The Application of the Scriptures
A Study of
Dispensationalism
By Arthur Pink
Table of Contents
Chapter 1
Having written so much upon both the
inspiration and the interpretation of Holy Writ, it is necessary, in order to give
completeness unto the same, to supply one or two articles upon the application thereof.
First, because this is very closely related to exegesis itself: if a wrong application or
use be made of a verse, then our explanation of it is certain to be erroneous. For
example, Romanism insists that "Feed my sheep" (John 21:15-17) was Christs
bestowal upon Peter of a special privilege and peculiar honour, being one of the passages
to which that evil system appeals in support of her contention for the primacy of
that Apostle. Yet there is nothing whatever in Peters own writings which indicates
that he regarded those injunctions of his Master as constituting him "Universal
Bishop." Instead, in his first Epistle there is plainly that to the contrary, for
there we find him exhorting the elders or bishops, "Feed the flock of God which is
among you, taking the oversight thereof, not by constraint, but willingly; not for filthy
lucre, but of a ready mind; neither as being lords over Gods heritage, but being
ensamples to the flock" (5:2,3).
Thus it is quite clear from the above passage that Christs
precepts in John 21:15-17, apply or pertain unto all pastors. On the other hand,
our Lords words to Peter and Andrew, "Follow Me, and I will make you fishers of
men" (Matt. 4:19) do not apply to the rank and file of His disciples, but only
unto those whom He calls into and qualifies for the ministry. That is evident from the
fact that in none of the Epistles, where both the privileges and the duties of the saints
are specifically defined, is there any such precept or promise. Thus, on the one hand, we
must ever beware of unwarrantable restricting the scope of a verse; and, on the other
hand, be constantly on our guard against making general what is manifestly particular. It
is only by carefully taking heed to the general Analogy of Faith that we shall be
preserved from either mistake. Scripture ever interprets Scripture, but much familiarity
with the contents, and a diligent and prayerful comparing of one part with another, is
necessary before anyone is justified in dogmatically deciding the precise meaning or
application of any passage.
But there is further reason, and a pressing one today, why we
should write upon our present subject, and that is to expose the modern and pernicious
error of Dispensationalism. This is a device of the Enemy, designed to rob the children of
no small part of that bread which their heavenly Father has provided for their souls; a
device wherein the wily serpent appears as an angel of light, feigning to "make the
Bible a new book" by simplifying much in it which perplexes the spiritually
unlearned. It is sad to see how widely successful the devil has been by means of this
subtle innovation. It is likely that some of our own readers, when perusing the articles
upon the interpretation of the Scriptures, felt more than once that we were taking an
undue liberty with Holy Writ, that we made use of certain passages in a way altogether
unjustifiable, that we appropriated to the saints of this Christian era what does not
belong to them but is rather addressed unto those who lived in an entirely different
dispensation of the past, or one which is yet future.
This modern method of mishandling the Scripturesfor modern
it certainly is, being quite unknown to Christendom till little more than a century ago,
and only within recent years being adopted by those who are outside the narrow circle
where it originatedis based upon 2 Timothy 2:15, "Study to show thyself
approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of
truth." Very little or nothing at all is said upon the first two clauses of that
verse, but on the third one, which is explained as "correctly partitioning the
Scriptures unto the different peoples to whom they belong." These mutilators of the
Word tell us that all of the Old Testament from Genesis 12 onwards belongs entirely to
Israel after the flesh, and that none of its precepts (as such) are binding upon those who
are members of the Church which is the Body of Christ, nor may any of the promises found
therein be legitimately appropriated by them. And this, be it duly noted, without a
single word to that effect by either the Lord or any of His Apostles, and despite the
use which the Holy Spirit makes of the earliest Scriptures in every part of the New
Testament. So far from the Holy Spirit teaching Christians practically to look upon the
Old Testament much as they would upon an obsolete almanac, He declares, "For
whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our learning, that we
through patience and comfort of the (Old Testament) Scriptures might have hope" (Rom.
15:4).
Not satisfied with their determined efforts to deprive us of the
Old Testament, these would-be super-expositors dogmatically assert that the four Gospels
are Jewish, and that the Epistles of James and Peter, John and Jude are designed for a
"godly Jewish remnant" in a future "tribulation period," that nothing
but the Pauline Epistles contain "Church truth," and thousands of gullible souls
have accepted their ipse digitthose who decline so doing are regarded as
untaught and superficial. Yet God Himself has not uttered a single word to that effect.
Certainly there is nothing whatever in 2 Timothy 2:15, to justify such a revolutionizing
method of interpreting the Word: that verse has no more to do with the sectioning of
Scripture between different "dispensations" than it has with distinguishing
between stars of varying magnitude. If that verse be carefully compared with Matthew 7:6,
John 16:12 and 1 Corinthians 3:2, its meaning is clear. The occupant of the pulpit is to
give diligence in becoming equipped to give the different classes of his hearer
"their portion of meat in due season" (Luke 12:42). To rightly divide the
Word of Truth is for him to minister it suitably unto the several cases and circumstances
of his congregation: to sinners and saints, the indifferent and the inquiring, the babes
and fathers, the tempted and afflicted, the backslidden and fallen.
While there be great variety in the teaching of the Word, there
is an unmistakable unity underlying the whole. Though He employed many mouthpieces, the
Holy Scriptures have but one Author; and while He "at sundry times and in divers
manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets" and "hath in these
last days spoken unto us by His Son" (Heb. 1:1,2), yet He who spoke by them was and
is One "with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning" (Jam. 1:17),
who throughout all ages declares: "I am the Lord, I change not" (Mal. 3:6).
Throughout there is perfect agreement between every part of the Word: it sets forth one
system of doctrine (we never read of "the doctrines of God," but always
"the doctrine": see Deut 32:2; Prov 4:2; Matt 7:28; John 7:17; Rom. 16:17, and
contrast Mark 7:7; Col. 2:22; 1 Tim. 4:1; Heb. 13:9) because it is one single and organic
whole. That Word presents uniformly one way of salvation, one rule of faith.
From Genesis to Revelation there is one immutable Moral Law, one glorious Gospel for
perishing sinners. The Old Testament believers were saved with the same salvation, were
indebted to the same Redeemer, were renewed by the same Spirit, and were partakers of the
same heavenly inheritance as are New Testament believers.
It is quite true that the Epistle to the Hebrews makes mention of
a better hope (7:19), a better testament or covenant (7:22), better promises (8:6), better
sacrifices (9:23), some better thing for us (11:40), and yet it is important to recognize
that the contrast is between the shadows and the substance. Romans 12:6, speaks of
"the proportion [or "analogy"] of faith." There is a due proportion, a
perfect balance, between the different parts of Gods revealed Truth which must needs
be known and observed by all who would preach and write according to the mind of the
Spirit. In arguing from this analogy, it is essential to recognize that what is made known
in the Old Testament was typical of what is set forth in the New, and therefore the
terms used in the former are strictly applicable unto the latter. Much needless wrangling
has occurred over whether or not the nation of Israel were a regenerate people. That is
quite beside the real point: outwardly they were regarded and addressed as the people of
God, and, as the Spirit through Paul affirmed, "who are Israelites: to whom
pertaineth the adoption, and the glory, and the covenants, and the giving of the law, and
the service of God, and the promises: whose are the fathers, and of whom as concerning the
flesh Christ came" (Rom. 9:4,5).
Regeneration or non-regeneration affected the salvation of individuals
among them, but it did not affect the covenant relationship of the people as a
whole. Again and again God addressed Israel as "backsliders," but never once
did He so designate any heathen nation. It was not to the Egyptians or Canaanites that
Jehovah said, "Return, ye backsliding children, and I will heal your
backslidings," or "Turn, 0 backsliding children...for I am married unto
you" (Jer. 3:22, 14). Now it is this analogy or similarity between the two
covenants and the peoples under them which is the basis for the transfer of Old Testament
terms to the New. Thus the word "circumcision" is used in the latter not with
identity of meaning, but according to analogy, for circumcision is now "of the heart,
in the spirit" (Rom. 2:29), and not of the flesh. In like manner, when John closes
his first Epistle with "Little children, keep yourselves from idols," he borrows
an Old Testament term and uses it in a New Testament sense, for by "idols" he
refers not to material statues made of wood and stone (as the prophets did when employing
the same word), but to inward objects of carnal and sensual worship. So too are we to see
the antitypical and spiritual "Israel" in Galatians 6:16, and the celestial and
eternal "Mount Zion" in Hebrews 12:22.
The Bible consists of many parts, exquisitely correlated and
vitally interdependent upon each other. God so controlled all the agents which He employed
in the writing of it, and so coordinated their efforts, as to produce a single living
Book. Within that organic unity there is indeed much variety, but no contrariety.
