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To: David fisk who wrote (24504)2/20/1999 10:07:00 AM
From: David fisk  Respond to of 39621
 
Many are going to be destroyed, more than are saved.

""You can enter God's Kingdom only through the narrow gate. The highway to hell[1] is broad, and its gate is wide for the many who choose the easy way." (Mat 7:13 NLT)

1 "HELL": 7:13 Greek The way that leads to destruction.

"But the gateway to life is small, and the road is narrow, and only a few ever find it." (Mat 7:14 NLT)
""Beware of false prophets who come disguised as harmless sheep, but are really wolves that will tear you apart." (Mat 7:15 NLT)
"You can detect them by the way they act, just as you can identify a tree by its fruit. You don't pick grapes from thornbushes, or figs from thistles." (Mat 7:16 NLT)
"A healthy tree produces good fruit, and an unhealthy tree produces bad fruit." (Mat 7:17 NLT)
"A good tree can't produce bad fruit, and a bad tree can't produce good fruit." (Mat 7:18 NLT)
"So every tree that does not produce good fruit is chopped down and thrown into the fire." (Mat 7:19 NLT)
"Yes, the way to identify a tree or a person is by the kind of fruit that is produced." (Mat 7:20 NLT)
""Not all people who sound religious are really godly. They may refer to me as 'Lord,' but they still won't enter the Kingdom of Heaven. The decisive issue is whether they obey my Father in heaven." (Mat 7:21 NLT)
"On judgment day many will tell me, 'Lord, Lord, we prophesied in your name and cast out demons in your name and performed many miracles in your name.'" (Mat 7:22 NLT)
"But I will reply, 'I never knew you. Go away; the things you did were unauthorized[1].'" (Mat 7:23 NLT)

1 "UNAUTHORIZED": 7:23 Or unlawful.

""Anyone who listens to my teaching and obeys me is wise, like a person who builds a house on solid rock." (Mat 7:24 NLT)
"Though the rain comes in torrents and the floodwaters rise and the winds beat against that house, it won't collapse, because it is built on rock." (Mat 7:25 NLT)
"But anyone who hears my teaching and ignores it is foolish, like a person who builds a house on sand." (Mat 7:26 NLT)
"When the rains and floods come and the winds beat against that house, it will fall with a mighty crash."" (Mat 7:27 NLT)
"After Jesus finished speaking, the crowds were amazed at his teaching," (Mat 7:28 NLT)
"for he taught as one who had real authority--quite unlike the teachers of religious law." (Mat 7:29 NLT)




To: David fisk who wrote (24504)2/20/1999 10:51:00 AM
From: Emile Vidrine  Respond to of 39621
 
THE PAROUSIA IN THE APOSTLOTIC EPISTLES

INTRODUCTION

WE have seen how the Parousia, or coming of Christ, pervades the Gospels from beginning to
end. We find it distinctly announced by John the Baptist at the very commencement of his ministry,
and it is the last utterance of Jesus recorded by St. John. Between these two points we find continual
references to the event in various forms and on various occasions. We have seen also that the
Parousia is generally associated with judgment,- that is, the judgment of Israel and the destruction of
the temple and city of Jerusalem. The reason of this association of the coming of Christ with the
judgment of Israel is very apparent. The Parousia was the culminating event in what may be called
Messianic history, or the Theocratic government of the Jewish people. The incarnation and mission of
the Son of God, though they had a general relation to the whole human race, had at the same time an
especial and peculiar relation to the covenant nation, the children of Abraham. Christ was indeed the
'second Admit,' the new Head and Representative of the race, but before that, He was the Son of
David and the King of Israel. His own declared view of His mission was, that it was first of all special
to the chosen people,-- 'I am not sent but to the lost sheep of the house of Israel ' (Matt. xv. 24).
The very title which He claimed, 'Christ,' the Messiah, or Anointed One, was indicative of His
relation to Judaism and the Theocracy, for it recognised Him as the rightful King, come in the fulness
of time 'to His own,' to take possession of the throne of His father David. This special Judaic
character of the mission of the Lord Jesus is constantly recognised in the New Testament, though it is
often ignored by theologians and almost forgotten by Christians in general. St. Paul lays great stress
upon it.

' Now I say that Jesus Christ was a minister of the circumcision, to confirm the promises made
unto the fathers'(Rom. xv. 8); and we might well add, 'to fulfil the threatenings' as well. The phrase
'the kingdom of God' is distinctly a Messianic and Theocratic idea, and has a special and unique
reference to Israel, over whom the Lord was King in a sense peculiar to that nation alone (Deut. vii.
6 ; Amos iii. 2). We shall see that 'the kingdom of God' is represented as arriving at its consummation
at the period of the destruction of Jerusalem.

That event marks the denouement of the great scheme of divine providence, or economy, as it is
called, which began with the call of Abraham and ran a course of two thousand years. We may
regard that scheme, the Jewish dispensation, not only as an important factor in the education of the
world, but also as an experiment, on a large scale and under the most favourable circumstances,
whether it were possible to form a people for the service, and fear, and love of God ; a model nation,
the moral influence of which might bless the world. In some respects, no doubt, it was a failure, and
its end was tragic and terrible; but what is important for us to notice, in connection with this inquiry, is
that the relation of Christ, the Son of David and King of Israel, to the Jewish nation explains the
prominence given in the Gospels to the Parousia, and the events which accompanied it, as having a
special bearing upon that people. Inattention to this has misled many theologians and commentators
:-they have read 'the earth,' when only 'the land' was meant; ' the human race,' when only 'Israel' was
intended; 'the end of the world,' when 'the close of the age, or dispensation,' was alluded to. At the
same time it would be a serious mistake to undervalue the importance and magnitude of the event
which took place at the Parousia. It was a great era in the divine government of the world: the close
of an economy which had endured for two thousand years; the termination of one aeon and the
commencement of another; the abrogation of the 'old order' and the inauguration of the new. It is,
however, its special relation to Judaism which gives to the Parousia its chief significance and import.

Passing from the Gospels to the Epistles we find that the Parousia occupies a conspicuous place
in the teaching and writings of the apostles. It is natural and reasonable that it should be so. If their
Master taught them in His lifetime that He was soon to come again; that some of themselves would
live to see Him return ; if in His farewell conversation -with them at the Paschal supper He dwelt
upon the shortness of the interval of His absence, and called it ' a little while ;' and if at His ascension
divine messengers bad assured them that He would come again even as they had seen Him go ;it
would be strange indeed if they could have forgotten or lost sight of the inspiring hope of a speedy
reunion with the Lord. They certainly often express their expectation of His coming. That hope was
the day-star and dawn that cheered them in the gloomy night of tribulation through which they had to
pass : they comforted one another with the familiar watchword, 'The Lord is at hand.' They felt that at
any moment their hope might become a reality. They waited for it, looked for it, longed for it, and
exhorted one another to watchfulness and prayer. So the Lord had commanded them, and so they
did. Could they be mistaken ? Is it possible that they cherished illusions on this subject? May they not
have misunderstood the teachings of the Lord ? If this were possible, it would shake the foundations
of our faith. If the apostles could have been in error respecting a matter of fact about which they had
the most ample means of information, and on which they professed to speak with authority as the
organs of a divine inspiration, what confidence could be reposed in them on other subjects, in their
nature obscure, abstruse, and mysterious 2 No one who has any faith in the assurance which the
Saviour gave His disciples that He would send the Holy Spirit to ' guide them into all the truth,' to '
teach them all things,' and to ' bring all things to their remembrance that he had said unto them,' can
doubt that the authority with which the apostles speak concerning the Parousia is equal to that of our
Lord Himself. The hypothesis that a distinction may be made between what they believed and taught
on this subject, and what they believed and taught on other subjects, will not bear a moment's
examination. The whole of their teaching rests upon the same foundation, and that foundation the
same on which rests the doctrine of Christ Himself.

We now proceed to examine the references to the Parousia contained in the Epistles of St.
Paul,-- taking them in their chronological order, so far as this may be said to be ascertained.



THE PAROUSIA IN THE EPISTLES TO THE THESSALONIANS.

THE FIRST EPISTLE TO THE THESSALONIANS

It is generally agreed that this is the earliest of all the apostolic epistles, and its date is assigned to
the year A.D. 52, sixteen years after the conversion of St. Paul, [1] and twenty-two Years after the
crucifixion of our Lord. It is evident, therefore, that any suggestions of inexperience, or new-born
enthusiasm, being visible in this epistle, afterwards toned down by the riper judgment of subsequent
years, are quite out of place. We can detect no difference in the faith and hope of 'Paul the aged' and
that of the 'weighty and powerful' writer of this epistle. It is, therefore, most instructive to observe the
Sentiments and beliefs which were manifestly current and prevalent in the minds of the early
Christians.

Bengel remarks : 'The Thessalonians were filled with the expectation of Christ's advent. So
praiseworthy was their position, so free and unembarrassed was the rule of Christianity among them,
that they were able to look each hour for the coming of the Lord Jesus.' [2] This is strange reasoning.
It is true the Thessalonians were filled with the expectation of Christ's speedy coming, but if in this
expectation they were deceived, where is the praiseworthiness of labouring under a delusion ? If it
was an amiable weakness, 'sancta simplicitas,' to expect the speedy return of Christ, it seems a
poor compliment to praise their credulity at the expense of their understanding.

We shall find, however, that the Christians of Thessalonica stand in no need of any apology for
their faith.



