Chapter 40
God's People Delivered
When the protection of human laws shall be withdrawn
from those who honor the law of God, there will be, in different lands,
a simultaneous movement for their destruction. As the time appointed in
the decree draws near, the people will conspire to root out the hated
sect. It will be determined to strike in one night a decisive blow,
which shall utterly silence the voice of dissent and reproof.
The people of God--some in prison cells, some hidden
in solitary retreats in the forests and the mountains--still plead for
divine protection, while in every quarter companies of armed men, urged
on by hosts of evil angels, are preparing for the work of death. It is
now, in the hour of utmost extremity, that the God of Israel will
interpose for the deliverance of His chosen. Saith the Lord; "Ye
shall have a song, as in the night when a holy solemnity is kept; and
gladness of heart, as when one goeth . . . to come into the mountain of
the Lord, to the Mighty One of Israel. And the Lord shall cause His
glorious voice to be heard, and shall show the lighting down of His arm,
with the indignation of His anger, and with the flame of a devouring
fire, with scattering, and tempest, and hailstones." Isaiah 30:29,
30.
With shouts of triumph, jeering, and imprecation,
throngs of evil men are about to rush upon their prey, when, lo, a
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dense blackness, deeper than the darkness of the
night, falls upon the earth. Then a rainbow, shining with the glory from
the throne of God, spans the heavens and seems to encircle each praying
company. The angry multitudes are suddenly arrested. Their mocking cries
die away. The objects of their murderous rage are forgotten. With
fearful forebodings they gaze upon the symbol of God's covenant and long
to be shielded from its overpowering brightness.
By the people of God a voice, clear and melodious, is
heard, saying, "Look up," and lifting their eyes to the
heavens, they behold the bow of promise. The black, angry clouds that
covered the firmament are parted, and like Stephen they look up
steadfastly into heaven and see the glory of God and the Son of man
seated upon His throne. In His divine form they discern the marks of His
humiliation; and from His lips they hear the request presented before
His Father and the holy angels: "I will that they also, whom Thou
hast given Me, be with Me where I am." John 17:24. Again a voice,
musical and triumphant, is heard, saying: "They come! they come!
holy, harmless, and undefiled. They have kept the word of My patience;
they shall walk among the angels;" and the pale, quivering lips of
those who have held fast their faith utter a shout of victory.
It is at midnight that God manifests His power for
the deliverance of His people. The sun appears, shining in its strength.
Signs and wonders follow in quick succession. The wicked look with
terror and amazement upon the scene, while the righteous behold with
solemn joy the tokens of their deliverance. Everything in nature seems
turned out of its course. The streams cease to flow. Dark, heavy clouds
come up and clash against each other. In the midst of the angry heavens
is one clear space of indescribable glory, whence comes the voice of God
like the sound of many waters, saying: "It is done."
Revelation 16:17.
That voice shakes the heavens and the earth. There is
a
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mighty earthquake, "such as was not since men
were upon the earth, so mighty an earthquake, and so great." Verses
17,
18. The firmament appears to open and shut. The glory
from the throne of God seems flashing through. The
mountains shake like a reed in the wind, and ragged rocks are scattered
on every side. There is a roar as of a coming tempest. The sea is lashed
into fury. There is heard the shriek of a hurricane like the voice of
demons upon a mission of destruction. The whole earth heaves and swells
like the waves of the sea. Its surface is breaking up. Its very
foundations seem to be giving way. Mountain chains are sinking.
Inhabited islands disappear. The seaports that have become like Sodom
for wickedness are swallowed up by the angry waters. Babylon the great
has come in remembrance before God, "to give unto her the cup of
the wine of the fierceness of His wrath." Great hailstones, every
one "about the weight of a talent," are doing their work of
destruction. Verses 19, 21. The proudest cities of the earth are laid
low. The lordly palaces, upon which the world's great men have lavished
their wealth in order to glorify themselves, are crumbling to ruin
before their eyes. Prison walls are rent asunder, and God's people, who
have been held in bondage for their faith, are set free.
Graves are opened, and "many of them that sleep
in the dust of the earth. . . awake, some to everlasting life, and some
to shame and everlasting contempt." Daniel 12:2. All who have died
in the faith of the third angel's message come forth from the tomb
glorified, to hear God's covenant of peace with those who have kept His
law. "They also which pierced Him" (Revelation 1:7), those
that mocked and derided Christ's dying agonies, and the most violent
opposers of His truth and His people, are raised to behold Him in His
glory and to see the honor placed upon the loyal and obedient.