Mans body is but one, though it be made up of many members, diverse in size,
character, and operation. The rainbow is but one, nevertheless it reflects distinctly the
seven prismatic rays, yet they are harmoniously blended together. So it is with the Bible:
its unity appears in the perfect consistency throughout of its teachings. The oneness yet
triunity of God, the deity and humanity of Christ united in one Person, the everlasting
covenant which secures the salvation of all the election of grace, the highway of holiness
and the only path which leads to heaven, are plainly revealed in Old and New Testament
alike. The teaching of the prophets concerning the glorious character of God, the
changeless requirements of His righteousness, the total depravity of human nature, and the
way appointed for restoration therefrom, are identical with the Apostles teaching.
If the question be raised, Since the sacred Scriptures be a
strict unit, then why has God Himself divided them into two Testaments? perhaps it will
simplify the matter if we ask why God has appointed two principal bodies to illuminate the
earththe sun and the moon. Why, too, is the human frame duplex, having two legs and
arms, two lungs and kidneys, etc.? Is not the answer the same in each case: to augment and
supplement each other? But, more directly, at least four reasons may be suggested. First,
to set forth more distinctly the two covenants which are the basis of Gods dealings
with all mankind: the covenant of works and the covenant of graceshadowed forth by
the "old" from Sinai and the "new" or Christian one. Second, to show
more plainly the two separate companies which are united in that one Body which
constitutes the Church of which Christ is the Head, namely redeemed Jews and redeemed
Gentiles. Third, to demonstrate more clearly the wondrous providence of God: using the
Jews for so many centuries to be the custodians of the Old Testament, which condemns them
for their rejection of Christ; and in employing the papists throughout the dark ages to
preserve the New Testament, which denounces their idolatrous practices. Fourth, that one
might confirm the other: type by antitype, prophecy by fulfillment.
"The mutual relations of the two Testaments. These two main
divisions resemble the dual structure of the human body, where the two eyes and ears,
hands and feet, correspond to and complement one another. Not only is there a general, but
a special, mutual fitness. They need therefore to be studied together, side by side, to be
compared even in lesser details, for in nothing are they independent of each other; and
the closer the inspection the minuter appears the adaptation, and the more intimate the
association. . . .The two Testaments are like the two cherubim of the mercy seat, facing
in opposite directions, yet facing each other and overshadowing with glory one mercy seat;
or again, they are like the human body bound together by joints and bands and ligaments,
with one brain and heart, one pair of lungs, one system of respiration, circulation,
digestion, sensor and motor nerves, where division is destruction" (A.T. Pierson,
from Knowing the Scriptures).
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Chapter 2
Some Dispensationalists do not
go quite so far as others in arbitrarily erecting notice-boards over large sections of
Scripture, warning Christians not to tread on ground which belongs to others, yet there is
general agreement among them that the Gospel of Matthewthough it stands at the
beginning of the New Testament and not at the close of the Old!pertains not to those
who are members of the mystical body of Christ, but is "entirely Jewish," that
the sermon on the mount is "legalistic" and not evangelistic, and that its
searching and flesh-withering precepts are not binding upon Christians. Some go so far as
to insist that the great commission with which it closes is not designed for us today, but
is meant for "a godly Jewish remnant" after the present era is ended. In support
of this wild and wicked theory, appeal is made to and great stress laid upon the fact that
Christ is represented, most prominently, as "the son of David" or King of the
Jews; but they ignore another conspicuous fact, namely that in its opening verse the Lord
Jesus is set forth as "the son of Abraham," and he was a Gentile! What
is still more against this untenable hypothesisand as though the Holy Spirit
designedly anticipated and refuted itis the fact that Matthews is the only one
of the four Gospels where the Church is actually mentioned twice (16:18;
18:17)!though in Johns Gospel its members are portrayed as branches of the
Vine, members of Christs flock, which are designations of saints which have no
dispensational limitations.
Equally remarkable is the fact that the very same Epistle which
contains the verse (2 Tim. 2:15) on which this modern system is based emphatically
declares: "All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for
doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness; that the man of
God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works" (3:16,17). So far from
large sections of Scripture being designed for other companies, and excluded from our
immediate use, ALL Scripture is meant for and is needed by us. First, all of it is
"profitable for doctrine," which could not be the case if it were true (as
Dispensationalists dogmatically insist) that God has entirely different methods of dealing
with men in past and future ages from the present one. Second, all Scripture is given us
"for instruction in righteousness" or right doing, but we are at a complete loss
to know how to regulate our conduct if the precepts in one part of the Bible are now
outdated (as the teachers of error assert) and injunctions of a contrary character have
displaced them; and if certain statutes are meant for others who will occupy this scene
after the Church has been removed from it. Third, all Scripture is given that a man of God
might be "perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works"every part of
the Word is required in order to supply him with all needed instructions and to produce a
full-orbed life of godliness.
When the Dispensationalist is hard pressed with those objections,
he endeavors to wriggle out of his dilemma by declaring that though all Scripture be for
us much of it is not addressed to us. But really, that is a distinction without
a difference. In his exposition of Hebrews 3:7-11, Owen rightly pointed out that when
making quotation from the Old Testament the Apostle prefaced it with "the Holy Spirit
saith" (not "said"), and remarked, "Whatever was given by inspiration
from the Holy Spirit and is recorded in the Scriptures for the use of the Church, He
contrived to speak it to us unto this day. As He liveth for ever so He continues to speak
for ever; that is, whilst His voice or word shall be of use for the ChurchHe speaks
now unto us . . . Many men have invented several ways to lessen the authority of the
Scriptures, and few are willing to acknowledge an immediate speaking of God unto
them therein." To the same effect wrote that sound commentator Thomas Scott,
"Because of the immense advantages of perseverance, and the tremendous consequences
of apostasy, we should consider the words of the Holy Spirit as addressed to us."
Not only is the assertion that though all Scripture be for us all
is not to us meaningless, but it is also impertinent and impudent, for there
is nothing whatever in the Word of Truth to support and substantiate it. Nowhere has the
Spirit given the slightest warning that such a passage is "not to the
Christian," and still less that whole books belong to someone else. Moreover, such a
principle is manifestly dishonest. What right have I to make any use of that
which is the property of another? What would my neighbor think were I to take letters
which were addressed to him and argue that they were meant for me?
Furthermore, such a theory, when put to the test, is found to be unworkable. For
example, to whom is the book of Proverbs addressed, or for that matter, the first Epistle
of John? Personally, this writer, after having wasted much time in perusing scores of
books which pretended to rightly divide the Word, still regards the whole of Scripture as
Gods gracious revelation to him and for him, as though there were not another person
on earth, conscious that he cannot afford to dispense with any portion of it; and he is
heartily sorry for those who lack such a faith. Pertinent in this connection is that
warning, "But fear, lest by any means, as the serpent beguiled Eve .
. . so your
minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ" (2 Cor.
11:3).
But are there not many passages in the Old Testament which have
no direct bearing upon the Church today? Certainly not. In view of 1 Corinthians
10:11"Now all these things happened unto them for ensamples [margin,
"types"]: and they are written for our admonition"Owen pithily
remarked: "Old Testament examples are New Testament instructions." By their
histories we are taught what to avoid and what to emulate. That is the principal reason
why they are recorded: that which hindered or encouraged the Old Testament saints
was chronicled for our benefit. But, more specifically, are not Christians unwarranted in
applying to themselves many promises given to Israel according to the flesh during the
Mosaic economy, and expecting a fulfillment of the same unto themselves? No indeed, for if
that were the case, then it would not be true that "whatsoever things were
written aforetime were written for our learning, that we through patience and comfort of
the scriptures might have hope" (Rom. 15:4). What comfort can I derive from those
sections of Gods Word which these people say "do not belong to me"? What
"hope" (i.e. a well-grounded assurance of some future good) could possibly be
inspired today in Christians by what pertains to none but Jews? Christ came here, my
reader, not to cancel, but "to confirm the promises made unto the fathers: and
that the Gentiles might glorify God for His mercy" (Rom. 15:8,9)!
It must also be borne in mind that, in keeping with the character
of the covenant under which they were made, many of the precepts and the promises given
unto the patriarchs and their descendants possessed a spiritual and typical significance
and value, as well as a carnal and literal one. As an example of the former, take
Deuteronomy 25:4, "Thou shalt not muzzle the ox when he treadeth out the corn,"
and then mark the application made of those words in 1 Corinthians 9:9,10: "Doth God
take care for oxen? Or saith He it altogether for our sakes? For our sakes, no
doubt, this is written: that he that ploweth should plow in hope." The word
"altogether" is probably a little too strong here, for pantos is rendered
"no doubt" in Acts 28:4, and "surely" in Luke 4:23, and in the text
signifies "assuredly" (Amer. RV) or "mainly for our sakes."
Deuteronomy 25:4 was designed to enforce the principle that labour should have its reward,
so that men might work cheerfully. The precept enjoined equity and kindness: if so to
beasts, much more so to men, and especially the ministers of the Gospel. It is a striking
illustration of the freedom with which the Spirit of grace applies the Old Testament
Scriptures, as a constituent part of the Word of Christ, unto Christians and their
concerns.
What is true of the Old Testament precepts (generally speaking,
for there are, of course, exceptions to every rule) holds equally good to the Old
Testament promisesbelievers today are fully warranted in mixing faith therewith and
expecting to receive the substance of them. First, because those promises were made to
saints as such, and what God gives to one He gives to all (2 Pet. 1:4)Christ
purchased the self-same blessings for every one of His redeemed. Second, because most of
the Old Testament promises were typical in their nature: earthly blessings adumbrated
heavenly ones. That is no arbitrary assertion of ours, for anyone who has been taught of
God knows that almost everything during the old economies had a figurative meaning,
shadowing forth the better things to come. Many proofs of this will be given by us a
little later. Third, a literal fulfillment to us of those promises must not be
excluded, for since we be still on earth and in the body our temporal needs are the same
as theirs, and if we meet the conditions attached to those promises (either expressed or
implied), then we may count upon the fulfillment of them: according unto our faith and
obedience so will it be unto us.
But surely we must draw a definite and broad line between the Law
and the Gospel. It is at this point that the Dispensationalist considers his position to
be the strongest and most unassailable; yet nowhere else does he more display his
ignorance, for he neither recognizes the grace of God abounding during the Mosaic era, nor
can he see that Law has any rightful place in this Christian age. Law and grace are to him
antagonistic elements, and (to quote one of his favorite slogans) "will no more mix
than will oil and water." Not a few of those who are now regarded as the champions of
orthodoxy tell their hearers that the principles of law and grace are such contrary
elements that where the one be in exercise the other must necessarily be excluded. But
this is a very serious error. How could the Law of God and the Gospel of the grace of
God conflict? The one exhibits Him as "light," the other manifest Him as
"love" (1 John 1:5; 4:8), and both are necessary in order fully to reveal His
perfections: if either one be omitted only a one-sided concept of His character will be
formed. The one makes known His righteousness, the other displays His mercy, and His
wisdom has shown the perfect consistency there is between them.
Instead of law and grace being contradictory, they are
complementary. Both of them appeared in Eden before the Fall. What was it but grace which
made a grant unto our first parents: "Of every tree of the garden thou mayest freely
eat"? And it was law which said, "But of the tree of knowledge of good and evil,
thou shalt not eat of it." Both of them are seen at the time of the great deluge, for
we are told that "Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord" (Gen. 6:8), as His
subsequent dealings with him clearly demonstrated; while His righteousness brought in a
flood upon the world of the ungodly. Both of them operated side by side at Sinai, for
while the majesty and righteousness of Jehovah were expressed in the Decalogue, His mercy
and grace were plainly evinced in the provisions He made in the whole Levitical system
(with its priesthood and sacrifices) for the putting away of their sins. Both shone forth
in their meridian glory at Calvary, for whereas on the one hand the abounding grace of God
appeared in giving His own dear Son to be the Saviour of sinners, His justice called for
the curse of the Law to be inflicted upon Him while bearing their guilt.
In all of Gods works and ways we may discern a meeting
together of seemingly conflicting elementsthe centrifugal and the centripetal
forces which are ever at work in the material realm illustrate this principle. So it is in
connection with the operations of Divine providence: there is a constant interpenetrating
of the natural and supernatural. So too in the giving of the sacred Scriptures: they are
the product both of Gods and mans agency: they are a Divine revelation, yet
couched in human language, and communicated through human media; they are inerrantly true,
yet written by fallible men. They are Divinely inspired in every jot and
tittle, yet the
superintending control of the Spirit over the penmen did not exclude nor interfere with
the natural exercise of their faculties. Thus it is also in all of Gods dealings
with mankind: though He exercises His high sovereignty, yet He treats with them as
responsible creatures, putting forth His invincible power upon and within them, but in no
wise destroying their moral agency. These may present deep and insoluble mysteries to the
finite mind, nevertheless they are actual facts.
In what has just been pointed outto which other examples
might be added (the person of Christ, for instance, with His two distinct yet conjoined
natures, so that though He was omniscient yet He "grew in wisdom"; was
omnipotent, yet wearied and slept; was eternal, yet died)why should so many stumble
at the phenomenon of Divine law and Divine grace being in exercise side by side, operating
at the same season? Do law and grace present any greater contrast than the fathomless love
of God unto His children, and His everlasting wrath upon His enemies? No indeed, not so
great. Grace must not be regarded as an attribute of God which eclipses all His other
perfections. As Romans 5:21 so plainly tells us, "That as sin hath reigned unto
death, even so might grace reign through righteousness," and not at the
expense of or to the exclusion of it. Divine grace and Divine righteousness, Divine love
and Divine holiness, are as inseparable as light and heat from the sun. In bestowing
grace, God never rescinds His claims upon us, but rather enables us to meet them. Was the
prodigal son, after his penitential return and forgiveness, less obliged to conform to the
laws of his Fathers house than before he left it? No indeed, but more so.
That there is no conflict between the Law and the Gospel of the
grace of God is plain enough in Romans 3:31: "Do we then make void the law through
faith? God forbid: yea, we establish the law." Here the Apostle anticipates an
objection which was likely to be brought against what he said in verses 26-30. Does not
the teaching that justification is entirely by grace through faith evince that God has
relaxed His claims, changed the standard of His requirements, set aside the demands of His
government? Very far from it. The Divine plan of redemption is in no way an annulling of
the Law, but rather the honoring and enforcing of it. No greater respect could have been
shown to the Law than in Gods determining to save His people from its course by
sending His co-equal Son to fulfill all its requirements and Himself endure its penalty.
Oh, marvel of marvels; the great Legislator humbled Himself unto entire obedience to the
precepts of the Decalogue. The very One who gave the Law became incarnate, bled and died,
under its condemning sentence, rather than that a tittle thereof should fail. Magnified
thus was the Law indeed, and for ever "made honorable."
Gods method of salvation by grace has "established the
law" in a threefold way. First, by Christ, the Surety of Gods elect, being
"made under the law" (Gal. 4:4), fulfilling its precepts (Matt. 5:17), suffering
its penalty in the stead of His people, and thereby He has "brought everlasting
righteousness" (Dan. 9:24). Second, by the Holy Spirit, for at regeneration He writes
the Law on their hearts (Heb. 8:10), drawing out their affections unto it, so that they
"delight in the law of God after the inward man" (Rom. 7:22). Third, as the
fruit of his new nature, the Christian voluntarily and gladly takes the Law for his rule
of life, so that he declares, "with the mind I myself serve the law"
(Rom. 7:25). Thus is the Law "established" not only in the high court of heaven,
but in the souls of the redeemed. So far from law and grace being enemies, they are mutual
handmaids: the former reveals the sinners need, the latter supplies it; the one
makes known Gods requirements, the other enables us to meet them. Faith is not
opposed to good works, but performs them in obedience to God out of love and gratitude.
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Chapter 3
Before turning to the positive
side of our present subject, it was necessary for us to expose and denounce that teaching
which insists that much in the Bible has no immediate application unto us today. Such
teaching is a reckless and irreverent handling of the Word, which has produced the most
evil consequences in the hearts and lives of manynot the least of which is the
promotion of a pharisaical spirit of self-superiority. Consciously or unconsciously,
Dispensationalists are, in reality, repeating the sin of Jehoiakim, who mutilated
Gods Word with his penknife (Jer 36:23). Instead of "opening the
Scriptures," they are bent in closing the major part of them from Gods people
today. They are just as much engaged in doing the devils work as are the Higher
Critics, who, with their dissecting knives, are wrongly "dividing the word of
truth." They are seeking to force a stone down the throats of those who are asking
for bread. These are indeed severe and solemn indictments, but not more so than the case
calls for. We are well aware that they will be unacceptable unto some of our own readers;
but medicine, though sometimes necessary, is rarely palatable.
Instead of being engaged in the unholy work of pitting one part
of the Scriptures against another, these men would be far better employed in showing the
perfect unity of the Bible and the blessed harmony which there is between all of
its teachings. But instead of demonstrating the concord of the two Testaments, they are
more concerned in their efforts to show the discord which they say there is between that
which pertained unto "the Dispensation of Law" and that which obtains under
"the Dispensation of Grace," and in order to accomplish their evil design all
sound principles of exegesis are cast to the wind. As a sample of what we have reference
to, they cite "Eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot" (Ex.
