THE PAROUSIA IN THE APOSTOLIC EPISTLES
THE PAROUSIA IN THE EPISTLE TO THE
EPHESIANS.
THE
ECONOMY OF THE FULNESS OF THE TIMES.
Ephes.
i. 9, 10.---‘Having made known unto us the mystery of his will, according to
his good pleasure, which he hath purposed in himself: that in the dispensation
[] of the fulness of the times he might gather together in one all things in
Christ, both which are in heaven, and which are in the earth,’ etc.
Though this passage does not affirm anything
directly respecting the nearness of the Parousia, yet it has a very distinct
bearing upon the event itself. The field of investigation which it opens is
indeed far too wide for us now to explore, yet we cannot wholly pass it by. The
theme is one on which the apostle loves to expatiate, and nowhere does he dwell
upon it more rapturously than in this epistle. It may be presumed therefore
that, however obscure it may seem to us in some respects, it was not
unintelligible to the Christians of Ephesus, or those to whom this epistle was
sent, for, as Paley well observes, no man write unintelligibly on purpose. We
may also expect to find allusions to the same subject in other parts of the
apostle’s writings, which may serve to elucidate dark sayings in this.
There are two questions which are raised by the
passage before us: (1) What is meant by the ‘gathering together in one of all
things in Christ?’ (2) What is the period designated ‘the economy of the
fulness of the times,’ in which this ‘gathering together in one’ is to take
place?
1. With regard to the first point we are greatly
assisted in determination by the expression which the apostle employs in
relation to it, viz. ‘the mystery of his will.’ This is a favourite word
of St. Paul in speaking of that new and wonderful discovery which never failed
to fill his soul with adoring gratitude and praise,---the admission of the
Gentiles into all the privileges of the covenant nation. It is difficult for us
to form a conception of the shock of surprise and incredulity which the
announcement of such a revolution in the divine administration excited in the
Jewish mind. We know that even the apostles themselves were unprepared for it,
and that it was with something like hesitation and suspicion that they at
length yielded to the overpowering evidence of facts,---‘Then hath God also to
the Gentiles granted repentance unto life’ (Acts xi. 18). But to the apostle of
the Gentiles this was the glorious charter of universal emancipation. Of all
men he saw its divine beauty and glory, its transcendent mystery and
marvelousness, most clearly. He saw the barriers of separation between Jew and
Gentile, the antipathies of races, ‘the middle wall of partition,’ broken down
by Christ, and one great family of brotherhood formed out of all nations, and
kindreds, and peoples, and tongues, under the all-reconciling and uniting power
of the atoning blood. We cannot be mistaken, then, in understanding this
mystery of the ‘gathering together in one all things in Christ’ as the same
which is more fully explained in chap. iii. 5,6, ‘the mystery which in other
ages was not made known unto the sons of men, as it is now revealed unto his
holy apostles and prophets by the Spirit; that the Gentiles should be
fellow-heirs, and of the same body, and partakers of his promise in Christ by
the gospel.’ This is the unification, ‘the summing up,’ or consummation
[], to which the apostle makes such frequent reference in this epistle: ‘the
making of both one,’ ‘the making of twain one new man;’
‘reconciling both unto God in one body’ (Ephes. ii. 14, 15, 16). This
was the grand secret of God, which had been hidden from past generations, but
was now disclosed to the admiration and gratitude of heaven and earth.
But it may be said, How can the reception of the
Gentiles into the privileges of Israel be called the comprehension of all
things, both which are in the heavens, and in the earth?
Some very able critics have supposed that the
words heaven and earth in this, and in several other passages,
are to be understood in a limited and, so to speak, technical
sense. To the Jewish mind, the covenant nation, the peculiar people of God
might fitly be styled ‘heavenly,’ while the degraded and uncovenanted
Gentiles belonged to an inferior, an earthly, condition. This is the
view taken by Locke in his note on this passage:---
‘That
St. Paul should use "heaven" and "earth" for Jews and
Gentiles will not be thought so very strange if we consider that Daniel himself
expresses the nation of the Jews by the name of "heaven" (Dan. viii.
10). Nor does he want an example of it in our Saviour Himself, who (Luke xxi.
26) by "powers of heaven" plainly signifies the great men of the
Jewish nation. Nor is this the only place in this Epistle of St. Paul to the
Ephesians which will bear this interpretation of heaven and earth. He who shall
read the first fifteen verses of chap. iii. and carefully weigh the expressions,
and observe the drift of the apostle in them, will not find that he does
manifest violence to St. Paul’s sense if he understand by "the family in
heaven and earth" (ver. 15) the united body of Christians, made up of Jews
and Gentiles, living still promiscuously among those two sorts of people who
continued in their unbelief. However, this interpretation I am not positive in,
but offer it as matter of inquiry to those who think an impartial search into
the true meaning of the Sacred Scriptures the best employment of all the time
they have.’
It is in favour of such an interpretation of
‘heaven and earth’ that these expressions must apparently be taken in a similar
restricted sense in other passages where they occur. For example, ‘Till heaven
and earth pass’ (Matt. v. 18); ‘Heaven and earth shall pass away’ (Luke xxi.
33). In the first of these passages the context shows that it cannot possibly
refer to the final dissolution of the material creation, for that would assert
the perpetuity of every jot and tittle of that which has long ago been
abrogated and annulled. We must, therefore, understand the ‘passing away of
heaven and earth’ in a tropical sense. A judicious expositor makes the
following observations on this passage:---
‘A
person at all familiar with the phraseology of the Old Testament Scriptures
knows that the dissolution of the Mosaic economy and the establishment of the
Christian, is often spoken of as the removing of the old earth and heavens, and
the creation of a new earth and new heavens. (See Isa. lxv. 17, and lxvi. 22.)
The period of the close of the one dispensation and the commencement of the
other, is spoken of as "the last days," and "the end of the
world," and is described as such a shaking of the earth and heavens, as
should lead to the removal of the things which were shaken (Hag. ii. 6; Heb.
xiv. 26, 27).’
There seems, therefore, to be Scripture warrant
for understanding ‘things in heaven and things in earth’ in the sense indicated
by Locke, as meaning Jew and Gentiles. It is possible, however, that the
words point to a still wider comprehension and a more glorious consummation.
They may imply that the human race, separated from God and all holy beings, and
divided by mutual enmity and alienation, was destined by the gracious purpose
of God to be reclaimed, restored, and reunited under one common Head, the Lord
Jesus Christ, to the one God and Father of mankind, and to all holy and happy
beings in heaven. The whole intelligent universe, according to this view, was
to be brought under one dominion, the dominion of God the Father, through His
Son, Jesus Christ. This is the great consummation presented to us in so many
forms in the New Testament. It is the ‘regeneration’ [] of Matt. xix. 28; the
‘times of refreshing’ [ ]; and the ‘times of restoration of all things’ [ ] of
Acts. iii. 19, 21; the ‘subjection of all things to Christ’ of 1 Cor. xv. 28;
the ‘reconciliation of all things to God’ [] of Col. i. 20; the ‘time of
reformation’ [ ] of Heb. ix. 10; the ‘ ’---‘the new age’---of Ephes. i. 21. All
these are only different forms and expressions of the same thing, and all point
to the same great coming era; and to this category we may unhesitatingly assign
the phrase, ‘the economy of the fulness of the times,’ and ‘the gathering
together in one of all things in Christ.’
Before this universal dominion of the Father
could be publicly assumed and proclaimed, it was necessary that the exclusive
and limited relation of God to a single nation should be superseded and
abolished. The Theocracy had therefore to be set aside, in order to make way
for the universal Fatherhood of God: ‘that God might be All in all.’
2. The next question for consideration is, Have
we any indication of the period at which this consummation was to take place?
We have the most explicit statements on this
point; for almost every on of those equivalent designations of the event
enables us to fix the time. The regeneration is ‘when the Son of man shall sit
on the throne of his glory;’ the times of ‘restitution of all thing’ are when ‘God
shall send Jesus Christ;’ the ‘subjection of all things to Christ’ is ‘at his
coming’ and ‘the end.’ In other words, all these events coincide with the
Parousia; and this, therefore, is the period of ‘the reuniting of all things’
under Christ.