Thick clouds still cover the sky; yet the sun now and
then breaks through, appearing like the avenging eye of Jehovah.
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Fierce lightnings leap from the heavens, enveloping
the earth in a sheet of flame. Above the terrific roar of thunder,
voices, mysterious and awful, declare the doom of the wicked. The words
spoken are not comprehended by all; but they are distinctly understood
by the false teachers. Those who a little before were so reckless, so
boastful and defiant, so exultant in their cruelty to God's commandment-keeping
people, are now overwhelmed with consternation and shuddering in fear.
Their wails are heard above the sound of the elements. Demons
acknowledge the deity of Christ and tremble before His power, while men
are supplicating for mercy and groveling in abject terror.
Said the prophets of old, as they beheld in holy
vision the day of God: "Howl ye; for the day of the Lord is at
hand; it shall come as a destruction from the Almighty." Isaiah
13:6. "Enter into the rock, and hide thee in the dust, for fear of
the Lord, and for the glory of His majesty. The lofty looks of man shall
be humbled, and the haughtiness of men shall be bowed down, and the Lord
alone shall be exalted in that day. For the day of the Lord of hosts
shall be upon everyone that is proud and lofty, and upon everyone that
is lifted up; and he shall be brought low." "In that day a man
shall cast the idols of his silver, and the idols of his gold, which
they made each one for himself to worship, to the moles and to the bats;
to go into the clefts of the rocks, and into the tops of the ragged
rocks, for fear of the Lord, and for the glory of His majesty, when He
ariseth to shake terribly the earth." Isaiah 2:10-12, 20, 21,
margin.
Through a rift in the clouds there beams a star whose
brilliancy is increased fourfold in contrast with the darkness. It
speaks hope and joy to the faithful, but severity and wrath to the
transgressors of God's law. Those who have sacrificed all for Christ are
now secure, hidden as in the secret of the Lord's pavilion. They have
been tested, and before the world and the despisers of truth they have
evinced their fidelity to Him
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who died for them. A marvelous change has come over
those who have held fast their integrity in the very face of death. They
have been suddenly delivered from the dark and terrible tyranny of men
transformed to demons. Their faces, so lately pale, anxious, and
haggard, are now aglow with wonder, faith, and love. Their voices rise
in triumphant song: "God is our refuge and strength, a very present
help in trouble. Therefore will not we fear, though the earth be
removed, and though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea;
though the waters thereof roar and be troubled, though the mountains
shake with the swelling thereof." Psalm 46:1-3.
While these words of holy trust ascend to God, the
clouds sweep back, and the starry heavens are seen, unspeakably glorious
in contrast with the black and angry firmament on either side. The glory
of the celestial city streams from the gates ajar. Then there appears
against the sky a hand holding two tables of stone folded together. Says
the prophet: "The heavens shall declare His righteousness: for God
is judge Himself." Psalm 50:6. That holy law, God's righteousness,
that amid thunder and flame was proclaimed from Sinai as the guide of
life, is now revealed to men as the rule of judgment. The hand opens the
tables, and there are seen the precepts of the Decalogue, traced as with
a pen of fire. The words are so plain that all can read them. Memory is
aroused, the darkness of superstition and heresy is swept from every
mind, and God's ten words, brief, comprehensive, and authoritative, are
presented to the view of all the inhabitants of the earth.
It is impossible to describe the horror and despair
of those who have trampled upon God's holy requirements. The Lord gave
them His law; they might have compared their characters with it and
learned their defects while there was yet opportunity for repentance and
reform; but in order to secure the favor of the world, they set aside
its precepts and taught others to transgress. They have endeavored to
compel
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God's people to profane His Sabbath. Now they are
condemned by that law which they have despised. With awful distinctness
they see that they are without excuse. They chose whom they would serve
and worship. "Then shall ye return, and discern between the
righteous and the wicked, between him that serveth God and him that
serveth Him not." Malachi 3:18.
The enemies of God's law, from the ministers down to
the least among them, have a new conception of truth and duty. Too late
they see that the Sabbath of the fourth commandment is the seal of the
living God. Too late they see the true nature of their spurious sabbath
and the sandy foundation upon which they have been building. They find
that they have been fighting against God. Religious teachers have led
souls to perdition while professing to guide them to the gates of
Paradise. Not until the day of final accounts will it be known how great
is the responsibility of men in holy office and how terrible are the
results of their unfaithfulness. Only in eternity can we rightly
estimate the loss of a single soul. Fearful will be the doom of him to
whom God shall say: Depart, thou wicked servant.
The voice of God is heard from heaven, declaring the
day and hour of Jesus' coming, and delivering the everlasting covenant
to His people. Like peals of loudest thunder His words roll through the
earth. The Israel of God stand listening, with their eyes fixed upward.
Their countenances are lighted up with His glory, and shine as did the
face of Moses when he came down from Sinai. The wicked cannot look upon
them. And when the blessing is pronounced on those who have honored God
by keeping His Sabbath holy, there is a mighty shout of victory.
Soon there appears in the east a small black cloud,
about half the size of a man's hand. It is the cloud which surrounds the
Saviour and which seems in the distance to be shrouded in darkness. The
people of God know this to be the sign of the Son of man. In solemn
silence they gaze upon it as it
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draws nearer the earth, becoming lighter and more
glorious, until it is a great white cloud, its base a glory like
consuming fire, and above it the rainbow of the covenant. Jesus rides
forth as a mighty conqueror. Not now a "Man of Sorrows," to
drink the bitter cup of shame and woe, He comes, victor in heaven and
earth, to judge the living and the dead. "Faithful and True,"
"in righteousness He doth judge and make war." And "the
armies which were in heaven" (Revelation 19:11, 14) follow Him.
With anthems of celestial melody the holy angels, a vast, unnumbered
throng, attend Him on His way. The firmament seems filled with radiant
forms--"ten thousand times ten thousand, and thousands of
thousands." No human pen can portray the scene; no mortal mind is
adequate to conceive its splendor. "His glory covered the heavens,
and the earth was full of His praise. And His brightness was as the
light." Habakkuk 3:3,4. As the living cloud comes still nearer,
every eye beholds the Prince of life. No crown of thorns now mars that
sacred head; but a diadem of glory rests on His holy brow. His
countenance outshines the dazzling brightness of the noonday sun.
"And He hath on His vesture and on His thigh a name written, King
of kings, and Lord of lords." Revelation 19:16.
Before His presence "all faces are turned into
paleness;" upon the rejecters of God's mercy falls the terror of
eternal despair. "The heart melteth, and the knees smite together,
. . . and the faces of them all gather blackness." Jeremiah 30:6;
Nahum 2:10. The righteous cry with trembling: "Who shall be able to
stand?" The angels' song is hushed, and there is a period of awful
silence. Then the voice of Jesus is heard, saying: "My grace is
sufficient for you." The faces of the righteous are lighted up, and
joy fills every heart. And the angels strike a note higher and sing
again as they draw still nearer to the earth.
The King of kings descends upon the cloud, wrapped in
flaming fire. The heavens are rolled together as a scroll, the earth
trembles before Him, and every mountain and island
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is moved out of its place. "Our God shall come,
and shall not keep silence: a fire shall devour before Him, and it shall
be very tempestuous round about Him. He shall call to the heavens from
above, and to the earth, that He may judge His people." Psalm
50:3,4.
"And the kings of the earth, and the great men,
and the rich men, and the chief captains, and the mighty men, and every
bondman, and every freeman, hid themselves in the dens and in the rocks
of the mountains; and said to the mountains and rocks, Fall on us, and
hide us from the face of Him that sitteth on the throne, and from the
wrath of the Lamb: for the great day of His wrath is come; and who shall
be able to stand?" Revelation 6:15-17.
The derisive jests have ceased. Lying lips are hushed
into silence. The clash of arms, the tumult of battle, "with
confused noise, and garments rolled in blood" (Isaiah 9:5), is
stilled. Nought now is heard but the voice of prayer and the sound of
weeping and lamentation. The cry bursts forth from lips so lately
scoffing: "The great day of His wrath is come; and who shall be
able to stand?" The wicked pray to be buried beneath the rocks of
the mountains rather than meet the face of Him whom they have despised
and rejected.
