|
| |
|
Készűlőben
van. |

|
 |
--The
General View of the Day of Judgment
--Is it Scriptural?
--The Terms, Judgment and Day, Defined
--Several Judgment Days Referred to in the Scriptures
--The First Judgment Day and its Results
--Another Appointed
--The Judge
--The Character of the Coming Judgment
--Similarity and Dissimilarity of the First and
Second Judgments
--The World's Present Accountability
--Two Intervening Judgments and Their Objects
--Widely Different Estimates of the Coming Judgment
--How Prophets and Apostles Viewed it |

|
"GOD hath appointed a day in which he will judge
the world in righteousness by that man whom he hath ordained"
--"Jesus Christ, the righteous."
"For the Father judgeth no man, but hath committed
all judgment unto the Son."
Acts 17:31; 1 John 2:1; John 5:22
|
 |
A very vague and indefinite idea prevails in regard to the day of judgment. The view generally entertained is that Christ
will come to earth, seated upon a great white throne, and that he will summon saint and
sinner in rank and file before him to be judged, amidst great convulsions of
nature--earthquakes, opening graves, rending rocks and falling mountains.
The trembling sinners will be brought
from the depths of everlasting woe to hear their sins rehearsed, only to be again returned
to an eternal and merciless doom. The saints will be brought from heaven to witness
the misery and despair of the condemned, to hear again the decision in their own cases,
and to return.
According to the prevailing
theory, all receive their sentence and reward at death. This, which by way of
distinction is commonly called the general judgment, is merely a repetition of that first
judgment, but for no conceivable purpose, since they claim that a decision which is final
and unalterable is rendered at death.
|
Is the
Day of Judgment
a 24-hour day? |
The entire time supposed to be assigned to this stupendous work of judging billions is a
twenty-four hour day. A discourse recently delivered to a Brooklyn congregation voiced the
general view on this subject. It affected to give a detailed account of the work of the
Day of Judgment, representing it as completed within the limits of a single literal day.
|
| Figurative
language 
Parable of the
Sheep and Goats
|
This is a very crude conception, and is entirely out of harmony with the inspired Word. It
is drawn from a too literal interpretation of our Lord's parable of the sheep and the
goats. Matthew 25:31-46 It illustrates the absurdity of attempting to force a literal
interpretation upon figurative language.
A parable is never an exact statement, but merely an illustration of a truth by something
which is in many respects like it. If this parable were a literal statement of the manner
in which the judgment will be conducted, it would apply to literal sheep and goats, just
as it reads, and not to mankind at all.
Let us now look at a more
Scriptural as well as a more reasonable view of the work and the result of the great
Judgment Day which God hath appointed, with which reasonable and Scriptural conclusions
all parables and figures should and do agree.
|
Judgment
includes a trial,
and a decision
based on the trial. |
The term judgment signifies more than simply the rendering of a verdict. It
includes the idea of a trial, as well as a decision based upon that trial. This is true
not only of the English word judgment, but also of the Greek word which it translates.
|

"Day"
can represent
a period of time.

