By J. L. Dagg
Chapter
3 IN THE LAST DAY JESUS CHRIST WILL COME TO JUDGE THE WORLD; AND
HAVING ASSEMBLED ALL MEN BEFORE HIM, WILL PASS SENTENCE ON THEM ACCORDING TO
THEIR WORKS.[1]
Natural religion leads us to expect future retribution; and of course some
sort of judgment, by which that retribution will be awarded. Even the heathen
mythology had its judges, Æacus, Minos, and Rhadamanthus, by whom the
dead had their place and condition assigned to them in the other world. But
the doctrine of a public, general judgment, is peculiar to revelation. This
teaches, that, besides the judgment passed on each individual when he leaves
this world, there will be a final judgment, in which all men will stand at the
judgment seat of Christ, and receive their final sentence from his lips. "God
hath appointed a day, in which he will judge the world in righteousness, by
that man whom he hath ordained."[2] "It is
appointed unto all men once to die, and after this the judgment."[3]
As the condition of each soul will be determined, when it leaves the body,
another judgment may, to our finite minds, appear to be unnecessary; but the
wisdom of God has determined otherwise. All the reasons for this divine
appointment, we cannot presume to understand; but we are able to conceive of
some important advantages which may arise from a general judgment.
The general judgment will publicly and impressively vindicate the ways of God,
in the view of all intelligent beings. The mystery of the divine
administration will then be fully unfolded; the wisdom and righteousness of all
God's dispensations will then be made apparent; the justice of the sentences
then pronounced will be rendered perfectly clear; and, on every creature, as he
leaves the tribunal, to go to the place assigned him, an impression will have
been made, which will last throughout eternity. It is for the glory of God,
that his perfections should thus be displayed, in the view of his intelligent
creatures; and the remembrance of this great day will constitute an important
element in the happiness or misery to which each individual will be adjudged.
The general judgment will be honorable to Jesus Christ. It is called "the day
of Christ."[4] When Jesus stood, as an arraigned
malefactor, before the Jewish council, he claimed, in their presence, to be the
Christ, and he referred to this day as the time when his claim would be
acknowledged. This will be the day of Christ, the day when every knee shall
bow to him,[5] and every tongue confess that
Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.[6]
The general judgment will extend to the bodies of men. The previous judgment,
at the death of each individual, affects the spirit only. But men are to be
judged according to the deeds done in the body, and it is fit that they should
be judged in the body, and especially inasmuch as the body is to participate in
the final retribution.
The general judgment will suitably mark the final victory over all God's
enemies. Among men, days of triumph have been observed, when wars have
terminated, and victory has been attained. In the great day of the Lord, all
the enemies of God will have been subdued; the kingdom, which, as rebels
against him, they have seized and claimed, will have been fully restored; and
universal peace and order will have been established in Jehovah's
empire. At this day of triumph, it is suitable that all creatures should be
present, to do honor to the victory, and to him by whom it has been achieved.
The judge on the last day will be Jesus Christ, the same who was condemned at
the bar of Caiaphas and of Pilate. How changed the scene! They who then
condemned him to death, will now tremble before him, and be condemned by him to
death eternal. "The Father has committed all judgment to the Son."[7] The transactions of the great day will form a
part of his mediatorial administration. Having undertaken to restore order to
God's empire, in which the rebellion of the human race had broken out, and
having assumed the office of Mediator for this purpose, it will be proper, in
this office, to complete the work; and therefore Christ the Mediator will be
the Judge in the last great day: "We must all stand before the judgment seat of
Christ."[8]
At the day of judgment Christ will make his second coming. This coming is
frequently spoken of in the Holy Scriptures. He instituted the Lord's supper,
to be observed until he come.[9] Believers are
described as looking for his appearing.[10] As
men look for a beloved friend who has gone away, leaving a promise of return;
so believers in Christ look for the return of their Lord, who has promised, "I
come quickly;"[11] and they pray, "Even so,
come, Lord Jesus."[12] He came, formerly,
with sin; not sin of his own, but the sin of his people, which the Lord
laid on him. Having fully expiated this by his death, he will come, the second
time, without sin unto salvation.[13] On this
great and terrible day, Christ will come to the salvation of his people, and
will, at the same time, take vengeance on them that know not God, and obey not
the gospel. In a subordinate sense, he is said to come, when he displays his
power, either in the deliverance of his people, or in the destruction of his
enemies. But all these times are over-
looked in the, computation, when, with reference to his appearing for judgment,
it is said, "he will come the second time." This will be the great day
of deliverance and of wrath. There are other comings mentioned in Scripture,
not included in this computation, which are only preparatory and subordinate.
