






HOPE
In the N.T. only one Greek word and its compounds are translated
"hope", these words are elpizo, to hope, to hope for; proelpizo, to
hope before; apelpizo, to hope for again; elpizomenoi, things hoped
for; elpis, hope. No other word in the English language can be
suggested as a better rendering of elpis than "hope", and yet all have
to acknowledge that in common use hope has degenerated in its meaning.
We can speak of a forlorn hope, or sometimes a person who has no
grounds for hope at all, will say "I hope so". "Expectation is a
conviction that excludes doubt" and this is the temper of the word.
elpis. When we use the word "hope" we must remember to keep it on the
ground of confident expectancy, not merely hoping for the "possible"
but confidently expecting the fulfilment of a promise. There is no
trace of anxiety or fear in the LXX use of elpis or elpizo, although in
later classical Greek this element creeps into the word. Cremer's
summary is that "Hope is a prospect, gladly and firmly held as a
well-grounded expectation of a future good."
Where we read of "hope" in the New Testament we often find in the
context a reference either to a "PROMISE" or to a "CALLING". For
example, Paul before Agrippa says:
"And now I stand and am judged for THE HOPE OF THE PROMISE made of God
unto our fathers; unto which promise OUR TWELVE TRIBES, instantly
serving God day and night, hope to come.” (Acts 26:6,7)
Here there is no possibility of making a mistake. Not only is
the hope that is in view the fulfilment of a promise, but it is the
fulfilment of a specific promise "made of God unto our fathers".
Further, there is no ambiguity as to those who entertain this hope; the
words "our twelve tribes" are too explicit to permit of spiritualizing.
Other examples will occur to the reader, and will come before us in the
prosecution of our present study. For the moment it is sufficient that
the principle should be clear, that HOPE LOOKS TO THE FULFILMENT OF A
PROMISE. It is therefore necessary to discover what promise has been
made to any particular company before we can speak with understanding
of their HOPE. Another prerequisite is a knowledge of the
"CALLING" concerned.
"That ye may know what is THE HOPE OF HIS CALLING" (Eph.
1:18).
"Even as ye are called in ONE HOPE OF YOUR CALLING" (Eph.
4:4).
The realization of our hope in the future will be in
agreement with our calling now by faith.
"Now faith is the substance of things HOPED for" (Heb. 11:1).
Recent discoveries among the papyri of Egypt have brought to light the
fact that the word "substance" was used in New Testament times to
signify the "Title Deeds" of a property. Every believer holds the
title-deeds now, by faith, the earnest and first-fruits of the
inheritance that will be entered when his hope is realized. As every
believer does not necessarily belong to the same calling, and most
believers grant a distinction between Kingdom and Church, while some
realize the further distinction between Bride and Body, it follows that
the character of the calling must be settled before the hope can be
defined.
Three spheres of blessing
There are at least three distinct spheres of blessing
indicated in the New Testament:
(1). The
Earth. "Blessed are the meek; for they shall inherit the earth" (Matt.
5:51.
(2).
The Heavenly City. -"The city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem
. . . and church of the firstborn, which are written in heaven" (Heb.
12:22,23).
(3). Far
Above All. -"He ascended up, far above all heavens" (Eph. 4:10).
"And made us sit together in heavenly places" (Eph. 2:6).
These three spheres of blessing correspond to three distinct
callings:
(1).
The Kingdom. - "Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done in earth" (Matt.
6:10).
(2).
The Bride. - "The Bride, the Lamb's wife . . . the holy Jerusalem,
descending out of heaven from God" (Rev.21:9,10).
(3). The
Body. -"His body . . . the church: whereof I (Paul) am made a minister,
according to the dispensation of God which is given to me for you . . .
the mystery which hath been hid from ages and from generations" (Col.
1:24-26).
These three spheres of blessing, each with its special
calling, have associated with them three groups of people in the N.T.
The first sphere of blessing is exclusive to ISRAEL according to the
flesh; the second to believers from among both "JEW and GREEK", while
in the third sphere the calling is addressed to "YOU GENTILES".
(1).
Israel according to the flesh. - "My kinsmen according to the flesh,
who are Israelites; to whom pertaineth the adoption, and the glory, and
the covenants, and the giving of the law, and the service of God, and
the promises, whose are the fathers, and of whom as concerning the
flesh Christ came, Who is over all, God blessed for ever. Amen" (Rom.
9:3-5).
(2).
Abraham's seed (includes believing Gentiles).-"Having begun in the
Spirit, are ye now made perfect by the flesh? . . . they which are of
faith, the same are the children of Abraham .... For as many of you as
have been baptized into Christ, have put on Christ. There is neither
Jew nor Greek . . . for ye are all one in Christ Jesus. And if ye be
Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the
promise" (Gal: 3:3,7,9,27-29).
