The Signs of The Times (1901-1905)
The Signs of The Times (1901-1905)
The Signs of The Times (1901-1905)
27 (1901)
March 6, 1901
"HOW shall we, that are dead to sin, live any longer therein?"
How shall we? Can you tell?
Can a man live in what he dies of? When any person dies of any disease, can
he live any longer in it?–No; that is why he died–he could not live any longer in it.
Having died of that disease, were he even brought back from the dead into
that very disease, could he live any longer in it?–No; he would certainly and
immediately die again. A person simply can not live any longer in the thing of
which he has died. This is perfectly plain to everybody.
Very well, then, have you died to sin? Have you grown so sick of sin that you
died of it? Have you grown so sick of it that you could live no longer in it, and so
died to it?
If you have, do not be afraid; you can not live any longer therein. Were you
even taken back from that death, and put once more in the presence of sin, you
would certainly and immediately die again. You could not live any longer in it,
when you were there before; and because you could not live any longer in it, you
died; and if you were brought back to it again, you could not live any longer in it
any more than you did before.
Remember, this is being sick unto death, of sin; not sick of a few or even
many particular sins, while at the same time you choose others because they are
pleasing to you, and become fat and flourishing on them. In this way you can live
in sin forever, and then die in it, and then die the second death for it.
No; it is not sins, so that we can die to one and live to another, that are
contemplated in the Scripture; it is sin,–sin in the essence,–so that when you die
to it, it is death indeed to sin, in every phase and of every sort. Then, being thus
dead to sin, you simply can not live any longer therein. The very presence of the
thing, the very suggestion of it, is death to you.
And being thus dead to sin, the Lord intends that we shall not live any longer
in it. And intending that we shall not live any longer in it, He intends that we shall
live ever longer without sinning.
There is power in Jesus Christ to keep the believer from sinning. There is
virtue in the grace of God to hold back the believer in Jesus from serving the
sinful propensities and passions that dwell in the human flesh. Praise His holy
name forever and ever.
"Where sin abounded, grace did much more abound; that as sin hath reigned
unto death, even so might grace reign thru righteousness unto eternal life by
Jesus Christ our Lord."
Are you dead to sin? Then how shall you live any longer therein?
A. T. JONES.
May 22, 1901
July 3, 1901
NIMROD was the first man who wore a kingly crown. By him there was
established among men the principle of human sovereignty. By him was begun
kingship among men in this world; the rulership of man over man, and subjection
of man to man; instead of the rulership of man over himself,–self-government,–
and subjection of man to God only.
Nor was it only kingship that was by Nimrod begun; not merely kingship or
sovereignty over a single city or territory, but kingship over kings, sovereignty
over separate peoples and territories. For tho "the beginning of his kingdom" was
the important cities and territories of "Babel, and Erech, and Accad, and Calneh,
in the land of Shinar," his ambition of kingly rule was not satisfied with these; but
"out of that land he went forth into Assyria, and builded Nineveh, and Rehoboth-
Ir, and Calah, and Resen between Nineveh and Calah." Thus it was not only
kingship, but kingship expanded into empire, that was begun by Nimrod in the
world.
Thru a long period of ages, Nimrod's example was followed, thru the rise and
expansion into empire of Elam, Egypt, Assyria, Babylon, Grecia. Then there
arose a people who threw off and utterly repudiated all kingship and all idea of
kingship; and established a republic–the republic of Rome–a government of the
people, by the people, for the people.
This government of the people likewise expanded into empire, degenerated
into monarchy and imperial despotism, then to such utter corruption that in
terrible ruin it was swept totally from the earth.
From the tribes of barbarians who accomplished the destruction of Rome,
there were established ten distinct kingdoms in the territory that had been
Roman. Thus there was again established the principle of distinct kingship in
government in the world.
Then again thru a period of ages, kingship expanded into empire in a
succession of rises and falls, when in 1776 there arose another people who
threw off and utterly repudiated all kingship and all idea of kingship; and
established another republic–the republic of the United States–a government of
the people, by the people, for the people.
And now this second great republic, which arose upon the repudiation of
kingship, and upon the establishment of government of the people, has also
expanded into empire.
Thus the whole history of this world from Nimrod's day unto this year 1901 is
expressed in two series of kingships expanding into empire, each followed by the
total repudiation of kingship in the establishment of a republic–a government of
the people, by the people, for the people–and each of these itself expanding into
empire; the first, expanding into empire and irretrievable ruin; the second,
expanding into empire and –– what?
This is an interesting parallel. It is more than interesting; it is intensely
suggestive, because the parallel stands, not only in the fact that twice in the
world's history has a long period of kingship been followed by the utter
repudiation of kingship in the establishment of a republic, but the parallel likewise
stand sin the careers of these two republics–even to close details.
For this reason it is not only interesting but exceedingly important that the
people of this republic of the United States should know the parallel, and how
close it is, between these two republics; to know how far this parallel extends
already, and to know how far it is likely yet to extend.
To this study the readers of the SIGNS OF THE TIMES and all who can be
induced to become readers are invited, thru four or five numbers of the paper.
Come; it will thoroly [sic.] pay.
ALONZO T. JONES.
WE Have seen that the history of this world, from the day of Nimrod until now,
is expressed in a succession of kingships expanding into empire, until Rome's
total repudiation of kingship, and the establishment of a republic–a government
of the people, by the people, and for the people–which itself expanded into
empire and went to ruin; to be followed by establishments of kingships expanding
into empire, until the total repudiation of kingship by the thirteen British colonies
of America, and their establishment of the republic of the Untied States–a
government of the people, by the people, and for the people–which itself has now
expanded into empire.
And now every consideration of the subject forces the question, What shall be
the result of this second expansion of republic into empire? Everybody knows
that the republic of Rome went that road only to ruin; the question now is, How
can the republic of the United States follow that same road without the same
result?
This question is the more forcibly suggested by the fairly startling truth, that
the course of the republic of Rome is being followed step by step by the republic
of the United States; these steps being followed so closely as to be veritably
identical. The likeness between the two is so manifest that it is difficult to write
the course of the republic of Rome, without incurring the charge of "coloring it"
from the course of the republic of the United States; tho the standard histories of
Rome, long ago written, are a sufficient defense against the justice of any such
charge. The likeness is not in the "coloring," but in the very texture and
substance of the fabric.
Rome established herself upon the then entirely new principle, that men are
capable of governing themselves by themselves, and need not kings to lord it
over them; that, upon principle, men are of themselves free and as capable of
governing themselves as kings are capable of governing themselves; and much
more capable of governing themselves than kings can be capable of governing
them.
Since all the nations were governed by kings, this new principle, from the
beginning, made Rome a mark of attention to the world. And Rome was willing to
be a mark of attention to the world; for of her attitude she was justly proud. Thus
Rome looked upon herself, and was looked upon by other nations, and especially
by oppressed peoples, as the example and conservator of liberty for the world.
When by her valuable and native faculty of self-government Rome had filled
her proper home territory, and commanded the respect of the mightiest kings,
she considered it to be her high prerogative to extend to neighboring peoples
who were struggling against the oppressions of kings, the blessings of liberty.
The first of these were the Greek States, who were ever tenacious of liberty, but
who, from the example of Rome, were now tenacious of republican liberty. They
were struggling peristently [sic.], and even desperately, against Philip V. of
Macedon to wreak his kingly power over them.
In her native love of liberty, Rome generously espoused the cause of the
struggling States of Greece, that she might extend to them, and that they might
know and enjoy, the blessings of republican liberty.
Of her own free will, and wholly at her own expense, Rome sent across the
seas her armies and her navies to fight the battles of the Greeks, and to deliver
them from the oppression of kingships, and assure to them the great boon of
liberty and the blessings of self-government.
In this Rome succeeded wonderfully. In brief campaigns she defeated Philip
and the Macedonians, and forced a peace which severed from Philip's power
seven of the States of Greece. And in announcing the peace, Rome made the
following glowing proclamation of liberty and self-government to the Greek
States:–
The Senate and people of Rome, and Titus Quintius, their
general, having overcome Philip and the Macedonians, do set at
liberty from all garrisons, imposts, and taxes, the Corinthians, the
Locrians, the Phocians, the Phthihat-Acheans, the Magnesians, the
Thessalians, and the Perrhúbians; declare them free and ordain
that they shall be governed by their respective laws and usages.
All this was wonderfully pleasing to the Greeks. In the excess of their
gratitude and joy they went fairly wild. But just as soon as they began to take
steps to use the liberty and self-government thus so generously proclaimed, they
found themselves balked by temporizings, reservations, and interpretations on
the part of Rome. Rome entered the plea that since it was to her the Greek
States owed their freedom, they were thereby bound to recognize the
sovereignty of Rome in all their affairs.
The Greeks pointed to the plain words of the published
proclamation. But Rome would not admit the plea; she would not
stand by the obvious meaning of her own published words. By her
subtle explanations and interpretations she reduced the
proclamation to a mere platitude and a sheer pretense from the
beginning. The Grecians appealed to the manifest justice of the
case, and to the former acknowledged character of Rome as the
example of liberty and justice to the world. But all in vain. They
finally appealed to Rome direct: "Put yourself in our place, and
decide how you would like it for yourself."
We hear one of the chief magistrates in the republic of the
Acheans inveighed strongly, in a public assembly, against this
unjust usurpation and ask by what title the Romans were
empowered to assume so haughty an ascendant over them;
whether their republic was not as free and independent as that of
Rome, by what right the latter pretended to force the Acheans to
account for their conduct; whether they would be pleased should
the Acheans, in their former officiousness pretend to inquire into
their affairs; and whether matters ought not to be on the same
footing on both sides.
All these reflections were very reasonable, just, and
unanswerable, and the Romans had no advantage in the question
but force.–Rollin.
No man can deny that so far, this is a faithful sketch of the course of the
republic of Rome; and no man can deny that, even to the closest detail, that
course has so far been repeated, item by item, by this republic of the United
States.
What, then, is the meaning of all this? Shall it be said that this is all nothing?
Think on these things.
And there is more to follow.
ALONZO T. JONES.
WE have seen thru an article last week that with a grand flourish and promise
of the extension of the blessings of republican liberty, the republic of Rome sent
her armies and navies across the sea to fight the battles of peoples who were
struggling for liberty against the oppressions of kingships.
We have seen her shortly and triumphantly deliver these struggling peoples
from the oppressive power of kingships, and publish a proclamation promising to
these peoples, liberty, self-government, and freedom from taxation–in once word
independence.
And we have seen her so evade her published promise as in every sense to
disregard it, and compel from those peoples an acknowledgment of the universal
and perpetual sovereignty of the republic of Rome.
When the republic of Rome had gone thus far, it became essential that she
should decide as to what should be done with these new territories and peoples.
Since she had refused to them the self-government and independence which she
had publicly promised, she was compelled, by the very necessities of the case, to
decide how she herself would govern them. And this forced the question as to
whether she would govern them according to the Roman constitution, or
according to a new order of procedure adapted to the new circumstances;
whether she should govern them with the constitution or without it.
The earlier State law of Rome knew nothing of tributary subjects. The
conquered communities [in the home territory if Italy] were either sold into
slavery, or merged in the Roman commonwealth, or admitted to an alliance which
secured to them at least communal independence and freedom from taxation."–
Mommsen. But since these people "had paid tithe and tribute to their former
masters, it was, in the judgment of the shortsighted, the most judicious, and, if
Rome was desirous of retaining these possessions at all, undoubtedly the most
convenient, course to manage the new territories entirely in accordance with the
rules" to which they had been subject under their former masters. Accordingly the
Romans did not extend to the new possessions the Roman constitution, but
continued there the original systems under Roman governorship. But "it was the
shirt of Nessus which they inherited from the enemy."–Mommsen.
This expression "the shirt of Nessus" is a mythological reference; in the myth
a shirt of Hercules was secretly tinged with the blood of the dying Nessus, which,
when Hercules again put it on, caused his ruin. The thought of the historian is
that when Rome would not extend to her new possessions her own constitution
and the privileges of her own government, but held them as tributary subjects
ruled by foreign laws, in that she took upon herself what corresponds in the myth
to "the shirt of Nessus." And as in the myth that shirt proved the ruin of him who
wore it, so this abandonment of her constitution and the inauguration of this
colonial system, proved the ruin of the republic or Rome.
It is true that "at first the Roman government, in imposing taxes on their
subjects, intended not strictly to enrich themselves, but only to cover the cost of
administration and defense. . . . The fact, however, that they still maintained
moderation in the imposition of burdens was of little consequence as compared
with the conversion of their sovereignty into a profitable privilege at all; the FALL
WAS THE SAME, whether a SINGLE APPEL WAS TAKEN or the TREE WAS
PLUNDERED."–Mommsen. The historian was writing on the all of the Roman
republic, not the fall of her new possessions; and he says that the Roman empire
fell when she refused to extend to her new possessions and peoples her own
constitution, and made those peoples tributary subjects, even tho the taxes
levied were to be spent upon and within the new possessions themselves. And
he declares that when that was done, the fall of the republic of Rome "was the
same, whether a single apple was taken or the tree plundered;" whether the tax
imposed were a single sesterce or whole talents, a single cent or millions of
dollars.
Nor did the abandonment of her constitution by the republic of Rome stop
with her refusal to extend it to the new possessions. Those who in that step
conducted the government affairs thought to keep the constitution, and the
government under it, intact at home, while refusing it to the new peoples abroad.
But that step involved yet other issues, which forced the taking of yet other steps
in abandonment of the constitution, in which those who were in power in the
State "not only usurped in substance the government, but also remodeled the
constitution according to their own views," tho "they changed not the letter but
merely the practice of the existing constitution."–Mommsen.
Such was the course followed by the republic of Rome, and onward to ruin;
and all the people of the United States and of the whole world have seen the
same course repeated so far, step by step and item by item, in the past three
years and up to date, in the course of the republic of the United States.
The course of the republic of Rome did not stop at this point; will the course of
the republic of the United States stop at this point?
As a matter of already accomplished fact, the course of the republic of the
United States has not even paused at this point, but has passed yet further
onward in the identical course of descent of the republic of Rome.
This will be followed further next week.
ALONZO T. JONES.
WE have seen the republic of Rome deny to the peoples of her new and
foreign possessions the privileges of her constitution, and make of them tributary
subjects governed entirely without the constitution. We have seen that it was the
thought of the responsible governmental party, that this should be done while
retaining intact the constitution at home; but that the first step involved other
issues which forced yet other steps in which those in power remodeled the
constitution–"changing not the letter, but merely the practise of the existing
constitution."
And still "punishment followed in the steps of wrong. The new provincial
system NECESSITATED the appointment of governors whose position was
absolutely incompatible . . . with the Roman constitution."–Mommsen.
The principle of the Roman constitution was that of self-government–
government from the people themselves, by themselves; that men were capable
of governing themselves, without any such thing as kingships. The theory upon
which Rome's new foreign possessions were held under Roman sovereignty, and
their peoples held as tributary subjects of Rome, was that those peoples were
not capable of self-government. Therefore when Roman governors were
appointed to those peoples, it was upon the assumption that the people could not
govern themselves, and must be governed. Accordingly, was the Roman
communities in the provinces took the place of the former rulers of the land, so
the governor appeared there in the position of a king."–Mommsen.
Nor was it only in the theory that the Roman governors "appeared there in the
position of a king."
Those peoples had been ruled by kings. Their immediate governors had been
the official representatives of kings. These governors had dwelt in kingly palaces
and maintained the state of kings. And now, since the whole theory of this Roman
governorship was that those peoples were incapable of self-government, in order
for the Roman governor to maintain the theory it become essential that he should
actually hold toward the new subject peoples exactly the attitude, as well as the
position, of a king. And this is why it was that "the new provincial system
necessitated the appointment of governors, whose position was absolutely
incompatible, not only with the welfare of the provinces, but with the Roman
constitution."–Mommsen.
And up to this point followed the course of the republic of Rome has been
followed by the republic of the United States. To the new possessions of the
republic of the United States, governors have been appointed precisely upon the
theory, and under precisely the local conditions, that the republic of Rome
appointed her new governors. And how certainly the position of these new
governors is not only absolutely incompatible, but is also recognized by the
government to be absolutely incompatible with the United States Constitution, is
made plain by the legislation of Congress respecting the government of the
Philippine Islands.
February 27, 1901, there was before the Senate of the republic of the United
States, for consideration and enactment, the following provision for the governing
of the Philippine Islands:–
All military, civil, and judicial powers necessary to govern the
Philippine Islands acquired from Spain by the treaties concluded at
Paris on the tenth day of December, 1898, and at Washington on
the seventh day of November, 1900, shall, until otherwise provided
by Congress, be vested in such person and persons, and shall be
exercised in such manner, as the President of the United States
shall direct for the establishment of civil government and for
maintaining and protecting the inhabitants of such islands in the
free enjoyment of their liberty, property, and toleration: Provided,
That all franchises granted under the authority hereof shall contain
a reservation of the right to alter, amend, or repeal the same.
This provision at once merges in one "person" all governmental powers in the
Philippine Islands. A fundamental principle not only of the United States
Constitution but of the genius of Anglo-Saxon government is that all
governmental powers shall not be vested in one person, but shall be distributed–
the legislative, the judicial, and the executive powers–in departments. This
principle is that absolutism in government–all governmental power lodged in one
man or one set of men–is not good; and that therefore not more than one portion
of governmental power shall ever be exercised by one person or set of persons,
so that each department shall be a check upon the others, in the interests of
liberty and the protection of the people.
Upon this principle the government of the United States consists of three co-
ordinate branches–the legislative, the judicial, and the executive; and Section I of
Article I of the Constitution declares:–
All legislative powers herein granted shall be vested in a
Congress of the United States, which shall consist of a Senate and
House of Representatives.
And Section I of Article III of the Constitution says:–
The judicial power of the United States shall be vested in one
supreme court, and in such inferior courts as the Congress may
from time to time ordain and establish.
It is therefore easily seen that the proposal respecting the government of the
Philippine Islands is "absolutely incompatible with the" United States
Constitution. For to make effective the new order of government for the new
possessions, it was found necessary for the responsible power in the
governments of the United States, while retaining the letter, to change the
practise, of the existing Constitution. For when the Constitution definitely confines
to Congress "all legislative powers" granted, and to a supreme court, and such
inferior courts as may from time to time be provided, all judicial powers; and then
Congress passes over to, and vests in, "such person and persons . . . as the
President of the United States shall direct," all civil and judicial powers necessary
to govern territory of the United States, that is nothing less than for Congress so
far to abdicate its own power, and so far to take away from the courts their
powers. It is also a clear abandonment of the Constitution of the United States,
so far as the Philippine Islands are concerned, and, in principle, so far as any
place is concerned.
Not only is this true in principle, but in the Senate, and by the Senate, it was
seen to be true; and action was taken accordingly. First, an amendment was
proposed to the Philippine section as follows:–
SEC.–That the Constitution of the United States is hereby
extended over, and declared to be in force in, the Philippine
Islands, so far as the same or any provision thereof may be
applicable.
This was rejected by a vote of thirty-nine to twenty-three; not voting, twenty-
six.
Afterward there was offered the following amendment:–
And provided further, That no judgment, order, nor act by any of
said officials so appointed shall conflict with the Constitution and
laws of the United States.
This was rejected by a vote of forty-five to twenty-five; not voting, eighteen.
After this an amendment was offered requiring that–
Every person in whom authority is vested under this grant of
power shall take an oath to support the Constitution of the United
States.
This also was rejected, by a vote of forty-one to twenty-five; not voting,
twenty-two.
When the Constitution itself had been thus definitely excluded and
abandoned in the government of the Philippine Islands, there was offered an
amendment embodying, and extending to the people of the islands, the
substance of the Bill of Rights contained in the first few amendments to the
Constitution, as follows:–
All persons shall be bailable unless for capital offenses where
the proof shall be evident or the presumption great. All fines shall
be moderate, and no cruel or unusual punishment shall be inflicted.
No man shall be deprived of his life, liberty, or property, but by the
judgment of his peers and the law of the land. If the public
exigencies make it necessary for the common preservation, to take
the property of any person, or to demand his particular services, full
compensation shall be made for the same. No ex post facto law, or
law impairing the obligation of contracts, shall be made. No law
shall be made which shall lay any person under restraint, burden,
or ability on account of his religious opinions, provisions, or mode of
worship, in all of which he to be free to maintain his own, and not
burdened to those of another.
This, too, was rejected, by a vote of forty-one to twenty-three; not voting,
twenty-four.
When, thus, it had been voted, over and over again, to bestow unlimited
power upon such persons as the President shall name to govern the Philippine
Islands, then attempt was made to limit the time and the exercise of this power.
Accordingly, an amendment was offered limiting this time to March 4, 1903. But
this was rejected by a vote of forty-three to twenty-six; not voting, nineteen.
When it had been so positively decided that no limited power should be given
to these men,–for unlimited time,–an attempt was made to give the Filipinos a
part in the government of themselves. Accordingly, an amendment was offered,
as follows:–
And secure to them such participation in the affairs of the civil
government so to be established as shall be consistent with the
safety of the government.
But this was rejected by a vote of thirty-nine to twenty-three; not voting,
twenty-six.
When it had thus been explicitly and confirmedly settled that the powers of
such men as the President shall appoint to govern the Philippines, shall be so
limited for all time, and shall be absolute over all people of the islands, attempt
was made to save at least a vestige of constitutional liberty, as follows:–
Mr. Hoar: Mr. President there is one principle of constitutional
liberty not yet slain, and I desire to give it a little chance for its life. I
move the amendment which I send to the desk, to be inserted at
the end of the bill.
The Presiding Officer: The Senator from Massachusetts submits
an amendment, which will be stated.
The Secretary: It is proposed to add as a new section the
following:–
"In the government of the Philippine Islands the person vested
with legislative power shall even exercise the executive or judicial
powers, or either of them; no person vested with executive powers
shall ever exercise the legislative or judicial power, nor either of
them; no person vested with judicial powers shall ever exercise the
legislative or executive powers, or either of them; to the end there
may be a government of laws and not of men.
The Presiding Officer: The question is on the amendment of the
Senator from Massachusetts [Mr. Hoar] to the amendment of the
committee.
Mr. Jones, of Arkansas, and Mr. Pettus called for the yeas and
nays.
The yeas and nays were ordered, and the Secretary proceeded
to call the roll.
And even this last principle of constitutional liberty was slain. It was rejected
by a vote of forty-three to twenty-six; not voting, nineteen.
See the whole account in Congressional Record, dated Wednesday, Feb. 27,
1901.
As already stated, the next day but one–Friday, March 1–the House of
Representatives passed the legislation as it came from the Senate, without any
change whatever. And since it was all done at the demand of the executive, of
course it was all proved by him when it came before him to be signed. And
Monday, May 27, 1901, the Supreme Court of the United States rendered a
decision likewise abandoning the Constitution and recognizing "an unrestrained
possession of power on the part of Congress" with respect to the new
possession.
Thus, and up to date, the republic of the United States has repeated the
course of the republic of Rome, step by step and item by item, in the apostasy
from government of the people to government by few or by one; from
Constitutional government of absolutism; from the principle of a republic to one of
monarchy.
The republic of Rome did not stop at that point. Will the republic of the United
States stop at this point? Can she stop at this point?
Further consideration next week.
ALONZO T. JONES.
August 7, 1901
WE have seen that the republic of Rome governed her foreign possessions
and tributary subjects by a system that was "absolutely incompatible with the
Roman constitution;" and that her constitution was abandoned, and its principles
repudiated, in order that this should be done. We have seen the republic of the
United States do precisely these same things; by direct legislative acts
specifically and repeatedly refusing to allow any provision of her Constitution of
her foreign possessions and tributary subjects.
All see that this has been done by the republic of the United States, since it
has been openly done before the eyes of all; but not all see the real meaning and
the true bearing of it. Most observers think that in doing this the United States
has reverted to the British system of colonial government. But this is not so;
indeed, if it were so, it would be complete apostasy from her own fundamental
principles; for it was in absolute repudiation of the British system of colonial
government that the thirteen American-British colonies founded their existence as
thirteen American independent States.
But this action of the United States is not a reversion to the British system,
nor to the British principles; it is a sheer abandonment of all principles of Anglo-
Saxon government–a clear leap back beyond all Anglo-Saxon, all constitutional
government, beyond all government even of law; even beyond Magna Charta
itself.
Look at it: John Lackland was king of England. He was ruling without law, by
his own will alone. This was what had been done for hundreds of years in
England, since the pope had assumed the over-lordship. The king was subject
only to the pope. The government was Roman with the pope supreme.
In John Lackland, the evils of that system culminated. With the support of the
pope, King John declared that he would be "for the first time king and lord of
England." But "the time was come when no man should be 'kind and lord in
England' with a total disregard of the rights of other men; a time when a king
should rule in England by law, instead of by force, or rule not at all."–Knight.
Magna Charta was drawn up and demanded of the king. "It preserved all the
proper attributes of the kingly power, while it guarded against the king being a
tyrant." In it the king was required to declare the great principle of the supremacy
of the law of the realm, in the words: "No freeman shall be taken, or imprisoned,
or disseized, or outlawed, or banished, or any otherwise destroyed; nor will we
pass upon him, nor send upon him, unless by the legal judgment of his peers, or
by the law of the land. To no man will we sell, to no man will we deny or delay,
right or justice." He was also required to agree that if the king or any of his
officers violated any of the provisions of the Charter, there might be petition for
redress of grievance; and if the grievance were not redressed in forty days, the
barons, "together with the community of the whole kingdom, shall distrain and
distress us all the ways possible; namely, by seizing our castles, lands,
possessions, and in any other way they can, till grievance is redressed according
to their pleasure; saving harmless our own person, and those of our queen and
children; and when it is redressed, they shall obey us as before."
Of course this was all fought by both King John and the pope–the pope
excommunicating the barons, and annulling Magna Charta. But since it is always
the disposition of a king to do anything rather than not be king, John surrendered;
and since the pope's real power always lies in possessing kings, his opposition
fell powerless with the king's surrender. And thus there was first fixed in a written
constitution the Anglo-Saxon principle of government by virtue of written law,
instead of by mere force and caprice of human will; the principle that government
is by consent of the governed, and not by absolutism of a superior set arrogating
to themselves "divine right" to rule wrong.
John's son, King Henry III., in league with the pope, also resisted the
governed and rejected Magna Charta. He declared: "Whensoever, and
wheresoever, and as often as it may be our pleasure, we may declare, interpret,
enlarge, or diminish the aforesaid statutes, and their several parts, by our own
free will, and as to us shall seem expedient for the security of us and our land."
But he, as John, was firmly met by the kingdom's insistence upon the right of the
people and the supremacy of the law.
In answer to King Henry's pronunciamento, the English judge Bracton set the
voice of English law. "The king must not be subject to any man, but to God and
the law; for the law makes him king. Let the king, therefore, give to the law what
the law gives to him–dominion and power; for there is no king where will, and not
law, bears rule. The king can do nothing on earth, being the minister of God, but
what he can do by law. So that if the king were without a bridle–that is, the law–
they ought to put a bridle upon him.
That is the principle of Anglo-Saxon government, of free government–
government by consent of the governed–everywhere. That is the principle of
Anglo-Saxon government, of free government–government by consent of the
governed–against that principle of the apostate republic of Rome perpetuated in
the Papacy, and then adopted by the apostate republic of the United States in
her following the course of the apostate republic of Rome. For compare with the
principle of Anglo-Saxon government, as expressed in Magna Charta and the
voice of English law, and in the Declaration of Independence and the United
States Constitution,–compare with this the principle repeatedly expressed and
postively [sic.] fixed in the legislation of Congress regarding the Philippines, as
already given in these articles–SIGNS of July 17, 24, 31, 1901. There see how
that, when every other principle of constitutional liberty had been repudiated, and
when, to prevent the slaughter of this last principle of constitutional liberty a
senator offered an amendment expressly providing that "it may be a government
of laws and not of men," even this was repudiated.
And this repudiation of the primary principle of Anglo-Saxon government–the
principle of Magna Charta–was seen, and was deliberately sanctioned, by the
United States Supreme Court in its latest decision–its decision on this great
subject. Read the words of that decision:–
If those possession are inhabited by alien races, differing from
us in religion, customs, laws, methods of taxation, and modes of
thought, the administration of government and justice according to
Anglo-Saxon principles MAY for a time BE IMPOSSIBLE; and the
question at once arises whether large concessions ought not to be
made for a time, that, ultimately, our own theories may be carried
out and the blessings of free government under the Constitution be
extended to them. We decline to hold that there is anything in the
Constitution to forbid such action.
Therefore, as to principle of government, where stand the government of the
United States to-day?–No longer upon the true ground of Anglo-Saxon principle;
but upon the despotic ground of Roman principle only. Not upon the free principle
of Magna Charta and English law, the Declaration of Independence, and the
Constitution; but upon the despotic principle of Rome as perpetuated in the
Papacy and maintained by the popes. For back of Magna Charta there is nothing
but Rome as perpetuated in the Papacy.
And by this wild plunge of the United States from her own native, and from all
Anglo-Saxon, principles of government, down the declivity, and sheer into the
gulf to the principles of Rome as perpetuated in the Papacy and maintained by
the popes, Leo XIII. sees opened the way to the fulfilment of his declared
purpose that "what the church has done for other nations, she will not do for the
United States." There is no doubt that she will, for what is to hinder? Cuba, Porto
Rico, and the Philippines are the peculiar ground of the new activities of the
United States upon her newly chosen principles of Rome. Cuba, Porto Rico, and
the Philippines are solidly Catholic, and subject to the Papacy in the Latest
appointed apostolic delegate, Archbishop Chapelle. Here, the Papacy in full
possession, and the United States inextricably in her net, and indeed do for this
nation now what she has done for other nations. The public of Rome which had
apostatized into imperial despotism, she inveigled and sunk in the abyss of
eternal ruin. the barbarians who were the instruments of the divine wrath in
sweeping away the corrupted Roman Empire, these also she corrupted, and
filled Europe with her own anarchy throughout her own Dark Ages. And now the
republic of the United States, which has so fast and so far followed the course of
the republic of Rome to imperial despotism, will also sink in the abyss of eternal
ruin; and through this, and at the same time, she will fall with her anarchy to the
same annihilation, all the other nations.
And this dire work of Rome is made the more speedily certain from the fact
that professed Protestantism in the United States and the whole world has
completely espoused papal principles, stands so fully upon papal ground, and is
so entirely friendly and at one with the Papacy. It has abandoned the principle of
the Gospel, and puts its dependence only upon law. It has repudiated the
principle of freedom of choice in the divine government–government by consent
of the
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governed–and has espoused only the principle of force. As a consequence "all
that dwell upon the earth" must be compelled to worship the beast and his image,
whose names are not written in the Book of Life of the Lamb slain from the
foundation of the world. Revelation 13.
And thus "Babylon the great"–mother and daughters–"is fallen, is fallen, and
is become the habitation of devils, and the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of
every unclean and hateful bird;" and the "voice from heaven" sounds, "Come out
of her, My people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of
her plagues." She has "made all nations drunk with the wine of the wrath of her
fornication;" and "by her sorceries were all nations corrupted."
ALONZO T. JONES.
WE have seen that the late decision of the Supreme Court of the United
States on the subject of the new possessions, recognized "an unrestrained
possession of power on the part of Congress." We have seen that it even
connects and declares that "the administration of government and justice
according to Anglo-Saxon principles, may for a time be impossible."
We have seen that the court thus abandons not only the American, but even
the Anglo-Saxon, principle of government; and places the United States upon the
Roman, absolute, and monarchical principle solely.
And yet this is not a new position on the part of that court; nor is this principle
new in decisions of the court. Nearly eleven years before this decision was
rendered, the same court rendered a decision in which it took the same position
and declared substantially the same principles.
May 19, 1890, the Supreme Court of the United States rendered a decision in
which "the unrestrained possession of power on the part of Congress"–the
absolute power of Congress–"was recognized, approved, and established. It
declared the "full and perfect right" of Congress to repeal a charter, dissolve a
corporation, and confiscate the property of such corporation, of its own free will
and of its own nation, "independent" of any limitation of law set even by
Congress itself, or of any violation of law or charter by the corporation. The exact
words of the court are as follows:–
Congress, for good and sufficient reasons of its own,
independent of that limitation [a previous act of Congress] and of
any violation of it [by the corporation], had a full and perfect right to
repeal its [the corporation's] charter and abrogate its corporate
existence, which of course depended upon its charter.
Than that, how could any power be more completely absolute? And that at
the time the decision was recognized as establishing the power of Congress as
absolute, is proved by the words of the Chief Justice in a dissenting opinion, as
follows:–
In my opinion, Congress is restrained, not merely by the
limitation expressed in the Constitution, but also by the absence of
any grant of power, expressed or implied, in that instrument. And no
such power as that involved in the act of Congress under
consideration is conferred by the Constitution, nor in any clause
pointed out as its legitimate source. I regard it of vital consequence
that absolute power shall never be awarded as belonging, under
our form of government, to any one of its departments.
Thus in 1890, by Supreme Court decision, was the independent and absolute
power of Congress declared. Is it at all strange that, in 1901, by the same court,
that independent and absolute power should have been confirmed and
established?
In 1890 the right of Congress under this independent and absolute power to
confiscate the property of a corporation, even without any violation of its charter
by the corporation, was settled by the court's making Congress "the sovereign
authority" and "parens patrie"–parent of the country, or father of the people–
corresponding to "the king" in Britain and other European countries, and to the
emperor in Rome, upon the principles "found embedded in the civil law of Rome,
in the laws of the European nations, and especially in the laws of that nation from
which our institutions are derived"–Britain.
This at one stroke set aside the people as sovereign, and set up Congress as
sovereign, as king, and as emperor, in place of the people. It swept away
government of the people, and made government to be of a "royal" and absolute
authority, as parens patrie, only lodged in "the legislature" instead of a sole royal
person. The words of the court, stating this monarchical principle as the principle
of the government of the United States, are as follows:–
It may be contended that, in this country, there is no royal
person to act as parens patrie, and to give direction for the
application of charities which can not be administered by the court.
It is true we have no such chief magistrate. But here the legislative
is the parens patrie, and unless restrained by Constitutional
limitations, the legislature possesses all the powers in this regard
which the sovereign possesses in England.
In reply to this, the words of the Chief Justice, in his dissenting opinion,
concurred in by Justices Field and Lamar, are as follows:–
Nor is there here any counterpart in Congressional power to the
exercise royal prerogative in the disposition of a charity. If this
property was accumulated for purposes declared illegal, that does
not justify its arbitrary disposition by judicial legislation. In my
judgment, its diversion under this act of Congress is in
contravention of specific limitations in the Constitution:
unauthorized, expressly or by implication, by any of its provisions;
and in disregard of the fundamental principle that the legislative
power of the United States as exercised by the agents of the
people of the republic is delegated and not inherent.
In reviewing that Supreme Court decision of May 19, 1890, the writer of this
present article wrote of it, May 7, 1891, the following words:–
If this doctrine shall be maintained, so that it becomes a principle of American
law, and shall become established as a principle of Government here, then the
revolution backwards is complete; government of the people is gone; and that of
a sovereign parent of the people is put in its place. Then the doctrine of the
Declaration of Independence and of the Constitution of the United States is
subverted and the doctrine of sovereignty, absolutism, and paternalism, is
established in its stead. Then also Bancroft's history in the place above cited, [Is
it asked, Who is the sovereign of the United States?–The words "sovereign" and
"subjects" are unknown to the Constitution] will need to be revised so that it shall
read as follows: "Is it asked, Who is the sovereign of the United States? The
Legislature is the sovereign and the people are subjects."
And now experience has demonstrated that the doctrine and principle of that
Supreme Court decision of May 19, 1890, has been maintained by both the court
and the government, and has become in practise the established principle of the
government; the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution have been
deliberately repudiated; the Supreme Court, in 1901, has reiterated the principles
of its monarchical decision of 1890; and, finally, the legislature of this republic of
the United States has, in the year 1901, repeated, for the new possessions and
tributary subjects, the action of the Legislature of the republic of Rome in B. C.
46-44 and 31 B. C.- 23 A. D., for the whole empire-republic–it has lodged in one
man "all military, civil, and judicial powers."
Thus the sovereign power which in May, 1890, the Supreme Court transferred
from the people to "the legislature," was in February and March, 1901,
transferred by that "legislature-sovereign" from itself to one man; for only a
limited part of the jurisdiction of the United States, it is true, just now; but the
principle and procedure once established, how long before it will be extended to
more, and finally to all of this empire-republic? And thus a one-man power in the
republic of the United States looms up apace, in exact repetition of the court of
the republic of Rome; and that one-man power unrestrained, absolute; and this
all made strictly legal by official acts and decisions of the legislative and judicial
branches of the government itself.
Thus steadily as the march of time itself, and as swiftly as the rush of these
hurrying times, is the republic of the United States marching over the course of
the republic of Rome, even to the last item.
And the late decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, as well as
the governmental course which it confirmed, is but the confirmation and logical
continuation of the identical scheme of monarchical absolutism announced May
19, 1901, by that same court. There is nothing new in it.
These studies will be concluded next week, in the notice of another and
kindred decision of the Supreme Court of the United States.
A. T. JONES.
THERE is hardly any portion of the Bible story that receives less attention
than that relating to the period of the restoration of Israel to their own land, from
the captivity to Babylon. And yet there is hardly any portion of the Bible story that
is more full of the very life and movement of God in human affairs; hardly any
portion more full of valuable lessons. Indeed, there is no portion of the Bible story
so full as is this of striking illustrations of how, how promptly and how
triumphantly, God can interpose with kings and powers in behalf of His cause
and His people in the earth.
For this reason the SIGNS OF THE TIMES will publish, beginning with this
article, a series of studies of that interesting and important part of the Bible story.
The books of the Bible especially embraced in this are, Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah,
Esther, Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi. The period of the world covered in the
narrative is about from B. C. 536 to the crucifixion.
God had brought Israel out of Egypt, and, separated from all the nations, had
placed them in the land of Canaan, "the glory of all lands," to be the light of the
world. The chief reason why He placed them in the land of Canaan–Palestine–is
that then, and for ages afterward, that little country was the pivot of the world.
Between Egypt and the eastern and northern nations there was then, and for
ages afterward, constant intercourse, practically all of which necessarily passed
through Palestine. Yet later, when the weight of empire passed to the west, still
Palestine was the center around which swirled the grand sweep of the world's
affairs.
At that center of the world's great currents God set His people to be His light
to all the nations, whose people by thus constantly passing and repassing
through that land, should behold that blessed people and glorious land, and be
led to say, "Surely this great nation is a wise and understanding people" (Deut.
4:6); and thus be led to inquire for the source of this wisdom and understanding,
this prosperity and glory, and so find the true God, and turn form idolatry to the
worship of Him. God intended that by His splendid presence abiding with them,
His people should thus influence all the nations for good; and thus to carry on His
fulfilment of His promise to Abraham, "In thee shall all nations of be blessed."
Therefore, of Israel God had said, "Lo, the people shall dwell alone, and shall
not be reckoned among the nations." Num. 23:9. But the people would not have it
so. They exclaimed and insisted, "Make us a king," "that we may be like all the
nations." 1 Sam. 8:4-20. They had their way, they rejected God, and not only
became "like all the nations," but did "worse than the heathen" round them. And
then, as they became like the nations that were in that land before them, likewise
as with those nations the land could no longer endure them, and so must spew
them out, as it had spewed out the nations before them. They were carried
captive to Babylon, and the land was left desolate that it might have rest from the
sickening iniquities with which it had been afflicted.
The special sins that brought the captivity of Israel and the desolation of the
land were:–
1. Oppression and injustice. "O house of David, thus saith the Lord, Execute
judgment in the morning, and deliver him that is spoiled out of the hand of the
oppressor, lest My fury go out like fire, and burn that none can quench it,
because of the evil of your doings." Jer. 21:12. "Thus saith the Lord, Execute ye
judgment and righteousness, and delvier the spoiled out of the hand of the
oppressor; and do no wrong, do no violence to the stranger, the fatherless, nor
the widow, neither shed innocent blood in this place," "then will I cause you to
dwell in this place." Jer. 22:3; 7:5-7.
2. Oppressing and defrauding the laborer in his wages, while they in their
wealth reveled in luxury. "Woe unto him that buildeth his house by
unrighteousness, and his chambers by wrong; that useth his neighbor's service
without wages, and giveth him not for his work; that saith, I will build me a wide
house and large chamgers, and cutteth him out windows; and it is ceiled with
cedar, and painted with vermillion." Jer. 22:13, 14.
3. Neglect of the poor. "Shalt thou reign, because thou closest thyself in
cedar? did not thy father eat and drink, and do judgment and justice, and then it
was well with him? He judged the cause of the poor and needy; then it was well
with him: was not this to know Me? saith the Lord. But thine eyes and thine heart
are not but for thy covetousness." Jer. 22:15-17.
4. Disregard of the Sabbath. Jer. 17:21-27.
5. The worship of the sun, with all the abominations that go with it. Eze.
8:3-18.
6. Rejection of the word and message of the Lord in reproof, counsel, and
warning. Jer. 26:1-23; 36:22, 23; 37:1-21; 38:1-25.
But the very crowning abomination of all was:–
7. Their making the temple of God, and the forms of worship of the Lord, their
confidence of salvation, while practising all those other iniquities and
abominations their holding God to a strict accountability for His promises, while
they ran perfect riot against every princept upon which those promises could
possibly rest; their making capital of God's temple, and ordinances, and services
designed to put away sin, as security in their corruptible abandon in the
indulgence of sin: "Thus saith the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, Amend your
ways and your doings, and I will cause you to dwell in this place. Trust ye not to
lying words, saying, The temple of the Lord. The temple of the Lord. The temple
of the Lord, are these." [Luther's translation: "Here is the Lord's temple. Here is
the Lord's temple. Here is the Lord's temple."] Jer. 7:3, 4. "Hear this, I pray you,
ye heads of the house of Jacob, and princes of the house of Israel, that abhor
judgment, and pervert all equity. They build up Zion with blood, and Jerusalem
with iniquity. The heads thereof judge for reward, and the priests thereof teach for
hire, and the prophets thereof divine for money: yet will they lean upon the Lord,
and
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say, Is not the Lord among us? none evil can come upon us." Micah 3:9-12.
"Behold, ye trust in lying words, that cannot profit. Will ye steal, murder, and
commit adultery, and swear falsely, and burn incense unto Baal, and walk after
other gods whom ye know not; and come and stand before me in this house,
which is called by My name, and say, We are delivered to do all these
abominations? ["There is no danger to us, tho, or as long as, we do such
abominations."–Luther's Translation.] Is this house, which is called by My name,
become a den of robbers [den of murderers, a resort of cut throats–German] in
your eyes? Behold, even I have seen it, saith the Lord." Jer. 7:8-11.
"Therefore shall Zion for your sake be plowed as a field, and Jerusalem shall
become heaps, and the mountain of the house [of the Lord] as the high places of
the forest." Micah 3:12. "G go ye now unto my place which [was] in Shiloh, where
I set my name at the first, and see what I did to it for the wickedness of my
people Israel. And now, because ye have done all these works, saith the Lord,
and I spake unto you, rising up early and speaking, but ye heard not; and I called
you, but ye answered not; therefore will I do unto this house, which is called by
My name, wherein ye trust, and unto the place which I gave to you and to your
fathers, as I have done to Shiloh. And I will cast you out of My sight, as I have
cast out all your brethren, even the whole seed of Ephraim. Therefore pray not
thou for this people, neither lift up cry nor prayer for them, neither make
intercession to Me: for I will not hear thee." Jer. 7:12-16.
Because of that deplorable, even desperate, condition of things in Jerusalem,
the Lord of Jerusalem was compelled to liken her to Sodom, declaring that she
and Sodom were sisters; and further: "As I live, saith the Lord God, Sodom thy
sister hath not done, she nor her daughters, as thou hast done, thou and thy
daughters. Behold, this was the iniquity of thy sister Sodom, pride, fulness of
bread, and abundance of idleness was in her and in her daughters, neither did
she strengthen the hand of the poor and needy. And they were haughty, and
committed abomination before me: therefore I took them away as I saw good."
Eze. 16:48-50. And consequently Ezekiel saw in a vision a man with a writer's ink
horn by his side, passing throughout Jerusalem, setting a mark upon the
foreheads of the men who were sighing and crying for all the abominations that
were done therein. Following him were six other men, each with a slaughter-
weapon in his hand, to "slay utterly" all to whom they should come, except that
they were to "come near any man upon whom is the mark." Eze. 9:1-7.
Now this whole narrative has its parallel in the last days, even in our own
time. General wickedness prevails (Matt. 24:12; 2 Tim. 3:1-3), oppression,
injustice, defrauding the laborer in his wages to increase the overloaded coffers
of the rich, who revel in luxury–all this is indulged (James 5:1-8); in the midst of
this abundance to boundless millions there is such neglect of the poor that God is
obliged to turn His attention especially to them (Luke 14:21-23); the Sabbath is
disregarded (Isa. 56:1, 2; 58:13, 14); the sun–in the Sunday–is honored (Dan.
7:25; Rev. 14:9-12); the Word of God in counsel and warning, concerning all the
evil and impending destruction, is rejected (2 Peter 3:3-7, 10-14; Matt. 24:37-39);
and, also there prevails the same chief abomination of all–the indulgence of a
whole catalog of iniquities under the form and profession of godliness (2 Tim.
3:1-5);–so that, looking again upon it all, God is compelled to liken it also to
Sodom, because the last days of the world are as the last days of Sodom.
"Likewise also as it was in the days of Lot . . . even thus shall it be in the day
when the Son of man is revealed." "The same day that Lot went out of Sodom it
rained fire and brimstone from heaven, and destroyed them all. Even thus shall it
be in the day when the Son of Man is revealed." Luke 17:28, 29, 30.
And while this destruction and desolation is impending, the heavenly
messenger (Rev. 7:2, 3) passes through the world, setting the royal seal–the
heavenly mark–upon the servants of God, who are sighing and crying for all the
abominations that are done in the land; and after him pass the messengers of
judgment, slaying utterly all upon whom is not found the mark. Rev. 14:9, 10;
15:1; 16:1-21.
Thus certainly and thus fully does the period which culminated in the
destruction of Jerusalem and the desolation of that land, contain lessons of deep
meaning to the people of God of all times, and especially of the last days.
[The next article of the series is entitled, "The Release from Captivity."]
ISRAEL had frustrated God's purpose to enlighten all the nations by them in
the land where He had planted them; yet He would fulfil His purpose and His
promise to Abraham, and enlighten all the nations through them in the lands
where He had scattered them.
By unbelief and iniquity Israel, when planted in their own land, had lost the
power to arrest and command the attention of all the nations, that the nations
might consider God and His wonderful works and ways with the children of man,
for now, as they are scattered among the nations, God would use them to
enlighten those who had acquired the power to arrest and command the attention
of all the nations, and thus through them would still cuase all nations to consider
the wonderful works and ways of God with the children of men.
Through Daniel and his three brethren in captivity, God enlightened king
Nebuchadnezzar who was ruler over all the nations, and by king
Nebuchadnezzar twice distinctly proclaimed to all people, nations, and languages
His kindness, His justice, His power, His glory, and His kingdom and dominion.
Dan. 3:29; 4:1-3, 34-37.
Nebuchadnezzar and his empire, and even the last vestige of his kingdom,
passed away. Another kingdom and empire took the dominion of the world.
"Darius the Median took the kingdom." Dan. 5:31. As the result of a conspiracy,
Daniel was cast to the hungry lions in their den. But God shut the lions' mouths
that they did him no hurt; because innocency was found in him, and because he
believed in his God. this so fixed upon God as the only true and living God, the
heart of king Darius the Mede, who was now king of all the nations, that he also
"wrote unto all people, nations, and languages, that dwell in all the earth,"
proclaiming that "the God of Daniel" "is the living God, and steadfast forever, and
His kingdom that which shall not be destroyed, and His dominion shall be even
unto the end. He delivereth and rescueth, and He worketh signs and wonders in
heaven and in earth." Dan. 6:25-27.
"In the first year of Darius the son of Ahasuerus, of the seed of the Medes,
which was made king over the realm of the Chaldeans; in the first year of his
reign I Daniel understood by books the number of the years, whereof the word of
the Lord came to Jeremiah the prophet, that he would accomplish seventy years
in the desolations of Jerusalem." Dan. 9:1, 2. One thing that had caused Daniel
to be most deeply interested in this subject was the word of Palmoni, the
wonderful numberer in the vision of Daniel 8, given to him in the third year of
Belshazzar, saying, "Unto two thousand and three hundred days; then shall the
sanctuary be cleansed." Dan. 8:14.
This two thousand and three hundred days to the cleansing of the sanctuary
caused Daniel great anxiety. He could not understand it. The temple at
Jerusalem was a ruin, and had so lain for more than fifty years. Was it possible
that it should so lie for yet two thousand and three hundred years, before the
ruins should be cleared away and the temple restored? To this the book of
Jeremiah answered, No: "After seventy years be accomplished at Babylon I will
visit you, and perform My good word toward you, in causing you to return to this
place." Jer. 29:10. Could it be possible, then, that they should return, and yet the
temple be not restored for so long? To this the book of Isaiah answered, No for
therein God had declared to Jerusalem, "Thou shal be built; and to the temple,
Thy foundation shall be laid?" and that this should be in the time of Cyrus, and
Cyrus was now living and sixty years old.
What, then, could mean that word, "Unto two thousand and three hundred
days, then shall the sanctuary be cleansed? Was there any connection between
that and the return from captivity and the rebuilding of the city and temple? This
problem was beyond solution by human thought. Therefore–
"I set my face unto the Lord God, to seek by prayer and supplications, with
fasting; and sackcloth, and ashes . . . [and] whiles I was speaking in prayer, even
the man Gabriel, whom I had seen in the vision at the beginning [Dan. 8:16],
being caused to fly swiftly, touched me about the time of the evening oblation."
Dan. 9:3, 21.
"And he informed me, and talked with me, and said, O Daniel, I am now come
forth to give thee skill and understanding. At the beginning of thy supplications
the commandment came forth, and I am come to show thee; for thou art greatly
beloved: therefore understand the matter, and consider the vision. Seventy
weeks are determined upon thy people and upon thy holy city, to finish the
transgression, and to make an end of sins, and to make reconciliation for iniquity,
and to bring in everlasting righteousness, and to seal up the vision and prophecy,
and to anoint the most Holy.
"Know therefore and understand, that from the going forth of the
commandment to restore and to build Jerusalem unto the Messiah the Prince
shall be seven weeks, and threescore and two weeks: the
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street shall be built again, and the wall, even in troublous times. And after
threescore and two weeks shall Messiah be cut off, but not for Himself: and the
people of the prince that shall come shall destroy the city and the sanctuary; and
the end thereof shall be with a flood, and unto the end of the war desolations are
determined. And He shall confirm the covenant with many for one week: and in
the midst of the week He shall cause the sacrifice and the oblation to cease, and
for the overspreading of abominations He shall make it desolate, even until the
consummation, and that determined shall be poured upon the desolate." Dan.
9:22-27.
Within two years, in 536, died Darius the Mede, and was immediately
succeeded by Cyrus the Persian, of the same united and universal kingdom of
the Medes and Persians. Cyrus had been the commander of the Medo-Persian
armies in the destruction of the empire and kingdom of Babylon. At that time he
was an idolater. Yet long before that, even one hundred and fourteen years
before he was born, the God of Israel had called him by name; and had recorded
a message addressed to him personally. And this is the message: "Thus saith the
Lord to His anointed, to Cyrus, whose right hand I have holden, to subdue
nations before him; and I will loose the loins of kings, to open before him the two
leaved gates; and the gates shall not be shut; I will go before thee, and make the
crooked places straight: I will break in pieces the gates of brass, and cut in
sunder the bars of iron: and I will give thee the treasures of darkness, and hidden
riches of secret places, that thou mayest know that I, the Lord, which call thee by
thy name, am the God of Israel. For Jacob My servant's sake, and Israel Mine
elect, I have even called thee by thy name: I have surnamed thee, tho thou hast
not known me." Isa. 45:1-4.
Thus the Lord revealed Himself to Cyrus as the God of Israel. But since Cyrus
was an idolater, God must further reveal Himself to him as the only true and living
God. This He did in the further word, "I am the Lord, and there is none else, there
is no God beside Me: I girded thee, though thou hast not known Me: that they
may know from the rising of the sun, and from the west, that there is none beside
Me. I am the Lord, and there is none else." Verses 5, 6.
God thus revealed Himself to Cyrus as the God of Israel, and as the only true
God; it remained to reveal to Cyrus that He, the God of Israel, and the only true
God, was distinct from and above the gods that Cyrus had worshiped. Therefore
the Lord revealed Himself yet further, "I form the light, and create darkness. I
make peace, and create evil." Verse 7. The point in this is–
1. The Persians, in their religious system, recognized two original principles–
good and evil. Their conception of good and evil, however, did not rise to the
height of moral and spiritual good and evil, or righteousness and sin, as is
revealed by the Lord, rather as men naturally conceive of good and evil as
manifested in prosperity and adversity, tranquillity and disturbance. Therefore
when the Lord would show to Cyrus that He is over all, He said, "I make peace,
and create evil." That is, "I make tranquillity and create disturbance; I give
prosperity and send adversity."
2. The Persians held that their principle of good was represented in light; and
the principle of evil in darkness. Therefore when the Lord would reveal to Cyrus
the Persian that He is alone all, He said, "I form the light, and create darkness."
The night that the city of Babylon was captured and Belshazzar slain, before
the capture king Belshazzar had made Daniel the first man of the empire after
the two kings, Belshazzar and his father. Then when the city was taken,
Belshazzar slain, and his father a captive, this left Daniel the first man of the
kingdom, Darius and Cyrus, the new rulers, found Daniel in his royal robe of
scarlet with his insignia of office, the "chain of gold about his neck." They found
him so intelligent in all the affairs of the vanished kingdom that they immediately
took him into their council, and gave to him the chief place in their organization of
the kingdom.
And when Cyrus thus met Daniel, Daniel showed to him the word of the Lord,
written to him by Isaiah one hundred and seventy-four years before. The
message was so direct and so personal, and the revelation so plain and
indisputable, that Cyrus accepted and acknowledged God as "the Lord God of
heaven," and declared, "He is the God."
There was also read to Cyrus the further word of the Lord by Isaiah to him,
"That saith of Cyrus, He is My shepherd, and shall perform all My pleasure. . . . I
have raised him in righteousness, and I will direct all his ways; he shall build My
city, and he shall let go My captives, not for price nor reward, saith the Lord of
hosts." Isa. 44:28; 45:13. This message, too, Cyrus accepted from the Lord; and
in 536, when Cyrus came to the throne of the empire, that very year expired the
seventy years' captivity, and in that very year Cyrus issued the decree and
proclamation throughout the whole empire, releasing from captivity all the people
of Israel, and calling them to return to Jerusalem and rebuild the city, and
especially the house of the Lord.
And here is a copy of that decree:–
"Thus saith Cyrus king of Persia, The Lord God of heaven hath given me all
the kingdoms of the earth; and He hath charged me to build Him an house at
Jerusalem, which is in Judah. Who is there among you of all his people? his God
be with him, and let him go up to Jerusalem, which is in Judah, and build the
house of the Lord God of Israel, He is the God, which is in Jerusalem. And
whosoever remaineth in any place where he sojourneth, let the men of his place
help him with silver, and with gold, and with goods, and with beasts, beside the
freewill offering for the house of God that is in Jerusalem."
"Let the house be builded, the place where they offered sacrifices, and let the
foundations thereof be strongly laid; the height thereof threescore cubits, and the
breadth thereof threescore cubits; with three rows of great stones, and a row of
new timber: and let the expenses be given out of the king's house: and also let
the golden and silver vessels of the house of God, which Nebuchadnezzar took
forth out of the temple which is at Jerusalem, and brought unto Babylon, be
restored, and brought again unto the temple which is at Jerusalem, every one to
his place, and place them in the house of God." Ezra 1:2-4; 6:3-5.
That decree was published by "proclamation throughout all his kingdom," and
was put "also in writings;" and was deposited among the archives of the kingdom
in the palace at Ectutana, the Median capital of the empire. "Then rose up the
chief of the fathers of Judah and Benjamin, and the priests, and the Levites, with
all them whose spirit God had raised, to go up to build the house of the Lord
which is in Jerusalem. And all they that were about them strengthened their
hands with vessels of silver, with gold, with goods, and with beasts, and with
precious things, beside all that was willingly offered."
"Also Cyrus the king brought forth the vessels of the house of the Lord, which
Nebuchadnezzar had brought forth out of Jerusalem, and had put them in the
house of his gods; even those did Cyrus king of Persia bring forth by the hand of
Mithredath the treasurer, and numbered them unto Sheshbazzar, the prince of
Judah. . . . All the vessels of gold and of silver were five thousand and four
hundred. All these did Sheshbazzar bring up with them of the captivity that were
brought up from Babylon unto Jerusalem." Ezra 1:7-11.
And of the people who returned to Jerusalem:–
"The whole congregation together was forty and two thousand three hundred
and threescore, beside their servants and their maids, of whom there were seven
thousand three hundred thirty and seven: and there were among them two
hundred singing men and singing women. . . . And some of the chief of the
fathers, when they came to the house of the Lord which is at Jerusalem, offered
freely for the house of God to set it up in his place: they gave after their ability
unto the treasure of the work threescore and one thousand drams of gold, and
five thousand pound of silver, and one hundred priests' garments. So the priests,
and the Levites, and some of the people, and the singers, and the porters, and
the Nethinims, dwelt in their cities, and all Israel in their cities." Ezra 2:64-70.
The restoration of Israel had begun.
April 2, 1902
AT the death of Cyrus king of Persia, Cambyses his son, the Ahasuerus of
Ezra 4:6, immediately succeeded to the throne of the empire. The Samaritans
who had so persistently carried on their work of obstruction by hired counselors
and otherwise "all the days of Cyrus," continued it all the days of Cambyses–
about seven years.
At the very beginning of his reign, in addition to the work of their hired
counsellors, the Samaritans took the bold step of presenting to Cambyses, the
son of Cyrus, a formal and written accusation against the Jews: "In the reign of
Ahasuerus, in the beginning of his reign, wrote they unto him an accusation
against the inhabitants of Judah and Jerusalem." Ezra 4:6.
There is no known record that any notice at all was taken of their accusation.
Even if any notice was taken of it, it is certain that their efforts were still in vain.
The victory gained over them in the three weeks' contest at the Persian court in
the first month of the third year of Cyrus, still held all the days of his son
Cambyses. This shows that there was real meaning in Gabriel's words that at the
end of the three weeks' contest at the court of Persia he held the victory with not
only the king, singular, but plural,–with the kings of Persia. From this it is plain
that Cambyses, the heir apparent to the throne, was in that council through that
three weeks' contest, and therefore when the contest was ended and the victory
was kept, it was victory not only as respected Cyrus and the time being, but also
respecting Cambyses and the years to come. The victory was kept with the kings
of Persia.
There was a second son of Cyrus, named Smerdis; but Cambyses caused
him to be secretly murdered. Indeed, this was accomplished with so much
secrecy that the great body of the people believed that he was still alive. This
gave opportunity for conspiracy and the rise of a usurper, whose real name was
Gomates, but who claimed before the people to be Smerdia, the son of Cyrus.
This occurred at the capital of Persia while Cambyses was absent on his
expedition in the conquest of Egypt. The original account runs thus:–
Cambyses the son of Cyrus was king. . . . This Cambyses had a
brother, named Smerdis (Bardiga); they had the same mother and
the same father. Afterward, this Cambyses killed Smerids. When
Cambyses killed Smerdis, the people did not know that Smerdis
was killed. Then Cambyses went to Egypt. The people became
bad; and many falsehoods grew up in the provinces, as well as in
Persia, as in Media, as in the other lands. And then a man, a
Magian, named Gomates, from Pasargade, near the mount named
Arakadris, there he arose. On the 14th day of the month Vlyakhna,
thus arose: To the people he told lies, and said, "I am Smerids, the
son of Cyrus, the brother of Cambyses." Then all the people
revolted from Cambyses, went over to him, and the Persians, and
the Medes, and the other nations. He seized the kingdom. On the
ninth day of the month Garmapada he took the royalty from
Cambyses. . . . Gomates the Magian deprived Cambyses as well of
the Persians, as of the Medians, as of the other nations; he did
according to his own will, and seized the royalty over them.–Darius,
in "Records of the Past," Old Series, vol. VII., pp. 89, 90.
Cambyses, returning with his army from Egypt, went as far as Syria, and was
there met by one of the many heralds whom Gomates had sent into all the
empire publishing the "proclamation to the troops that henceforth they were to
obey Smerdis, the son of Cyrus, and not Cambyses." Cambyses, believing now
that his secret murderers of Smerdis had really played him false; and that thus
Smerdis was really alive and reigning in the capital, immediately killed himself
(Darius): "having reigned, in all, seven years and five months, and left no issue
behind him, male or female."–Herodotus. This was the end of July, 522 B.C.
As before stated, Gomates, this false Smerdis, was a Magian. His usurpation
was a part of the conspiracy of the Magian priests to make predominate the
Median element in the mixed national religion of Media and Persia. And though
Gomates the Magian reigned as Smerdis the Persians, yet he was but the tool of
the Magians to swing back the predominant element in the imperial religion from
the Persian to the original Median. The difference was more sectarian and merely
priestly, than fundamental and popular; but it furnished an opportunity that was
instantly seized by the Samaritans and their hired counselors to make effective
their determination to stop the work on the temple at Jerusalem.
Accordingly, no sooner was it known in Palestine that the new king reigned,
than the Samaritans wrote to him a new and extended accusation against the
Jews. For this Gomates, the false Smerdis, was the Artaxerxes of Ezra 4:7-23.
"In the days of Artaxerxes wrote Bishlam, Mithredath, Tabeel, and the rest of
their companions, unto Artaxerxes king of Persia; and the writing of the letter was
written in the Syrian tongue, and interpreted in the Syrian tongue. Rehum the
chancellor and Shimshai the scribe wrote a letter against Jerusalem to
Artaxerxes the king in this sort:–
"Then wrote Rehum the chancellor, and Shimshai the scribe, and the rest of
their companions; the Dinaites, the Apharsathchites, the Tarpelites, the
Apharsites, the Archevites, the Babylonians, the Susanchites, the Dehavites, and
the Elamites, and the rest of the nations whom the great and noble Asnapper
brought over, and set in the cities of Samaria, and the rest that are on this side
the river, and at such a time. . . . Thy servants the men on this side the river, and
at such a time. Be it known unto the king, that the Jews which came up from thee
to us are come unto Jerusalem, building the rebellious and the bad city, and have
set up the walls thereof, and joined the foundations. Be it known now unto the
king, that, if this city be builded, and the walls set up again, then will they not pay
toll, tribute, and custom, and so thou shalt endamage the revenue of the kings.
Now because we have maintenance from the king's palace, and it was not meet
for us to see the king's dishonor, therefore have we sent and certified the king;
that search may be made in the book of the records of thy fathers: so shalt thou
find in the book of the records, and know that this city is a rebellious city, and
hurtful unto kings and provinces, and that they have moved sedition within the
same of old time; for which cause was this city destroyed. We certify the king
that, if this city be builded again, and the walls thereof set up, by this means thou
shalt have no portion on this side the river."
That letter is a most subtle and deceptive mixture of truth and falsehood. It
was true that the city of Jerusalem had in old time been rebellious and seditious
to the eastern kings, and that because of that, the city was destroyed. It was true
that the imperial records at Babylon would confirm all this. But it was not in any
sense true that such was the intention in now rebuilding the city, or that such
would be the result of its rebuilding. This attributed intention of the Jews, and this
surmised result of the rebuilding of the city, was nothing else than the revealing
of their own secret purpose, when at the very first they offered to join the Jews
and help in the building of that very city; and which they would have carried out to
the full as soon as the city should have been finished, as certainly as they had
been allowed to join in the building of the city.
Such a subtle mixture of lies and truth would have been well calculated to
deceive any new king; and when it came to the false Smerdis, the tool of the
reactionary priests, it only the more readily had its intended effect. "Then sent the
king an answer unto Rehum the chancellor, and to Shimshai the scribe, and to
the rest of their companions that dwell in Samaria, and unto the rest beyond the
river:–
"Peace, and at such a time. The letter which ye sent unto us hath been plainly
read before me. And I commanded, and search hath been made, and it is found
that this city of old time hath made insurrection against kings, and that rebellion
and sedition have been made therein. There have been mighty kings also over
Jerusalem, which have ruled over all countries beyond the river; and toll, tribute,
and custom, was paid unto them. Give ye now commandment to cause these
men to cease, and that this city be not builded, until another commandment shall
be given from me. Take heed now that ye fail not to do this: why should damage
grow to the hurt of the kings?"
This letter was of course exceedingly gratifying to the rebellious, seditious,
and officious Samaritans. Accordingly, "when the copy of king Artaxerxes' letter
was read before Rehum, and Shimshai the scribe, and their companions, they
went up in haste to Jerusalem unto the Jews, and made them to cease by force
and power."
"Then ceased the work of the house of God which is at Jerusalem." Then the
Samaritans laughed, and congratulated one another, and strutted, and rode
around among the Jews, asserting their power. But even in the most exalted
moments they never dreamed of what it really was over which they were so
gleeful and so perfectly satisfied. They had no idea of what it was in reality into
which they had so persistently, and at last so triumphantly, pushed themselves. In
about six months there was another turn in imperial affairs. In the eighth month of
his reign the false Smerdis, Gomates the Magian, was slain by Darius the
Persian and six companions, and Darius the Persian, of ancient kingly race and
descent, reigned in the Medo-Persian Empire. The Magian scheme was
annihilated; the Persian element was once more predominant; the tide turned
again in favor of the Jews, the rebuilding of the temple and the city went on, and
by the power which they had invoked the Samaritans were compelled to help in
the good work. This was exceedingly galling to them; but they had persistently
pushed themselves into it, and there they must stay; they had been exceedingly
glad when the power which they had invoked worked altogether their way; they
could not fairly complain when that same power worked altogether the other way.
(The next article is "The Work of Haggai and Zechariah.")
April 9, 1902
EARLY in the year 521 B. C. Darius, the son of Hystaspes, of ancient Persian
line, took the Medo-Persian throne by killing the false Smerdis and his chief
adherents. Yet it was nearly a year and a half before work was resumed upon the
temple of God in Jerusalem.
The people of God in Jerusalem and Judea had lost faith in God. They knew
that the decree of the false Smerdis stopping the work, was secured by false
representations; and they knew that the decree was illegal in itself, because of
the fundamental principle of Medo-Persian law that no law of the Medes and
Persians could be changed. Yet tho they knew that the usurper was dead, and
tho they had in their hands the original decree of Cyrus which could not be
lawfully reversed by any other Medo-Persian decree, still they did not have the
faith to take up the work again. In their lack of faith they had imbibed the notion
that the work was really dependent upon kings and their decrees, instead of upon
God; that the Lord's part in the work was really secondary to that of kings and
powers; that the kings' motions and decrees must come first, and then the Lord
co-operate; instead of the Lord and His work being first, and then the king's co-
operate.
Also as a consequence of their lack of faith, and so their neglect of the cause
and work of God, there had come hard times in the land; the seasons were
unfavorable; there was drought in the land, the crops of all kinds were short; what
money was received went such a little way that it seemed more as if it had been
lost than as if it had really been spent; what was bought with the money seemed
to do so little good, that, whether it were food or clothing, it seemed almost as tho
they had not had it at all.
In view of all these things, which were only the consequences of their loss of
faith in God, in His cause, and in His present work in the world; and in the face of
all that God had done, not only before their very eyes, but by their very selves;
they actually reached and expressed in words the astonishing conclusion that,
"The time is not come, the time that the Lord's house should be built"!!
To correct these utterly mistaken thoughts, reasonings, and conclusions, the
Lord sent to them the prophets Haggai and Zechariah to revive their faith in God;
thus to open their eyes, that they might see things in their true light.
Haggai spoke first: The first day of the sixth month, in the second year of
Darius–520 B. C.–the word of the Lord came to Zerubbabel the governor, and
Joshua the high priest, saying, "Thus speaketh the Lord of hosts, saying, This
people say, The time is not come, the time that the Lord's house should be built.
Is it time for you, O ye, to dwell in your ceiled houses, and this house lie
waste? . . .
"Now therefore thus saith the Lord of hosts: Consider your ways. Ye have
sown much, and bring in little; ye eat, but ye have not enough; ye drink, but ye
are not filled with drink; ye clothe you, but there is none warm; and he that
earneth wages earneth wages to put it into a bag with holes.
"Thus saith the Lord of hosts: Consider your ways. Go up to the mountain,
and bring wood, and build the house; and I will take pleasure in it, and I will be
glorified, saith the Lord. Ye looked for much, and, lo, it came to little; and when ye
brought it home, I did blow upon it. Why? saith the Lord of hosts. Because of
mine house that is waste, and ye run every man unto his own house. Therefore
the heaven over you is stayed from dew, and the earth is stayed from her fruit.
And I called for a drought upon the land, and upon the mountains, and upon the
corn, and upon the new wine, and upon the oil, and upon that which the ground
bringeth forth, and upon men, and upon cattle, and upon all the labor of the
hands." Haggai I.
This message of the Lord by His prophet was promptly received by all to
whom it came. Zerubbabel the governor and Joshua the high priest, "with all the
remnant of the people, obeyed the voice of the Lord their God, and the words of
Haggai the prophet, as the Lord their God had sent him; and the people did fear
before the Lord.
"Then spake Haggai the Lord's messenger in the Lord's message unto the
people, saying, I am with you, saith the Lord. And the Lord stirred up the spirit of
Zerubbabel the son of Shealtiel, governor of Judah, and the spirit of Joshua the
son of Josedech, the high priest, and the spirit of all the remnant of the people;
and they came and did work in the house of the Lord of hosts, their God, in the
four and twentieth day of the sixth month, in the second year of Darius the king."
In the following month, "in the seventh month," in the twenty-first day of the
month, came again the word of the Lord by Haggai to Zerubbabel, and Joshua,
and all the remnant of the people, saying:–
"Who is left among you that saw this house in her first glory? and how do ye
see it now? is it not in your eyes in comparison of it as nothing? Yet now be
strong, O Zerubbabel, saith the Lord; and be strong, O Joshua, son of Josedech,
the high priest; and be strong, all ye people of the land, saith the Lord, and work:
for I am with you, saith the Lord of hosts: according to the word that I covenanted
with you when ye came out of Egypt, so my spirit remaineth among you: fear ye
not. For thus saith the Lord of hosts: Yet once, it is a little while, and I will shake
the heavens, and the earth, and the sea, and the dry land; and I will shake all
nations, and the Desire of all nations shall come: and I will fill this house with
glory, saith the Lord of hosts. The silver is mine, and the gold is mine, saith the
Lord of hosts. The glory of this latter house shall be greater than of the former,
saith the Lord of hosts: and in this place will I give peace, saith the Lord of hosts."
Hag. 2:3-9
In the next month, "the eighth month in the second year of Darius," the
message of the Lord came to them by the prophet Zechariah, saying:–
"The Lord hath been sore displeased with your fathers. Therefore say thou
unto them, Thus saith the Lord of hosts; Turn ye unto me, saith the Lord of hosts,
and I will turn unto you, saith the Lord of hosts. Be ye not as your fathers, unto
whom the former prophets have cried, saying, Thus saith the Lord of hosts; Turn
ye now from your evil ways, and from your evil doings: but they did not hear, nor
hearken unto me, saith the Lord. Your fathers, where are they? and the prophets,
do they live for ever? But my words and my statutes, which I commanded my
servants the prophets, did they not take hold of your fathers? and they returned
and said, Like as the Lord of hosts thought to do unto us, according to our ways,
and according to our doings, so hath he dealt with us." Zech. 1:2-6.
In the next month, "the ninth month," the twenty-fourth day of the month, the
message of the Lord came again by the prophet Haggai in which He said:–
"Consider from this day and upward, from before a stone was laid upon a
stone in the temple of the Lord: Since those days were, when one came to an
heap of twenty measures, there were but ten: when one came to the pressfat for
to draw out fifty vessels out of the press, there were but twenty. I smote you with
blasting and with mildew and with hail in all the labors of your hands; yet ye
turned not to me, saith the Lord. Consider now from this day and upward, from
the four and twentieth day of the ninth month, even from the day that the
foundation of the Lord's temple was laid, consider it. Is the seed yet in the barn?
yea, as yet the vine, and the fig tree, and the pomegranate, and the olive tree,
hath not brought forth: from this day will I bless you." Hag. 2:15-19.
In the eleventh month and the twenty-fourth day of the month of that same
year, the word of the Lord came again to the prophet Zechariah. He saw in a
vision a man riding a bay horse, followed by bay, speckled, and white horses.
They stood among myrtle trees in a valley. Zechariah asked what were these.
The angel answered, "These are they whom the Lord hath sent to walk to and fro
through the earth." And they reported to the angel, in the hearing of the prophet,
"We have walked to and fro through the earth, and, behold, all the earth sitteth
still, and is at reat." Then the angel said, "O Lord of hosts, how long wilt Thou not
have mercy on Jerusalem and on the cities of Judah, against which Thou hast
had indignation, these threescore and ten years?"
Then the angel spoke to Zechariah, saying:–
"Cry thou, saying, Thus saith the Lord of hosts; I am jealous for Jerusalem
and for Zion with a great jealousy. And I am very sore displeased with the
heathen that are at ease: for I was but a little displeased, and they helped
forward the affliction. Therefore thus saith the Lord; I am returned to Jerusalem
with mercies: my house shall be built in it, saith the Lord of hosts, and a line shall
be stretched forth upon Jerusalem. Cry yet, saying, Thus saith the Lord of hosts;
My cities through prosperity shall yet be spread abroad; and the Lord shall yet
comfort Zion, and shall yet choose Jerusalem."
Next in the vision the prophet saw the four horns–powers–that had scattered
Judah, Israel, and Jerusalem, and also four carpenters come to repair these
desolations. And the angels said:–
"These are the horns which have scattered Judah, Israel, and Jerusalem. And
the Lord showed me four carpenters. Then said I, What come these to do? And
he spake, saying, These are the horns which have scattered Judah, so that no
man did lift up his head: but these are come to fray them, to cast out the horns of
the Gentiles, which lifted up their horn over the land of Judah to scatter it." Zech.
1:19-21.
Next in the vision he saw a man with a measuring line in his hand "to
measure Jerusalem, to see what is the breadth thereof, and what is the length
thereof." Then the angel who talked with the prophet went forth and was met by
another angel who said to him:–
"Run, speak to this young man, saying, Jerusalem shall be inhabited as towns
without walls for the multitude of men and cattle therein: for I, saith the Lord, will
be unto her a wall of fire round about, and will be the glory in the midst of her.
"Ho, ho, come forth, and flee from the land of the north, saith the Lord: for I
have spread you abroad as the four winds of the heaven, saith the Lord. Deliver
thyself, O Zion, that dwellest with the daughter of Babylon. For thus saith the
Lord of hosts; After the glory hath he sent me unto the nations which spoiled you:
for he that toucheth you toucheth the apple of his eye. For, behold, I will shake
mine hand upon them, and they shall be a spoil to their servants: and ye shall
know that the Lord of hosts hath sent me.
"Sing and rejoice, O daughter of Zion: for, lo, I come, and I will dwell in the
midst of thee, saith the
228
Lord. And many nations shall be joined to the Lord in that day, and shall be my
people: and I will dwell in the midst of thee, and thou shalt know that the Lord of
hosts hath sent me unto thee. And the Lord shall inherit Judah his portion in the
holy land, and shall choose Jerusalem again. Be silent, O all flesh, before the
Lord: for he is raised up out of his holy habitation." Chapter 2.
Next Zechariah saw in the vision "Joshua the high priest standing before the
angel of the Lord, and Satan standing at his right hand to resist him. And the Lord
said unto Satan, The Lord rebuke thee, O Satan; even the Lord that hath chosen
Jerusalem rebuke thee: is not this a brand plucked out of the fire?"
Joshua was clothed with filthy garments, and stood before the angel. The
angel said to others who stood by, "Take away the filthy garments from him. And
unto him he said, Behold, I have caused thine iniquity to pass from thee, and I
will clothe thee with change of raiment." And Zechariah said, "Let them set a fair
miter upon his head." So they set a fair miter on his head, and clothed him with
the beautiful garments. Then said the angel to Joshua:–
"If thou wilt walk in my ways, and if thou wilt keep my charge, then thou shalt
also judge my house, and shalt also keep my courts, and I will give thee places
to walk among these that stand by. Hear now, O Joshua the high priest, thou,
and thy fellows that sit before thee: for they are men wondered at [a sign]: for,
behold, I will bring forth my servant the BRANCH. For behold the stone that I
have laid before Joshua; upon one stone shall be seven eyes: behold, I will
engrave the graving thereof, saith the Lord of hosts, and I will remove the iniquity
of that land in one day. In that day, saith the Lord of hosts, shall ye call every man
his neighbor under the vine and under the fig tree." Chapter 3.
Next in the vision there was shown to the prophet a candlestick all of gold,
with a bowl upon the top of it, and seven lamps upon it, and seven pipes to the
seven lamps; and an olive tree on each side of the bowl; this signifying to
Zerubbabel that the building of the house of the Lord was "not by might, nor by
power, but by My Spirit, saith the Lord of hosts. Who art thou, O great mountain?
Before Zerubbabel thou shalt become a plain: and he shall bring forth the
headstone thereof with shoutings, crying, Grace, grace unto it." And in the vision
the word of the Lord was spoken:–
"The hands of Zerubbabel have laid the foundation of this house; his hands
shall also finish it; and thou shalt know that the Lord of hosts hath sent me unto
you. For who hath despised the day of small things? for they shall rejoice, and
shall see the plummet in the hand of Zerubbabel with those seven; they are the
eyes of the Lord, which run to and fro through the whole earth." Chapter 4.
Next in the vision the prophet saw a flying roll of the law of God; the length
twenty cubits, and the breadth ten cubits; revealing the curse, because of the
sins, that goeth forth over the face of the whole earth. after that the prophet saw
go forth two women, having between them in an ephah "Wickedness," "to build it
an house in the land of Shinar; and it shall be established, and set there upon her
own base." Chapter 5.
Next in the vision the prophet saw going forth four chariots, each with horses;
two toward the north, one toward the south, and the remaining one to and fro
through the earth. and last he was instructed to take certain men by name, and
have them make crowns of silver and gold, and set them upon the head of
Joshua the high priest, and say:–
"Thus speaketh the Lord of hosts, saying, Behold the man whose name is the
BRANCH; and he shall grow up out of his place, and he shall build the temple of
the Lord: even he shall build the temple of the Lord; and he shall bear the glory,
and shall sit and rule upon his throne; and he shall be a priest upon his throne:
and the counsel of peace shall be between them both." Zech. 6:12, 13.
Then the crowns were to be for a memorial in the temple of the Lord.
And the vision closed with the words of confirming promise upon all: "And this
shall come to pass, if ye will diligently obey the voice of the Lord your God."
Chapter 6.
[The next article in the series is "The Samaritans Compelled to Help."]
IN a previous study we read that in vision there was shown to the prophet
Zechariah, Joshua the high priest standing before the angel of the Lord, and
Satan standing at his right hand to resist him. That is the key to the vicissitudes
of this whole history.
The time was come when the cause of God must be restored, and His work
done in the earth. In the nature of things, this must be done through human
instrumentalities. Joshua, the high priest, was the chief of these human
instrumentalities; and therefore stood in the vision as the representative of God
and His work in the earth. On the other hand, Satan is the great adversary of
God and His work everywhere, whether in the earth or in heaven. And when the
time came for the cause and work of God to be revived and restored in the earth,
Satan, as the great adversary of all that is of God, was prompt to create every
kind of opposition. Accordingly he was seen standing at the right hand of
Joshua–in the very place of opportunity and helpfulness–to resist him.
Satan had been actively engaged in this from the very first day that the work
was begun in Jerusalem. It was his spirit and energy that actuated the Samaritan
meddlers and their hired counselors at the court of Cyrus, Cambyses, and the
false Smerdis. It was the personal presence of Satan in that three weeks' contest
at the court of Cyrus, that made the unbroken presence of the angel Gabriel
essential there the three full weeks, and finally demanded even the presence and
help of Michael to make victory certain.
But in spite of all Satan's resistance the temple of God was finished and
dedicated, and the full worship and service of God was there established. Yet he
slacked not his plotting of resistance. He failed to accomplish anything of his
purpose during the reign of Darius; but in the reign of the successor to Darius he
played a master-stroke, and arranged a most stupendous plot–nothing less than
the sweeping away, in one day, all the Jews in the empire; the complete blotting
out at one stroke of the whole worship, and even the whole people of God. Of
course it was a plot worthy only of Satan; but that even he should think that he
could make such a plot succeed, would be astonishing, were it not for the
peculiar train of circumstances that had developed the special instrumentality
that he could use for his enormous purpose.
Darius died in B. C. 485, having reigned thirty-six years, and was succeeded
by his son Xerxes, who was the Ahasuerus of the book of Esther. For the Hebrew
Ahashuerosh is the natural equivalent of the old Persian Khshayersha, the true
name of the monarch called by the Greeks Xerxes, as now read in his
inscriptions. "The name of him whom the Greeks called Xerxes, as left by himself
in his own inscriptions is Khshayersha, which proves to be identical with the
Ahasuerus of Holy Scriptures."–Oppert. And it is not strange that in the endeavor
to pronounce such a name, the tongue of a Greek would reduce it to Xerxes.
Thus Xerxes being truly the Ahasuerus of the book of Esther, this causes the
book of Esther to stand chronologically in the Scriptures between the sixth and
seventh chapters of the book of Ezra. Xerxes, the king of Persia, was the son of
Darius of Ezra 6, and the father of Artaxerxes of Ezra 7.
Political conditions, as developed by Darius in his last years, and left by his
death, were such that, in order for Xerxes to complete the plans of Darius, he
must "stir up all against the realm of Grecia;" as it had been stated by the angel
to Daniel that Xerxes would do. Dan. 11:2. In furtherance of this enterprise,
"Xerxes, being about to take in hand the expedition against Athens, called
together an assembly of the noblest Persians, to learn their opinions, and to lay
before them his own designs."–Herodotus. This was in the third year of the reign
of Xerxes; and this assembly was the one that is referred to in Esther 1:1-4:–
"In those days, when the king Ahasuerus sat on the throne of his kingdom,
which was in Shushan the palace, in the third year of his reign, he made a feast
unto all his princes and his servants; the power of Persia and Media, the nobles
and princes of the provinces; being before him: when he showed the riches of his
glorious kingdom and the honor of his excellent majesty many days, even an
hundred and fourscore days."
That was the day of Persia's greatest glory, and at the end of the six months'
council of preparation for the invasion of Greece, Xerxes made a grand feast for
a whole week to the whole company of imperial officials:–
"The king made a feast unto all the people that were present in Shushan the
palace, both unto great and small, seven days, in the court of the garden of the
king's palace; where were white, green, and blue, hangings, fastened with cords
of fine linen and purple to silver rings and pillars of marble: the beds were of gold
and silver, upon a pavement of red, and blue, and white, and black, marble. And
they gave them drink in vessels of gold, (the vessels being diverse one from
another,) and royal wine in abundance, according to the state of the king. And the
drinking was according to the law; none did compel: for so the king had
appointed to all the officers of his house, that they should do according to every
man's pleasure. Also Vashti the queen made a feast for the women in the royal
house which belonged to King Ahasuerus." Esther 1:5-9.
And because Vashti declined to make a display of herself to the drunken
crowd, she was deposed from the position of queen.
Xerxes led into Greece a force, land and naval, amounting to 5,283,220 men.
But in the successive defeats of Theromopyle, Salamis, Plateu, and Mycale, B.
C. 480-79, his whole force was annihilated, and he returned to Shushan with only
a body-guard. Shortly after his return, he issued his directions for the gathering
together of the most beautiful maidens of the empire, that he might select a
queen in the place of the deposed Vashti. Among these was Esther, the cousin
and adopted daughter of Mordecai, a Benjamite who was an attendant in the
king's palace in Shushan. Esther was chosen.
"So Esther was taken unto king Ahasuerus into his house royal in the tenth
month, which is the month Tebeth, in the seventh year of his reign. And the king
loved Esther above all the women, and she obtained grace and favor in his sight
more than all the virgins; so that he set the royal crown upon her head, and made
her queen instead of Vashti." Esther 2:16, 17.
About this same time two of the king's chamberlains laid a plot to kill him. The
plot was discovered by Mordecai. He told it to Esther, Esther told it to Xerxes,
investigation was made, the thing was proved, and the two men were hanged.
Then a record of the whole affair was made in the official chronicles of the
kingdom, in which was included the name of Mordecai and the part that he had
taken in exposing the plot, and so saving the life of the king.
Not long after that, a certain prince whose name was Haman was promoted
by king Xerxes, who thus "advanced him, and set his seat above all the princes
that were with him." Thus Haman was not only prime minister of the empire, but
also the special favorite of the king; so that the king commanded all the servants
"that were in the king's gate" to bow to Haman and reverence him. Now Mordecai
the Jew sat in the king's gate; and he would not bow nor do reverence to Haman.
His fellow-servants noticed this, and asked him, "Why transgressest thou the
king's commandment?" When they had for several days in succession called
Mordecai's attention to this, and still he would not bow nor do reverence to
Haman, they told it to Haman, and also told him that this Mordecai who had thus
refused to do him reverence was a Jew.
And just there is where Satan found his grand opportunity to make his
master-stroke against the whole nation of Israel at once. Therefore "when Haman
saw that Mordecai bowed not, nor did him reverence, then was Haman full of
wrath." But "he thought scorn to lay hands on Mordecai alone; for they had
showed him the people of Mordecai; wherefore Haman sought to destroy all the
Jews that were throughout the whole kingdom of Ahasuerus, even the people of
Mordecai." Esther 3:5, 6.
But why was this? What was the secret spring that Satan could touch there,
to urge on one man thus to plan the destruction of a whole people? The answer
is easy. Haman was "the Agagite." That is, he was a direct descendant from king
Agag, the king of the Amalekites whom Saul captured when he destroyed the
Amalekites, and whom the prophet Samuel slew after Saul had brought him to
Gilgal alive. And Mordecai was a Benjamite; of the very tribe of that Saul, king of
Israel, who had destroyed the nation of the Amalekites. Here, then, was the
chance for the remaining Amalekite and Agagite to visit vengeance upon this
people, and destroy this whole nation, as this people had destroyed his nation so
long before.
Possibly some one will say, "Well, was not that even justice, and fair
enough?" The answer is, "No; it was but the continuation of the original
treacherous and destructive purpose of the Amalekites who initiated the war
shortly after Israel left Egypt, and before they came to Sinai. In Rephidim,
between the wilderness of Sin and the wilderness of Sinai, the Amalekites laid an
ambush for the children of Israel as they marched, and cruelly smote the
hindmost; even all that were feeble, and when they were faint and weary. 1 Sam.
15:2; Deut. 25:17, 18. And it was for this that Saul had destroyed the Amalekites.
Ex. 17:8-14; Deut. 25:19; 1 Sam. 15. And now it was in perpetuation of original
and native Amalekite treachery and cruelty that Haman the Amalekite must
scheme to blot out the whole people, simply because one of their number failed
to bow and do him reverence.
And Haman proceeded to put into effect his Amalekitish scheme. First he cast
lots in the the [sic.] selection of the month in which the mas-
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sacre should be. It was in the first month that the lots were cast, and the lot fell
on the twelfth month–in the twelfth year of Xerxes, B. C. 473–and the day fixed,
was the thirteenth day of the twelfth month.
Having this preliminary arranged, Haman approached the king for the royal
authority to execute his murderous plot. He–
"said unto king Ahasuerus, There is a certain people scattered abroad and
dispersed among the people in all the provinces of thy kingdom; and their laws
are diverse from all people; neither keep they the king's laws: therefore it is not
for the king's profit to suffer them. If it please the king, let it be written that they
may be destroyed: and I will pay ten thousand talents [about six millions of
dollars] of silver to the hands of those that have the charge of the business, to
bring it into the king's treasuries." Esther 3:8, 9.
Then Xerxes gave to Haman his imperial ring, and said, "The silver is given to
thee, the people also, to do with them as it seemeth good to thee." Then Haman
caused the imperial secretaries to issue his murderous commandment to–
"the king's lieutenants, and to the governors that were over every province,
and to the rulers of every people of every province according to the writing
thereof, and to every people after their language; in the name of king Ahasuerus
was it written, and sealed with the king's ring." Esther 3:12.
Then the letters were sent by the imperial post-riders "into all the king's
provinces, to destroy, to kill, and to cause to perish, all Jews, both young and old,
little children and women, in one day, even upon the thirteenth day of the twelfth
month, which is the month Adar, and to take the spoil of them for a prey." The
letters also commanded all the people to be "ready against that day." So "the
posts went out, being hastened by the king's commandment, and the decree was
given in Shushan the palace. And the king and Haman sat down to drink; but the
city Shushan was perplexed." Esther 3:7-15.
It may be thought strange that Xerxes should so readily fall in with Haman's
scheme, and apparently so thoughtlessly give over a whole people thus to sheer
massacre. And yet when it is remembered that the very flower of the defensive
strength of the empire had only lately been swept away in the campaign against
Greece, it is not difficult to understand that, from the way in which the matter was
presented to him by Haman, he might fear that this "lawless" people would take
advantage of the weakness of the kingdom, and attempt a revolution. Thus he
could easily convince himself that it was only for the safety of his kingdom that
they should be forestalled.
The imperial decree had gone forth for the massacre of all the Jews in every
province on the thirteenth day of the twelfth month. The king had commanded all
the people to be ready against that day, to execute the decree. The time was
fixed, and each passing day brought the devoted people only a step nearer to the
fearful goal; and the law, being a law of the Persians and Medes, could not be
changed.
[The next article is a striking one, entitle, "The Hand upon the Throne of the
Lord."]
"Restoration from Babylon. 'The Hand upon the Throne of the Lord'"
The Signs of the Times 28, 18 , p. 3, 4 .
WITH every soul of them devoted to massacre on a day already fixed, and
fixed by a law that could not be changed, the Jews throughout the whole empire
of the Persians and Medes were in great distress. "In every province,
whithersoever the king's commandment and his decree came, there was great
mourning among the Jews, and fasting, and weeping, and wailing; and many had
on sackcloth and ashes." And "Mordecai rent his clothes, and put on sackcloth
with ashes, and went out into the midst of the city, and cried with a loud and a
bitter cry; and came even before the king's gate." Esther 4:1, 2.
Yet these expressions of distress and grief were not merely such, as tho they
were hopeless lamentations. The living God was still their God. In their history
there had been crises as desperate as was this; and when appealed to and
trusted, He had never failed to work deliverance. They could surely trust that He
would deliver them now. And because the examples of God's wonderful
deliverances in their history in their history, which they had as encouragements to
their faith, they had the direct word of the Lord with respect to any such occasion
as this that might ever arise in which the Amalekites were to have a part.
When Amalek played his treacherous part, and attacked the weak, the feeble,
the faint, and the weary, even the hindmost, in Rephidim, tho he was defeated,
when the battle was over the Lord commanded Moses to write "for a memorial in
a book, and rehearse it in the ears of Joshua," that "I will utterly blot out the
remembrance of Amalek from under heaven." Yet that matter did not end with
only writing it for a memorial in a book. For Moses built there an altar unto the
Lord, "and called the name of it Jehovah-nisai"–"The Lord my banner." This was
also a memorial of the affair of Amalek's, that the Lord Jehovah would ever be
His people's banner against Amalek. For said Moses in the name of the Lord–
"Because the hand of Amalek is against the throne of the Lord, therefore the
hand upon the throne of the Lord hath sworn that the Lord will have war with
Amalek from generation to generation." Ex. 17:16, margin.
And now in this latest generation of Amalek, in this Haman the Agagite the
hand of Amalek was still against the throne of the Lord. And now also the oath of
the hand upon the throne of the Lord, was still good, the Lord Jehovah was still
the banner of His people in the war with Amalek.
And this is why it was that the distress, the mourning, the fasting, and the cry
of His devoted people, was not hopeless. Indeed, it was not only not hopeless,
but was full of faith; for the memorial and the oath of God, written in the Book, still
stood as the door of faith, and therefore of victory. And this was their confidence.
Therefore they expected victory and deliverance by that blessed hand that is
upon the throne of the Lord. It is certain that they expected only victory and
deliverance, for when Mordecai got word to Esther of the true state of their
affairs, urging her to go to the king and make supplication and request for her
people, and she pleaded the danger of death when she went without being
called, Mordecai assured her that if she failed to do her part, then should "relief
and deliverance arise to the Jews from another place."
God would not fail them. Esther was in a position to be an instrumentality in
God's working the deliverance that was certain to come. How could she know but
that she was in that position for just such an occasion as this? and if, for any
reason, even the certain risk of her own life, she should fail to rise to the
occasion and do her part, still life and deliverance would certainly come, only it
would come by other instrumentality; it would arise from another place. This was
the faith of Mordecai and of his people. It was true faith in the word of God; it
rested upon the word of God, and the oath of Him whose hand is upon the throne
of the Lord. All that remained for them to do was to prove themselves
appreciative of that word by separating themselves from all sin, and everything
that was unbecoming to their Banner, so that the certain victory of the Hand upon
the throne of the Lord should include very individual; and that they might see that
Hand moving victoriously in this final war with Amalek.
Esther did rise nobly to the occasion; she proved indeed to be the queen that
her position implied that she was. She sent word to Mordecai to gather together
all the Jews that were in Shushan, and fast for her "three days" night and day; "I
also and my maidens will fast likewise; and so will I go in unto the king, which is
not according to the law; and if I perish, I perish." And God began just then to
work their glorious deliverance.
On the third day Esther made her trembling venture into the king's presence.
The king graciously received her; and told her to ask anything she chose, even to
the half of the kingdom, and it should be granted her. She simply asked that the
king and Haman come that day to a banquet which she had prepared. The king
caused Haman to be informed; and "so the king and Haman came to the banquet
that Esther had prepared." At the banquet the king said again to Esther, "What is
thy petition? and it shall be granted to the half of the kingdom it shall be
performed." Esther most respectfully requested that the king and Haman come
again on the morrow to a banquet which she would prepare; stating also that on
the morrow she would present her petition and request that the king desired to
know.
Thus twice in immediate succession had Haman been shown the high honor
of an exclusive banquet with the king and queen; and this upon the special
invitation of the queen herself. This was honor and distinction surpassing all. He
was correspondingly elated, and "went forth that day joyful and with a glad
heart." Yet there was one element that detracted from the perfection of his happy
state: as he went forth from the royal banquet, he saw Mordecai in the king's
gate, who still "stood not up, nor moved for him." This, and at such a time, was
an ignominy too great to be borne, and filled him "full of indignation against
Mordecai." Nevertheless, in view of what he had prepared for Mordecai and all
his people, "Haman refrained himself."
"And when he came home, he sent and called for his friends, and Zeresh his
wife. And Haman told them of the glory of his riches, and the multitude of his
children, and all the things wherein the king had promoted him, and how he had
advanced him above the princes and servants of the king. Haman said moreover,
Yea, Esther the queen did let no man come in with the king unto the banquet that
she had prepared but myself; and to morrow am I invited unto her also with the
king. Yet all this availeth me nothing, so long as I see Mordecai the Jew sitting at
the king's gate."
To Haman's wife and his friends his affliction from the presence of Mordecai
was exceedingly proper and reasonable, and a thing from which he ought to be
speedily relieved. Therefore "said Zeresh his wife and all his friends unto him, Let
a gallows be made of fifty cubits [seventy-five feet] high, and to-morrow speak
thou unto the king that Mordecai may be hanged thereon; then go thou in merrily
with the king unto the banquet."
"And the thing pleased Haman; and he caused the gallows to be made," and
went to sleep perfectly satisfied with all his arrangements and fair prospects for
the morrow.
But He that keepeth Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps. He whose hand is
upon the throne of the Lord had other arrangements for both Mordecai and
Haman on the morrow. Therefore that night, for some reason, king Xerxes found
it impossible to sleep. In order to occupy the sleepless hours, the king caused the
book of the chronicles of the kingdom to be brought and read to him, and the
place where the reader read in the book happened to be the very place of the
record of the late plot to assassinate the king, and of Mordecai exposure of the
plot in time to save the king.
When this had been read, the king asked, "What honor and dignity hath been
done to Mordecai for this?" The king's attendants answered, "There is nothing
done for him." The king inquired, "Who is in the court?" It was now morning, and
Haman had come early to get the king's order to hang Mordecai on that seventy-
five-foot gallows that was waiting, so that Haman could go merrily to the coming
banquet. Thus at so early an hour Haman was in the court, and was the only
man in the court. So when the king's attendants looked into the court, they saw
Haman, and in answer to the king's question said, "Behold, Haman standeth in
the court." The king said, "Let him come in." The word was passed; anmd "so
Haman came in."
But before Haman had a chance to present his request for the hanging of
Mordecai, the king asked him, "What shall be done unto the man whom the king
delighteth to honor?" Haman, having flattered himself beyond all judgment or
reason, instantly thought, That man is myself. For "to whom would the king
delight to do honor more than to myself?" The king designs some new honor for
me, so that I can go to that banquet to-day in a style befitting my nobility and
dignity: and he has even done me the honor of letting me name it myself. The
only honor that remains, that could be really becoming to me, is that I should
occupy the very place of the king.
Therefore Haman answered:–
"For the man whom the king delighteth to honor.
"Let the royal apparel be brought which the king useth to wear.
"And the horse that the king rideth upon;
"And the crown royal which is set upon his head;
"And let this apparel and horse be delivered to the hand of one of the king's
most noble princes,
276
"That they may array the man withal whom the king delighteth to honor,
"And bring him on horseback through the street of the city,
"And proclaim before him
"That shall it be done to the man whom the king delighteth to honor."
Then said Xerxes to Haman:–
"Make haste,
"And take the apparel and the hose,
"As thou hast said,
"And do even so to Mordecai the Jew,
"That sitteth at the king's gate;
"Let nothing fail of all that thou hast spoken."
For Haman, this was a terrific come-down. Yet there was no escaping it; he
had fixed the whole matter himself. Therefore "took Haman the apparel and the
horse, and arrayed Mordecai, and brought him on horseback through the street
of the city, and proclaimed before him: Thus shall it be done unto the man whom
the king delighteth to honor."
"And Mordecai came again to the king's gate. But Haman hasted to his house
mourning, and having his head covered. And Haman told Zeresh his wife and all
his friends every thing that had befallen him. Then said his wise men and Zeresh
his wife unto him, If Mordecai be of the seed of the Jews, before whom thou hast
begun to fall, thou shalt not prevail against him, but shalt surely fall before him."
All this had occurred early in the day, and before the time of the banquet of
the queen. And just now, even while Zeresh and Haman's wise men were talking
with him of what he should expect from this beginning, "came the king's
chamberlains, and hasted to bring Haman unto the banquet that Esther had
prepared. So the king and Haman came to banquet with Esther the queen." But
Haman did not go to the banquet as "merrily" as had been planned by himself,
and wife, and friends the evening before.
As they sat at the banquet, the king again said to Esther, "What is thy petition,
queen Esther? and it shall be granted thee; and what is thy request? and it shall
be performed, even to the half of the kingdom." Esther now, to the king and in the
very presence of Haman, presented her petition and her request:–
"If I have found favor in thy sight, O king, and if it please the king, let my life
be given me at my petition, and my people at my request. For we are sold, I and
my people, to be destroyed, to be slain, and to perish. But if we had been sold for
bondmen and bondwomen, I had held my tongue, altho the enemy could not
countervail the king's damage."
In blank astonishment the king asked, "Who is he, and where is he, that durst
presume in his heart to do so?" Esther answered, and Haman sitting there, "The
adversary and enemy is this wicked Haman." This revelation was more than the
king could bear, and sit still. Therefore "in his wrath" he arose from the banquet
and stepped into the palace garden. Haman, well knowing what the king's
wrathful astonishment must mean to him, arose from his seat to plead with
Esther for his life. In his anxiety and fear in his pleading he fell upon the divan
where queen Esther was sitting. Just then the king returned to the banquet room,
and discovered Haman in that attitude. Instantly there flashed across the mind of
the king a suspicion that in that murderous scheme Haman had a design to seize
the kingdom: and he exclaimed, "Will he force the queen also before me in the
house?"
As the word "went out of the king's mouth," the chamberlains ran in and
"covered Haman's face. And Harbonah, one of the chamberlains, said before the
king, Behold also the gallows fifty cubits high, which Haman had made for
Mordecai, who had spoken good for the king, standeth in the house of Haman."
And the king said, "Hang him thereon. So they hanged Haman on the gallows
that he had prepared for Mordecai. Then was the king's wrath pacified."
The same day Esther told king Xerxes what Mordecai was to her; and "the
king took off his ring, which he had taken from Haman, and gave it unto
Mordecai. And Esther set Mordecai over the house of Haman;" for the king had
given "the house of Haman the Jews' enemy unto Esther the queen." And again
Esther put her life at stake in approaching the king without being called. She
came "before the king, and fell down at his feet, and besought him with tears to
put away the mischief of Haman the Agagite, and his device that he had devised
against the Jews.
The king held out to Esther his golden scepter, and she arose and stood, and
pleaded that letters be written and sent to every province, reversing the letters
sent by Haman to destroy the Jews. In response the king directed that Esther
and Mordecai should write as they liked in the king's name, and to seal it with the
king's ring; "for the writing which is written in the king's name, and sealed with the
king's ring, may no man reverse."
But already were the letters out in the king's name, and sealed with the king's
ring, commanding that all the Jews should be destroyed. This could not be
reversed by writing letters saying that the Jews should not be destroyed, or
forbidding anybody to attack them. But letters were written to all the officials and
all the people in all provinces of the empire, granting to the Jews full right and
power to defend themselves against all who should attack them. This being
published everywhere, and the favor of the king thus known toward the Jews,
plainly it could be only the most desperate and murderous characters that would
attempt to execute the first decree; and if, in so doing, they should fall, it would
be only a benefit to the empire and to mankind.
"And Mordecai went out from the presence of the king in royal apparel of blue
and white, and with a great crown of gold, and with a garment of fine linen and
purple: and the city of Shushan rejoiced and was glad. The Jews had light, and
gladness, and joy, and honor. And in every province, and in every city,
whithersoever the king's commandment and his decree came, the Jews had joy
and gladness, a feast and a good day. And many of the people of the land
became Jews; for the fear of the Jews fell upon them."
These letters were sent out on the twenty-third day of the third month. Thus
there were yet nearly nine months before the day fixed in Haman's decree for the
massacre. And when that day came, there were found in all parts of the empire
the number of seventy-five thousand who were so set in their hatred of the Jews
as to attack them under Haman's decree. But "all the rulers of the provinces, and
the lieutenants, and the deputies, and officers of the king, helped the Jews;
because the fear of Mordecai fell upon them."
Among those who attacked the Jews were the ten sons of Haman the
Agagite. These were all slain; the last remnant of the race of the Amalekites. And
so ended the war of Amalek against the hand that is upon the throne of the Lord.
And so also ended Satan's master-stroke against the cause, and work, and
people of God in the earth.
[The next article is "The Second Return."]
May 7, 1902
FROM the time of Satan's master-stroke by Haman the Amalekite against the
people and the work of God in the earth, unto the next recorded event in their
history, was fifteen years–from the twelfth year of Xerxes to the seventh year of
Artaxerxes Longimanus, Esther 3:17; Ezra 7:1-7. Yet it must not be supposed
that in all these years Satan had been idle or had in any wise slacked his efforts;
he only changed his tactics, and plied his efforts in another and more insidious
way. He insinuated himself, his spirit, and his ways, into the individual life of the
Jews in Palestine.
When the people of Israel came up first from the captivity, the Samaritans and
other people of the land sought alliance with them. By the faithfulness of
Zerubbabel and Joshua, that proposed alliance was rejected and prevented. By
the faithfulness of these devoted men, and by their noble example, the people
were held in faithfulness and devotion to God, and so to the rejection of all form
of alliance with the mixed peoples around them. But when these devoted men
had passed away, they were not succeeded by men of equal devotion. As a
consequence the people, not having before them a good example in the men in
chief responsibility, drifted into looseness of life: faithfulness and integrity were
forgotten; and the alliance which the mixed peoples sought with them was
secured, and by that Satan accomplished his purpose of putting a stop to the
work of God in the rebuilding of Jerusalem.
The alliance of the mixed peoples with Israel was accomplished by the new
leaders in Israel forgetting their integrity and true responsibility, and intermarrying
with the mixed peoples around them. "The people of Israel, and the priests, and
the Levites," and "the princes and rulers," did not keep themselves separate
"from the people of the lands;" but did "according to their abominations, even of
the Canaanites, the Hittites, the Perizzites, the Jebusites, the Ammonites, the
Moabites, the Egyptians, and the Amorites." For they took "of their daughters for
themselves, and for their sons: so that the holy seed mingled themselves with the
people of those lands: yea, the hand of the princes and rulers hath been chief in
this trespass." Ezra 9:1, 2.
As a natural and very easy consequence the work of rebuilding the city, the
streets, and the walls of Jerusalem was neglected, and finally was left off entirely,
and even the temple that had been built and dedicated was neglected, and
allowed to fall into decay. But thank the Lord, in captivity down in Babylon there
were yet some faithful ones whose hearts were seeking the law of the Lord to do
it. Of these Ezra was the chief; for "Ezra had prepared his heart to seek the law
of the Lord to do it, and to teach in Israel statutes and judgments." Ezra 7:10.
This right spirit and true example drew others to the right way; and in the seventh
year of Artaxerxes Longimanus, B. C. 457, a decree was issued by that king of
Persia in favor of Ezra and whosoever was minded to go with him, for the
building of the city and wall of Jersualem, and the repair of the house of God; and
commanding all the people beyond the Euphrates to pay toll, tribute, and custom
for the work of the Lord in Jerusalem. This decree is recorded in Ezra 7:12-26.
In gratitude for this blessed favor, Ezra wrote:–
"Blessed be the Lord God of our fathers, which hath put such a thing as this in
the king's heart, to beautify the house of the Lord which is in Jerusalem: and hath
extended mercy unto me before the king, and his counselors, and before all the
king's mighty princes. And I was strengthened as the hand of the Lord my God
was upon me, and I gathered together out of Israel chief men to go up with me."
Ezra 7:27, 28.
The number of those who went up from Babylon with Ezra was about six
thousand, as enumerated in the Scriptures. On the first day of the first month in
the year 457 B. C., they started from Babylon. When they had reached the river
of Ahava, about a day's journey from Babylon, Ezra reviewed the people, and
found that in all the company there was not a single Levite. As the Levites were
essential to the ministry of the house of God when they should reach Jerusalem.
Ezra was obliged to send messengers back to the Jewish colony at Babylon to
find some Levites who would come with them to Jerusalem. In response to Ezra's
call, there came two hundred and fifty-eight men. When those had arrived,
"then," says Ezra,–
"Then I proclaimed a fast there, at the river of Ahava, that we might afflict
ourselves before our God, to seek of him a right way for us, and for our little
ones, and for all our substance. For I was ashamed to require of the king a band
of soldiers and horsemen to help us against the enemy in the way: because we
had spoken unto the king, saying, The hand of our God [is] upon all them for
good that seek him; but his power and his wrath [is] against all them that forsake
him. So we fasted and besought our God for this: and he was entreated of us."
Ezra 8:21-23.
This reviewing of the people, the sending back to Babylon for the Levites, and
the time of fasting and prayer, occupied eleven days. "Then we departed from the
river of Ahava on the twelfth day of the first month, to go unto Jerusalem: and the
hand of our God was upon us, and he delivered us from the hand of the enemy,
and of such as lay in wait by the way." And "on the first day of the fifth month"
they arrived safely at Jerusalem, "according to the good hand of God" upon
them. On the fourth day after their arrival at Jerusalem, the gold and silver and
the vessels for the house of God which they had brought as offerings, were
weighed into the house of God and entered in writing; they offered burnt-offerings
according to the twelve tribes of Israel; "and they delivered the king's
commissions unto the king's lieutenants, and to the governors on this side the
river; and they furthered the people, and the house of God." The temple was
immediately repaired, and beautified, and caused once more to stand worthy of
the divine purpose to which it was devoted, and to which it had been dedicated.
Ezra 6:14, last clause.
This work of repairing and building the temple occupied about eight months.
When that work was all done, and Ezra turned his attention to restoring and
organizing the full worship and service of God in the temple, there was made the
discovery of the mixed marriages and other abominations into which had entered
the Jews who had first returned from Babylon.
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The princes who had come with Ezra, and who were his assistants, discovered
this deplorable condition, and came to Ezra, saying:–
"The people of Israel, and the priests, and the Levites, have not separated
themselves from the people of the lands, doing according to their abominations,
even of the Canaanites, the Hittites, the Perizzites, the Jebusites, the
Ammonites, the Moabites, the Egyptians, and the Amorites. For they have taken
of their daughters for themselves, and for their sons: so that the holy seed have
mingled themselves with the people of those lands: yea, the hand of the princes
and rulers hath been chief in this trespass."
This was so fully true that no fewer than four of the very sons of Joshua the
son of Jozadak "had taken strange wives."
When the full truth of the dismal situation burst upon the devoted Ezra, he
was so overcome that he was utterly speechless all the remaining part of the day.
"When I heard this thing, I rent my garment and my mantle, and plucked off
the hair of my head and of my beard, and sat down astonied [like stone,
petrified]. Then were assembled unto me every one that trembled at the words of
the God of Israel, because of the transgression of those that had been carried
away; and I sat astonied until the evening sacrifice. And at the evening sacrifice I
arose up from my heaviness; and having rent my garment and my mantle, I fell
upon my knees, and spread out my hands unto the Lord my God, and said:–
"O my God, I am ashamed and blush to lift up my face to thee, my God: for
our iniquities are increased over our head, and our trespass is grown up unto the
heavens. Since the days of our fathers have we been in a great trespass unto
this day; and for our iniquities have we, our kings, and our priests, been delivered
into the hand of the kings of the lands, to the sword, to captivity, and to a spoil,
and to confusion of face, as it is this day. And now for a little space grace hath
been showed from the Lord our God, to leave us a remnant to escape, and to
give us a nail in his holy place, that our God may lighten our eyes, and give us a
little reviving in our bondage. For we were bondmen; yet our God hath not
forsaken us in our bondage, but hath extended mercy unto us in the sight of the
kings of Persia, to give us a reviving, to set up the house of our God, and to
repair the desolations thereof, and to give us a wall in Judah and in Jerusalem.
And now, O our God, what shall we say after this? for we have forsaken thy
commandments, which thou hast commanded by thy servants the prophets,
saying, The land, unto which ye go to possess it, is an unclean land with the
filthiness of the people of the lands, with their abominations, which have filled it
from one end to another with their uncleanness. Now therefore give not your
daughters unto their sons, neither take their daughters unto your sons, nor seek
their peace or their wealth for ever: that ye may be strong, and eat the good of
the land, and leave it for an inheritance to your children for ever. And after all that
is come upon us for our evil deeds, and for our great trespass, seeing that thou
our God hast punished us less than our iniquities deserve, and hast given us
such deliverance as this; should we again break thy commandments, and join in
affinity with the people of these abominations? wouldest not thou be angry with
us till thou hadst consumed us, so that there should be no remnant nor
escaping? O Lord God of Israel, thou art righteous: for we remain yet escaped,
as it is this day: behold, we are before thee in our trespasses: for we cannot
stand before thee because of this.
"Now when Ezra had prayed, and when he had confessed, weeping and
casting himself down before the house of God, there assembled unto him out of
Israel a very great congregation of men and women and children: for the people
wept very sore."
Then spoke one for all,–
"We have trespassed against our God, and have taken strange wives of the
people of the land: yet now there is hope in Israel concerning this thing. Now
therefore let us make a covenant with our God to put away all the wives, and
such as are born of them, according to the counsel of my lord, and of those that
tremble at the commandment of our God; and let it be done according to the law.
Arise: for this matter belongeth unto thee: we also will be with thee: be of good
courage, and do it."
This proposal was accepted by all. Then Ezra arose up from before the house
of God, and went into one of the chambers of the priests, but "he did eat no
bread, nor drink water; for he mourned because of the transgression of them that
had been carried away." Then a call was sent throughout Jerusalem and all the
land, that all should assemble at Jerusalem; "and that whosever would not come
within three days, according to the counsel of the princes and the elders, all his
substance should be forfeited, and himself separated from the congregation."
Within the three days all were assembled in Jerusalem. "It was the ninth
month, on the twentieth day of the month; and all the people sat in the street of
the house of God, trembling because of this matter, and for the great rain." Ezra
addressed them:–
"Ye have transgressed, and have taken strange wives, to increase the
trespass of Israel. Now therefore make confession unto the Lord God of your
fathers, and do his pleasure: and separate yourselves from the people of the
land, and from the strange wives."
The people answered, "As thou hast said, so must we do." But since the
people were many, and it was a time of much rain, and they were not able to
stand without, neither was this "a work of one day or two; for we are many that
have transgressed in this thing," they advised that portions of the people come
respectively at appointed times, until all who were in the transgression had
cleared themselves. This suggestion was adopted. And the time required to
accomplish the work was two whole months–from the first day of the tenth month
until the first day of the first month.
By this record there is made plain at least one very important lesson.
Looseness in the individual life of the people of God gives to Satan advantage
and victory over the people and cause of God, which it is impossible for him, by
any possible power or machination, to gain, while they maintain integrity and true
devotion to God. In the day of the false Smerdis, all that Satan, in possession of
imperial power, could do against the work and people of God was, in reality, to
produce a condition which only the more helped it forward. In the day of Haman
the Amalekite, all that Satan, in possession of the very supremacy of worldly
power, could do against the work and people of God, was only to demonstrate
the absolute impotence of it all. And all this, simply because the people of God
were walking in singleness of heart before Him, in true faith and integrity. But
when they neglected all this, and so gave place to Satan in the individual life,
then Satan gained the victory for which he had so long striven, and which, with all
the power of earth in his hands, he had utterly failed to gain.
Individual faithfulness is the victory of the people of God; individual
unfaithfulness if the victory of Satan over the people of God.
[The next article is "The Third Return."]
"Restoration from Babylon. The Third Return" The Signs of the Times
28, 20 , p. 4, 5 .
FROM the time of the arrival of Ezra at Jerusalem and his reformatory work
done there, as recorded in Ezra, 7-10, unto the next recorded event in the
history–Neh. 1:1–was thirteen years; from the seventh year of Artaxerxes
Longimanus to the twentieth year of the same king.
It seems that the efforts of Ezra were confined to moral and ecclesiastical
reforms; and that in all these thirteen years nothing was done toward rebuilding
the wall and city of Jerusalem; for it was the news that that place was still a ruin
that stirred up Nehemiah to the determination to go himself to Jerusalem. As he
wrote:–
"It came to pass in the month Chisleu, in the twentieth year, as I was in
Shushan the palace, that Hanani, one of my brethren, came, he and certain men
of Judah; and I asked them concerning the Jews that had escaped, which were
left of the captivity, and concerning Jerusalem. And they said unto me, The
remnant that are left of the captivity there in the province are in great affliction
and reproach: the wall of Jerusalem also [is] broken down, and the gates thereof
are burned with fire.
"And it came to pass, when I heard these words, that I sat down and wept,
and mourned certain days, and fasted, and prayed before the God of heaven,
and said:–
"I beseech thee, O Lord God of heaven, the great and terrible God, that
keepeth covenant and mercy for them that love Him and observe His
commandments: let Thine ear now be attentive, and Thine eyes open, that Thou
mayest hear the prayer of thy servant, which I pray before Thee now, day and
night, for the children of Israel thy servants, and confess the sins of the children
of Israel, which we have sinned against thee: both I and my father's house have
sinned. We have dealt very corruptly against thee, and have not kept the
commandments, nor the statutes, nor the judgments, which Thou commandedst
Thy servant Moses. Remember, I beseech Thee, the word that Thou
commandedst Thy servant Moses, saying, If ye transgress, I will scatter you
abroad among the nations: but if ye turn unto Me, and keep My commandments,
and do them; though there were of you cast out unto the uttermost part of the
heaven, yet will I gather them from thence, and will bring them unto the place that
I have chosen to set My name there. Now these are Thy servants and Thy
people, whom Thou hast redeemed by Thy great power, and by Thy strong hand.
O Lord, I beseech Thee, let now Thine ear be attentive to the prayer of Thy
servant, and to the prayer of Thy servants, who desire to fear Thy name: and
prosper, I pray Thee, Thy servant this day, and grant him mercy in the sight of
this man."–
Artaxerxes Longimanus, king of Persia.
"Moreover I said unto the king, If it please the king, let letters be given me to
the governors beyond the river, that they may convey me over till I come into
Judah; and a letter unto Asaph the keeper of the king's forest, that he may give
me timber to make beams for the gates of the palace which appertained to the
house, and for the wall of the city, and for the house that I shall enter into. And
the king granted me, according to the good hand of my God upon me."
Yet more than this, the king appointed Nehemiah governor of the province of
Judah; and sent with him captains and troops of the imperial army to escort him
to Jerusalem. The Samaritans were still as envious, and as much opposed to the
work of God in Jerusalem as at the first return from the captivity. The principal
men of the Samaritans now were Sanballat the Horonite, Tobiah the Ammonite,
and Geshem or Gashmu the Arabian. When these men heart that Nehemiah the
Jew had come, with the commission, the honor, and the support of the king of
Persia, they were greatly perplexed; "it grieved them exceedingly that there was
come a man to seek the welfare of the children of Israel."
When Nehemiah had come to Jerusalem, and had been there three days, he
spent a night in viewing the condition of ruin in which the city still lay. Then he
had the priests, and the nobles, and the rulers, and others, assemble; and to
them he said, "Ye see the distress that we are in, how Jerusalem lieth waste, and
the gates thereof are burned with fire; come, and let us build up the wall of
Jerusalem, that we be no more a reproach." He also told them of the hand of
God that was good upon him; and also of the words which Artaxerxes had
spoken to him. And they answered heartily, "Let us rise up and build." And so
"they strengthened their hands for this good work."
As soon as Sanballat, and Tobiah, and Geshem heard that the Jews had
begun again to build, they laughed them to scorn, and despised them, and said,
"What is this thing that ye do? will ye rebel against the king?" And Nehemiah
answered as did Zerubbabel and Joshua at the first restoration: "The God of
heaven, He will prosper us; therefore we His servants will arise and build; but ye
have no portion, nor right, nor memorial, in Jerusalem."
The people were divided into forty-two companies. These companies were
distributed round the city the whole length of the compass of the wall, each
company to build a portion of the wall. The work was entered upon so heartily
that even the women were engaged, tho certain of the nobles of the Tekoites "put
not their necks to the work of their Lord."
When Sanballat heard that the work of building the wall went busily on, "he
was wroth, and took great indignation, and mocked the Jews. And he spake
before his brethren and the army of Samaria, and said, What do these feeble
Jews? will they fortify themselves? will they sacrifice? will they make an end in a
day? will they revive the stones out of the heaps of the rubbish which are
burned?" Tobiah the Ammonite was standing by when Sanballat snapped forth
these ironical inquiries, and Tobiah answered in kind: "Even that which they build,
if a fox go up, he shall even break down their stone wall." But the work went on
so prosperously that soon the whole wall was built and was joined together, to
half the height unto which it was to be built.
Sanballat and his Samaritans, finding that their prognostications were a
mistake, and that a good solid wall was actually going up, "were very wroth, and
conspired all of them together to come and to fight against Jerusalem, and to
hinder it. Nevertheless we made our prayer unto our God, and set a watch
against them day and night, because of them." The courage of some began to
wane, and they said, "The strength of the bearers of burdens is decayed, and
there is much rubbish; so that we are not able to build the wall." And the
adversaries, the Samaritans, said, "They shall not know, neither see, till we come
in the midst among them, and slay them, and cause the work to cease." And
even among the Jews in the country there were sympathizers with the
Samaritans. These came ten times to Nehemiah and the workers on the wall,
with the evil advice, "From all place ye must return to us, for they [the
Samaritans] will be upon you."
Since a surprise by secret and sudden attack was thus planned by the
Samaritans, Nehemiah armed all the people, men, women, and children, wit
swords, and spears, and bows, and stood constantly on such watchfulness that
the enemies found that their plot was known, and they could not execute their
planned surprise, and that "God had brought their counsel to naught." Being thus
delivered from the immediate danger, the people returned all of them "to the wall,
every one unto his work." And from that time forth half of the governor's imperial
guard wrought in the work, and the other half held the spears, shields, bows, and
breast-plates of both. And of those who built on the wall, and carried the material,
"every one with one of his hands wrought in the work, and with the other hand
held a weapon." And the builders "every one had his sword girded by his side,
and so builded."
Nehemiah had the trumpeter stand constantly by his side, to sound the alarm;
and he said to all the people:–
"The work is great and large, and we are separated upon the wall, one far
from another. In what place therefore ye hear the sound of the trumpet, resort ye
thither unto us: our God shall fight for us. So we labored in the work: and half of
them held the spears from the rising of the morning till the stars appeared.
Likewise at the same time said I unto
308
the people, Let every one with his servant lodge within Jerusalem, that in the
night they may be a guard to us, and labor on the day. So neither I, nor my
brethren, nor my servants, nor the men of the guard which followed me, none of
us put off our clothes, saving that every one put them off for washing."
Thus the work of building the city and the wall went steadily onward, tho truly,
as the angel had said to Daniel, "even in troublous times."
[The next article is called "The Year of God against Unbrotherliness."]
THE time spent in the building of the wall of Jerusalem after the coming of
Nehemiah, noted in the preceding study, was so far only about a month.
Nehemiah's attention had been so engaged in the work of pushing forward the
work on the wall, and in warding off the schemes of the enemies, that he had not
had time or opportunity to look into the individual and social conduct and
condition of the people. And now there came to his knowledge that which was
almost as surprising to him as was to Ezra the knowledge of the mixed
marriages.
In the thirteen years that had elapsed between the coming of Ezra and that of
Nehemiah to Jerusalem, tho the evil of the mixed marriages had been largely
corrected, other wrong and weakening things had been indulged. And Nehemiah
was surprised and greatly offended by "a great cry of the people and of their
wives against their brethren the Jews. for there were that said, We, our sons, and
our daughters, are many; therefore we take up corn for them, that we may eat
and live." That is, they had put to pledge the honor of their children, for the grain
which, in food, they and their children must eat. "Some also there were that said,
We have mortgaged our lands, vineyards, and houses, that we might buy corn,
because of the dearth. There were also that said, We have borrowed money for
the king's tribute [the State taxes], and that upon our lands and vineyards. Yet
now our flesh is as the flesh of our brethren, our children as their children: and,
lo, we bring into bondage our sons and our daughters to be servants, and [some]
of our daughters are brought unto bondage [already]: neither [is it] in our power
[to redeem them]; for other men have our lands and vineyards."
Thus on the part of many there was the spirit and practise of speculating on
the necessities of their brethren; for this money was not simply loaned, but
loaned at interest and profit. This spirit, in the nature of things, only increased the
natural selfishness of the heart, and cultivated hardness and oppressiveness of
brother to brother. It really destroyed all true brotherliness, and supplanted it with
the spirit of sordid gain; the whole thought became not, How can I do most to
help my brother? but, How can I make most off of him? not, What can I do most
to help him? but, What can I do most to help myself through his necessities?
For these reasons, this that they were doing was plainly forbidden by the
Lord; and in it all they were going directly contrary to the Scriptures which they
professed to obey. In the Word of the Lord it was plainly written to all: "If thy
brother be waxen poor, and fallen in decay with thee, then thou shalt relieve him;
yea, tho he be a stranger, or a sojourner; that he may live with thee. Take thou no
money11 of him for increase; but fear thy God; that thy brother may live with thee.
Thou shalt not give him thy money upon money, nor lend him thy victuals for
increase. I am the Lord your God, which brought you forth out of the land of
Egypt, to give you the land of Canaan, and to be your God. And if thy brother that
dwelleth by thee be waxen poor, and be sold unto thee, thou shalt not compel
him to serve as a bondservant; but as a hired servant, and as a sojourner, he
shall be with thee." Lev. 25:35-40. "Thou shall not lend upon usury to thy brother;
usury of money, usury of victuals, usury of anything that is lent upon usury. Unto
a stranger thou mayest lend upon usury; but unto thy brother thou shalt not lend
upon usury; that the Lord thy God may bless thee in all that thou settest thine
hand to in the land whither thou goest to possess it." Deut. 23:19, 20. "If thou
lend money to any of My people that is poor by thee, thou shalt not be to him as
an usurer, neither shalt thou lay upon him usury." Ex. 22:25. "Lord, who shall
abide in Thy tabernacle? who shall dwell in Thy holy hill?–He that walketh
uprightly, and worketh righteousness, and speaketh the truth in his heart. . . . He
that putteth not out his money to usury, nor taketh reward against the innocent."
Ps. 15:1, 2, 5. "If a man be just, and do that which is lawful and right. . . . and
hath not oppressed any, but hath restored to the debtor his pledge, hath spoiled
none by violence, hath given his bread to the hungry, and hath covered the
naked with a garment; he that hath not given forth upon usury, neither hath taken
any increase, that hath withdrawn his hand from iniquity, hath executed true
judgment between man and man, hath walked in My statutes, and hath kept My
judgments, to deal truly; he is just, he shall surely live, saith the Lord." Eze.
18:1-9, 12, 13, 16, 17. And among the "abominations" that had destroyed "the
bloody city," Jerusalem, and taken the people captive to Babylon, was this: "In
thee have they taken gifts to shed blood; thou hast taken usury and increase,
and thou hast greedily gained of thy neighbors by extortion, and hast forgotten
Me, saith the Lord." Eze. 22:2, 12.
All this was written in the Scriptures which these very people professed to
believe, and in which they even boasted; and yet they disregarded it all, and
made the poverty and necessity of their brethren only opportunity for traffic in
loaning money and victuals for usury and increase! No wonder that the righteous
Nehemiah declares, "I was very angry when I heard their cry and these words."
And, "Then I consulted with myself, and I rebuked the nobles, and the rulers, and
said unto them, Ye exact usury, every one of his brother. And I set a great
assembly against them. And I said unto them, We after our ability have
redeemed our brethren the Jews, which were sold unto the heathen; and will ye
even sell your brethren? or shall they be sold unto us? Then held they their
peace, and found nothing to answer."
"Also I said, It is not good that ye do: ought ye not to walk in the fear of our
God because of the reproach of the heathen our enemies? I likewise, and my
brethren, and my servants, might exact of them money and corn: I pray you, let
us leave off this usury. Restore, I pray you, to them, even this day, their lands,
their vineyards, their oliveyards, and their houses, also the hundredth part of the
money, and of the corn, the wine, and the oil, that ye exact of them. Then said
they, We will restore them, and will require nothing of them; so will we do as thou
sayest.
"Then I called the priests, and took an oath of them, that they should do
according to this promise. Also I shook my lap, and said, So God shake out every
man from his house, and from his labor, that performeth not this promise, even
thus be he shaken out, and emptied. And all the congregation said, Amen, and
praised the Lord. And the people did according to this promise."
Nehemiah could safely and consistently appeal to all the people upon this
issue; for, tho he was an exceedingly rich man, and had the best of opportunities
to lend money at big interest, and make gain of the people, he not only did
nothing of the kind as a speculator, but he did not use nor even collect what was
his due as governor. For twelve years he supported himself and his whole
household and retinue as governor, also a hundred and fifty Jews and rulers,
besides others, at his own expense from his own personal funds. And he says:
"From the time that I was appointed to be their governor in the land of Judah,
from the twentieth year even unto the two and thirtieth year of Artaxerxes the
king, that is, twelve years, I and my brethren have not eaten the bread of the
governor. But the former governors that had been before me were chargeable
unto the people, and had taken of them bread and wine, beside forty shekels of
silver; yea, even their servants bare rule over the people: but so did not I,
because of the fear of God. Yea, also I continued in the work of this wall, neither
bought we any land: and all my servants were gathered thither unto the work.
Moreover there were at my table an hundred and fifty of the Jews and rulers,
beside those that came unto us from among the heathen that are about us. Now
that which was prepared for me daily was one ox and six choice sheep; also
fowls were prepared for me, and once in ten days store of all sorts of wine: yet
for all this required not I the bread of the governor, because the bondage was
heavy upon this people."
With such an example as this of mercy and brotherly kindness ever before
them, those who had been trading upon the bondage and necessities of the
people were enabled to keep their promise to quit it all, and to deal with their
brethren as tho they were brethren indeed. This reform was a success.
Nehemiah, because of the fear of God, had from the heart manifested the very
spirit and essence of the divine principle. "All thing whatsoever ye would that men
should do to you, do ye even so to them." Also in the same fear of God he could
pray, "Think upon me, my God, for good, according to all that I have done for this
people." And that prayer . . . and will be certainly answered to the soul, because it
is also a divine principle that "with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to
you again."
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And now, as then, let all the people say, "Amen."
["The Wall Finished, and the Full Temple Service Restored," is the title of the
next article of this series.]
"Restoration from Babylon. The Wall Finished, and the Full Temple
Service Restored" The Signs of the Times 28, 22 , p. 3, 4 .
AT last the wall of Jerusalem was finished. So diligently had the work been
pursued, that the wall was finished in fifty-two days from the day that Nehemiah
began the work. However, the gates were not yet set up. But even tho the wall
was finished, the "troublous times" did not cease; for says Nehemiah:–
"When Sanballat, and Tobiah, and Geshem the Arabian, and the rest of our
enemies, heard that I had builded the wall, and that there was no breach left
therein; . . . Sanballat and Geshem sent unto me, saying, Come, let us meet
together in some on of the villages in the plan of Ono."
This was a part of a plan of theirs and of the master adversary, to get
Nehemiah into their power, and to slay him, and then cause to cease the work of
building the city. But Nehemiah knew that the work in which he was engaged was
one in which those men could have no part nor lot, nor any true interest, and to
the extent of a parley; therefore he "sent messengers unto then, saying, I am
doing a great work, so that I can not come down; why should the work cease,
whilst I leave it, and come down to you?"
Yet they were so persistent that they sent to Nehemiah "four times after this
sort," and every time he "answered them after the same manner." And even yet
they did not cease. In encouragements to the people in the work of that
restoration of the city and people of God, Nehemiah, with his faithful fellow
laborers, constantly cited the promises of God that the Messiah, the Son of
David, the official King of Judah, would come. He assured them that the work
which was then being done, and the time upon which they were engaged, would
end only in the coming of the Messiah, the rightful King. Rumors of this
constantly reached the adversaries, the Samaritans. Their dull minds could frame
only the conception of an earthly king; only Nehemiah himself could be such
king; this could mean only rebellion as soon as the city should be finished,
therefore Nehemiah could be working so diligently only for his own
aggrandizement.
"Accordingly Sanballat sent his servant even the fifth time:" this time "with an
open letter in his hand," wherein was written:–
"It is reported among the heathen, and Gashmu saith it, that thou and the
Jews think to rebel: for which cause thou buildest the wall, that thou mayest be
their king, according to these words. And thou hast also appointed prophets to
preach of thee at Jerusalem, saying, There is a king in Judah: and now shall it be
reported to the king according to these words. Come now therefore, and let us
take counsel together."
Nehemiah answered truly, "There are no such things done as thou sayest, but
thou feignest them out of thine own heart." And of them he says, "For they all
made us afraid, saying, Their hands shall be weakened from the work, that it be
not done." And against all he appealed to God, "Now therefore, O God,
strengthen my hands."
Yet the worst feature of the situation was not the scheming of Sanballat, and
Tobiah, and Geshem; it was the traitorous fellowship; of Jews in Jerusalem who
in heart were united with Sanballat, and Tobiah, amnd Geshem, and constantly
played into their hands and aided their schemes. When the trick of Sanballat, and
Tobiah, and Geshem to get Nehemiah into their power, outside the city, had
failed, these false brethren attempted to make that scheme effective inside the
city. So as Nehemiah came one day to the house of Shemaiah, the son of
Delaiah, the son of Mehetabeel, who was shut up, Shemaiah said to him, "Let us
meet together in the house of God, within the temple, and let us shut the doors of
the temple; for they wilt come to slay thee; yea, in the night will they come to slay
thee." But, said noble Nehemiah, "Should such a man as I flee? and who is
there, that, being as I am, would go into the temple to save his life? I will not go
in."
Yet more, and the worst, was to come. Here is the record:–
"And, lo, I perceived that God had not sent him; but that he pronounced this
prophecy against me: for Tobiah and Sanballat had hired him. Therefore was he
hired, that I should be afraid, and do so, and sin, and that they might have matter
for an evil report, that they might reproach me. My God, think thou upon Tobiah
and Sanballat according to these their works, and on the prophetess Noadiah,
and the rest of the prophets, that would have put me in fear. . . . Moreover in
those days the nobles of Judah sent many letters unto Tobiah, and the letters of
Tobiah came unto them. For there were many in Judah sworn unto him, because
he [Tobiah] was the son in law of Shechaniah the son of Arah; and his [Tobiah's]
son Johanan had taken the daughter of Meshullam the son of Berechiah. Also
they reported his good deeds before me, and uttered my words to him. And
Tobiah sent letters to put me in fear."
Yet, for all this, there was no halt in the work. The gates were set up, and thus
the wall was finished in all its parts completely round the city. And "when all our
enemies heard thereof, and all the heathen that were about us saw these things,
they were much cast down in their own eyes: for they perceived that this work
was wrought of our God." As the danger from the enemies was still great,
Nehemiah commanded, "Let not the gates of Jerusalem be opened until the sun
be hot; and while they stand by, let them shut the doors, and bar them: and
appoint watches of the inhabitants of Jerusalem, every one in his watch, and
every one to be over against his house. Now the city was large and great: but the
people were few therein, and the houses were not builded."
Being able thus to dwell in comparative safety, the restoration of the worship
of God according to the Scriptures was systematically entered upon. On the first
day of the seventh month "all the people gathered themselves together as one
man, into the street that was before the water gate," and the people spake unto
"Ezra the scribe to bring the book of the law of Moses, which the Lord
commanded to Israel." Ezra brought forth the book, and stood upon a pulpit of
wood which they had made for the purpose, and "opened the book in the sight of
all the people (for he was above all the the people;) and when he opened it, all
the people stood up: and Ezra blessed the Lord, the great God. And all the
people answered, Amen, Amen, with lifting up their hands: and they bowed their
heads, and worshiped the Lord with their faces to the ground."
Certain chosen ones "caused the people to understand the law; and the
people stood in their place. So they read in the book in the law of God distinctly,
and gave the sense, and caused them to understand the reading." This was so
especially necessary, because,–owing to the scattered condition of the people in
the captivity, and especially owing to the mixed marriages in which the people
had indulged since their return–the language of the people had so changed that
many of them could not well understand the pure Hebrew in which the Scriptures
were written, and now read by Ezra. And when they did understand the reading,
as now distinctly presented to them in its plain sense, it presented before them a
manner of life so distinct from that which they had been living, so much purer and
more elevated and noble, that "all the people wept when they heard the words of
the law."
But Nehemiah and Ezra and the interpreters comforted all the people, saying,
"This day is holy unto the Lord your God; mourn not, nor weep. . . . Go your way,
eat the fat, and drink the sweet, and send portions unto them for whom nothing is
prepared; for this day is holy unto our Lord. Neither be ye sorry; for the joy of the
Lord is your strength. . . . Hold your peace, for the day is holy; neither be ye
grieved. And all the people went their way to eat, and to drink, and to send
portions, and to make great mirth, because they had understood the words that
were declared unto them."
On the second day, as they were all gathered to the reading, it was also the
second day of the seventh month, in the portion that was read was what is now
Leviticus 23. In this they found that it was commanded "that the children of Israel
should dwell in booths in the feast of the seventh month; and that they should
publish and proclaim in all their cities, and in Jerusalem, saying, Go forth into the
mount, and fetch olive branches, and pine branches, and myrtle branches, and
palm branches, and branches of thick trees, to make booths, as it is written." This
had stood in the book all the ages since the children of Israel had been in the
wilderness, after their coming out of Egypt; yet "since the days of Joshua the son
of Nun unto that day had not the children of Israel done so." Nevertheless as
soon as it was now read, the people received it as it is the word of God, and
promptly went forth, and brought the branches, "and made themselves booths,
every one upon the roof of his house, and in their courts, and in the courts of the
house of God, and in the street of the water gate, and in the street of the gate of
Ephraim. And all the congregation of them that were come again out of the
captivity made booths, and sat under the booths. . . . And there was very great
gladness."
When the booths were prepared, and the people dwelt in them, on the first
day of the Feast of Tabernacles the reading of the Scriptures was taken up again,
and was continued day by day throughout the whole seven days of the feast. And
on the eighth day, the twenty-third day of the seventh month, "was a solemn
assembly according to the manner." And on the twenty-fourth day of this same
month the people "assembled with fasting, and with sackclothes, and earth upon
them. And the seed of Israel separated themselves from all
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strangers, and stood and confessed their sins, and the iniquities of their fathers.
And they stood up in their place, and read in the book of the law of the Lord their
God one fourth part of the day; and another fourth part they confessed, and
worshiped the Lord their God."
One of these blessed and thorough confessions is recorded in full in
Nehemiah 9 as an example for God's people in all time. It is well worth a careful
reading in detail by every one of God's people to-day. there is not anywhere in it
any suggestion that either they or their fathers had been infallibly right, and had
done infallibly right, all the time, so that it should be accounted akin to sacrilege
for anybody to think, and akin to blasphemy for anybody to say, that there was a
better way. This confession was written out, and Nehemiah and eighty-three
others of the princes, priests, and Levites signed it in behalf of themselves and all
the people, who "clave to their brethren, their nobles, and entered into a curse,
and into an oath, to walk in God's law, which was given by Moses the servant of
God, and to observe and do all the commandments of the Lord our Lord, and his
judgments and his statutes; and that we would not give our daughters unto the
people of the land, nor take their daughters for our sons: and if the people of the
land bring ware or any victuals on the Sabbath day to sell, that we would not buy
it of them on the Sabbath, or on the holy day: and that we would leave the
seventh year, and the exaction of every debt."
At the same time the ordinances, and the courses of the priests, Levites,
porters, and singers, etc., were restored, in the service of God in the temple.
[The next article is "The Wall Dedicated, the Rival Worship of Samaria
Established."]
June 4, 1902
SOME time after the events related in the preceding article, Nehemiah made
a journey to the court of the king of Persia, where he stayed several months, and
then returned to Jerusalem.
As soon as he returned, he began to arrange for a great celebration in the
dedication of the wall that had at last, through such "troublous times," been
triumphantly finished. He gathered from the cities, the villages, and the . . .
country of Judah, priests, Levites, and . . . in great numbers to bear a leading
part in the dedication with gladness, both with thanksgivings, and with singing,
with cymbals, . . . , and with harps. And the sons of the singers gathered
themselves together, both out of the plain country round about Jerusalem, and
from the villages of Netophathi; also from the house of Gilgal, and out of the
fields of Geba and Azmaveth: for the singers had builded them villages round
about Jerusalem. And the priests and the Levites purified themselves, and
purified the people, and the gates, and the wall."
When all had thus been "purified," and so prepared, the day of the dedication
came. There were formed two great processions of . . . , priests, singers, and
people who ascended the wall at opposite points, and . . . round upon the top of
the wall till the two processions were joined at both ends of . . . forming now one
continuous procession round the whole city upon the top of the wall. Then the
whole united procession stood still and "gave thanks," and "the singers sang
loud, with Jezrahiah their overseer. Also that day they offered great sacrifices,
and rejoiced: for God had made them rejoice with great joy: the wives also and
the children rejoiced: so that the joy of Jerusalem was heard even afar off."
Also during Nehemiah's absence there had been a falling away from
faithfulness in bringing the tithes into the storehouse. "I perceived that the
portions of the Levites had not been given them; for the Levites and the singers,
that did the work, were fled everyone to his field. Then contended I with the rulers
and said, Why is the house of God forsaken? And I gathered them together, and
set them in their place. Then brought all Judah the tithe of the corn and the new
wine and the oil into the treasuries."
There had been also a falling away from the proper observance of the
Sabbath; indeed, with many, from any observance of the Sabbath at all; for–
"In those days saw I in Judah some treading winepresses on the Sabbath,
and bringing in sheaves, and lading asses; as also wine, grapes, and figs, and all
manner of burdens, which they brought into Jerusalem on the Sabbath day; and I
testified against them in the day wherein they sold victuals. There dwelt men of
Tyre also therein, which brought fish, and all manner of ware, and sold on the
Sabbath unto the children of Judah, and in Jerusalem. Then I contended with the
nobles of Judah, and said unto them, What evil thing is this that ye do, and
profane the Sabbath day? Did not your fathers thus, and did not our God bring all
this evil upon us, and upon this city? yet ye bring more wrath upon Israel by
profaning the Sabbath.
"And it came to pass, that, when the gates of Jerusalem began to be dark
before the Sabbath, I commanded that the gates should be shut, and charged
that they should not be opened till after the Sabbath: and some of my servants
set I at the gates, that there should no burden be brought in on the Sabbath day.
So the merchants and sellers of all kind of ware lodged without Jerusalem once
or twice. Then I testified against them, and said unto them, Why lodge ye about
the wall? if ye do so again, I will lay hands on you. From that time forth came
they no more on the Sabbath."
Mixed Marriages
Encouraged by the example of the priests and others, many of the people had
again fallen away to mixed marriage:–
"In those days also saw I Jews that had married wives of Ashdod, of Ammon,
and of Moab; and their children spake half in the speech of Ashdod, and could
not speak in the Jews' language; but according to the language of each people.
And I contended with them, and cursed them, and smote certain of them, and
plucked off their hair, and made them swear by God, saying, Ye shall not give
your daughters unto their sons, nor take their daughters unto your sons, or for
yourselves. Did not Solomon king of Israel sin by these things? yet among many
nations was there no king like him, who was beloved of his God, and God made
him king over all Israel: nevertheless even him did outlandish women cause to
sin. Shall we then hearken unto you to do all this great evil, to transgress against
our God in marrying strange wives?"
We have seen that a daughter of Eliashib had been given in marriage to one
of the chief enemies of the cause of God–Tobiah the Ammonite. In addition to
that, one of his grandsons had married the daughter of the very chief enemy
himself–Sanballat the Horonite. When it was demanded that he separate from
this heathenish connection, he was so far gone in apostasy that he refused. And
as the consequence, says Nehemiah, "One of the sons of Joiada, the son of
Eliashib the high priest, was son-in-law to Sanballat the Horonite; therefore I
chased him from me."
IN the history of the restoration from the captivity to Babylon there is one
notable thought that runs like a thread through the whole, that until now it could
not be considered in its full strength of meaning. That thought–that truth–is that
after the first coming-out of Babylon, the real strength and hope of the cause of
God lay in the other comings-out of Babylon, and not at all in any development or
growth from within, of those who were not of Babylon and in the Lord's land, and
possessed there of the full light of His Word, His prophets, and all the
opportunities and blessings of His true worship.
Spirituality Waning.
And still there were in Babylon devout souls, loving God, and longing to see
His cause rise in its true dignity and power, and move prosperously, in the world;
souls longing for deliverance from the corruption of Babylon, into the light and
freedom and place of God's own land, among God's people who were out of
Babylon. And again these were disappointed and groaned at the low and loose
conditions of the people whom they thought to be out of Babylon; grieved at the
neglect of the cause and work of God which those people professed, and grieved
at the deplorable unity of heart and mixture of marriage between them and the
open enemies of God and His cause and work in the world.
Nevertheless, again as the consequence of these comings-out of Babylon,
there was a great revival, and a cleansing and a separating from the heathen,
among the backslidden ones also professed to be "out of Babylon."
And still again, but now for the last time, the power and blessedness of the
revival was allowed to wane, the people drifted into formalism, worldliness, love
of money, neglect of the cause and work of God, and now–even worse than the
confusion of marriages with the heathen–a confusion of relationships among
themselves by the use and multiplying of divorce.
The backsliding was now so great that there was a total separation of their
own interests from the cause and work of God, so much so that if they did for the
cause so little a thing as the shutting of the doors of the house of God, or the
kindling of a fire on His altar, they considered that they ought to be paid for it;
because that was "not their work," but the work of those whose time was devoted
to that and who consequently were paid for it. When they made offerings to the
Lord, instead of making them from the first and the first and the best, it was from
what was left after they had consumed upon themselves the first and the best–
from the refuse, that would be unfit to offer to their human governor. Yes, and
even when the first and best was still in their possession unconsumed–instead of
making offerings from that, they would actually pick out that which was inferior,
and make that their offering to the Lord. And all this as a professed expression of
their faith that God had given for their salvation and redemption of His First and
Best! But in truth it was the expression of their unbelief in God's having made, or
that He would make, any true offering at all, but only the refuse, if any.
The backsliding was now such that the priests, the ministers and teachers to
the people, "departed out of the way," and actually caused the people to stumble
at the very law that they were set to teach. They forgot the fear of God, and of
course feared the people. Then they would not declare the clear and plain Word
of God, for fear that the people would resent it and they would lose their place;
for tho the office of priest was of God, as a consequence of such example the
people, seeing that the priests had become political and were afraid of them,
became themselves political and unruly, and would turn out of office even a priest
who did not please them. Thus the priests did not keep the straight way of the
truth, but practised partiality in the law of the Lord, and so made the Lord
"contemptible and base before all the people."
The men dealt treacherously, committed abomination, and profaned the
holiness of the Lord and the covenant of fatherhood, in dealing treacherously
against the wife of their youth by divorcing her for another, and especially for a
younger. "For the Lord, the God of Israel, saith that He hateth putting away; for
one covereth violence with his garment, saith the Lord of hosts; therefore take
heed to your spirit, that ye deal not treacherously."
They were so far backslidden from God that they would keep the tithe, paying
it not at all; thus robbing God. they were so far in the dark that they actually drew
comparisons between themselves and the wicked, to the advantage of the
wicked. And when in their darkness and discontent with God, because of their
own perverseness, they concluded that the wicked were having a better time
than themselves were, they declared, "It is vain to serve God," and there is no
profit in trying to do right and walking mournfully before the Lord; for while we are
doing this and having a hard and cheerless time of it, the proud are happy, the
wicked are prospered, and they that actually go so far as to tempt God, are even
delivered.
Dead Formality.
And with all this looseness of life, this darkness of spirit, this corruption of
morals, they would go to meeting on the Sabbath, and go through the forms of
worship, and pray, and weep; and they counted themselves very religious
because of all this. But the Lord rebuked this with the rest of their iniquity, and
declared that it was this formalism. This was the cause of His rejecting their
offerings. "This have ye done again, covering the altar of the Lord with tears, with
weeping, and with crying out, insomuch that He regardeth not the offering any
more, or receiveth it with good will of your hand."
But amidst this dark and dismal mass there were still a few, a little flock, who
feared the Lord. These "spake often one to another" of the goodness of the Lord,
of the joy of serving Him, and the wealth of happiness found in the loving-
kindness of the Lord. "And the Lord hearkened and heard it, and a book of
remembrance was written before Him for them that feared the Lord, and that
thought upon His name. And they shall be Mine, saith the Lord, of hosts in that
day when I make up My jewels; and I will spare them, as a man spareth His own
son that serveth Him."
Thus was it with the few; but as for the people themselves, the nation, they
were gone. They had neglected the light and joy and blessing of the three
messages of God calling out of Babylon; they had worn out the Lord's good Spirit
of reviving; they had confirmed themselves in backsliding. All that is left for the
Lord to do is by His prophet to testify to the real condition of things and the end
thereof, close up His revelation, cease to speak; and let them reap what they had
so persistently sown–the rejection of God when He came in the person of His
Son to offer Himself finally for them; and then appeal directly to the heathen to
whom they had persistently allied themselves, and whose salvation they had so
long hindered by so allying themselves to them.
It was a wonderful thing to be delivered from Babylon, and brought to the
freedom, and light, and joy, and blessing, of the Lord in His own chosen land. It
was a wonderful thing to have God enlist in their favor all power of earth as well
as of heaven. It was a wonderful thing that God should speak to them by living
prophets. And it was a most deplorable thing that they should allow the love of
the world and fellowship of the heathen to frustrate and make utterly vain, so far
as they were concerned, this whole tide of heaven which had been made to flow
upon earth. O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, which killest the prophets, and stonest
them that are sent unto thee; how often would I have gathered thy children
together, as a hen doth gather her brood under her wings, and ye would not!
Behold, your house is left unto you desolate."
["From Religious to Political" is the title of the next article.]
July 2, 1902
IN the year 130 B. C., the king of Syria was slain in a battle with the
Parthians. Then John Hyrcanus, the high priest of the Jews, "took the advantage
of the disturbances and divisions that thenceforth ensued . . . to make himself
absolute and wholly independent. For after this, neither he nor any of his
descendants owned any further dependence on the kings of Syria; but
thenceforth wholly freed themselves from all manner of homage, servitude, or
subjection to them."–Prideaux. And thus the government of the new independent
country of Judea was merged in the high priests in succession, the high priest
being the head of both religion and the State.
In the year 129 B. C., this same high priest conquered the Idumeans,–
Edomites,–and "reduced them to this necessity, either to embrace the Jewish
religion or else to leave the country, and seek new dwellings elsewhere." They
chose to adopt the Jewish religion rather then be driven from their country. But
under such circumstances they were as much Idumeans as before, except only
in the forms of worship. About the year 128 B. C., Hyrcanus sent an embassy to
Rome "to renew the league of friendship they had with the Romans." "And when
the Senate had received their epistle, they made a league of friendship with
them," and "decreed" "to renew their league of friendship and mutual assistance
with these good men, and who were sent by a good and friendly people."–
Josephus.
In the year 106 B. C., Aristobulus, the eldest son of John Hyracanus, regularly
succeeded to the high-priesthood, and, being also the head of the State,
resolved "to change the government into a kingdom," and "first of all put a
diadem on his head, four hundred and eighty-one years and three months after
the people had been delivered from Babylonish slavery, and were returned to
their own country again."–Josephus. This piece of worldly ambition opened
among the Jews the flood-gates of jealousy, strife, assassination, and domestic
war, which evils were, if possible, more indulged than among the nations around.
After Aristobulus, Alexander Janneus reigned; and after him his widow,
Alexandra. While Alexandra was queen, Hyrcanus, the eldest son of Janneus,
was high priest. At the court there was a shrewd and ambitious Idumean,
Antipater by name. He studiously gained the ascendant over Hyrcanus. This he
did in the hope that when Hyrcanus should become king at the death of his
mother, he himself would virtually rule the kingdom. However, when the time
actually came, Antipater saw all his plans upset by the revolt of Aristobulus II., the
brother of Hyrcanus. For Hyrcanus was defeated in a battle, and was obliged to
resign to Artistobulus the office of high priest and king. Yet Antipater did not
despair; he immediately set on foot, and persistently wrought an intrigue to
replace Hyrcanus upon the throne.
Such was the condition of affairs in Judea when Pompey came into Syria of
Damascus. To Pompey at Damascus came ambassadors from both Hyrcanus
and Aristobulus–Antipater the Idumaean on behalf of Hyrcanus, and more for
himself. Also there came ambassadors from the people to make representations
against both Hyrcanus and Aristobulus, and to plead that the kingship be
abolished and the governorship be only in the high priest as such. Pompey heard
them all; but deferred the decision until he should arrive in Judea. By the time
that Pompey reached Judea, Aristobulus had taken a course greatly to offend
him. But Pompey coming to Jerusalem, Aristobulus repented and went out to
meet him, and offered to receive him into the city and give him money. But the
partisans of Aristobulus would not accept this arrangement. They stationed
themselves at the temple and prepared for a siege.
The siege of the temple was promptly begun by Pompey; but he was obliged
to spend three months of hard work and fierce fighting before it was taken.
However, when the temple was finally taken, Pompey refrained from plundering it
of its wealth or of anything, though he passed into the most holy place within the
veil. Judea was now held in subjection, and laid under tribute, to the Roman
power, from which she never escaped except by annihilation.
"Now the occasions of this misery which came upon Jerusalem
were Hyrcanus and Aristobulus, by raising a sedition one against
the other; for now we lost our liberty, and became subject to the
Romans, and were deprived of that country which we had gained
by our arms from the Syrians, and were compelled to restore it to
the Syrians. Moreover the Romans exacted of us, in a little time,
above ten thousand talents [about $12,000,000]; and the royal
authority, which was a dignity formerly bestowed on those that were
high priests by the right of their family, became the property of
private men."–Josephus.
"Pompey committed Coele-Syria, as far as the river Euphrates and Egypt, to
Scaurus with two Roman legions, and then went away to Cilicia, and made haste
to Rome." Joppa, Gaza, and other coast towns were added to the province of
Syria, which was the cause of that province's reaching to Egypt. Thus the
Euphrates was made by Pompey the eastern boundary of the Roman Empire.
As the cause of Hyrcanus had been represented throughout by Antipater the
Idumaean, he succeeded in so gaining the favor of Pompey and the Romans that
he sustained confidential relations with them and with Pompey's successor in the
East, Gabinius, who "settled the affairs which belonged to the city of Jerusalem,
as was agreeable to Antipater's inclination."–Josephus.
When Gabinius "came from Rome to Syria as commander of the Roman
forces," there was in his army a young officer named Mark Antony. In Judea
young Alexander, the son of Aristobulus, had "suddenly got together ten
thousand armed footmen and fifteen hundred horsemen, and fortified
Alexandrium, a fortress near Coreae, and Macherus, near the mountains of
Arabia." In subduing the revolt of Alexander, Antony and Antipater were brought
into such relationship that a firm friendship was established between them, and
which in after years, out of a curious combination of events wholly undreamed of
now by either of them, had a positive bearing upon one of the most significant
occurrences in the world's history.
In the Roman civil war, 49-47 B. C., Cesar was obliged to follow Pompey to
Egypt, and to war in Egypt and the East. While Cesar was in Egypt, Antipater the
Idumean became of great service to him; for he and Mithridates, king of
Pergamus, were chiefly instrumental in bringing Egypt into complete subjection to
Cesar. And when they had taken . . . , and in a severe engagement had subdued
"the whole Delta," "Mithridates sent an . . . of this battle to Cesar, and openly
declared that Antipater was the author of this . . . and of his own preservation,
insomuch that Cesar commended Antipater then, and made use of him all the
rest of that war in the most hazardous undertakings; he also happened to be
wounded in one of these engagements. However, when Cesar, after some time,
had finished that war and was sailed away from Syria, he honored Antipater
greatly, and confirmed Hyracanus in the high-priesthood, and bestowed on
Antipater the privilege of . . . of Rome, and freedom from taxes everywhere."–
Josephus.
And when one came to Cesar with accusations against Hyrcanus and
Antipater, hoping to have himself put in their places, again "Cesar appointed
Hyrcanus to be high priest, and gave Antipater what principality he himself should
choose, leaving the determinations himself; so he made him procurator of Judea.
He also gave Hyrcanus leave to raise up the walls of his own city, upon his
asking that favor of him; for they had been demolished by Pompey. And this grant
he sent to the consuls of Rome, to be engraven in the capitol. The decree of the
Senate was this that follows:–
"Caius Cesar, consul the fifth time, hath decreed: That the Jews
shall possess Jerusalem, and may compass that city with walls;
and that Hyrcanus, the son of Alexander, the high priest and
ethnarch of the Jews, retain it, in the manner he himself pleases;
and the Jews be allowed to deduct out of their tribute, every second
year the land is let (in the sabbatic period), a corus of that tribute;
and that the tribute they pay be not let to farm, nor that they pay
always the same tribute."
Antipater the Idumaean "was in great repute with the Idumaeans also; out of
which nation he married a wife, who was the daughter of one of their eminent
men, and her name was Cypros, by whom he had four sons–Phasael, and
Herod, who was afterward made king, and Joseph, and Pheroras, and a
daughter named Salome."
Antipater made Phasaelus, his eldest son, governor of
Jerusalem and the places that were about it, but committed Galilee
to Herod, his next son, who was then a very young man; for he was
but twenty-five years of age. But as he was a youth of great mind,
he presently met with an opportunity of signalizing his courage. For,
finding there was one Hezekiah, a captain of a band of robbers,
who overran the neighboring parts of Syria with a great troop of
them, he seized him and slew him, as well as a great number of the
other robbers that were with him, for which action he was greatly
beloved by the Syrians. For when they were very desirous to have
their country freed from this nest of robbers, he purged it of them;
so they sung songs in his commendation in their villages and cities,
as having pro-
421
cured them peace and the secure enjoyment of their possessions.
And on this account it was that he became known to Sextus Cesar,
who was a relative of the great Cesar, and was now president of
Syria."
Cesar spent the time till the autumn of 47 setting things in order in Egypt and
the East, then he returned to Rome, where, in 44, he was murdered. Then within
two years Octavius Cesar and Mark Antony held the world under their power; and
to Antony there fell the task of gathering from the wealth of Asia the enormous
sum of $170,000,000 for the payment of the troops.
This need and greed of Antony for money stood Herod of Judea in good
stead. For when ambassadors from all parts met Antony in Bithynia, among them
"the principal men of the Jews came to accuse" Herod and his brother
Phasaelus, and to charge that tho "Hyrcanus had indeed the appearance of
reigning, these men had all the power. But Antony paid great respect to Herod,
who was come to him to make his defense against his accusers, on which
account his adversaries could not so much as obtain a hearing, which favor
Herod had gained of Antony by money."–Josephus.
The Antony in Cilicia there came again "a hundred of the most potent of the
Jews to accuse Herod and those about him, and set the men of the greatest
eloquence among them to speak." But "when Antony had heard both sides at
Daphne, he asked Hyrcanus who they were that governed the nation best.
Hyrcanus replied, 'Herod and his friends.' Hereupon Antony, by reason of the old
hospitable friendship he had made with his father [Antipater], . . . made both
Herod and Phasaelus tetrarchs, and committed the public affairs of the Jews to
them, and wrote letters to that purpose."–Josephus.
Antony went with Cleopatra to Alexandria, B. C. 41. Fulvia, his wife, died in
the spring of 40. Antony's giddy infatuation with the voluptuous queen of Egypt
was fast estranging him from Octavius and the Roman people. The matter was
patched up for a little while by the marriage of Antony and Octavia, the sister of
Octavius, B. C. 40; and "the triumvirs returned to Rome to celebrate this union."–
Duruy.
Troubles of Herod.
In the same year, at the instance of a certain Antigonus, the Parthians made
an incursion into Judea, gained possession of Jerusalem, and captured
Hyrcanus and Phasaelus, with many of their friends. But Herod with his
betrothed, with some of his family and a number of his friends, accompanied by a
strong guard, all escaped and made their way to Petra in Idumaea. Thus by
means of the Parthians, Antigonus obtained the power in Judea. He cut off the
ears of Hyrcanus so that, being maimed, he could not, according to the law, hold
the high-priesthood. Phasaelus being imprisoned, and knowing he was devoted
to death, "since he had not his hands at liberty,–for the bands he was in
prevented him from killing himself thereby,–he dashed his head against a great
stone, and thereby took away his own life."
Herod shortly went from Idumaea to the king of Arabia, and from there to
Egypt, stopping first at Pelusium. There the captains of the ships befriended him
and took him to Alexandria, where Cleopatra received him and entertained him;
"yet was she not able to prevail with him to stay there, because he was making
haste to Rome, even though the weather was stormy, and he was informed that
the affairs of Italy were very tumultuous and in great disorder."
Having through violent storms, severe reverses, and much expense, reached
Rome, "he first related to Antony what had befallen him in Judea," and how "that
he had sailed through a storm, and contemned all these terrible dangers, in order
to come, as soon as possible, to him who was his hope and only succor at this
time."
This account made Antony commiserate the change that had happened in
Herod's condition. And, reasoning with himself that this was a common case
among those that were placed in such great dignities, and that they are liable to
the mutations that come from fortune, he was very ready to give him the
assistance that he desired; and this because he called to mind the friendship he
had had with Antipater; because Herod offered him money to make him king, as
he had formerly given it to him to make him tetrarch; and chiefly because of his
hatred to Antigonus, for he took him to be a seditious person and an enemy to
the Romans.
Cesar [Octavius] was also the forwarder to raise Herod's dignity, and to give
him his assistance in what he desired, on account of the toils of war which he
had himself undergone with Antipater his father in Egypt, and of the hospitality he
had treated him withal, and the kindness he had always shown him, as also to
gratify Antony, who was very zealous for Herod.
So the Senate was convocated; and Messala first and then Atratinus,
introduced Herod into it, and enlarged upon the benefits they had received from
his father, and put them in mind of the goodwill he had borne to the Romans. At
the same time they accused Antigonus, and declared him an enemy, not only
because of his former opposition to them, but that he had now overlooked the
Romans, and taken the government from the Parthians. Upon this the Senate
was irritated; and Antony informed them further that it was for their advantage in
the Parthian War that Herod should be king. This seemed good to all the
senators, and so they made a decree accordingly.
When the Senate was dissolved, Antony and Cesar went out of
the Senate house with Herod between them, and with the consuls
and other magistrates before them, in order to offer sacrifices, and
to lay up their decrees in the capital. Antony also feasted Herod the
first day of his reign. And thus did this man receive the kingdom,
having obtained it on the one hundred and eighty-fourth Olympiad
[July, 40 B. C], when Cneius Domitius Calvinus was consul the
second time, and Caius Asinius Pollio the first time."–Josephus.
And thus when Herod, a full-blooded Idumaean, had become king of Judea,
the scepter had departed from Judah, and a lawgiver from between his feet; and
the time was at hand when Shiloh should come, to whom the gathering of the
people should be.
[The End.]
April 1, 1903
TO-DAY many remarkable things are occurring, so openly before the eyes of
all, that every thoughtful person is compelled to query, What do these things
mean? One, among the most remarkable of these remarkable things of to-day,
may be best defined as the universal spirit of combine. Everywhere, among all
classes, and in all lines of effort, there prevails this spirit of combine.
This spirit of combine is not merely an expansion of the sound principle of co-
operation of unity of action of individuals acting effectively toward a common
purpose. It is not, in any sense, the principle of co-operation or unity of action of
individuals acting as such, collectively toward a common purpose. It is instead
the principle of one mind, of one intellect, dominating all others possible, and
using all them to the one purpose of that one mind as individual.
This truth and this domination is demonstrated in the universally-known fact
that the first effort of this spirit is to deny, to execute, and to crush out, all right
and all freedom of the individual; is instanced in the trust, whether it be the
Standard Oil Trust, the Steel Trust, or a fruit trust. Whatever business it may be
that is comprehended in the trust, no individual is allowed to do anything in that
line of work, except as the servant of the trust, and absolutely subject to the
dictation of the trust. If the "combine" takes the form, not of the trust as such, but
of the labor union, then no individual is allowed to work, except as the servant of
the union and under the absolute dictation of the union.
The second effect of this spirit, wherever entertained, is to destroy all
individuality of the individual himself; so that he can not do the simplest and
easiest thing, a thing the virtue of which consists entirely in its being individually
done, unless a combine, a club, or a society, is first created, and he do that
simple and easy individual thing in the name and by the power of the combine. If,
for instance, a person wants to rest one day in the week, he insists that he can
not rest unless everybody else rests at the same time; and so a combine must be
formed, requiring everybody to rest when he rests to, so that he can rest because
they do. A member of the church knows that it is only plain, simple Christianity to
visit and help the afflicted, the poor, and the needy; and he knows that this is
what the church is for; yet he can not do this simple, Christian thing as an
individual Christian; but must first form within the church a combine, called a
"band" or of "society," for the purpose, and then do it in the name of this combine,
and because the combine requires it.
Another effect, and the direct logic of the combine, is a one-man power. This
is to-day manifest on every hand; the head of the trust can dictate daily what the
whole people shall pay for their sugar, their kerosene, their nails, etc; the head of
the union can dictate just what the employer shall do, and how he shall conduct
is business, or whether he shall conduct it at all. In the railroad strike of 1894,
that reached from Buffalo to San Francisco. It occurred that two governors of
sovereign states could not travel on official business within their own respective
states without permission of the one-man head of the strike combine, who
dominated from Chicago the greater part of the whole country of the United
States.
The logic of a one-man power is always a despotism. This is certain, because
of the nature of man himself. And it has proved so universally true that it is
universally understood. Indeed, it was the character of the rule of the man who
held the innocent office of despot that gave to that word its terrible meaning.
The logic of a one-man power is a despotism, and it is a despotism in all
relations, religious as well as other. This, too, is inevitable, because, as we have
already seen, the spirit of the combine is the spirit that leads one mind to usurp
the place and power of God over the minds, the rights, the persons, and the
property of others, and by force compel them to his one purpose. And as it is
certain that a man in the place of God will always act unlike God, it is also certain
that his power will always be exerted in compelling that his power will always be
exerted in compelling them to do things contrary to the righteousness of God.
This has been the unvarying history of it from the mighty despotism of Nimrod,
the first that arose since the Flood, to be partly but growing ones of to-day. For
Nimrod was not only a mighty hunter of beasts, but of men, also. He pursued and
compelled men to recognize his authority in all things; they must worship as he
dictated, and his example has been invariably followed. It was followed by
Pharaoh, by Nebuchadnezzar, by Darius, by the Cesars, and by the popes.
It never has failed, and it never will fail, that a one-man power develops a
despotism, and a despotism in religion as well as other affairs of life. And those
who disregarded the spirit of the combine and maintained their individual
integrity, have always been in the right, and are the true heroes of the ages.
Abraham disregarded the spirit and power of the combine established by Nimrod,
and maintained his individual integrity with God; and God vindicated him, called
him out of it unto an eternal reward, and made him an example unto all men, "the
father of all them that be of faith," and "the friend of God." Moses did it in Egypt.
God maintained his cause, delivered him and his whole people from it, made him
the greatest legislator of all times, and took him to an eternal reward. In the face
of a blazing furnace of sevenfold heat the three Hebrews did it in the presence of
Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon. God vindicated their course, preserved them in the
midst of the fire, brought them forth unscathed, changed the king's word, and
made the circumstance a lesson to all kings and all combines forever. Daniel did
it individually alone in the presence of the Medo-Persian combine and the den of
hungry lions. God vindicated him, because of his "innocency" in the matter, and
again made the individual an example to all men, and the circumstance a lesson
to all one-man powers and combines, forever. John the Baptist did it, Jesus
Christ did it, Stephen did it, all the apostles and early Christians did it, not in a
"combine," but wholly as individuals, each for himself alone, in disregard of the
greatest one-man power, and so the greatest despotism, of all ancient times.
John Wycliffe, John Huss, and Martin Luther did it against the greatest one-man
power, and so the greatest despotism, of all time, ancient or modern. These are
the ones who have kept alive liberty and the rights of mankind through the ages,
and have saved the world from being engulfed long ago in the vortex of
unmitigated despotisms.
ALONZO T. JONES.
April 8, 1903
II.
WHEN from Nimrod onward the despotism, the combine, of a one-man
power, had afflicted the world for a long series of ages, there arose a people who
renounced all that as akin to it, and established a government of the people.
They threw off all kingship, and declared that they needed no such figment to
govern them, but that they were capable of governing themselves, and so
established a government of the people, by the people, and for the people–
individual self-government, the republic of Rome. They were right. The principle
was sound, and the government was a grand success–while the people really
governed themselves. But the grandeur of the their success brought results
which caused the Roman people to lose the faculty of governing themselves; and
the government fell to cliques, coteries, and combines. These presently merged
in the first triumvirate–government by a special three.
And who were these three?–One of them was the chief capitalist, the head of
the trusts, the combines of capital, of the empire; another was the pride of the
populace, and the combines of the unions and of the envious crowd; and the
third was the pride of the army;–Crassus, Cesar, and Pompey. These three men
sat down together and agreed that nothing should be done in the Roman State
but by their consent. This held for awhile, but Crassus was killed in a battle.
Pompey was afterward killed, and Cesar alone was the government–a one-man
power. But a one-man power was dreaded. Cesar was murdered to escape it.
But immediately a new triumvirate was formed: Antony, Octavius, and Lepidus.
Lepidus was soon shelved; Antony and Octavius fought the battle of Actium;
Antony was defeated and shortly afterward committed suicide; and Octavius was
the government–a one-man power which permanently remained and which
became the most terrible despotism ever till then known. This one-man power, its
despotism, and its empire sank in annihilating ruin by the floods of barbarians
from the forests of Germany, and upon that ruin was built the one-man power of
the Papacy, the completed combine and the greatest despotism ever known on
earth.
The Barbarians established kingdoms in Western Europe. And again there
was a long series of kingships expanding into empire, with their consequent
tyranny, though these tyrannies were so far overtopped by the one greatest of all
tyrannies–the Papacy–that they were but slightly felt in comparison. Then after
that series of ages of kingships and imperialism there arose another people who
cast off all kingship and established a government of the people. They declared
that men are capable of governing themselves, and that, therefore, governments
derive their just powers from the consent of the governed. Accordingly, they
established a government of the people, by the people, for the people–individual
self-government, the republic of the United States. These men were right. These
principles are sound. The government was a grand success so long as the
people governed themselves.
But how many of the people of the United States to-day are self-governing?
And it must not be forgotten that the majority is, in effect, the government. In a
government of the people, when a majority fail to govern themselves, the
government is gone. In the world of business and traffic in the United States to-
day, how many of the people are governing themselves in their own business?–
The vast majority are governed by the trusts. In the world of labor to-day, how
many of the people govern themselves?–The vast majority are governed by the
unions. In the realm of government itself in the United States, in politics, how
many of the people govern themselves?–Almost the whole body of them are
governed by "the party," by "the machine," by "the boss," and according to "the
state."
Then where is self-government in the United States to-day? Where is
government of the people in this "government of the people" to-day–It is
absolutely gone; gone to the combines–to the business combines, the labor
combines, and the political combines. And do not forget that the logic of the
combine, of whatever sort, is a one-man power. And how far are we form this
even now?–The condition of things in this nation to-day is such that in a crisis
any day the head of the trust, the head of the unions, and the chief of the
national, political machine, can form a triumvirate as quietly and as absolute as
was that of Crassus, Cesar, and Pompey. And of such a triumvirate the only
outcome that there can be is a one-man power.
And even for this outcome the way is already blazed. The great coal strike in
the summer of 1892 brought the nation to the brink of such danger as could not
possibly be risked. As a government the state of Pennsylvania failed. There
3
was no way by which the national government could constitutionally reach the
case. Then he, who is the head of the national government, intervened–not as
head of the government, but only as "a private citizen." And when he intervened
only as "a private citizen," his intervention was promptly accepted and every
suggestion was respected–not because he was a private citizen, but wholly
because he is head of the national government. If he had been indeed only a
private citizen, he would not then been listened to for a moment; any more than
were the many other private citizens, who had offered suggestions. Therefore,
here is an instance of the head of the national government, in a case of a
national danger, acting only as a private citizen, yet with all the prestige of the
head of the government; an instance in which official and constitutional
government is left behind by the head of the government, yet that same head of
the government, acting as a private citizen with all the prestige of official and
constitutional head of the government. This is nothing else than in principle the
direct intimation of a one-man power.
This is not to say nor in any way to intimate that this has been in any way
intended, nor that President Roosevelt would intentionally do such a thing to any
extent. It is not in any way to criticize what he did. It is only a study of the
principle that is in what has been done. And this is the principle. And these great
strikes, with their consequent complications, are not by any means over with.
Indeed, things have now only fairly begun. A victory has been gained that will be
pushed to the utmost limit. Other such strikes with their perplexing complications
will certainly arise. Other men will occupy the place of head of the national
government. They too, will act "as private citizens," yet with the prestige of head
of the government. They, too, will act "pas private citizens," yet with the prestige
of head of the government, but with the important difference that over the course
where President Roosevelt cautiously, and, as it were, tremblingly, felt for the
way for his feet, the other man will, on horseback and in fully panoply, ride rough
shod.
And what a fearful pass it is to which this nation has already come, when the
only escape from a ruinous danger is the taking of a course that carries in its
train ruinous danger; in other words, when the only escape from ruinous danger
is a mere temporary palliative?
As in this consequence of the coal strike there has already been blazed the
way to a one-man power, so also in it there has appeared even in sight the
religious despotism that attaches to the one-man power. In the choosing of the
commission to settle the coal strike, it was stipulated that the commission should
consist of five men, each chosen from a certain calling that would make him in a
sense an expert. However, when the five had been chosen, the President went
beyond this, and added a sixth member. This sixth member was added "as a
commission to the strikers." It is Bishop Spaulding, of the Catholic Church, for the
reason that he "should be an imminent Roman Catholic prelate, nearly all of the
miners being adherents of the Catholic Church." In addition to this, the President
appointed a recorder to the commission. And this recorder was a man who "freely
admits his admiration for the magnificent organization of the Roman Church and
his appreciation of its strong and elevating influence upon artisans and wage-
earners," and who "has been for many years an active teacher in the economic
department of the great Catholic university at Washington." In addition to all this,
the President appointed two assistant recorders, and one of the two "is professor
of political economy at the Catholic university, located near Washington."
And yet even this does not exhaust the list of Catholic influences connected
with the commission, so that it is safe to say that the Catholic Church held the
dominating influence in connection with that commission which originally was to
consist of five men chosen from specific callings. Under the circumstances, with
"nearly all the miners being adherents of the Catholic Church," and they being
one of the principals in the controversy; and with the large Catholic influence
attached to the commission; it was in no small degree simply the Catholic Church
arbitrating her own cause and settling her own case. And when thus stands her
power and her influence at the very outset, in the very nature of things her power
in these things will grow as these troubles grow upon the government, and when
from it all there is developed the inevitable one-man power, there will she be
close beside him, the same perpetual Papacy. This is not to say that the Papacy
herself will be the one-man power. It is only to say that she will be the inspiration
and the directing voice of that which, apart from her personally, will be the one-
man power.
Yet this power and influence which she has gained and will hold in connection
with the strikes, combines, and complications is only a part of the true standing of
the Papacy in connection with the United States Government of to-day.
ALONZO T. JONES.
III.
IN closing the previous article we said that the power and influence which the
Papacy had already gained in the national government, in connection with the
coal-strike and labor combines, is only a part of the new standing of the Papacy
in connection with the United States Government to-day.
The opening of the Spanish-American War presented to the Papacy a grand
opportunity, which she instantly seized, and which she has been working to the
utmost at every stage of proceedings since. The entanglement of the question of
the friars in the Philippines she so worked as to draw the national government
one official communication with the papal government in Rome. She secured a
commission from the United States Government to be sent to Rome to deal with
the Papacy on her own ground in the Vatican. This commission consisted of
three persons,–Governor Taft, of the Philippine Islands; Bishop O'Gorman, of the
Catholic Church; and Attorney James F. Smith, a Roman Catholic and associate
justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines. That is to say, the United States
Government and the Papacy are two parties to a controversy or negotiation. The
United States Government sends a commission of three to represent the United
States, and two of the three are themselves Papists. This, then, was nothing else
than another instance in which the Papacy is professedly dealing for the United
States Government simply deals with herself. For is there anybody in the world
so obtuse as not to be able to discern that the papal two-thirds of that
commission sent to deal with the Papacy would inevitably work for the interests
of the Papacy first of all? that they would represent the Papacy instead of the
United State?
This two-thirds papal commission went duly to Rome, and entered upon
negotiations with the Papacy; with the result that the question in controversy was
relegated to Manila as the place of the further consideration of it, and Governor
Taft and the papal apostolic delegate, Mgr. Guido, as the persons to conduct the
further negotiations, with "the Philippine Government expressly recognizing the
official character of Mgr. Guido, and has pledged itself, over Mr. Taft's signature,
to treat with him as a duly-accredited representative of the Holy See." And this is
but the recognition of the papal government by the United States Government in
her Philippine possessions and jurisdiction.
In the negotiations Governor Taft proposed four articles as a basis of
procedure and settlement. One of these articles proposed a tribunal of arbitration
composed of five members, two to be appointed by the pope, two by the
Philippine Government, and the fifth to be chosen by "an indifferent person, like
the governor-general of India." By the Papacy these four articles were expanded
to twelve; and this particular one was so changed as to have that arbitration
board composed thus: "Two shall be named by the Holy See, two by the
Philippine Government, and the fifth by the common accord of the same four;
and if such accord can not be reached, his holiness the pope and the President
of the United States shall come to an understanding as to the choice of said fifth
member." Negotiations were at this point abruptly broken off, so that the matter
went no further. But this one item shows plainly enough how ready is the Papacy
to set traps by which she shall involve the United States Government in such a
way that it shall be caused to work hand in hand with the Papacy in behalf of the
Papacy. If that proposition had been accepted, can anybody believe that the four
would ever have agreed upon the fifth members, when the alternative was that
the pope and the President of the United States should work together in the
matter, thus becoming a union of the United States and the Papacy?
July 1, 1903
"Free from the Service of Sin" The Signs of the Times 29, 26 , p. 5 .
"KNOWING this, that our old man is crucified with Him, that the body of sin
might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin."
Plainly, therefore, the Lord intends that we shall not serve sin, and,
accordingly, has made provision that this intention shall be fulfilled.
"The body of sin" must be "destroyed," in order that henceforth we shall "not
serve sin." If the body of sin is not destroyed, if sin is not taken up by the root, we
shall certainly still serve sin, whatever our profession or desire.
Indeed, if I desire not to serve sin, if I desire to live without sinning, and yet do
not desire it enough to have the body of sin destroyed, to have sin completely
uprooted, whatever the cost, or however painful the process, then my desire is
not sincere, and can not possibly be realized. I am simply tickling my fancy with a
mirage.
No, the body of sin must be destroyed,–nothing short of destruction will do,–in
order that we shall not serve sin. See, too, what "destroy" means, "To pull down;
unbuild; demolish, to overthrow; lay waste; ruin; make desolate; to kill; slay;
extirpate; to bring to naught; put an end to; annihilate; obliterate entirely; cause to
cease, or cease to be."
The Lord has made full provision for this destruction of the body of sin; it must
be accomplished by crucifixion. "Our old man is crucified," "that the body of sin
might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin." That is the straight,
sure course to freedom from the service of sin.
But, thank the Lord, we do not have to go this way alone. "Our old man is
crucified with Him." He was made "in the likeness of sinful flesh" for us. He was
in all things made "like unto His brethren." He "was in all points tempted like as
we are." "The Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all." And He was crucified.
He was crucified for us. He was crucified as we. He was "the last Adam." He was
humanity. And in Him the old Adam–the old, sinful humanity–was crucified. And
"our old man is crucified with Him" in order "that the body of sin might be
destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin."
Are you indeed crucified with Him? Have you given up yourself to crucifixion,
do you give yourself up to destruction, that you may be delivered from the service
of sin? Is your desire to be free from sinning so sincere that you freely give
yourself up to crucifixion–that you abandon yourself to destruction? If it is, then
you can easily know the triumph that there is in knowing that the body of sin is
destroyed, and that henceforth you shall not serve sin.
Why is this verse of scripture written, if it is not intended that you shall not
serve sin? And when it is written to show you this, the Lord's intention, then what
good is that to you, what good can it ever be to you, if that intention is not fulfilled
in you, and you are not kept from the service of sin?–A. T. Jones.
I AM Jehovah thy God. . . . Thou shalt have no other gods before Me." Ex.
20:2, 3.
To have Jehovah alone as God is to love Him with all the heart and soul and
mind and strength. It therefore plainly follows that anything by which any part of
the heart or the soul or the mind or the strength is turned from God, is devoted to
anything other than to God, is in itself to have another God than Jehovah. And
this is what is forbidden in the First Commandment, "Thou shalt have no other
gods before Me."
One of the chief gods which it is natural for men to have before the Lord is
"the god of this world," "the spirit that now worketh in the children of
disobedience."
One prominent phase of the worship of "the god of this world," is the worship
of Mammon, or riches. And this is not by any means least, tho it is the last one in
the list; for is it not written, "The love of money is the root of all evil"?
This is so wrapped up with the phase of "the pride of life,"–ambition, self-
exaltation, self-aggrandizement, glorious–that it is, in great measure, inseparable
from it. For there is nothing which gives worldly glory so quickly, so easily, and so
abundantly as money; and there is nothing that gives power so quickly and so
easily as does money. All this, simply because mankind is naturally so worshipful
of Mammon. And yet it is all idolatry; it is all a denial of the true God; it is a
breaking of the First Commandment, which says, "Thou shalt have no other gods
before Me." For, says Jesus: "Ye can not,"–not, Ye ought not; not, Ye shall not;
but,–"Ye can not serve God and Mammon."
Since the true worship of God is to love God with all the heart, and all the
soul, and all the mind, and all the strength; and anything that draws away either
the heart, soul, mind, or strength to it, and comes between man and the true
worship of God, is another god; so the allowing of money, the desire for money,
the love of money, to come between a man and his true service to God, is the
worship of Mammon. And to allow the desire for money, the love of money, to
separate a man from true Christian thoughtfulness, and care of mankind
temporarily and eternally, is the worship of Mammon; it is to have another god
than the Lord, it is to break the First Commandment.
The distinction may be clearly drawn by saying that the keeping of the First
Commandment is the being right, and doing right, with no thought whatever, at
any time, as to what it will cost. No amount of money can ever have any
consideration whatever in any question of serving God; in any question of loving
God with all the heart, or our neighbor as ourself. And yet everybody knows that
"What will it cost?" does have a positive bearing with the vast majority, even of
professed Christian people, upon the exercise of their love to God with all the
heart, and their neighbor as themselves.
But to allow this question to have any bearing whatever is the worldly way. It
"is not of the Father, but of the world." For with the world the first question is
always, "What will it cost?" "How much can I make?" In all the dealing, all the
traffic of business relationship in the world, the way of the world, and the inquiry
of the world, is only, "How much can I make?" And if more can be made by
oppressing the neighbor, the oppression takes precedence of the love of the
neighbor, and the neighbor is deliberately robbed.
If a neighbor begins business of the same order as that of a man who has
already begun, he is deliberately underbidden, undersold, that, if possible, he
may be crushed completely out of business, in order that the first one may be left
alone, to have all, in order that he alone may be rich, and have the worldly glory
of his little kingdom of the crossroads. And those that have succeeded most fully
at this form gigantic combinations to crush out, or absorb, all lesser ones, until
there remains but one vast combination drawing tribute from all the people in the
nation, and even of the whole world.
But God has written of it all that "he is a proud man" "who enlargeth his desire
as hell, and is as death, and can not be satisfied, but gathereth unto him all
nations, and heapeth unto him all people," "that coveteth an evil covetousness to
his house, that he may set his nest on high, that he may be delivered from the
power of evil." But "shall not all these take up a parable against him, and a
taunting proverb against him, and say, Woe to him that increaseth that which is
not his! how long?" "Shall they not rise up suddenly that shall bite thee, and
awake that shall vex thee, and thou shalt be for booties unto them? Because
thou hast spoiled many nations, all the remnant of the people shall spoil thee."
See Hab. 2:5-9.
This is all "the pride of life," which "is not of the Father, but of the world." It is
all Mammon-worship. And since the literal, original meaning of the word
"mammon" is "that in which one trusts," it is particularly appropriate that these
various combinations, which crush out all individuality and demand tribute of all
peoples, should be called "trusts."
Yet the most gigantic of the "trusts" is but the extreme of that trick of trade
held by the individual by which, to get the trade, he undersells and crowds out
the man across the way.
The most gigantic "trust" is but the extreme of that trick in trade by which the
individual or the little partnership or corporation asks more for a thing when there
is no competition than would be asked if there were competiton. Whomsoever,
without competition, demands a greater price than he knows that he would take if
there were competition, is an exactor of unjust gain. And "he that by usury and
unjust gain increaseth his substance, he shall gather it for him that will pity the
poor." Prov. 28:8.
The most gigantic "trust" is but the extreme of that trick in trade on the part of
the individual by which, through his beating down, or "jewing," he tries his best to
get a thing for less than he knows that it is worth. "It is naught, it is naught, saith
the buyer; but when he is gone his way, then he boasteth." Prov. 20:14.
The organizer of the president of the "trust" who boasts in his enormous gain
is no more an idolater and a sinner in this thing than is the individual who, in his
degree, and to the extent of his power, does the same thing precisely. If he had
the ability, or the power, of the organizer or the president of the "trust," he would
be doing precisely the same things that he is doing now, only in the larger
measure that would be his, as the head of a mighty corporation. And so certainly
is it true, as written, "In the world, the god of traffic is the god of fraud."
All such is but the worship of Mammon, it is idolatry; it is to have another god
before the Lord; it is not of the Father, but is of the world; it is neither loving God
with all the heart nor the neighbor as the self. "If I have made gold my hope, or
have said to the fine gold, Thou art my confidence; if I rejoiced because my
wealth was great, and because mine hand had gotten much. . . . this also were
an iniquity to be punished by the judge; for I should have denied the God that is
above." Job 31:24-28. And this equally and as really as if I were a worshiper of
the sun and the moon.
There if a better way; it is the way of the keeping of the commandment of
God. "Thou shalt have no other gods before Me." It is the way of Christianity: "All
things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them."
You know that you do not like to have a man work a scheme upon you, by which
he requires you to pay for a thing more than he would take for it if there were
competition. You know that you would not like to have people "jew" you down to
take for a thing less than you know that it is worth. Put yourself in the other man's
place–and stay there. Look at things from his side, and continue to do so. "Look
not every man on his own things, but every man also on the things of others."
This is Christianity; it is the keeping of the First Commandment. Yea, it is the
keeping of all "the law and the prophets."
Nor is it hard to do this. It is the easiest thing in the world for him who has the
heart to do it. And God gives the heart to do it; as it is written: "A new heart also
will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you."
Idolatry in Giving.
We say it with emphasis, for it is applicable to people who are not millionaires,
as truly as to those who are: All the value of our giving as measured by the Lord,
in perfect justice and righteousness, rests altogether upon the basis upon which
we make or obtain our money. If my money is not made honestly, not a cent that I
ever give away will stand to my credit, in righteousness, and in justice it can not. I
robbed another man to get it; it is his still, and when I give it away, it is his money
that I give away.
And this is another reason why the two mites of the poor widow, that day
when she gave it, was more than all that the wealthy put in of their abundance.
We know that the Mammon-worshipers in Christ's day were like the Mammon-
worshipers in this day. They would crowd down in the dealing when the people
were selling to them; and they would round up on the price when people were to
buy of them, and thus at both ends they increased their fain.
Then they would put great offerings into the temple treasury of the Lord, and
take credit to themselves because they gave "so much to the cause." But that
poor widow, who, because of these men who devoured widow's houses and for a
pretense made long prayers, was reduced to substance honestly gotten, but by
the hardest,–the widow, who, out of her love to the Lord, gave what little she had
left after she had passed through the devouring hands of these men–when she
came into the temple of the Lord, giving the little that she had, she gave more
than all the others together, every particle of it was honest. Every particle of it
came from honest effort. And that was a gift that measured according to
righteousness in the sight of God. there is such a thing as honest dealing, and it
can be practised in this world. And whatever means is not acquired in that way,
how much soever of it may be given, it can not be counted as the gift of him who
gave it. It will be counted to those widows and the poor whom he has ground
down to
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get it, to the laborers whose wages he ground down to the lowest notch to
increase or to preserve his great gains.
That is why God says to the laborers, be patient unto the coming of the Lord.
The husbandman waiteth for the precious fruits of the earth, and hath long
patience for it. Be ye also patient; your labor is not in vain. God knows the just
wages that you earn, and of just how much of it you are robbed. And in the day of
reckoning He will return it to you in full justice and righteousness.
Be ye patient. Serve God. "Obey in all things your masters according to the
flesh; not with eyeservice, as menpleasers; but in singleness of heart, fearing
God: and whatsoever ye do, do it heartily, as to the Lord, and not unto men;
knowing that of the Lord ye shall receive the reward of the inheritance: for ye
serve the Lord Christ."
In that day God will distribute justly all the rewards of labor. He is the
righteous God. The Christian can cheerfully bear to be ground down, robbed, and
oppressed; he can wait for the day of great distribution in righteousness; for he
knows that in that day he will receive all that his honest toil every earned, and he
shall have the eternal glory of it. Even tho in this world some Mammon-worshiper
absorbed it, and made a great gift of it, and got the worldly, fleeting glory of it; yet
since from the beginning it belonged in righteousness to him who was defrauded
of it, in righteousness it, with all the fruits of it, will be reckoned to him to whom in
righteousness from the beginning it belonged.
This is the word and the message of God to the robbed, oppressed, and
defrauded workingmen everywhere to-day, who are clamoring for a more
equitable distribution of the fruits of their labor: "Fear God, and keep His
commandments." No righteous distribution can be made by force and violence. In
that way, an iniquitous and bad condition can only be made more iniquitous and
worse. "Sanctify the Lord of Hosts Himself, and let Him be your fear, and let Him
be your dread." "Be ye also patient; stablish your hearts, for the coming of the
Lord draweth nigh." Then shall every man receive his own reward according to
his own labor.
"I am the Lord thy God. Thou shalt have no other gods before Me."
January 6, 1904
Individuality
Equality
True Self-Government
THIS earth was formed to be inhabited. When it had been created, God
created man upon it and appointed him to have, under God, "dominion" over the
beast of the field and the fowl of the air and the fishes of the sea and over every
creeping thing that moves upon the earth.
The government of man himself was self-government under God, with God,
and in God; and he was created thus to remain forever. But he chose to abandon
this and to take a course contrary to the will, and outside the design, of God. by
this choice he fell under the power of the chief opponent of all government, and
the author of anarchy. But to this usurper of the dominion of the earth and man,
God said, "I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed
and her seed." Thus God broke up the absolutism of the dominion of Satan over
man; and opened the way for man to return to allegiance to God, and so to true
government.
Of the first two sons of the first man, one chose the way of true government–
self-government according to the will, and within the design, of God; the other
chose the way of Satan–the way of lawlessness, the way of anarchy. And in strict
accordance with the principle of that way, and in manifestation of the true spirit of
the originator of that way, and the hater of the principle of government, he killed
his brother.
Two Classes.
Another son was born who chose the way of true government–self-
government according to the will and within the design, of God. this man was
allowed to live, and he was succeeded by others of his way. The other was
succeeded by others of his way. The two classes continued, and so did the
controversy between the true and false government upon the earth; between
self-government according to the will and within the design of God on the one
side; and on the other the dominion of the evil ones in lawlessness resulting in
anarchy. The lawless elements multiplied till "the earth was filled with violence."
This anarchy became so universal that to quench it, there were required the
waters of the universal Flood. And true government–self-government according
to the will and within the design of God in the eight persons who, of all the earth's
inhabitants, recognized it, in the ark which they had prepared–was preserved by
the waters of the same Flood that quenched the opposing anarchy. Thus was
man preserved alive upon the earth and the race was perpetuated. And so the
second time the Creator started man upon the earth, and with him the principle of
true government–self-government according to the will and within the design of
God. but in spite of the demonstration of the fearful results of taking the other
way, it was but a short time before that false way was again chosen; again the
two classes were developed; and again the controversy arose and continued
between those who on the earth were espoused to true government, and those
who were not.
This refusal to recognize true government, this refusal of the individual to hold
himself subject to the will and within the design of God, not only continued, but
continued to increase. Idolatry was substituted for the recognition of God, for
"when they knew God, they glorified him not as God, neither were thankful; but
became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened.
Professing themselves to be wise they became fools, and changed the glory of
the uncorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man, and to birds,
and four-footed beasts, and creeping things." And in just the degree in which the
knowledge of God was disregarded, the absence of true government was
manifested, and confusion and lawlessness prevailed. And in the nature of
things, amongst the idolatrous ones, the strongest prevailed. And when the
strong had prevailed they held the power which in the contest they had gained;
and, in the true spirit of the false government, having abandoned self-
government according to the will and within the purpose of God, they asserted
dominion over others according to their own will, and in furtherance of their own
design. And such is the origin of monarchy–the assertion of man in the place of
God–upon earth.
And it is curious as well as important to notice how idolatry aided in this bad
development.
First, they did know God, but they rejected Him. They chose not to glorify him
as God, nor to be thankful, nor even to recognize Him. Then idols were put in His
place. But these idols were but the creation of their own perverse imagination.
The idols were only the imagining of their own false conceptions, and so were but
the representations of themselves. and when they had put these idols in the
place of God, the idols being but the representations of themselves, it was
perfectly easy and also perfectly natural and logical that they should presently
put themselves in the places of the idols, as the agents of the idol and the
executors of its will which from the beginning was but their own will cast for the
occasion upon the idol.
For, strictly and truly speaking, literally the idol was nothing. All that it could
possibly be was what its creators and worshipers conceived it to be. This
conception was altogether their own. Then, whatever will, character, or purpose,
the idol could possibly have was but the will, character, or purpose of the one
who made it or worshiped it. And the idol being helpless to execute this will or to
manifest either character or purpose, it fell inevitably to the maker or worshiper of
the idol, himself to make this manifest. And since the idol had been put in the
place of God, and since all that the idol could ever possibly be was simply what
its maker and worshiper himself was, this was simply to put the man, the
worshiper of the idol, in the
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place of God. And when apostasy had reached this point, confusion and
turbulence had reached the point at which it was only the power of force that
could prevail; and the force which prevailed most, maintained its place and power
by the assertion of dominion over others according to the will and purpose of the
one man who exerted it. Thus arose monarchy in the world. In the nature of the
case, the monarch was in the place of God.
Facts of History.
Nor is this mere theory; nor yet is it merely philosophy. It is fact–fact according
to the records of the times in which this bad development occurred. For in the
earliest records of the race, in totally and widely-separated places, such is the
record. In earliest records in the plain of Shinar, the cradle of the race after the
Flood, in every instance the ruler bears not the title of king, but of "viceroy" of the
idol god, which is held to be truly king. These records reveal clearly that there
had been a time when these same people recognized God as the only King and
the true Ruler. These records also reveal the fact that these people had not yet
gone so far in apostasy that the one in authority, the one who exercised rulership,
could dare to assume positively the title of king. But the idol which had been put
in the place of God could be made to bear God's title of King and true Ruler; and
then the man who would usurp the place and prerogative of God over men, could
deftly insinuate himself as viceroy, vicegerent, or substitute, of the idol god who,
in the figment of men, still bore the dignity and title of king.
Such also is the record in earliest Assyria, in earliest Egypt, and even among
our own ancient Anglo-Saxon progenitors. The persistence of the principle is
illustrated in the conception of king in our own English language; for "among the
English, at least, the kingly houses all claimed descent from the blood of the
gods. Every king was a son of Woden."
Thus, by these widely separated and independent records, it is demonstrated
that the concept of kingship in the human race was originally recognized as
belonging only to God. And this so exclusively that when idols were put in the
place of God (which idols were themselves nothing, but were in fact the reflection
of the maker of the idols), this title must abide exclusively with the figment, which
stood in the place of God.
But as apostasy continued and the asserters of dominion and power over
others became more bold, there came Nimrod, the one, and the first one, who
was so bold as to take to himself from the idols the title and the prerogative of
king, which by the makers of the idols had been taken from God and placed upon
the idol. Because of this his impious boldness, the name of Nimrod signifies
"rebellion, supercilious contempt," and is equivalent to "the extremely impious
rebel."
This is not to say that there should be no governments, nor is it to say that
there should be no monarchy on earth. It is only to say that without such
apostasy there never could have been monarchy. But when such apostasy had
come, and consequent turbulence and violence prevailed, it was better that there
should be even monarchy such as that of Nimrod, than that there should be no
government at all, but only anarchy. It were better that there should be such
government as that of Nimrod or of Nero, than that there should be none on
earth. But apostasy must of necessity go a long way from true and original
government–self-government with God–before there could be required such
government as that of Nimrod or of Nero.
NIMROD was the first "mighty one in the earth." He was the first one of men
to assert power and force, unrestrained, upon men; the first man to assert the
absolutism of authority over men. This is evident from the fact, as we have seen,
that those before him had not the boldness to assume openly and decidedly the
title and prerogative of king, which they knew belonged, by right, only to God. this
unwillingness to assume the title of king, and the willingness to assert authority
only as viceroy of the king, even though their own idols were held to be the king,
shows the recognition of the restraint of a superior authority, and the recognition
of that authority above them to which they were responsible and under which
they acted only as agent; or viceroy. But with Nimrod, all this was thrown off. He
himself would be supreme. He would recognize no superior. He alone would be
king. The title and prerogatives of king should merge in him. And this position
was taken by him in view of the fact that before this, the title and prerogatives of
king merged only in God. This was at once and openly the putting of himself in
the place of God. He was assuming the title, the prerogatives, and the absolute
authority that belonged only to God; which only God can exercise in
righteousness; and which can be exercised by man only in a cruel, wicked
despotism.
And all this, which in principle lay in Nimrod's assumption of the title of king, is
demonstrated in his career. For, though Babel was the city in which, and over the
people of which, he began the assertion of this absolute authority and power, yet
he was not content with the assertion of this over Babel alone and leaving it for
others to follow his example in their own particular cities; but with Babel he at
once grasped by this his kingly authority "Erech, and Accad, and Calneh, in the
land of Shinar." Thus he asserted his absolute dominion over the whole of the
land of Shinar.
Nor was he content even with this. It was not enough for him to be king–
supreme, unrestrained monarch; but he must extend his authority to the farthest
limits. For "out of that land he went forth into Assyria, and builded Nineveh, and
Rehoboth-Ir, and Calah, and Resen between Nineveh and Calab." He was not
content with a kingdom only; but he must expand kingdom into empire, and so
assert his authority to the widest possible limit, to be indeed supreme and
absolute everywhere.
With the setting up of Nimrod's kingdom, the entire ancient world entered a
new historical plane. The original tradition which makes that warrior the first man
who wore a kingly crown, points to a fact more significant than the assumption of
a new ornament of dress, of even the conquest of a province. His reign
introduced to the world a new system of relations between the governor and the
governed. The authority of former rulers had rested upon the telling of kindred,
and the ascendancy of the chief was an image of parental control. Nimrod, on the
contrary, was a sovereign of territory, and of men just as far as they were its
inhabitants, and irrespective of personal ties. Hitherto there had been tribes–
enlarged families–society; now there was a nation, a political community–the
State. The political and social history of the world henceforth are distinct, if not
divergent.
Egyptian Imitators.
The next universal empire after that of Egypt was the empire of Israel under
Solomon. The conquests and empire of Solomon were no less extended than
were those of Egypt; and the empire of Israel under Solomon was as truly
universal in that day as were those of Egypt and Alexander in their respective
days. Yet the conquests accomplished, and the empire established, by Solomon
were altogether by peace. And the power exerted in these conquests and the
government of this empire was only the power of the peace, the wisdom, and the
righteousness of God. For "God gave Solomon wisdom and understanding
exceeding much, and largeness of heart, even as the sand that is on the
seashore. And Solomon's wisdom excelled the wisdom of all the children of the
East country, and all the wisdom of Egypt. For he was wiser than all men; . . . and
his fame was in all nations round about." And "all the kings of the earth sought
the presence of Solomon, to hear his wisdom, that God had put in his heart."
All these kings came to him, not as mere curiosity seekers; but to recognize
his supremacy and to do him honor in it. For "they brought every man his
present, vessels of silver, and vessels of gold, and raiment, harness, and spices,
horses, and mules, a rate year by year." The "presents" themselves were a
recognition of sovereignty; and their bringing them as "a rate" and "year by year"
shows that they were an annual tribute rendered to recognition of the sovereignty
of Solomon and of the empire of Israel, by "all the kings of the earth." It is true, as
already stated, that this conquest of all the kings was not by force of arms, and
the carnage of battle; yet it was none the less a fact. For there is more power in
the wisdom and righteousness of God manifested through sincere hearts of men
than in all the governments, armies, and weapons of war that this world can ever
know.
But this empire Solomon himself lost, by turning from the wisdom and
righteousness of God, and adopting the ways of the heathen.
For immediately, upon Solomon's turning to the ways of the heathen,
adversaries arose on every hand; and the empire of Israel went the way of all the
empires that had been before it. But in this universal conquest and empire
established by the peace, the wisdom, and the righteousness of God, God
demonstrated to His own people what He would have done for the world by
them, if they had been loyal to Him in peace, wisdom, and righteousness, and
had not gone into idolatry and the evil ways of the heathen, and then rejected
God and demanded a king "like all the nations." And in this God also gave
witness to all the nations of the earth of what He was ready, willing, and anxious
to do in all the earth, even in the great apostasy that brought kingships, if only
those kings would recognize Him and serve Him in holiness of heart.
52
This peaceful empire of Israel under Solomon brought a respite to all the
nations from the long succession of oppression of the despotic imitators of
Nimrod. And this inspired them anew with a love of freedom and government of
their own choice. This made it harder for the despotic, world-conquering kings of
Assyria to again establish an empire of the Nimrod stripe. Yet, in spite of all
difficulties, the kings of Assyria in straightforward succession for 400 years
persistently asserted imperial power, and nothing short of universal conquest and
empire. And their work was as tedious as it was persistent; for there was not a
king who succeeded to the Assyrian throne who was not compelled on his own
part to conquer all that his predecessors had conquered; and, in many instances,
they were compelled to repeat their conquests year by year throughout their
whole reign. Shalmaneser II., whose reign was one of the longest in the Assyrian
annals, made thirty-three campaigns in the thirty-one years of his reign; and
many of these were made into the same countires and against the same peoples
that his father had conquered in his reign. And the work of these two was only the
repetition of what their predecessors had done, and was what their successors
were compelled to do during all the following 300 years, through the reigns of
Tiglath-Pileser, Shalmaneser, Sargon, Sennacherib, Esar-Haddon, unto the
pinnacle of Assyrian supremacy in the reign of Assur-bani-pal. Then Assyria was
broken down, and the kingdom of Babylon under Nabopolassar and
Nebuchadnezzar was expanded into empire by the same means by which the
persistent power of former conquests had established the universal empire of
Assyria.
And this perpetual hammering during the 400 years of Assyrian supremacy,
which was immediately taken up and continued by Babylon, so broke the spirit of
the peoples of the earth, that practically there was no further attempt of the
conquered peoples to throw off the incubus of imperialism. They submitted to the
inevitable, accepted imperial power as final, and left imperialism free to manifest
itself fully in the world, and to show what it could do when it had its own way
untrammeled and undisputed.
February 3, 1904
WE have seen that by the time of the conquests and the establishment of
empire by Nabopolassar and Nebuchadnezzar, of Babylon, the spirit of
independence of the peoples had been so completely broken down that the
despotism of empire had secured undisputed sway. This was so effectually
accomplished by Babylon, that the Scripture plainly defines it as "the hammer of
the whole earth." And, yet, Babylon had only perpetuated the hammering of the
peoples which Assyria, with but a brief interval, had kept up for more than a
thousand years. And this perpetual hammering, continued by Babylon, had
effected at last what the ambitious of every imperialist, since Nimrod had ever
hoped; the silent suffering and submission of all peoples to one predominant and
absolute will.
This work of Babylon in perpetuating the destructive work of Assyria in this
respect, is forcibly told in the expressive words of the Scripture concerning their
dealings with the peoples: "First the king of Assyria hath devoured him; and last
this Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon hath broken his bones." While Assyria, in
its lust of empire, had fed itself on the substance of the peoples, Babylon
completed the work by breaking their bones and sucking the very marrow. And
tho a single king of Assyria, as Sennacherib, might compel the nations and
peoples to such submission as that, like terror-stricken chickens, "none opened
his mouth or peeped;" yet, when the direct assertion of personal power by that
particular king was passed, all people were prompt to stand up again for freedom
and independence; but when Babylon, "the hammer of the whole earth," had laid
upon the nations and peoples her crushing strokes, the subjection of all was
complete, and their submission final.
And now that the supremacy and absolutism of empire was attained in
permanency, and the imperial spirit was absolutely free to demonstrate what it
could and would do when entirely untrammeled and undisputed, this was
demonstrated to the full, and that in such measure as to be a perpetual lesson to
all peoples that should follow, even to the world's end. And in order that empire
might be saved from what it would certainly do if left to itself, God foretold to all
by giving to Nebuchadnezzar the first head of permanent empire, a vision in a
notable dream. In this vision God showed to Nebuchadnezzar that his empire,
tho universal and so great, would be succeeded by another, inferior; which would
be succeeded by another, further inferior; and that, in turn, by another, yet further
inferior, which would go all to pieces; and then even the pieces would be dashed
so utterly to pieces that they would be "like the chaff of the summer threshing-
floors;" and the wind, as with chaff, would hurl them lightly away, and no place be
found for them.
But this could not be believed even from God, by one who stood as the proud
possessor of permanent, worldly, imperial power; and he undertook to disprove it
by setting up against it the imperial idea.
To show the gradation and inferiority in the succession of empires, the Lord,
in the vision, had presented the image of man composed of metals of inferior
gradations from head to foot, the head only being of gold: this head of gold
representing the empire of Babylon. But Nebuchadnezzar could not accept, as
correct, any such representation as that. accordingly, he, too, presented a great
image, but all of gold from head to feet; thus excluding all suggestion that there
should be even any succession of empires, much less a gradation of inferiority in
succession. This great image, all of gold, was but the king's assertion that the
golden glory of his empire of Babylon should continue forever.
And this embodiment of his idea, King Nebuchadnezzar set up; and required,
under the terrible penalty of a burning, fiery furnace, that all the peoples, nations,
and languages should accept it. But amongst his subjects there were some
servants of the Most High God, who had studied, and who understood, the truth
as to empire. These being loyal to God, and, therefore, holding His idea to be the
correct one, refused to accept the imperial idea. Therefore, they were cast into
the burning, fiery furnace, heated to the highest possible degree. But God
preserved them, and the came forth unscathed, and with not even the smell of
fire upon them. And thus God not only vindicated their course as righteous, but
continued the truth of His idea of empire and changed the king's word and also
his idea of empire.
After this lesson, King Nebuchadnezzar was led of God; but when he had
died the empire shortly demonstrated what it could and would do; that is, sink
itself in everlasting ruin by intemperance. For when the abundant tribute of all
nations flowed in an uninterrupted stream into the one treasury of Babylon; and
the permanent submission of all nations and peoples had left the government in
complete idleness so far as military expeditions were concerned; the imperial
classes thus having an endowment of boundless wealth and abundance of
idleness, intemperance of every sort grew to such a height that the empire sank
in a night in the drunken, lascivious feast of Belshazzar, which he made "to a
thousand of his lords, and drank wine before the thousand." And this perfection of
ruin was accomplished in only twenty-three years from the death of
Nebuchadnezzar.
And to this excess of intemperance the Persian empire sank, so had Babylon
before her. The Persian empire sank before another new people, accustomed to
hardships, and tho not so strictly temperate as were the Medes and Persians in
the day of their succession to empire, yet, so far more so than were the Persians
at their last, that they could be called a temperate people. For when the Greeks
first met the Persians at Marathon, and before as well as afterward, it is recorded
of them that they were "well disciplined troops under skilful and experienced
commanders; soldiers accustomed to temperance, whose bodies were inured to
toil and labor, and rendered both robust and active by wrestling and other
exercises practised in that country."
But the glory of wealth and luxury of empire that came to the Greeks,
immediately robbed them equally of their power. Their mighty king, who won the
world-empire before he was thirty-three, perished as the result of a drunken bout;
the empire was broken to pieces, was held in four parts, then in two, but going
the same course of empire–vast wealth, abundance of idleness, and consequent
intemperance–till "the transgressors came in the full;" and again empire, having
demonstrated precisely what alone empire was and will do when it can have its
own way in undisputed sway, perished; and in its place there came empire by
another new people, built up by hardships, self-discipline, and temperance.
Roman Dominion.
For at the time when the Romans were rapidly stepping to the very height of
world-empire, three ambassadors were sent by the senate to the king of Egypt in
his capitol. In their honor the king spread a banquet of "all the variety of the most
assumptuous fare. Yet, they would touch nothing more of it than was useful, and
that in the most temperate manner for the necessary support of nature, despising
all the rest as that which corrupted the mind as well as the body, and bred vicious
humours in both." Such was the moderation and temperance of the Romans at
this time. And hereby it was that they at length advanced their State to so great a
height. In this height would they have still continued could they have retained the
same virtues. But when their prosperity and the great wealth attained thereby,
became the occasion that they degenerated into luxury and corruption of
manners, they drew decay and ruin as fast upon them as they had before victory
and prosperity, till at length they were undone by it. Being so undone, the empire
of the Romans sank in annihilating ruin as had the empires before it.
Such is the repeatedly demonstrated course of empire. And thus it is also
repeatedly demonstrated that such is precisely and only what absolute empire in
permanence can and will do.
WE have studied the principles, the origin, and the essential nature of
monarchy. Monarchy being the recognized system of government, it was in
essence the same everywhere; yet there were varieties of form which, in
practise, made the successive monarchies different, and in some things peculiar.
Since, in its very inception, the assertion of monarchy was the assumption of
the title and prerogatives of God, it became necessary for the monarch, in
supporting this pretension, to separate himself as far as possible from the
people, and to surround himself with an atmosphere of exclusiveness and
pseudo-divinity; and indeed, personally, to assert divinity. This was the case with
Nimrod; and in this also he was imitated by the world-kings, as they also imitated
him in the manifestation of the imperial spirit.
This is illustrated more fully in the kings of Egypt than in any other ancient
nation. The sun was held to be the great god, and in Egypt the kings professed to
be the very impersonation of the sun-god. They claimed identity with the sun-
god, and must be addressed as "sun-god." For instance, Thothmes III., the
founder of the Egyptian empire, inscribes himself as "Son of the Sun, Thothes
III., Giver of Life, like the Sun forever." And, again, "Giver of Life like the Sun
eternal." The governors must address the king of Egypt as "The king, my Lord,
my Sun-God," and say, "At the feet of my Lord, my Sun-God, seven times seven I
prostate myself." In the records of Egypt, letter after letter from governors to the
king open with the words, for instance, "To the king, my Lord, my Sun-God, I
speak, even I, Rib-Adda, thy servant; at the feet of my Lord, my Sun-God, seven
times seven do I prostrate myself." And again, "To the great king, the king of the
world, I, the servant of the mighty Lord, to the king, my Lord; at the feet of my
Lord, the Sun-God, seven times seven I prostrate myself."
As he was the "giver of life," the people were supposed to receive from him
"the breath of their nostrils." As, for instance, on a certain occasion it is recorded
of the chiefs of a conquered country, making their submission, "Then the chiefs of
that land came bringing the usual tribute, adoring the spirits of His Majesty,
asking breath for their nostrils of the greatness of His power and the importance
of His spirits."
Being so great, he must be beheld by the mass of the people afar off, and
was approachable only by the inner ones of the gradation of royal circles. For
instance, when one of the kings had decided to establish and build a temple, and
wanted to convey to even the royal masons and the sacred sculptors his
purpose, he must do it thus: "Then His Majesty ordered that orders should be
given to the superintendent of the royal masons, who were with him, and the
sacred sculptors." Here are plainly no less than two, or possibly three, gradations
between the king and even the royal masons and sacred sculptors. What, then,
must have been the distance between "His Majesty" and the daily toiling
masses?
Not in every monarchical nation or world-empire did the king stand at this
extreme of idolatrous "Majesty." But with Nimrod and the kings of Egypt it was so;
and with the kings of Assyria it was hardly less than so. For, eleven hundred
years before Christ, Tiglath-Pileser I., of Assyria, published himself as "the
powerful king, the king of hosts who has no rivals, the king of the four zones, the
king of all kinglets, the king of lords, the shepherd of princes, the king of kings,
the exalted prophet. . . . The faithful shepherd, proclaimed lord over kinglets, the
supreme governor whose weapons Assur has predestinated, and for the
government of the four zones has proclaimed his name forever."
Two hundred years after this, another king of Assyria proclaimed himself
"Assur-natsir-pal, the powerful king, the king of hosts, the king unrivaled, the king
of all the four regions of the world, the Sun-God of multitudes of men. . . . who
has overcome all the multitudes of men. . . . who has established empire over
lands, . . . the supreme judge. . . . who has established empire over all the
world, . . . mightiest among the gods am i."
His son and immediate successor, Shalmaneser II., proclaimed himself,
"Shalmaneser, the king of the multitudes of men, high priest of Assur, the
powerful king, the king of all the four regions, the Sun-God of the multitudes of
mankind, who governs in all countries; the son of Assur-natsir-pal, the supreme
priest, etc., etc."
SELF-GOVERNMENT IN ROME.
When the Roman people collectively repudiated their own essential principle
of government, they lost from themselves, individually, the benefits of the
restraining power of that principle. And when from her many conquests, through
their native habits of thrift and economy in self-support, the first consequence of
self-government, "money poured in upon them in rolling streams of gold," the
getting of money by any means, lawful or unlawful, became the universal
passion. "Money was the one thought, from the highest senator to the poorest
wretch who sold his vote in the Comitia." And, with the restraint of self-control
annihilated in the repudiation of the principle of self-government, all this
abundance of wealth was spent only in the indulgence of luxury of every kind.
"Wealth poured in more and more, and luxury grew more unbounded. Palaces
sprang up in the city, castles in the country, villas at pleasant places by the sea,
and parks, and fish-ponds, and game-preserves, and gardens, and vast retinues
of servants," everywhere.
All this indulgence of luxury inevitably resulted in a vast sea of idleness,
depravity, and debauchery. And that people, committed originally to the principle
of self-government in the world, and who originally possessed the faculty of self-
government beyond all other people of ancient times, became the most
abandoned to every kind of depravity and vice, and was sunken in intemperance
the farthest from any thought of self-government. "No language can describe the
state of that capital after the civil wars. The accumulation of power and wealth
gave rise to universal depravity. Law ceased to be of any value. . . . The social
fabric was a festering mass of rottenness, the people had become a populace,
the aristocracy was demoniac, the city was a hell. No crime that the annals of
human wickedness can show was left unperpetrated. The higher classes on all
sides exhibited a total extinction of moral principle; the lower were practical
atheists."
Past Reformation.
So complete and so universal was the depravity that the few who retained
any sober thought on the subject "despairingly acknowledged that the system
itself was utterly past cure."
It was truly past cure, or even amelioration, from any earthly or human
source. And when the corruption had reached such a depth of depravity that from
it men could conclude only that if there were a God, He must surely let loose His
judgments and end it all, just then–instead of letting loose His judgments in
annihilating ruin, He opened full and free the fountain of His love, and "gave His
only-begotten Son," that whosoever would believe in Him, instead of deservedly
perishing, should be saved from all his sins and from all evil, and should have
eternal life. Jesus, the Son of God, came into the Roman world that was sunken
in iniquity and corruption. He came into that Roman world which was dominated
by that people who were so utterly apostate from their own original espousal of
the principle of self-government. And He came to reveal to that people and to all
mankind the true principle of self-government in very truth–self-government
under God, with God, and in God.
And He did reveal it. He sent His apostles into all the world to preach it "to
every creature"; and when one day one of His apostles stood face to face with a
representative Roman who had sent for that apostle, to hear him concerning the
faith in Christ, that apostle, in preaching to that representative Roman the truth of
the true faith in Christ, "reasoned of righteousness, self-government, and
judgment to come."
And as that apostle of Christ, talking to that representative Roman, to that
man who was a chief representative of that government originally founded upon
the principle of self-government, set forth in the spirit of truth the true principle of
self-government, indeed, that representative Roman "trembled," as he saw not
only how far short had that people come in their original conception of the
principle of self-government, but how infinitely farther short was that people now
come. As that representative Roman saw the heavenly beauty and infinite value
of the true principle of self-government as it is in truth, and that in all consistency
117
he should espouse it, and that to do so meant the utter abandonment of all that
Rome had soon become, this was also an element in his trembling.
And tho God so graciously sent, and Christ so kindly brought, and the
apostles and early Christians so faithfully preached to the people of Rome the full
reality and vital substance and the essential truth of the principle of government
which the people of Rome had originally espoused, yet, instead of readily
recognizing it and gladly accepting it, they absolutely repudiated it, and
persecuted to the death the principle and all who espoused it.
But most deplorable of all was that there came an apostasy, "a falling away,"
even amongst those who espoused in the name of Christ this true principle of
self-government. These unfaithful ones also held the principle only in the mere
profession, and upon only the human basis. These also, instead of governing
themselves, naturally enough manifested the ambition to govern others,
asserting in this "a kind of sovereignty for themselves," and even beyond this,
they extended their ambition to dominate the civil power.
They said, "Let the government, let the imperial power, espouse the Christian
religion; let it ally itself with the church; let it receive through the church the true
principle of government. Thus will it attain to true government indeed; and thus
shall the kingdom of God come."
Their words were accepted. Their scheme was adopted. By political means
the empire was made "Christian." The name, the forms, and the profession of
Christianity were adopted as the way to salvation, and so became only a cloak to
cover the original iniquity; so became only the form of godliness, under which to
increase unto more ungodliness. Then and thus Roman apostasy and iniquity
attained its ultimate; and the divine judgments of destruction did now fall in
annihilating ruin "upon this nominally Christian, but essentially heathen world."
Wave after wave of a mighty flood of the barbarians of the north swept out of
existence the empire and people of Rome.
"Self-government" on the human basis, "self-government" without God, had
demonstrated itself a complete failure.
Such was the system of the Roman Government of the people at the first, and
by virtue of which it was the freest government, therefore the best government,
and by which it grew to be the greatest government, then in the world. But when
that nation assumed the prerogative of governing other people than themselves,
and, to do this, repudiated for itself its own original and vital principle; and when
into the national treasury there came from conquered provinces and plundered
peoples immense wealth in great, rolling streams of gold; and when the more
fortunate individuals multiplied their wealth in boundless measure, and the
positions, powers, and favors of the government were absorbed by these, as well
as boundless luxury indulged by them,–when all this passed steadily before the
eyes of all, the inevitable result was that the great mass of the less fortunate, the
ones solely dependent upon their daily labor, and the poor–these followed the
example of the rich and luxurious ones, and abandoned self-government, and
with self-government abandoned self-help, and demanded governmental help.
But when the government was a government of the people, the demand by the
people for governmental support was merely the advocacy of Socialism.
There was however at the first a condition, under cover of which
governmental support could be pleaded without itself appearing to be socialistic.
That condition was that the vast wealth of the public treasury was not gathered
from the people by taxation; but came as tribute and by plunder from conquered
nations. The plea and the campaign for governmental support was successful;
not at first in having money or even provisions given direct to the people, but in
the expenditure of the public money for the distribution of land to the people. Vast
sums were thus spent. Then great numbers of people were, free of expense to
themselves, placed upon well-improved lands. But this failed; because, when
they were upon the land, they must support themselves by their own efforts, and
they had all by far followed the example of the rich and luxurious, that their own
work on the lands that were given them would not supply the means which they
required to keep up the rate of living which they must maintain. And, living
beyond their means, they incurred debt, then had to borrow from the rich to pay
their debt; and, in borrowing what they must have, they mortgaged their claim
upon the land. Accordingly, it was but a comparatively short time before their
lands were all gone, and they were again clamoring for governmental support.
Then, in answer to these clamors, the same thing was done by the government
again, and with the same result again. Then, again, the clamors arose; against
the government did the same thing, with again the same result.
When this had been followed in the same round several times, it became
apparent to the public authority that such a course was practically useless. Also
the beneficiaries were heartily tired of it, because it did not relieve them from the
necessity of work with their hands in self-support. Therefore, the scheme was
discontinued. But those who insisted upon governmental support did not cease
the demands for governmental support. They next required that the government
should establish public granaries from which the people should be supplied with
grain at a merely nominal sum. It was argued that this would be in nowise
different in principle from that which had already been done in the supplying of
land. It could hardly be more expensive, and being much more direct, would be
much less complicated. There were always plenty of demagogues to urge these
claims of the populace, and so to lift themselves to popular favor and
governmental place.
With the enthusiastic clapping of every pair of poor hand in Rome, a law was
secured which decreed that public granaries should be established in Rome, to
be filled and maintained at the cost of the State, and that from these the wheat
should be sold to the poor citizens at a merely nominal price. This was practically
governmental support of the populace, because the immediate "effect was to
gather into the city a mob of needy, unemployed voters, living on the charity of
the State, to crowd the circus, and to clamor at the elections, available, no doubt,
immediately to strengthen the hands of the popular tribune, but certain, in the
long run, to sell themselves to those who could bid highest for their voices." And
each voter could sell his vote for a sum sufficient to keep him constantly well
supplied with provisions form the public granaries. Then, as the populace existed
in practical idleness, the next thing was that the State must supply games and
spectacles to fill the time of the idle crowd sufficiently to prevent mischievous
designs that would threaten the government.
As before remarked, the open practise of Socialism could be avoided, so long
as the public treasury was supplied with money from conquered nations; but
when all the nations had been conquered, and the supply was not sufficient, then
it was found that the scheme was absolutely socialistic in practice, as in the
beginning it was in principle. For when the supply of money in the public treasury
from
133
conquered provinces proved insufficient, by public devices and decrees the
needed sums were simply taken by confiscation from those who had money.
But, while events were reaching this final point, other accompanying and
strictly logical in which had gained a permanent hold upon the government, and,
with this had carried it utterly away from government of the people. In the
progress of this socialistic principle, there was a constant struggle between the
rich and the poor, between capital and labor, between governmental order and
anarchy. When the rich, or capital, held the power, the poor and laboring classes
were oppressed. When the populace held the power, the rich were oppressed.
In this see-saw for the possession of power capital had the advantage,
because the senate was always on the side of capital, and the senate was
always in existence, and, therefore, in possession of power. Besides, owing to
the fact that the elections were annual, the ascendancy of the people was but
spasmodic at the best. When some leader, who could carry the multitude with
him, arose, the people would arise, and carry everything before them. But when
the particular occasion was passed, or the leader fallen, the people would drop
back into the old, easy way. The elections were never without riot, but the senate
would gradually regain all its former power, which it would use still more
oppressively in revenge for the checks which had been put upon it, and the
insults which it had received when the populace was in power.
Despotism.
Thus, when the populace was in power, it was a despotism of the majority;
and when the senatorial party was in power, it was a despotism of the minority.
Yet, it must in justice be observed that the despotism of the senatorial party, the
party of property, was not so great as was the despotism of the majority. And in
justice it must also be admitted that the violence and excesses in defiance of law
and order, of the populace, whether in power or out, compelled despotism on the
part of the government. For instance: The senate absolutely abolished the
trades-union; but to this the senate was driven by the fact that, tho these unions
had been originally formed only for mutual benefit, yet in the times which we are
now considering they had become nothing but political clubs, and had become so
dangerous to property and even to life, that, for the security of both property and
life, it was essential that they should be absolutely abolished. And this but
illustrates the truth that, tho the government was a despotism, whether the
majority (the populace) or the minority (the senatorial party) was in power; yet,
the despotism of the minority was, in a degree, less heavy than was that of the
majority; for the majority, possessing nothing, had no kind of respect, or any
consideration, whatever, for the rights of property. All that they cared for was to
get what they could. With the populace the chief consideration was how to get
more, and whatever means they could employ for this purpose was to them
perfectly proper. On the other hand, the senatorial party was preeminently the
party of property. Therefore, even their own instincts of self-preservation required
of them that they should have respect to the rights of property. And this principle
also acted as a check on the temper and despotism of that party. Yet, with this
exception, the minority could no more be trusted than could the majority.
Extra-constitutional Power
Finally the contention between these two parties became so continuous and
so violent that, for the very existence of society, there had to be created a power
which would be a check on both; and, under the circumstances, upon the
principle of government of the people, even extra-governmental. Under the
circumstances of the alternate despotism of the majority and of the minority, it
was essential that there should be organized a power which should be constantly
active, and so balance the power of the senate, and hold in check its despotic
tendencies, and also be able to hold in check the despotic sway of the majority.
Already it had appeared more than once that this power lay in the veterans of the
triumphant, but disbanded, armies; but it was impossible, at the first, to rule
openly by the power of the army. And since this feature must be shaded, the logic
of the situation was that a coalition should in some way be formed, representing
the contending parties, with the understanding that it could depend upon the
army for support. And the logic of the situation was met by the formation, B. C.
60, of
A Triumvirate,
not only was government of the classes gone, not only was government of a
few gone–all government was gone but government by one.
The senate, seeing what had come, formed a conspiracy "to save the
republic" in the destruction of the government by the assassination of him who,
by the direct logic of affairs, was alone the government. For affairs had reached
that point in the Roman State where a one-man power was inevitable. And, tho to
avoid this the senate had killed the one man who was that power, and the one
man who, of all the Roman nation, was most capable of exercising that power,
the reality and permanency of a one-man power, and that by one worse than he,
was only the more hastened by the very means which they had employed for the
purpose of preventing it. This they themselves realized, as soon as they awoke
from the dream in which they had done the desperate deed. Cicero exactly
defined the situation, and gave a perfect outline of the whole history of the times,
when, shortly after the time of the murder of Cesar, he bitterly exclaimed: "We
have killed the king; but the kingdom is with us still. We have taken away the
tyrant; the tyranny survives." That tyranny survived in the breast of every man in
Rome; and the only question was, which one should be the tyrant to such a
degree that he could dominate the tyranny of all the others.
This was very soon decided; for, immediately upon the murder of Cesar, a
second triumvirate was formed–Mark Antony; Cesar's general of cavalry, who
was at the head of his troops. This was, however, a mere shuffle on the part of
the two principals, Antony and Octavius, to gain time and get their bearings. And
as soon as this was done, Lepidus was eliminated, and the sole question and
contest was repeated as to which of these two men should be the one man, who
should be the Roman Government. Again there was war; Octavius was
successful; Antony, with Cleopatra, committed suicide; and now, just thirteen and
one-half years after the murder of Cesar, again, and this time in permanency, one
man was the Roman Government, and that one man a man who could not
govern himself; and that government a furious and crushing despotism, only a
single degree removed from sheer anarchy. And such it remained, with only slight
amelioration, until it sunk in annihilating ruin.
March 2, 1904
Sustained by Forgery.
The power that was usurped by the church and her popes upon these
perversions of Scrip-
149
ture, was finally confirmed by a specific and downright forgery. This "most
stupendous of all the medieval forgeries" consisted of "The Imperial Edict of
Donation," or "The Donation of Constantine." "Itself a portentous falsehood, it is
the most unimpeachable evidence of the thoughts and beliefs of the priesthood
which framed it." It proceeds to tell how that Constantine the Great, having been
cured of leprosy by the prayers of Sylvester, bishop of Rome, resolved, as a
reward of gratitude, that he would forsake Rome, and found a new capital, "lest
the continuance of the secular government should cramp the freedom of the
spiritual." It declares that "Constantine found Bishop Sylvester in one of the
monasteries on Mount Soracte, and, having mounted him on a mule, he took
hold of his bridle rein, and, walking all the way, the emperor conducted Sylvester
to Rome, and placed him on the papal throne." Then the forgery makes
Constantine decree as follows:–
We attribute to the see of Peter, all the dignity, all the glory, all
the authority, of the imperial power. Furthermore, we give to
Sylvester and to his successors our palace of the Lateran, which is
incontestably the finest palace on earth; we give him our crown, our
miter, our diadem, and all our imperial vestments; we transfer to
him the imperial dignity. We bestow on the holy pontiff in free gift
the city of Rome, and all the western cities in Italy. To cede
precedence to him, we divest ourselves to our authority over all
these provinces; and we withdraw from Rome, transferring the seat
of our empire to Byzantium, inasmuch as it is not proper that an
earthly emperor should preserve the least authority where God hath
established the head of His religion.
It was strictly in the exercise of this power, exercised by Leo the Great, and
systematized by his successors, that the Papacy exercised the prerogative of
restoring and re-establishing the Roman Empire, in the proclaiming and crowning
of Charlemagne as emperor, and Augustus; and then of asserting supreme
power over emperor, empire, and all, and using this as the means by which she
herself would attain to this supreme height of worldly ambition and priestly
arrogance; where she herself would assure entirely to herself all the power and
prerogative of that enormous assumption, and, "arrayed with sword and crown
and scepter," in the sight of the assembled multitude, would shout, "There is no
other Cesar, nor king, nor emperor, than I, the sovereign pontiff, and the
successor of the apostles."
One of the bases of her claim of right to rule the world was that she was the
sole embodiment on earth of the principles of the Prince of Peace, and that the
bishop of Rome was the very vicegerent of the person of the Prince of Peace,
and, therefore, she would assure the reign of peace to the full extent of her
recognized dominion. But the fact proved that at every step of the way in her
climbing to that pinnacle of world power, and in maintaining herself there, she
kept kingdoms and nations, and even all Europe, and beyond, in a constant
turmoil of war and anarchy. And in order to save their own kingdoms from sheer
anarchy, and to preserve even society itself from annihilation by the anarchism of
the Papacy, the heads of the nations of Europe, the secular powers, were
compelled to assemble in a general council, specifically "for the reformation of
the church in its head and members;" at which council they took her down from
her high throne of universal supremacy, and seated her upon a stool of
submission and subjection. In complete and horrible measure there had been
demonstrated to all the world that the essence of the Papacy and the ultimate of
her rule is only anarchy.
Such was the result to the nations of Europe, and to Europe as a whole, with
respect to government itself. But the real dominion claimed by the Papacy is of
the heart and life–the soul–of man. As essential to the proper demonstration of
this dominion, she claims that the temporal power of the world must be
absolutely subject to her will; that power she had surely gained, and the
universality of her rule had been recognized, so that she had a fair, free, and
open field to demonstrate exactly what she would do. And as respected the
temporal power, and even her own power in government, the result was only
anarchy.
Speculation in Crime.
And the result of her rule in her own peculiar claim of dominion over the soul
of man, demonstrated universally in her dominion over those who were become
her own, and who acknowledge themselves her own–in this dominion, the result
was in nowise different from that in the other. Her whole power to the full extent
of her recognized dominion was devoted to the seducing, and even the
compelling, of mankind to sin. She actually speculated in human corruption.
Pope John XXII., regularly listed, and set a tax upon, the sins of men. The list of
taxes drawn up by John XXII., as levied upon the licentious practises of
ecclesiastics, priests, nuns, and the laity; on murder and other enormities, as well
as lesser crimes and breaches of monastic rules and church requirements; is
sufficient to cover almost every sin that mankind could commit. Yet, all these sins
were regularly taxed at a certain rate, down to the single "sou" (cent), and even
to the "denier." So that it is literally true that no inconsiderable portion of the
revenues of the Papacy were derived from a regularly assessed tax upon the
sins of men. Well did the abbot of Usperg exclaim:–
O Vatican, rejoice now, all treasuries are open to thee; thou
canst draw in with full hands! Rejoice in the crimes of the children
of men, since thy wealth depends on their abandonment and
iniquity! Urge on to debauchery, excite to rape, incest, even
parricide; for, the greater the crime, the more gold will it bring thee.
Rejoice thou! Shout forth songs of gladness! Now the human race
is subjected to thy laws! Now thou reignest through depravity of
morals and the inundation of ignoble thoughts. The children of men
can now commit with impunity every crime, since they know that
thou wilt absolve them for a little gold. Provided he brings thee gold,
let him be soiled with blood and lust; thou wilt open the kingdom of
heaven to debauchees, Sodomites, assassins, parricides. What do
I say? Thou wilt sell God Himself for gold!
March 9, 1904
"History of Government. Departure from True Principle" The Signs of
the Times 30, 10 , p. 4, 5 .
WHEN Rome had perished, every form of government had been tried but
one–the Papacy; for the Roman Government was diverse from all that were
before it. Dan. 7:19, 23. When the middle ages were past, every form, even that
one, had been tried; for the papal government was diverse from all. Dan. 7:24.
And that one not only failed, as had all before it, but proved itself a greater curse
than had all before it.
Except in Britain alone, the new nations that planted themselves upon the ruin
of the Roman Empire, being burdened with the incubus of the Papacy, never had
fair chance to develop government upon the basis of their own native, free
principles; but were borne down, perverted, and corrupted by the influence and
power of the Papacy. The feudal system, the worst form of things ever
established in civil affairs, was nothing else than the system of the Papal Church,
adapted and applied apart from the actual machinery of the church.
In Britain every Roman influence was swept away before the Anglo-Saxon,
who made Britain England. A hundred and fifty years after the Anglo-Saxons
entered Britain, the Catholic Church was also planted there by the invasion of
Augustine and his accompanying monks; but the papal system never gained a
foothold in England, and was never recognized there except for the little moment
when King John surrendered himself and the kingdom to the pope as supreme.
And even this act of recognition of the papal system complete in England, only
the more swiftly and the more certainly excluded it forever. For that surrender by
John of England to the Papacy immediately drew forth Magna Charta and its long
train of resultant free institutions, of which the Constitution of the United States
was not by any means the least important development.
Through all these changes of all of these nations after the fall of Rome,
kingdoms were invariably the form of government, and kingdoms expanded into
empire, tho every kingdom or empire was in subjection to the Papacy. But when
the American nation arose, kings and all principles of kingship were utterly
repudiated; the freedom, the right, and the capability of the people to govern
themselves was again asserted. And when government of the people was
formally established in the adoption of the Constitution of the United States, it
was in repudiation not only of kings and all principles of kingship, but also of
popes and all principles of Papacy. The State was established as a government
of self-government people; a government of the people, by the people, and for
the people. It was such a government separated and held by the Constitution
entirely apart from the church, or from any connection with the church, or any
recognition of the church, or even of religion in the abstract.
The churches were left perfectly free to go their own way; to organize and
govern themselves, and conduct their own affairs as they might choose. The
State held to itself the principle of utter separation from any Church or religion,
and upon that principle would conduct all the affairs of the State. These two
bodies, the Church and the State, abiding by natural and essential principle in
totally distinct realms, occupied each its distinctive realm. And so in this new and
final nation, the system of the church was a church without a pope, and the
system of State was the State without a king; the Church and the State each
absolutely independent of the other, and each entirely separated from the other.
This was indeed "a new order of things," 21 and it was equally the correct and
the divine order of things. And those who established it thus did so entirely out of
respect to the divine order of things, as to the government of the church on earth.
they did it out of respect entirely to the principles of "the Holy Author of our
religion," and "upon the principles upon which the Gospel was first propagated,
and the reformation from popery carried on." And so they established this new
nation upon right principles for the State, that it should be a light and a guide to
all the nations in the way of individual liberty and of free and happy government;
and also upon the right principles for the Church leaving her free in her own
realm to be joined only to her own true Lord, to Him alone as her true head and
guide, that she should be indeed the light of the world.
Thus, at last, was attained the form of perfect earthly government. And all that
was needed in order that this nation should forever lead the world was that the
people composing the nation should hold themselves in practise, in strict
allegiance to the principles upon which the nation was founded. And while this
was done, this nation was distinctly the leading nation of the world; that is, the
nation was truly leading the world toward right principles, away fom the corrupt
and the corrupting influence of the Papacy. But in the latest years these
principles have not been adhered to either by the Church or by the State in this
nation. The churches, combining their strength and influence, have sought to
unite themselves to the State; and in direct violation of the fundamental principles
of the Reformation and of Christianity, it has sought "by force to enter into the
office of another," to transfer worldly government, and "to prescribe laws to the
magistrate touching the form of the State."
On the other hand, the people of the State have not been loyal to the
principles of the State in the United States. The fundamental principle of State in
this government is government of the people–self-government: the government
deriving its just powers form the consent of the governed. The people have not
continued to govern themselves; and the government has repudiated
government by the consent of the governed, and has espoused government by
the consent of "some of the governed," which, in principle, is merely government
of the few, and in logic and in practise, presently, government by one, or a one-
man power.
And with fundamental principles and original practise of this nation
abandoned on the part of both the Church and the State, it is literally impossible
that there can be any other result than that there shall be here repeated the
history of that other degenerate government of the people which developed the
one-man power in the Roman State; and that other apostate church which
developed the one-man power in the church, dominating the world. And to-day
this nation has gone so far in this direction, and the inevitable course further is so
clearly defined, that all that any one needs to do to understand the subject even
in detail, is merely to be acquainted with the history as it actually occurred in that
degenerate Roman Government of the people, and of that apostate church,
which drew life and supremacy from the destruction and ruin of that degenerate
government of the people.
Not Self-Governing.
To-day, in the United States, the people are not a self-governing people. They
do not govern themselves either in private or public life. Intemperance, absence
of self-government in individual life, possesses and absolutely controls the
individual life of the vast majority of the people of the United States, and is
constantly increasing at a fearful rate. In the business or commercial life of the
people of the United States the people do not govern themselves. They are
absolutely governed either by the trusts or by the unions, or by both. In the field
of labor and employment, the people of the United States of all people, do not
govern themselves. Almost wholly, they are governed as to their employment,
their wages, and almost in their very buying and selling, by the trades-union. In
political life the people of the United States do not govern themselves, and the
government is not of the people. The people are governed by "the party" and "the
machine," and these, in turn, are controlled by the political "bosses."
165
Here is the same old desperate struggle between capital and labor; here also
is the same old longing and grasping for governmental support, which, under
whatever pretense it may be urged, is merely socialism. And, indeed, here it is
advocated as socialism direct and by name. And just as the advocacy of
governmental support means only socialism, so also the advocacy or socialism
means only anarchy. In some instances here it is advocated under the would-be-
saving title of "Christian socialism." And in the advocacy of it in all its phases, the
words of Christ are readily grasped and enthusiastically rung in as an expression
of the principles of socialism.
There are, however, a number of serious considerations which absolutely
preclude this socialism from ever being in any sense Christianity. One is that the
words and principles of Christ are absolutely meaningless in the mouths, the
plans, or the devices, of those who do not believe at all in Jesus; and even tho
there be some believers in Jesus who are mistakenly advocating socialism, yet,
the overwhelming mass of those who advocate socialism are those who have no
regard for the truth, or the faith, or the principles of Christ. And this fact alone
absolutely vitiates all possibility of any virtue ever accruing to socialism from the
words or principles of Jesus, tho they be quoted and advocated in every speech
and on every page. The defect is not in the words or the principles of Jesus; the
defect is in the people who quote these words and principles and urge them for a
wrong purpose.
It is the same old story of Sinai: there God gave His own divine truths in
words spoken direct from heaven. The people adopted them and declared that,
"All that the Lord hath spoken will we do, and be obedient." But the people
adopted them in the wrong way, and for wrong purposes: "Wherefore, finding
fault with them, He saith, Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, when I will make
a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah; not
according to the covenant that I made with their fathers in the day when I took
them by the hand to lead them out of the land of Egypt, which My covenant they
break." Heb. 8:8, 9; Jer. 31:31, 32. The fault was not on the part of the Lord, nor
was it in the words or the principles announced in the covenant on His part; the
fault was in the people. They went about it to do some great thing themselves
and make a great change and reform in the world. They failed, as all others must
fail, who attempt to use the divine principles without supreme guidance and
control of the divine Spirit through the divine and abiding faith of Christ Jesus, the
Saviour and Sanctifier of the soul. They failed, as all others must fail, who
attempt to use the divine principles for worldly or selfish purposes, for any other
than divine purposes, according to the divine will, under the supreme guidance
and control of the divine spirit.
(To be continued.)
(Concluded).
IT is true that the people of the earliest church brought their belongings and
put them into a common fund, and "had all things common." And this is cited by
the advocates of socialism as the true example, and assurance that socialism is
the true order in government and society on earth. But in this deduction in behalf
of socialism, the most important elements, indeed the strictly vital elements, are
all left out. It is true that at that time the church had all things in common, and no
one said that aught that he had was his own. But that was the church, not the
State, nor society, as such; and it was the church immediately after Pentecost,
when "all were filled with the Holy Ghost." And not all who cite this in advocacy of
socialism are thus filled with the Holy Ghost. Another item in that action of the
early church is that the matter of having all things common was altogether and
absolutely voluntary on the part of every one of those who were in it. While in the
socialism proposed, it is intended to conduct a political campaign, and get a
majority vote, and then have this majority compel by force all to have all things
common. But the thing can never be accomplished by force, nor by any political
or any other worldly scheme.
Another vital element, which in this socialism is ignored, is that the Holy Spirit
reigned so completely there that those who were the leaders had, by that divine
Spirit, the faculty of detecting those who would use the system for merely selfish
purposes, as the means of sponging, while in the system of socialism, as now
advocated for the United States, this power is entirely lacking. And without that
element, every scheme of having all things common will surely fail; for it is
perfectly certain that there never can be given perfect assurances that amongst
these advocates of socialism there are, and ever will be, absolutely none
actuated by the motives that characterized Ananias and Sapphira.
These items demonstrate that no scheme of having all things common,
whether it be distinct socialism or what not, whether in the church or in the world,
ever can be true, or ever can be successful; into which all composing it do not
enter individually, of their own free choice; in which all who compose it are not
entirely free from selfishness; in which every one in it is not filled with the Holy
Ghost, as the consequence of having personal faith in Jesus Christ as the
Saviour from sin; in which all are not absolutely subject to the control and
guidance of the Holy Spirit; and in which the Holy Spirit does not preside to such
a degree as absolutely to guard the community from all selfishness and all
hypocrisy.
Nevertheless, there can be no doubt that this mistaken system of socialism
will continue to be advocated; and will even be advocated as "Christian"
socialism. It is also scarcely to be doubted that, at least to some extent, the
scheme will be made effective in governmental affairs. But to whatever degree
the thing shall be made effective, it will prove itself only that much of an element
in the hastening of the anarchy, which is the only logic of the socialistic
proposition from the beginning.
Government of the people, both in the individual life and in the public life, is
so far gone that, in every phase of the public life, government is of a few. The
contest between capital and labor has reach the point where it is truly a contest
as to which shall control the formal governmental machinery to the disadvantage
of the other. This contest is as certain to grow as that day and night continue.
And as it grows, confusion and uncertainty will only the more grow, and
expedients of government will certainly have to be resorted to as means of
balancing issues and preserving order. And, at the rate that things have been
going lately, it will be but a little while before
A Triumvirate
will be the surest expedient of the balancing of issues. For at the point at
which things almost stand to-day, the chief representative of capital, and the chief
representative of labor, and the chief political manager of whatever national party
should be in power, by agreeing together, could decree that nothing should be
done in the commonwealth without the consent of each of the three; and such a
triumvirate would form a power as complete and beyond any other combinations
to resist, as was that of the triumvirate of Pompey, Crassus, and Cesar.
And while events have reached this pass, and are fast hastening to a crisis.
Of which some such expedient can be the only salvation,–while all this is
occurrent on the part of the State, the religious power (and that the power of the
Papacy, flattered and favored by apostate Protestantism) is striding at even
greater pace to position of supremacy at Washington, and, from this, the
supremacy of the world. For, of all the elements that are working to-day to exalt
the Papacy once more to world supremacy, there are none so potent, none so
sure, and none so rapid, as the influence of the United States. And with that
supremacy there comes also the persecution and the anarchy that are the
inevitable accompaniments of undisputed papal power. But this time, thank the
Lord,
for the Scriptures point out that the period allowed her in this thing is the
shortest of all the prophetic periods named by inspiration–"one hour." Her power
over the kingdoms of the earth is received for but "one hour," and in "one hour"
her judgment comes. In "one hour" all her wealth and glory vanish. And then that
mighty angel takes up a stone like a great millstone, and throws it into the sea,
saying: "So shall Babylon, the great city, be violently overthrown, never more to
be seen. No more shall the music of harpers, minstrels, fluteplayers, or
trumpeters be heard in you; no more shall any worker, skilled in any art, be found
in you; no more shall the sound of the mill be heard in you; no more shall the light
of a lamp shine in you; no more shall the voices of bridegroom and bride be
heard in you. Your merchants were the great men of the earth, for all the nations
were deceived by your magical charms. Yes, and in her was to be found the
blood of the prophets and of Christ's people, and of all who have been put to
death upon earth." Rev. 18:21-24 (Twentieth Cent. Version).
And then there will be heard that loud voice of a great throng in heaven,
saying: "Praise the Lord! To our God belongs salvation, glory, and power, for true
and just are His judgments. For He passed judgment on the great prostitute, who
was corrupting the earth by her licentiousness, and He took vengeance upon her
for the blood of His servants." And again the voices cried, "Praise the Lord!"
Then when the earth shall have been cleansed with fire from on high, He who
sits on the throne, says, "Behold, I make all things new," and, "It is done." Then
comes the kingdom of God indeed, in all its beauty, glory, and power, "and 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 dominion shall serve and obey Him."
"And the saints of the Most High shall take the kingdom, and possess the
kingdom forever, even forever and ever."
NOTE.–After the foregoing article was written, the annual congress of the
German Socialists was held at Dresden, Germany, Sept. 14, 1903. The following
passage from the brief report of the proceedings the very first day and at only the
second meeting of the congress is strongly illustrative and confirmatory of the
points made in the article as it relates to that subject:–
Gaylor Wilshire, in the name of the societies of the United
States, congratulated the Republican Social Democrats of
Germany on their "marvelous organization, and still more
marvelous electoral triumphs." Wilshire said the antagonism of
capital and labor was assuming in the United States for us more
acute than in Europe," owing mainly to the developments of the
trusts." The crisis in the existing capitalistic system, he asserted,
would be precipitated first in the great trans-Atlantic republic, and
would spread thence to Europe, "leading to the universal dominion
of Social Democracy."
A stormy discussion took place at the afternoon session of the
congress, due to a resolution of the executive council, prohibiting
the literary members of the socialist party from contributing articles
to non-socialistic papers.
The resolution was mainly directed against the so-called
academicians, who claim the place of honor in the party by virtue of
their learning, while gaining their livelihood by writing for newpapers
antagonistic to the socialistic movement.
Angry recriminations were indulged in, and at one time violent
scenes appeared to be imminent.
"It is an untruth," shouted Herr Bebel in a frenzied rage, to
Heinrich Braun, who was engaged in proving that even the classic
leaders of Social Democracy were guilty of this.
Herr Singer, the president of the congress, stopped Herr Nenel,
and asked the members to preserve their dignity and refrain from
behaving like schoolboys. Herr Bebel, who was much excited,
demanded to know whom the president meant.
Later there were lively passages at arms between Herr Babel
and Herr Voltmar. Finally the debate was adjourned until to-morrow.
When such a crowd as that get governmental power and control of all
property, their attempt to have "all things common" will be a good deal farther
from peace and harmony than was this meeting of Sept. 1, 1903. To any sober-
minded person the mere contemplation of the prospect thus presented is surely
sufficient to demonstrate that socialism successful will develop nothing short of
sheer anarchy.
A. T. J.
NOTE 2.–After the foregoing article was written, the American Bar Association
held its annual session for 1903; and the report of its committee on trusts
contains the remarkable forecast of a one-man power, of how near it may be, and
what it can be when it comes:–
The modern combination's primary object is to control trade and
commerce in plain articles of production and substitute a more or
less perfect monopoly in place of a more or less free competition. It
changes entirely the basic principle of commercial relation between
man and man, and if they are to
165
continue to grow and develop in the future, as in the past, will
render necessary most important changes on the principles of our
commercial laws. Combination as an economic force, is fast
coming to take the place of competition. The producers are
combining, the transportation companies are containing, trades-
union are combining; workmen, as well as employers, are
combining; everything seems to be coming into some form of
combination, and everybody seems to be a combiner. The
competition that still remains is fast disappearing. Workmen are
refusing to compete for jobs. Labor unions are enlarging the
spheres of their activity and extending their operations.
The union of the employers is still stronger and more far-
reaching than the union of workmen. We are now having
combinations of combinations. The United States Steel Corporation
is a combination of a dozen theretofore competing producers, who
themselves were combinations of still other producers, and these,
in turn, often combinations of still others. To have them back to their
beginning is like discovering all the multitude of sources that go to
make up the volume of the swollen Mississippi.
The ambition of the shipping trust, perhaps the pet project of the
great American combiner, has been to control all the ships that sail
the ocean. A hundred years ago there were hardly two ships owned
by the same individual or corporation, and even fifty years ago
there was scarcely a ship owner, individual or corporation, that
owned a half dozen ships. No one knows but that within the next
ten years a greater man than J. P. Morgan will arise, who will
combine into one organization all the industries of the land, so that
the workman who works for wages can find but one possible
employer, and the purchaser of wares can find but one possible
seller. The steps toward the formation of one universal industrial
corporation, which shall crowd out all other corporations and
assume to itself all the industries of the land have already been
more than half taken. It is not so far to go from now to that end, as
we had to go to reach the present condition.
And when that point shall have been reached, the event will bring the sure
fulfilment of Rev. 13:16, 17. So true is it that the best view of the signs of the
times is presented in the daily march of events.
A. T. J.
(Concluded).
We have also found that the universal cause of the failure of individual self-
government has been the attempt at self-government without God, and the
universal and inevitable failure of every attempt at self-government without God
lies simply in the fact of sin. It was sin in the first place that originated any such
attempt; and it is sin which, ever since, has frustrated and will ever frustrate
every such attempt.
Sin has enslaved every soul on earth. There is power in sin to enslave and to
reign over man, and even against his wish, impelling him to wrong. And man,
being thus enslaved to sin and reigned over in power by sin, simply can not
possibly truly govern himself. The power of sin must be broken and the enslaved
captive freed, before it is possible for him truly to govern himself.
And the power of sin can be broken. The enslaved captive can be freed. For
Jesus Christ, the Lord, has met both sin and its author on their own territory, and
in the very citadel of their own kingdom, has conquered and has completely
broken their power; has openly triumphed over them; and leads in His triumphant
train every soul who chooses this only true way of freedom.
And this whole story of the impossibility of human self-government, except by
the breaking of the power and the reign of sin by and through Christ Jesus, the
Lord, is told in a single passage and few words in the Scriptures. And here is the
story:–
"For we know that the law is spiritual: but I am carnal, sold under sin. For that
which I do I allow not: for what I would, that do I not; but what I hate, that do I. If
then I do that which I would not, I consent unto the law that it is good. Now then it
is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in me. For I know that in me (that is, in
my flesh,) dwelleth no good thing: for to will is present with me; but how to
perform that which is good I find not. For the good that I would I do not; but the
evil which I would not, that I do. Now if I do that I would not, it is no more I that do
it, but sin that dwelleth in me. I find then a law, that, when I would do good, evil is
present with me. For I delight in the law of God after the inward man; but I see
another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me
into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members. O wretched man that I
am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death? I thank God through Jesus
Christ our Lord. . . . Therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ
Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit. For the law of the Spirit of
life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death." Rom.
7:14-25, 8:1, 2.
And this free man, the Christian free in Christ, free in God, which is the place
and the way of the only true freedom, exercising self-government with God, and
in God, is
And that true government is not human; it is divine-human; for divinity is the
only source of true self-government. The only person in the universe who, of
Himself, can in all things truly and perfectly govern Himself, is God. Self-
government, therefore, is in truth but an attribute of God. Therefore, divinity is the
only source of self-government; and it is impossible for any creature in the
universe to govern himself except as he is allied to divinity; except as he is made
partaker of the divine nature. And he who is made partaker of the divine nature
has escaped the corruption that is in the world, and is delivered unto the glorious
liberty of the children of God.
And this is Christianity. This is the way, the true and living way, revealed by
Christ in human flesh. And in this divine-human way, every human soul can walk
in the manifestation of the principles and the glory of true government, which is
true self-government.
And this manifestation of true government–the true government of self–is
greater than is the government of all kingdoms and empire, and he who truly
exercises it is greater than all kings and emperors that ever were on earth. "He
that ruleth his spirit [is better] than he that taketh a city." Accordingly, this power
of true government–self-government–is truly kingly power. Being from the divinity,
it could be nothing else. And He who came into the world to make manifest in
human flesh this true government, which is true self-government,–He, when
challenged on the point with the words, "Art Thou a king then?" royally answered:
"Thou sayest that I am a king. To this end was I born; and for this cause came I
into the world [and this in order], that I might bear witness unto the truth." And He
who was born to the end, and who came into the world for this cause, that He
should be King, He "hath loved us, and washed us from our sins in His own
blood, and hath made us kings."
Every Christian is, therefore, by creation, and so by divine right, a king. The
ambition that has so manifested itself in all ages to be king, has never been in
itself a false or a wrong ambition. The ambition itself has been true and right; it is
the course, the manifestation, and the aims of that ambition that have been false
and wrong. As we have seen in this whole study of government, the
manifestation and aims of the ambition of man on earth to be a king have been
invariably to gain power and dominion over others, and to govern and exercise
authority upon others; and to govern and exercise authority upon others; while
the true ambition and aim to be king is to gain dominion, over self, and to govern
and exercise authority upon self.
has made this distinction plain in the following words to His disciples: "The
princes of the Gentiles exercise dominion over them, and they that are great
exercise authority upon them; but it shall not be so among you. For whoso ever
will be great among you, let him be your minister; and whosoever will be chief
among you, let him be your servant; even as the Son of Man came not to be
ministered unto, but to minister; and to give His life, the ransom of many."
Worldly, false kingship is always government of others and the service of others.
With worldly, false kingship is always the ambition to conquer all nations, that
they may serve Him; while with the Christian, true kingship, the ambition is
always and only to surrender himself to all nations that he may serve them.
And it is the simple philosophy of Christian kingship that Christ is the greatest
of all kings, yea, the very King of kings. Because He surrendered far more, to
serve far more, than any other in the universe possibly could. And since true
kingship is to surrender self to all, that he may serve all; in the manner of things
he who surrenders most to serve most, is the greatest king. And since Christ
made the greatest possible surrender in surrendering Himself, and He did it for
the greatest possible number, that He might serve absolutely all; it is but the plain
philosophy of Christian kingship that He is in very truth the greatest of all kings,
the very King of kings. And all who in Him, in God, and with God, surrender
themselves to all, that they may serve all, are true kings; and are of His kingdom.
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And this is the kingdom, this is the government which, upon earth, shall
presently succeed all earthly human governments, and which shall stand forever;
simply because it is the divinely true government. For in reference to the
succession of all earthly human governments, it was declared long ago by the
divine Spirit that "the saints of the Most High shall take the kingdom, and possess
the kingdom forever, even forever and ever;" and "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." "And there shall be no more curse;
for the throne of God and of the Lamb shall be in it; and His servants shall serve
Him; and they shall see His face, and His name shall be in their foreheads. And
there shall be no night there; and they need no candle, neither light of the sun,
for the Almighty giveth them light; and they shall reign forever and ever."
They serve and they reign. They serve Him, they serve Him in serving others,
and they reign over themselves. And such alone is true government, whether in
heaven or on earth. And because it is true, such government abides eternally.
And such is Christianity in the truth of it. And unto Him, Christ, the Author and
Finisher of Christianity–"Unto Him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in
His own blood, and hath made us kings unto God and His Father; to Him be glory
and dominion, forever and ever. Amen." And let all the people forever say, "Amen
and amen."
Let us, therefore, look at the Sabbath as God made it; and at what the Lord
did in the making of it by which it became the Sabbath of the Lord. First, He
created all things, then He ceased from His works and rested the seventh day;
He then blessed the seventh day; He made it holy, and sanctified it. The
Sabbath, therefore, is–
1. The reminder of God as Creator; it is the reminder of His creative power
manifested; for it is a sign between Him and His people forever, because that "in
six days the Lord made heaven and earth, and on the seventh day He rested,
and was refreshed." Ex. 31:17.
2. In the Sabbath is God's rest, "for He spake in a certain place of the seventh
day on this wise, And God did rest the seventh day from all His works. And in this
place again [He spake of the seventh day on this wise], They shall not enter into
My rest." Heb. 4:4, 5.
3. In the Sabbath is God's blessing; for He "blessed the seventh day, and
sanctified it, because that in it He had rested from all His work which God created
and made." Gen. 2:3.
4. In the Sabbath is God's holiness; for He "hallowed" (made holy) the
Sabbath day. But it is only the presence of God which makes anything holy.
When Moses, attracted by the curious sight of the bush burning with fire yet not
consumed, turned aside and approached to behold, "God called unto him out of
the midst of the bush, and said, Moses, Moses. And he said, Here am I. And He
said, Draw not nigh thither; put off thy shoes from off thy feet, for the place
whereon thou standest is holy ground." Ex. 3:4, 5. That place was made holy
ground solely by the presence of "Him who dwelt in the bush."
And as it is the presence of the Lord which makes holy; that which made holy
the seventh day, the Sabbath of the Lord, was the presence of Him who rested
the seventh day from all His works.
5. The Sabbath has in it God's sanctification; because He not only blessed
the seventh day, but sanctified it,–set it apart unto the holy use and service of the
Lord,–that His presence might dwell therein; for it is not merely the transient
presence, but the abiding presence, the special dwelling of God in a place, which
sanctifies; for it is written: "Israel shall be sanctified by My glory," for "I will dwell
among the children of Israel, and will be their God." Ex. 29:43 (margin), 45.
Thus connected with the Sabbath there is the creative power of God; the rest
of God; the blessing of God, the presence of God which makes holy; and the
continuing, dwelling, presence of God which sanctifies.
And all this is precisely, and in order, what is found in Christ by the believer in
Jesus.
Christ in the Sabbath.
God's rest is in the seventh day; and God's rest is in Christ. It is impossible for
God's rest to be in antagonistic places; for as with God "there is no variableness
neither shadow of turning," God's rest is the same wherever it may be. Therefore,
God's rest being ever the same, God's rest in the seventh day, and God's rest in
Christ, is precisely the same rest. And this, being impossible to be in antagonism,
is in perfect unity, and therefore demonstrates that the Sabbath is in Christ and
CHRIST IS IN THE SABBATH.
The Sabbath, truly understood, means all of Christ; and Christ, truly
understood, means all of the Sabbath. And neither can be truly understood
without the other. The Sabbath is God's sign, and Christ is God's sign. Christ is
God's sign spoken against, and the Sabbath is God's sign spoken against; and
all, "that the thoughts of many hearts ay be revealed." Luke 2:34, 35. Yet ever He
is indeed "the glorious Lord" (Isa. 33:21); and ever "His rest," His Sabbath, is
indeed "glorious." Isa. 11:10.
"Let us therefore fear, lest, a promise being left us of entering into His rest,
any of you should seem to come short of it. . . . For we which have believed do
enter into rest." "And hallor My Sabbaths, and they shall be a sign between Me
and you, that ye may know that I am the Lord your God." "The seventh day is the
Sabbath of the Lord your GOD."
"Thus saith the Lord, Keep ye judgment, and do justice: for my salvation is
near to come, and my righteousness to be revealed. Blessed is the man that
doeth this, and the son of man that layeth hold on it; that keepeth the Sabbath
from polluting it, and keepeth his hand from doing any evil." Isa. 56: 1, 2.
"If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath, from doing thy pleasure on my
holy day; and call the Sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord, honorable; and
shalt honor Him, not doing thine own ways, nor finding thine own pleasure, nor
speaking thine own words: then shalt thou delight thyself in the Lord; and I will
cause thee to ride upon the high places of the earth, and feed thee with the
heritage of Jacob thy father: for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it." Isa. 58:13,
14.
"For as the new heavens and the new earth, which I will make, shall remain
before me, saith the Lord, so shall your seed and your name remain. And it shall
come to pass, that from one new moon to another, and from one Sabbath to
another, shall all flesh come to worship before Me, saith the Lord." Isa. 66:22, 23.
After all Satan's efforts to destroy Christ had been defeated, and the Man-
child "was caught up unto God, and to His throne," Satan next turned all his
endeavors, still through his world-instrumentality, the Roman Empire, against "the
woman," which is the church, and "persecuted the woman which brought forth
the Man-child." "And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb, and by the
word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives unto the death."
This persecution Satan continued as long as the Roman power stood. But the
Roman Empire fell, and there was a change–not a change in spirit, for it was still
the same spirit of the same "old serpent," not a change in the persecution, for it
was only intensified–it was a change in the power, the instrumentality, that Satan
used in the persecution. When the Roman Empire, that had been such an
excellent instrument of Satan's will, had fallen and perished forever, in the
anarchy of the times, he was for the moment without any efficient power to make
his wrath felt against the church and the saints of God. Therefore "he stood upon
the sand of the sea," waiting. Rev. 13:1, R. V.
A Beast
But he had not long to wait; for presently "a beast" rose up "out of the sea,
having seven heads and ten horns, and upon his horns ten crowns, and upon his
heads the name of blasphemy." This beast was most gladly welcomed by Satan;
for it was so exactly what he had been waiting for, that he immediately gave to it
his own "power," his own "seat," which he had so long held in Rome and his own
"great authority" or "a wide-spread dominion." Rev. 13:2, 4; 2:13.
The beast was well adapted to this great Satanic gift; and immediately it was
all alive as the most thoroughly efficient instrumentality that had ever yet fallen to
Satan's lost: "He opened his mouth in blasphemy against God, to blaspheme His
name, and His tabernacle, and them that dwell in heaven." Indeed, it only opened
its mouth to blaspheme God, to blaspheme God Himself and His tabernacle; that
is, all who dwell in His tabernacle in heaven. "And it was given unto him to make
war with the saints, and to overcome them; and power was given him over all
kindreds, and tongues, and nations." Rev. 13:5-7.
With such an agent as this ready to do his will, Satan was again all activity,
and poured out a perfect flood of persecution against "the woman" "that he might
cause her to be carried away of the flood." But "to the woman were given two
wings of a great eagle, that she might fly into the wilderness, into her place,
where she is nourished for a time, and times, and half a time, from the face of the
serpent." Also "the earth helped the woman, and the earth opened her mouth,
and swallowed up the flood which the dragon," "called the Devil, and Satan,"
"cast out of his mouth." This was the time when, for twelve hundred and sixty
years, Satan, through the instrumentality of the Papacy, poured out his wrath
against the church of Christ and upon the satins of God, "to kill with sword, and
with hunger, and with death, and with the beasts of the earth," "by flame, by
captivity, and by spoil;" even for "many days." Rev. 6:8; Dan. 11:33.
This "time, times, and an half," "forty and two months," twelve hundred and
sixty years, in which "the beast," the Papacy, "was empowered to work its will,"
ended in A. D. 1798. At that time the beast was "as it were, wounded to death;"
the power of the Papacy was broken, her dominion was taken away, she was left
as a widow and sorrowful, and Satan's power was again crippled, and his wrath
seriously hindered.
But, lo! help was coming; for just then there was seen "another beast coming
up out of the earth;" and tho "he had two horns like a lamb," yet "he spake as a
dragon." And this one, tho strong on his own part, uses his power to revive and
restore the power and working of the beast. For "he exerciseth all the power of
the first beast before him, and causeth the earth and them which dwell therein to
worship the first beast, whose deadly wound was healed. And he doeth great
wonders, so that he maketh fire come down from heaven on the earth in the sight
of men, and deceiveth them that dwell on the earth by the means of those
miracles which he had power to do in the sight of the beast; saying to them that
dwell on the earth, that they should make an image to the beast, which had the
wound by a sword and did live. And he had power to give life unto the image of
the beast, that the image of the beast should both speak, and cause that as
many as would not worship the image of the beast should be killed. And he
causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, to receive a mark
in their right hand or in their foreheads, and that no man might buy or sell, save
he that had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name." Rev.
13:11-17.
A Warning Message
Thus this beast and the first beast unite in compelling all to worship the first
beast. But against all this God sends a great threefold message of warning to all
the people of the earth, pleading with them that they worship not the beast
neither his image, and "if any man worship the beast and his image, and receive
his mark in his forehead, or in his hand he shall drink of the wine of the wrath of
God, which is poured out without mixture into the cup of His indignation." Instead
of their worshiping the beast, God calls them to "worship him that made heaven,
and earth, and the sea, and the fountains of waters," and to "keep the
commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus." Rev. 14:7-12.
Through all the time of this later interval Satan's wrath had been against the
church of God as much as before, but there was no power by which he could
make if effective. Now, however, in this combination of the beast and his image
he forms again the power that for a while he had lost; and again he is active as
before. Now "the dragon" is not only "wroth with the woman," but, with his
restored beast and his image, he goes forth anew "to make war with the remnant
of her seed, which keep the commandments of God, and have the testimony of
Jesus Christ." Rev. 12:17.
Wrath of Satan
In this his last war, his wrath is especially "great," because "he knoweth that
he hath but a short time." Rev. 12:12. But still he does not prevail. Still they
overcome him by the blood of the Lamb, and by the word of their testimony. But
his wrath is so great, and, even tho he has all the allied powers of the beast and
his image, his case becomes so desperate, that in very person he appears and
takes command of his forces. But lo! presently heaven is opened, and there
appears also in His very person. One "called Faithful and True," sitting upon "a
white horse," and "the armies of heaven" follow Him, also "upon white horses,"
"and in righteousness He doth judge and make war."
"And I saw the beast, and the kings of the earth and their armies, gathered
together to make war against Him that sat on the horse, and against His army.
And the beast was taken, and with him the false prophet that wrought miracles
before him, with which he deceived them that had the mark of the beast, and
them that worshiped his image. These both were cast alive into a lake of fire
burning with brimstone." "And I saw as it were a sea of glass mingled with fire;
and them that had gotten the victory over the beast, and over his image, and
over his mark, and over the number of his name, stand on the sea of glass,
having the harps of God." Rev. 19:11-20; 15:2.
The persecution is ceased. The conflict is ended.
(Continued on page 13.)