That voice which penetrates the ear of the dead, they
know. How often have its plaintive, tender tones called them to
repentance. How often has it been heard in the touching entreaties of a
friend, a brother, a Redeemer. To the rejecters of His grace no other
could be so full of condemnation, so burdened with denunciation, as that
voice which has so long pleaded: "Turn ye, turn ye from your evil
ways; for why will ye die?" Ezekiel 33:11. Oh, that it were to them
the voice of a stranger! Says Jesus: "I have called, and ye
refused; I have stretched out My hand, and no man regarded; but ye have
set at nought all My counsel, and would none of My reproof."
Proverbs 1:24, 25. That voice awakens memories which they would fain
blot out--warnings despised, invitations refused, privileges slighted.
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There are those who mocked Christ in His humiliation.
With thrilling power come to their minds the Sufferer's words, when,
adjured by the high priest, He solemnly declared: "Hereafter shall
ye see the Son of man sitting on the right hand of power, and coming in
the clouds of heaven." Matthew 26:64. Now they behold Him in His
glory, and they are yet to see Him sitting on the right hand of power.
Those who derided His claim to be the Son of God are
speechless now. There is the haughty Herod who jeered at His royal title
and bade the mocking soldiers crown Him king. There are the very men who
with impious hands placed upon His form the purple robe, upon His sacred
brow the thorny crown, and in His unresisting hand the mimic scepter,
and bowed before Him in blasphemous mockery. The men who smote and spit
upon the Prince of life now turn from His piercing gaze and seek to flee
from the overpowering glory of His presence. Those who drove the nails
through His hands and feet, the soldier who pierced His side, behold
these marks with terror and remorse.
With awful distinctness do priests and rulers recall
the events of Calvary. With shuddering horror they remember how, wagging
their heads in satanic exultation, they exclaimed: "He saved
others; Himself He cannot save. If He be the King of Israel, let Him now
come down from the cross, and we will believe Him. He trusted in God;
let Him deliver Him now, if He will have Him." Matthew 27:42, 43.
Vividly they recall the Saviour's parable of the
husbandmen who refused to render to their lord the fruit of the
vineyard, who abused his servants and slew his son. They remember, too,
the sentence which they themselves pronounced: The lord of the vineyard
"will miserably destroy those wicked men." In the sin and
punishment of those unfaithful men the priests and elders see their own
course and their own just doom. And now there rises a cry of mortal
agony. Louder than the shout, "Crucify Him, crucify Him,"
which rang through the streets of Jerusalem, swells the awful,
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despairing wail, "He is the Son of God! He is
the true Messiah!" They seek to flee from the presence of the King
of kings. In the deep caverns of the earth, rent asunder by the warring
of the elements, they vainly attempt to hide.
In the lives of all who reject truth there are
moments when conscience awakens, when memory presents the torturing
recollection of a life of hypocrisy and the soul is harassed with vain
regrets. But what are these compared with the remorse of that day when
"fear cometh as desolation," when "destruction cometh as
a whirlwind"! Proverbs 1:27. Those who would have destroyed Christ
and His faithful people now witness the glory which rests upon them. In
the midst of their terror they hear the voices of the saints in joyful
strains exclaiming: "Lo, this is our God; we have waited for Him,
and He will save us." Isaiah 25:9.
Amid the reeling of the earth, the flash of
lightning, and the roar of thunder, the voice of the Son of God calls
forth the sleeping saints. He looks upon the graves of the righteous,
then, raising His hands to heaven, He cries: "Awake, awake, awake,
ye that sleep in the dust, and arise!" Throughout the length and
breadth of the earth the dead shall hear that voice, and they that hear
shall live. And the whole earth shall ring with the tread of the
exceeding great army of every nation, kindred, tongue, and people. From
the prison house of death they come, clothed with immortal glory,
crying: "O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy
victory?" 1 Corinthians 15:55. And the living righteous and the
risen saints unite their voices in a long, glad shout of victory.
All come forth from their graves the same in stature
as when they entered the tomb. Adam, who stands among the risen throng,
is of lofty height and majestic form, in stature but little below the
Son of God. He presents a marked contrast to the people of later
generations; in this one respect is shown the great degeneracy of the
race. But all arise with the freshness and vigor of eternal youth. In
the beginning, man
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was created in the likeness of God, not only in
character, but in form and feature. Sin defaced and almost obliterated
the divine image; but Christ came to restore that which had been lost.
He will change our vile bodies and fashion them like unto His glorious
body. The mortal, corruptible form, devoid of comeliness, once polluted
with sin, becomes perfect, beautiful, and immortal. All blemishes and
deformities are left in the grave. Restored to the tree of life in the
long-lost Eden, the redeemed will "grow up" (Malachi 4:2) to
the full stature of the race in its primeval glory. The last lingering
traces of the curse of sin will be removed, and Christ's faithful ones
will appear in "the beauty of the Lord our God," in mind and
soul and body reflecting the perfect image of their Lord. Oh, wonderful
redemption! long talked of, long hoped for, contemplated with eager
anticipation, but never fully understood.
The living righteous are changed "in a moment,
in the twinkling of an eye." At the voice of God they were
glorified; now they are made immortal and with the risen saints are
caught up to meet their Lord in the air. Angels "gather together
His elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the
other." Little children are borne by holy angels to their mothers'
arms. Friends long separated by death are united, nevermore to part, and
with songs of gladness ascend together to the City of God.
On each side of the cloudy chariot are wings, and
beneath it are living wheels; and as the chariot rolls upward, the
wheels cry, "Holy," and the wings, as they move, cry,
"Holy," and the retinue of angels cry, "Holy, holy, holy,
Lord God Almighty." And the redeemed shout, "Alleluia!"
as the chariot moves onward toward the New Jerusalem.
Before entering the City of God, the Saviour bestows
upon His followers the emblems of victory and invests them with the
insignia of their royal state. The glittering ranks are drawn up in the
form of a hollow square about their King, whose form rises in majesty
high above saint and angel,
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whose countenance beams upon them full of benignant
love. Throughout the unnumbered host of the redeemed every glance is
fixed upon Him, every eye beholds His glory whose "visage was so
marred more than any man, and His form more than the sons of men."
Upon the heads of the overcomers, Jesus with His own right hand places
the crown of glory. For each there is a crown, bearing his own "new
name" (Revelation 2:17), and the inscription, "Holiness to the
Lord." In every hand are placed the victor's palm and the shining
harp. Then, as the commanding angels strike the note, every hand sweeps
the harp strings with skillful touch, awaking sweet music in rich,
melodious strains. Rapture unutterable thrills every heart, and each
voice is raised in grateful praise: "Unto Him that loved us, and
washed us from our sins in His own blood, and hath made us kings and
priests unto God and His Father; to Him be glory and dominion for ever
and ever." Revelation 1:5, 6.
Before the ransomed throng is the Holy City. Jesus
opens wide the pearly gates, and the nations that have kept the truth
enter in. There they behold the Paradise of God, the home of Adam in his
innocency. Then that voice, richer than any music that ever fell on
mortal ear, is heard, saying: "Your conflict is ended."
"Come, ye blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for
you from the foundation of the world."
Now is fulfilled the Saviour's prayer for His
disciples: "I will that they also, whom Thou hast given Me, be with
Me where I am." "Faultless before the presence of His glory
with exceeding joy" (Jude 24), Christ presents to the Father the
purchase of His blood, declaring: "Here am I, and the children whom
Thou hast given Me." "Those that Thou gavest Me I have
kept." Oh, the wonders of redeeming love! the rapture of that hour
when the infinite Father, looking upon the ransomed, shall behold His
image, sin's discord banished, its blight removed, and the human once
more in harmony with the divine!
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With unutterable love, Jesus welcomes His faithful
ones to the joy of their Lord. The Saviour's joy is in seeing, in the
kingdom of glory, the souls that have been saved by His agony and
humiliation. And the redeemed will be sharers in His joy, as they
behold, among the blessed, those who have been won to Christ through
their prayers, their labors, and their loving sacrifice. As they gather
about the great white throne, gladness unspeakable will fill their
hearts, when they behold those whom they have won for Christ, and see
that one has gained others, and these still others, all brought into the
haven of rest, there to lay their crowns at Jesus' feet and praise Him
through the endless cycles of eternity.
As the ransomed ones are welcomed to the City of God,
there rings out upon the air an exultant cry of adoration. The two Adams
are about to meet. The Son of God is standing with outstretched arms to
receive the father of our race--the being whom He created, who sinned
against his Maker, and for whose sin the marks of the crucifixion are
borne upon the Saviour's form. As Adam discerns the prints of the cruel
nails, he does not fall upon the bosom of his Lord, but in humiliation
casts himself at His feet, crying: "Worthy, worthy is the Lamb that
was slain!" Tenderly the Saviour lifts him up and bids him look
once more upon the Eden home from which he has so long been exiled.
After his expulsion from Eden, Adam's life on earth
was filled with sorrow. Every dying leaf, every victim of sacrifice,
every blight upon the fair face of nature, every stain upon man's
purity, was a fresh reminder of his sin. Terrible was the agony of
remorse as he beheld iniquity abounding, and, in answer to his warnings,
met the reproaches cast upon himself as the cause of sin. With patient
humility he bore, for nearly a thousand years, the penalty of
transgression. Faithfully did he repent of his sin and trust in the
merits of the promised Saviour, and he died in the hope of a
resurrection. The Son of God redeemed man's failure and fall; and
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now, through the work of the atonement, Adam is
reinstated in his first dominion.
Transported with joy, he beholds the trees that were
once his delight--the very trees whose fruit he himself had gathered in
the days of his innocence and joy. He sees the vines that his own hands
have trained, the very flowers that he once loved to care for. His mind
grasps the reality of the scene; he comprehends that this is indeed Eden
restored, more lovely now than when he was banished from it. The Saviour
leads him to the tree of life and plucks the glorious fruit and bids him
eat. He looks about him and beholds a multitude of his family redeemed,
standing in the Paradise of God. Then he casts his glittering crown at
the feet of Jesus and, falling upon His breast, embraces the Redeemer.
He touches the golden harp, and the vaults of heaven echo the triumphant
song: "Worthy, worthy, worthy is the Lamb that was slain, and lives
again!" The family of Adam take up the strain and cast their crowns
at the Saviour's feet as they bow before Him in adoration.
This reunion is witnessed by the angels who wept at
the fall of Adam and rejoiced when Jesus, after His resurrection,
ascended to heaven, having opened the grave for all who should believe
on His name. Now they behold the work of redemption accomplished, and
they unite their voices in the song of praise.
Upon the crystal sea before the throne, that sea of
glass as it were mingled with fire,--so resplendent is it with the glory
of God,--are gathered the company that have "gotten the victory
over the beast, and over his image, and over his mark, and over the
number of his name." With the Lamb upon Mount Zion, "having
the harps of God," they stand, the hundred and forty and four
thousand that were redeemed from among men; and there is heard, as the
sound of many waters, and as the sound of a great thunder, "the
voice of harpers harping with their harps." And they sing "a
new
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song" before the throne, a song which no man can
learn save the hundred and forty and four thousand. It is the song of
Moses and the Lamb--a song of deliverance. None but the hundred and
forty-four thousand can learn that song; for it is the song of their
experience--an experience such as no other company have ever had.
"These are they which follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth."
These, having been translated from the earth, from among the living, are
counted as "the first fruits unto God and to the Lamb."
Revelation 15:2, 3; 14:1-5. "These are they which came out of great
tribulation;" they have passed through the time of trouble such as
never was since there was a nation; they have endured the anguish of the
time of Jacob's trouble; they have stood without an intercessor through
the final outpouring of God's judgments. But they have been delivered,
for they have "washed their robes, and made them white in the blood
of the Lamb." "In their mouth was found no guile: for they are
without fault" before God. "Therefore are they before the
throne of God, and serve Him day and night in His temple: and He that
sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them." They have seen the
earth wasted with famine and pestilence, the sun having power to scorch
men with great heat, and they themselves have endured suffering, hunger,
and thirst. But "they shall hunger no more, neither thirst any
more; neither shall the sun light on them, nor any heat. For the Lamb
which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them, and shall lead them
unto living fountains of waters: and God shall wipe away all tears from
their eyes." Revelation 7:14-17.
In all ages the Saviour's chosen have been educated
and disciplined in the school of trial. They walked in narrow paths on
earth; they were purified in the furnace of affliction. For Jesus' sake
they endured opposition, hatred, calumny. They followed Him through
conflicts sore; they endured self-denial and experienced bitter
disappointments. By their
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own painful experience they learned the evil of sin,
its power, its guilt, its woe; and they look upon it with abhorrence. A
sense of the infinite sacrifice made for its cure humbles them in their
own sight and fills their hearts with gratitude and praise which those
who have never fallen cannot appreciate. They love much because they
have been forgiven much. Having been partakers of Christ's sufferings,
they are fitted to be partakers with Him of His glory.
The heirs of God have come from garrets, from hovels,
from dungeons, from scaffolds, from mountains, from deserts, from the
caves of the earth, from the caverns of the sea. On earth they were
"destitute, afflicted, tormented." Millions went down to the
grave loaded with infamy because they steadfastly refused to yield to
the deceptive claims of Satan. By human tribunals they were adjudged the
vilest of criminals. But now "God is judge Himself." Psalm
50:6. Now the decisions of earth are reversed. "The rebuke of His
people shall He take away." Isaiah 25:8. "They shall call
them, The holy people, The redeemed of the Lord." He hath appointed
"to give unto them beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning,
the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness." Isaiah 62:12;
61:3. They are no longer feeble, afflicted, scattered, and oppressed.
Henceforth they are to be ever with the Lord. They stand before the
throne clad in richer robes than the most honored of the earth have ever
worn. They are crowned with diadems more glorious than were ever placed
upon the brow of earthly monarchs. The days of pain and weeping are
forever ended. The King of glory has wiped the tears from all faces;
every cause of grief has been removed. Amid the waving of palm branches
they pour forth a song of praise, clear, sweet, and harmonious; every
voice takes up the strain, until the anthem swells through the vaults of
heaven: "Salvation to our God which sitteth upon the throne, and
unto the Lamb." And all the inhabitants of heaven respond in the
ascription: "Amen: Blessing, and glory, and wisdom, and
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thanksgiving, and honor, and power, and might, be
unto our God for ever and ever." Revelation 7:10, 12.
In this life we can only begin to understand the
wonderful theme of redemption. With our finite comprehension we may
consider most earnestly the shame and the glory, the life and the death,
the justice and the mercy, that meet in the cross; yet with the utmost
stretch of our mental powers we fail to grasp its full significance. The
length and the breadth, the depth and the height, of redeeming love are
but dimly comprehended. The plan of redemption will not be fully
understood, even when the ransomed see as they are seen and know as they
are known; but through the eternal ages new truth will continually
unfold to the wondering and delighted mind. Though the griefs and pains
and temptations of earth are ended and the cause removed, the people of
God will ever have a distinct, intelligent knowledge of what their
salvation has cost.
The cross of Christ will be the science and the song
of the redeemed through all eternity. In Christ glorified they will
behold Christ crucified. Never will it be forgotten that He whose power
created and upheld the unnumbered worlds through the vast realms of
space, the Beloved of God, the Majesty of heaven, He whom cherub and
shining seraph delighted to adore--humbled Himself to uplift fallen man;
that He bore the guilt and shame of sin, and the hiding of His Father's
face, till the woes of a lost world broke His heart and crushed out His
life on Calvary's cross. That the Maker of all worlds, the Arbiter of
all destinies, should lay aside His glory and humiliate Himself from
love to man will ever excite the wonder and adoration of the universe.
As the nations of the saved look upon their Redeemer and behold the
eternal glory of the Father shining in His countenance; as they behold
His throne, which is from everlasting to everlasting, and know that His
kingdom is to have no end, they break forth in rapturous song:
"Worthy, worthy is the Lamb
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that was slain, and hath redeemed us to God by His
own most precious blood!"
The mystery of the cross explains all other
mysteries. In the light that streams from Calvary the attributes of God
which had filled us with fear and awe appear beautiful and attractive.
Mercy, tenderness, and parental love are seen to blend with holiness,
justice, and power. While we behold the majesty of His throne, high and
lifted up, we see His character in its gracious manifestations, and
comprehend, as never before, the significance of that endearing title,
"Our Father."
It will be seen that He who is infinite in wisdom
could devise no plan for our salvation except the sacrifice of His Son.
The compensation for this sacrifice is the joy of peopling the earth
with ransomed beings, holy, happy, and immortal. The result of the
Saviour's conflict with the powers of darkness is joy to the redeemed,
redounding to the glory of God throughout eternity. And such is the
value of the soul that the Father is satisfied with the price paid; and
Christ Himself, beholding the fruits of His great sacrifice, is
satisfied.
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