Not thorns, but victory, on His brow.

So near the shore that ne'er was touched
By sorrow, death, or sin ;
So near the place His love prepared,
His death for me did win :
So near my loved eternal home,
From whence I look for Him to come.

So near the real, so near the true,
My heart's eternal rest,
Of which the sweetest joys of earth
Are shadowy forms at best.
O blessed Lord, Thou art to me
The haven of reality.

Earth's shadows pass before mine eyes,
But Thou art e'er the same ;
Thy promises are all my hope,
I glory in Thy name.
I've waited long, am waiting still,
The purpose of Thy holy will.

Possess my heart still more and more,
And hold it captive, Lord;
And brighten every step I take
With light from Thy blest Word,
Until I reach the homeland bright,
With no more sea, and no more night!

H. McD.
Feb, 1st. to R. H., who departed to be with Christ Feb. 7th, 94 years old

  Author: H. McD.         Publication: Volume HAF26

The Cross.

"God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ."-Gal. 6 :14.

The cross of our blessed Lord may be viewed under different aspects, or in different lights. It is so viewed in the sacred writings. It may be looked at first as that which man, sinful man, gave the blessed Son of God. It was said to the men of Israel, on the day of Pentecost, "Him ye have taken, and by wicked hands have crucified and slain."Gentiles also took part in the wicked deed. And why did they thus treat Him ?He gave them no cause. He could say, "They hated Me without a cause."He was perfect goodness. He was love, "full of grace and truth."In short, He was what God is. The moral glory of God shone out in Him. In this sense, those who saw Him saw the Father. Therefore, ,in hating Him they hated what God is. They might not, through their wilful blindness, know who Jesus was; for surely, had they known who He was, they would not have dared to crucify the Lord of glory. But, as we have said, they hated what He was ; and in hating what He was, they hated what God is. Hence they really hated God:thus proving, at least in their case, that "the carnal mind," the mind of the flesh, "is enmity against God."

And what was manifestly true of them, is really true of all. Some of us may remember the time when we heard or read of the way Jesus was treated, that we said in thought, and perhaps in word, "If we had lived then, we would not have so treated Him; we would not have preferred Barabbas to Jesus; we would not have joined in the cry, "Away with Him, away with Him, crucify Him." And yet, while thus saying, we were preferring anything and everything to Him. We were virtually saying, "Away with Him "; thus proving that we are "by nature the children of wrath "-that, as the word of God says, "As in water face answereth to face, so the heart of man to man." " There is no difference, for all have sinned"-all away from God, with a mind enmity to Him. "None righteous; no, not one." "Every mouth stopped." "All the world guilty before God."

But the Cross is to be viewed as God's gracious provision for the meeting of man's need-his deep need as a sinner. Though the Lord Jesus was taken, and by wicked hands crucified and slain, yet we are assured that He was "delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God"; and also that "He was delivered for our offences." Thus the Cross is the gospel of the grace of God. The Lord having said to Nicodemus, "Ye must be born again," said, "As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up," signifying death by crucifixion ; see John 12:32, 33. And for what purpose was He lifted up on the cross? He answers, "That whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have eternal life." The apostle Paul says, "Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us; for it is written, Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree; that the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles through Jesus Christ; that we might receive the promise of the Spirit through faith." The apostle Peter says that Christ "His own self bare our sins in His own body on the tree, that we being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness; by whose stripes ye were healed."

Thus man's hatred to God, and God's love to man, met at the cross,-met face to face, and both at their highest point of activity,-man by his hatred telling out his deep need, and God in His love meeting that need-sin thus abounding at the cross, and grace at the same time much more abounding. While we were yet "sinners," "ungodly," "enemies," and "without strength," God loved us, and the Son of His love put Himself in our place, and died the death of the cross as a sacrifice for sin. And as a proof that the atoning work was done, that divine righteousness was fully and forever satisfied, He was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father; so that God can righteously receive all who avail themselves of this provision of grace. Yes, He is just in justifying the vilest one of Adam's race who believes in Jesus. Poor, weary, burdened soul, trust this moment in the blood of the cross, even in that blood alone, saying from a full heart,

"In my hand no price I bring,
Simply to Thy Cross I cling ";

and, as God and His Word are true, thou art accepted and saved.

It seems suitable, next, to think of the Cross in the relation which believers sustain to it, and the present happy effects of that relation. God's part in the Cross, as we have seen, was a gracious one. And believers are identified with that; and their identification therewith is taught as being most intimate, especially in Paul's writings. He says, in his epistle to the Romans, " Knowing this, that our old man is crucified with Him." Our old man is ourselves in the old sinful standing; so that the meaning is, we are crucified with Christ. He adds, "Now if we be dead with Him, we believe that we shall also live with Him." He says, in his epistle to the Galatians, " I am crucified with Christ; nevertheless I live; yet not I,"-he would not own the old "I," that being gone through the cross ; and every true believer might say the same. In writing to the Colossians, he regards them as "dead with Christ"; and "risen with Christ" He says, "Ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God." In his second epistle to Timothy, he says, "If we be dead with Him, we shall also live with Him."

The following words by Gregory of Nazianzum, born 347, and died 390, serve to show that the above expressions and thoughts of the apostle continued to have a place for some time after the apostolic age:" Floods of tears flow from mine eyes, but they cannot wash away my sin. . . . The paschal lamb of the Jews was a type of that of Christians. We have escaped the tyranny of Pharaoh. Crucified with Christ, we are also glorified with Him. He died; we die with Him. He rose; we rise with Him. Let us sacrifice everything to Him who has sacrificed Himself for our redemption." But soon these inspired words of the apostle dropped out of use, and their deep and blessed significance was lost. And how little we find as to believers being dead with Christ and risen with Him in the theological writings of Christendom, since the Reformation! But God has used some who were fully with Him to bring these precious things, and others, to light; and no one was ever gladder in discovering truth than the writer of this was in seeing that, as a believer in Christ, he has died with Him and is risen with Him.

"With Him upon the cross I died,
With Him I there was crucified."

R. H.

(To be continued, D. V.)

  Author: R. H.         Publication: Volume HAF26

Answers To Correspondents

QUES. 26.-Does Satan incite to every act of lust, or are his temptings confined principally to spiritual, or doctrinal, wickedness?

ANS.-James 1:14, Mark 7:14-23, and many like scriptures, conclusively show that lusts come from within us, from our own evil hearts. By the fall lost is as natural in man as weeds are in the field. "Every man," saint or sinner, " is tempted when he is drawn away of his own lust, and enticed"-enticed by that lust the gratification of which gives him pleasure. No man therefore can blame Satan for any evil action he may do. It comes from the lust within himself, which, instead of abhorring and repelling in suffering, he has allowed and enjoyed and carried out in practice.

Satan's activities are to a very different end. Supremacy is his burning lust. He covets Christ's place, and he labors with that in view. Indeed, we doubt not he is most anxious that his subjects be men of lovely and attractive demeanor, while he loves to see God's people give way to lust. Everything is his delight in which he can oppose God and discredit His name. Now that God is at work to fill heaven with redeemed men, he is opposing that, as Eph. 6:10-18 clearly shows. When the heavens are furnished, and God now turns to the earth to fill it with redeemed men and with His glory, Satan will use his power there, as Rev. 12 teaches.

Our flesh is not an intelligent thing, but an evil principle within man, which sinners love and gratify, and saints hate and refuse. Bat Satan is an intelligent, ambitious, proud creature; a bitter enemy of God, envious of Christ, and ready ever to make use of anything to oppose Christ, especially by imitation of the things of Christ. His great role is that of a counterfeiter.