EXPECTATION OF THE SPEEDY COMING OF CHRIST.

1 THESS. i. 9, 10-- 'Ye turned to God from your idols, to serve the living and true God; and to wait
for his Son from the heavens, whom he raised from the dead, even Jesus, who delivereth us from
the coming wrath.'

This passage is interesting as showing very clearly the place which the expected coming of Christ
held in the belief of the apostolic churches. It was in the front rank; it was one of the leading truths of
the Gospel. St. Paul describes the new attitude of these Thessalonian converts when they 'turned from
their idols to serve the living and true God;' it was the attitude of 'waiting for his Son.' It is very
significant that this particular truth should be selected from among all the great doctrines of the
Gospel, and should be made the prominent feature which distinguished the Christian converts of
Thessalonica. The whole Christian life is apparently summed up under two heads, the one general,
the other particular : the former, the service of the living God; the latter, the expectation of the coming
of Christ. It is impossible to resist the inference, (1) That this latter doctrine constituted an integral
part of apostolic teaching. (2) That the expectation of the speedy return of Christ was the faith of the
primitive Christians. [3] For, how were they to wait ? Not Surely, in their graves; not in Heaven; nor
in Hades; plainly while they were alive on the earth. The form of the expression, 'to wait for his Son
from the heavens,' manifestly implies that they, while on earth, were waiting for the coming of Christ
from heaven. Alford observes 'that the especial aspect of the faith of the Thessalonians was hope;
hope of the return of the Son of God from heaven;' and he adds this singular comment: 'This hope
was evidently entertained by them as pointing to an event more immediate than the church has
subsequently believed it to be. Certainly these words would give them an idea of the nearness of the
coming of Christ; and perhaps the misunderstanding of them may have contributed to the notion
which the apostle corrects, 2 Thess. ii. 1.' This is a suggestion that the Thessalonians were mistaken in
expecting the Saviour's return in their own day. But whence did they derive this expectation ? Was it
not from the apostle himself ? We shall presently see that the Thessalonians erred, not in expecting
the Parousia, or in expecting it in their own day, but in supposing that the time had actually arrived.

The last clause of the verse is no less important,-' Jesus, who delivereth us from the coming
wrath.' These words carry us back to the proclamation of John the Baptist,-- 'Flee from the coming
wrath.' It would be a mistake to suppose that St. Paul here refers to the retribution which awaits
every sinful soul in a future state; it was a particular and predicted catastrophe which he bad in view.
'The coming wrath' [h orgh h ercomenh] of this passage is identical with the 'coming wrath' [orgh
mellousa] of the second Elijah ; it is identical with 'the days of vengeance,' and 'wrath upon this
people,' predicted by our Lord, Luke xxi. 23. It is 'the day of wrath, and revelation of the righteous
judgment of God,' spoken of by St. Paul, Rom ii. 5. That coming 'dies irae' always stands out
distinct and visible throughout the whole of the New Testament. It was now not far off, and though
Judea might be the centre of the storm, yet the cyclone of judgment would sweep over other regions,
and affect multitudes who, like the Thessalonians, might have been thought beyond its reach. We
know from Josephus how the outbreak of the Jewish war was the signal for massacre and
extermination in every city where Jewish inhabitants had settled. It was to this ubiquity of 'the coming
Wrath' that our Lord referred when He said, 'Wheresoever the body is, thither will the eagles be
gathered together' (Luke xvii. 37). Here again, as we have so frequently had occasion to remark, the
Parousia is associated with the judgment.



'THE WRATH' COMING UPON THE JEWISH PEOPLE.

I Thess. ii. 16 -- ' But the wrath is come upon them to the uttermost.'

Here the apostle represents the 'coming wrath' as already come. Now it is certain that the
judgment of Israel, that is, the destruction of Jerusalem and the extinction of the Jewish nationality,
had not yet taken place. Bengel seems to think that the apostle alludes to a fearful massacre of Jews
that bad just occurred at Jerusalem, where 'an immense multitude of persons (some say more than
thirty thousand) were slain.' [4] Alford's explanation is : ' He looks back on the fact in the divine
counsels as a thing in past time, q.d. " was appointed to come;" not "has come." Jonathan Edwards,
in his sermon on this text, refers it to the approaching destruction of Jerusalem. "The wrath is come,"
i.e. it is just at hand; it is at the door : as it proved with respect to that nation : their terrible destruction
by the Romans was soon after the apostle wrote this epistle.' [5] Either Bengel's supposition is
correct, or the final catastrophe was, in the apostle's view, so near and so sure that he spoke of it as
an accomplished fact.

We may trace a very distinct allusion in the language of the apostle in verses 15 and 16 to our
Lord's denunciations of 'that wicked generation' (Matt. xxiii. 31, 32, 36).

THE BEARING OF THE PAROUSIA ON THE DISCIPLES OF CHRIST.

I Thess. ii. 19.-- ' For what is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing ? Are not even ye in the
presence of our Lord Jesus at his coming ?'

The uniform teaching, of the New Testament is, that the event which was to be so fatal to the
enemies of Christ was to be an auspicious one to His friends. Everywhere the most malignant
opposers and persecutors of Christianity were the Jews; the annihilation of the Jewish nationality,
therefore, removed the most formidable antagonist of the Gospel and brought rest and relief to
suffering Christians. Our Lord had said to His disciples, when speaking of this approaching
catastrophe, 'When these things begin to come to pass, then look up, and lift up your heads, for your
redemption draweth nigh' (Luke xxi. 28). But this explanation is far from exhausting the whole
meaning of such passages. It cannot be doubted that the Parousia is everywhere represented as the
crowning day of Christian hopes and aspirations ; when they would 'inherit the kingdom,' and 'enter
into the joy of their Lord.' Such is the plain teaching both of Christ and His apostles, and we find it
clearly expressed in the words of St. Paul now before us. The Parousia was to be the consummation
of glory and felicity to the faithful, and the apostle looked for 'his crown' at the Lord's 'coming.'

CHRIST TO COME WITH ALL HIS HOLY ONES.

I Thess. iii. 13. -- ' To the end that he may stablish ' your hearts unblameable in holiness before
God, even our Father, at the coming of our Lord Jesus with all his holy' [ones].

This passage furnishes another proof that the apostle regarded the period of our Lord's coming as
the consummation of the blessedness of His people. He here represents it as a judicial epoch when
the moral condition and character of men would be scrutinised and revealed. This is in accordance
with I Cor. iv. 5 : ' Judge nothing before the time, until the Lord come, who both will bring to light
the hidden things of darkness, and will make manifest the counsels of the hearts : and then shall every
man have praise of God.' Similarly in Col. i. 22 we find an almost identical expression,-'To present
you holy, and unblameable, and unreproveable in his sight,' words which can only be understood as
referring to a judicial investigation and approval.

That this prospect was not distant, but, on the contrary, very near, the whole tenor of the apostle's
language implies. Is St. Paul still without his crown of rejoicing? Are his Thessalonian converts Still
waiting for the Son of God from heaven ? Are they not yet ' stablished in holiness before God' ? not
yet presented holy, and unblameable, and unreproveable in His sight? For this was to be their felicity
'at the coming of the Lord Jesus,' and not before. If that event therefore has never yet taken place,
what becomes of their eager expectation and hope? If they could have known that hundreds and
thousands of years must first Slowly run their course, could St. Paul and his children in the faith have
been thus filled with transport at the thought of the coming glory? But on the supposition that the
Parousia was close at hand; that they might all expect to witness its arrival, then how natural and
intelligible all this eager anticipation and hope become. That both the apostle and the Thessalonians
believed that 'the coming of the Lord was drawing nigh,' is so evident that it scarcely requires any
argument to prove it. The only question is, were they mistaken, or were they not?

A remark may be added on the concluding word of the passage. 'Agioi, holy, may refer to angels,
or men, or to both. There is nothing in the text to determine the reference. It is true that in the next
chapter (ver. 14) we are told that them also which sleep in Jesus will God bring with him but this
seems to refer rather to the raising of the sleeping saints from their graves, than of their coming from
heaven with Him. We are therefore precluded from referring agioi to the dead in Christ. The more so
that Christ at His coming is always represented as attended by His angels.

'He shall come with his angels' (Matt. xvi. 27) ; 'with the holy angels' (Mark viii. 38) ; 'with his
mighty angels' (2 Thess. i. 7); 'all his holy angels with him' (Matt. xxv. 1).

This is in accordance also with Old Testament usage. The royal state of Jehovah when He came to
give the law at Mount Sinai is thus described,-- 'He came with ten thousands ' i.e. , of saints, angels
(Dent. xxxiii. 2). 'The chariots of God are twenty thousand, even thousands of angels ; the Lord is
among them as in Sinai' (Ps. lxviii. 17). 'Ye received the law by the disposition [at the
injunction,-Alford] of angels' (Acts vii. 53). We may therefore take it as probable that the reference
in this passage is to the angels.



To: David fisk who wrote (24504)2/20/1999 10:52:00 AM
From: Emile Vidrine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 39621
 
THE PAROUSIA IN THE APOSTOLIC EPISTLES--Part II

EVENTS ACCOMPANYING THE PAROUSIA.

