No. 773
“Be of good courage, and he shall strengthen your heart, all ye that hope in the Lord.” (Psa. 31:24)
The opening of a New Year is like the opening of a new business ledger. It is a favorable time for evaluating the assets and liabilities of our characters and for putting into effect good plans or resolutions for the New Year. Those who make no resolutions make very little progress in building character. The poor fallen human nature needs all the braces and supports that a sound mind and will can give it. We are not advocating hasty or unreasonable vows, resolutions and pledges, thoughtlessly taken and soon broken. What we have in mind is a thoughtful, rational evaluation and a full determination to pursue the course that sound judgment tells us is the proper one. In general, the New Year is a time of preparation for a courageous fresh start in life.
The Scriptures everywhere encourage the Lord’s people to be full of faith, hope, confidence, and trust. The majority of the world are full of fear, apprehension, distrust, and worry. Consequently they fail to take full advantage of the opportunities they have. They know the pitfalls of sin and the troubles that surround them on all sides; they have good reason to be distrustful and fearful.
But the Lord’s people have a special relationship with Him. He has assured them that He will supervise their affairs, as would not have been the case had they not come into relationship with Him. They are, therefore, to hope in the Lord, to trust in Him. They are to heed the things which He has said, and to take courage in the thought that their affairs are under His supervision.
God’s people have stepped out of the world’s standards and into the standard of the Lord Jesus Christ – the standard of righteousness, truth, holiness, and opposition to sin and the Adversary. They will be beset by powerful enemies. Against them will be arrayed Satan himself, who will seek to oppose them, as he has opposed all of God’s plans. He can make no direct attack upon the Lord, but he can attack His Plan and those who believe in God. It was the Adversary who instigated the riots, the tumults and the persecutions in the Lord’s time on earth and subsequently instigated the persecution of the Lord’s people.
Satan has not done these things through his own direct actions, but through his deluded servants. He has opposed righteousness and all those who love righteousness. For this reason, the Lord’s people must have great courage; for if they allow the Adversary to beat their courage down, he will soon put them out of the battle entirely. A retreating soldier is of no more use than one who has not gone out to battle at all. Instead of losing courage, we are to resign our earthly interests to our Father and trust that He will guide us in the present life, and will overrule everything for our benefit: “And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose.” (Rom. 8:28)
Besides being opposed by the Adversary, we are opposed by the general spirit of the world. The world considers us foolish in thinking that we have any special divine supervision – for thinking that God loves us. They say that God made countless worlds and countless beings, so how can He have any special interest in us? They tell us that if there is a God, He is so great and we are so small that He cannot take any notice of us. Thus they attempt to beat down our faith. This is the sentiment of the world, even when it is not expressed. Whenever we come in contact with worldly people, we find they attempt to throw a wet blanket on our simple trust, even though they may not say a word to us. We need to have good courage and to hope in the Lord, as our opening text urges.
Additionally, each of us has an opponent in himself, in his own body, with its tendencies to sin. But if we have exchanged earthly interests and hopes for Kingdom interests and hopes, we are to turn our backs on sin. The Lord is testing us by our daily experiences, and we must be on guard to overcome the flesh. It requires a great deal of courage to fight down the tendencies to sin, but after battling with the weaknesses and frailties of the flesh, it requires still more courage to force our human bodies to sacrifice, to abandon earthly things, and to serve the Lord. It requires so much courage that we are of ourselves insufficient.
We are urged to put our trust in the Lord, and to believe as did the Apostle: “I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me.” (Phil. 4:13) His is a power sufficient for us. While it requires all the courage and hope we can muster to bring about the most successful result, the Lord supplies sufficient grace so that we may be overcomers. This does not mean that anyone will live a perfect life or fully exercise this good courage. We may partially fail from time to time, but our Lord is leading us on, and we learn valuable lessons from our failures. “Hope in the Lord” is to be backed up by “good courage” – a strong, proper, and godly courage.
There is a type of courage that is born of pride, which would tell us to not back down or to let anyone get ahead of us. Soldiers in battle will vie with one another, each desiring to do something especially conspicuous, which would bring him the applause of his comrades. They need something to inspire them, such as a desire for fame or love of country, in order to give them courage to run the risk of losing their own lives, or to take the lives of other human beings. This is the kind of courage that will help them to gain the victory in their battle, even though it be an unworthy motive for inspiring courage.
But courage that comes from right principles, based on faith in the Lord, is not one of bluster and swagger, but a courage that is noble and pleasing to God. It has its source in a realization that God is watching, is testing us to see whether we will prove faithful.
The exhortation to be of good courage applies regardless of our station in life. It would apply to a king on his throne, in that he should be courageous enough to do the right thing – that is, to do the Lord’s will. Such courage tells us to do our duty, whatever may be the Lord’s will for us. It tells us to have hope in the Lord, even though others may misunderstand our motives. We should have the good courage to stand for what is right, whether our reward is in this life or in the life to come.
This exhortation applies to those in business who are Christians. Their worldly friends may warn them that they will fail in business if they speak the truth. They will say that people will not patronize their businesses but will instead go to places where they will be told a host of lies. If they take such advice, they might do a larger business, but they will make a failure of the chief affair of their lives, seeking the reward of the Kingdom.
It applies also to the humblest working men and women, who should advocate for righteous principles, and be not faint-hearted and fearful of expressing the truth. This does not mean that they are to be contentious and take a contrary view on every question. However, where there is a principle at stake they should take a stand and defend their position, while acknowledging that others have a duty to act according to their own consciences. Thus even those who think differently would know that the one speaking to them had conviction, and that he was of good courage.
COURAGE PROPORTIONATE TO FAITH
The right kind of courage is necessary to each of God’s children because we all have trials and difficulties in life. The Lord is looking for this kind of courage, the courage that must be found in overcomers. Only overcomers will be granted any place in the Kingdom. Hence the lesson of our text is that we should be of good courage, because this is the way we demonstrate our faith in the Lord. He who hopes in the Lord and is loyal to the Lord will be courageous in proportion to his loyalty and his faith.
This kind of courage will serve us in all circumstances. For example, in addressing His disciples on one occasion our Lord said, “But beware of men: for they will deliver you up to the councils, and they will scourge you in their synagogues; And ye shall be brought before governors and kings for my sake, for a testimony against them and the Gentiles. But when they deliver you up, take no thought how or what ye shall speak: for it shall be given you in that same hour what ye shall speak.” (Matt. 10:17-19) The Lord’s disciples were humble and uneducated. For them to be brought before kings and governors and judges would naturally cause them much apprehension. What should they say? How could they answer those great, learned men? They realized their ignorance, but the Lord guided them.
Whatever circumstances may arise, the Lord’s people will have such faith and trust in God that they will conduct themselves courageously, relying on God’s power. The way in which God will give us the proper words and wisdom may vary according to circumstances. Perhaps they will come by suggestions from others or from hearing the testimony of someone else. It may be that an especially helpful text of Scripture will come to our mind. The important thing to remember is that our trust is in the Lord, and we are not to be in fear and trembling.
If we are in difficult circumstances, we are to remember what the Scriptures assure us: “The angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear [reverence] him, and delivereth them.” (Psa. 34:7) This thought should calm our minds and enable us to conduct ourselves courageously, feeling ourselves in close relationship with Him. Furthermore, because we are not wise enough to know exactly what God’s purposes for us may be, we cannot know exactly how the Lord prefers any matter to resolve.
TRUST IN HIM
As the early disciples pondered the things Jesus said were to happen to Him, they could not fathom that God would allow any disaster to befall such a good man. St. Peter said to Him, “Thou art the Christ, the Son of the Living God.” (Matt. 16:16) Not understanding how God could allow any harm to come to Him, the disciples concluded that the things He said must be figures of speech, just as when He said they were to eat His flesh and drink His blood. When He said that the Son of Man would be crucified, they thought it was one of His peculiar sayings that they could not understand.
Hence they were quite disturbed and astonished when He was arrested and taken before the Jewish Sanhedrin, and even more perplexed when, instead of using His powers and His eloquence, He was silent, and allowed Himself to be contradicted and maligned. When He was taken before Pilate, the disciples thought Jesus would surely not hesitate to speak up before him. They were again surprised and astonished when things turned out so contrary to what they had expected. But this course on our Lord’s part was necessary in the Heavenly Father’s Plan, not merely for the Lord Jesus, that He might suffer and then enter into His glory, but necessary also for the world, because the redemption price must be laid down, must be in the hands of justice.
The Lord did not declare that His people would in all cases be protected from earthly troubles. If His Wisdom deems it best in any way to allow us to be bruised and shamed as was our Master, we are to be of good courage. He will strengthen our hearts because we trust in Him. We know that He is too wise to err, and that there must be a motive, a reason for permitting it to happen. We know assuredly that the Lord’s people are precious in His sight – they are as the apple of His eye and all things are working together for their good.
Whatever may be the outcome of any matter in our lives, we are to accept it as from the Lord, whether we are able to discern the reason for it or not. We are to have faith and hope, even though the way is rough, and even though things might seem to be the very reverse of what we expected. “Wait on the Lord: be of good courage, and he shall strengthen thine heart: wait, I say, on the Lord.” (Psa. 27:14)
(Based on Reprint 5329.)
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THE JUBILEE IS AT HAND
“And he that sat upon the throne said, Behold, I make all things new.” (Rev. 21:5)
Bible chronology shows that in 1875 we entered upon a great Sabbath of one thousand years. This great Sabbath Day will bring neither the end of God’s dealings with humanity nor the destruction of the world. Instead, it will bring the completion of the creation of our race. The earth will become a world-wide paradise. The human family will be brought to perfection, and will fill the earth according to the original divine program and propagation will cease. Man was originally created in God’s likeness and was “very good.” The sex division was merely for the propagation of the race, and not designed to be permanent. (Gen. 1:28; Luke 20:35-36)
It was no more the divine purpose that man contend with sickness, sorrow, pain, weakness, and death than it was for the angels to be so afflicted. The same God that created the angels, and gave them happiness and perfection, created man and properly endowed him at the beginning. The present difference between the perfection of the angels and the mental, moral and physical decrepitude of humanity is explained by the Bible alone. It tells us that Adam was originally perfect and pleasing to God, and that his rejection by God and his subjection to death and all its accompanying ill effects are the results of his disobedience in Eden. (Rom. 5:12)
THE DIVINE PURPOSE FROM THE BEGINNING
The Bible assures us that God purposed human redemption from sin and death from the very beginning, so there was no turning point as far as His purpose was concerned. But as far as human observation could discern, the first manifestation of that purpose was the turning-point. That turning-point was the birth of Jesus, who was born into the world, not sinful and imperfect like Adam’s race, but “holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners,” that He might redeem mankind from their imperfect, dying conditions. (Heb. 7:26) His birth was the first step in the great divine plan, a step that ultimately lead to His death, which really began with His consecration to death at His baptism by John at Jordan; it was completed on Calvary when He cried, “It is finished!” (John 19:30)
The resurrection of Jesus was the next step in the divine program. Put to death in the flesh, He was quickened in the spirit, still more glorious than before He was made flesh. (1 Pet. 3:18; Phil. 2:9-11) The next step in the program was the anointing of those of His followers who were the most holy to be fellow-members of the glorious Church under His Headship. This took place at Pentecost, and the work begun there has continued throughout the Gospel Age. The anointing began with the most holy of the Jews, and in due time He began to anoint the most holy among the Gentiles.
It was the divine purpose that the risen Christ, the second Adam, have a Bride class, the second Eve, composed of a divinely foreordained number. When this has been completed, this age will end and the new age will be fully inaugurated. Most Bible students agree that we are very near this time which will usher in the next step of the divine program – the Messianic Kingdom, with Christ and His Church-Bride associated with Him in the power and great glory necessary for the ruling, judging and uplifting of all the families of the earth.
