Chapter
XI.
THE CALL OF THE BRIDEGROOM
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IMMEDIATELY before His death Jesus delivered two great discourses which
served to culminate His teaching ministry. Though spoken at about the
same time and to the same disciples there is the widest difference between
them. One, “The Olivet discourse “(Mt. xxiv. 4 - xxv. 49,
and Lk. xxi. 20-24), was spoken from the very Mount of Olives where His
feet shall stand when He returns to the earth (Zech. xiv. 4). In this
discourse only His own nation Israel is in view, and His instruction to
them is of the events leading up to, and accompanying, His coming to the
world in mighty judgments as King of kings and Lord of lords, and of the
establishment, at that time, of the long delayed earthly kingdom. These
great events had been before the eyes of prophets and seers from Moses
to Christ, and will fulfill all covenants and promises for Israel including
a world-wide Gentile blessing through them. This discourse naturally appears
in the Gospel of the King, and completes the testimony committed to Matthew.
The other closing
discourse was given in the upper room and continued on the way to the
garden
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(Jno. xiii. 1 - xvii. 26). The subjects He presents to the disciples are
those blessings that flow out of His death and resurrection; for here
He speaks as though His cross was an accomplished fact. Thus the disciples
are not now addressed as of the nation Israel; but as of the heavenly
company who, by that cross, have come into heavenly union with Him (Jno.
xiv. 20). Matthew records that John the Baptist announced Jesus as King:
John records that he announced Jesus as “The Lamb of God which taketh
away the sin, of the world.” Matthew has a nation in view, with
its covenanted earthly kingdom: John has the individual in view, with
the heavenly glory of the bride of Christ. In Matthew’s Gospel the
coming judgments and sorrows of earth with the following earthly glory
are in view. In John’s presentation the sacrificial atoning judgments
of the cross and the heavenly glory are in view. In the one, the return
of the King to the earth is presented: in the other, the call of the Bridegroom
when He shall receive His bride from the earth into the mansion He has
gone to prepare is recorded. One discourse is addressed to and concerns
Israel in the earth: the other is addressed to and concerns the born-again
ones of all nations who, by His grace, are already citizens of heaven.
Each writer draws from the doings and teachings of Christ the particular
materials required to present the picture divinely assigned to him.
No event, unless
it be the cross, is more emphasized
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in Scripture than the personal return of Christ to this earth. This truth
occupies at least one verse in twenty of the New Testament, and is not
only the subject of the last words of Jesus to His own in the world, but
is the subject of the closing words and promise of the Bible itself. John,
who had been with Jesus on earth and in the glory, who had heard His promise
to return again and who, in the Spirit, had witnessed those representations
of the age-closing scenes as recorded in the Revelation, could say in
answer to that final promise of Christ: “Amen. Even so, come, Lord
Jesus.” John certainly had all the facts before him, and if any
child of God does not find the same response in his heart to the last
promise of Jesus would it not be well to discover the unhappy cause?
The general
fact of a return of Christ has, of necessity, found its way into all evangelical
creeds; but individual readers who have hesitated to believe the literal
promises of unfulfilled prophecy, have invented numerous interpretations
of this body of Scripture. As must follow, every false interpretation
utterly fails, at some point or points, to adequately deal with all the
facts of revelation. If Christ’s promised return was fulfilled at
Pentecost by the coming of the Spirit then the two Persons of the Godhead
are confused and every New Testament writer is found to be a false witness
in that they each, writing long after Pentecost, presented the return
of Christ as a then future event. If His return is said to be fulfilled
in the death of a believer,
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because of the fact that he then goes to be with Christ, there is a sad
ignoring of every predicted event accompanying that return and a hopeless
confusion of what the Scriptures call the “last enemy” and
“the blessed hope.” If His return is represented as fulfilled
by the results of evangelization, on the ground that Christ is said to
come into the life of every saved one, then a process has been substituted
for that which in Scripture is said to be visible, sudden and personal,
and every recorded circumstance and event accompanying His return has
been ignored, or forgotten. If He is to return only after a millennium
of a saved and sanctified earth, ushered in by the present form of Christian
ministry and service, the numerous injunctions to be personally “watching,”
”waiting,” “looking” and “loving”
could well be taken as irony in the light of the fact that even a tendency
toward such a man-made millennium is not discernible after two thousand
years of God’s dealings in grace with the children of men. If Satan,
“loosed a little season” (Rev. xx. 3), can utterly spoil a
full ripened millennium, what human agency can hope to establish that
millennium while Satan still usurps the throne of this world (2 Cor. iv.
3, 4)? Scripture plainly predicts the sudden and violent imprisonment
of that mighty age-ruler by the power of the returning Christ before any
universal kingdom blessings can be secured on the earth (Rev. xix. 11
- xx. 3; 2 Thess. ii. 1-10). It is not at all a question of whether the
Holy Spirit, now present in the
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world, could bind Satan and set up a kingdom in the earth, nor is it belittling
to the work of the Spirit to point out that this is not the revealed purpose:
rather, the whole question turns, and turns only, on what the revealed
purpose of God is, which purpose must be determined in the light of every
promise and event contained in the whole body of Scripture. A system of
interpretation which does not account for every detail of revelation fails,
in so far as it does not so account, to expose the meaning of the Word
of God. If the same liberty were taken in the interpretation of redemptive
truth that is often taken in prophetic truth, the doors would be instantly
flung open to every soul-destroying heresy of the present time.
The thoughtful
reader of Scripture has observed that the passages usually supposed to
relate to the return of Christ naturally gather into two classes, or groups,
totally different as to time, purpose and events. In one class of passages
it is not represented that Christ will appear on the earth, or to any
but His own redeemed people. These passages affirm that at this appearing
the bodies of sleeping saints will come forth from the graves and, together
with saints living on the earth, are to be caught up to meet Him in the
air and thus are to be forever with the Lord. In the other class of passages,
His return is to the earth, visibly, suddenly, in power and great glory,
accompanied with the national judgments and followed by the setting up
of His kingdom in the earth. In this group of prophecies the
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Lord is seen to bring a mighty army of redeemed with Him and they are
to share with Him His kingly reign.
Very much must
yet be fulfilled, according to Scripture, before the events connected
with the visible return of Christ to the earth are to occur (2 Thess.
ii. 1-10). In contradistinction, however, no prophecy remains unfulfilled
which in its order precedes the coming into the air to call for His own
(1 Thess. iv. 13-18), other than that the outgathered bride shall have
made herself ready; and, therefore, that coming to call His own is the
next event in the prophetic program. Of that day and hour no man could
know; but all generations of saints have been instructed to ”watch,”
“wait,” “look,” ”love” and “be
ready.” These words are descriptive of the attitude of heart of
a bride awaiting the return of the one on whom all her life and love is
centered. Especially would this be true if she knew not the day nor hour
when he would return.
This call of
the Bridegroom for His bride is an event that should never have been considered
even as an aspect of the second coming of Christ. It is a mystery, or
sacred secret, and, as such, is but a part of the whole mystery of the
body and bride of Christ. It is only one Item in the program of the out-calling
and final gathering of the church. No revelation had been given to the
Old Testament prophets of that great age purpose, and certainly no hint
had been made as to the manner in which she would be taken out of the
earth into her
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heavenly bliss. On the other hand, the return of Christ to the earth in
power and glory was seen by all the prophets from Moses to Christ. They
beheld it as the consummation of all earthly blessings. The one, revealed
only when the time for explaining the mystery was ripe, concerns a redeemed
and heavenly people as to the manner of their final departure from this
world: the other, foreseen by all the prophets, concerns Israel and the
nations as to their judgments and final positions in a kingdom on the
earth.
Of the first
event it is written: “Behold, I shew you a mystery; We shall not
all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling
of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead
shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed” (1 Cor.
xv. 51. 52). This mystery, that not all should die, but that some should
be changed “in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last
trump,” was never before revealed. So again in 1 Thess. iv. 13-18.
“But I would not have you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning them
which are asleep, that ye sorrow not, even as others which have no hope.
For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so them also which
sleep in Jesus will God bring with him. For this we say unto you by the
word of the Lord, that we which are alive and remain unto the coming of
the Lord shall not prevent them which are asleep. For the Lord himself
shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the
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voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ
shall rise first: then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up
together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so
shall we ever be with the Lord. Wherefore comfort one another with these
words.”
The dead in
Christ will be raised first and the living saints caught up, and together
they shall all go on in clouds to meet the Lord in the air (see Gen. v.
24; 2 Kings ii. 11) and to be forever with the Lord.
In the two
passages quoted above, Paul, by the use of the pronoun “we,”
has five times included himself as possibly to be among the living ones
at the time of the Lord’s call for His bride. This precludes a doubt
as to the belief of the great Apostle in the imminent, personal, premillennial
return of Christ. This hope was evidently his greatest motive for true
character and service. So it has been to the great missionaries and soulwinners
since his day.
A great moral
effect was divinely intended in the promise of the imminent appearing
of Christ. The church that has lost hope to the extent that she could
say, “My Lord delayeth his coming,” has soon been drunk with
the wine of this world. It was this blessed expectation that was intended
to teach us that, “denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should
live soberly, righteously, and godly, in this present world; looking for
that
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blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour
Jesus Christ” (Titus ii. 12, 13). Only an apostate age could doubt
this promise, Peter tells us: “Knowing this first, that there shall
come in the last days scoffers, walking after their own lusts, and saying,
Where is the promise of his coming? For since the fathers fell asleep,
all things continue as they were from the beginning of the creation”
(2 Pet. iii. 3, 4).
The eternal
blessings of seeing His face and the reunion with loved ones gone before
are by this hope but a moment removed. It is therefore the “blessed
hope” and the comforting hope. We did not turn to God from idols
to serve the living and true God and to wait for death; but rather to
“wait for his Son from heaven” (1 Thess. i. 9, 10). How natural
for one who has really come to love Him to also “love his appearing”
(2 Tim. iv. 8) above all the things of earth. The sweetest experiences
foreshadowed in the bridal unions of the Old Testament and those experiences
which are anticipated in the New Testament await that unannounced, signless
and timeless summons to be forever at rest in His bosom of love: “Let
not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also in me. In
my Father’s house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would
have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare
a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto myself; that
where I am, there ye may be also” (Jno. xiv. 1-3).
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“
I know not when the Lord will come,
Or at what hour He may appear.
Whether at midnight, or at morn,
Or at what season of the year.
I only know that He is near,
And that His voice I soon shall hear.”
If the pastor
is mourning over the cold, unspiritual condition of his church, let him
consider the warm, glowing love and devoted service that has always accompanied
the right understanding of this “blessed hope.” If the church
is given to carelessness and worldliness, let him recall that for this
there has been provided the “purifying hope.” As under-shepherds
shall we not go down on our faces before God and there question whether
we have been giving these dependent ones their “meat in due season”?
*
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The
Kingdom in History and Prophecy, Chapter 11,
was originally published by the
Sunday School Times Company, 1021 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA.
Copyright 1915. 4th Edition, 1919. Public domain.
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