|
The term day, both in the Scriptures and in common usage, though most frequently
used to represent a period of twelve or twenty-four hours, really signifies any definite
or special period of time. Thus, for instance, we speak of Noah's day, Luther's day,
Washington's day. Thus in the
Bible the entire time of creation is called a day, where we read of "the day that
Jehovah God made the earth and the heavens" (Genesis 2:4)--a long, definite
period.
Then we read of "the
day of temptation in the wilderness" -- forty years (Hebrews 3:8,9); "the
day of salvation"
(2 Corinthians 6:2); also the "day of vengeance," "day of wrath"
and "day of trouble" --terms applied to a period of forty years in the
close of the Jewish age, and to a similar period of trouble in the end of the Gospel age.
Then again we read of the
"day of Christ," the "day of judgment," and "his
day"--terms applicable to the Millennial age, in which Messiah will reign over,
rule and judge the world in righteousness, granting trial as well as rendering sentence.
And of that period it is written: He
shall judge the world in righteousness, and in his day shall show who is that blessed and
only potentate, the King of kings and Lord of lords. Acts 17:31;
1 Timothy 6:15
Why any should suppose this day
of judgment to be of but twelve or twenty-four hours, while recognizing the wider meaning
of the word day in other similar cases, is beyond comprehension, except upon the
supposition that they have been influenced by tradition, without proper evidence or
investigation.
|
There is more
than one Judgment Day
in the Scriptures. |
Those who will carefully consult a complete concordance of the Bible with reference to the
Day of Judgment, and note the kind and amount of work to be accomplished within that
period, will soon see the absurdity of the common view, and the necessity for giving to
the term day its wider significance.
|
The
worlds first Judgment Day
was in Eden.
|
While the Scriptures speak of a great judgment or trial day yet future, and show that the
masses of mankind are to have their complete trial and final sentence in that day, they
also teach that there have been other judgment days, during which certain elect classes
have been on trial. The first
great judgment [trial and sentence] was at the beginning, in Eden, when the whole human
race, as represented in its head, Adam, stood on trial before God. The result of that
trial was the verdict-- Guilty, disobedient, unworthy of life. The penalty
inflicted was death--"Dying thou shalt die." Genesis 2:17, margin. And so
"In Adam all die."
That trial time in Eden was the world's
first judgment day, and the decision of the Judge (Jehovah) has ever since been enforced.
|

Every funeral procession demonstrates the death sentence.
Death is
like a sleep;
Resurrection is like an awakening.

"Lazarus,
Come Forth!"
|
"The wrath of God is revealed from heaven
against all unrighteousness."
It may be seen in every funeral
procession. Every tomb is a witness to it. It is felt in every ache and pain we
experience--all of which are results of the first trial and sentence--the righteous
sentence of God, that we are unworthy of life and the blessings originally provided for
man when obedient and in God's likeness.
But mankind are to be recovered from
the sentence of that first trial by the one sacrifice for all, which the great Redeemer
provides.
All are to be rescued from the
grave and from the sentence of death --destruction-- which in view of this redemption is
no longer to be considered death in the full, everlasting sense of the word, but rather a
temporary sleep. In the Millennial morning all will be awakened by the Life-giver
who redeemed all.
Only the Church of believers in Christ
are yet in any sense released or "escaped" from this original sentence and
penalty. Their escape is not yet actual, but only so reckoned by faith. "We
are saved by hope" only.
Our actual release from this
death penalty (incurred in Adam and escaped from by getting into Christ) will not be fully
experienced until the resurrection morning, when we shall be satisfied to awake in our
Redeemer's likeness.
But the fact that we who have come to a
knowledge of God's gracious plan in Christ "have escaped the corruption
that is [still] on the world," so far from proving that others will have
no future hope of escape, proves rather the contrary of this. We are first-fruits
unto God of his creatures.
Our escape from death in Adam to
life in Christ is but a foretaste of the deliverance of whosoever wills to be delivered
from the of corruption [death] to the liberty of life proper to all whom God shall
recognize as sons.
All who will may be delivered from
death to life, regardless of the distinctions of nature God has provided for his sons on
different planes of being. The Gospel age is the trial-day for life or death to those
called to the divine nature.
|
Another
Judgment Day
has been provided.