For the divine program to consume so much time in preparing for the blessing of the world, what a great blessing must be planned! This is fully attested by both the Old and New Testaments. They speak of the new dispensation now dawning as “times of refreshing” and “times of restitution.” (Acts 3:19-21) They tell us that the earth will yield her increase, as we see already beginning. (Ezek. 34:27) They tell us that the knowledge of the glory of God will fill the whole world, breaking the shackles of ignorance and superstition. (Hab. 2:14) We see abundant evidence of this coming about.
EARTH’S COMING GLORY
The Bible tells us the next step in the program will require a thousand years, and will accomplish all that God has declared. The earth will then be brought to perfection and even now we see evidences of this beginning. Millennial blessings are not to come to the world by a process of evolution, but as a result of God’s lifting the veil from our eyes and permitting us to see what to do and how to do it. This divine providence is manifested in all the great inventions of our time. These have not gradually evolved, but have practically sprung into existence before our eyes at an ever accelerating rate since 1799, the beginning of the period known in the Bible as the day of God’s preparation. (Nah. 2:3) During this period God has been preparing the world for the Millennium.
Our greatest inventors acknowledge that their work is not just the result of personal effort, but rather a result of inspiration. The eyes of their understanding have been opened to things kept secret since the foundation of the world, which have speedily been put into practical form. The same is true for the progress in Bible study and in the understanding of the divine plan of the ages. That progress came not merely by meticulous study, but rather as an illumination by the Holy Spirit; God’s due time had come for those of an honest mind to know the Truth. It is hard to believe that the wonderful inventions of our time and the wonderful knowledge of the Bible now possible is merely the beginning of God’s blessings. Yet it must be so; it must be that we are on the verge of still greater blessings for all mankind.
UNSCRIPTURAL EXPECTATIONS FROM THE PAST
The horrible doctrines of the Dark Ages clouded and hindered thought, handicapping the world in every matter of progress and intelligence. The creeds of the Dark Ages deceived us into thinking of the Almighty as a cunning, powerful being who had planned before the foundation of the world to injure us, and who purposed to torture eternally the vast majority of the billions He had created.
While Christians have long realized that God does not purpose to leave the world forever in a sin and death condition, they have looked for divine victory in the wrong direction, because they have accepted the theories of the Dark Ages, theories formulated when the Bible was not in the hands of the people. The belief was that God wished the Church to establish the Millennium by converting the world from sin to righteousness. Attempts have been made to accomplish that goal. Inquisitions and persecutions were invoked to force the people into church membership. The nominal church has attempted to convert the world by inflating church records and calling people Christians who are not Christians at all, yet even by these methods so-called “Christians” are a minority of the earth’s population.
Looking at the character of those thus forced or enticed into church membership, we see they are nominal Christians, Christians in name only. While we believe that in every nation and denomination there have been some true saints of God, members therefore of the true Church of God, nevertheless, taken as a whole, we see that what Jesus said of some in His day must be applicable in what today is called Christendom: “Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts [desires] of your father ye will do.” (John 8:44)
Are the people of so-called Christian nations doing the works of God or of the devil? The Master said, “Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them.” (Matt. 7:20) The fruits of Christ’s Spirit are meekness, gentleness, patience, brotherly kindness, and love. Anger, malice, hatred, envy, and strife are works of the flesh and of the Devil. The Apostle said this: “Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his.” (Rom. 8:9) Surely, we should realize that it is a huge mistake to call these nations Christ’s Kingdom – “Christendom.”
We now see that the Bible tells a very different story from that told by the “doctrines of devils.” (1 Tim. 4:1) It tells us that God’s time for saving the world from sin and death will be during the thousand years of Messiah’s Kingdom. It tells us that then the world will have every good opportunity, arranged on their behalf by divine wisdom, justice, love, and power.
We see that the dead are not in Heaven nor in the Catholic Purgatory, nor in the still worse Protestant eternal torture. The Bible declares that they “sleep in Jesus.” (1 Thess. 4:14) If not for Jesus and His work of redemption, they would be dead in the same sense that the lower animals are dead. Because Jesus died for sins, there will be a resurrection from the dead; therefore, the dead are spoken of as being asleep, unconscious, waiting for the morning of Messiah’s coming and for the glorious blessings of resurrection promised.
