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Acts 17:31 (quoted above). Here is "a.s.surance" in the sense of proof or ground of evidence. The context is suggestive: G.o.d had long borne with the sins of men, and in a sense, overlooked them.
Therefore men have thought that G.o.d would continue to do so. But no, this shall not be; there is a day of judgment coming, the evidence of which lies in the fact of the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
II. THE JUDGE--CHRIST.
John 5:22, 23, 27; 2 Tim. 4:1; 2 Cor. 5:10; Acts 10:42; 17:31.
The Man of the Cross is the Man of the Throne. Note the expression "Because he is the Son of Man." That indicates His fitness to judge: He can sympathize. But He is equal with the Father. This too indicates His competency to judge, for it implies omniscience.
The texts which speak of G.o.d as judging the world are to be understood as referring to G.o.d the Son. No appeal can be made from the Son to the Father.
III. THE NATURE OF THE JUDGMENT.
The erroneous idea that there is to be one great general judgment which is to take place at the end of the world, when all mankind shall stand before the great white throne, is to be guarded against.
The judgments of the Bible differ as to time, place, subjects, and results.
1. THERE IS A JUDGMENT THAT IS ALREADY PAST--THE JUDGMENT AT THE CROSS.
John 5:24; 12:31; 2 Cor. 5:21; Gal. 3:13; 1 Pet. 3:24. At this judgment bar Satan was judged and his power over the believer broken. Here also the sins of the believer were judged and put away.
2. THERE IS A PRESENT JUDGMENT WHICH IS TAKING PLACE DAILY IN THE LIFE OF THE BELIEVER.
1 Cor. 11:31, 32; 5:5; 1 Tim. 1:20; cf., for ill.u.s.tration, 2 Sam.
7:14, 15; 12:13,14. This continual judgment must be going on in the life of the believer or there will be judgment from G.o.d because of the consequent failure to grow in grace. There must be constant and continual judging of sin as it comes up in the believer's life (1 John 1:5-7).
3. THERE IS A FUTURE JUDGMENT.
a) Of the Saints.
1 Cor. 3:8-16; 2 Cor. 5:10; 1 Cor. 4:5. This is to be a judgment with reference to the works, not the salvation, of the believer.
It is called "the judgment seat of Christ." That the saints are here referred to is clear from 2 Cor. 5:1, 5, 7, 9; also 1 Cor. 4:5 which says that those who are judged "shall have praise of G.o.d."
This is not true of the wicked. This is a judgment, not for destiny, but for adjustment, for reward or loss according to our works, for position in the kingdom; every man according as his work shall be.
b) Of the Living Nations.
Matt. 25:31-46. This judgment will take place at the coming of Christ with His saints. Note three things in this chaper: first, the marriage supper of the Lamb (w. 1-13); second, the judgment of the saints (vv. 14-30); third, the judgment of the living nations (vv. 31-46). This is not a general judgment of good and bad, for there are three cla.s.ses here. "My brethren" can hardly refer to the saints, for then it would be "inasmuch as ye have done it unto yourselves, ye have done it unto me." Nor is the Church in this judgment, for she is already translated and rewarded as we have seen. The Church no more belongs to the nations than does Israel.
The nations are those who deal with Israel through the great tribulation. The "brethren" are probably the Jewish remnant who have turned to Christ during the great tribulation and whom the Antichrist has severely persecuted as also have many of the wicked nations, like Russia today. This is a judgment of nations that are living; there is no mention of the dead.
c) Of the Great White Throne.
Rev. 20:11-15. It is called the final judgment and takes place at the close of the millennium, after the judgment of the living nations (Matt. 25). It is a judgment of "the dead"; no mention is made of the living in connection therewith.
Note the difference between the judgments of the Living Nation and of the Great White Throne: the former at the beginning, the latter at the close of the millennium; one deals with the living, the other with the dead; one deals with conduct towards "the brethren," the other with general sins recorded in the books.
d) Of Israel.
Ezek. 20:33-44; Psa. 50:16-22. Takes place probably at the end of the great tribulation.
e) Of the Fallen Angels.
Jude 6; 2 Pet. 2:4. Believers are a.s.sociated with Christ in this judgment (1 Cor. 6:3).
D. THE FINAL DESTINY OF THE WICKED.
I. PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS.
1. DIFFERENCE BETWEEN FUTURE OF THE RIGHTEOUS AND WICKED.
2. DIFFICULTY OF FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE.
3. DISPARITY IN NUMBER OF THE SAVED AND LOST.
4. PROPHECY VS. HISTORY.
II. THE WICKED DIE IN THEIR SINS.
III. THE WICKED ARE NOT ANNIHILATED.
IV. THE WICKED ARE RAISED FROM THE DEAD FOR JUDGMENT.
V. THE PUNISHMENT DESCRIBED.
1. DEATH.
2. ETERNAL.
3. PUNISHMENT.
4. FIRE.
5. DARKNESS.
D. THE FINAL DESTINY OF THE WICKED.
"Every view of the world has its eschatology. It cannot help raising the question of the whither, as well as of the what and the whence?
'0, my Lord,' said Daniel to the angel, 'what shall be the end of these things?' (12:8). What is the end, the final destiny of the individual? Does he perish at death, or does he enter into another state of being; and under what conditions of happiness or woe does he exist there? What is the end, the final aim of the great whole, that far-off divine event towards which the whole creation moves?
It is vain to tell man not to ask these questions. He will ask them, and must ask them. He will pore over every sc.r.a.p of fact, or trace of law, which seems to give an indication of an answer. He will try from the experience of the past, and the knowledge of the present, to deduce what the future shall be. He will peer as far as he can into the unseen; and, where knowledge fails, will weave from his hopes and trusts pictures and conjectures.
"The Christian view of the world also has its eschatology. The Christian view, however, is positive, where that of science is negative; ethical, where it is material; human, where it is cosmogonic; ending in personal immortality, where this ends in extinction and death. The eschatology of Christianity springs from its character as a teleological religion--it seeks to grasp the unity of the world through the conception of an end or aim."--_James Orr._
This is probably the hardest of all the doctrines of Christianity to be received. If we ask the reason why, we receive various answers.
Some would tell us that this doctrine is unwelcome to many because they feel themselves guilty, and their conscience tells them that unless they repent and turn to G.o.d this awful doom awaits them.
Others believe that it is because the thought of future punishment strikes terror to people's hearts, and therefore this doctrine is repulsive to them. To others again, the thought of future anguish seems utterly incompatable with the fatherly love of G.o.d. Yet it is acknowledged to be a remarkable fact that both Jesus and John, who more than any one else in the New Testament represent the element of love in their lives and teaching, speak most of the future anguish of the wicked.
That future punishment of the wicked holds a prominent place in the teachings of the Scriptures there can be no reasonable doubt.
What is between the covers of the Bible is the preacher's message.
Yet great care must be exercised in the teaching or proclamation of this doctrine. After all it is not the saying of hard things that pierces the conscience of people; it is the voice of divine love heard amid the thunder.
Yet there must be no consciousness of cowardice in proclaiming the doctrine of future retribution, however awful its delineation may be. Fear is a legitimate motive to which we may appeal, and while it may be cla.s.sed among the lower motives, it is nevertheless true that it is the only motive that will effectively move some people to action.
SOME RECOGNIZED FACTS.
There are certain preliminary facts which should be recognized in the discussion of this subject: