SCRIPTURE STUDIES
VOLUME ONE - THE DIVINE PLAN OF THE AGES
STUDY XIII
THE KINGDOMS OF THIS
WORLD
The First Dominion — Its Forfeiture
— Its Redemption and Restoration — The Typical Kingdom of God — The
Usurper — Two Phases of the Present Dominion — The Powers that be,
Ordained of God — Nebuchadnezzar’s View of Them — Daniel’s View and
Interpretation — The Kingdoms of this World viewed from another
Standpoint — The Proper Relationship of the Church to Present
Governments — The Divine Right of Kings Briefly Examined — Claims of
Christendom False — A Better Hope in the Fifth Universal Empire.
IN THE first chapter
of the Divine Revelation, God declares his purpose concerning his
earthly creation and its government: “And God said, Let us make man
in our image, after our likeness, and let them have dominion over
the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the
cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that
creepeth upon the earth. So God created man in his own image; in
the image of God created he him: male and female created he them.
And God blessed them. And God said to them, Be fruitful and
multiply, and fill the earth, and subdue it; and have dominion over
the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every
living thing that moveth upon the earth.”
Thus the dominion of earth was
placed in the hands of the human race as represented in the first
man Adam, who was perfect, and therefore fully qualified to be the
lord, ruler or king of earth. This commission to multiply, and
fill, and subdue, and have dominion over the earth was not to Adam
alone, but to all mankind: “Let them have dominion,”
[page 246] etc. Had the human race
remained perfect and sinless, this dominion would never have passed
out of its hands.
It will be noticed that in
this commission no man is given dominion or authority over
fellowmen, but the whole race is given dominion over the earth, to
cultivate and to make use of its products for the common good. Not
only its vegetable and mineral wealth is thus placed at man’s
command, but also all its varieties of animal life are at his
disposal and for his service. Had the race remained perfect and
carried out this original design of the Creator, as it grew in
numbers it would have been necessary for men to consult together,
and to systematize their efforts, and to devise ways and means for
the just and wise distribution of the common blessings. And as, in
the course of time, it would have been impossible, because of their
vast numbers, to meet and consult together, it would have been
necessary for various classes of men to elect certain of their
number to represent them, to voice their common sentiments, and to
act for them. And if all men were perfect, mentally, physically and
morally; if every man loved God and his regulations supremely, and
his neighbor as himself, there would have been no friction in such
an arrangement.
Thus seen, the original
design of the Creator for earth’s government was a Republic in form,
a government in which each individual would share; in which every
man would be a sovereign, amply qualified in every particular to
exercise the duties of his office for both his own and the general
good.
This dominion of earth
conferred upon man had but one contingency upon which its
everlasting continuance depended; and that was that this
divinely-conferred rulership be always exercised in harmony with the
Supreme Ruler of the universe, whose one law, briefly stated, is
Love. “Love is the fulfilling of the law.” “Thou shalt love the
Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all
[page 247] thy mind;...and thou shalt
love thy neighbor as thyself.” Rom. 13:10; Matt. 22:37-40
Concerning this great
favor conferred upon man, David, praising God, says: “Thou madest
him a little lower than the angels; thou crownedst him with glory
and honor; thou madest him to have dominion over the works of thy
hands.” (Psa. 8:5,6) This dominion given to mankind in the person
of Adam was the first establishment of the Kingdom of God on the
earth. Man thus exercised dominion as God’s representative. But
man’s disobedience to the Supreme Ruler forfeited not only his life,
but also all his rights and privileges as God’s representative ruler
of earth. He was thenceforth a rebel, dethroned and condemned to
death. Then speedily the kingdom of God on earth ceased, and has not
since been established, except for a short time, in a typical
manner, in Israel. Although in Eden man lost his right to life and
dominion, neither was taken from him suddenly; and while the
condemned life lasts man is permitted to exercise the dominion of
earth according to his own ideas and ability, until God’s due time
for him whose right it is to take the dominion which he purchased.
Our Lord’s death redeemed
or purchased not only man, but also all his original inheritance,
including the dominion of earth. Having purchased it, the title is
now in him: he is now the rightful heir, and in due time, and
shortly, he will take possession of his purchase. (Eph. 1:14) But
as he bought man not for the sake of holding him as his slave, but
that he might restore him to his former estate, so with the dominion
of earth: he purchased it and all of man’s original blessings for
the purpose of restoring them when man is again made capable of
exercising them in harmony with the will of God. Hence the reign of
Messiah on earth will not be everlasting. It will continue only
until, by his strong iron rule, he will have put down all rebellion
and insubordination, and restored the fallen race to the original
[page 248] perfection, when they will
be fully capable of rightly exercising the dominion of earth as
originally designed. When thus restored, it will again be the
Kingdom of God on earth, under man, God’s appointed representative.
During the Jewish age God
organized the people of Israel as his kingdom, under Moses and the
Judges—a sort of Republic—but it was typical only. And the more
despotic rule afterward established, especially under David and
Solomon, was in some respects typical of the kingdom promised, when
Messiah should reign. Unlike the surrounding nations, Israel had
Jehovah for their King, and their rulers nominally served under him,
as we learn from Psa. 78:70,71. This is quite definitely stated in 2
Chron. 13:8 and 1 Chron. 29:23, where Israel is called “the Kingdom
of the Lord,” and where it is said that Solomon “sat on the THRONE
OF THE LORD, instead of David his father,” who sat upon or exercised
the rule of the same throne for the forty years previous, following
Saul, the first king.
When the people of Israel
transgressed against the Lord, he chastised them repeatedly, until
finally he took away their kingdom entirely. In the days of
Zedekiah, the last who reigned of the line of David, the scepter of
royal power was removed. There the typical kingdom of God was
overthrown.
God’s decision relative to
the matter is expressed in the words, “Thou profane, wicked prince
of Israel, whose day is come, when iniquity shall have an end, Thus
saith the Lord God: Remove the diadem, and take off the crown: this
shall not be the same....I will overturn, overturn, overturn it; and
it shall be NO MORE, until he come, whose right it is;
and I will give it him.” (Ezek. 21:25-27) In fulfilment of this
prophecy the king of Babylon came against Israel, took the people
captive and removed their king. Though afterward restored to
national existence by Cyrus the Persian, they
[page 249] were subjects and tribute
payers to the successive empires of Medo-Persia, Greece, and Rome,
down to the final destruction of their nationality, A.D. 70, since
which time they have been scattered among all nations.
The kingdom of Israel is
the only one, since the fall, which God ever recognized as in any
way representing his government, laws, etc. There had been many
nations before theirs, but no other could rightfully claim God as
its founder, or that its rulers were God’s representatives. When
the diadem was taken from Zedekiah and the kingdom of Israel was
overturned, it was decreed that it should remain overturned until
Christ, the rightful heir of the world, should come to claim it.
Thus, inferentially, all other kingdoms in power until the
re-establishment of God’s kingdom are branded “kingdoms of this
world,” under the “prince of this world”; and hence any claims put
forth by any of them to being kingdoms of God are spurious. Nor was
this Kingdom of God “SET UP” at the first advent of Christ. (Luke
19:12) Then and since then God has been selecting from the world
those who shall be accounted worthy to reign with Christ as
joint-heirs of that throne. Not until his second advent will Christ
take the kingdom, the power and the glory, and reign Lord of all.
All other kingdoms than
that of Israel are Scripturally called heathen or Gentile
kingdoms—“the kingdoms of this world,” under the “prince of this
world”—Satan. The removal of God’s kingdom in the days of Zedekiah
left the world without any government of which God could approve, or
whose laws or affairs he specially supervised. The Gentile
governments God recognized indirectly, in that he publicly declares
his decree (Luke 21:24) that during the interregnum the control of
Jerusalem and the world should be exercised by Gentile governments.
This interregnum, or
intervening period of time between [page
250] the removal of God’s scepter and government and the
restoration of the same in greater power and glory in Christ, is
Scripturally termed “The Times of the Gentiles.” And these “times”
or years, during which the “kingdoms of this world” are permitted to
rule, are fixed and limited, and the time for the re-establishment
of God’s Kingdom under Messiah is equally fixed and marked in
Scripture.
Evil as these Gentile
governments have been, they were permitted or “ordained of God” for
a wise purpose. (Rom. 13:1) Their imperfection and misrule form a
part of the general lesson on the exceeding sinfulness of sin, and
prove the inability of fallen man to govern himself, even to his own
satisfaction. God permits them, in the main, to carry out their own
purposes as they may be able, overruling them only when they would
interfere with his plans. He designs that eventually all shall work
for good, and that finally even the “wrath of man shall praise
him.” The remainder, that would work no good, serve no purpose or
teach no lesson, he restrains. Psa. 76:10
Man’s inability to
establish a perfect government is attributable to his own weaknesses
in his fallen, depraved condition. These weaknesses, which of
themselves would thwart human efforts to produce a perfect
government, have also been taken advantage of by Satan, who first
tempted man to disloyalty to the Supreme Ruler. Satan has
continually taken advantage of man’s weaknesses, made good to appear
evil, and evil to appear good; and he has misrepresented God’s
character and plans and blinded men to the truth. Thus working in
the hearts of the children of disobedience (Eph. 2:2), he has led
them captive at his will and made himself what our Lord and the
apostles call him—the prince or ruler of this world. (John 14:30;
12:31) He is not the prince of this world by right, but by
usurpation; through fraud and deception and control of fallen
[page 251] men. It is because he is
a usurper that he will be summarily deposed. Had he a real title as
prince of this world, he would not thus be dealt with.
Thus it will be seen that
the dominion of earth, as at present exercised, has both an
invisible and a visible phase. The former is the spiritual, the
latter the human phase—the visible earthly kingdoms measurably under
the control of a spiritual prince, Satan. It was because Satan
possessed such control that he could offer to make our Lord the
supreme visible sovereign of the earth under his direction. (Matt.
4:9)
When the Times of the
Gentiles expire, both phases of the present dominion will terminate:
Satan will be bound and the kingdoms of this world will be
overthrown.
The fallen, blinded,
groaning creation has for centuries plodded along its weary way,
defeated at every step, even its best endeavors proving fruitless,
yet ever hoping that the golden age dreamed of by its philosophers
was at hand. It knows not that a still greater deliverance than
that for which it hopes and groans is to come through the despised
Nazarene and his followers, who as the Sons of God will shortly be
manifested in kingdom power for its deliverance. Rom. 8:22,19
In order that his children
should not be in darkness relative to his permission of present evil
governments and concerning his ultimate design to bring in a better
government when these kingdoms, under his overruling providence,
shall have served the purpose for which they were permitted, God has
given us, through his prophets, several grand panoramic views of the
“kingdoms of this world,” each time showing, for our encouragement,
their overthrow by the establishment of his own righteous and
everlasting kingdom under the Messiah, the Prince of Peace.
That man’s present effort
to exercise dominion is not in successful defiance of Jehovah’s will
and power, but by his [page 252]
permission, is shown by God’s message to Nebuchadnezzar, wherein God
gives permission to rule, until the time for the
setting up of Christ’s kingdom, to the four great empires, Babylon,
Medo-Persia, Greece and Rome. (Dan. 2:37-43) This shows where this
lease of the dominion will end.
As we now glance at these
prophetic views, let us remember that they begin with Babylon at the
time of the overthrow of the kingdom of Israel, the typical kingdom
of the Lord.
Nebuchadnezzar’s Vision of Earth’s Governments
Among those things
“written aforetime for our edification,” that we, who are commanded
to be subject to the powers that be, might through patience and
comfort of the Scriptures have hope (Rom. 15:4; 13:1), is the dream
of Nebuchadnezzar and its divine interpretation through the Prophet.
Dan. 2:31-45
Daniel explained the
dream, saying: “Thou, O king, sawest, and behold a great image.
This great image, whose brightness was excellent, stood before thee;
and the form thereof was terrible. This image’s head was of fine
gold, his breast and his arms of silver, his belly and his thighs of
brass, his legs of iron, his feet part of iron and part of clay.
Thou sawest till that a stone was cut out without hands, which smote
the image upon his feet that were of iron and clay, and brake them
to pieces.
“Then was the iron, the
clay, the brass, the silver and the gold broken to pieces together,
and became like the chaff of the summer threshing-floors; and the
wind carried them away, that no place was found for them; and the
stone that smote the image became a great mountain and filled the
whole earth.
“This is the dream, and we
will tell the interpretation thereof before the king. Thou, O king,
art a king of kings: [page 253] for
the God of heaven hath given thee a kingdom, power,
and strength, and glory. [There the Gentile kingdoms, or powers
that be, were ordained of God.] And wheresoever the children of men
dwell, the beasts of the field and the fowls of the heaven hath he
given into thine hand, and hath made thee ruler over them all. Thou
art this head of gold.
“And after thee shall
arise another kingdom inferior to thee [silver], and another third
kingdom of brass, which shall bear rule over all the earth. And the
fourth kingdom shall be strong as iron: forasmuch as iron breaketh
in pieces and subdueth all things; and as iron that breaketh all
these, shall it break in pieces and bruise. And whereas thou sawest
the feet and toes, part of potter’s clay and part of iron, the
kingdom shall be mixed; but there shall be in it of the strength of
the iron: forasmuch as thou sawest the iron mixed with the miry
clay. And as the toes of the feet were part of iron and part of
clay, so the kingdom shall be partly strong and partly brittle.”
The student of history can
readily trace, among the many smaller empires of earth which have
arisen, the four above described by Daniel. These are termed
UNIVERSAL EMPIRES—Babylon, first, the head of gold (verse 38); Medo-Persia,
conqueror of Babylon, second, the breast of silver; Greece,
conqueror of Medo-Persia, third, the belly of brass; and Rome,
fourth, the strong kingdom, the iron legs and clay-mixed feet.
Three of these empires had passed away, and the fourth, the Roman,
held universal sway, at the time of our Lord’s birth, as we read,
“There went out a decree from Caesar Augustus that all the
world should be taxed.” Luke 2:1
The iron empire, Rome, was
by far the strongest, and endured longer than its predecessors. In
fact, the Roman Empire still continues, as represented in the
nations of Europe. This division is represented in the ten toes of
the image. The [page 254] clay
element blended with the iron in the feet represents the mixture of
church and state. This mixture is in the Scriptures termed
“Babylon”—confusion. As we shall presently see, stone
is the symbol of the true Kingdom of God, and Babylon substituted an
imitation of stone—clay—which it has united with the fragmentary
remains of the [iron] Roman Empire. And this mixed system—church
and state—the Church nominal wedded to the kingdoms of this world,
which the Lord calls Babylon, confusion, presumes to call itself
Christendom—Christ’s Kingdom. Daniel explains: “Whereas thou sawest
iron mixed with miry clay, they shall mingle themselves with the
seed of men [church and world blend—Babylon], but they shall not
cleave one to another, even as iron is not mixed with clay.” They
cannot thoroughly amalgamate. “And in the days of these kings [the
kingdoms represented by the toes, the so-called “Christian kingdoms”
or “Christendom”] shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom which
shall never be destroyed; and the kingdom shall not be left to other
people, but it shall break in pieces and consume all these kingdoms;
and it shall stand forever.” Dan. 2:43,44
Daniel does not here state
the time for the end of these Gentile governments: that we find
elsewhere; but every foretold circumstance indicates that today the
end is nigh, even at the doors. The Papal system has long claimed
that it is the kingdom which the God of heaven here promised to set
up, and that, in fulfilment of this prophecy, it did break in pieces
and consume all other kingdoms. The truth, however, is that the
nominal Church merely united with earthly empires as the clay with
the iron, and that Papacy never was the true Kingdom of God, but
merely a counterfeit of it. One of the best evidences that Papacy
did not destroy and consume these earthly kingdoms is that they
still exist. And now that the miry clay has become dry and
[page 255] “brittle,” it is losing
its adhesive power, and the iron and clay show signs of dissolution,
and will quickly crumble when smitten by the “stone,” the true
Kingdom.
Continuing his
interpretation, Daniel states: “Forasmuch as thou sawest that the
stone was cut out of the mountain without hands, and that it brake
in pieces the iron, the brass, the clay, the silver and the gold,
the great God hath made known to the king what shall come to pass
hereafter; and the dream is certain and the interpretation thereof
sure.” Verse 45
The stone cut out of the
mountain without hands, which smites and scatters the Gentile
powers, represents the true Church, the Kingdom of God. During the
Gospel age this “stone” kingdom is being formed, “cut out,” carved
and shaped for its future position and greatness—not by human hands,
but by the power or spirit of the truth, the invisible power of
Jehovah. When complete, when entirely cut out, it will smite and
destroy the kingdoms of this world. Not the people, but the
governments, are symbolized by the image, and these are to be
destroyed that the people may be delivered. Our Lord Jesus came not
to destroy men’s lives, but to save them. John 3:17
The stone, during its
preparation, while being cut out, might be called an embryo
mountain, in view of its future destiny; so, too, the Church could
be, and sometimes is, called the Kingdom of God. In fact, however,
the stone does not become the mountain until it has smitten the
image; and so the Church, in the full sense, will become the Kingdom
to fill the whole earth when “the day of the Lord,” the “day of
wrath upon the nations” or “time of trouble,” will be over, and when
it will be established and all other dominions have become
subservient to it.
Call to mind now the
promise made by our Lord to the overcomers of the Christian Church:
“To him that overcometh [page 256]
will I grant to sit with me in my throne”—“and he that overcometh
and keepeth my works unto the end, to him will I give power over the
nations; and he shall rule them with a rod of iron; as the vessels
of a potter shall they be broken to shivers, even as I
received of my Father.” (Rev. 3:21; 2:26,27; Psa. 2:8-12) When the
iron rod has accomplished the work of destruction, then will the
hand that smote be turned to heal, and the people will
return to the Lord, and he shall heal them (Isa. 19:22; Jer.
3:22,23; Hos. 6:1; 14:4; Isa. 2:3), giving them beauty for ashes,
the oil of joy for mourning and the garment of praise for the spirit
of heaviness.
Daniel’s Vision of Earthly
Governments
In Nebuchadnezzar’s vision
we see the empires of earth, as viewed from the world’s standpoint,
to be an exhibition of human glory, grandeur, and power; though in
it we also see an intimation of their decay and final destruction,
as expressed in the deterioration from gold to iron and clay.
The stone class, the true
Church, during its selection or taking out of the mountain, has been
esteemed by the world as of no value. It has been despised and
rejected of men. They see no beauty in it that they should desire
it. The world loves, admires, praises and defends the rulers and
governments represented in this great image, though it has been
continually disappointed, deceived, wounded and oppressed by them.
The world extols, in prose and verse, the great and successful
agents of this image, its Alexanders, Caesars, Bonapartes and
others, whose greatness showed itself in the slaughter of their
fellowmen, and who, in their lust for power, made millions of widows
and orphans. And such is still the spirit which exists in the “ten
toes” of the image, as we see it exhibited today in their marshaled
hosts of more than twelve millions of men armed with every
[page 257] fiendish device of modern
ingenuity, to slaughter one another at the command of “the powers
that be.”
The proud are now called
happy; yea, they that work wickedness are set up in power. (Mal.
3:15) Can we not see, then, that the destruction of this great
image by the smiting of the stone, and the establishment of God’s
kingdom, mean the liberating of the oppressed and the blessing of
all? Though for a time the change will cause disaster and trouble,
it will finally yield the peaceable fruits of righteousness.
But now, calling to mind
the difference of standpoint, let us look at the same four universal
empires of earth from the standpoint of God and those in harmony
with him, as portrayed in vision to the beloved prophet Daniel. As
to us these kingdoms appear inglorious and beastly, so to him these
four universal empires were shown as four great and ravenous wild
beasts. And to his view the coming Kingdom of God (the stone) was
proportionally grander than as seen by Nebuchadnezzar. Daniel says:
“I saw in my vision by night, and behold the four winds of heaven
strove upon the great sea. And four great beasts came up from the
sea, diverse one from another. The first was like a lion and had
eagle’s wings;...and behold another beast, a second, like a
bear;...and lo another, like a leopard....After this I saw in the
night visions, and behold a fourth beast, dreadful and terrible, and
strong exceedingly; and it had great iron teeth. It devoured and
brake in pieces, and stamped the residue with the feet of it; and it
was diverse from all the beasts that were before it, and it had ten
horns.” Dan. 7:2-7
The details relative to
the first three beasts (Babylon the lion, Medo-Persia the bear, and
Greece the leopard), with their heads, feet, wings, etc., all of
which are symbolic, we pass by, as of less importance in our present
examination than the details of the fourth beast, Rome.
[page 258]
Of the fourth beast, Rome,
Daniel says: “After this I saw in the night visions, and behold a
fourth beast, dreadful and terrible, and strong exceedingly;...and
it had ten horns. I considered the horns, and, behold, there came
up among them another little horn, before whom there were three of
the first horns plucked up by the roots; and, behold, in this horn
were eyes, like the eyes of man, and a mouth speaking great things.”
Dan. 7:7,8
Here the Roman Empire is
shown; and the divisions of its power are shown in the ten horns, a
horn being a symbol of power. The little horn which arose among
these, and which appropriated the power of three of them to itself,
and ruled among the others, represents the small beginning and
gradual rise to power of the Church of Rome, the Papal power or
horn. As it rose in influence, three of the divisions, horns or
powers of the Roman Empire (the Heruli, the Eastern Exarchate and
the Ostrogoths) were plucked out of the way to make room for its
establishment as a civil power or horn. This last specially notable
horn, Papacy, is remarkable for its eyes, representing intelligence,
and for its mouth—its utterances, its claims, etc.
To this fourth beast,
representing Rome, Daniel gives no descriptive name. While the
others are described as lion-like, bear-like and leopard-like, the
fourth was so ferocious and hideous that none of the beasts of earth
could be compared with it. John the Revelator, seeing in vision the
same symbolic beast (government), was also at a loss for a name by
which to describe it, and finally gives it several. Among others,
he called it “the Devil.” (Rev. 12:9) He certainly chose an
appropriate name; for Rome, when viewed in the light of its bloody
persecutions, certainly has been the most devilish of all earthly
governments. Even in its change from Rome Pagan to Rome Papal it
illustrated one of Satan’s chief characteristics; for he also
transforms himself to appear [page 259]
as an angel of light (2 Cor. 11:14), as Rome
transformed itself from heathenism and claimed to be Christian—the
Kingdom of Christ.*
After giving some details
regarding this last or Roman beast, and especially of its peculiar
or Papal horn, the Prophet states that judgment against this horn
would be rendered, and it would begin to lose its dominion, which
would be consumed by gradual process until the
beast should be destroyed.
This beast or Roman Empire
in its horns or divisions still exists, and will be slain by the
rising of the masses of the people, and the overthrow of
governments, in the “Day of the Lord,” preparatory to the
recognition of the heavenly rulership. This is clearly shown from
other scriptures yet to be examined. However, the consuming
of the Papal horn comes first. Its power and influence began to
consume when Napoleon took the Pope prisoner to France. Then, when
neither the curses of the Popes nor their prayers delivered them
from Bonaparte’s power, it became evident to the nations that the
divine authority and power claimed by the Papacy were without
foundation. After that, the temporal power of the Papacy waned
rapidly until, in September, 1870, it lost the last vestige of its
temporal power at the hands of Victor Emmanuel.
Nevertheless, during all
that time in which it was being “consumed,” it kept uttering its
great swelling words of blasphemy, its last great utterance being in
1870, when, but a few months before its overthrow, it made the
declaration of the infallibility of the Popes. All
this is noted in the prophecy: “I beheld then [i.e.,
after the decree against this ‘horn,’ after its consumption
had begun] because of the voice of the GREAT WORDS which the horn
spake.” Dan. 7:11
—————
*The fact that Rome is called “the Devil”
by no means disproves a personal devil: rather the
reverse. It is because there are such beasts as lions, bears and
leopards, with known characteristics, that governments were likened
to them: and so, it is because there is a Devil, with known
characteristics, that the fourth empire is likened to him.
[page 260]
Thus we are brought down
in history to our own day, and made to see that the thing to be
expected, so far as the empires of the earth are concerned, is their
utter destruction. The next thing in order is described by the
words, “I beheld even till the beast was slain and his body
destroyed and given to the burning flame.” The slaying and burning
are symbols, as well as the beast itself, and signify the utter and
hopeless destruction of present organized government. In verse 12
the prophet notes a difference between the end of this fourth beast
and its predecessors. They three successively (Babylon, Persia and
Greece) had their dominion taken from them; they
ceased to hold the ruling power of earth; but their lives as nations
did not cease immediately. Greece and Persia still have some life,
though it is long centuries since universal dominion passed from
their grasp. Not so, however, with the Roman Empire, the fourth and
last of these beasts. It will lose dominion and life at once, and
go into utter destruction; and with it the others will pass away
also. Daniel 2:35
No matter what may be the
means or instrumentality used, the cause of this fall
will be the establishment of the Fifth Universal Empire of earth,
the Kingdom of God, under Christ, whose right it is to take the
dominion. The transfer of the kingdom from the fourth beast, which
for its appointed time was “ordained of God,” to the fifth kingdom,
under the Messiah, when its appointed season has come, is described
by the Prophet in these words: “And behold, one like the Son of man
came with the clouds of heaven, and came to the Ancient of days, and
they brought him near before him. And there was given unto him [the
Christ—head and body complete] dominion, and glory,
[page 261] and a kingdom, that all
people, nations and languages should serve him. His dominion is an
everlasting dominion which shall not pass away, and his kingdom that
which shall not be destroyed.” This the angel interpreted to mean
that “the kingdom and dominion, and the greatness of the kingdom
under the whole heaven, shall be given to the people of the saints
of the Most High, whose kingdom is an everlasting kingdom; and all
dominions shall serve and obey him.” Dan. 7:13,27
Thus seen, the dominion of
earth is to be placed in the hands of Christ by Jehovah (“the
Ancient of days”), who shall “put all things under his feet.” (1
Cor. 15:27) Thus enthroned over God’s kingdom, he must reign until
he shall have put down all authority and power in conflict with the
will and law of Jehovah. To the accomplishment of this great
mission, the overthrow of these Gentile governments is first
necessary; for the “kingdoms of this world,” like the “prince of
this world,” will not surrender peaceably, but must be bound and
restrained by force. And thus it is written, “To bind their kings
with chains and their nobles with fetters of iron; to execute upon
them the judgment written; this honor have all his saints.” Psa.
149:8,9
As we thus view present
governments from the standpoint of our Lord and of the Prophet
Daniel, and realize their ferocious, destructive, beastly and
selfish character, our hearts long for the end of Gentile
governments and joyfully look forward to that blessed time when the
overcomers of the present age will be enthroned with their Head, to
rule, bless and restore the groaning creation. Surely all of God’s
children can heartily pray with their Lord—“THY KINGDOM COME, thy
will be done on earth as it is in heaven.”
Each of these governments
represented in the image and by the beasts existed before it came
into power as the universal empire. So, too, with the true Kingdom
of God: it has [page 262] long
existed separate from the world, not attempting rulership, but
awaiting its time—the time appointed by the Ancient of days. And,
like the others, it must receive its appointment and must come into
authority or be “set up” before it can exercise its
power in the smiting and slaying of the beast or kingdom preceding
it. Hence the appropriateness of the statement, “In the days of
these kings [while they still have power] shall the God of heaven
set up [establish in power and authority] a kingdom.” And after it
is set up, “it shall break in pieces and consume all these kingdoms,
and it shall stand forever.” (Dan. 2:44) Hence, however we may look
for it, we must expect God’s Kingdom to be inaugurated before
the fall of the kingdoms of this world, and that its power and
smiting will bring their overthrow.
Present Governments from
Another Standpoint
Supreme right and
authority to rule the world are and ever will be vested in the
Creator, Jehovah, no matter whom he may permit or authorize to have
subordinate control. Under the imperfections and weaknesses
resulting from his disloyalty to the King of kings, Adam soon grew
weak and helpless. As a monarch he began to lose the power by
which, at first, he commanded and held the obedience of the lower
animals by the strength of his will. He lost control of himself
also, so that when he would do good his weaknesses interfered and
evil was present with him; and the good he even would do he did not
do, and the evil which he would not, he did.
Hence, while making no
attempt to excuse our rebel race, we can sympathize with its vain
efforts to govern itself and to arrange for its own well-being. And
something can be said of the success of the world in this direction;
for, while recognizing the real character of these beastly
governments, corrupt though they have been, they have been vastly
superior [page 263] to none—much
better than lawlessness and anarchy. Though anarchy would probably
have been quite acceptable to the “prince of this world,” it was not
so to his subjects, and his power is not absolute: it is limited to
the extent of his ability to operate through mankind; and his policy
must conform in great measure to the ideas, passions, and prejudices
of men. Man’s idea was self-government independent of God; and when
God permitted him to try the experiment, Satan embraced the
opportunity to extend his influence and dominion. Thus it was by
wishing to forget God (Rom. 1:28) that man exposed himself to the
influence of this wily and powerful though unseen foe; and therefore
he has ever since been obliged to work against Satan’s machinations,
as well as his own personal weaknesses.
This being the case, let
us again glance at the kingdoms of this world, viewing them now as
the effort of fallen humanity to govern itself independent of God.
Though individual corruption and selfishness have turned aside the
course of justice, so that full justice has seldom been meted out to
any under the kingdoms of this world, yet the ostensible object of
all governments ever organized among men has been to promote justice
and the well-being of all the people.
To what extent that object
has been attained is another question; but such has been the claim
of all governments, and such the object of the people governed in
submitting to and supporting them. And where the ends of justice
have been greatly ignored, either the masses have been blinded and
deceived with reference to them, or wars, commotions and revolutions
have been the result.
The dark deeds of base
tyrants, who gained positions of power in the governments of the
world, did not represent the laws and institutions of those
governments, but in usurping authority and turning it to base ends
they gave to [page 264] those
governments their beastly character. Every government has had a
majority of wise, just and good laws—laws for the protection of life
and property, for the protection of domestic and commercial
interests, for the punishment of crime, etc. They have also had
courts of appeal in matters of dispute, where justice is meted out
to some extent, at least; and however imperfect those in office may
be, the advantage and necessity for such institutions is apparent.
Poor as these governments have been, without them the baser element
of society would, by force of numbers, have overcome the juster,
better element.
While, therefore, we
recognize the beastly character of these governments, as rendered so
by the exaltation to power of a majority of unrighteous rulers,
through the intrigues and deceptions of Satan, operating through
man’s weaknesses and depraved tastes and ideas, yet we recognize
them as the best efforts of poor, fallen humanity at governing
itself. Century after century God has allowed them to make the
effort, and to see the results. But after centuries of experiment,
the results are as far from satisfactory today as at any period of
the world’s history. In fact, the dissatisfaction is more general
and widespread than ever before; not because there is more
oppression and injustice than ever, but because, under God’s
arrangement, men’s eyes are being opened by the increase of
knowledge.
The various governments
which have been established from time to time have exhibited the
average ability of the people represented by them to
govern themselves. Even where despotic governments have existed,
the fact that they have been tolerated by the masses proved that as
a people they were not capable of establishing and supporting a
better government, though many individuals were always, doubtless,
far in advance of the average standing.
[page 265]
As we compare the
condition of the world today with its condition at any former
period, we find a marked difference in the sentiments of the
masses. The spirit of independence is now abroad, and men are not
so easily blindfolded, deceived and led by rulers and politicians,
and therefore they will not submit to the yokes of former days. This
change of public sentiment has not been a gradual one from the very
beginning of man’s effort to govern himself, but clearly marked only
as far back as the sixteenth century; and its progress has been most
rapid within the last fifty years. This change, therefore, is not
the result of the experience of past ages, but is the natural result
of the recent increase and general diffusion of knowledge among the
masses of mankind. The preparation for this general diffusion of
knowledge began with the invention of printing, about 1440 A.D., and
the consequent multiplication of books and news periodicals. The
influence of this invention in the general public enlightenment
began to be felt about the sixteenth century; and the progressive
steps since that time all are acquainted with. The general
education of the masses has become popular, and inventions and
discoveries are becoming everyday occurrences. This increase of
knowledge among men, which is of God’s appointment, and comes to
pass in his own due time, is one of the mighty influences which are
now at work binding Satan—curtailing his influence and
circumscribing his power in this “Day of Preparation”
for the setting up of God’s kingdom in the earth.
The increase of knowledge
in every direction awakens a feeling of self-respect among men, and
a realization of their natural and inalienable rights, which they
will not long permit to be ignored or despised; rather, they will go
to an opposite extreme. Glance back along the centuries and see
[page 266] how the nations have
written the history of their discontent in blood. And the prophets
declare that because of the increase of knowledge a still more
general and widespread dissatisfaction will finally express itself
in a world-wide revolution, in the overthrow of all law and order;
that anarchy and distress upon all classes will be the result; but
that in the midst of this confusion the God of heaven will SET UP
his Kingdom, which will satisfy the desires of all nations. Wearied
and disheartened with their own failures, and finding their last and
greatest efforts resulting in anarchy, men will gladly welcome and
bow before the heavenly authority, and recognize its strong and just
government. Thus man’s extremity will become God’s opportunity, and
“the desire of all nations shall come”—the Kingdom of God, in power
and great glory. Hag. 2:7
Knowing this to be the
purpose of God, neither Jesus nor the apostles interfered with
earthly rulers in any way. On the contrary, they taught the Church
to submit to these powers, even though they often suffered under
their abuse of power. They taught the Church to obey the laws, and
to respect those in authority because of their office, even if they
were not personally worthy of esteem; to pay their appointed taxes,
and, except where they conflicted with God’s laws (Acts 4:19; 5:29),
to offer no resistance to any established law. (Rom. 13:1-7; Matt.
22:21) The Lord Jesus and the apostles and the early Church were
all law-abiding, though they were separate from, and took no share
in, the governments of this world.
Though the powers that be,
the governments of this world, were ordained or arranged for by God,
that mankind might gain a needed experience under them, yet the
Church, the consecrated ones who aspire to office in the coming
Kingdom of God, should neither covet the honors and the emoluments
of office in the kingdoms of this world,
[page 267] nor should they oppose these powers. They are
fellow citizens and heirs of the heavenly kingdom (Eph. 2:19), and
as such should claim only such rights and privileges under the
kingdoms of this world as are accorded to aliens.
Their mission is not to help the world to improve its present
condition, nor to have anything to do with its affairs at present.
To attempt to do so would be but a waste of effort; for the world’s
course and its termination are both clearly defined in the
Scriptures and are fully under the control of him who in his own
time will give us the kingdom. The influence of the
true Church is now and always has been small—so small
as to count practically nothing politically; but however great it
might appear, we should follow the example and teaching of our Lord
and the apostles. Knowing that the purpose of God is to let the
world fully test its own ability to govern itself, the true Church
should not, while in it, be of the world. The saints
may influence the world only by their separateness from it, by
letting their light shine; and thus through their
lives the spirit of truth REPROVES the world. Thus—as peaceable,
orderly obeyers and commenders of every righteous law, reprovers of
lawlessness and sin, and pointers forward to the promised Kingdom of
God and the blessings to be expected under it, and not by the method
commonly adopted of mingling in politics and scheming with the world
for power, and thus being drawn into wars and sins and the general
degradation—in glorious chastity should the prospective Bride of the
Prince of Peace be a power for good, as her Lord’s representative in
the world.
The Church of God should
give its entire attention and effort to preaching the
Kingdom of God, and to the advancement of the interests of that
Kingdom according to the plan laid down in the Scriptures. If this
is faithfully done, there will be no time nor disposition to dabble
in the [page 268] politics of present
governments. The Lord had no time for it; the apostles had no time
for it; nor have any of the saints who are following their example.
The early Church, shortly
after the death of the apostles, fell a prey to this very
temptation. The preaching of the coming Kingdom of God, which would
displace all earthly kingdoms, and of the crucified Christ as the
heir of that Kingdom, was unpopular, and brought with it
persecution, scorn and contempt. But some thought to improve on
God’s plan, and, instead of suffering, to get the Church into a
position of favor with the world. By a combination with earthly
powers they succeeded. As a result Papacy was developed, and in
time became the mistress and queen of nations. Rev. 17:3-5; 18:7
By this policy everything
was changed: instead of suffering, came honor; instead of humility,
came pride; instead of truth, came error; and instead of being
persecuted, she became the persecutor of all who condemned her new
and illegal honors. Soon she began to invent new theories and
sophistries to justify her course, first deceiving herself, and then
the nations, into the belief that the promised millennial reign of
Christ HAD COME, and that Christ the King was represented by her
popes, who reigned over the kings of the earth as his vicegerents.
Her claims were successful in deceiving the whole world. “She made
all nations drunk” with her erroneous doctrines (Rev.
17:2), intimidating them by teaching that eternal torment awaited
all who resisted her claims. Soon the kings of Europe were crowned
or deposed by her edict, and under her supposed authority.
Thus it comes that the
kingdoms of Europe today claim to be Christian kingdoms, and
announce that sovereigns reign “by the grace of God,” i.e., through
appointment of either Papacy or some of the Protestant sects. For
though the Reformers abandoned many of Papacy’s claims to
ecclesiastical [page 269]
jurisdiction, etc., they held to this honor which the kings of earth
had come to attach to Christianity. And thus the Reformers fell
into the same error, and exercised the authority of monarchs in
appointing and sanctioning governments and kings, and denominating
such “Christian kingdoms,” or kingdoms of Christ. So we hear much
today of that strange enigma, “The Christian World”—an
enigma indeed, when viewed in the light of the true principles of
the Gospel. Our Lord said of his disciples, “They are not of the
world, even as I am not of the world.” And Paul exhorts us, saying,
“Be not conformed to this world.” John 17:16; Rom. 12:2
God never approved of
calling these kingdoms by the name of Christ. Deceived by the
Church nominal, these nations are sailing under false colors,
claiming to be what they are not. Their only title, aside from the
vote of the people, is in God’s limited grant, spoken
to Nebuchadnezzar—until he come whose right the dominion is.
The claim that these
imperfect kingdoms, with their imperfect laws and often selfish and
vicious rulers, are the “kingdoms of our Lord and his Anointed” is a
gross libel upon the true Kingdom of Christ, before which they must
shortly fall, and upon its “Prince of Peace” and righteous rulers.
Isa. 32:1
Another serious injury
resulting from that error is that the attention of the children of
God has thereby been attracted away from the promised heavenly
kingdom; and they have been led to an improper recognition of and
intimacy with earthly kingdoms, and to almost fruitless attempts to
engraft upon these wild, worldly stocks the graces and morals of
Christianity, to the neglect of the gospel concerning the true
Kingdom and the hopes centering in it. Under this deception, some
are at present very solicitous that the name of God should be
incorporated into the Constitution [page
270] of the United States, that thereby this
may become a Christian nation. The Reformed Presbyterians have for
years refused to vote or hold office under this government,
because it is not Christ’s Kingdom. Thus they recognize the
impropriety of Christians sharing in any other. We have great
sympathy with this sentiment, but not with the conclusion, that if
God’s name were mentioned in the Constitution, that
fact would transform this government from a kingdom of this world to
a kingdom of Christ, and give them liberty to vote and to hold
office under it. O, how foolish! How great the deception by which
the “Mother of harlots” has made all nations drunk (Rev. 17:2); for
in a similar manner it is claimed that the kingdoms of Europe were
transferred from Satan to Christ, and became “Christian nations.”
Let it be seen that the
best and the worst of earth’s nations are but “kingdoms of this
world,” whose lease of power from God is now about expired, that
they may give place to their ordained successor, the Kingdom of
Messiah, the Fifth Universal Empire of earth (Dan. 2:44;
7:14,17,27)—this view will do much to establish truth and to
overthrow error.
But as it is, the actions
of Papacy in this regard, sanctioned by the Protestant Reformers, go
unquestioned among Christian people. And since they should uphold
the Kingdom of Christ, they feel themselves bound to champion the
present falling kingdoms of so-called Christendom, whose time is
fast expiring; and thus their sympathies are often forced to the
side of oppression, rather than to the side of right and freedom—to
the side of the kingdoms of this world, and the prince of this
world, rather than to the side of the coming true Kingdom of Christ.
Rev. 17:14; 19:11-19
The world is fast coming
to realize that the “kingdoms page 271]
of this world” are not Christlike, and that their claim to be
of Christ’s appointment is not unquestionable. Men are beginning to
use their reasoning powers on this and similar questions; and they
will act out their convictions so much more violently, as they come
to realize that a deception has been practiced upon them in the name
of the God of Justice and the Prince of Peace. In fact, the
tendency with many is to conclude that Christianity itself is an
imposition without foundation, and that, leagued with civil rulers,
its aim is merely to hold in check the liberties of the masses.
O that men were wise, that
they would apply their hearts to understand the work and plan of the
Lord! Then would the present kingdoms melt down gradually—reform
would swiftly follow reform, and liberty follow liberty, and justice
and truth would prevail until righteousness would be established in
the earth. But they will not do this, nor can they in their present
fallen state; and so, armed with selfishness, each will strive for
mastery, and the kingdoms of this world will pass away with a great
time of trouble, such as was not since there was a nation. Of those
who will be vainly trying to hold to a dominion which has passed
away, when the dominion is given to him whose right it is, the Lord
speaks, urging that they are fighting against him—a conflict in
which they are sure to fail. He says:
“Why do the nations
tumultuously assemble, and the people meditate a vain thing? The
kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers take counsel
together against the Lord, and against his Anointed, saying, Let us
break their bands asunder, and cast away their cords from us. He
that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh: the Lord shall have them in
derision. Then shall he speak unto them in his wrath, and vex them
in his sore displeasure [saying], I have anointed my
king upon my holy hill of Zion....Be wise now,
therefore, O ye kings: be instructed, ye judges of the earth. Serve
the [page 272] Lord with fear and
rejoice with trembling. Kiss [make friends with] the Son [God’s
Anointed] lest he be angry, and ye perish in the way; for his wrath
may soon be kindled. Blessed are all they that take refuge in him.”
Psa. 2:1-6,10-12
The Kingdom Near
“Watchman, tell us of the night—
What its signs of promise are.
Traveler, o’er yon mountain’s height,
See that glory-beaming star!
Watchman, does its beauteous ray
Aught of hope or joy foretell?
Traveler, yes, it brings the day—
Promised day of Israel.
“Watchman, tell us of the night—
Higher yet that star ascends.
Traveler, blessedness and light,
Peace and truth its course portends.
Watchman, will its beams alone
Gild the spot that gave them birth?
Traveler, ages are its own;
See, its glory fills the earth.
“Watchman, tell us, does the morning
Of fair Zion’s glory dawn?
Have the signs that mark its coming
Yet upon thy pathway shone?
Traveler, yes: arise! look round thee!
Light is breaking in the skies!
Gird thy bridal robes around thee!
Morning dawns! arise! arise!” |
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