QUES. 27.-Should not the phrase "in like manner," in Jude 7, refer to the judgment of the fallen angels, as in the A. V., rather than to make these angels participants also in the sins of Sodom and Gomorrah, as in the E. V. ? The J. N. D. Version follows the A. V., while the Numerical Bible punctuates as the R. V.

ANS.-The punctuation in the A. V. would make the clause " in like manner" appear to refer to Sodom and Gomorrah; that is, that the cities about them acted as they did. It is evident from the differences in punctuation that the various translators have found difficulty to understand the exact meaning in the text. And that is the crucial point. If a translator is not sure of the thought in the mind of the author, he cannot translate intelligently. A literal translation would often be without sense.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF26

Departed To Be With Christ.

After two years of gentle ailing from complications difficult to define, Celia Adelaide Sanderson, wife of Paul J. Loizeaux, entered her eternal rest on the 4th of November, 1908, at the age of 66 years.

Eighteen months before, she had joined her husband in Canada, where open doors in the gospel were holding him. She would not have him disturbed from such work, but she loved to be at his side, and to perform various little services which a loving wife can best render; and though ailing already, and reluctantly let go by her loving children and "beloved physician " at home, .she went, and tor seven months shared, for the last time, his pathway in all its ups and downs Her ailments increasing, and her husband realizing that his mission was fulfilled, they returned home to Plainfield, N J., where, under the tender and assiduous care she received, it pleased God to preserve her through several strokes of paralysis, and to restore to her a good measure of health and comfort. During the last six months she was absent but a few times from the table of her dear Lord. She knew what His death meant, and she loved above all things to remember Him according to His request. When even her friends would have advised her not to venture out, she listened not, but, seated in a wheel-chair, she made her way to her loved place in the company of worshipers.

She was born at Athens on the Hudson, in 1842; was converted in her teens in Milwaukee, Wis., under the ministry of Dr. Pyper, a faithful Baptist minister. She afterward attended the Abbot School for Young Ladies, in New York (1860-2), where she formed strong friendships, and where she, by witness of all, maintained a devoted Christian character.

In 1866, soon after being bereaved of both her loved father and mother, finding it impossible to reconcile existing conditions in the various denominations of Christendom with the word of God, she left the one she was in to identify herself with a few in Milwaukee who were gathered to the name of Christ alone, and on this principle, that there is but one church, one body-the body of Christ (Eph. 4:4). There she faithfully and joyfully stood to the day of her death.

One of the many incidents in her life tells of her faith:

When she pledged her hand to Paul J. Loizeaux, he was in a prosperous business in New York. When he resigned it for the path he has been in since, though she was pressed by some of her friends to break her engagement with him, she remained unmoved, and became his wife in 1868. One year after, her husband was laboring in the gospel at Plainfield, a small town in Iowa, where he was finding a harvest of souls. But as she was in a delicate state of health, he broke away from the work, and, returning home to Vinton, Iowa, found her in want of the various necessaries of life. He had brought with him what would relieve all this, and soon her skillful hands had prepared as cozy a tea-table as two who loved each other could sit at together.

But a strange letter had come from New York that day, and was awaiting his return. It said that the chief of the establishment there with which her husband had been connected was failing in health, and that it was an important establishment, and prosperous ; that he knew no one so well fitted to manage it as her husband; would he not therefore return to it, and carry it on ? He passed this letter to his dear wife as they sat together at tea, at the same time putting to her the question, "What am I to answer, my dear ? " As she read, her cheeks flushed, and, looking up, she said, "Is there any more than one answer to this ? " "Yes, it asks a direct question, which may be answered by a ' yes' or a ' no':which shall it be ? "

Her husband knew how deep her attachment was when, spite of the great change in his circumstances, she had become his wife. She had in that one year of their life together seen what his path was, and what was involved in following it. So he was anxious that she should now be the one to decide what answer should be given to the letter in hand. To say "Yes" to it meant a life of ease and luxury in keeping with her past; to say "No," meant poverty and much self-denial. Her faith rose to the need of the hour. Casting her large, tender eyes full into his own, she said, in sweet, gentle tones, " No man, having put his hand to the plow, and looking back, is fit for the kingdom of God." How deep then the fellowship between them! They were partners indeed in the holy affairs of the Lord Jesus Christ and of Eternity.