|
But God has appointed a day, in which he will judge the world. How can this be? Has God
changed his mind? Has he concluded that his decision in the trial of the first man and the
general sentence were unjust, too severe, that he now concludes to judge the world
individually? No; were such the case, we should have no better guarantee of a just
decision in the future trial than in the past.
It is not that God considers his decision in the first judgment unjust, but that he has
provided a redemption from the penalty of the first judgment, in order that he may
grant another judgment (trial) under more favorable conditions to the entire race--all
having then had experience with sin and its results.
God has not changed one iota from
his original purpose, which he formed before the world began. He distinctly informs us
that he changes not, and that he will by no means clear the guilty.
He will exact the full penalty which he
justly pronounced. And that full penalty has been provided by the Redeemer or substitute
whom God himself provided--Jesus Christ, who, "by the grace [favor] of God,
tasted death for every man."
Our Lord having provided a ransom
for Adam's race, with his own life, can justly give a new offer of life to them all. This
offer to the Church is under the Covenant of sacrifice. Psalms 50:5;
Romans 12:1
To the world it will be under the New
Covenant. Romans 14:9; Hebrews 10:16; Jeremiah 31:31
|
|
We are further informed that when God gives the world this individual trial, it will be
under Christ as Judge, whom Jehovah will thus honor because of his obedience even unto
death for our redemption. God
has highly exalted him, even to the divine nature, that he may be a Prince and a Savior
(Acts 5:31), that he may be able to recover from death and grant judgment to all whom he
purchased with his own precious blood.
God has committed all judgment unto the
Son, and has given him all power in heaven and in earth. John 5:22
|
| The Judgment
Day nothing to dread.
The character of Jesus guarantees
a just and
merciful trial. |
It is, then, the highly exalted, glorified Christ, who so loved the world as to give his
life as its ransom-price, who is to be the Judge of the world in its promised future
trial. And it is Jehovah himself who has appointed him to that office, for that very
purpose. Since such are the
plain declarations of the Scriptures, there is nothing to dread, but on the contrary there
is great cause for rejoicing on the part of all, in looking forward to the Judgment Day.
The character of the Judge is a
sufficient guarantee that the judgment will be just and merciful, and with due
consideration for the infirmities of all, until the willing and obedient are brought back
to the original perfection lost in Eden.
|
| There will be
justice and relief for the oppressed. 
Samson,
a Judge of Israel

Egyptian Slavery
|
A judge, in ancient times, was one who executed justice and relieved the oppressed. Note,
for instance, how, when under oppression by their enemies because of transgression against
the Lord, Israel was time and again released and blessed by the raising up of judges. Thus
we read,
"When the children of Israel cried unto Jehovah,
Jehovah raised up a deliverer,...Othniel.
"And the spirit of Jehovah came upon him, and he judged
Israel, and went out to war, and prevailed, and the land had rest forty years." Judges
3:9-11
So, though the world has long
been under the power and oppression of the adversary, Satan, yet shortly he who pays for
the sins of all with his own precious blood will take his great power and reign.
He will deliver and judge
those whom he so loved as to redeem. With this conclusion all the prophetic
declarations agree. It is written:
"With righteousness shall he judge the world, and
the people with equity." Psalms 98:9
|
| 
The reign of Christ will be to
educate, train, and discipline man.

Adam forfeited life by his disobedience.
|
This coming judgment will be on exactly the same principles as the first. The same law of
obedience will be presented, with the same reward of life, and the same penalty of death. As the first trial had a beginning, progressed,
and culminated with a sentence, so also will the second. The sentence will be life
to the righteous, and death to the unrighteous.
The second trial will be more
favorable than the first, because of the experience gained under the results of the first
trial. Unlike the first trial, the second trial will be one in which every man will stand
the test for himself alone, and not for another.
None will then die because of Adam's
sin, or because of inherited imperfections. It shall no more be said,
"The fathers have eaten a sour grape and the
children's teeth are set on edge; but he that eateth the sour grape, his teeth
shall be set on edge."
"The soul that sinneth, it shall die."
Ezekiel 18:4; Jeremiah 31:29,30
And it will be true of the world
then, as it is of the Church now, that a man will not be judged according to that which he
hath not, but according to that which he hath. 2 Corinthians 8:12
Under the reign of Christ, mankind will
be gradually educated, trained and disciplined until they reach perfection. And when they
have reached perfection, perfect harmony with God will be required, and any who then fall
short of perfect obedience will be cut off, being judged unworthy of life.
The sin which brought death to
the race through Adam was simply one disobedient act; but by that act he fell from his
perfection. God had a right to demand perfect obedience of him, since he was created
perfect. He will demand the same of all men when the great work of restoring them is
complete.
None will be permitted to have
everlasting life who then in the slightest degree fall short of perfection. To fall short
of perfection, then, will be to sin wilfully against full light and perfect ability.
|
|
Any who sin wilfully, against full light and ability, will perish in the second death.
Should any one, during that age of trial, under its full blaze of light, spurn the offered
favors, and make no progress toward perfection for a hundred years, he will be reckoned
unworthy of life and will be "cut off," though at a hundred years he would be in
the period of comparative childhood. Thus it is written of that day:
"As a lad shall one die a hundred years old; and
as a sinner shall be accursed he who dieth at a hundred years old." Isaiah
65:20--Leeser
Thus all must have at least one
hundred years of trial. If not so obstinate as to refuse to make progress, their
trial will continue throughout the entire day of Christ, reaching a culmination only at
its close.
|
The parable
of the sheep
and the goats
|
The conclusion of the world's coming judgment is clearly shown in the parable of the sheep
and the goats Matthew 25:31-46, in Revelation 20:15; 21:8 and in 1 Corinthians 15:25. These and other scriptures show that at its
close the two classes will have been completely separated--the obedient and the
disobedient. Those in harmony with the letter and the spirit of God's law, and those out
of harmony with it.
They enter into everlasting life,
and the others are remanded to death, extinction ("second death"), the same
sentence as in the first judgment, from which they had been reckonedly released by Christ
who secured the right to release them by the giving of their ransom--by his death. This
will be their second death.
No ransom will be given for them, and
there will be no release or resurrection for them, their sin being a willful, individual
sin against full light and opportunity, under a most favorable, individual trial.
|
| Deeds
of the present
will receive
their just reward.

The Good Samaritan
|
We do not wish to be understood as ignoring the present responsibility of the world, which
every man has, according to the measure of light enjoyed, whether it be much or little,
whether it be the light of nature or of revelation.
"The eyes of the Lord are in every place,
beholding the evil and the good," and
"God shall bring every work into judgment, with
every secret thing, whether it be good or whether it be evil." Proverbs
15:3; Ecclesiastes 12:14
The good and the evil deeds of
the present time will receive a just recompense of reward either now or hereafter.
"Some men's sins are open beforehand, going before
to judgment, and some they follow after."
1 Timothy 5:24
No others than the Lord's favored
"little flock" have as yet sufficient light to incur the final penalty, the
second death. We here merely broach the subject of the world's present accountability,
leaving the particulars for subsequent consideration.
|
God has been
selecting
the future judges |
A period of about six thousand years intervenes between the world's first and second
judgment days. During this long period God has been selecting two special classes
from among men, and specially trying, disciplining and training them to be his honored
instruments during the period or day of the world's judgment.
|
The House
of Servants
and
The House
of Sons

|
These two classes are respectively designated by Paul (Hebrews 3:5,6) as the house of sons
and the house of servants, the former being composed of those overcomers tried and found
faithful during the Christian dispensation, and the latter being composed of the faithful
overcomers who preceded the Christian dispensation. These special selections in no sense
interfere with the judgment or trial promised to the world of mankind in the age to follow
this Gospel Dispensation.
Those who successfully pass the trial for either of these special classes will not come
into judgment with the world, but will enter upon their reward when the world is coming
into judgment. They will be God's agents in the blessing of the world--in giving to men
the instruction and training necessary for their final testing and judgment.
"Do ye not know that the saints shall judge
the world?" 1 Corinthians 6:2
These specially selected classes, like
the rest of mankind, were once under the Adamic condemnation, but became sharers by faith
in the benefits of Christ's death. After being first justified by faith in God's promises,
and having then fulfilled the subsequent conditions of their respective callings, they are
accounted worthy of high exaltation to stations of honor and authority.
|
| The trial
of these classes
is more severe than the trial
of the world.