THE SEVENTH AND LAST TRUMPET
When our minds were filled with the fears of the Dark Ages, we once thought of the “trump of God” as though it were a trumpet of the Devil, as though it implied a horrible disaster to befall the human family. Now the eyes of our understanding are opened to discern more clearly the Bible teachings, and we are amazed to find that the trumpet of God is symbolic, like the preceding six trumpets. It relates to Messiah’s Kingdom and to the world’s release from the bondage of sin and death. Thank God for the seventh trumpet, the last trump, the trump of love!
Under the Jewish law arrangement, this time was pictured as the “Jubilee.” God provided that every fiftieth year would be a Jubilee year, in which all debts would be cancelled and all bondages terminated. This was not only a beneficial arrangement for the Jews, but it was a type of the future. It pictured the full forgiveness of sin and the full release of humanity from all the consequences of Adam’s disobedience. At the opening of the year of Jubilee, the priests blew upon silver trumpets, proclaiming that the Jubilee had come, and that all might return to their former estate.
According to Scriptural chronology, the great antitypical Jubilee of a thousand years began in 1875. Now is the proper time for all the servants of God to blow the silver trumpet of Truth and to inform the people that it is God’s will that they be freed from the bondage to sin and death. Such proclamations have been going forth from Bible students since the beginning of the antitypical Jubilee. Many have opposed this message. Just as among the Israelites there was a nominal priesthood who opposed the message of Jesus and the Apostles, today there is a nominal priesthood who oppose the message of Truth, the message that Messiah is about to take His great power and reign.
ALL THINGS TO BE MADE NEW
In the meantime, humanity has been increasingly anxious concerning its bondage, and has restlessly been seeking liberty – sometimes wisely, sometimes unwisely. Some officials, employers, teachers, etc. have accepted that change is imminent and have governed, managed, and taught accordingly. Others resist the change and have invoked still further the powers of ignorance and superstition, with a view to continuing the present order of things which God has declared will be replaced by a new order. Christ is now taking to Himself His great power and is about to begin His reign. Through that reign He will make all things new. (Rev. 21:5)
If all people recognized that the great clock in the divine plan has tolled out a change of dispensation, what joy there would be! How marvelous it would be if all could see that the new order is due to be established and the old order is due to cease. But because selfishness has hardened so many hearts, the world is not ready for the restitution blessings, and hence God, foreknowing this, has foretold the Time of Trouble which now is at our door.
According to God’s Word, the Time of Trouble will be the prelude to Messiah’s Kingdom. The Prophet Elijah was given a vision of the three great phases of this trouble – war, revolution, and anarchy – represented by wind, earthquake and fire. (1 Kings 19:11-12) Using Jerusalem as a figure of Christendom, the Prophet Ezekiel describes the war and revolution with the term “sword.” He describes the anarchy of the Time of Trouble by the figure of the noisome beast (a beast is opposed to law and order). (Ezek. 14:21) Additionally, he shows that famines and pestilences will play their part in these troubles, as we are now seeing.
After the anarchy, Satan will attempt one final effort against God’s people, which will be against His fleshly Israel. One of the signs of our times as a fulfilment of prophecy has been the return of Jews to their homeland and the rebirth of Israel as a nation. Seeing this and realizing that his days of mischief are about over, Satan will stir up the anarchistic remnants of all nations to plunder Israel. (Ezek. 38; Ezek. 39; Zech. 12:1-9; Zech. 14:1-3) These plunderers will be gathered by Satan from among all nations to sorely afflict Israel in what the Bible calls “Jacob’s Trouble.” (Jer. 30:1-9)
The fire of anarchy will consume our present civilization. The Lord said that unless those days would be shortened, no flesh would survive. (Matt. 24:22) But our Lord assured us that those days will be shortened – that the Elect will take the Kingdom and establish righteousness and peace on the firm foundation of justice. Man’s extreme hardship will become God’s opportunity, wisely provided before the foundation of the world.
(Based on What Pastor Russell Wrote for the Overland Monthly, pages 383-386, with additions.)
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ANNOUNCEMENT
The date of our Lord’s Memorial is April 13, 2022 after six p.m.
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