The forty years which have elapsed since have proved how real was the step which she had now deliberately and knowingly taken, and she never complained of its difficulties. She ever encouraged and sustained her husband. A few days before her end he was finding encouragement in the gospel in the parts of Fredericksburg, Va., and, knowing he was anxious not to be away from her too long, she wrote him, "I hope you are not leaving the work in Virginia too soon."

Her hospitality was indeed " without grudging "; there was with her no favoritism:while able to enjoy the most refined, her door was ever open to all, and "the brother of low degree" was as sure of a cheery welcome as any. Some, homeless, came there to die; others, to be cared for in times of need or affliction.

The mother of eight children, all now grown to manhood and womanhood, her incessant effort was to instruct them in all the word of God; and her importunate prayer was that they should be found humble and devout worshipers at the feet of Jesus. We believe we speak aright in saying that her chief suffering in life was not to have seen this in each and every one of them before her end. Repeatedly she said to her husband, " Pray on, my dear; for if, for some good reason, the Lord does not answer my own prayer, He will answer ours yet some time." May we not, in that confidence which, in Christ Jesus, we have one toward another, ask those who have loved her in sincerity, now to add their prayers to those she has poured out to God to that end, while not forgetting to praise Him for what goodly measure of it she already realized in life ?

On the Lord's day morning (Nov. 1st) previous to her death, she was, as usual, at her wonted place in the assembly of His people. She wrote to her husband of the excellent remarks which had been made on the words of John, " Behold the Lamb of God," and of a most enjoyable visit she had from two dear brethren in the afternoon. On the day of her death she was not feeling as well as usual, yet in the afternoon she wrote a long, affectionate letter to her husband, saying in it that she hoped to be herself again by the time he returned home. In the evening she refused her usual meal, and retired early. Being prepared for the night by one of the loving daughters who constantly waited on her, she walked to her bed, was gently assisted to her usual position for sleep; then, in an instant, showed signs which alarmed the daughter. She called the others, but they had only time to see her turn her head toward them, hear two gentle breathings, and she had left their loving arms for the loving breast of her Saviour and Lord.
Beloved people of God, these details would be kept for the bosom alone of her family circle, or sent you privately, but your letters of love toward her, pouring in from all sides, and her path in life making her your property too in a way, are sufficient apology for putting them in public print. None could shrink more than she did from being placed in public view.

She was buried on Lord's day afternoon (Nov. 8th). Her friends had assembled from far and from near; also all her children, save one who is in California. We had asked that Christ might be exalted in this last service we could render her, and we believe "that day "will show that He was-as also the sorrowing hearts comforted. Prayers drawing us all to the throne of grace; hymns so elevating; an address from Rom. 8 :28-39, with 1 Thess. 4 :13-18 forcibly recalling to our hearts the rich grace of God by which we are eternally saved, and the blessed hope before us.

Another, from Rev. 20:6, while ministering rich comfort indeed to bereaved hearts, remembered pointedly and affectionately those who might not be yet of the company of whom it is said, "Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection."

At the grave, prayer and an address of rich comfort was given from 2 Cor. 12 :2-4, showing the actual state of departed saints; and the singing of Hymn 323 in the Little Flock Hymn Book filled our hearts with sweetness in leaving the sacred spot.

To the God of all grace be glory and honor for making it possible for poor, fallen man to have such a future before him in our Lord Jesus Christ, and to have already here, in this scene of darkness and death, the light, and peace, and comfort, of it all by the power of His Holy Spirit.

Her friends all over the land will accept the grateful thanks of her husband and children for such proofs of their love and sympathy as reach them from day to day. They will kindly accept them in this form, as it would be beyond their power to reply to them individually, much as they would delight to do so.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF26