Monday, March 26, 2012

The Promise of His Return Pastor Penno - Notes

THE GOOD NEWS OF CHRIST’S COMING
It wasn’t this way long ago but now almost all Christian churches say they believe in the second coming of Christ, and many believe it is near. Almost all Christian churches are now talking about the second coming of Christ, and the possibility of the imminent end of the world is widely talked about. Yes, it does make good sense to talk about preparing for such an event!
Even the supermarket tabloids scream at you about it. The people living in the mid-West are urged to prepare for tornadoes and most of them decided that made good sense.
But there is one big question that still divides many Christians: do we need a special preparation to be ready for Christ’s soon coming? Many say, No; just live a good Christian life day by day so you can be ready if you have to die suddenly-keep your debts paid up, keep your sins confessed every day, keep going to church, and trust the Lord. That’s all that’s necessary. If Jesus were to come today, you’d be ready; it’s all the same as dying; if you’re “ready” and you die in a plane crash, you’re OK.
There are many pastors and theologians who tell us that there is no special preparation—just live a good life and do the best you can and you’ll be ready either to die or to meet Jesus and be translated when He comes. Can’t we apply good sense to preparing for the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ?
But a great big question comes up: when Jesus returns, He will come in person, with the glory of the Father. And Hebrews 12:29 says that “our God is a consuming fire.” If anyone has sin buried in his/her heart, even sin that he is not aware of, to meet God face to face would be sudden death—which is precisely what happens to the wicked when Jesus returns according to 2 Thess. 1:8, 9: Those “who know not God and that obey not the gospel” will “be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of His power, when He shall come.” He will come with “flaming fire.” Jesus says that only “the pure in heart” will be able to “see God” without perishing (Mt. 5:8). Isaiah asks, “Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings? He that walketh righteously, and speaketh uprightly; he that . . . stoppeth his ears from hearing of blood, and shutteth his eyes from seeing evil . . .” (Isa. 33:14-16; what about the TV we watch so often?). The context of these questions is “the sinners in Zion,” that is, the church members themselves. Yes, there is a special preparation needed in order to meet Jesus when He returns, and to be happy in His presence! That special preparation is not a fear-induced frenzy of good works, but a clearer understanding of the gospel of His grace. By grace are we saved, and by grace will God’s people experience translation—through faith.
“What is the difference between getting ready to die and getting ready for the second coming of Christ?” Some would answer, “None!” but common sense dictates that there HAS to be a difference because the latter are a special group who gain the victory over the “beast, and over his image, and over his mark, and over the number of his name, [and] stand on the sea of glass” and therefore go through the seven last plagues (Rev. 15:1-3).  They sing “a new song before the throne, and . . . no man could learn that song” but that special group who are (at last) the “firstfruits unto God and to the Lamb. . . . They are without fault before the throne of God” (14:1-5). Theirs is obviously a special experience, but it is not a “works trip.” They are not “little christs” running around puffed up with special spiritual pride. No, a million times no. Theirs will be a “faith trip,” if you please, a people whose faith has matured, who “grow up” “unto the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ,” “henceforth . . . no more children’ (Eph 4:15, 14, 13). “Children” are wonderful, innocent, sweet; but it’s a tragedy never to grow up.
Could it be that the time has finally come when God is getting serious about a people getting ready for the second coming of Christ? The Saviour dares not come while they still have sin buried in their hearts for “our God is a consuming fire” (Heb 12:29), and His coming would therefore be disaster to them. And all the dead must remain prisoners in their graves until the Life-Giver returns, for only the Son of God can resurrect them. Therefore everything depends on a people getting ready for Him to come! The Good News is that the Holy Spirit IS WORKING night and day, seven days a week including our holidays, preparing a people for Christ’s soon coming. Are you letting Him work?
Even a child can see that there is something special involved: there is a final exam coming, a great test that Revelation 13 says is “the mark of the beast” that in one final issue will divide the sheep from the goats forever. The “mark of the beast” will involve “great signs and wonders, insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect” (Mt. 24:24). Never in history have God’s people met such a test! Jesus said, “Ye shall be hated of all nations for my name’s sake and then shall many be offended and shall betray one another, and shall hate one another” (vss. 9, 10). In other words, many who now profess to keep the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus will then turn traitor and accept the mark of the beast. And Paul sobers us even more when he warns us, “Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall” (1 Cor. 10:12). Peter was cocksure he would never “fall,” but a girl in or barely out of her teens overthrew him.
The Good News is that there is an alternative to the mark of the beast: the seal of God (Rev. 7:1-4). That involves a special work of purification of the heart: “When [Christ] shall appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is. And every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself, even as he is pure” (1 Jn. 3:2, 3). On this great cosmic Day of Atonement, that precisely is the work of the great High Priest. Don’t stop Him, don’t resist Him. Cooperate with Him!
Jesus promised in Jn. 14:1-3, “I will come again.” And He clearly explained in Mt. 24 that His coming will be personal and literal, and He will resurrect the dead in Christ.” And 1 Thess. 4:16, 17 tells us that those who will be resurrected are “the dead in Christ” who have chosen to abide in Him. So, the question makes real sense: “What kind of special preparation will those people make who go through the final time of trouble, overcome the mark of the beast, stand on the sea of glass ‘without fault’ (Rev 14:1-5) and actually welcome Christ at His second coming?”
The Bible is full of Good News, but here is where it is finally focused to its greatest brilliance: (1) First comes what appears on the surface to be intense bad news—the Holy Spirit will shine that Light into the darkened chambers of the human heart until every secret, previously unknown sin is mercilessly exposed. God’s people will be painfully aware of its deep existence that they had never before fully realized. Every last vestige of spiritual pride will be laid in the dust.  The popular glib, superficial “I’m OK you’re OK” will be shattered by the realization that no one of us is one whit better or more righteous OF OURSELVES, than anybody else in the world. The sin of somebody else will be seen to be OUR sin—but for the grace of Christ. At last, those who believe in Christ will realize what God said through Isaiah long ago, “Their righteousness is of Me” (54:17), not of themselves. And what will be the crowning sin in which they at last realize they share guilt? The crucifixion of Christ. Zechariah 12:10 says “they shall look upon Me whom THEY have pierced.” Each will see himself/herself at the cross! (2) Then comes the Good News: “There shall be a fountain opened” for cleansing that will flow in unprecedented glory (13:1). Grace will abound “much more,” corresponding to the “much more” conviction of sin that God’s people will experience. The final negative will be matched by the final Positive. A PEOPLE WILL BE READY!
It’s one of the most serious topics of debate in Bible classes: can God’s people do anything to hasten or to delay the second coming of Christ? Probably just asking that question will spark contention among my readers!
The question is so important that we must look at what the Bible actually says: (1) We are not to know “the day or the hour”; not even the angels know, nor does Jesus Himself (Mk. 13:32). (2) But we are to know when it is near (“when ye shall see all these things, know that it is near, even at the doors” (Mt 24:33). (3) He expressly declared that the generation which will see and recognize all those “signs” is not “to pass away, till all these things be fulfilled” (vs. 34). (4) The timing of His coming will catch everybody by surprise (“Watch therefore, for ye know not what hour your Lord doth come”; “ye know not when the master of the house cometh . . . lest coming suddenly he find you sleeping”; Mt. 24:42, Mk. 13:35, 36). (5) Nowhere does the Bible say that the timing of His coming is irrevocably fixed by the Father in a predestination manner, but the Father in His infinite foreknowledge knows the time. But foreknowledge is not the same as predestination, but still Jesus does not know, He says. (6) In His love and mercy, the Father will not permit the final seven last plagues of Rev 16 to fall until in fairness the people of the world have had an opportunity to hear the message of the gospel: “This gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all nations and then shall the end come” (Mt. 24:14). This would seem strongly to suggest that the timing of the second coming is directly related to the zeal with which that special “gospel of the kingdom” is proclaimed. (7) Twice at least the Bible declares that the time of the second coming is dependent on a process of development in the hearts and lives of His people.
Why have 2000 years of human suffering had to drag by since Christ the Saviour of the world was born? Why do so many people have to go on suffering? At His birth, the angel promised “good tidings of great joy . . . to all people, . . . peace, good will toward men” (Lk. 2:10-14). He would “make wars to cease unto the end of the earth” (Ps. 46:9), and “He shall not fail nor be discouraged, till He hath set judgment in the earth” (Isa. 42:4), and that “the work of righteousness shall be peace; and the effect of righteousness quietness and assurance forever” (32:17). Why the long delay?
The popular view taught through most of these 2000 years is that when good people die they go straight to heaven, or at least to purgatory to be purified for heaven—the doctrine of “natural immortality of the soul.” But the Bible teaches (1) that those who die, sleep until the resurrection day (John 11:11).  And (2) the resurrection depends on the second coming of Christ, for He alone can raise the dead (John 5:25-29; 1 Thess. 4:16, 17). And (3) when Jesus returns, those who are not ready will not be able to endure the glory of His appearing (2 Thess 1:7-10). And therefore (4) the time of Christ’s second coming depends on His people getting ready, for He would not dare to come if they are not ready (Heb. 12:29). (5) Jesus likens their getting ready to a farmer’s crop growing up and maturing until it is ready for harvest (Mk. 4:26-29). (6) The growing up makes it possible for Him to come the second time to “reap” the “harvest” (Rev. 14:14, 15). (7) But the “crop” cannot become mature until “the latter rain” of the Holy Spirit’s outpouring comes (Joel 2:23, 24). The “former rain” fell at Pentecost at the beginning of the Christian dispensation; but the latter rain will close that dispensation. Therefore (8) nothing can be more important than for the church to seek the blessing of the latter rain (Zech. 10:1). And where is the Good News? (9) The latter rain is a message of “much more abounding grace,” a clearer view of what the Saviour of the world has done for us, a revelation of His love (agape) that “constrains” every honest-hearted soul to live unto Him and not unto self (2 Cor. 5:14, 15), so that (10) this truth can “lighten the earth with glory” (Rev 18:1-4).
“Let not your heart be troubled; you believe in God, believe also in Me. . . . If I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and receive you to Myself; that where I am, there you may be also” (John 14:1-3).