21:24) and then quote against it, "But I say unto you, That ye resist not evil: but
whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also" (Matt.
5:39), and then it is exultantly asserted that those two passages can only be
"reconciled" by allocating them to different peoples in different ages; and with
such superficial handling of Holy Writ thousands of gullible souls are deceived, and
thousands more allow themselves to be bewildered.
If those who possess a Scofield Bible turn to Exodus
21:24, they will see that in the margin opposite to it the editor refers his readers to
Leviticus 24:20; Deuteronomy 19:21, and cf. Matthew 5:28-44; 1 Peter 2:19-21; upon which
this brief comment is made: "The provision in Exodus is law and righteous; the
New Testament passages, grace and merciful." How far Mr. Scofield was
consistent with himself may be seen by a reference to what he states on page 989, at the
beginning of the New Testament under the Four Gospels, where he expressly affirms
"The sermon on the mount is law, not grace" [italics ours]: verily
"the legs of the lame are not equal." In his marginal note to Exodus 21:24, Mr.
Scofield cites Matthew 5:38-44, as "grace," whereas in his introduction to the
Four Gospels he declares that Matthew 5-7 "is law, and not grace." Which of
those assertions did he wish his readers to believe?
Still the question may be asked, How are you going to
reconcile Exodus 21:24, with Matthew 5:38-44? Our answer is, There is nothing between them
to "reconcile," for there is nothing in them which clashes. The former
passage is one of the statutes appointed for public magistrates to enforce, whereas
the latter one lays down rules for private individuals to live by! Why do not these
self-styled "rightly dividers" properly allocate the Scriptures, distinguishing
between the different classes to which they are addressed? That Exodus 21:24 does contain
statutes for public magistrates to enforce is clearly established by comparing Scripture
with Scripture. In Deuteronomy 19:21, the same injunction is again recorded, and if the
reader turns back to verse 18 he will there read, "And the judges shall make
diligent inquisition," etc. It would be real mercy unto the community if our judges
today would set aside their sickly sentimentality and deal with conscienceless and brutal
criminals in a manner which befits their deeds of violenceinstead of making a
mockery of justice.
Ere leaving what has been before us in the last three paragraphs,
let it be pointed out that when our blessed Lord added to Matthew 5:38, "But I say
unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate
you" (verse 44) He was not advancing a more benign precept than had ever been
enunciated previously. No, the same gracious principle of conduct had been enforced in the
Old Testament. In Exodus 23:4, 5, Jehovah gave commandment through Moses, "If thou
meet thine enemys ox or his ass going astray, thou shalt surely bring it back
to him again. If thou see the ass of him that hateth thee lying under his burden, and
wouldest forbear to help him, thou shalt surely help with him." Again in Proverbs
25:21, we read, "If thine enemy be hungry, give him bread to eat; and if he be
thirsty, give him water to drink."
The same God who bids us, "Recompense to no man evil for
evil. Provide things honest in the sight of all men. If it be possible, as much as lieth
in you, live peaceably with all men. Dearly beloved, avenge not yourselves, but rather
give place unto wrath" (Rom. 12:17-19), also commanded His people in the Old Testament,
"Thou shalt not avenge, nor bear any grudge against the children of thy
people, but thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself: I am the Lord" (Lev. 19:18);
and therefore was David grateful to Abigail for dissuading him from taking vengeance on
Nabal: "Blessed be thou, which hast kept me this day from coming to shed blood, and
from avenging myself with mine own hand" (1 Sam. 25:33). So far was the Old Testament
from allowing any spirit of bitterness, malice or revenge that it expressly declared,
"Say not thou, I will recompense evil; but wait on the Lord, and He shall save
thee" (Prov. 20:22). And again, "Rejoice not when thine enemy
falleth,
and let not thine heart be glad when he stumbleth" (Prov. 24:17). And again,
"Say not, I will do so to him as he hath done to me: I will render to the man
according to his work" (Prov. 24:29).
One more sample of the excuseless ignorance betrayed by these
Dispensationalistswe quote from E.W. Bullingers How to Enjoy the Bible. On
pages 108 and 110 he said under "Law and Grace": "For those who lived under
the Law it could rightly and truly be said, It shall be our righteousness, if we
observe to do all these commandments before the Lord our God, as He hath commanded
us (Deut 6:25). But to those who live in this present Dispensation of Grace it is as
truly declared, By the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in His
sight (Rom. 3:20). But this is the very opposite of Deuteronomy 6:25. What, then,
are we to say, or to do? Which of these two statements is true and which is false? The
answer is that neither is false. But both are true if we would rightly divide the Word of
Truth as to its dispensational truth and teaching. . . .Two words distinguish the two
dispensations: Do distinguished the former; Done the latter. Then
salvation depended upon what man was to do, now it depends upon what Christ has
done." It is by such statements as these that "unstable souls" are
beguiled.
Is it not amazing that one so renowned for his erudition and
knowledge of the Scriptures should make such manifestly absurd statements as the above? In
pitting Deuteronomy 6:25 against Romans 3:20, he might as well have argued that fire is
"the very opposite" of water. They are indeed contrary elements, yet each has
its own use in its proper place: the one to cook by, the other for refreshment. Think of
one who set up himself as a teacher of preachers affirming that under the Mosaic economy
"salvation depended on what man was to do." Why, in that case, for fifteen
hundred years not a single Israelite had been saved. Had salvation then been obtainable by
human efforts, there had been no need for God to send His Son here! Salvation has never
been procurable by human merits, on the ground of human performance. Abel obtained witness
that he was righteous, because he offered to God a slain lamb (Gen. 4:4; Heb. 11:4).
Abraham was justified by faith, and not by works (Romans 4). Under the Mosaic economy it
was expressly announced that "it is the blood that maketh an atonement for the
soul" (Lev. 17:11). David realized, "If Thou, Lord, shouldest mark iniquities, 0
Lord, who shall stand?" (Ps. 130:3); and therefore did he confess, "I will make
mention of Thy righteousness, even of Thine only" (Ps. 71:16).
By all means let the Word of Truth be "rightly
divided"; not by parceling it off to different "dispensations," but by
distinguishing between what is doctrinal and what is practical, between that which
pertains to the unsaved and that which is predicated of the saved. Deuteronomy 6:25 is
addressed not to alien sinners, but to those who are in covenant relationship with the
Lord; whereas Romans 3:20 is a statement which applies to every member of the human race.
The one has to do with practical "righteousness" in the daily walk, which
is acceptable to God; the other is a doctrinal declaration which asserts the impossibility
of acceptance with God on the ground of creature doings. The former relates to our conduct
in this life in connection with the Divine government; the latter concerns our eternal
standing before the Divine throne. Both passages are equally applicable to Jews and
Gentiles in all ages. "Our righteousness" in Deuteronomy 6:25 is a practical
righteousness in the sight of God. It is the same aspect of righteousness as in
"except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the scribes and
Pharisees" of Matthew 5:20, the "righteous man" of James 5:16, and the
"doeth righteousness" of 1 John 2:29.
The Old Testament saints were the subjects of the same
everlasting covenant, had the same blessed Gospel, were begotten unto the same celestial
heritage as the New Testament saints. From Abel onwards, God has dealt with sinners in
sovereign grace, and according to the merits of Christs redemptive workwhich
was retroactive in its value and efficacy (Romans 3:25; 1 Peter 1:19,20). "Noah found
grace in the eyes of the Lord" (Gen. 6:8). That they were partakers of the same
covenant blessings as we are is clear from a comparison of 2 Samuel 23:5, and Hebrews
13:20. The same Gospel was preached unto Abraham (Gal. 3:8), yea, unto the nation of
Israel after they had received the Law (Heb 4:2), and therefore Abraham rejoiced to see
Christs day and was glad (John 8:56). Dying Jacob declared, "I have waited for
Thy salvation, 0 Lord" (Gen. 49:18). As Hebrews 11:16 states, the patriarchs desired
"a better country [than the land of Canaan, in which they dwelt], that is, an
heavenly." Moses "refused to be called the son of Pharaohs
daughter...esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of
Egypt" (Heb. 11:24-26). Job exclaimed, "I know that my Redeemer
liveth...in my
flesh shall I see God" (19:25,26).
When Jehovah proclaimed His name unto Moses, He revealed Himself
as "the Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious" (Exo 34:5-7). When
Aaron pronounced the benediction on the congregation, he was bidden to say, "The Lord
bless thee, and keep thee: the Lord make His face shine upon thee, and be gracious unto
thee: the Lord lift up His countenance upon thee, and give thee peace" (Num.