|
The trial or judgment of both these classes has been much more severe than the trial of
the world will be in its judgment day. Because these have had to withstand Satan,
the prince of this world, with all his wiles and ensnarements, while in the world's
judgment day Christ will be reigning, and Satan will be bound, that he may not deceive the
nations. Revelations 20:3
These have suffered persecution for righteousness' sake, while then men will be rewarded
for righteousness, and punished only for unrighteousness. These have had great stumbling
blocks and snares in the way, which will be removed when the world is placed on trial.
Though the trial of these two special
companies has been much more severe than the trial of the world will be, the rewards are
correspondingly greater.
|
|
Under the sophistries of the great deceiver, Satan, both the world and the Church nominal
have been robbed of the blessed assurances of the coming time of righteous judgment. They
know that the Bible tells of a coming judgment day, but they regard it with only fear and
dread; and because of this fear, there is to them no more unwelcome tidings than that the
day of the Lord is at hand. They
put it far away from them, and do not wish to hear it even mentioned. They have no idea of
the blessings in store for the world under that glorious reign of him whom God hath
appointed to judge the world in righteousness.
Among the greatest of the
blinding influences which Satan has devised to keep men in ignorance of the truth
regarding the judgment day have been the errors which have crept into the creeds and hymn
books of the various religious sects. Many have come to esteem these errors as of
paramount importance to the Word of God.
How differently did the prophets
and apostles regard that promised day of judgment! Note the exultant prophetic utterance
of David. 1 Chronicles 16:31-34 He says:
|
|

Let the Heavens be Glad!
|

And Let the Earth Rejoice!
|
And let men say
among the nations, Jehovah reigneth!
|

Let the sea roar, and the fullness thereof.
|

Let the fields rejoice, and all that are therein.
|

Then shall the trees of the wood sing aloud at the
presence of Jehovah,
|
BECAUSE HE
COMETH TO JUDGE THE EARTH.
O give thanks unto Jehovah, for He is good,
for His mercy endureth forever."
|
|
|
The prophets
and the apostles regarded the Judgment Day as a blessing for man...A glorious and desirable day! |
To the same day the Apostle also points, assuring us that it will be a
glorious and desirable day, and that for it the whole creation is groaning and travailing
in pain together --waiting for the great Judge to deliver and to bless the world, as well
as to exalt and glorify the Church. Romans 8:21,22
In John 5:28,29 a precious promise for the world of a coming judgment-trial for
life everlasting is, by a mistranslation, turned into a fearful imprecation. According to
the Greek, they that have done evil--that have failed of divine approval--will come forth
unto resurrection [raising up to perfection] by judgments, "stripes,"
disciplines. See the Revised Version.
|

God's ways are equal:
storm or calm,
Seasons of peril and of rest,
The hurting dart, the healing balm,
Are all apportioned as is best.
In judgments oft misunderstood,
In ways mysterious and obscure,
He brings from evil lasting good,
And makes the final gladness sure.
While Justice takes its course with strength,
Love bids our faith and hope increase:
He'll give the chastened world at length
His afterward of peace.
When the dread forces
of the gale
His sterner purposes perform,
And human skill can naught avail
Against the fury of the storm,
Let loving hearts trust in Him still,
Through all the dark and devious way;
For who would thwart His blessed will,
Which leads through night to joyous day?
Be still beneath His tender care;
For he will make the tempest cease,
And bring from out the anguish here
An afterward of peace.
|
 |
Look up, O Earth; no storm can last
Beyond the limits God hath set.
When its appointed work is past,
In joy thou shalt thy grief forget.
Where sorrow's plowshare hath swept
through,
Thy fairest flowers of life shall spring,
For God shall grant thee life anew,
And all thy wastes shall laugh and sing.
Hope thou in Him; His plan for thee
Shall end in triumph and release.
Fear not, for thou shalt surely see
His afterward of peace.
|
 |
Hogy
vissza térj
a Home Page-re kattincs a térképre |

|
E-mail
a cimre

Csak angolu |
|
|