Obviously, He doesn’t want us to be afraid of His returning to our troubled earth. Anyone having no fear about His first coming need not be fearful regarding His second coming. For those who believe, it is easy to see how this is the most welcome, exciting Good News. But will it be the same for everyone?
When He went away, two angels assured His disciples, “This same Jesus . . . will so come in like manner as you saw Him go into heaven” (Acts 1:10, 11). Who was “this same Jesus”? He was a physical person, for after His resurrection He told His disciples, “Handle Me and see, for a spirit does not have flesh and bones as you see I have” (Luke 24:39). He will come as a real Person in a literal, physical body and will interact with real people. “He is coming with clouds, and every eye will see Him, and they also who pierced Him” (Rev. 1:7).[1]
But “this same Jesus” is not One with a different character. If He was loving and compassionate when He was here, He must be the same when He comes again. But what about those who irrevocably reject Him? His love and compassion must take a different form for them. It would not be love to perpetuate an existence which for them, would only be endless misery.
In a democracy, presidents or prime ministers are elected by the people’s wishes. But at the present time, the vast majority of earth’s inhabitants either 1) don’t know about it, 2) don’t believe it, 3) don’t care about it, or 4) really don’t want Jesus to come back to Earth. That being so, . . . then why should He?
Two compelling reasons make His personal return to this world necessary:
(a) He is the world’s rightful Ruler. He has been temporarily ousted by a coup d’ etat engineered by an enemy—Satan, who subverted Adam and Eve in his rebellion Adam and Eve in his rebellion (Gen. 3). When Christ first appeared as the world’s Saviour, Satan deceived His own people into rejecting and crucifying Him. But far more than the Jews were involved, for “the kings of the earth took their stand, and the rulers were gathered together against the LORD and against His Christ” (Acts 4:26). Therefore the rightful Ruler of earth must return, take His rightful position and restore His peaceful and beneficent authority after the coup has run its course. The Lord speaks by His ancient prophet,
“‘Take off the crown; nothing shall remain the same. Exalt the lowly, and abase the exalted. . . . It shall be no longer, until He comes whose right it is, and I will give it [the crown] to Him’” (Ezek. 21:27).
Although He came the first time as a meek and lowly One, He comes the second time as “KING OF KINGS, AND LORD OF LORDS” (Rev. 19:16).
(b) “A time of trouble” will engulf the world (Dan. 12:1). A new and unhappy development on earth will make His intervention necessary—a final, ominous scene in the last act of the cosmic drama of the ages. Those in rebellion against God will issue a terrible and evil decree causing “as many as would not worship the image of the beast to be killed, . . . and that no one may buy or sell except one who has the mark or the name of the beast, or the number of his name” (Rev. 13:15, 16).
In fact, at that fearful time only a few left on earth will not be bent on self-destruction. Christ’s second coming will thus literally be a rescue mission of world proportions. As a nation ousts a tyrannical and cruel usurper and welcomes back its true sovereign, so His loyal subjects will long and even plead for His return. In the end, the only sane and reasonable people left on earth will joyously welcome Christ at His glorious return. The Psalmist represents Him as enthroned upon the praises of His people (Ps. 22:3, NIV).
Throughout history, the vast proportion of the inhabitants of earth have joined with the Great Deceiver in his rebellion against God, yet they have not known what they were doing. The murder of Christ fully disclosed that guilt, but the people did not realize it. Christ prayed for them, “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they do” (Luke 23:34). This hidden layer of rebellion is something natural to all human hearts: “All the world [has] become guilty before God” (3:19). Not only did some far-off Jews or Romans crucify Him two millennia ago, but “all alike have sinned” (vs. 23, NEB). Today, we are all alike guilty of the pain sin has caused the heart of God, since its inception.
“The carnal mind is enmity against God, for it is not subject to lie law of God, neither indeed can be” (8:7). Throughout history the sinful, cruel, selfish nature of Satan has led some human beings to act worse than beasts. Surely in many cases, the conventional mores of society and civilization have kept most of these raw forces of evil passion somewhat in control.
A little thought demonstrates how reasonable is the idea of a “pre-advent judgment.” Jesus says that the people who are privileged to be resurrected in glory when He returns of course will have been “accounted worthy” of that reward in a judgment beforehand (Luke 20:35). Otherwise, how could the angels know whom to call forth in the first resurrection (“blessed and holy is he who has part in the first resurrection,” Rev. 20:6), and whom to allow to sleep through until the dreadful second resurrection (vs. 5)?
Further, there will be two classes still living on earth when Jesus returns—those who are to be translated without tasting death, and those who will be unable to endure the sight of seeing Jesus come in glory. How will these two groups be distinguished unless there is a pre-advent judgment?
Jesus speaks of it in Luke 21:36: “Watch therefore and pray always that you may be accounted worthy . . . to stand before the Son of Man.” Those solemn words were spoken of today—this very day now dawning. The “accounting” is today’s agenda.
Actually, no one can judge us against our will. This pre-advent judgment is determined by ourselves. God can never force anyone into heaven or hell against his/her own will. He gives us each a new 24-hour day that we may demonstrate to the world and to the universe exactly where we want to be. Your first conscious moments after waking indicate your free choice.
It’s wisdom to remember what the Bible says—each day begins with “evening” (Gen. 1:5, 8, 13, 19, 23, 31). Spend your last hour of each day in prayer and contemplation of heavenly reality; then your waking hour will also be “blessed and holy.”