6:24-26). No greater and grander blessings can be invoked today. Such a passage as that
cannot possibly be harmonized with the constricted concept which is entertained and is
being propagated by the Dispensationalists of the Mosaic economy. God dealt in grace with
Israel all through their long and checkered history. Read through the book of Judges and
observe how often He raised up deliverers for them. Pass on to Kings and Chronicles and
note His longsuffering benignity in sending them prophet after prophet. Where in the New
Testament is there a word which, for pure grace, exceeds "though your sins be as
scarlet, they shall be as white as snow" (Isa 1:18)? In the days of Jehoahaz
"the Lord was gracious unto them" (2 Kings 13:22-23). They were invited to say
unto the Lord, "Take away all iniquity, and receive us graciously" (Hosea 14:2).
Malachi bade Israel "beseech God that He will be gracious unto us" (1:9).
The conception which the pious remnant of Israel had of the
Divine character during the Mosaic economy was radically different from the stern and
forbidding presentation made thereof by Dispensationalists. Hear the Psalmist as he
declared, "Gracious is the Lord, and righteous; yea, our God is merciful"
(116:5). Hear him again, as he bursts forth into adoring praise, "Bless the Lord, 0
my soul, and forget not all His benefits: who forgiveth all thine iniquities, who healeth
all thy diseases...He hath not dealt with us after our sins, nor rewarded us according to
our iniquities" (103:2,3,10). Can Christians say more than that? No wonder David
exclaimed, "Whom have I in heaven but Thee? and there is none upon earth that I
desire besides Thee. My flesh and my heart faileth: but God is the strength of my heart,
and my portion for ever" (73:25,26). If the question be asked, What, then, is the
great distinction between the Mosaic and Christian eras? the answer is, Gods
grace was then confirmed to one nation, but now it flows out to all nations.
What is true in the general holds in the particular. Not only
were Gods dealings with His people during Old Testament times substantially the same
as those with His people now, but in detail too. There is no discord, but perfect
accord and concord between them. Note carefully the following parallelisms. "His
inheritance in the saints" (Eph. 1:18): "The Lords portion is His people,
Jacob is the lot of His inheritance" (Deut. 32:9). "Beloved of the Lord, because
God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation" (2 Thess. 2:13): "I have
loved thee with an everlasting love" (Jer. 3 1:3). "In whom we have
redemption" (Eph. 1:7): "With Him is plenteous redemption" (Ps. 130:7).
"That we might be made the righteousness of God in Him" (2 Cor. 5:2 1): "In
the Lord have I righteousness and strength" (Isa. 45:24). "Who hath blessed us
with all spiritual blessings...in Christ" (Eph. 1:3): "Men shall be blessed in
Him" (Ps. 72:17). "The blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us from all
sin" (1 John 1:7): "Thou art all fair, My love, there is no spot in
thee" (Song 4:7).
"Strengthened with might by His Spirit in the inner
man" (Eph. 3:16): "In the day when I cried Thou answeredst me, and
strengthenedst me with strength in my soul" (Ps. 138:3). "The Spirit of truth
... will guide you into all truth" (John 16:13): "Thou gayest also Thy good
Spirit to instruct them" (Neh. 9:20). "I know that in me (that is, in my flesh),
dwelleth no good thing" (Rom. 7:18): "All our righteousness are as filthy
rags" (Isa. 64:6). "I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims" (1 Pet. 2:11):
"Ye are strangers and sojourners" (Lev. 25:23). "We walk by faith" (2
Cor. 5:7): "The just shall live by his faith" (Hab. 2:4). "Strong in the
Lord" (Eph. 6:10): "I will strengthen them in the Lord" (Zech. 10:12).
"Neither shall any pluck them out of My hand" (John 10:28): "All His saints
are in Thy hand" (Deut. 33:3). "He that abideth in Me, and I in him, the same
bringeth forth much fruit" (John 15:5): "From Me is thy fruit found" (Hosea
14:8). "He which hath begun a good work in you will finish it" (Phil. 1:6,
margin): "The Lord will perfect that which concerneth me" (Psa 138:8).
Innumerable other such harmonies might be added.
[Table of Contents]
Chapter 4
As it is particularly the Old
Testament promises of which Dispensationalists would deprive the Christian, a more
definite and detailed refutation of this error is now requiredcoming, as it
obviously does, within the compass of our present subject. We will here transcribe what we
wrote thereon almost twenty years ago.
Since the Fall alienated the creature from the Creator,
there could be no intercourse between God and men but by some promise on His part. None
can challenge anything from the Majesty on high without a warrant from Himself, nor could
the conscience be satisfied unless it had a Divine grant for any good that we hope for
from Him.
God will in all ages have His people regulated by His
promises, so that they may exercise faith, hope, prayer, dependence upon Himself: He gives
them promises so as to test them, whether or not they really trust in and count upon Him.
The Medium of the promises is the God-man Mediator,
Jesus Christ, for there can be no intercourse between God and us except through the
appointed Daysman. In other words, Christ must receive all good for us, and we must have
it at second hand from Him.
Let the Christian ever be on his guard against
contemplating any promise of God apart from Christ. Whether the thing promised, the
blessing desired, be temporal or spiritual, we cannot legitimately or truly enjoy it
except in and by Christ. Therefore did the Apostle remind the Galatians, "Now to
Abraham and his seed were the promises made. He saith not, And to seeds, as of many; but
as of one, And to thy seed, which is Christ" (3:16)in quoting
Genesis 12:3, Paul was not
proving, but affirming, that Gods promises to Abraham respected not all his
natural posterity, but only those of his spiritual childrenthose united to Christ.
All the promises of God to believers are made to Christ, the Surety of the everlasting
covenant, and are conveyed from Him to usboth the promises themselves and the things
promised. "This is the [all-inclusive] promise that He hath promised us, even
eternal life" (1 John 2:25), and, as 5:11 tells us, "this life is in His
Son"so grace, and all other benefits. "If I read any of the promises I
found that all and every one contained Christ in their bosom, He Himself being the one
great Promise of the Bible. To Him they were all first given; from Him they
derive all their efficacy, sweetness, value, and importance; by Him they are
brought home to the heart; and in Him they are all yea, and amen" (R. Hawker,
1810).
Since all the promises of God are made in Christ, it
clearly follows that none of them are available to any who are out of Christ, for to be
out of Him is to be out of the favour of God. God cannot look on such a person but as an
object of His wrath, as fuel for His vengeance: there is no hope for any man until he be
in Christ. But it may be asked, Does not God bestow any good things on them who are out of
Christ, sending His rain upon the unjust, and filling the bellies of the wicked with good
things (Ps. 17:14)? Yes, He does indeed. Then are not those temporal mercies blessings?
Certainly not: far from it. As He says in Malachi 2:2, "I will curse your
blessings: yea, I have cursed them already, because ye do not lay it to heart" (cf.
Deut. 28:15-20). Unto the wicked, the temporal mercies of God are like food given to
bullocksit does but "prepare them for the day of slaughter"
(Jer. 12:3,
and cf. Jam. 5:5).
Having presented above a brief
outline on the subject of the Divine promises, let us now examine a striking yet
little-noticed expression, namely "the children of the promise" (Rom. 9:8). In
the context the Apostle discusses Gods casting of the Jews and calling of the
Gentiles, which was a particularly sore point with the former. After describing the unique
privileges enjoyed by Israel as a nation (verses 4 and 5), he points out the difference
there is between them and the antitypical "Israel of God" (verses 6-9),
which he illustrates by the cases of Isaac and Jacob. Though the Jews had rejected the
Gospel and had been cast off by God, it must not be supposed that His word had failed of
accomplishment (verse 6), for not only had the prophecies concerning the Messiah been
fulfilled, but the promise respecting Abrahams seed was being made good. But it was
most important to apprehend aright what or whom that "seed" comprised.
"For they are not all Israel [spiritually speaking], who are of Israel [naturally]:
neither, because they are the seed of Abraham, are they all children: but, in Isaac shall
thy seed be called" (verses 6 and 7).
The Jews erroneously imagined (as modern Dispensationalists do)
that the promises made to Abraham concerning his seed respected all of his descendants.