An impression has often prevailed among the followers of Christ, that his
second coming was near at hand. This impression, when soberly entertained, has
a salutary influence. Compared with the eternity which is to follow, the
interval until the day of judgment is exceedingly short; and but a very little
part of this short interval is included in the life of any one individual;
whose preparation for judgment must be completed before he is called away by
death. It is therefore true concerning every one, that the time is short,[14] and that the Judge standeth before the
door.[15] But the expectation that Christ's
coming will be so hastened as not to leave time for the fulfilment of prophecy,
or for the measure of duty and suffering to which he has appointed us, is of
injurious tendency. An erroneous impression on this subject had so disquieted
the minds of the Thessalonian Christians, that Paul thought it necessary, in
his second epistle to them, to free them from its influence: "Be not shaken in
mind, or troubled, as that the day of Christ is at hand."[16] It may be that they had mistaken his design, when, in
his first epistle to them, he said, "We which are alive and remain unto the
coming of the Lord, shall not prevent them which are asleep."[17] They may have understood him to intimate, by his use of
the word "we," that he expected to be alive and remain when Christ should
appear. He may have used this word as including himself, in interest, in the
number of those who will be alive at the second coming; or he may intimate that
believers of each successive generation should regard themselves as placed, for
the time, on the watch-tower, to look for the coming of Christ, and that,
compared with those who had fallen asleep, all who at any time are alive and
remain, should regard themselves, though looking for his coming, as having no
advantage to prevent [go before, or get the start of] those that are asleep.
Whatever may have been Paul's design in using this mode of speech, it is clear,
from his second epistle, that he did not mean to make the impression that the
coming of Christ was so near at hand. He stated explicitly, that the day will
not come, "unless there be a falling away first, and the man of sin be
revealed."[18] It was necessary that time
should be allowed for the Romish apostasy. So now, there are various
prophecies remaining to be fulfilled; as, the calling of the Gentiles, the
conversion of the Jews, and the millennial state of the Church. All these must
be, accomplished before the coming of Christ; and, while these prophecies
remain unfulfilled, believers should not permit themselves to be troubled in
mind by those who would persuade them that the end of the world is just at
hand.
Some suppose that the coming of Christ, and the resurrection of the righteous
dead, will precede the millennium, and that the resurrection of the wicked will
be at the end of the thousand years. This opinion, according to which the
reign of Christ will be personal, is founded chiefly on Rev. xx. 4, 5: "And I
saw the souls of them that were beheaded for the witness of Jesus, and for the
word of God, and which had not worshipped the beast, neither his image, neither
had received his mark upon their foreheads, or in their hands; and they lived
and reigned with Christ a thousand years. But the rest of the dead lived not
again until the thousand years were finished. This is the first resurrection."
In carefully examining this passage, we may observe that the first resurrection
here mentioned does not include all the righteous dead, but only the martyrs;
and that it is not a resurrection of their bodies, but of their souls: "I saw
the souls of them, and they lived," &c. Making due allowance for the
boldly figurative language employed in this prophetical book, we way understand
this passage to mean, that generations of holy men will arise, at the time here
referred to, who will so much resemble the ancient martyrs in zeal and devotion
to the service of God, that it will be as if the souls of these martyrs had
returned in new bodies. So Elijah reappeared, in the person of John the
Baptist; not literally, but in the figurative sense in which we may interpret
the passage before us; which, so understood, teaches a spiritual, and not a
personal reign of Christ. It is true that Paul says, "the dead in Christ shall
rise first:"[19] but the meaning of this is,
that the dead in Christ shall rise before the living saints shall be changed.