1. The Resurrection of the Dead in Christ.
2. The Rapture of the Living Saints to Hearen.



I Thess. iv. 13-17 -- ' But I would not have .you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning them which
are asleep, that ye sorrow not, even ,is 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 [in] the word of the Lord, that we which are alive and remain unto the coming of
the Lord, shall not prevent [come before, take precedence of] them which are asleep. For the Lord
himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel and with the trump
of God: and first the dead in Christ shall rise 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.'

These explanations of St. Paul are evidently intended to meet a state of things which had begun to
manifest itself among the Christians of Thessalonica, and which had been reported to him by
Timotheus. Eagerly looking for the coming of Christ, they deplored the death of their fellow
Christians as excluding them from participation in the triumph and blessedness of the Parousia. ' They
feared that these departed Christians would lose the happiness of witnessing their Lord's second
coming, which they expected soon to behold.' [6]- To correct this misapprehension the apostle makes
the explanations contained in this passage.

First, be assures them that they had no reason to regret the departure of their friends in Christ, as
if they bad sustained any disadvantage by dying before the coming of the Lord; for as God had raised
up Jesus from the dead, so He would raise u His sleeping disciples from their graves, at His return in
glory.

Secondly, he informs them, on the authority of the Lord Jesus, that those of themselves who lived
to see His coming would not take precedence of, or have any advantage over, the faithful who had
deceased before that event.

Thirdly, he describes the order of the events attending the Parousia : --

1. The descent of the Lord from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel,
and the trump of God.
2. The raising up of the dead who had departed in the Lord.
3. The simultaneous rapture of the living saints, along with the resuscitated dead, into the
region of the air, there to meet their coming Lord.
4. The everlasting reunion of Christ and His people in heaven.

The legitimate inference from the words of St. Paul in ver. 15, 'we who are alive and remain unto
the coming of the Lord,' is that he anticipated it as possible, and even probable, that his readers and
himself would be alive at the coming of the Lord. Such is the natural and obvious interpretation of his
language. Dean Alford observes, with much force and candour, -

' Then, beyond question, he himself expected to be alive, together with the majority of those to
whom he was writing, at the Lord's coming. For we cannot for a moment accept the evasion of
Theodoret and the majority of ancient commentators (viz. that the apostle does not speak of
himself personally, but of those who should be living at the period), but we must take the words in
their only plain grammatical meaning, that "we which are alive and remain" [oi zwntej oi
perileipomenoi] are a class distinguished from "they that sleep" [oi koimhqentej] by being yet in
the flesh when Christ comes, in which class by prefixing " we " [h,me/ij] he includes his readers and
himself. That this was his expectation we know from other passages, especially from 2 Cor. v.' [7]

But while thus admitting that the apostle held this expectation, Alford treats it as a mistaken one,
for he goes on to say :

"Nor need it surprise any Christian that the apostles should in this matter of detail have found their
personal expectation liable to disappointment respecting a day of which it is so solemnly said that
no man knoweth its appointed time, not the angels in heaven, not the Son, but the Father only
(Mark xiii. 32).'

In like manner we find the following remarks in Conybeare and Howson (chap. xi.):

' The early church, and even the apostles themselves, expected their Lord to come again in that
very generation. St. Paul himself shared in that expectation, but, being under the guidance of the
Spirit of truth, he did not deduce therefrom any erroneous practical conclusion.'

But the question is, had the apostles sufficient grounds for their expectation ? Were they not fully
justified in believing as they did ? Had not the Lord expressly predicted His own coming within the
limit of the existing generation ? Had He not connected it with the overthrow of the temple and the
subversion of the national polity of Israel ? Had He not assured His disciples that in 'a little while'
they should see Him again ? Had He not declared that some of them should live to witness His return
? And after all this, is it necessary to find excuses for St. Paul and the early Christians, as if they had
laboured under a delusion ? If they did, it was not they who were to blame, but their Master. It
would have been strange indeed if, after all the exhortations which they bad received to be on the
alert, to watch, to live in continual expectancy of the Parousia, the apostles had not confidently
believed in His speedy coming, and taught others to do the same. But it Would seem that St. Paul
rests his explanations to the Thessalonians on the authority of a special divine communication made to
himself, ' This I say unto you by the word of the Lord,' etc. This can hardly mean that the Lord had
so predicted in His prophetic discourse on the Mount of Olives, for no such statement is recorded; it
must therefore refer to a revelation Which he had himself received. How, then, could he be at fault in
his expectations? It is strange that so great incredulity should exist in this day respecting the plain
sense of our Lord's express declarations on this subject. Fulfilled or unfulfilled, right or wrong, there
is no ambiguity or uncertainty in His language. It may be said that we have no evidence of such facts
having occurred as are here described,-- the Lord descending with a shout, the sounding of the
trumpet, the raising of the sleeping dead, the rapture of the living saints. True; but is it certain that
these are facts cognisable by the senses ? is their place in the region of the material and the visible ?
As we have already said, we know and are sure that a very large portion of the events predicted by
our Lord, and expected by His apostles, did actually come to pass at that very crisis called 'the end
of the age.' There is no difference of opinion concerning the destruction of the temple, the overthrow
of the city, the unparalleled slaughter of the people, the extinction of the nationality, the end of the
legal dispensation. But the Parousia is inseparably linked with the destruction of Jerusalem ; and, in
like manner, the resurrection of the dead, and the judgment of the 'wicked generation,' with the
Parousia. They are different parts of one great catastrophe ; different scenes in one great drama. We
accept the facts verified by the historian on the word of man ; is it for Christians to hesitate to
accept the facts which are vouched by the word of the Lord ?

EXHORTATIONS TO WATCHFULNESS IN PROSPECT OF THE PAROUSIA.

I Thess. v. 1-10.-- 'But of the times and the seasons, brethren, ye have no need that I write unto
you. For yourselves know perfectly that the flay of the Lord so cometh as a thief in the night. For
when they shall ray, Peace and safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon them, as travail upon
a woman with child ; and they shall not escape. But ye, brethren, are not in darkness, that that day
should overtake you as a thief. Ye are all the children of light, and the children of the day : we are
not of the night, nor of darkness. Therefore let us not sleep as do others ; but let us watch and be
sober. For they that sleep, sleep in the night; and they that be drunken are drunken in the night.
But let us, who axe of the day, be sober, putting on the breastplate of faith and love; and for an
helmet, the hope of salvation. For God hath not appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation by
our Lord Jesus Christ, who died for us, that, whether we wake or sleep, we should live together
with Him.'



It is manifest that there would be no meaning in these urgent calls to watchfulness unless the
apostle believed in the nearness of the coming crisis. Was it to the Thessalonians, or to some unborn
generation in the far distant future, that St. Paul was penning these lines ? Why urge men in A.D. 52 to
watch, and be on the alert, for a catastrophe which was not to take place for hundreds and
thousands of years ? Every word of this exhortation supposes the crisis to be impending and
imminent.

To say that the apostle writes not for any one generation, nor to any persons in particular, is to
throw an air of unreality into his exhortations from which reverent criticism revolts. He certainly meant
the very persons to whom he wrote, and who read this epistle, and he thought of none others. We
cannot accept the Suggestion of Bengel that the 'we which are alive and remain' are only imaginary
personages, like the names Caius and Titius (John Doe and Richard Roe) ; for no one can read this
epistle without being conscious of the warm personal attachment and affection to individuals which
breathe in every line. We conclude, therefore, that the whole bad a direct and present bearing upon
the actual position end prospects of the persons to whom the epistle is addressed.

PRAYER THAT THE THESSALONIANS MIGHT SURVIVE UNTIL THE COMING OF CHRIST.

1 THESS. v. 23 -- ' Now may the God of peace himself sanctify you wholly, and may your spirit,
and soul, and body, all together be preserved blameless at the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ.'
[8]

If any shadow of a doubt still rested on the question whether St. Paul believed and taught the
incidence of the Parousia in his own day, this passage would dispel it. No words can more clearly
imply this belief than this prayer that the Thessalonian Christians might not die before the appearing of
Christ. Death is the dissolution of the union between body, soul, and spirit



To: David fisk who wrote (24504)2/20/1999 10:57:00 AM
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THE LAST WORDS OF OLD TESTAMENT PROPHECY.

THE BOOK OF MALACHI



THE canon of the Old Testament Scriptures closes in a very different manner from what might
have been expected after the splendid future revealed to the covenant nation in the visions of Isaiah.
None of the prophets is the bearer of a heavier burden than the last. Malachi is the prophet of doom.
It would seem that the nation, by its incorrigible obstinacy and disobedience, had forfeited the divine
favour, and proved itself not only unworthy, but incapable, of the promised glories. The departure of
the prophetic spirit was full of evil omen, and seemed to intimate that the Lord was about to forsake
the land. Accordingly, the light of Old Testament prophecy goes out amidst clouds and thick
darkness. The Book of Malachi is one long and terrible impeachment of the nation. The Lord Himself
is the accuser, and sustains every charge against the guilty people by the clearest proof. The long
indictment includes sacrilege, hypocrisy, contempt of God, conjugal infidelity, perjury, apostasy,
blasphemy; while, on the other hand, the people have the effrontery to repudiate the accusation, and
to plead ' not guilty ' to every charge. They appear to have reached that stage of moral insensibility
when men call evil good, and good evil, and are fast ripening for judgment.

Accordingly, coming judgment is 'the burden if the word of the Lord to Israel by Malachi.'

Chap. iii. 5: 'I will come near to you to judgment; and I will be a swift witness against the sorcerers,
and against the adulterers, and against false swearers, and against those that oppress the hireling
in his wages, the widow, and the fatherless, and that turn aside the stranger from his right, and fear
not me, saith the Lord of hosts.,

Chap. iv. 1: 'For, behold, the day cometh that shall burn as an oven [furnace]: and all the proud, yea, and
all that do wickedly, shall be stubble: and the day that cometh shall burn them up, saith the Lord of hosts,
that it shall leave them neither root nor branch.'

That this is no vague and unmeaning threat is evident from the distinct and definite terms in which it
is announced. Everything points to an approaching crisis in the history of the nation, when God would
inflict judgment upon His rebellious people. 'The day, was coming - 'the day that shall burn as a
furnace;, 'the great and terrible day of the Lord., That this 'day' refers to a certain period, and a
specific event, does not admit of question. It had already been foretold in precisely the same words
by the Prophet Joel (ii. 31): 'The great and terrible day of the Lord;, and we shall meet with a distinct
reference to it in the address of the Apostle Peter on the Day of Pentecost (Acts ii. 20). But the
period is further more precisely defined by the remarkable statement of Malachi in chap. iv. 5:
'Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before the coming of the great and terrible day of the
Lord.' The explicit declaration of our Lord that the predicted Elijah was no other than His own
forerunner, John the Baptist (Matt. xi. 14), enables us to determine the time and the event referred to
as 'the great and terrible day of the Lord., It must be sought at no great distance from the period of
John the Baptist. That is to say, the allusion is to the judgment of the Jewish nation, when their city
and temple were destroyed, and the entire fabric of the Mosaic polity was dissolved.

It deserves to be noticed, that both Isaiah and Malachi predict the appearance of John the Baptist
as the forerunner of our Lord, but in very different terms. Isaiah represents him as the herald of the
coming Saviour: 'The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord,
make straight in the desert a highway for our God' (Isa. xl. 3). Malachi represents John as the
precursor of the coming Judge: 'Behold, I will send my messenger, and he shall prepare the way
before me; and the Lord, whom ye seek, shall suddenly come to his temple, even the messenger of
the covenant whom ye delight in: behold, he shall come, saith the Lord of hosts' (Mal. iv. 1).

That this is a coming to judgment, is manifest from the words which immediately follow, describing
tile alarm and dismay caused by His appearing: 'But who may abide the day of his coming? and who
shall stand when he appeareth ?' (Mal. iii. 2.)

It cannot be said that this language is appropriate to the first coming of Christ; but it is highly
appropriate to His second coming. There is a distinct allusion to this passage in Rev. vi. 17, where
'the kings of the earth, and the great men, and the rich men, and the chief captains,' etc., are
represented as 'hiding from the face of him that sitteth on the throne, and from tile wrath of the Lamb,
and saying, The great day of his wrath is come; and who shall be able to stand?'. Nothing can
be more clear than that the 'day of his coming', in Mal. iii. 1 is the same as 'the great and dreadful day
of the Lord' in chap. iv. 5, and that both answer to 'the great day of his wrath' in Rev. vi. 17. We
conclude, therefore, that the prophet Malachi speaks, not of the first advent of our Lord, but of the
second.

This is further proved by the significant fact, that, in chap. iii. 1, the Lord is represented as
'suddenly coming to his temple.' To understand this as referring to the presentation of the infant
Saviour in the temple by His parents, or to His in the courts of the temple, or to His of the buyers and
sellers from the sacred edifice, is surely a most inadequate explanation. Those were not occasions of
terror and dismay, such as is implied in the second verse, 'But who may abide the day of his coming
?' The expression is, however, vividly suggestive of His final and judicial visitation of His Father's
house, when it was to be 'left desolate,' according to His prediction. The temple was the centre of the
nation's life, the visible symbol of the covenant between God and His people; it was the spot where
'judgment must begin,' and which was to be overtaken by 'sudden destruction.' Taking, then, all
these particulars into account, the 'sudden coming of the Lord to his temple,' the dismay attending 'the
day of his coming,' His coming as 'a refiner's fire,' His coming ' near to them to judgment,' 'the day
coming that shall burn as a furnace,' 'burning up the wicked root and branch,' and the appearing of
John the Baptist, the second Elijah, previous to the arrival of 'the great and dreadful day of the Lord,'
it is impossible to resist the conclusion that the prophet here foretells that great national catastrophe in
which the temple, the city, and the nation, perished together; and that this is designated, 'the day of
his coming.'

However strange, therefore, it may seem, it is undoubtedly the fact that the first coming of our
Lord is not alluded to by Malachi. This is distinctly acknowledged by Hengstenberg, who observes:
'Malachi passes by the first coming of Christ in humiliation altogether and leaves the interval between
his forerunner end the judgment of Jerusalem a perfect blank.' (1) This is to be accounted for by the
fact, that the main object of the prophecy is to predict national destruction and not national
deliverance.

At the same time, while judgment and wrath are the predominant elements of the prophecy,
features of a different character are not wholly absent. The day of wrath is also a day of redemption.
There is a faithful remnant, even among the apostate nation: there are gold and silver to be refined
and jewels to be gathered, as well as dross to be rejected, and stubble to be burned. There are sons
to be spared, as well as enemies to be destroyed; and the day which brought dismay and darkness to
the wicked, would see 'the Sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings' on the faithful. Even
Malachi intimates that the door of mercy is not yet shut. If the nation would return unto God, He
would return unto them. If they would make restitution of that which they had sacrilegiously withheld
from the service of the temple, He would repay them with blessings more than they could receive.
They might even yet be a 'delightsome land,' the envy of all nations. At the eleventh hour, if the
mission of the second Elijah should succeed in winning the hearts of the people, tile impending
catastrophe might after all be averted (chap. iii. 3, 16-18; iv. 2, 3, 5, 6).

Nevertheless, there is a foregone conclusion that expostulation and threatening will be unavailing.
The last words sound like the knell of doom (Mal. iv. 6): 'Lest I come and smite the land with a
curse!'

The full import of this ominous declaration is not at once apparent. To the Hebrew mind. it
suggested the most terrible fate that could befall a city or a people. The 'curse' was the anathema, or
cheremwhich denoted that the person or thing on which the malediction was laid was given over to
utter destruction. We have an example of the cherem, or ban, in the curse pronounced upon Jericho
(Josh. vi. 17); and a more particular statement of the ruin which it involved, in the Book of
Deuteronomy (chap. xiii. 12-18). The city was to be smitten with the edge of the sword, every living
thing in it to be put to death, the spoil was not to be touched, all was accursed and unclean, it was to
be wholly consumed with fire, and the place given up to perpetual desolation. Hengstenberg remarks:
'All the things that can possibly be thought of are included in this one word;' (2) and he quotes the
comment of Vitringa on this passage: ' There can be no doubt that God intended to say, that He
would give up to certain destruction, both the obstinate transgressors of the law and also their city,
and that they should suffer the extreme penalty of His justice, as heads devoted to God, without any
hope of favour or forgiveness.'

Such is the fearful malediction suspended over the land of Israel by the prophetic Spirit, in the
moment of taking its departure, and becoming silent for ages. It is important to observe, that all this
has a distinct and specific reference to the land of Israel. The message of the prophet is to Israel; the
sins which are reprobated are the sins of Israel; the coming of the Lord is to His temple in Israel; the
land threatened with the curse is the land of Israel. (3) All this manifestly points to a specific local and
national catastrophe, of which the land of Israel was to be the scene and its guilty inhabitants the
victims. History records the fulfilment of the prophecy, in exact correspondence of time, place, and
circumstance, in the ruin which overwhelmed the Jewish nation at the period of the destruction of
Jerusalem.



THE INTERVAL BETWEEN MALACHI AND JOHN THE BAPTIST.

The four centuries which intervene between the conclusion of the Old Testament and the
commencement of the New are a blank in Scripture history. We know, however, from the Books of
the Maccabees and the writings of Josephus, that it was an eventful period in the Jewish annals.
Judea was by turns the vassal of the great monarchies by which it was surrounded - Persia, Greece,
Egypt, Syria, and Rome, - with an interval of independence under the Maccabean princes. But
though the nation during this period passed through great suffering, and produced some illustrious
examples of patriotism and of piety, we look in vain for any divine oracle, or any inspired messenger,
to declare the word of the Lord. Israel might truly say: 'We see not our signs, there is no more any
prophet: neither is there among us any that knoweth how long' (Psa. lxxiv. 9). Yet those four
centuries were not without a powerful influence on the character of the nation. During this period,
synagogues were established throughout the land, and the knowledge of the Scriptures was widely
extended. The great religious schools of the Pharisees and Sadducees arose, both professing to be
expounders and defenders of the law of Moses. Vast numbers of Jews settled in the great cities of
Egypt, Asia Minor, Greece, and Italy, carrying with them everywhere the worship of the synagogue
and the Septuagint translation of the Old Testament. Above all, the nation cherished in its inmost
heart the hope of a coming deliverer, a scion of the royal house of David, who should be the
theocratic king, the liberator of Israel from Gentile domination, whose reign was to be so happy and
glorious that it might deserve to be called 'the kingdom of heaven.' But, for the most part, the popular
conception of the coming king was earthly and carnal. There had not in four hundred years been any
improvement in the moral condition of the people, and, between the formalism of the Pharisees and
the scepticism of the Sadducees, true religion had sunk to its lowest ebb. There was still, however, a
faithful remnant who had truer conceptions of the kingdom of heaven, and 'who looked for
redemption in Israel.' As the time drew near, there were indications of the return of the prophetic
spirit, and premonitions that the promised deliverer was at hand. Simeon received assurance that
before his death ho should see 'the Lord's anointed;' a like intimation appears to have been made to
the aged prophetess Anna. Such revelations, it is reasonable to suppose, must have awakened eager
expectation in the hearts of many, and prepared them for the cry which soon after was heard in the
wilderness of Judea: 'Repent; for the kingdom of heaven is at hand !' A prophet had again risen up in
Israel, and 'the Lord had visited His people.'