Their boast was "we be Abrahams seed" (John 8:33), to which Christ
replied, "If ye were Abrahams children ye would do the works of Abraham"
(verse 39 and see Romans 4:12). Gods rejection of Ishmael and Esau was decisive
proof that the promises were not made to the natural descendants as such. The selection of
Isaac and Jacob showed that the promise was restricted to an elect line. "The
children of the flesh, these are not the children of God; but the children of the promise
are counted [regarded] as the seed. For this is the word of promise. At this time will I
come, and Sarah shall have a son (Rom. 9:8,9). The "children of God" and the
"children of promise" are one and the same, whether they be Jews or Gentiles. As
Isaac was born supernaturally, so are all of Gods elect (John 1:13). As Isaac, on
that account, was heir of the promised blessing, so are Christians (Gal. 4:29; 3:29).
"Children of the promise" are identical with "the heirs of promise"
(Heb. 6:17, and cf. Rom. 8:17).
Gods promises are made to the spiritual children of
Abraham (Rom. 4:16; Gal 3:7), and none of them can possibly fail of accomplishment.
"For all the promises of God in Him [namely Christ] are yea, and in Him
amen" (2 Cor. 1:20). They are deposited in Christ, and in Him they find their
affirmation and certification, for He is the sum and substance of them. Inexpressibly
blessed is that declaration to the humble-minded child of Godyet a mystery hid from
those who are wise in their own conceits. "He that spared not His own Son, but
delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all
things?" (Rom. 8:32). The promises of God are numerous: relating to this life and
also that which is to come. They concern our temporal wellbeing, as well as our spiritual,
covering the needs of the body as well as those of the soul. Whatever be their character,
not one of them can be made good unto us except in and through and by Him who lived and
died for us. The promises which God has given to His people are absolutely sure and
trustworthy, for they were made to them in Christ: they are infallibly certain for
fulfillment, for they are accomplished through and by Him.
A blessed illustration, yea, exemplification, of what has just
been pointed out above is found in Hebrews 8:8-13, and 10:15-17, where the Apostle quotes
the promises given in Jeremiah 31:31-34. The Dispensationalists would object and say that
those promises belong to the natural descendants of Abraham, and are not to us. But
Hebrews 10:15 prefaces the citation of those promises by expressly affirming,
"Whereof the Holy Spirit is [not "was"] a witness to us." Those
promises extend to Gentile believers also, for they are the assurance of grace founded in
Christ, and in Him believing Jews and Gentiles are one (Gal. 3:26). Before the
middle wall of partition was broken down, Gentiles were indeed "strangers unto the
covenants of promise" (Eph. 2:12), but when that wall was removed, Gentile believers
became "fellow-heirs, and of the same body, and partakers of His promise in
Christ by the gospel" (Eph. 3:6)! As Romans 11 expresses it, they partake of the root
and fatness of the olive tree (verse 17)! Those promises in Jeremiah 31 are made not to
the Jewish nation as such, but to "the Israel of God" (Gal 6:16), that is to the
entire election of grace, and they are made infallibly good unto all of them at the moment
of their regeneration by the Spirit.
In the clear light of other New Testament passages, it appears
passing strange that anyone who is familiar with the same should deny that God has made
this "new covenant" with those who are members of the mystical body of Christ.
That Christians are partakers of its blessings is plain in 1 Corinthians 11:25,
where quotation is made of the Saviors words at the institution of His supper,
saying, "This cup is the new testament [or "new covenant"] in My
blood"; and again by 2 Corinthians 3:6, where the Apostle states that God "hath
also made us able ministers of the new testament," or "covenant," for the
same Greek word is used in those passages as in Hebrews 8:8, and 10:16, where it is
translated "covenant." In the very first sermon preached after the new covenant
was established, Peter said, "For the promise is unto you, and to your children, and
to all that are afar off" i.e. the Gentiles: Ephesians
2:13qualified by "as many as the Lord our God shall call" (Acts 2:39).
Furthermore, the terms of Jeremiah 31:33,34 are most certainly made good unto all
believers today: God is their covenant God (Heb. 13:20), His law is enshrined in
their affections (Rom 7:22), they know Him as their God, their iniquities are forgiven.
The Holy Spirits statement in 2 Corinthians 7:1, must, for
all who bow to the authority of Holy Writ, settle the matter once and for all of the
Christians right to the Old Testament promises. "Having therefore these
promises, dearly beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and
spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God." Which promises? Why, those
mentioned at the close of the preceding chapter. There we read, "And what agreement
hath the temple of God with idols? for ye are the temple of the living God; as God hath
said, I will dwell in them, and walk in them; and I will be their God, and they shall
be My people" (6:16). And where had God said this? Why, as far back as Leviticus
26:12, "And I will walk among you, and will be your God, and ye shall be My
people." That promise was made to the nation of Israel in the days of Moses! And
again we read, "Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the
Lord, and touch not the unclean thing; and I will receive you, and will be a Father unto
you, and ye shall be My sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty" (2 Cor. 6:17,
18), which words are a manifest reference to Jeremiah 3 1:9, and Hosea 1:9,10.
Now observe very particularly what the Holy Spirit says through
Paul concerning those Old Testament promises. First, he says to the New Testament saints,
"Having these promises." He declared that those ancient promises are theirs: that
they have a personal interest in them and title to them. That they were theirs not merely
in hope, but in hand. Theirs to make full use of, to feed upon and enjoy, to delight in
and give God thanks for the same. Since Christ Himself be ours, all things are ours
(1 Cor. 3:22,23). Oh, Christian reader, suffer no man, under pretense of "rightly
dividing the word," to cut you off from, to rob you of any of "the exceeding
great and precious promises" of your Father (2 Pet. 1:4). If he is content to
confine himself unto a few of the New Testament Epistles, let him do sothat is his
loss. But allow him not to confine you to so narrow a compass. Second, we are
hereby taught to use those promises as motives and incentives to the cultivation of
personal piety, in the private work of mortification and the positive duty of practical
sanctification.
A striking and conclusive proof that the Old Testament promises
belong unto present-day saints is found in Hebrews 13:5, where practical use is again made
of the same. There Christians are exhorted, "Let your conversation be without
covetousness: be content with such things as ye have." That exhortation is enforced
by this gracious consideration: "for He hath said, I will never leave thee,
nor forsake thee." Since the living God be your portion your heart should rejoice in
Him, and all anxiety about the supply of your every need be for ever removed. But what we
are now more especially concerned with is the promise here cited: "For He hath said,
I will never leave thee," etc. And to whom was that promise first given? Why,
to the one who was about to lead Israel into the land of Canaanas a reference to
Joshua 1:5 shows. Thus it was made to a particular person on a special occasion, to a
general who was to prosecute a great war under the immediate command of God. Facing that
demanding ordeal, Joshua received assurance from God that His presence should ever be with
him.
But if the believer gives way to unbelief, the devil is very apt
to tell him, That promise belongs not unto you. You are not the captain of armies,
commissioned by God to overthrow the forces of an enemy: the virtue of that promise ceased
when Canaan was conquered and died with him to whom it was made. Instead, as Owen pointed
out in his comments on Hebrews 13:5, "To manifest the sameness of love that is
in all the promises, with their establishment in the one Mediator, and the general concern
of believers in every one of them, howsoever and on what occasion given to any, this
promise to Joshua is here applied to the condition of the weakest, meanest, and poorest of
the saints; to all and every one of them, be their case and condition what it will. And
doubtless, believers are not a little wanting in themselves and their own consolation,
that they do so more particularly close with those words of truth, grace, and
faithfulness, which upon sundry occasions and at divers times have been given out unto the
saints of old, even Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, David, and the residue of them, who walked with
God in their generation: these things in an especial manner are recorded for our consolation."
Let us now observe closely the use which the Apostle made
of that ancient but ever-living promise. First, he here availed himself of it in order to
enforce his exhortation unto Christians to the duties of mortification and sanctification.
Second, he draws a logical and practical inference from the same, declaring, "So
that we may boldly say, The Lord is my helper, and I will not fear what man shall do
unto me" (Heb. 13:6). Thus a double conclusion is reached: such a promise is to
inspire all believers with confidence in Gods succour and assistance, and with
boldness and courage before menshowing us to what purpose we should put the
Divine pledges. Those conclusions are based upon the character of the
Promiser: because
God is infinitely good, faithful, and powerful, and because He changes not, I may
trustfully declare with Abraham, "God will provide" (Gen. 22:8); with Jonathan,
"There is no restraint to the Lord" (1 Sam. 14:6); with
Jehoshaphat, "None
is able to withstand Him" (2 Chron. 20:6); with Paul, "If God be for us, who can
be against us?" (Rom 8:31). The abiding presence of the all-sufficient Lord ensures
help, and therefore any alarm at mans enmity should be removed from our hearts. My
worst enemy can do nothing against me without my Saviors permission.