[1] This must include the high priest Caiaphas who handed Him over to the Romans to be crucified, whose bones have recently been discovered in an ornate ossuary marked with his name, south of Jerusalem (Biblical Archaeology Review, September 1992). Jesus promised Caiaphas that he would actually see Him return in glory (Matt. 26:64). This requires a special resurrection, of which Daniel speaks (12:2).

"The Promise of His Return"

Sabbath School Today
With the 1888 Message Dynamic

Glimpses of Our God
Lesson 13: "The Promise of His Return"

This final Sabbath School lesson, in a series highlighting the Good News about God's character, focuses on Jesus' promise, "I will come again" (John 14:3). And it begs the question: Is there a difference between preparing to die and coming up in the first resurrection, and the preparation necessary to meet Jesus at His second coming? Some pastors and Bible teachers say, No. There is no special preparation necessary to meet Jesus. Just live a good life, pay your debts, go to church, and you're good to go!
However others have recognized that for eighteen hundred years, Jesus as High Priest was engaged in a first apartment ministry in the heavenly sanctuary, preparing people to die and come up in the first resurrection. If one is going to die, he should look by faith to Jesus for his sins to be forgiven. But is a mere legal pardon for sin sufficient for God's people to face the final test of the mark of the beast and the time of trouble?
Jesus is now engaged in a different ministry after 1844 (Dan. 8:14), in preparing a people to be alive when He returns. It's called translation (1 Thess. 4:17). What is the special preparation necessary to be translated according to the 1888 message?
Christ comes with the glory of myriads of angels, His own glory and the glory of the Father (Matt. 24:27, 30, 31). Should there be any vestige of sin both known or unknown remaining in the last generation, they would be devoured, for "our God is a consuming fire" (Heb. 12:29; Isa. 33:14-16). This is exactly what happens to the wicked who "know not God, and that obey not the gospel." They will "be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of His power, when He shall come" (2 Thess. 1:8-10).
A special work of purification is necessary in order to remain alive at Jesus' coming. "When [Christ] shall appear, we shall be like Him; for we shall see Him as He is. And every man that hath this hope in Him purifieth himself, even as He is pure" (1 John 3:2, 3; Matt. 5:8). On this great cosmic Day of Atonement, that is precisely the work of the great High Priest. Don't resist Him. Let Him do it.
What is involved in this special preparation? First, Jesus' sends His Holy Spirit from the sanctuary as the high intensity laser beam shining the Light of the truth of His cross into every darkened corner of the heart, revealing the hidden secrets and sins. "And I will pour upon the house of David [church leadership], and upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem [church members], the spirit of grace and of supplications: and they shall look upon Me whom they have pierced, and they shall mourn for Him, as one mourneth for his only son, and shall be in bitterness for Him, as one that is in bitterness for his firstborn. In that day shall there be a great mourning in Jerusalem. ..." (Zech. 12:10, 11). The Holy Spirit is giving the gift of repentance (Rom. 2:4).
Then comes the good news: "There shall be a fountain opened" for cleansing that will flow in unprecedented glory (Zech. 13:1). Grace will abound "much more," corresponding to the "much more" conviction of sin that God's people will experience. The final negative will be matched by the final positive--a people will be ready!
But now comes the question: Do God's people have the power to hasten or delay the second coming of Christ? Some answer that they do not. They say, in some sort of Calvinist predestination that God has predetermined the exact hour on the celestial clock when Christ will return. He will force His coming upon the inhabitants of the earth whether they are ready or not. But this does not take into account the great controversy theme of God's constraining love which appeals to the hearts of humans by which they make a voluntary choice in welcoming Christ back to earth as King of kings and Lord of lords.
Others ask, "When is Jesus coming back? It doesn't matter." [1] They say, "In one sense, as far as our own personal experience is concerned, the Second Coming is as 'soon' as our death. We die, and regardless of how long after we are in the grave--two years, two hundred, two thousand--we sleep, and the next thing we know ... Jesus has returned." [2] This is a pre-1844 understanding of the preparation necessary for the second coming. Evangelicals teach that death is a good thing because it is the door to heaven based on their doctrine of the immortality of the soul. But should Adventists teach that our individual death is the quickest way to heaven in view of the fact that God has revealed to us "the cleansing of the sanctuary" truth? Focusing "the blessed hope" upon individual death does not get to the root problem of Laodicea's self-centeredness ("am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing," Rev. 3:17). It does matter to Jesus how long the delay of His return continues. He will be eternally embarrassed if the "remnant" do not respond to His overtures of love so that He can cleanse them from sin.
Others say there is something Christians can do to hasten the coming of Christ (2 Peter 3:12). Christ is waiting for "His wife" to make "herself ready" (Rev. 19:7). Jesus likens their getting ready to a farmer's crop growing up and maturing until it is ready for harvest (Mark 4:26-29). The growing up makes it possible for Him to come the second time to "reap" the "harvest" (Rev. 14:14, 15). But the "crop" cannot become mature until "the latter rain" of the Holy Spirit's outpouring comes (Joel 2:23, 24). The "former rain" fell at Pentecost at the beginning of the Christian dispensation; but the latter rain will close that dispensation. Therefore nothing can be more important than for the church to seek the blessing of the latter rain (Zech. 10:1).
And where is the good news? The latter rain is a message of "much more abounding grace," a clearer view of what the Saviour of the world has done for us, a revelation of His love (agape) that "constrains" every honest-hearted soul to live unto Him and not unto self (2 Cor. 5:14, 15), so that this truth can "lighten the earth with glory" (Rev. 18:1-4).
--Paul E. Penno
Endnotes:
[1] Sabbath School Lesson for Sabbath, March 24, 2012, "The Promise of His Return."
[2] Sabbath School Lesson for Thursday, March 29.
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Monday, March 19, 2012

"Love Stories"

Sabbath School Today
With the 1888 Message Dynamic
Glimpses of Our God
Lesson 12: "Love Stories"

Our Sabbath School lesson asks: "How are we to understand the loving side of God?" Perhaps the most obvious examples, as our quarterly points out, are memorable marriages in the Bible. These marriages begin with Adam and Eve, and end with the most glorious marriage event in the history of the universe: the marriage of the Lamb and His Bride.

Adam and Eve: In each of these memorable marriages (or "romances" as our quarterly puts it) there is a key principle which, if we will receive it, brings healing and stability to every marriage. Beginning in Genesis we read: "... the Lord brought [Eve] to the man [Adam]." This is not suggesting that one should go to sleep and then the Lord will--presto--bring you a wonderful spouse all ready to be yours. The common sense idea is that you ask for, you trust, you expect, you wait for the Lord to lead the two of you together. The lesson from Adam and Eve is that the Lord God takes an active, personal interest in your life. Let Him do the leading and your union will be lasting.

Believing that God loves you is an important first step. You can't live if you think He is mean or unfair or cruel; believing Satan's lie about Him is the sure path to eternal sorrow. Jesus comments on their marriage when he says, "What God has joined together, let no man separate" (Matt. 19:6, NKJV). The "glue" that will hold a married couple together is their conviction, their faith, that "God has joined [us] together." God is a loving heavenly Father who above all else has in mind your true happiness; and in His infinite wisdom He sees and knows that such happiness lies with your being faithful to the "wife [husband] of your youth" (Mal. 2:14).
The Bible story about marriage from the beginning is love; God created us to love and to be loved in devotion that lasts forever. So, thank you, Adam and Eve, for this lesson in happiness.

Abraham and Sarah: Their marriage was to result in seven grand blessings for the world, most of all, that "in you all families [homes, marriages] of the earth shall be blessed [made happy]" (Gen. 12:2, 3). Abraham and Sarah were called to be the world's most understanding father-in-law and mother-in-law! But their own happiness was a long time in coming. We've all read the story, but when the blessing finally came with the birth of Isaac, it was just in time to save them from the bitterness that old-age marriage-failure can bring. Abraham humbly repented of his sin with the comely younger woman, Hagar, which was more than just infatuation, but the darker sin of deep heart-unbelief in God's promise that he and Sarah should have a son. Sarah repented of her anger against God. (We know this because Hebrews 11:11 tells us that "... she judged Him faithful who had promised.") The truth in this marriage is: believe the promise that God gave you of happiness in your marriage; that believing will give you happy and peaceful endurance and a rich reward that indulgence with a third party could never bring you.

Isaac and Rebekah: Our lesson also mentions this couple, the happiest marriage we read about in the Bible, which culminates in a tantalizing glimpse of their lasting love, when we read, "he [Isaac] loved her" (Gen. 24:67).

Jesus Christ and His Bride-to-Be: There is a hidden love story in the Laodicean message that few seem ever to have discerned. Somehow it eluded our pioneers, and our eyes have been too "holden" ever since to see it.

The lady in Song of Solomon 5:2-7 who had gone to bed early and was annoyed by her Lover banging on her door represents the remnant church, which has resented (in our history) the urgent appeals of our Lord to surrender to Him as a beloved surrenders at last to her husband-to-be.

The Greek of Revelation 3:20 reads something like this: "Behold, I have taken My stand at the door and am knocking, knocking. If a certain one hears My voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and will have intimate fellowship with him." This is a clear allusion to the story in the Song of Solomon, where in verse 5:2 Solomon says: "I sleep, but my heart is awake: the voice of my Beloved knocks at the door ..." Although some say the Song of Solomon is nowhere quoted in the New Testament, here it is in the Laodicean message by our Lord Himself!
It was in the history of 1888 that our Lord "knocked" as a Divine Lover seeking entrance at the door of His Bride-to-be. Can we not sense how Christ "the Lover" hoped against hope that she would respond? But Ellen White said afterwards, "The disappointment of Christ is beyond description" (Review and Herald, Dec. 15, 1904).

What is distinctive about the Christ whom we are to love and proclaim to the world? Ellen White says of the 1888 message:

"On Sabbath afternoon many hearts were touched, and many souls were fed on the bread that cometh down from heaven. ... We [she and A. T. Jones and E. J. Waggoner] felt the necessity of presenting Christ as a Saviour who was not afar off, but nigh at hand" (ibid., March 5, 1889, emphasis added).

Clearly this is an allusion to the Christology that Jones and Waggoner presented that made Him "nigh," that brought Him truly near as our "kinsman" who came "in the likeness of sinful flesh," "tempted in all points like as we are, "yet without sin."

Note how Ellen White clearly ties in the Song of Solomon with the results of the 1888 message:
"The Christian life, which had before seemed to them [the youth] undesirable and full of inconsistencies, now appeared in its true light, in remarkable symmetry and beauty. He who had been to them as a root out of dry ground, without form or comeliness, became the chiefest among ten thousand [SS 5:10], and the one altogether lovely" (ibid., Feb. 12, 1889).

It is a love story indeed--the most poignant ever penned. It breathes the same hope of ultimate reconciliation and reunion as does the Laodicean message. Such a hope is worth dying for, and worth living for. Whether our own poor little souls are at last saved and we get to Heaven to bask in our rewards--this is not at all important. What is important is that the deeply disappointed Lover and Bridegroom-to-be receive His reward, that He at last receive as His Bride a church which is capable of a true heart-appreciation of Him.

"Everything in sacred history proclaims there has been a terrible delay in the second advent. All that the human mind can comprehend in a union of true love between a man and woman has been thwarted in the experience of Jesus. If there was anything more that He could do to win His fair one, He would have done it. And so the delay continues ... until the Bride hears the knocking at the door and repents of her harlotry. But with all the tragedy of this, she will repent and she will be ready for the marriage of the Lamb. This marriage need not be delayed further. It must come for the prophet has said, 'These are the true sayings of God. ... Surely I come quickly. Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus' (Rev. 19:9, 22:20)." [1]

--Compiled from the writings of Robert J. Wieland

[1] Donald K. Short, "Really--Is There No Delay?", 1997.

Note: If you would like to receive Robert J. Wieland's study on "The Song of Solomon and the Laodicean Message," please reply to this e-mail with "SS Study."
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"Love Stories"