The interval, however, he represents to be exceedingly short: "In a moment, in
the twinkling of an eye, the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised
incorruptible, and we shall be changed."[20]
Whether the wicked dead will be raised at the precise moment at which the
righteous dead will be raised, we are not expressly informed; but, from the
representations of the scene which are given in the Scriptures, we may infer
that one voice, one trumpet will call forth all the dead, and that one hour[21] will suffice for the resurrection of all.
In one and the same day,[22] the great day of
the Lord, he will be revealed in flaming fire, taking vengeance on them that
know not God; and will come, to be glorified in his saints, and admired of all
them that believe.[23]
The place of the final judgment will be on earth. Here Jesus was humbled,
condemned, and crucified; and here he will be glorified, and sit in judgment
over all the world. When he ascended from the earth, it was foretold that he
would return as he had ascended.[24] A cloud
received him out of the sight of his disciples,[25] who were gazing after him as he went up; and, on his
return, he will be soon coming in the clouds of heaven, with power and great
glory.[26] A multitude of angels and the
spirits of the just will attend him. The bodies of his saints, called forth
from their graves, will rise to meet him in the air, and reunited with their
spirits, will appear before him. The living saints will be changed and form a
part of the company at his right hand. The wicked dead will be raised, and
will stand on the left hand of the Judge. On what part of the earth the
Saviour way choose to fix the throne of judgment, we are not informed, nor is
it a matter of any moment. Why Sinai was selected for the giving of the law,
Calvary for the crucifixion, and Olivet for the ascension, we know not. It is
enough for us to know, that he will come, and that we must appear before him.
In the description of the great day, contained in the book of Revelation, it is
said, that the Judge will be seated on a great white throne, and that the books
will be opened; and that another book will be opened, which is the book of
life: and the dead will be judged out of the things which are written according
to their works.[27] The representation is
doubtless figurative, but we may learn from it that the decisions will be made
in perfect justice; and that the acquittal of the righteous will be an act of
grace. Their names will be found in the Lamb's book of life. They will be
accepted in that day, because they belong to Christ, and in proof of their
attachment to him, their work and labor of love in his cause, and towards his
people, will be brought into remembrance.[28]
In the transactions of this great day, notwithstanding the greatness of the
multitude that will be assembled, no individual will feel himself lost in the
immense throng, or concealed from the view of the omniscient Judge. Every one
will be brought to judgment, as if he were the only creature present, and every
one will give account of himself, and receive sentence for himself with as much
discrimination and perfection of justice, as if the judge were wholly absorbed
in the consideration of his single case. So rapidly do our minds move, even
now while bound to our sluggish bodies, that we can review our past history in
a few moments, and judge and condemn ourselves before God. With a rapidity
beyond our present conception, the deeds, words, and thoughts of our whole
lives will pass in review before us on that day, and we shall realize that the
eye of God is fixed on each particular with as thorough knowledge of it, as if
that deed, word, or thought, were the only one on which he sat in judgment.
How can we bear a scrutiny so severe, a knowledge so perfect? How shall we
abide a judgment so strict? Who shall be able to stand? |
|
[1] Rev. xx. 11, 12; Acts xvii. 30, 31; Eccl. xi. 9; xii. 14; Matt. xii. 36; 1 Pet. iv. 4, 5; 2 Cor. v. 10. [2] Acts xvii. 31. [3]Heb. ix. 27. [4]Phil. i. 6; 2 Thess. ii. 2. [5]Rom. xiv. 11. [6]Phil. ii. 11. [7]John v. 22. [8]Rom. xiv. 10. [9]1 Cor. xi. 26. [10]Heb. ix. 28. [11]Rev. xxii. 12. [12] Rev. xxii. 20. [13] Heb. ix. 28. [14] 1 Cor. vii. 29. [15] James v. 9. [16] 2 Thess. ii, 2. [17] 1 Thess. iv. 15. [18]2 Thess. ii. 3. [19] 1 Thess. iv. 16. [20] 1 Cor. xv. 52. [21]John v. 25. [22]Acts xvii. 31. [23]2 Thess. i. 8-10. [24]Acts i. 11. [25]Acts i. 9. [26]Matt. xxiv. 30; Rev. i. 7. [27]Rev. xx. 11, 12. [28] Matt. xxv. 34-40. |