|
Concordant Studies
THIS GENERATION
UNDER no circumstances should you be finishing the
cities of Israel till the Son of Mankind may be coming (Matt.10:23b).
Verily I am saying to you that there are some of those standing here who under no
circumstances should be tasting death till they should be perceiving the Son
of Mankind coming in His kingdom (Matt.16:28; cp Luke 9:27). Verily I
am saying to you that by no means may this generation be passing by till all these
things should be occurring (Matt.24:34; cp Mark 13:30; Luke 21:32).
For still how very little, He Who is coming will be arriving and not delaying
(Heb.10:37). Little children, it is the last hour, and, according as you hear that
the antichrist is coming, now also there have come to be many antichrists, whence we know
that it is the last hour (1 John 2:18).
These and similar
passages are often appealed to by unbelievers to show the exceedingly unreliable
natureindeed the sheer falsehoodof Jesus words and teaching, since the
event which they predict, the second coming of Christ, did not occur
within the specified time and has not yet occurred over 1,900 years later. Much is made of
the supposed absurdity of Christianity at its very core, its claims being
founded upon the word of such a manifest delusionist as Jesus of Nazareth.
After all, they
reason, the sun was not darkened and the moon did not fail to give her
beams, and the stars did not fall from heaven, nor were the powers of the
heavens shaken; the sign of the Son of Mankind in heaven did not appear, all the
tribes of the land did not grieve, nor did they see the Son of Mankind
coming on the clouds of heaven with power and much glory (Matt.24:29,30). Every eye did not
see Him (Rev.1:7), much less did the kingdoms of this world become those of the Lord God
and His Christ (Rev.11:15); decidedly, the nations did not beat their swords into
plowshares, nor their spears into pruninghooks, so as not to learn war any more
(Isa.2:4).
Remarkably, however,
certain believers, termed Preterists since they claim a fulfilled or past
second coming of Christ, have appealed to these very same passages in order to show the
exceedingly reliable natureindeed the utter truthfulnessof Jesus words.
According to their claims, the second coming of Christ did occur within
the specified time, all related prophecies being fulfilled accordingly.
Preterists, however,
must explain all prophecy concerning Christs advent and kingdom in highly
allegorical or even mystical terms, contrary to the plain sense of the passages
themselves. Nonetheless, these believers have convinced themselves of the legitimacy of
their interpretations, since, according to them, either Christs second coming did
occur within a generation of the time in which He made these prophecies, or He is a
deceiver and a false prophet. Since no believer will affirm that Christ is either of
these, and since, according to Preterists, the only alternative is to accept their claims
as to a first-century second coming, they imagine that they have proved the correctness of
their position.

GOD'S HIDDEN INTENTION
A
recognition of the hidden intention of God as distinct from His revealed will, is vital to
our subject at hand. The revealed will of God is well illustrated by our Lords reproach
upon the cities of Israel in which most of His powerful deeds occurred, for they do
not repent (Matt.11:20). Since the people had failed to repent, Jesus reproached
them for their failure to heed Gods revealed will which had called for their
repentance (cf Matt.3:2; 4:17).
Yet the hidden
intention of God is equally well illustrated in Jesus words in reference and as a
complement to His preceding words of reproach upon the people: At that season,
answering, Jesus said, I am acclaiming Thee, Father, Lord of heaven and
earth, for Thou hidest these things from the wise and intelligent and Thou dost
reveal them to minors. Yea, Father, seeing that thus it became a delight in front of
Thee (Matt.11:25,26).
If a recognition of
the significance of Christs powerful deeds is vital to repentance, and yet if God
should hide this significance from some, those from whom it is hidden will be
unable to repent. Yet even so, if this is what God has done, we too may well acclaim the
Father, Lord of heaven and earth, seeing that thus it became a delight in front of Him.
It is important to
understand that the rightness or wrongness of an action is determined in relation to its
purpose, according to the motive which sponsors it. Whatever God does is right;
and, it is also good, with respect to His purpose. That which men devise for evil
is that which God designs for good (cp Gen.50:20). If it should be that Gods
revealed will is not fulfilled, it is only that His hidden intention might be realized.
Similarly, if Gods present intention should entail a measure of evil, it is only
that His consummate intention should be comprised of a superfluity of good (cp
Rom.8:18-21). This should ever be kept in mind whenever we should be considering
Israels failure, or our own.