11. LOVE STORIES

I read an article once about “Five Things to Do if You Want a Happy Marriage.” Good, solid legalism! Then I thought of five truths to BELIEVE if you want a happy marriage. This week let’s look at “Seven Memorable Marriages” in the Bible, each of which will give us a punch line truth that is the basis of happiness in marriage. Of course, #1 has to be the marriage of Adam and Eve. How happy they were the Bible doesn’t say, but for sure they were together far longer than any of us, and they never divorced. In each of these memorable marriages I find some key principle which, if you will believe it, can bring healing and stability to your marriage. I find that key principle in Gen. 2:22 where we read that “the Lord God . . . brought [Eve] unto Adam.” Now, I am not being fanatical: I am not saying that you should lie down and go to sleep and then the Lord will-presto-bring you a beautiful wife all ready to be yours. No, the common-sense idea is that you ask for, you wait for, you trust, you appreciate, the Lord’s leading the two of you together. And Jesus comments on Adam and Eve when he says, “What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put asunder” (Mt. 19:6). The glue that will hold a married couple together is not their exercise of strong will power, to clinch their fists and grit their teeth and say “I will be true no matter how horrible this is!” No, the glue is their conviction, their faith, that “God hath joined [them] together,” that “the Lord God brought [them]” together. Of course, as a part of that confidence is the faith that not only does God exist, but “He is a rewarder of those that diligently seek Him.” (Heb. 11:6). You must believe that He is a loving heavenly Father who has in mind above all else your true happiness; and in His infinite wisdom He sees and knows that your true happiness lies with your being faithful to “the wife [husband] of thy youth.” (Mal. 2:14). Such faith can work miracles and can even transform what the devil makes you think is purgatory into happy matrimony.
Memorable marriage #2 has to be that of Abraham and Sarah in the Book of Genesis. God called Abraham to be our example in faith—he was to be “the father of the faithful.” And his wife was to share that honor of prestige in faith. Their marriage was to result in seven grand blessings for the world, most of all, that “in thee shall all families [homes, marriages] of the earth be blessed [made happy]” (12:2, 3). But their own happiness turned out to be a long time coming. So long, in fact, that both husband and wife thought the only way they’d find it was to break their marriage vows—that is, to let a third party in on their marriage.
In that marriage of Abraham and Sarah you have all the elements that make for alienation and divorce as we know it today: (a) disappointment with the marriage and with each other; (b) a wife who is bitter and alienated and angry with God (read Gen. 16:2); (c) a husband who is all too ready to grab the excuse to find some happiness in the “other woman” (read vs. 4, how he “went in” to Hagar, the comely younger woman). But the happiness and personal fulfillment still didn’t come. In fact, read the story and you’ll find they waited 25 years before they could realize the married happiness they had been wanting and felt that God had promised them. Then the blessing finally came with the birth of Isaac, just in time to save them from the bitterness that old-age marriage failure always brings:
(1) Abraham humbly repented of his sin—which was more than mere lust; his sin was the darker one of unbelief (faith makes it impossible to yield to the temptations of lust); (2) Sarah repented of her anger against God because Heb 11:11 says that “through faith Sarah received strength [finally!] to conceive.” The punch line of truth in this memorable marriage is: BELIEVE the promise that God gave you of happiness in your marriage, and that believing will give you endurance and a rich reward that indulgence with a third party could never bring you.
If you’re married, the story is beautiful to think about again; if you’re not married, it will do your soul good to consider how the God of heaven brought Isaac and Rebekah together for what was the happiest marriage we read about in the Bible, memorable marriage #3. The fantastic story is in Genesis 24. In vs. 3 we find the guiding principle—Isaac purposed not to marry someone who is an unbeliever. In verse 7 we find the principle truth to believe—the Lord sends His angel on ahead to guide the choice to the right girl for Isaac, and to reveal who she is. Verse 8 makes clear that this is not Calvinist predestination, for God never forces two people to marry against their own free will. Verses 10-14 reveal how the Lord hears earnest prayer for guidance, that the one who prays may have discernment to recognize the true, beneath-the-surface character of the person to whom he/she thinks he may link his life. What a pity to marry someone who looks nice on the outside but who isn’t, on the inside! And Rebekah passes the test beautifully, demonstrating in vss 15-20 what a truly unselfish character she is. Then another principle is made clear in vs. 21, even now take your time; think; don’t rush. Verse 16 states a wonderful truth that makes for happiness in the marriage yet to come—both Rebekah and Isaac are virgins when they are married. Verses 32-50 make clear another element of happiness in marriage: the good will of the in-laws to be. “Laban and Bethuel answered and said, The thing proceedeth from the Lord.” They know that the Lord is leading this young couple. A solid foundation for happiness! Vss. 57, 58 make clear that the Lord wants the girl to be absolutely free and clear in her own mind what to do-no coercion of any kind. Love can never be forced; it must only be won. Vs. 65 tells us something most unusual to this age—Rebekah is modest, even after she is engaged to Isaac. And then last of all, in vs. 67, and best of all, we read, “Isaac loved her.” Chapter 26:8 gives a tantalizing glimpse of the lasting love they knew as a married couple. Memorable marriage indeed! May yours be so!
The Bible tells of one memorable marriage that was built on a platform of sin. And yet God blessed it! Perhaps taking a brief look can encourage some perplexed people who must look back on a sordid past and wonder if God can ever bless their marriage. Take a look at the marriage of David and Bathseheba. It was the totally wrong way to do anything: Bathsheba apparently enticed David; he lusted, used his position to seduce her (surely, a double sin!); then murdered her husband in order to cover it up (“Davidgate,” now a triple sin or crime); then brazenly married Bathsheba, as though nothing had happened. Bad, all the way around. It would be difficult to make a worse mess. So, “goodbye, God’s blessings?” No, there’s still grace.