Footnotes



1. See Hengst. Nature of Prophecy. Christ. vol. iv. p. 418. - Back

2. Hengst. Christology, vol. iv. p 227.- Back

3. The meaning of this passage (Mal. iv. 6) is obscured by the unfortunate translation earth instead of
land. The Hebrew ch,a, like the Greek gh/, is very frequently employed in a restricted sense. The
allusion in the text plainly is to the land of Israel. -See Hengst. Christology, vol. iv. p 224 - Back



To: David fisk who wrote (24504)2/20/1999 10:58:00 AM
From: Emile Vidrine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 39621
 
THE PAROUSIA IN THE GOSPELS

THE PAROUSIA PREDICTED BY JOHN THE BAPTIST

THERE is nothing more distinctly affirmed in the New Testament than the identity of John the
Baptist with the wilderness-herald of Isaiah and the Elijah of Malachi. How well the description of
John agrees with that of Elijah is evident at a glance. Each was austere and ascetic in his manner of
life; each was a zealous reformer of religion; each was a stern reprover of sin. The times in which they
lived were singularly alike. The nation at both periods was degenerate and corrupt. Elijah had his
Ahab, John his Herod. It is no objection to this identification of John as the predicted Elijah, that the
Baptist himself disclaimed the name when the priests and Levites from Jerusalem demanded: 'Art
thou Elias ?' (John i. 21.) The Jews expected the reappearance of the literal Elijah, and John's reply
was addressed to that mistaken opinion. But his true claim to the designation is expressly affirmed in
the announcement made by the angel to his father Zacharias: 'He shall go before him in the spirit and
power of Elias' (Luke i. 17); as well as by the declarations of our Lord: 'If ye will receive it, this is
Elias which was for to come' (Matt.. xi. 14); 'I say unto you that Elias is come already, and they
knew him not.... Then the disciples understood that he spake unto them of John the Baptist' (Matt..
xvii. 10-13). John was the second Elias, and exhaustively fulfilled the predictions of Isaiah and
Malachi concerning him. To dream of an 'Elijah of the future,' therefore, is virtually to discredit the
express statement of the word of God, and rests upon no Scripture warrant whatever.

We have already adverted to the twofold aspect of the mission of John presented by the prophets
Isaiah and Malachi. The same diversity is seen in the New Testament descriptions of the second
Elias. The benignant aspect of his mission which is presented by Isaiah, is also recognized in the
words of the angel by whom his birth was foretold, as already quoted; and in the inspired utterance
of his father Zacharias: 'Thou, child, shalt be called the prophet of the Highest, for thou shalt go
before the face of the Lord to prepare his ways, to give knowledge of salvation unto his people by
the remission of their sins , (Luke i. 76, 77). We find the same gracious aspect in the opening verses
of the Gospel of St. John: 'The same came for a witness, to bear witness of the Light, that all men
through him might believe, (John i. 7).

But the other aspect of his mission is no less distinctly recognized in the Gospels. He is
represented, not only as the herald of the coming Saviour, but of the coming Judge. Indeed, his own
recorded utterances speak far more of wrath than of salvation, and are conceived more in the spirit
of the Elijah of Malachi than of the wilderness-herald of Isaiah. He warns the Pharisees and
Sadducees, and the multitudes that crowded to his baptism, to 'flee from the coming wrath.' He tells
them that 'the axe is laid unto the root of the trees.' He announces the coming of One mightier than
himself, 'whose fan is in his hand, and who will thoroughly purge his floor, and gather his wheat into
the garner, but who will burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire' (Matt. iii. 12).

It is impossible not to be struck with the correspondence between the language of the Baptist and
that of Malachi. As Hengstenberg observes: 'The prophecy of Malachi is throughout the text upon
which John comments." (1) In both, the coming of the Lord is described as a day of wrath; both
speak of His coming with fire to purify and try, with fire to burn and consume Both speak of a time of
discrimination and separation between the righteous and the wicked, the gold and the dross, the
wheat and the chaff; and both speak of the utter destruction of the chaff, or stubble, with
unquenchable fire. These are not fortuitous resemblances: the two predictions are the counterpart one
of the other, and can only refer to the self-same event, the same 'day of the Lord,' the same coming
judgment.

But what more especially deserves remark is the evident nearness of the crisis which John
predicts. 'The wrath to come' is a very inadequate rendering of the language of the prophet. (2) It
should be 'the coming wrath;' that is, not merely future, but impending. 'The wrath to come' may be
indefinitely distant, but 'the coming wrath' is imminent. As Alford justly remarks: 'John is now
speaking in the true character of a prophet foretelling the wrath soon to be poured on the Jewish
nation.' (3) So with the other representations in the address of the Baptist; all is indicative of the swift
approach of destruction. 'Already the axe was lying at the root of the trees.' The 'winnowing shovel'
was actually in the hands of the Husbandman; the sifting process was about to begin. These warnings
of John the Baptist are not the vague and indefinite exhortations to repentance, addressed to men in
all ages, which they are sometimes assumed to be; they are urgent, burning words, having a specific
and present bearing upon the then existing generation, the living men to whom he brought the
message of God. The Jewish nation was now upon its last trial; the second Elijah had come as the
precursor of 'the great and dreadful day of the Lord:' if they rejected his warnings, the doom
predicted by Malachi would surely and speedily follow; 'I will come and smite the land with the
curse.' Nothing can be more obvious than that the catastrophe to which John alludes is particular,
national, local, and imminent, and history tells us that within the period of the generation that
listened to his warning cry, 'the wrath came upon them to the uttermost.'




To: David fisk who wrote (24504)2/20/1999 11:01:00 AM
From: Emile Vidrine  Respond to of 39621
 
THE TEACHING OF OUR LORD CONCERNING THE PAROUSIA,
IN THE SYNOPTICAL GOSPELS

The close of John the Baptist's ministry, in consequence of his imprisonment by Herod Antipas,
marks a new departure in the ministry of our Lord. Previous to that time, indeed, He had taught the
people, wrought miracles, gained adherents, and obtained a wide popularity; but after that event,
which may be regarded as indicating the failure of John's mission, our Lord retired into Galilee, and
there entered upon a new phase of His public ministry. We are told that 'from that time Jesus began
to preach, and to say, Repent; for the kingdom of heaven is at hand' (Matt. iv. 17). These are the
precise terms in which the preaching of John the Baptist is described (Matt. iii. 2). Both our Lord and
His forerunner called 'the nation to repentance,' and announced the approach of the 'kingdom of
heaven.' It follows that John could not mean by the phrase, 'the kingdom of heaven is at hand,' merely
that the Messiah was about to appear, for when Christ did appear, He made the same
announcement. 'The kingdom of heaven is at hand.' In like manner, when the twelve disciples were
sent forth on their first evangelistic mission, they were commanded to preach, not that the kingdom of
heaven was come, but that it was at hand (Matt. x. 7). Moreover, that the kingdom did not come in
our Lord's time, nor at the day of Pentecost, is evident from the fact that in His prophetic discourse
on the Mount of Olives our Lord gave His disciples certain tokens by which they might know that the
kingdom of God was nigh at hand (Luke xxi. 31).

We find, therefore, the following conclusions plainly deducible from our Lord's teaching:

1. That a great crisis, or consummation, called 'the kingdom of heaven, or of God,' was proclaimed
by Him to be nigh. 2. That this consummation, though near, was not to take place in His own lifetime,
nor yet for some years after His death. 3. That His disciples, or at least some of them, might expect
to witness its arrival.

But the whole subject of 'the kingdom of heaven' must be reserved for fuller discussion at a future
period.



PREDICTION OF COMING WRATH UPON THAT GENERATION.

There is another point of resemblance between the preaching of our Lord and that of John the
Baptist. Both gave the clearest intimations of the near approach of a time of judgment which should
overtake the existing generation, on account of their rejection of the warnings and invitations of divine
mercy. As the Baptist spoke of 'the coming wrath,' so our Lord with equal distinctness forewarned
the people of 'coming judgment.' He upbraided 'the cities wherein most of his mighty works were
done, because they repented not,' and predicted that a heavier woe would overtake them than had
fallen upon Tyre and Sidon, Sodom and Gomorrha (Matt. xi. 20-24). That all this points to a
catastrophe which was not remote, but near, and which would actually overtake the existing
generation, appears evident from the express statements of Jesus.

Matt. xii. 38-46 (compare Luke xi. 16, 24-36): 'Then certain of the scribes and of the Pharisees
answered, saying, Master, we would see a sign from thee. But he answered and said unto them, An
evil and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign: and there shall no sign be given unto it, but the
sign of the prophet Jonas: for as Jonas was three days and three nights in the whale's belly, so
shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth. The men of Nineveh
shall rise in the judgment with this generation, and shall condemn it, because they repented at the
preaching of Jonas and, behold, a greater than Jonas is here. The queen of the south shall rise up
in the judgment with generation, and condemn it, for sue came from the uttermost parts of the earth
to hear the wisdom of Solomon; and, behold, a greater than Solomon is here. When the unclean
spirit is gone out of a man, he walketh through dry places seeking rest, and findeth none. Then he
saith, I will return into my house from whence I came out; and when he is come he findeth it empty,
swept, and garnished. Then goeth he, and taketh with himself seven other spirits more wicked than
himself, and they enter in and dwell there: and the last state of that man is worse than the first.
Even so shall it be also unto this wicked generation.'

This passage is of great importance in ascertaining the true meaning of the phrase 'this generation'
[genea]. It can only refer, in this place, to the people of Israel then living- the existing generation. No
commentator has ever proposed to call 'genea' here the Jewish race in all ages. Our Lord was
accustomed to speak of His contemporaries as this generation:

Whereunto shall I liken this generation?'- that is, the men of that day who would listen neither to
His forerunner nor to Himself' (Matt. xi. 16; Luke vii. 31). Even commentators like Stier, who
contend for the rendering of 'genea' by race or lineage in other passages, admit that the reference in
these words is 'to the generation living in that then extant and most important age.' (1) So in the
passage before us there can be no controversy respecting the application of the words exclusively to
the then existing generation, the contemporaries of Christ. Of the aggravated and enormous
wickedness of that period our Lord here testifies. The generation has just before been addressed by
Him in the very words of the Baptist- ' O brood of vipers' (ver. 34). Its guilt is declared to surpass
that of the heathen; it is likened to a demoniac, from whom the unclean spirit had departed for a
while, but returned in greater force than before, accompanied by seven other spirits more wicked
than himself, so that 'the last state of that man is worse than that first.' We have in the testimony of
Josephus a striking confirmation of our Lord's description of the moral condition of that generation.
'As it were impossible to relate their enormities in detail, I shall briefly state that no other city ever
endured similar calamities, and no generation ever existed more prolific in crime. They confessed
themselves to be, what they were- slaves, and the very dregs of society, the spurious and polluted
spawn of the nation.' (2) 'And here I cannot refrain from expressing what my feelings suggest. I am of
opinion, that had the Romans deferred the punishment of these wretches, either the earth would have
opened and swallowed up the city, or it would have been swept away by a deluge, or have shared
the shun. defaults of the land of Sodom. For it produced a race far more ungodly than those who
were thus visited. For through the desperate madness of these men the whole nation was involved in
their ruin.' (3) 'That period had somehow become so prolific in iniquity of every description amongst
the Jews, that no work of evil was left unperpetrated; . . . so universal was the contagion, both in
public and private, and such the emulation to surpass each other in acts of impiety towards God, and
of injustice towards their neighbors.' (4)

Such was the fearful condition to which the nation was hastening when our Lord uttered these
prophetic words. The climax had not yet been reached, but it was full in view. The unclean spirit had
not yet returned to his house, but he was on the way. As Stier remarks, 'In the period between the
ascension of Christ and the destruction of Jerusalem, especially towards the end of it, this nation
shows itself, one might say, as if possessed by seven thousand devils.' (5) Is not this an adequate and
complete fulfilment of our Saviour's prediction? Have we the slightest warrant or need for saying that
it means something else, or something more, than this? What presence is there for supposing a further
and future fulfilment of His words? Is it not a virtual discrediting of the prophecy to seek any other
than the plain and obvious sense which points so distinctly to an approaching catastrophe about to
befall that generation? Surely we show most reverence to the Word of God when we accept
implicitly its obvious teaching, and refuse the unwarranted and merely human speculations which
critics and theologians have drawn from their own fancy. We conclude, then, that, in the notorious
profligacy of that age, and the signal calamities which before its close overwhelmed the Jewish
people, we have the historical attestation of the exhaustive fulfilment of this prophecy.



FURTHER ALLUSIONS TO THE COMING WRATH.

Luke xiii. 1-9 : 'There were present at that season some that told him of the Galileans, whose blood
Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices. And Jesus answering said unto them, Suppose ye that
these Galileans were sinners above all the Galileans, because they suffered such things? I tell you,
Nay: but, except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish. Or those eighteen, upon whom the tower in
Siloam fell, and slew them, think ye that they were sinners above all men that dwelt in Jerusalem? I
tell you, Nay: but, except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish.'

How vividly our Lord apprehended the approaching calamities of the nation, and how clear and
distinct His warnings were, may be inferred from this passage. The massacre of some Galileans who
had gone up to Jerusalem to the feast of the Passover, either by the command, or with the
connivance of the Roman governor; and the sudden destruction of eighteen persons by the fall of a
tower near the pool of Siloam, were incidents which formed the topics of conversation among the
people at the time. Our Lord declares that the victims of these calamities were not exceptionally
wicked, but that a like fate would overtake the very persons now talking about them, unless they
repented. The point of His observation, which is often overlooked, lies in the similarity of the
threatened destruction. It is not 'ye also shall all perish,' but, 'ye shall all perish in 'the same manner'
. That our Lord had in view the final ruin, which was about to overwhelm Jerusalem and the nation,
can hardly be doubted. The analogy between the cases is real and striking. It was at the feast of the
Passover that the population of Judea had crowded into Jerusalem, and were there cooped in by the
legions of Titus. Josephus tells us how, in the final agony of the siege, the blood of the officiating
priests was shed at the altar of sacrifice. The Roman soldiers were the executioners of the divine
judgment; and as temple and tower fell to the ground, they buried in their ruins many a hapless victim
of impenitence and unbelief. It is satisfactory to find both Alford and Stier recognising the historical
allusion in this passage. The former remarks: the force of which is lost in the English version
"likewise," should be rendered "in like manner," as indeed the Jewish people did perish by the
sword of the Romans.' (6)



IMPENDING FATE OF THE JEWISH NATION.

The Parable of the Barren Fig-tree.

Luke xiii. 6-9: 'He spake also this parable: A certain man had a figtree planted in his vineyard: and
he came and sought fruit thereon, and found none. Then said he to the dresser of his vineyard,
Behold, these three years I come seeking fruit on this fig-tree, and find none: cut it down; why
cumbereth it the ground? And he answering said unto him, Lord, let it alone this year also, till I
shall dig about it, and dung it: and if it bear fruit, well: and if not, then after that thou shalt cut it
down.'

The same prophetic significance is manifest in this parable, which is almost the counterpart of that
in Isa. v., both in form and meaning. The true interpretation is so obvious as to render explanation
scarcely necessary. Its bearing on the people of Israel is most distinct and direct, more especially
when viewed in connection with the preceding warnings. Israel is the fruitless tree, long cultivated, but
yielding no return to the owner. It was now on its last trial: the axe, as John the Baptist had declared,
was laid to the root of the tree; but the fatal blow was delayed at the intercession of mercy. The
Saviour was even then at His gracious work of nurture and culture; a little longer, and the decree
would go forth- 'Cut it down; why cumbereth it the ground ?'

No doubt there are general principles in this, as in other parables, applicable to all nations and all
ages; but we must not lose sight of its original and primary reference to the Jewish people. Stier and
Alford seem to lose themselves in searching for recondite and mystical meanings in the minor details
of the imagery; but Neander gives a luminous explanation of its true import: 'As the fruitless tree,
failing to realize the aim of its being, was destroyed, so the theocratic nation, for the same reason,
was to be overtaken, after long forbearance, by the judgments of God, and shut out from His
kingdom.' (7)



THE END OF THE AGE, OR CLOSE OF THE JEWISH DISPENSATION.

Parables of the Tares, and of the Drag-net.

Matt. xiii. 36-47: 'Then Jesus sent the multitude away, and went into the house: and his disciples
came unto him, saying, Declare unto us the parable of the tares of the field. He answered and said
unto them, He that soweth the good seed is the Son of man; the field is the world; the good seed
are the children of the kingdom; but the tares are the children of the wicked one; the enemy that
sowed them is the devil; the harvest is the end of the world [age]; and the reapers are the angels.
As therefore the tares are gathered and burned in the fire; so shall it be at the end of this world
[age]. The Son of man shall send forth his angels, and they shall gather out of his kingdom all
things that offend, and them which do iniquity, and shall cast them into a [the] furnace of fire: there
shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth. 'Then shall the righteous shine forth as the sun in the
kingdom of their Father. Who hath ears to hear, let him hear.... Again, the kingdom of heaven is like
unto a net, that was east into the sea, and gathered of every kind: which, when it was full, they
drew to the shore, and sat down, and gathered the good into vessels, but cast the bad away. So
shall it be at the end of the world [age]: the angels shall come forth, and sever the wicked from
among the just, and shall cast them into the furnace of fire: there shall be wailing and gnashing of
teeth.'