If, at the end of verse 28, we "shut the book", we may "prove" that the
blessed unity indicated by the words "neither Jew nor Greek" refers to
the "Church which is His Body". If, however, we keep the book open, we
see that such is not the sequel, but that this new company are
"Abraham's seed", and the hope before them "the promise" made to
Abraham. The reader may readily assent to this, but we would urge him
to remember that 1 Thessalonians and Galatians were both written before
Acts twenty-eight, and therefore before the revelation of the Mystery.
The hope then of 1 Thessalonians four belongs to the same calling as
that of Galatians and cannot constitute the hope of the Mystery.
(3).
The One New Man.-"Where there is neither Greek nor Jew . . .
but Christ is all and in all" (Col. 3:11).
"That He might create in Himself of the twain one new man, so
making peace" (Eph. 2:15 R.V.).
"That the Gentiles should be fellow-heirs" (Eph. 3:6).
Seeing then that there are three spheres of blessing, with
their three associated callings, we should expect to find three phases
of the Coming of the Lord. These three phases are presented in the
following Scriptures:
(1). Kingdom on earth. -HOPE. Matt. 24-25., Acts 26:7
(2). Abraham's seed (heavenly calling).- GOOD HOPE. 1 Thess. 4., 2
Thess. 2
(3). Far above all. - BLESSED HOPE. Col. 3:4. Tit. 2:13
Let us look at each phase of the second advent as presented
THE HOPE OF THE FIRST SPHERE
The sign of the coming of the Son of Man
The earthly ministry of the Lord Jesus Christ was limited to
the people of Israel, and had special regard to the promise made to
David concerning Israel's King. It also had in view the promise made to
Abraham concerning the blessing of all the families of the earth, but
did not, at that time, extend to them, being concentrated rather upon
Israel from whom, as the appointed channel, the blessing should flow to
all nations. We bring Scriptural proof of these statements, and then to
show that Matthew twenty-four and twenty-five speak of the hope of
ISRAEL, and that this phase of the advent has nothing to do with the
hope of the "church".
(1).
Proof that the earthly ministry was limited in the first instance to
Israel.
"Now I say that Jesus Christ was a minister of CIRCUMCISION
for the truth of God, to confirm the promises made unto the FATHERS"
(Rom. 15:8).
"Go not into the way of the Gentiles, and into any city, the
Samaritans enter ye not; but go rather to the lost sheep of the house
of ISRAEL" (Matt. 10:5-6).
"I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of
ISRAEL" (Matt. 15:24).
(2). Proof that the promise made to David concerning a King
was in view.
"Where is He that is born KING of the Jews? . . .
–in Bethlehem" (Matt. 2:2-5).
"Tell ye the daughter of Sion, Behold, thy KING cometh unto
thee" (Matt. 2I:5).
"What think ye of Christ, whose Son is He? They say unto Him,
The Son of DAVID" (Matt: 22:42).
"David . . . being a prophet, and knowing that God hath sworn
with an oath to him, that of the fruit of his loins
according to the flesh, HE WOULD RAISE UP CHRIST TO SIT ON HIS THRONE;
He seeing this before, spake of the resurrection of Christ" (Acts
2:30,31).
(3.) Proof that the promise to Abraham concerning Israel as
the chosen channel of blessing to the Gentiles was in view.
"Ye are the children of the prophets, and of the covenant which God
made with our fathers, saying unto Abraham And in thy seed shall all
the kindreds of the earth be blessed: UNTO YOU FIRST God, having raised
up His Son Jesus, sent Him to bless You, in turning away every one of
you from his iniquities" (Acts 3:25,26).
The consideration of these Scriptures in their setting
provides sufficient proof for the statements made concerning the
character of the Saviour's earthly ministry.
We are now in a position to consider Matthew twenty-four," and
twenty-five, which is a prophecy of the second coming of Christ, and
concerns the hope of Israel as distinct from the hope of the church.
The threefold prophecy of the coming of the Lord as revealed;
in Matthew twenty-four was given in answer to the threefold' question
of the disciples
"When shall these things be?"
"What shall be the sign of Thy coming?"
"And the end of the world (age)?"
The evidence which follows, Sufficiently shows that in this
passage the hope of Israel and no a hope of "the church which is His
Body" is the subject.
Three proofs that Matthew twenty-four speaks of the Hope of
Israel
First the word translated "end" is sunteleia, a word at that time well
known to every Jew, for it was the name of the third great feast,
namely "the feast of ingathering, which is in the end of the year"
(Exod. 23:1 6). This is evidence that Israel's hope is in view.
Secondly, we find that this coming of the Lord is to be
preceded by "wars and rumours of wars". Because of the fact that there
have been, and yet will be, many wars and rumours of wars since the
setting aside of Israel, these words, as they stand, cannot be
construed as evidence that Israel's hope is in view. If however we turn
to the O.T. origin of the reference: "For nation shall rise against
nation, and kingdom against kingdom" (Matt. 24:7), we shall see that it
comes from Isaiah's prophetic "Burden of Egypt" (Isa. 19:1,2), the
passage ending with the words "Blessed be Egypt My people, and Assyria
the work of My hands, and Israel Mine inheritance" (Isa. 19:25). This
reference, therefore, when seen in the light of its O.T. setting, gives
further evidence for the fact that Israel is in view in Matthew
twenty-four.