There’s one little smidgeon of goodness left in David. We read that after the murder of her husband and the rebuke of prophet Nathan and the death of their baby boy, “David comforted Bathsheba his wife, and went in to her” (2 Sam. 12:24). There was nothing David could do to make restitution to Uriah her husband, or to her; but he could have ditched Bathsheba to get her out of his life and go after someone else and left her to sorrow forever. No, he’d made a bad bargain, but he remained loyal. He had ruined her marriage by doing away with her husband, now he chose not to ruin her life by abandoning her. I remember reading of wise counsel given by someone who knew the Lord, about a man who had wrecked several women’s lives and had finally ended up with # so-and-so and the church members wanted him to get rid of her and go back to #1. This counselor said that he had already ruined several women’s lives; now don’t urge him to ruin another one’s. Let him stay where he was! David and Bathsheba had a shameful beginning; but they ended up giving Solomon to the world. That shouldn’t encourage us to follow David’s sin; it should encourage us to emulate his repentance.
Have you ever heard the story of the memorable marriage (#5) that fell apart because God told the man to marry a bad woman in the first place? It’s in the Bible. God actually told His prophet Hosea to marry a prostitute (Hosea 3:1). How could such a marriage not fall apart? And of course the lady Gomer played her husband false. He was forced to watch her flirt with other men in his presence. And then the flirting became outright adultery. She had no excuse, for the record is clear that Hosea was not a bad husband; he gave Gomer all her heart could wish for. She was just plain faith-less. “Infidelity” is the word. And there was nothing the grieving husband cxould do but wait. The problem was that he actually loved this woman! In fact, there was no other woman in the world that could take her place, for him. The modern way is that if your true love is betrayed, you chuck it and grab someone else. Hosea’s heart was gold, and he was captive to his love for her, the kind of love that Paul says “never faileth” (1 Cor. 13:8). So, what could Hosea do? Just . . . suffer. Well, the time came that her lovers inevitably demonstrated their faith-less-ness, leaving Gomer to end up a miserable wreck in the slave market (ch. 3:2). Hosea bought her for a paltry sum, was nice to her, and miracle of miracles, won her love and helped her find repentance. (I don’t know that I’ve ever seen such a case in real life). Before Hosea could “save” a soul, he had to start from scratch and “build” a soul-to be saved.
They finally walk off the Bible stage hand in hand, in love forever, the memorable marriage of the ages. And how could Hosea, sinner though he was by nature, have ever been able so to love a loveless, faithless woman? He learned how from the God of Israel, who is the same as our Saviour of the world. Gomer is Israel. And Israel is “we.” There is enough in this story to keep you and me studying, praying, pondering, repenting, for a lifetime, yes, for eternity.
There is one memorable marriage in the Bible that no one seems to talk about: that is the marriage of Joseph and Mary. If there is a punch line of wisdom in which we can sum up the lessons of that marriage, it is this: Honor thy stepmother.
Now the Bible says, “Honor thy . . . mother,” but not a word about honoring a stepmother. But that’s what Mary was! Matthew 12:46 tells us that Jesus had “brethren,” and ch. 13:55 actually tells us the names of four of the brothers, and adds that Jesus also had “sisters,” but doesn’t say how many girls there were. Now the question arises, were these brothers and sisters children of Mary herself? Or were they Joseph’s children by a previous marriage? Two quite clear clues are in the Bible: (a) the fact that Jesus’ “brethren” bossed Him around would indicate that they had to be older than He, for in Jewish families the younger never did that to the older siblings (John 7:3-5); and (b) when Jesus was dying on His cross, He did not leave His mother to the care of any of these “brothers” or “sisters,” as He would have done if they were actually her children (see John 19:26, 27). Therefore the conclusion seems inescapable: these four boys and these girls were children from Joseph’s previous marriage; he was a widower. That opens up a wider vista of appreciation for Mary herself.
Being step-mother to such a brood was a terrific job! We know there was friction and tension in the family, for these siblings “did not believe in Him,” says John; and that would mean also they did not believe in Mary.
Imagine raising at least 6 stepchildren who are not truly respectful of you and who believe you are an adulteress. But wait—look how the story turns out: after Jesus’ crucifixion, at least some of those siblings repented, and believed in Jesus. In Acts 1:14 we find “Mary the mother of Jesus with His brethren” gathered in the upper room with the apostles, praying for the Holy Spirit. And one of the boys actually became president of the General Conference (see Acts 15:13). And so I conclude, all honor to Mary as a step-mother!
Life today is solemnly exciting—more than at any time in 6000 years: this is the cosmic, grand “Day of Atonement.” It’s the antitype of ancient Israel’s one Day of days when the nation was in such heart-stopping excitement that they ate nothing all day. They (and God, too!) were on trial in an awe inspiring Day of Judgment. But now the real thing is going on.
In Israel, it was the one Day of the year when everything got straightened out and all questions were answered. At Day’s end, the nation was in heart-oneness with God. In miniature, “the great controversy” (between Christ and Satan) was finished. Sin and sinners were no more. The entire nation was clean. One pulse of harmony and gladness beat throughout. Sin and sinners were as no more. Life and light and gladness flowed from the Lord. It seemed to Israel, all things in their unshadowed beauty and perfect joy declared that God is love—on that one grand day of the year, the Day of Atonement.
Now the message from our great High Priest, Jesus Christ, is this: “be ye reconciled to God” (2 Cor. 5:20). “Atonement” is not obscure Latin, Greek or Hebrew—it’s pure simple Anglo-Saxon, “be at-one with God.” It’s time for your doubts to be resolved, those deep feelings that He has not been fair with you. It’s time to join that distraught father in Mark 9 who cried with tears (when everything seemed against him), “Lord, I believe; help Thou mine unbelief” (vs. 24). It’s time for “Jacob” the Supplanter to wrestle with God and get a new name, “Israel.”
But can we shake ourselves by our shoulders and just DO it—reconcile ourselves to Him? It means a change of mind (Greek, metanoia) which actually is repentance. Now wait a moment: do we have a self-start button to press for “repenting ourselves”? Acts 5:31 says it’s a “gift” from our “Prince and Saviour.” A “gift” is not what you work for.