PROVISIONAL DECLARATIONS OF TRUTH
It
is indeed important to believe what the Scriptures say. Yet the deeper question
still remains: In what sense is what the Scriptures say to be understood. As
we approach this question of the time of Christs appearing, whether it is past or
future, it should first of all be noted that in the Original, each of these statements of
Jesus concerning His appearing (e.g., Matt.10:23b; 16:28; 24:34) is expressed in the
subjunctive mood, sometimes with the conditional particle an (EVER) included. These grammatical features are reflected in the
Concordant Version by the auxiliaries should and may.
The subjunctive mood
calls attention to the contingent (i.e., dependent) nature of what is being affirmed. It
speaks of the connection which obtains between what is affirmed and that upon which the
affirmation depends for its fulfillment.
In the nature of
things, if that upon which a declaration expressed in the subjunctive mood depends, is
unrevisably certain, the declaration itself is unrevisable and is certain to occur. But if
that upon which a declaration expressed in the subjunctive mood depends, is not
unrevisably certain, the declaration itself is revisable and is not certain to occur.
Of course that upon
which the first-century fulfillment of these texts in question immediately depended, was
the will of God, then revealed. If the will of God, then revealed, was peremptory (final,
barring any possible recension for whatever reason), then these prophecies were certain to
occur in that generation. But if the will of God, then revealed, was not peremptory, then
these prophecies were not certain to occur in that generation. It will not do simply to
claim that since these prophecies were made, they were therefore made peremptorily. This
is what is at issue, and must not be decided by circular reasoning, special pleading, or
emotional claims.
It should be noted
that the prophecies of the establishment of the kingdom within that present generation of
Israelites to whom Christ came, were necessarily provisional. They were contingent upon
Israels national repentance and acceptance of Jesus as the Messiah and Saviour.
It is true that it
was the revealed will of God that the kingdom should then come. This is reflected
in the various passages such as Matthew 24:4-34 which predicted the occurrence of certain
events preceding the kingdoms establishment within that present generation. But it
is just as true that the kingdom did not then come.

IN HIS OWN JURISDICTION
It
is certainly correct that Matthew 24:34 and similar prophetic declarations must be
understood provisionally; this is because certain provisional considerations were entailed
in their fulfillment (cf Acts 3:19,20). Ultimately, however, it is not their
provisional nature that raises the question as to whether they were unrevisably certain to
occur. If, in the counsels of God, they were unrevisably certain to occur, doubtlessly
their provisional element would be entirely fulfilled. The only ultimate question is
whether such a prophecy is an expression of the actual intention of God and is therefore a
peremptory declaration.
This can only be
decided by a consideration of all relevant issues. But to claim that because the future
tense is used, such declarations are therefore peremptory and may not be understood
provisionally either in relation to Israels obedience or even in relation to
Gods hidden intention, is wholly unwarranted. This is especially true when it is
noted that these texts are expressed in the subjunctive mood, which calls attention to
their dependent nature. Their ultimate dependency is upon the actual intention of
the Father, Who has placed the decisive times and eras for restoring the kingdom to Israel
in His own jurisdiction (Acts 1:7).
Very simply, until
the word of God was completed (Col.1:25), one could not say to a certainty that a
particular declaration of Gods revealed will concerning things to come was also a
declaration of His actual intention concerning things to come.
That this
provisional yet prophetic declaration in Matthew 24:34 of the revealed will of God, was
not a peremptory expression of the actual intention of God concerning that very
generation, is made evident not only from history but from further revelation. The
millennial kingdom did not commence in the first century and run its course until some
time after 1000 A.D. Satan was not bound during this period, being
cast into the submerged chaos, locked and sealed therein. Surely, during the Middle Ages,
the rest of the dead of all past generations were not resurrected for judging and then
cast into the lake of fire. Nor, during that same period, was the earth destroyed by fire,
nor was a new earth created, one in which there was no more death, nor mourning, nor
clamor, nor misery.
Therefore, the words
of Christ in Matthew 24:34 and similar passages are to be understood within the compass of
the will of God, then revealed. It is foolish to insist on taking such passages in a
peremptory sense, as if no other sense but the peremptory existed, or as if this were the
only possible sense in which these passages could be understood.

NOT UNREVISABLY CERTAIN
It
is incorrect to claim that if the kingdom was not then established, Jesus was
wrong. His words cannot be taken beyond the bounds of an implicit God
willingand He isIsraels contingent obedience being understood. The
words of Christ, then, in these texts in question, are altogether true in relation to the
subject with which they are concerned.
It is neither
dishonest, mistaken, or even inappropriate to make provisionally correct statements
concerning future events. Indeed, nearly all of our own predictions concerning events of
ordinary human affairs can be no more than provisionally correct. They are not unrevisably
certain, since that upon which they depend has not been disclosed to us, certainly not in
a peremptory sense (if the Lord should be willing; cp James
4:13-17). The proviso God willing, is always to be understood, for
indeed it is always present, whether explicitly or implicitly.
In this respect, the
predictions of Christ, the Son of God, are quite like our own. Whatever He declares shall
occur (and this is especially emphasized where He uses the subjunctive and speaks of that
which should be occurring), is only that which shall occur, God
willing. In light, then, of Matthew 24:34 and related passages, surely it is correct
to say that the then-revealed will of God, to which our Lord was privileged to
testify, was that that generation of Israelites to whom Jesus spoke should repent and
receive their Messiah. God willing, then, these things should be occurring. Then, the
kingdom would come.

GOD'S ACTUAL INTENTION
It
is mistaken to take Christs words as somehow transcending the implicit proviso,
God willing, or to assume that Gods revealed will concerning that
generation, was also necessarily His actual intention concerning that generation. The case
of the Pharaoh of the exodus is a good example. Gods revealed will unto Pharaoh was
declared by Moses. Moses said, Thus says
Yahweh . . . . Dismiss My people that they may serve Me!
(Ex.10:3). Pharaoh said, Go! (Ex.10:8). Yet Yahweh made the heart of
Pharaoh steadfast, so that he did not dismiss the sons of Israel (Ex.10:20). This
was Gods actual intention.
The principle is the
same with the nation of Israel of our Lords day. Then, Gods revealed will was
that Israel should repent and enter the kingdom. But that it was His hidden intention that
they should not do so, is evident, seeing that He has blinded their eyes and
calloused their heart lest they may perceive with their eyes and apprehend with
their heart (cf John 12:40; cit. Isa.6:10). Gods intention concerning them,
His revealed will notwithstanding, was that [they] must not be
understanding . . . . [and they] must not be knowing
(Isa.6:9).
Certainly, that
which God wills should come to pass, shall come to pass (i.e., what He wants to occur will
occur). Whatever is His actual intention, shall occur.
In Christs
personal ministry to the nation of Israel, He came to His own simply as the Servant
of the Circumcision, for the sake of the truth of God, to confirm the patriarchal
promises (Rom.15:8). The truth of God for the sake of which He testified was the
truth of God revealed by Israels prophets concerning Gods glorious kingdom,
under Messiah (or, Christ), to be established on the earth. Thus He confirmed
the original promises which God had made to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, to bring blessing
to their seed.
Accordingly, then, in
relation to the revealed will of God concerning the kingdom, Jesus could truly say,
Verily, verily, I am saying to you that by no means may this generation be
passing by till all these things should be occurring (Matt.24:34).
It is altogether a
separate questionand indeed a question which Christ did not address during His
ministry to Israelwhether this revealed will of God was also His actual intention.
Apart from other considerations and without additional revelation, all that can be said as
to Christs testimony concerning this generation (which has now become
that generation), is that it was true and correct, in relation to Gods
revealed will.

THE INTEGRITY OF CHRIST'S WORDS
It
must ever be kept in mind that Matthew 24:34 and other similar imminency
passages concerning the Messianic kingdom, are made in relation to the will of God, then
revealed. That other considerations and further revelation have made evident that
Christs words, then spoken, were not a declaration of Gods actual intention
concerning that very generation, is no dishonor upon Christ, nor does it follow that He
was a false prophet.
If Gods
revealed will is not also His hidden intention, and if Christs testimony here is
only in relation to the former and not the latter, we should rather say that Christs
testimony as to this generation was altogether true and correct within the
province with which it was concerned. If other considerations and further revelation
should make evident that His testimony here was not true and correct concerning some other
theme with which it did not deal, is no opprobrium upon the name of Christ with
respect to any question of the veracity of His testimony.
Many true and
correct statements are only true and correct concerning the subject with which they deal,
and are incorrect with reference to other subjects. It is simply unintelligent, however,
to characterize a statement as false if it is only true in connection with its own
subject. To the contrary, such a statement is only to be characterized as true, it being a
matter of the intelligent use of idiom that a true statement is one which is
true insofar as its own subject is concerned, or insofar as it is contemplated within its
own province.
How unreasonable it
would be to require, in order to meet our approval, even as to gain our appraisal as a
true statement, that a statement must be true and correct not only concerning
its own subject but concerning a different and incompatible subject as well. Similarly, it
is absurd to ridicule or doubt the integrity of the words of Christ concerning this
generation for only being correct in relation to that with which they are concerned.
It is not Christ, or His words, that are mistaken, but we ourselves if we would expect His
words within a certain sphere also to be true within a different and incompatible sphere,
one which does not come under the purview of His words.