Thirdly, this coming of the Lord takes place after the
prophetic statements of Daniel 9:27 and 12:11 have been fulfilled:
"When ye therefore shall see the abomination of desolation,
spoken of by Daniel the prophet, stand in the holy place . . . then
shall be great tribulation . . . IMMEDIATELY AFTER THE TRIBULATION of
those days . . . shall appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven . .
. and they shall see the Son of man COMING IN THE CLOUDS OF HEAVEN"
(Matt. 24:1 5 -30).
As the detailed exposition of this chapter is not our
purpose, and as these three items provide proof beyond dispute that the
second coming of Christ as here made known cannot be the hope of the
church, we feel that no unbiased reader will desire further delay in
prosecuting our inquiry.
THE HOPE OF THE SECOND SPHERE
The Acts and Epistles of the Period
We must now turn our attention to the evidence of Scripture
as to the character of the Hope during the period covered the Acts of
the Apostles. Some commentators on this book appear to forget that it
is the record of the "Acts" of Apostles, and had no existence until
those "Acts" were accomplished. If the founding of the church at
Corinth chronicled in Acts eighteen be an act of the apostle
Paul, both Crispus (verse 8) and Sosthenes (verse 17) being mentioned
by name then the epistle written by the same apostle to the same ch
again mentioning Crispus and Sosthenes by name, must be included as the
Divine complement of the record of A eighteen. The aspect of the Hope
in view in the Acts and in the epistles written during that period to
the churches founded by the apostles must of necessity be the same: An
attempt to make the ministry of Paul during the Acts differ from the
epistles of the same period is false, and must be rejected. There can
be no doubt that the hope entertained by the churches during the period
covered by the Acts of the Apostles was a phase of the Hope of Israel.
This will, we trust, be made clear to the reader by the quotations and
comments given hereafter
(1).
"When they therefore were come together, they asked Him, saying, Lord,
wilt Thou at this time restore again the kingdom to Israel?" (Acts 1:6).
This question arose after the forty days' instruction given
by the risen Christ to His disciples, during which time He not only
opened the Scriptures, but "their understanding" also (Luke 24:45).
(2).
"Repent . . . and He shall send Jesus Christ, Which before was preached
unto you: Whom the heaven' must receive, until the times of restitution
of all things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of all His holy
prophets since the world began.... Ye are the children of the prophets.
. .Unto you first . . ." (Acts 3:19-26).
These words of Peter, spoken after Pentecost, cannot be
separated from the hope of Israel without violence to the inspired
words. It may be, that some readers will interpose the thought: "These
are from the testimony of Peter; what we want is the testimony of
Paul." We therefore give two more extracts from the Acts, quoting this
time from the ministry of Paul.
(3).
"And now I stand and am judged for the hope of the promise made of God
unto our fathers: unto which promise our twelve tribes, instantly
serving God day and night, hope to come" (Acts 26:6,7).
(4).
"Paul called the chief of the Jews together . . . because that for the
hope of Israel I am bound with this chain" (Acts 28:17,20).
Not until the Jewish people were set aside in Acts 28:25-29 does Paul
become "the prisoner of Jesus Christ for you Gentiles". Until it was a
settled fact that Israel would not repent and that the promise of Acts
3:19-26 would be postponed the hope of Israel persisted, and all the
churches that had been brought into being up to that time were of
necessity associated with that hope. See the testimony of Romans, which
is set out in much fuller detail after the reference to the heavenly
calling is completed.
The Heavenly Calling
We have already drawn attention to the intimate association
that exists between "hope", "promise" and "calling". We must pause for
a moment here to remind the reader that Abraham stands at the head of
two companies: an earthly people, the great nation of Israel; and a
heavenly people, associated with the heavenly phase of God's promise to
Abraham, and made up of the believing remnant of Israel and believing
Gentiles. This heavenly side of the Abrahamic promise is referred to by
the Apostle in Hebrews and Galatians:
"He looked for a city .... They seek a country .... They
desire a better country, that is, an heavenly; wherefore God is not
ashamed to be called their God: for He bath prepared for them a city"
(Heb.
11:10,14,16).
"If ye be Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs
according to the promise .... Jerusalem which is above is free, which
is the mother of us all'.'.(Gal. 3:29, 4:26).
This heavenly calling of the Abrahamic promise constitutes
the Bride of the Lamb, as distinct from the restored Wife, which refers
to Israel as a nation. We leave the reader to verify these statements
for himself by referring to Isaiah, Jeremiah Hosea, where Israel's
restoration is spoken of under the figure of the restored Wife; and to
the Book of the Revelation where the heavenly city is described as the
Bride. During the of the Acts of the Apostles, the churches founded by
Paul were "Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise" (Gal.