We find in the passages here quoted an example of one of those erroneous renderings which have
done much to confuse and mislead the ordinary readers of our English version. It is probable, that
ninety-nine in every hundred understand by the phrase, 'the end of the world,' the close of human
history, and the destruction of the material earth. They would not imagine that the ' world ' in ver. 38
and the 'world' in ver. 39 40, are totally different words, with totally different meanings. Yet such is
the fact. Koinos in ver. 38 is rightly translated world, and refers to the world of men, but aeon in ver.
39, 40, refers to a period of time, and should be rendered age or epoch. Lange translates it aeon. It
is of the greatest importance to understand correctly the two meaning of this word, and of the phrase
'the end of the aeon, or age.' aion is, as we have said, a period of time, or an age. It is exactly
equivalent to the Latin word aevum, which is merely aion in a Latin dress; and the phrase, (Greek-
coming), translated in our English version, 'the end of the world,' should be, 'the close of the age.'
Tittman observes: (Greek - coming), as it occurs in the New Testament, does not denote the end, but
rather the consummation, of the aeon, which is to be followed by a new age. So in Matt. xiii. 39, 40,
49; xxiv. 3; which last passage, it is to be feared, may be misunderstood in applying it to the
destruction of the world.' (8) It was the belief of the Jews that the Messiah would introduce a new
aeon: and this new aeon, or age, they called 'the kingdom of heaven.' The existing aeon: therefore,
was the Jewish dispensation, which was now drawing to its close; and how it would terminate our
Lord impressively shows in these parables. It is indeed surprising that expositors should have failed to
recognize in these solemn predictions the reproduction and reiteration of the words of Malachi and of
John the Baptist. Here we find the same final separation between the righteous and the wicked; the
same purging of the floor; the same gathering of the wheat into the garner; the same burning of the
chaff [tares, stubble] in the fire. Can there be a doubt that it is to the same act of judgment, the same
period of time, the same historical event, that Malachi, John, and our Lord refer ?

But we have seen that John the Baptist predicted a judgment which was then impending - a
catastrophe so near that already the axe was lying at the root of the trees,- in accordance with the
prophecy of Malachi, that 'the great and dreadful day of the Lord' was to follow on the coming of the
second Elijah. We are therefore brought to the conclusion, that this discrimination between the
righteous and the wicked, this gathering of the wheat into the garner, and burning of the tares in the
furnace of fire, refer to the same catastrophe, viz., the wrath which came upon that very generation,
when Jerusalem became literally 'a furnace of fire,' and the aeon of Judaism came to a close in 'the
great and dreadful day of the Lord.'

This conclusion is supported by the fact, that there is a close connection between this great
judicial epoch and the coming of 'the kingdom of heaven.' Our Lord represents the separation of the
righteous and the wicked as the characteristic of the great consummation which is called 'the kingdom
of God.' But the kingdom was declared to be at hand. It follows, therefore, that the parables before
us relate, not to a remote event still in the future, but to one which in our Saviour's time was near.

An additional argument in favour of this view is derived from the consideration that our Lord, in
His explanation of the parable of the tares, speaks of Himself as the sower of the good seed: 'He
that soweth the good seed is the Son of man.' It is to His own personal ministry and its results that
He refers, and we must therefore regard the parable as having a special bearing upon His
contemporaries. It is in perfect harmony with His solemn warning in Luke xiii. 26, where He
describes the condemnation of those who were privileged to enjoy His personal presence and
ministrations, the pretenders to discipleship, who were tares and not wheat. 'Then shall ye begin to
say, We have eaten and drunk in thy presence, and thou hast taught in our streets. But he shall say, I
tell you, I know you not whence ye are; depart from me, all ye workers of iniquity. There shall be
weeping and gnashing of teeth, when ye shall see Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and all the
prophets, in the kingdom of God; and you yourselves thrust out.' However applicable to men in
general under the gospel such language may be, it is plain that it had a direct and specific bearing
upon the contemporaries of our Lord - the generation that witnessed His miracles and heard His
parables; and that it has a relation to them such as it can have to none else.

We find at the conclusion of the parable of the tares an impressive nota bene, drawing special
attention to the instruction therein contained: 'Who hath ears to hear, let him hear.' We may take
occasion from this to make a remark on the vast importance of a true conception of the period at
which our Lord and His apostles taught. This is indispensable to the correct understanding of the
New Testament doctrine respecting the 'kingdom of God,' the 'end of the age,' and the 'coming
aeon,' or ' world to come. That period was near the close of the Jewish dispensation. The Mosaic
economy, as it is called - the system of laws and institutions given to the nation by God Himself, and
which had existed for more than forty generations,- was about to be superseded and to pass away.
Already the last generation that was to possess the land was upon the scene,- the last and also the
worst, -the child and heir of its predecessors. The long period, during which Jehovah had exhausted
all the methods which divine wisdom and love could devise for the culture and reformation of Israel,
was about to come to an end. It was to close disastrously. The wrath, long pent up and restrained,
was to burst forth and overwhelm that generation. Its 'last day' was to be a dies irae ' the great and
terrible day of the Lord.' This is 'the end of the age,' so often referred to by our Lord, and constantly
predicted by His apostles. Already they stood within the penumbra of that tremendous crisis, which
was every day advancing nearer and nearer, and which was at last to come suddenly, 'as a thief in the
night.' This is the true explanation of those constant exhortations to vigilance, patience, and hope,
which abound in the apostolic epistles. They lived expecting a consummation which was to arrive in
their own time, and which they might witness with their own eyes. This fact lies on the very face of the
New Testament writings; it is the key to the interpretation of much that would otherwise be obscure
and unintelligible, and we shall see in the progress of this investigation how consistently this view is
supported by the whole tenor of the New Testament Scriptures.




To: David fisk who wrote (24504)2/20/1999 11:18:00 AM
From: Emile Vidrine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 39621
 
We conclude then:

1. That the coming here spoken of is the Parousia, the second coming of the Lord Jesus Christ.

2. That the manner of His coming was to be glorious -' in his own glory; 'in the glory of his Father; "
with the holy angels.'

3. That the object of His coming was to judge that 'wicked and adulterous generation ' (Mark viii.
38), and ' to reward every' man according to his works.'

4. That His coming would be the consummation of 'the kingdom of God;' the close of the aeon; 'the
coming of the kingdom of God with power.'

5. That this coming was expressly declared by our Saviour to be near. Lange justly remarks that the
words, are 'emphatically placed at the beginning of the sentence; not a simple future, but meaning,
The event is impending that He shall come; He is about to come.' (14)

6. That some of those who heard our Lord utter this prediction were to live to witness the event of
which He spoke, viz., His coming in glory.

The inference therefore is, that the Parousia, or glorious coming of Christ, was declared by Himself to
fall within the limits of the then existing generation,- a conclusion which we shall find in the sequel to
be abundantly justified.



THE COMING OF THE SON OF MAN CERTAIN AND SPEEDY.

Parable of the Importunate Widow.

Luke xviii. 1-8: 'And he spake a parable unto them to this end, that men ought always to pray and
not to faint; saying, There was in a city a judge, which feared not God, neither regarded man: and
there was a widow in that city; and she came unto him, saying, Avenge me of mine adversary. And
he would not for a while: but afterward he said within himself, Though I fear not God, nor regard
man; get because this widow troubleth me, I will avenge her, lest by her continual coming she
weary me. And the Lord said, Hear what the unjust judge saith. And shall not God avenge his own
elect, which cry day and night unto him, though he bear long with them ? I tell you that he will
avenge them speedily. Nevertheless, when the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth'
[in the land] ?

The intensely practical and present-day character, if we may so call it, of our Lord's discourses,
is a feature of His teaching which, though often overlooked, requires to be steadily kept in view. He
spoke to His own people, and to His own times. He was God's messenger to Israel; and, while it is
most true that His words are for all men and for all time, yet their primary and direct bearing was
upon His own generation. For want of attention to this fact, many expositors have wholly missed the
point of the parable before us. It becomes in their hands a vague and indefinite prediction of a
vindication of the righteous, in some period more or less remote, but having no special relation to the
people and time of our Lord Himself. Assuredly, whatever the parable may be to us or to future
ages, it had a close and bearing upon the disciples to whom it was originally spoken. The Lord was
about to leave His disciples 'as sheep in the midst of wolves; ' they were to be persecuted and
afflicted, hated of all men for their Master's sake; and it might well be that their courage would fail
them, and their hearts would faint. In this parable the Saviour encourages them 'to pray always, and
not to faint,' by the example of what persevering prayer can do even with man. If the importunity of a
poor widow could constrain an unprincipled judge to do her right, how much more would God, the
righteous Judge, be moved by the prayers of His own children to redress their wrongs. Without
allegorising all the details of the parable, after the manner of some expositors, it is enough to mark its
great moral. It is this. The persecuted children of God would he surely and speedily avenged. God
will vindicate them, and that speedily. But when ? The point of time is not left indefinite. It is 'when
the Son of man cometh.' The Parousia was to be the hour of redress and deliverance to the suffering
people of God.

The reflection of our Lord in the close of the eighth verse deserves particular attention.
'Nevertheless when the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth ?' We must here revert to
the facts already stated with respect to the ministry of John the Baptist. We have seen how dark and
ominous was the outlook of the prophet who preached repentance to Israel. He was the precursor of
'the great and terrible day of the Lord ;' he was the second Elijah sent to proclaim the coming of Him
who would 'smite the land with a curse.' The reflection of our Lord suggests that He foresaw that the
repentance which could alone avert the doom of the nation was not to be looked for. There would be
no faith in God, in His promises, or in His threatenings. The day of His therefore, would be the 'day
of vengeance (Luke xxi. 22).