We arrive at the same conclusion from the
consideration of the phrase, ‘the economy of the fulness of the times.’ An
economy is an arrangement or order of things, and appears to be equivalent to
the phrase , or covenant. The Mosaic dispensation or economy is designated
the ‘old covenant’ (2 Cor. iii. 14), in contrast to the ‘new covenant,’ or the
‘Gospel dispensation.’ The ‘old covenant’ or economy is represented as
‘decaying, waxing old, and ready to vanish away,’---that is to say, the Mosaic
dispensation was about to be abolished, and to be superseded by the Christian
dispensation’ (Heb. viii. 13). Sometimes the old, or Jewish, economy is spoken
of as this aeon, the present aeon [ , ]; and the Christian, or Gospel,
dispensation as ‘the coming aeon,’ and the ‘world to come’ [ , ] (Ephes. i. 21;
Heb. ii. 5). The close of the Jewish age or economy is called ‘the end of the
age’ [ ], and it is reasonable to conclude that the end of the old is the
beginning of the new. It follows, therefore, that the economy of the fulness of
the times is that state or order of things which immediately succeeds and
supersedes the old Jewish economy. The economy of the fulness of the times is
the final and crowning dispensation; the ‘kingdom which cannot be moved;’ ‘the
better covenant, established upon better promises.’ Since, then, the old
economy was finally set aside and abrogated at the destruction of Jerusalem, we
conclude that the new aeon, or ‘economy of the fulness of times,’ received its
solemn and public inauguration at the same period, which coincides with the
Parousa.
THE
DAY OF REDEMPTION.
Ephes.
i. 13, 14.---‘The holy Spirit of promise, which is the earnest of our
inheritance until [for] the redemption of the purchased possession.’
Ephes.
iv. 30.---‘The holy Spirit of God, whereby we are sealed unto the day of
redemption.’
These two passages obviously point to the same
act and the same period. What is the redemption here referred to---the
redemption of the purchased possession? Ancient Israel is called the
Lord’s inheritance (Deut. xxxii. 9); and the people of God are said to be His
inheritance (Ephes. i. 11, Alford’s translation). Here, however, it is not God’s
inheritance, but our inheritance, that is referred to; and that
inheritance is not yet in possession, but in prospect; the pledge or earnest of
it only (viz. the Holy Spirit) having been received. We are therefore compelled
to understand by the inheritance the future glory and felicity awaiting the
Christian in heaven. This, then, is the inheritance, and also the purchased
possession, for they both refer to the same thing. Obviously it is something
future, yet not distant, for it is already purchased, though not yet possessed.
It stood in the same relation to the Ephesian Christians as the land of Canaan
to the ancient Israelites in the wilderness. It was the promised rest, into
which they hoped to live to enter. The day when the Lord Jesus should be
revealed from heaven was the day of redemption to which the apostolic churches
were looking forward. Our Lord had foretold the tokens of that day’s approach.
‘When these things begin to come to pass, then look up, and lift up your heads,
for your redemption draweth nigh.’ He had also declared that the
existing generation should not pass away till all was fulfilled’ (Luke xxi. 28,
32). The day of redemption, therefore, was in their view drawing nigh.
In the same manner St. Paul, writing to the
Christians in Rome, speaks of the eager longing with which they were ‘waiting
for the adoption, or redemption of their body from the bondage of corruption’
(Rom. viii. 23). This passage is precisely parallel with Ephes. i. 14 and iv.
30. There is the same inheritance, the same earnest of it, the
same full redemption in prospect. The change of the material and mortal
body into an incorruptible and spiritual body was an important part of the
inheritance. This was what the apostle and their converts expected at the
Parousia. The day of redemption, therefore, is coincident with the Parousia.
THE PRESENT AEON AND THAT
WHICH IS COMING.
Ephes.
i. 21.---‘Not only in this world [aeon], but also in that which is to come’
[which is coming].
We have often had occasion to remark upon the
true sense of the word , so often mistranslated ‘world,’ Locke observes: ‘It
may be worth while to consider whether hath not ordinarily a more natural
signification of the New Testament by standing for a considerable length of
time, passing under some one remarkable dispensation.’ There were in the
apostle’s view at least two great periods or aeons: the one present, but
drawing to a close; the other future, and just about to open. The former was
the present order of things under the Mosaic law; the latter was the new and
glorious epoch which was to be inaugurated by the Parousia.
‘THE
AGES [AEONS] TO COME.’
Ephes.
ii. 7.---‘That in the ages to come he might show the exceeding riches of his
grace.’ etc.
On this passage the following observation is made
by Conybeare and Howson:---
‘"In
the ages which are coming;" viz. the time of Christ’s perfect triumph
over evil, always contemplated in the New Testament as near at hand.’
It would be perhaps be more proper to say that it
refers to the approaching salvation of these Gentile believers, and their
glorification with Christ; for this is the consummation always contemplated in
the New Testament as near at hand (Rom. xiii. 11).
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