3:29). The Apostle speaks of "espousing them to one husband that I may
present you as a chaste virgin to Christ" (2 Cor. 11:2).
This heavenly phase of the hope of Israel was the hope of the
churches established during the Acts; until Israel was aside as
recorded in Acts twenty-eight.
The Testimony of Romans
The epistles written by Paul before his imprisonment were
Galatians, Hebrews, Romans, 1 and 2 Thessalonians, and 1 and 2
Corinthians. We are sure that any well-instructed reader who was asked
to choose from this set of epistles the one given the most recent as
well as the most fundamental teaching ,of the apostle for this period,
would unhesitatingly choose the epistle to the Romans. In this epistle
we have the solid rock foundation of justification by faith, where "no
difference" can be tolerated between Jew and Gentile. When, however, we
leave the sphere of doctrine (Rom. 1-8), and enter the sphere of
dispensational privileges, we discover that differences between Jewish
an Gentile believers remain. The Gentile, who was justified by faith,
was nevertheless reminded that he was at that time in the position of a
wild olive, graft into the true olive tree, from which some of the
branches had been broken off through unbelief. The grafting of the
Gentile into Israel's olive tree was intended (speaking after the
manner of men) to provoke Israel to jealousy. When, in the days to
come, these broken branches shall be restored, "All Israel shall be
saved".
These statements from Romans eleven are sufficient to prevent us from
assuming that, because there is evidently. DOCTRINAL equality in the
Acts period, there is also DISPENSATIONAL equality. This is not so, for
Romans declares that the Jew is still "first", and the middle wall
still stands, making membership of the One Body as revealed in
Ephesians impossible.
In Romans fifteen we have a definite statement concerning the
hope entertained by the church at Rome. Before quoting the passage,
Romans 15:12 and 13, we would advise the reader that the word "trust"
in verse 12 is elpizo, and the word "hope" in verse 13 elpis. There is
also the emphatic article "the" before the word "hope" in verse 12.
Bearing these points in mind we can now examine the hope entertained by
the church at Rome, as ministered to by Paul before his imprisonment.
"There shall be a Root of Jesse, and He that shall rise to
reign over the Gentiles; in Him shall the Gentiles hope. Now the God of
that hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, that ye may
abound in hope, through the power of the Holy Ghost" (Rom. 15:12,13).
Here we are on firm ground. Paul himself teaches the church
to look for the millennial kingdom and for the Saviour as the "Root of
Jesse" Who shall "reign over the Gentiles". How can this hope be
severed from "the hope of Israel"? How can it be associated with the
"Mystery" which knows nothing of Abraham, or of Israel, but goes back
before the "foundation of the world", and reaches up to heavenly
places? In case the reader should be uncertain of Paul's references to
the millennial Kingdom, we quote from Isaiah eleven:
"And there shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse .
. . . He shall smite the earth with the rod of His mouth, and with the
breath of His lips shall He slay the wicked .... The wolf also shall
dwell with the lamb .... And in that day there shall be a Root of
Jesse, which shall stand for an ensign of the people; to It shall the
Gentiles seek: and His rest shall be glorious" (Isa. 11:1,4,6,10).
The reader should consult the note on Isaiah 11:4 given in
The Companion Bible, where the reading, "He shall smite the oppressor"
(ariz) is preferred to the A.V. "He shall smite the earth" (erez). This
reading establishes a link with 2 Thessalonians 2:8:
"And then shall that Wicked be revealed, whom the Lord shall
consume with the spirit of His mouth, and shall destroy with the
brightness of His coming."
Before referring to 1 Thessalonians four, which presents the
hope of the church at that time very clearly, we must say something
about the strange avoidance of the second epistle that so many manifest
when dealing with this
subject.
The Importance of a Second Epistle
If a business man were to treat his correspondence in the
that some believers treat the epistles of Paul, the results would be
disastrous. A second letter, purporting to rectify a misunderstanding
arising out of a previous letter, would, if anything, be more important
and more decisive than the first; yet there are those whose system of
interpretation demands that they shall claim 1 Thessalonians four as
the revelation of theer hope, who nevertheless either neglect the
testimony of 2 Thessalonians or explain it away as of some future
mystical company unknown to the Apostle. Let us first verify that these
epistles form a definite pair, written by the same writer, at the same
period, to the same people, about the same subject.
Identity of address
FIRST EPISTLE -"Paul, and Silvanus, and Timotheus, unto the
church of the Thessalonians which is in God the Father and in the Lord
Jesus Christ" (1 Thess. 1:1).
SECOND EPISTLE--"Paul, and Silvanus, and Timotheus, unto thin
church of the Thessalonians in God our Father and Lord Jesus Christ" (2
Thess. 1:1).
