







Three Greek words in the New Testament call for careful consideration. These are :
The nations, Israel the
Chosen Nation, and the church (Ap.
186) are
each dealt with in distinct "times" and on distinct principles, and the
doctrine relating to each must be kept distinct. When our
Lord speaks
(Luke 21:24) of "the times (kairos)
of the Gentiles", the implication
is that there are times of the Jews (under Messiah, Isa. 33:6,
&c.),
whatever be the contrasted elements. So that what is recorded
as
connected with the times of the Jews is not necessarily applicable to
the
times of the Gentiles.
The present administration of God is in grace,
not in law, judgment, or glory, and belongs to the "dispensation" (oikonomia)
of the Mystery (Ap.
193), that secret "which hath
been hid from ages and
from generations, but now is made manifest to His saints" (Col. 1:26),
that secret "which in other ages was not made known unto the sons of
men"
(Eph. 3:5). Hid in God from the beginning of the world (see
Eph.
3:9), it was kept secret since the world began (see Rom. 16:25).
There is no authority for
taking enactments Divinely fitted for the
times of the Jews and transferring them to the present dispensation of
God in grace. Similarly, the endeavor to read the precepts of
the
"Sermon on the Mount" (Matt. 5-7), which are the laws of the kingdom of
heaven (see
Ap. 114), into such church
epistles as Ephesians, Philippians,
Colossians, not only obscures the truth, but antagonizes one part of
Scripture
with another.
In the Bible seven distinct
administrations are set before us.
Each has its own beginning and ending; each is characterized by certain
distinctive principles of God's dealings; each ends in a crisis or
judgment
peculiar to itself, save No. 7, which is without end. These
may be
tabulated thus :
While the seven
dispensations above specified are the main divisions
of the long period of the Divine dealings, there is still another
dispensation
referred to as "the times of the Gentiles" (Luke 21:24), a dispensation
which overlaps two of the above divisions. These
times began
when Jerusalem passed under the power of Babylon (477 B.C. See
Ap.
50, p. 60, and Ap.
180), and continue while
Jerusalem is "trodden down
of the Gentiles" (Luke 21:24). These "times" are referred to
in Rom.
11:25, which has no reference to the completion of "the church", as is
so generally believed, but relates to the fullness, or filling up, of
the
times of the Gentiles, the word "Gentiles" being put for the times
which they fill up.
In the Nazareth Synagogue (Luke 4:16-20) our Lord stood up and read from the book of the prophet Isaiah. After reading the first verse and part of the second (of ch. 61), He closed the book. Why stop there? Because the next sentence belonged, and still belongs, to a future dispensation. The acceptable "year of the Lord" had come, but "the day of vengeance of our God" has not even yet appeared. Thus did the Lord divide two dispensations. There is no mark in the Hebrew text of Isaiah 61:2 to indicate any break, yet an interval of nearly 2,000 years separates the two clauses quoted. In this interval comes the whole of the present church dispensation, following on the years after Israel's final rejection (Acts 28:25-28). See Ap. 180, 181.