"So that we may boldly say [freely, without
hesitating through unbelief], The Lord is my helper, and I will not fear what man
shall do unto me." Note attentively the change in number from the plural to the
singular, and learn therefrom that general principles are to be appropriated by us in
particular, as general precepts are to be taken by us personallythe Lord Jesus
individualized the "ye shall not tempt the Lord your God" of Deuteronomy
6:16, when assailed by Satan, saying, "It is written again, Thou shalt not
tempt the Lord thy God" (Matt. 4:7). It is only by taking the Divine promises and
precepts unto ourselves personally that we can "mix faith" with the same, or
make a proper and profitable use of them. It is also to be carefully noted that once more
the Apostle confirmed his argument by a Divine testimony, for the words "The Lord is
my helper, and I will not fear what man shall do unto me" are not his own, but a
quotation of those use by David in Psalm 118:6. Thus again we are shown that the language
of the Old Testament is exactly suited to the cases and circumstances of Christians today,
and that it is their right and privilege freely to appropriate the same.
"We may boldly say" just what the Psalmist did
when he was sorely pressed. It was during a season of acute distress that David expressed
his confidence in the living God, at a time when it looked as though his enemies were on
the point of swallowing him up; but viewing the omnipotence of Jehovah and contrasting His
might with the feebleness of the creature, his heart was strengthened and emboldened. But
let the reader clearly perceive what that implied. It means that David turned his mind
away from the seen to the unseen. It means that he was regulated by faith, rather than by
sight feelings or reasonings. It means that his heart was occupied with the
Almighty. But it means much more: he was occupied with the relationship of that
omnipotent One unto himself. It means that he recognized and realized the spiritual bond
there was between them, so that he could truly and rightly aver, "the Lord is my
helper." If He be my God, my Redeemer, my Father, then He may be counted upon to
undertake for me when I am sorely oppressed, when my foes threaten to devour me, when my
barrel of meal is almost empty. That "my" is the language of faith, and is the
conclusion which faiths assurance draws from the infallible promise of Him that
cannot lie.
[Table of Contents]
Chapter 5
In these articles we are
seeking to show the use which believers should make of Gods Word: or more
particularly, how that it is both their privilege and their duty to receive the whole
of it as addressed immediately unto themselves, and to turn the same unto
practical account, by appropriating its contents to their personal needs. The Bible is a
book which calls not so much for the exertion of our intellect as it does for the exercise
of our affections, conscience and will. God has given it to us not for our entertainment
but for our education, to make known what He requires from us. It is to be the
travelers guide as he journeys through the maze of this world, the mariners
chart as he sails the sea of life. Therefore, whenever we open the Bible, the
all-important consideration for each of us to keep before him is, What is there here for
me today? What bearing does the passage now before me have upon my present case and
circumstanceswhat warning, what encouragement, what information? What instruction is
there to direct me in the management of my business, to guide me in the ordering of my
domestic and social affairs, to promote a closer walking with God?
I should see myself addressed in every precept, included in every
promise. But it is greatly to be feared that, through failure to appropriate Gods
Word unto their own case and circumstances, there is much Bible reading and study which is
of little or no real benefit to the soul. Nothing else will secure us from the infections
of this world, deliver from the temptations of Satan, and be so effectual a preservative
from sin, as the Word of God received into our affections. "The law of his God is in
his heart; none of his steps shall slide" (Ps. 37:31) can only be said of the one
who has made personal appropriation of that Law, and is able to aver with the Psalmist,
"Thy word have I hid in mine heart, that I might not sin against Thee" (119:11).
Just so long as the Truth is actually working in us, influencing us in a practical way, is
loved and revered by us, stirs the conscience, are we kept from falling into open
sinas Joseph was preserved when evilly solicited by his masters wife (Gen.
39:9). And only as we personally go out and daily gather our portion of manna, and feed
upon the same, will there be strength provided for the performing of duty and the bringing
forth of fruit to the glory of God.
Let us take Genesis 17:1 as a simple illustration. "And when
Abram was ninety years old and nine, the Lord appeared to Abram and said unto him, I am
the Almighty God; walk before Me, and be thou perfect" or "sincere." How
is the Christian to apply such a verse unto himsel? First of all, let
him note to whom this signal favour and honour was shown: namely to him who is the
"father of all them that believe" (Rom. 4:11,12,16)and he was the first
person in the world to whom the Lord is said to have appeared! Second, observe when it was
that Jehovah appeared unto him: namely in his old age, when natures force was spent
and death was written on the flesh. Third, mark attentively the particular character in
which the Lord was now revealed to him: "the Almighty God," or more literally "El
Shaddai""the all-sufficient God." Fourth, consider the
exhortation which accompanied the same: "walk before Me, and be thou sincere."
Fifth, ponder those details in the light of the immediate sequel; Gods making
promise that he should beget a son by Sarah, who was long past the age of child-bearing
(verses 15-19). Everything that is for God must be effected by His mighty power: He
can and must do everythingthe flesh profits nothing, no movement of mere nature is
of any avail.
Now as the believer ponders that memorable incident, hope should
be inspired within him. El Shaddai is as truly his God as He was
Abrahams! That is clear from 2 Corinthians 7:1, for one of those promises is,
"I will be a Father unto you. . . .saith the Lord Almighty" (6:18), and from
Revelation 1:8, where the Lord Jesus says unto the churches, "I am Alpha and Omega. .
. .the Almighty." It is a declaration of His omnipotence, to whom all things are
possible. "The all-sufficient God" tells of what He is in
Himselfindependent, self-existent; and what He is unto His peoplethe Supplier
of their every need. When Christ said to Paul, "My grace is sufficient for
thee," it was all one with what Jehovah said unto Abraham. Doubtless the Lord
appeared unto the patriarch in visible (and human) form: He does so to us before the eyes
of faith. Often He is pleased to meet with us in the ordinances of His grace, and send us
on our way rejoicing. Sometimes He "manifests" Himself (John 14:21) to us in the
retirements of privacy. Frequently He appears for us in His providences, showing
Himself strong on our behalf. Now, says He, "Walk before Me sincerely" in the
believing realization that I am all-sufficient for thee, conscious of My almightiness, and
all will be well with thee.
Let us now adduce some of the many proofs of the
assertions made in our opening sentences, proofs supplied by the Holy Spirit and the Lord
Jesus in the application which They made of the Scriptures. It is very striking indeed to
discover that the very first moral commandment which God gave to mankind, namely that
which was to regulate the marriage relationship, was couched in such terms that it
comprehended a Divine law which is universally and perpetually binding: "Therefore
shall a man leave his father and mother, and shall cleave unto his wife; and they shall be
one flesh" (Gen. 2:24)quoted by Christ in Matthew 19:5. "When a man hath
taken a wife, and married her, and it come to pass that she find no favor in his eyes,
because he hath found some uncleanness in her: then let him write her a bill of
divorcement" (Deut. 24:1). That statute was given in the days of Moses, nevertheless
we find our Lord referring to the same and telling the Pharisees of His day, "For the
hardness of your heart he wrote you this precept" (Mark 10:5).
The principle for which we are here contending is beautifully
illustrated in Psalm 27:8, "When Thou saidst, Seek ye My face; my heart said unto
Thee, Thy face, Lord, will I seek." Thus David made particular what was
general, applying to himself personally what was said to the saints collectively. That is
ever the use each of us should make of every part of Gods Wordas we see the
Saviour in Matthew 4:7, changing the "ye" of Deuteronomy 6:16, to
"thou." So again in Acts 1:20, we find Peter, when alluding to the defection of
Judas, altering the "let their habitation" of Psalm 69:25, to "let his
habitation be desolate." That was not taking an undue liberty with Holy Writ,
but, instead, making a specific application of what was indefinite.
"Put not forth thyself in the presence of the king, and
stand not in the place of great men: for better it is that it be said unto thee, Come up
hither; than that thou shouldest be put lower in the presence of the prince whom thine
eyes have seen" (Prov. 25:6,7). Upon which Thomas Scott justly remarked, "There
can be no reasonable doubt that our Lord referred to those words in His admonition to
ambitious guests at the Pharisees table (Luke 14:7-11), and was understood to do so.
While, therefore, this gives His sanction to the book of Proverbs, it also shows that
those maxims may be applied to similar cases, and that we need not confine their
interpretation exclusively to the subject which gave rise to the maxims." Not even
the presence of Christ, His holy example, His heavenly instruction, could restrain the
strife among His disciples over which should be the greatest. Loving to have the
pre-eminence (3 John 9,10) is the bane of godliness in the churches.
"I the Lord have called Thee. . . . and give Thee for a
covenant of the people, for a light of the Gentiles"; "I will also give Thee for
a light to the Gentiles, that Thou mayest be My salvation unto the end of the earth"
(Isa. 42:6; 49:6). Those words were spoken by the Father unto the Messiah, yet in Acts
13:46,47 we find Paul saying of himself and Barnabas, "Lo, we turn to the Gentiles.