Identity of Theme
FIRST EPISTLE- "Remembering without ceasing your work of
faith, and labour of love, and patience of hope in our Lord Jesus
Christ, in the sight of God and our Father" (1
Thes.1:3).
SECOND EPISTLE- "We are bound to thank God always for you,
brethren, as it is meet; because that your faith groweth
exceedingly, and the love of every one of you all towards each other
aboundeth; so that we . . ,glory . . , in your patience" (2 Thess. 1:3).
FIRST EPISTLE- "The coming of our Lord Jesus Christ with all
His saints" (1 Thess. 3:13). (A reference to Deut. 33:2, Psa. 68:17 and
Zech. 14:5 will show that the "saints" here are the "holy angels" and
not the church).
SECOND EPISTLE- "The Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven
with His mighty angels, inflaming fire" (2 Thess.1:7, 8).
The Special Purpose of Second Thessalonians
The Thessalonian Church had been disturbed by the circulation of a
letter purporting to have come from the Apostle, and by certain
messages given by those who claimed to have "the spirit". These
messages distorted the Apostle's teaching concerning the coming of the
Lord, as taught in the church while he was with them and mentioned in
the fourth chapter of his letter.
"We beseech you, brethren . . . that ye be not soon shaken in mind or
be troubled, neither by spirit, nor by word, nor by letter as from us,
as that the day of Christ (or the Lord) is at hand. Let no man deceive
you by any means: for that day shall not come, except there come a
falling away first" (2 Thess. 2:1-3).
Before the hope of the church at Thessalonica could be
realized, certain important prophecies awaited fulfilment. As we have
seen, the hope during the period of the Acts (and therefore that of 1
Thessalonians four) was essentially the hope of Israel. When 1
Thessalonians four was written, Israel were still God's people. The
Temple still stood, and the possibility (speaking humanly) of Israel's
repentance had still to be reckoned with. If the hope of Israel was
about to be fulfilled, then Daniel 9-12 must be fulfilled also,
together with many other prophecies of the time of the end. This we
have seen to have been the testimony of the Lord Himself in Matthew
twenty-four, and so far Israel had not been set aside (i.e. when the
epistles to the Thessalonians were written).
The following predicted events must precede the coming of the
Lord as revealed in 1 and 2 Thessalonians:
(1).
The apostasy must come first ("falling away", Greek
apostasia).
(2).
The Man of Sin must be revealed in the Temple (the word "Temple" is the
same as in Matthew 23:16).
(3).
The coming of this Wicked Qne will be preceded by Satanic travesty of
Pentecostal Gifts (The same words are used as of Pentecost, with the
addition of the word "lying".)
(4).
This Wicked One shall be "consumed" and "destroyed" with the brightness
of the Lord's coming (see Isaiah 11:4, revised reading).
All this the Apostle had told the Thessalonian church when he
was with them, before he wrote 1 Thessalonians four (see 2 Thess: 2:5).
The Thessalonians had already been taught by the Apostle
himself concerning the events of prophecy, and would doubtless have
read 1 Thessalonians four in harmony with his teaching had they not
been deceived by false interpretations. The reference to the Archangel
would have taken them back to Daniel 10-12. The epistle of Jude uses
exactly the same word used here, and tells us that the Archangel's name
(Jude 9). Immediately following the great prophecy of seventy weeks,
with its climax in the "Abomination of desolation", we have the
revelation of Daniel ten. There the veil is partially withdrawn, and a
glimpse is given of the Satanic forces behind the "powers that
be". Michael is said to be "your Prince" and in Daniel twelve
we read:
"And at that time shall Michael stand up, the great prince
which standeth for the children of thy people: and there shall be a
time of trouble, such as never was since there was a nation . . . and
many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth awake" (Dan. 12:1,2).
Here we have Michael identified with the people of Israel and when he
stands up the great tribulation and the resurrection take place. This
FOLLOWS THE EVENTS OF DANIEL ELEVEN, which are briefly summarized in 2
Thessalonians two. Compare, for example, the following passages:
"He shall exalt himself, and magnify himself above every god
and shall speak marvellous things against the God of gods. (Dan. 11:36).
"Who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called
God, or that is worshipped" (2 Thess. 2:4).
1 and 2 Thessalonians and Revelation thirteen
If the reader would read consecutively Daniel nine, ten, eleven and
twelve, 1 Thessalonians four and five, 2 Thessalonians one and two, and
Revelation thirteen, the testimony of the truth itself would be so
strong as to need no human advocate. Our space is limited, and we
therefore earnestly ask all who value the teaching of the Scriptures
regarding "that blessed hope" to read and compare these portions most
carefully and prayerfully. When this is done, let the question be
answered: "what have all these Scriptures to do with the church of the
dispensation of the Mystery, a church called into being consequent upon
Israel's removal and the suspension of Israel hope?" The answer can
only be that, while the close association of the hope of the
Thessalonians with the hope of Israel was consistent with the character
of the dispensation then in force, the attempt to link the "one hope of
our calling" with prophetic times is a dispensational anachronism and a
failure to distinguish things that differ.