Doddridge has well apprehended the scope of this parable, and paraphrases the opening verse as
follows: 'Thus our Lord discoursed with His disciples of the approaching destruction of Jerusalem by
the Romans; and for their encouragement under those hardships which they might in the meantime
expect, from their unbelieving countrymen or others, He spake a parable, to them, which was
intended to inculcate upon them this great truth, that how distressed soever their circumstances might
be, they ought always to pray with faith and perseverance, and not to faint under their trials.' (15)

The following is his paraphrase of ver. 8: ' Yes I say unto you, He will certainly vindicate them;
and when He once undertakes it, He will do it speedily too; and this generation of men shall see and
feel it to their terror. Nevertheless, when the Son of man, having been put ill possession of His
glorious kingdom, comes to appear for this important purpose, will He find faith in the land ?' (16)



THE REWARD OF THE DISCIPLES IN THE COMING AEON,
i.e. AT THE PAROUSIA

Matt. xix. 27-30.

'Then answered Peter and said
unto him, Behold, we have
forsaken all, and followed thee;
what shall we have therefore?

And Jesus said unto them,
Verily I say unto you, That ye
which have followed me, in the
regeneration when the Son of
man shall site in the throne of his
glory, ye also shall sit upon
twelve thrones, judging the
twelve tribes of Israel. And
every one that hath forsaken
houses, or brethren, or sisters,
or father, or mother, or wife, or
children, or lands, for my
name's sake, shall receive an
hundredfold, and shall inherit
everlasting life.'
Mark x. 18-31.

'Then Peter began to say unto
him, Lo, we have left all, and
have followed thee.

'And Jesus answered and said,
Verily I say unto you, There is no
man that hath left house, or
brethren, or sisters, of father, or
mother, or wife, or children, or
lands, for my sake, and the
gospel's, but he shall receive an
hundredfold now in this time,
houses, and brethren, and sisters,
and mothers, and children, and
lands, with persecutions; and in
the world to come eternal life.'
Luke xvii. 28-30.

'Then Peter said, Lo, we have
left all, and followed thee.

'And he said unto them, Verily I
say unto you, There is no man
that hath left house, or parents,
or brethren, or wife, or children,
for the kingdom of God's sake,
who shall not receive manifold
more in this present time, and in
the world to come life
everlasting.'



To what period are we to assign the event or state here called by our Lord the 'regeneration'? It is
evidently contemporaneous with 'the Son of man sitting on the throne of his glory;' nor can there be
any question that the two phrases, 'The Son of man coming in his kingdom,' and, 'The Son of man
sitting on the throne of his glory,' both refer to the same thing, and to the same time. That is to say, it
is to the Parousia that both these expressions point.

We have another note of time, and another point of coincidence between the 'regeneration ' and
the Parousia, in the reference made by our Lord to the 'coming age or aeon' as the period when His
faithful disciples were to receive their recompense (Mark x.30; Luke xviii. 30). But the 'coming age'
was, as we have already seen, to succeed the existing age or aeon, that is to say, the period of the
Jewish dispensation, the end of which our Lord declared to be at hand. We conclude, therefore, that
the 'regeneration,' the 'coming age,' and the 'Parousia,' are virtually synonymous, or, at all events,
contemporaneous. The coming of the Son of man in His kingdom, or in His glory, is distinctly
affirmed to be a coming to judgment -- 'to reward every man according to his works (Matt. xvi. 27);
and His sitting on the throne of His glory, in the regeneration, is as evidently a sitting in judgment. In
this judgment the apostles were to have the honour of being assessors with the Lord, according to
His declaration (Luke xxii. 29, 30)- 'I appoint unto you a kingdom, as my Father hath appointed unto
me; that ye may eat and drink at my table in my kingdom, and sit on thrones judging the twelve tribes
of Israel.' But this glorious coming to judgment is expressly affirmed by our Lord to fall within the
limits of the generation then living: 'There be some standing here which shall not taste of death, till they
see the Son of man coming in his kingdom' (Matt. xvi. 28). It was therefore no long-deferred and
distant hope which Jesus held out to His disciples. It was not a prospect that is still seen afar off in the
dim perspective of an indefinite futurity. St. Peter and his fellow-disciples were fully aware that 'the
kingdom of heaven' was at hand. They had learned it from their first teacher in the wilderness; they
had been reassured of it by their Lord and Master; they had gone through Galilee proclaiming the
truth to their countrymen. When the Lord, therefore, promised, that in the coming aeon His apostles
should sit upon thrones, is it conceivable that He could mean that ages upon ages, centuries upon
centuries, and even millennium upon millennium must slowly roll away before they should reap their
promised honours? Are the inheritance of 'everlasting life' and the 'sitting upon twelve thrones' still
among 'the things hoped for but not seen ' by the disciples? Surely such a hypothesis refutes itself.
The promise would have sounded like mockery to the disciples had they been told that the
performance would be so long delayed. On the other hand, if we conceive of the 'regeneration' as
contemporaneous with the Parousia, and the Parousia, with the close of the Jewish age and the
destruction of the city and temple of Jerusalem, we have a definite point of time, not far distant, but
almost within the sight of living men, when the predicted judgment of the enemies of Christ, and the
glorious recompense of His friends, would come to pass.



Footnotes



1. Reden Jesu, in loc. Back

2. Jewish War, bk v. c. x sec. 5. Traill's translation. Back

3. Ibid. G. Xiii. sec. 6. Back

4. Ibid. bk. vii. c. viii. sec. I. Back

5. sec. Reden Jesu; Matt. xii, 43-45. Back

6. Greek Test. in loc. Back

7. Life of Christ, sec. 245. Back

8. Synonyms of the New Test. vol. i. a. 70; Bib. Cab. No. iii. Back

9. There is a real difficulty in this passage which ought not to be overlooked. It seems unaccountable
that our Lord, on an occasion like this, when He was sending forth the twelve on a short mission,
apparently within a limited district, and from which they were to return to Him in a short time, should
speak of of His coming as overtaking them before the completion of their task. It seems scarcely
appropriate to the particular period, and to belong more properly to a subsequent charge, viz., that
recorded in the discourse spoken on the Mount of Olives (Matt. xxiv.; Mark xiii.; Luke xxi ). Indeed,
a comparison of these passages will go far to satisfy any candid mind that the whole paragraph Matt.
x. 16-23) is transposed from its original connection, and inserted in our Lord's first charge to His
disciples We find the very words relating to the persecution of the apostles, their being delivered up
to the councils, their being scourged in the synagogues, brought before governors and kings, etc.,
which are recorded in the tenth chapter of St. Matthew, assigned by St. Mark and St. Luke to a
subsequent period, viz., the discourse on the Mount of Olives. There is no evidence that the disciples
met with such treatment on their first evangelistic tour There is therefore as strong evidence as the
nature of the case will admit, that ver. 23 and its context belong to the discourse on the Mount of
Olives. This would remove the difficulty which the passage presents in the connection in which we
here find it, and give a coherence and consistency to the language, which, as it stands, it is not easy to
discover. It is an admitted fact that even the Synoptical Gospels do not relate all events in precisely
the same order; there most therefore be greater chronological accuracy in one than in another. Stier
says: 'Matthew is careless of chronology in details' (Reden Jesu, vol. iii. p. US). Neander, speaking
on this very charge, says: 'Matthew evidently connects many things with the instructions given to the
apostles in view of their first journey, which chronologically belong later; ' (Life of Christ, _ 174, note
b); and again, speaking of the charge given to the seventy, as recorded by St. Luke: 'he says, 'The
entire and characteristic coherency of everything spoken by Christ, according to Luke, with the
circumstances (so superior to the collocation of Matthew),' etc. (Life of Christ, _ 204, note 1). Dr.
Blaikie observes: 'It is generally understood that Matthew arranged his narrative more by subjects
and places than by chronology' (Bible History, p. 372).

There seems, therefore, abundant warrant for assigning the important prediction contained in Matt. x
.23 to the discourse delivered on the Mount of Olives.

10. See note In Harmony of the Four Gospels. Back

11. The training of the Twelve, p. 117 Back

12. Large, Comm. on St. Matt. in loc. Back

13. Alford, Greek Test. in loc. Back

14. See Lange in loc. Back

15. Family Expos. on Luke xviii. 1-8 Back

16. Doddridge teas the following note on 'Will he find faith in the land ?' 'It is evident the word often
signifies not the earth in general, but some particular land or country; as in Acts vii. 3, 4,11, and in
numberless other places. And the context here limits it to the less extensive signification. The believing
Hebrews were evidently in great danger of being wearied out with their persecutions and distresses.
Comp. Heb. iii. 12-14; x. 23-39; xii. 1-4; James i. 1-4; ii. 6.'

The interpretation given by the judicious Campbell adds confirmation, if it were needed, needed, to
this view of the passage. 'There is a close connection in all that our Lord says on any topic of
conversation, which rarely escapes an attentive reader. If in this, as is very probable, He refers to the
destruction impending over the Jewish nation, as the judgment of Heaven for their rebellious against
God, in rejecting and murdering the Messiah. and in persecuting His adherents, (the Greek) must be
understood to mean "this belief," or the belief of the particular truth He had been inculcating, namely,
that God will in due time avenge His elect, and signally punish their oppressors; and (the Greek) must
mean "the land,"_to wit, of Judea. The words may be translated either way -- earth or land; but the
latter evidently gives them a more definite meaning, and unites them more closely with those which
preceded, (Campbell on the Gospels, vol. ii. p. 384). The teaching of this instructive parable is by no
means exhausted; and we shall find it throw an unexpected light on a very obscure passage, at a
future stage of this investigation. Meantime we may refer to 2 Thess. i 4-10, as furnishing a striking
commentary on the whole parable, and showing the connection between the Paroursia and the
avenging of the elect. Back