SIR ROBERT ANDERSON
Secret Service
Theologian
FORGOTTEN TRUTHS
APPENDIX 1
THE ERAS OF
SERVITUDE
NOTE CHAPTER 3
THE Divine judgment of the 70 years'
Servitude to Babylon fell in 606 B.C., which was the third year of King
Jehoiakim, and the year before the accession of Nebuchadnezzar. The Jews
refused to bow to the Divine judgment thus inflicted upon them, and in the
ninth year of the Servitude they revolted (597 B.C.). This brought upon them
the judgment of the Captivity. The Babylonian army again captured Jerusalem,
and all "save the poorest sort of the people of the land" were deported to
Chaldea. Jeremiah in Jerusalem, and Ezekiel among the captives, gave repeated
warnings that continued impenitence would bring down a still fiercer judgment
But, misled by promises of help from Egypt, the Jews again revolted in the
tenth year of the Captivity; and, in fulfillment of prophetic warnings, their
city was destroyed and their land laid desolate. "The Fast of Tebeth is still
observed by the Jews of every land in commemoration of the day from which the
era of the 70 years of "the Desolations" was reckoned, namely, the tenth day of
the tenth month in the ninth year of King Zedekiah (589 B.C.). See Ezekiel
24:1, 2, and Kings 25:1. Both the 70 years of the Servitude and the 62 years of
the Captivity ended in 536 B.C., when the decree of Cyrus permitted the Jews to
return to their own land. That decree expressly authorized the rebuilding of
the Temple. But though the words of a Persian king were regarded as divine,
that decree was thwarted by the local authorities in Judea until the reign of
Darius Hystaspes. The explanation of this strange fact is that God would not
permit the rebuilding of the Temple until the era of the Desolations ended.
The year in use both with the Jews and the Chaldeans was one of 860 days, the
calendar being corrected by intercalation. And that this is the prophetic year
is made plain both in Daniel and Revelation, 42 months being the equivalent of
1260 days. Now 70 years of 360 days contain 25,200 days; and the period between
the 10th Tebeth 589 and the 24th Chisleu 520, when the foundation of the second
Temple was laid (Haggai 2:18), was exactly 25,200 days.
It is very commonly
assumed that Daniel's prayer of chapter 9 of his prophecy had reference to the
70 years of the Captivity, and that the 70 weeks were to end with the coming of
Messiah. These blunders discredit many a learned writer. For there was no 70
years' captivity, and the period "unto Messiah the Prince" was not 70 weeks but
7 and 62 weeks. Daniel 9:2 states explicitly that it was the years of the
Desolations that were the basis of the prayer and of the prophecy; and, as we
have seen, these were prophetic years of 360 days. The era of the weeks was to
date from the issue of a decree to rebuild Jerusalem. History records one such
decree, and only one, viz. that of the month Nisan in the 20th year of
Artaxerxes. And 69 sevens of prophetic years (173,800 days), measured from 1st
Nisan, 445 B.C., end upon that fateful day in Passion week when, for the first
and only time in His ministry, the Lord was publicly acclaimed as the Messiah
the Prince. (Nehemiah 2; Luke 19:37 ff. Mark the words of verse 42: "If thou
hadst known, even thou in this day, the things that belong to thy peace!")
But what then of the 70th week? Here it is that all this has an important
bearing on the main subject of the preceding pages. As early as the clays of
Hippolytus, bishop and martyr, the belief prevailed that the fulfillment of
Daniel's last week belongs to the future. And such was the view of Julius
Africanus, "the father of Christian Chronologists." This, moreover, is entirely
in keeping with the Lord's words in the synagogue of Nazareth; and it is
definitely established by His words recorded in Matthew 24:15, with reference
to Daniel 9:27. It is certain, moreover, that the 70th week has not been
fulfilled in the past. For the 70th week begins with the covenant between the
Jews and their last great patron, who becomes their last great persecutor. In
the middle of the week he violates his treaty with them; and the latter half of
the week (the 42 months, or 1260 days, of Daniel and Revelation) is the period
of the Great Tribulation, which is to be followed immediately by the awful
portents of the "Coming of the Son of Man," foretold in Isaiah 13:10 and Joel
2:31. (Matthew 24:29, and see verse 27.)
As already noticed, there will be
a prolonged interval between those awful portents and the actual "Coming of the
Son of Man." This is evident from the Lord's words in verses 36-44. And yet
that Coming might have taken place within the lifetime of those to whom the
words were addressed. But, as I have sought to show in preceding pages, all
this has reference to Israel; and its fulfillment is in abeyance because of
Israel's rejection during this Christian dispensation. The "Second Sermon on
the Mount" will be fulfilled in every jot and tittle of it. But to throw it
into hotch-potch with the distinctively Christian revelation entrusted to His
Apostles after "the change of dispensation," modifying the language of both in
the vain effort to make them harmonize this displays neither spiritual
intelligence nor reverence for Holy Scripture.1
APPENDIX
2
IS THE CHURCH THE BRIDE OF CHRIST?