"Till He Come"
The coming of the Lord referred to in 1 Corinthians 11:26
must be the same hope as was entertained by the Thessalonians, and by
the church at Rome (Rom. 15:12,13). The Apostle himself summarizes this
hope in Acts 28:20 as the "hope of Israel". The Corinthian epistle
deals with a variety of subjects, and is addressed to different
sections of the church. Some called themselves by the name of Paul,
others by the name of Cephas. Some were troubled with regard to the
question of marriage, and others with regard to moral questions. . The
section in which the words "till He come" occur is addressed to those
whose "fathers" were "baptized unto Moses" (1 Cor. 10:1); whereas the
section that immediately follows is addressed to Gentiles (1 Cor. 12:2).
Concerning the question of marriage, the Apostle writes:
"I suppose therefore that this is good for the present
distress . . . . The time is short: it remaineth, that both they that
have wives be as though they had none; and they that weep, as though
they wept not . . . and they that buy, as though they possessed not" (1
Cor. 7:26-30).
Shall we fall into the error of teaching, as some have
taught, that marriage is wrong because of what Paul says in this
chapter? If we do, what shall we say of his wonderful words concerning
husband and wife in Ephesians five? Or of his advice that the younger
women should not only marry, but marry again if left as widows? (1 Tim.
5:9-14). The right interpretation is clearly that Paul's advice in 1
Corinthians seven was true AT THAT TIME, because the Second Coming of
Christ was expected to take place during the lifetime of some of his
hearers. He speaks as he does, "because of the present necessity", and
because "the time is short". When writing to the Thessalonians, he
rightly identifies himself with the imminent hope of the Lord's coming
by saying: "We which are alive" (1 Thess. 4).
The "present necessity" of 1 Corinthians seven is no longer applicable
on account of the failure of Israel and the suspension of their hope.
So in 1 Corinthians eleven, the teaching of the chapter was only true
while the hope of that calling was imminent. When the people of Israel
passed into their present condition of blindness, as they did in Acts
twenty-eight, their hope passed with them, not to be revived until the
end of days, when the Apocalypse is fulfilled. Meanwhile a new
dispensation has come in, a dispensation associated with a "mystery"
and unconnected with Israel. In the very nature of things a change of
dispensation means a change of calling. It introduces a new sphere and
a fresh set of promises, and demands a re-statement of its own peculiar
hope.
HOPE OF THE THIRD SPHERE
The Manifestation in Glory
Before considering the special characteristics of the hope
the church of the One Body, it may be of service to set out some of the
distinctive features of the dispensation of the Mystery, so that,
perceiving the unique character of its calling, we shall be compelled
to believe the unique character of its hope.
Special features of the present dispensation
First of all let us observe two features that marked previous
dispensation, but are now absent.
(1). The presence and prominence of Israel.
The testimony of the Gospels (Matt. 10:6, 15:24), the witness
of Peter (Acts 3:25,26), and the testimony of Paul (Rom. 1,: 3:29,
9:1-5, 11:24-25 and 15:8), all combine to show that the nation of
Israel was an important factor in the outworking of the purpose of the
ages, and that during the period covered by the Gospels and the Acts,
no blessing could be enjoyed by Gentile in independence of Israel. It
is evident that with the setting aside of this favoured people, a
change in dispensation was necessitated.
(2). The presence and prominence of miraculous gifts.
Throughout the public ministry of the Lord Jesus, and from
Pentecost in Acts two until the shipwreck on the island of Melita in
Acts twenty-eight, supernatural signs, wonders and miracles accompanied
and confirmed the preached word. Not only did the Lord Himself and also
His apostles work miracles, but during the time of the Acts ordinary
members of the church were in possession of spiritual gifts in such
abundance that they had to seek the Apostle's advice as to their
regulation in the assembly (1 Cor. 14:26-40). The miracles of Mark
sixteen, Acts two and 1 Corinthians twelve to fourteen are not the
normal experience of the church of today. Their absence, together with
the setting aside of the people of Israel, constitute two pieces of
negative evidence in favour of a new dispensation.
We are not, however, limited to negative evidence. Scripture
also provides definite evidence of a positive kind, which we must now
consider.
(3). The prison ministry of the apostle Paul.
When Paul spoke to the elders of the church at Ephesus, he
made it quite plain that one ministry was coming to an end and another,
closely associated with prison, was about to begin. He reviewed his
past services among them, and told them among other things that they
should see his face no more (Acts 20:17-38). Later, before King
Agrippa, he reveals the important fact that when he was converted and
commissioned by the Lord, in Acts nine, he had been told that at some
subsequent time the Lord would appear to him again and give him a
second commission (Acts 26:15-18).