RICHES TO THE WORLD
THROUGH ISRAELS OFFENSE
The
question remains, Since God could have turned the hearts of those first-century Israelites
to repent and accept the Lord Jesus as their Messiah, why did He not do so? The answer is
that it was in His purpose for them to be stubborn and disbelievingnot according to
His revealed will but according to His hidden intention: Yet, after His having done
so many signs in front of them, they believed not in Him, that the word of Isaiah the
prophet, which he said, may be being fulfilled, Lord, who believes our tidings? And
the arm of the Lord, to whom was it revealed? Therefore they could not believe,
seeing that Isaiah says again that He has blinded their eyes and callouses their
heart, lest they may be perceiving with their eyes, and should be apprehending with their
heart, and may be turning about, and I shall be healing them. These things Isaiah said,
seeing that he perceived His glory, and speaks concerning Him (John 12:37-41).
God does all unto
the end of salvation, and with a view toward mercy. God is the Saviour of all mankind,
especially of believers (1 Tim.4:10). God locks up all together in stubbornness, that
He should be merciful to all. O the depth of the riches and the wisdom and the knowledge
of God! How inscrutable are His judgments and untraceable His ways! (Rom.11:32,33).
On behalf of the
conciliation of the world, God has temporarily cast away Israel (Rom.11:15).
Even so, He has not thrust them away (Rom.11:1); He has not
thrown them out, never to be recovered. Callousness, in part, has come on
Israel, only until the complement of that which God is achieving through the nations has
been realized (Rom.11:25). Then, according as it is written, Arriving out of Zion
shall be the Rescuer. He will be turning away irreverence from Jacob. And this is my
covenant with them whenever I should be eliminating their sins (Rom.11:26,27; cp
Isa.59:20,21; Psa.14:7; Jer.31:34).
It was needful that
Israel should trip not that they should fall, but that in their
offense salvation to the nations might become a reality. Yet the nations
own salvation itself, in turn, is to provoke Israel to jealousy, that they too
might be saved (Rom.11:11; cp 11:25-27). Israel remains beloved because of
the fathers (Rom.11:28).
[Israels]
offense is the worlds riches (Rom.11:12a). That men, through unbelief,
should be ignorant of their riches, does not remove these riches from their possession. A
man who is ignorant of his wealth, is a wealthy man, even if an ignorant wealthy man. One
who is ignorant of his possessions, though he fails to enjoy them, does not forfeit their
ownership. Accordingly, through the blood of Christ, even now, the world possesses
vast spiritual riches.
That which
constitutes the worlds riches is declared in the word of the conciliation, how
that God was in Christ, conciliating the world to Himself, not reckoning their offenses to
them (2 Cor.5:19). Though men continue to offend, through the Lamb of God, God
nonetheless has taken away the sin of the world (John 1:29). Through Christ, God has
united the world to Himself, and is no longer reckoning their offenses to them. Though God
will judge all according to each ones need and according to His own purpose,
nevertheless, the judgment, ultimately speaking, will be that of those whose sins have
been taken away and whose offenses are not being reckoned.

THE POWER OF THE CONCILIATION
Whatever
loss is incurred to man through eonian judging, is needful on behalf of Gods own
purpose. It will not continue beyond the eons. At the consummation, death will be
abolished and all will be subjected, that God may be All in all (1 Cor.15:28). This
is the ultimate fruit of the conciliation.
At present, while
Israel is not Gods people, until the times of the restoration of all which God
speaks through the mouth of His holy prophets concerning them (Acts 3:21), when they will
then become sons of the living God (Rom.9:26), God has granted to the apostle Paul this
grace: to bring the evangel of the untraceable riches of Christ to the
nations (Eph.3:8b).
These untraceable
riches of Christ, revealed only through Paul, are those revelations concerning the Christ,
which Israels prophets did not seek out and could not search out, the
scope of their ministry being confined to the grace which God had appointed for Israel (cf
1 Pet.1:10). In contrast to this, it is the privilege of Paul and those who imitate
him, to enlighten all as to what is the administration of the secret, which has been
concealed from the eons in God, Who creates all, that now may be made known to the
sovereignties and authorities among the celestials the multifarious wisdom of God, in
accord with the purpose of the eons, which He makes in Christ Jesus our Lord
(Eph.3:9-11).
These glorious
Pauline revelations, even as Gods purpose concerning that company of believers (cf
Eph.1:22,23) who would be blessed according to Pauls evangel, could not be revealed
at the time of Christs personal ministry to Israel. It was necessary, for the sake
of the conciliation of the world, that Israel not encounter that for which she was seeking
(cp Rom.10:3; 11:7). Hence the revealed yet provisional will of God concerning
first-century A.D. Israel, was superseded by the actual divine
intention concerning that same people, according to Gods own design and purpose. Let
us rejoice in the marvelous wisdom and ways of our God. Seeing that out of Him and through
Him and for Him is all, we would praise Him accordingly, saying, to Him be the glory
for the eons! Amen! (Rom.11:36).
James Coram

(supplement to the preceding article:)
UNSEARCHABLE RICHES FOR JULY 1995
BEING THE FOURTH NUMBER OF VOLUME EIGHTY-SIX
EDITORIAL
THE QUESTION ARISES: If our Lords
words concerning His return and the conclusion of the eon, were not fulfilled to the
generation living during His ministry, is there to be a future enactment of these same
prophecies?
Of course there will
be no explicit, future enactment of these texts in which the twelve, and those evangelized
by them, will see these various prophesied signs and events come to pass, those which
precede Christs appearing.
The events
themselves of which Jesus speaks in Matthew 24 and parallel passages, however, are simply
those which the Hebrew prophets had long ago foretold, the events related to
Messiahs advent and the establishing of His kingdom, in the day of the Lord
(the day of Yahweh). They include the time of unparalleled great affliction,
known as Jacobs trouble (Jer.30:7, AV; a season of distress for
Jacob, CV). Our Lords own words concerning these things, are but an inspired
elucidation of the words of the prophets themselves concerning the events which will occur
and the conditions which will obtain in the conclusion of the eon (cf
Matt.24:3). The fact that Gods revealed willthat these events should be
arriving on that generationdid not come to pass, does not make the
yet-future fulfillment of those same events in Gods own time any less certain.
It is not true,
contrary to the claims of many, that Scripture reveals that the generation of people
living at the time whenever Israel should first obtain national statehood, are the
generation that will live in the day of the Lord and see the return of Christ to the
earth. It is only when all these things (cp Matt.24:33) which
the prophets record concerning the conclusion of the eon are all contemporaneous, that
anyone will be in a position to say that Christs appearing is at the
doors, which is to say, immediately imminent (cp Matt.24:15, 33). Apart from
such evidence, no generation can claim that their generation will see the end of human
society as we know it, including the judgments of the Unveiling, followed by the return of
Christ to the earth.
It is not at all
that some supposed, unexampled intensity or prevalence of evil will characterize the era
immediately preceding the day of the Lord, but thatfollowing a period of
unexampled peace and safety (1 Thess.5:1-3)there will be a startling and
fearful return to such swiftly accelerated, horrific evils, both in nature and among
men, as indeed had ever prevailed throughout the course of history (Matt.24:7,8).
No one today can
know that present-day levels of famine, disease, overpopulation, and the like, are of such
a degree or nature that humanity will destroy itself within just a few years, apart
from special divine intervention.
More importantly,
the day of Christs appearing for us is not dependent upon end-time
occurrences. We do not look for signs concerning the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ and
our assembling to Him. Instead, we are simply waiting for Gods Son out of the
heavens, Jesus, our Rescuer out of the coming indignation
(1 Thess.1:10; 4:17; 5:9). In the meantime, we hope not to be led into the spirit of
date-setting, by the reasoning that concludes that since the Scripture (supposedly)
teaches that our generation will see Christs return to earth, we ourselves therefore,
on any account, will soon be snatched away to meet Him in the air.
Let us not vainly
attempt to foster a true spirit of imminency through a false means employed unto that end.
We do not need the help of so poor an assistant, one which cannot truly help us, though
one which can decidedly hurt us, both in our ability to think clearly and believe
accurately, even as in our resolve not to be swayed by the dashed hopes of many, should
the latest round of date-settings fail, even as the many similar date-settings both of our
own day and of centuries past have already failed.
We await the day
when the Lord Himself will descend from heaven for us, the time when, even though
the day of Gods indignation will then fast be coming, we,
nonetheless, will be snatched away to meet the Lord in the air, that we
should be living at the same time together with Him, and thus always be together with Him.
Wherefore, console one another and edify one the other, according as you are doing also (cf
1 Thess.1:10; 4:13-18; 5:9-11).
James Coram

Copyright © Concordant Publishing Concern
15570 Knochaven Road, Santa Clarita, CA 91387, U.S.A. 661-252-2112
This publication may be reproduced for personal use
(all other rights reserved by copyright holder).
|
|