Which reminds us: the Israelites never “cleansed” their own sanctuary: the high priest alone always did it. It wasn’t a works-trip for them. Yes, bitter as this pill may be for do-it-yourself legalists: we have to LET Him do it for us and in us on this cosmic Day of Atonement. He takes the initiative and we cooperate “through faith.” So stop resisting the blessed Holy Spirit. Your High Priest loves you more than you ever dreamed He does. To understand, “behold” and “comprehend” what happened on His cross.
This little tid-bit of “bread” will come too late for those who are giving special attention to the Lord’s last-days message to the shepherds of His flock in Laodicea. But don’t trash it—if you are alive spiritually you’ll be studying that message until earth’s last day.
Jesus says something strange in Revelation 3:20. It grips our attention—“Behold, I stand at the door and knock.” He is quoting the Old Testament, but not the Hebrew text. He decides to use its Greek translation instead. And therein lies a profound revelation.
Jesus has quoted His Old Testament Bible from the Song of Solomon, chapter 5, verse 2. The ancient Greek translation (known as the Septuagint, LXX) has three little words that are not in the Hebrew version—“at the door” (epi ten thuran, if you want the Greek). And why this miniscule but tectonic choice on the part of this divine Author? Why does He quote the Greek version? This: Jesus reveals Himself here as the disappointed Lover who has just come from His safari to His Beloved. It’s night; it’s cold; it’s raining; He is hungry; He is lonely; He wants her. But she doesn’t want Him, apparently. He is hurt.
Standing outside in the cold, He says He goes on knocking, knocking “at the door.” The object of His love has just gone to bed, is in that twilight zone between waking and sleeping. Then she hears Him. (You can’t understand this unless you’ve lived in a mud hut with a cow-dung floor!). She is annoyed; why does He bother her at this hour? She doesn’t want to get her feet soiled on that floor—she’s comfy in bed. Finally, however, she stops thinking of her own selfish laziness, and thinks of Him outside. Belatedly she gets up to go to the door to let Him in. And, lo, He is gone. He got tired of waiting, waiting. (Yes, there is evidence that Jesus and the angels do get tired waiting).
Hundreds of years ago a few thoughtful scholars in Europe discerned that the Laodicean message is tied to the Song of Solomon. Has it somehow eluded us? This is a love story! It brings us to chapter 19:7-9 where the long-disappointed Bridegroom is perplexed what to do with His dilatory Bride-to-be. He can’t force her to marry Him. The next move is hers.
It was in the history of 1888 that our Lord “knocked” as a Divine Lover seeking entrance at the door of His Bride-to-be. Can we not sense how Christ “the Lover” hoped against hope that she would respond? But Ellen White said afterwards, “The disappointment of Christ is beyond description” (Review and Herald, Dec. 15, 1904).
What is distinctive about the Christ whom we are to love and proclaim to the world? Ellen White says of the 1888 message:
“On Sabbath afternoon many hearts were touched, and many souls were fed on the bread that cometh down from heaven. … We [she and A. T. Jones and E. J. Waggoner] felt the necessity of presenting Christ as a Saviour who was not afar off, but nigh at hand” (ibid., March 5, 1889, emphasis added).
Clearly this is an allusion to the Christology that Jones and Waggoner presented that made Him “nigh,” that brought Him truly near as our “kinsman” who came “in the likeness of sinful flesh,” “tempted in all points like as we are, “yet without sin.”
Note how Ellen White clearly ties in the Song of Solomon with the results of the 1888 message:
“The Christian life, which had before seemed to them [the youth] undesirable and full of inconsistencies, now appeared in its true light, in remarkable symmetry and beauty. He who had been to them as a root out of dry ground, without form or comeliness, became the chiefest among ten thousand [SS 5:10], and the one altogether lovely” (ibid., Feb. 12, 1889).
It is a love story indeed—the most poignant ever penned. It breathes the same hope of ultimate reconciliation and reunion as does the Laodicean message. Such a hope is worth dying for, and worth living for. Whether our own poor little souls are at last saved and we get to Heaven to bask in our rewards—this is not at all important. What is important is that the deeply disappointed Lover and Bridegroom-to-be receive His reward, that He at last receive as His Bride a church which is capable of a true heart-appreciation of Him.
“Everything in sacred history proclaims there has been a terrible delay in the second advent. All that the human mind can comprehend in a union of true love between a man and woman has been thwarted in the experience of Jesus. If there was anything more that He could do to win His fair one, He would have done it. And so the delay continues … until the Bride hears the knocking at the door and repents of her harlotry. But with all the tragedy of this, she will repent and she will be ready for the marriage of the Lamb. This marriage need not be delayed further. It must come for the prophet has said, ‘These are the true sayings of God. …. Surely I come quickly. Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus’ (Rev. 19:9, 22:20).”
The most memorable marriage of all time and eternity will be one that most people have never thought of: the marriage of Jesus Christ to His Bride. The idea is so strange, that it seems out of this world. But the Bible tells about it in Revelation 19:6-8: “The Lord God omnipotent reigneth. Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honor to Him: for the marriage of the Lamb is come, and His wife hath made herself ready.”
And the Good News is that you and I are invited to attend the wedding and the marriage feast: “And the Spirit and the Bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely” (22:17). This will be grandest party ever held anywhere, bar none!
Why should Jesus want to get married? Well, the answer is clear: He has become a human being, to retain His human nature forever. He is a man, as well as the Son of God. It is He who created us male and female and ordained holy marriage as an object lesson to help us understand His love for His church. No woman on earth could ever become the Bride of the Son of God; but in a corporate sense, the entire church becomes His Bride. And Revelation says that this wedding is something that hasn’t happened yet. It must take place just before Jesus can return the second time as He promised, “I will come again.” In other words, for the church to be ready for the marriage of the Lamb will require a growing up “unto the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ,” as Paul says in Ephesians 4:13. That’s more than just getting ready to die and be buried, to await the resurrection: that’s getting ready for translation, as 1 Thessalonians 4:16, 17 says, “Then we which are alive and remain [after the first resurrection] will be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air.” Now, around the world, God is preparing that people!