(4). The dispensational boundary of Acts twenty-eight.
Right up to the last chapter of the Acts, Israel and
miraculous gifts continued to occupy their pre-eminent place (Acts
28:1-10,17,20). Upon arrival at Rome, Paul, although desirous of
visiting the church (Rom. 1 a 1-13), sent first for the "chief of the
Jews", telling them that "for the hope of Israel" he was bound with a
chain. After spending a whole day with these men of Israel, seeking
unsuccessfully to persuade them "concerning Jesus" out of the law and
the prophets, he pronounces finally their present doom of blindness,
adding:
"Be it known therefore unto you; that the salvation of God is
sent unto the Gentiles, and that they will hear it" (Acts 28:;
During the two years of imprisonment that followed; Apostle
ministered to all that came to him, teaching those things which
"concern the Lord Jesus Christ" with no reference this time either to
the law or to the prophets (Acts 28:30,31).
(5). The present dispensation a new revelation.
The omission of "the law and the prophets" from Acts 28:31,
as compared with verse 23, is an important point. Throughout
the early ministry of the Apostle he makes continual and repeated
appeal to the O.T. Scriptures. But when one examines the "Prison
Epistles" one is struck by the absence of quotation. The reason for
this change is that Paul, as the prisoner of Jesus Christ for the
Gentiles, received the Mystery "by revelation (Eph. 3:1-3). This
mystery had been hidden from ages and generations, until the time came
for Paul to be made its minister (Col. 1:24-27). It could not,
therefore, be found in the O.T. Scriptures.
(6). Some special features of this new calling.
(a) This church was chosen "before the foundation of world"
(Eph. 1:4) and "before age-times" (2 Tim. 1:9).
(b) This church finds its sphere of blessing "in heavenly
places, far above all principality and power . . . seated together in
heavenly places in Christ Jesus" (Eph. 1:3,20,21, 2:6).
(c) This church is not an "evolution", but a new "creation"
the peculiar advantage of being a Jew, even though a member, of the
church, having disappeared with the middle wall partition (Eph.
2:14-19).
(d) This church is the One Body of which Christ is the Head
and in which all members are equal (Eph. 1:22,23, 3:6), a relationship
never before known.
(7). The Prison Epistles.
While the very nature of things demands a new dispensation
consequent upon Israel's removal, we are not left to mere inference.
There is a definite section of the N.T. with special teaching relating
to the church of the present dispensation. This is found in the
epistles written by Paul as the prisoner of the Lord for us Gentiles.
These epistles are five in number, but we generally refer to the "four
Prison Epistles", as that to Philemon is practical and personal and
makes no contribution to the new teaching.
The four Prison Epistles are:
A EPHESIANS .- The Dispensation of Mystery. Basic
Truth
B PHILIPPIANS. -The Prize. Outworking.
A COLOSSIANS. -The Dispensation of the Mystery.
Basic Truth
B 2 TIMOTHY. -The
Crown. Outworking.
The reader will find in each of these epistles, evidence that
they were written from prison and that they form part of the ministry
referred to in Acts 28:31.
The above notes on features (1) to (7) are necessarily brief
and are not intended to do anything more than provide the merest
outline of the subject. Any reader who is not convinced as to the
peculiar and unique character of these prison epistles and the
dispensation they reveal, should give them a personal study, noting all
their claims, and their distinctive features. This article has not been
written to prove to the satisfaction of all that a new dispensation
commenced at Acts twenty-eight, but has been prepared rather as a help
to those who, having realized that a change most certainly did take
place in the dispensational dealings of God with men at that time,
desire to understand what effect this change had upon the hope of the
church.
The new phase of Hope necessitates Prayer
While prayer should accompany the Word at all times, there is
no need to pray for "revelation" concerning one's hope if it be already
revealed. Words can scarcely be clearer than those employed in 1
Thessalonians four, and if this chapter still represented the hope of
the church of the One Body, there would be no need for the Apostle to
speak as he does in Ephesians one. In verse 17, he prays that the
saints might receive "the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the
knowledge of Him . . . that ye may know what is the hope of His
calling" (Eph. 1:17,18).
It might be well if the reader pondered the marginal reading
of Ephesians 1:17 where, instead of "in the knowledge of Him", we read,
"for the acknowledging of Him". This raises a most important point.
Many fail to go forward with the truth, not because of inability to
understand the meaning of plain terms, but because of failure to
"acknowledge Him". The Apostle' pauses in his teaching to tell his
hearers that before another step can be taken, acknowledgment of what
has already been revealed must be made. To acknowledge the truth of the
Mystery is to put oneself out of favour with denominationalism; and
many a child of God who says, "I do not see it", is really making a
confession of failure to acknowledge the revelation of truth connected
with the ascended Lord.
This new phase of Hope is associated with a Promise
We have already seen that hope and promise are necessarily,
linked together. We discovered that the promises that were the basis of
expectation during the Acts were the promises "made unto the fathers".