NOTE CHAPTER 5
"Is the Church the Bride of Christ?" Let us begin
by correcting our terminology. In the Patmos visions we read of "the Bride, the
Lamb's wife"; but "the Bride of Christ" is unknown to Scripture. The first
mention of the Bride is in John 3:29. In a Jewish marriage the "friend of the
bridegroom "answered to our "groomsman." His most important duty was to present
the bride to the bridegroom. And this was the place which the Baptist claimed.
His mission was to prepare Israel to meet the Messiah, "to make ready a people
prepared for the Lord" (Luke 1:17).
With the close of the Baptist's
ministry, both the Bride and the Lamb disappear from the New Testament until we
reach the Patmos visions. In Revelation 21 the Angel summons the Seer to behold
"the Bride, the Lamb's wife"; and he showed him "the Holy Jerusalem descending
out of heaven from God." The twelve gates of the city bear the names of the
twelve tribes of the children of Israel, and in its twelve foundations are "the
names of the twelve Apostles of the Lamb." And the foundations are "garnished
with all manner of precious stones. For "it is the city that hath the
foundations, whose builder and maker is God," (Hebrews 11:10) the city for
which Abraham looked, when he turned his back upon the then metropolis of the
world.
These Apostles of the Bride are not the Apostles who were given
after the Ascension for the building up of the Body of Christ the
Apostles of this Christian dispensation, chief among whom was Paul. They are
the twelve Apostles of the Lord's earthly ministry to Israel, who shall sit on
twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel (Matthew 19:28). They are
the Apostles of the Lamb. And "the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb" are the
temple of this city; and the Lamb is the light thereof. Every part of the
description and of the symbolism tends to make it clear that this city
represents a relationship and a glory pertaining to the people of the covenant.
And now we can understand why it is that it is called the Bride of the Lamb,
and never the Bride of Christ. For, the mystery of the Body having now been
revealed, Christ is identified with the Church which is His Body, whereas His
relation to Israel is entirely personal. What relation, then, does "Jerusalem
which is above" bear to us? No need here for guessing, and no room for
controversy, for on this point Scripture is explicit; "the Jerusalem that is
above is free, which is our Mother" (Galatians 4:26, R.V.). We know that most
of the Fathers were obsessed by the false belief that the Jew had been cast
away for ever; but even this seems inadequate to account for their claiming the
bridal relationship and glory for the Church of this dispensation.
There
are two reasons for refusing to believe that the Church is the Bride. First,
because Scripture nowhere states that it is the Bride, and secondly, because
Scripture implicitly teaches that it is not the Bride. The question, Is A the
wife of B? may be answered in the negative, either by pointing to C as his
wife, or by indicating a relationship between A and B which is incompatible
with that of marriage. And in both these ways Scripture vetoes the Church-Bride
theory. For it teaches that the Bride is "our Mother," and that the Church is
the Body of Christ.
The 5th chapter of Ephesians, moreover, ought to be
accepted as making an end of controversy on this subject. The marriage
relationship is there readjusted by a heavenly standard. If, therefore, the
Church were the Bride, we should find it asserted here with emphatic
prominence. But it is the Body relationship that is emphasized. Christ loved
the Church, and the Church is His Body; therefore a Christian is to love his
wife as his own body. In the 81st verse the ordinance of Genesis 2:24 is
re-enacted for the Christian with a new sanction and a new meaning.1 The "great
mystery" of verse 32 is not that a man and his wife are one body, for such a
use of the word "mystery" is foreign to Scripture. And moreover, the Apostle
says expressly, "I am speaking about Christ and the Church." And the last verse
of the chapter disposes of the whole question' "Nevertheless, though man and
wife are not one body, yet because Christ and the Church are one body) let
every one of you love his wife even as himself."
By a strange vagary of
exegesis the Apostle's words in 2 Corinthians 11:2 are sometimes appealed to in
support of the Church-Bride theory. Dr. Edersheim cites this passage to
illustrate the position of groomsmen (or "friends of the bridegroom") at a
Jewish marriage. Besides their other functions, they were, he says, "the
guarantors of the bride's virgin chastity."2 And the Apostle uses this figure
to express his "jealousy" his solicitude, for the Corinthian Christians.
APPENDIX 3
THE LORD'S COMING IN GREEK
WORDS
NOTE CHAPTER 6
THERE are three different words used in the
Greek Testament in relation to the Lord's Coming.
Parousia means primarily
"presence" (see 2 Corinthians 10:10; Philippians 2:12), and it is used of any
person's arrival (see, e.g., 1 Corinthians 16:17; 2 Corinthians 7:6, 7; etc.).
In secular use it applied specially to any state visit. In the following
passages it is used of the return of Christ: Matthew 24:3, 27, 37, 39; 1
Corinthians 15:23; 1 Thessalonians 2:19; 3:13; 4:15; 5:23; 2 Thessalonians 2:1,
8; James 5:7, 8; 2 Peter 1:16; 1 John 2:28.
Apokalupsis ("revelation" or
"manifestation") is used of the Advent in 1 Corinthians 1:7; 2 Thessalonians
1:7; 1 Peter 1:7, 13.
Epiphaneia ("appearing") occurs in 2 Thessalonians
2:8 (brightness); 1 Timothy 6:14; 2 Timothy 1:10; 4:1, 8; Titus 2:13.
And
the verb phaneroo ("to appear or be manifested") is used in Colossians 3:4; 1
Peter 5:4; 1 John 2:28; 3:2.
The attempt has been made to apportion these
words to the several future manifestations of the Lord Jesus Christ. A
reference to the passages where they occur will enable the Bible student to
judge whether this distinction can be sustained; or whether the words do not
rather indicate different phases or aspects of the various "Comings" foretold
in Scripture.
APPENDIX 4
PHILIPPIANS 3:8-141 NOTE CHAPTER 7
IF the
commonly received exegesis of Philippians 3:8-14 be correct, we are faced by
the astounding fact that the author of the Epistle to the Romans and of the
15th chapter of 1 Corinthians the Apostle who was in a peculiar sense
entrusted with the supreme revelation of grace announced when nearing
the close of his ministry that the resurrection was not, as he had been used to
teach, a blessing which Divine grace assured to all believers in Christ, but a
prize to be won by the sustained efforts of a life of wholly exceptional
saintship.
Nor is this all. In the same Epistle he has already said, "To me
to live is Christ, and to have died is gain "; whereas, ex hypothesi, it now
appears that his chief aim in life was to earn a right to the resurrection; and
that death, instead of bringing gain, would have cut him off before he had
reached the standard of saintship needed to secure that prize! For his words
are explicit, "not as though I had already attained."
Here was one who was
"not a whit behind the chiefest Apostles"; who excelled them all in labours and
sufferings for his Lord, and in the "visions and revelations" accorded to him;
whose prolonged ministry, moreover, was accredited by "mighty signs and wonders
by the power of the Spirit of God." And yet, "being now such an one as Paul the
aged," he was in doubt whether he should have part in that resurrection which
he had taught all his pagan Corinthian converts to hope for: for to them it was
he wrote the words, "we shall all be changed."
Such is the exposition of
the Apostle's teaching in many a standard commentary. And yet the passage which
is thus perverted reaches its climax in the words, "Our citizenship is in
heaven, from whence we are looking for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ, who
shall fashion anew the body of our humiliation that it may be conformed to the
body of His glory."
"Our citizenship is in heaven " here is the clew to the
teaching of the whole passage. The truth to which his words refer is more
clearly stated in Ephesians 2:6 - God has "quickened us together with Christ,
and raised us up with Him, and made us sit with Him in the heavenly places in
Christ." More clearly still is it given in Colossians 3:1-3: "If then ye were
raised together with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ is
seated on the right hand of God. Set your mind on the things that are above,
not on the things that are on earth. For ye died, and your life is hid with
Christ in God."
Ephesians and Colossians, be it remembered, were written at
the same period of his ministry as Philippians; and in the light of these
Scriptures we can read this chapter aright. To "win Christ" (ver. 8), or to
apprehend, or lay hold of, that for which he had been laid hold of, or
apprehended (ver. 12); or in other words, to realize practically in his life on
earth what was true of him doctrinally as to his standing before God in heaven
this is what he was reaching toward, and what, he says, he had not
"already attained."
The "high calling" of ver. 14 is interpreted by some to
mean Christ's calling up His own to meet Him in the air (a blessing assured to
all "who are alive and remain unto the Coming of the Lord"); but this is not in
keeping with the plain words God's high calling in Christ Jesus, i.e.
what God has called us (made us) to be in Christ.
If this passage refers to
the literal resurrection, then the words "not as though I had already attained
must mean that, while here on earth, and before the Lord's Coming, the Apostle
hoped either to undergo the change of ver. 21, or else to win some sort of
saintship diploma, or certificate, to ensure his being raised at the Coming.
These alternatives are inexorable; and they only need to be stated to ensure
their rejection.
One word more. If the Apostle Paul, after such a life of
saintship and service, was in doubt as to his part in the resurrection, no one
of us, unless he be the proudest of Pharisees or the blindest of fools, will
dream of attaining it. In fact we shall dismiss the subject from our
minds.
Appendix 5
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