For so bath the Lord commanded us; saying, I have set thee to be a light of the
Gentiles, that thou shouldest be for salvation unto the ends of the earth"! So again
in Romans 10:15 we find the Apostle was inspired to make application unto Christs
servant of that which was said immediately of Him: "How beautiful upon the mountains
are the feet of Him that bringeth good tidings, that publisheth peace" (Isa.
52:7): "How shall they preach, except they be sent? as it is written, How beautiful
are the feet of them that preach the gospel of peace" (Rom. 10:15). "He
is near that justifieth Me. . . . who is he that shall condemn Me?" (Isa. 50:8,9):
the context shows unmistakably that Christ is there the speaker, yet in Romans 8:33, 34
the Apostle hesitates not to apply those words unto the members of His body: "Who
shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect? It is God that
justifieth. Who is
he that condemneth?"
The unspeakably solemn commission given to Isaiah concerning his
apostate generation (6:9,10) was applied by Christ to the people of His day, saying:
"And in them is fulfilled the prophecy of Isaiah" (Matt. 13:14,15).
Again, in 29:13, Isaiah announced that the Lord said, "This people draw near Me with
their mouth, and with their lips do honour Me, but have removed their heart far from
Me," while in Matthew 15:7 we find Christ saying to the scribes and Pharisees,
"Hypocrites, well did Isaiah prophesy of you, saying, This people draweth nigh
unto Me with their mouth," etc. Even more striking is Christs rebuke unto the
Sadducees, who denied the resurrection of the body, "Have ye not read that which was spoken
unto you by God, saying, I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of
Jacob? God is not the God of the dead, but of the living" (Matt. 22:31,32). What God
spoke immediately to Moses at the burning bush was designed equally for the instruction
and comfort of all men unto the end of the world. What the Lord has said unto a particular
person, He says unto everyone who is favored to read His Word. Thus does it concern us to
hear and heed the same, for by that Word we shall be judged in the last great day (John
12:48).
The fundamental principle for which we are here contending is
plainly expressed again by Christ in Mark 13:37, "And what I say unto you I say unto
all, Watch." That exhortation to the Apostles is addressed directly to the saints in
all generations and places. As Owen well said, "The Scriptures speak to every age,
every church, every person, not less than to those to whom they were first directed. This
showeth us how we should be affected in reading the Word: we should read it as a letter
written by the Lord of grace from heaven, to us by name." If there be any
books in the New Testament particularly restricted, it is the "pastoral
Epistles," yet the exhortation found in 2 Timothy 2:19, is generalized: "Let
every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity." Those who are so
fond of restricting Gods Word would say that, "Thou therefore endure hardness,
as a good soldier of Jesus Christ" (verse 3) is addressed to the minister of the
Gospel, and pertains not to the rank and file of believers. But Ephesians 6:10-17 shows
(by necessary implication) that it applies to all the saints, for the militant
figure is again used, and used there without limitation. The Bullinger school insist that
James and Peterwho gave warning of those who in the last time should walk after
their own ungodly lustswrote to Jewish believers; but Jude (addressed to all the
sanctified) declares they "told you" (verse 18).
"Ye have forgotten the exhortation which speaketh unto you
as unto children, My son, despise not thou the chastening of the Lord" (Heb. 12:5).
That exhortation is taken from Proverbs 3:11, so that here is further evidence that the
precepts of the Old Testament (like its promises) are not restricted unto those who were
under the Mosaic economy, but apply with equal directness and force to those under the new
covenant. Observe well the tense of the verb "which speaketh": though
written a thousand years previously, Paul did not say "which hath
spoken"the Scriptures are a living Word through which their Author speaks today.
Note too "which speaketh unto you"New Testament saints: all
that is contained in the book of Proverbs is as truly and as much the Fathers
instruction to Christians as the contents of the Pauline Epistles. Throughout that book
God addresses us individually as "My son" (2:1; 3:1; 4:1; 5:1). That exhortation
is as urgently needed by believers now as by any who lived in former ages. Though children
of God, we are still children of Adamwillful, proud, independent, requiring to be
disciplined, to be under the Fathers rod, to bear it meekly, and to be exercised
thereby in our hearts and consciences.
A word now upon transferred application, by which we mean
giving a literal turn to language which is figurative, or vice versa. Thus, whenever the
writer steps on to icy roads, he hesitates not to literalize the prayer, "Hold Thou
me up, and I shall be safe" (Ps. 119:117). "I will both lay me down in peace,
and sleep: for Thou, Lord, only makest me dwell in safety" (Ps. 4:8) is to be given
its widest latitude, and regarded at both the rest of the body under the protection of
Providence and the repose of the soul in the assurance of Gods protecting grace. In
2 Corinthians 8:14 Paul urges that there should be an equality of giving, or a fair
distribution of the burden, in the collection being made to relieve the afflicted saints
in Jerusalem. That appeal was backed up with, "As it is written, he that hath
gathered much had nothing over; and he that had gathered little had no lack." That is
a reference to the manna gathered by the Israelites (Ex. 16:18): those who gathered the
largest quantity had more to give unto the aged and feeble; so rich Christians should use
their surplus to provide for the poor of the flock. But great care needs to be taken lest
we clash with the Analogy of the Faith: thus "the house of Saul waxed weaker and
weaker" (2 Sam. 3:1) certainly does not mean that "the flesh" becomes
enervated as the believer grows in grace, for universal Christian experience testifies
that indwelling sin rages as vigorously at the end as at the beginning.
A brief word upon double application. Whereas preachers
should ever be on their guard against taking the childrens bread and casting it to
the dogs, by applying to the unsaved promises given to or statements made concerning the
saints; on the other hand, they need to remind believers of the continuous force of
the Scriptures and their present suitability to their cases. For instance, the gracious
invitation of Christ, "Come unto Me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I
will give you rest" (Matt. 11:28), and "If any man thirst, let him come unto Me,
and drink" (John 7:37), must not be limited to our first approach to the Saviour as
lost sinners, but as 1 Peter 2:4 says, "to whom coming"in the present
tense. Note too the "mourn" and not "have mourned" in Matthew 5:4, and
"hunger" in verse 6. In like manner, the self-abasing word, "Who maketh
thee to differ!" (1 Cor. 4:7) today: first from the unsaved; second from what we were
before the new birth; and third from other Christians with less grace and gifts. Why, a
sovereign God, and therefore you have nothing to boast of and no cause for self-glorying.
A word now upon the Spirits application of the Word
unto the heart, and our task is completed. This is described in such a verse as, "For
our gospel came not unto you in word only, but also in power, and in the Holy Spirit, and
in much assurance" (1 Thess. 1:5). That is very much more than having the mind
informed or the emotions stirred, and something radically different from being deeply
impressed by the preachers oratory, earnestness, etc. It is for the preaching of the
Gospel to be accompanied by the supernatural operation of the Spirit, and the efficacious
grace of God, so that souls are Divinely quickened, convicted, converted, delivered from
the dominion of sin and Satan. When the Word is applied by the Spirit to a person, it acts
like the entrance of a two-edged sword into his inner man, piercing, wounding, slaying his
self-complacency and self-righteousnessas in the case of Saul of Tarsus (Rom.
7:9,10). This is the "demonstration of the Spirit" (1 Cor. 2:4), whereby He
gives proof of the Truth by the effects produced in the individual to which it is sayingly
applied, so that he has "much assurance"i.e. he knows it is Gods
Word because of the radical and permanent change wrought in him.
Now the child of God is in daily need of this gracious working of
the Holy Spirit: to make the Word work "effectually" (1 Thess. 2:13) within his
soul and truly regulate his life, so that he can thankfully acknowledge, "I will
never forget Thy precepts: for with them Thou hast quickened me" (Ps. 119:93).
For that quickening it is his duty and privilege to pray (verses 25, 37, 40, 88, 107, 149,
etc.). It is a fervent request that he may be "renewed day by day" in the inner
man (2 Cor. 4:16), that he may be "strengthened with might by His Spirit" (Eph.
3:16), that he may be revived and animated to go in the path of Gods commandments
(Ps. 119:35). It is an earnest petition that his heart may be awed by a continual sense of
Gods majesty, and melted by a realization of His goodness, so that he may see light
in Gods light, recognizing the evil in things forbidden and the blessedness of the
things enjoined. "Quicken Thou me" is a prayer for vitalizing grace, that he may
be taught to profit (Isa. 48:17), for the increasing of his faith, the strengthening of
his expectations, the firing of his zeal. It is equivalent to "draw me, we will run
after Thee" (Song 1:4). |