Now the fathers had no promises made to them concerning heavenly places
"where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God". They knew nothing of a
church where Gentile believers would be on perfect equality with Jewish
believers. The promises made to the fathers never extended beyond "the
Bride" or "the Heavenly Jerusalem", but in Ephesians we have "the Body"
and a sphere "far above all".
In Ephesians 1:12, where the A.V. reads "first trusted", the margin
reads "hoped"; and as we cannot speak of "the blessed trust" or "the
trust of the second coming" it is best to keep to the translation
"hope". The actual word used is proelpizo, to "fore-hope". Of this
prior hope the Holy Spirit is the seal, and as such is "the Holy Spirit
of promise".
What promise is in view? There is but one promise in the
Prison Epistles. The Gentiles who formed the church of the One Body
were by nature
"aliens from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers from
the covenants of promise" (Eph. 2:12),
but through grace they became
"fellow-heirs, and of the same body, and partakers of His
promise in Christ by the gospel; whereof I (Paul) was made a minister"
(Eph. 3:6-'n.
This promise takes us back to the period of Ephesians 1:4,
"before the foundation of the world"
"According to the promise of life, which is in Christ Jesus .
. . according to His own purpose and grace, which was given us in
Christ Jesus, before the world began" (before age-times) (2 Tim. 1:1,9).
It is this one unique promise that will be realized when the
blessed hope before the church of the one Body is fulfilled. Its
realization is described by the Apostle in Colossians three:
"When Christ, Who is our life, shall appear, then shall ye
also appear with Him in glory" (Col. 3:4).
It is impossible to defer this "appearing" until after the
Millennium, for the church is waiting for "Christ their life" and so
awaiting "the promise of life", which is their hope.
The word "appearing" might be translated "manifestation", and
will be familiar to most readers in the term "epiphany".
Parousia and Epiphany
Believing as we do that all Scripture is given by inspiration
of God, we must be careful to distinguish between the different words
used by God when speaking of the hope of His people. We observe that
the word parousia usually translated "coming", is found in such
passages as the following:
"What shall be the sign of Thy COMING and of the end of the
age?" (Matt. 24:3).
"The COMING of the Lord" (1 Thess. 4:15).
"The COMING of our Lord Jesus Christ" (2 Thess. 2:1).
"They that are Christ's at His COMING" (1 Cor. 15:23).
"The COMING of the Lord draweth nigh" (Jas. 5:8).
"The promise of His COMING" (2 Pet. 3:4).
"Not ashamed before Him at His COMING" (1 John 2:28).
This word is used to describe the hope of the church during
the period when "the hope of Israel" was still in view. Consequently we
find it used in the Gospel of Matthew, by Peter, James and John,
ministers of the circumcision, and by Paul in those epistles written
before the dispensational change of Acts twenty-eight.
A different word is used in the Prison Epistles. There, the
word parousia is never used of the Lord's coming or of the hope of the
church, but the word epiphany. In 1 Thessalonians four the Lord
descends from heaven; in 2 Thessalonians one He is to be revealed from
heaven. This is very different from being a manifested "in glory", i.e.
where Christ now sits "on the right hand of God". While, therefore, the
hope before all other companies of the redeemed is "the Lord's coming",
the "prior-hope" of the church of the Mystery is rather "their going"
to be "manifested with Him in glory".
While the epistle to Titus is not a "Prison Epistle", it
belongs to the same group as 1 and 2 Timothy. There, too, we read that
we should live
"looking for that blessed hope, and the manifestation of the
glory of our great God and Saviour Jesus Christ" (Titus 2:13).
The Marriage of the King's Son
We may perhaps illustrate these different aspects of the
Second Advent by using the occasion of the marriage of the King's son
at Westminster Abbey. The marriage is one, whether witnessed in the
Abbey itself, from a grandstand, or from the public footway. So,
whatever our calling, the hope is one in this respect, that it is
Christ Himself. Nevertheless, we cannot conceive of anyone denying that
to be permitted to be present in the Abbey itself is something
different from sitting in a grandstand until the King's son,
accompanied by "shout" and "trumpet", descends from the Abbey to be met
by the waiting people. These waiting people outside the Abbey form one
great company, although differentiated as to point of view. So the
early church, together with the Kingdom saints, form one great company,
although some, like Abraham, belong to "the heavenly calling" connected
with Jerusalem that is above, while others belong to the Kingdom which
is to be "on earth". We can hardly believe that any subject of the King
would "prefer" the grandstand or the curb to the closer association of
the Abbey itself; and we can hardly believe that any redeemed child of
God would "prefer" to wait on earth for the descent of the Lord from
heaven if the "manifestation with Hin in glory" were a possible hope
before him. We cannot, however, force these things upon the heart and
conscience. We can only respond to the exhortation to be "ready always
to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope
that is in you with meekness and reverence” (1 Pet. 3:15)