Their Reception—Life from the
Dead.
We reach now a most important
climax in this chapter. First
the Holy Spirit pointed us to
the Apostle Paul as a pattern of
what God in His rich mercy will
yet do for the people, whom He
hath not cast away. Then we
learned that Israel's apostasy
is neither complete nor final,
and in our last meditation the
fact was before us that God
permitted His people to fall, to
be set aside for a time, to
bring, by their fall, salvation
to the Gentiles, with the
purpose in view "to provoke them
to jealousy."
We are now led on in the
wonderful ways of God. "But if
their fall be the world's
wealth, and their loss the
wealth of the nations, how much
more their fulness? For I speak
to you, nations, inasmuch as I
am Apostle of the nations, I
glorify my ministry; if by any
means I shall provoke to
jealousy them which are my
flesh, and shall save some from
among them. For if their casting
away be the world's
reconciliation, what their reception, but life from the
dead?" (verses 12-15).
Let us notice that the apostle
here glorifies his ministry as
apostle of the nations. The
whole epistle was addressed to
the Romans* mostly believers
from the Gentiles, living in
Rome, later to become the prison
of Paul and at last the seat of
Christianity in its apostate and
corrupt form. But here the
apostle makes still more
prominent that his word is meant
for those of the Gentiles. He
says: "I speak to you the
nations." We have, therefore,
before us a message, which is of
special value and importance to
Gentiles. We have learned before
that Israel's disobedience and
fall brought salvation to the
Gentiles.
Thus their fall was the wealth
of the world, their loss the
wealth of the nations (or
Gentiles) and their casting away
the world's reconciliation. But
this is not all. All this is far
from fulfilling that gracious
promise made to the father of
the nation, Abraham, when God
told him "in thy seed all the
nations of the earth shall be
blest." Israel's fall, the means
in God's purpose to bring
salvation to the Gentiles, is
not the final thing and the
blessing the Gentiles received
by their fall is not the fullest
blessing which God has in store
for the nations of the world. There is a "much
more" in Romans xi. In turning
to the fifth chapter of this
epistle we find the same two
significant words used by way of
contrast. There it is the "much
more" of salvation. "For if,
when we were enemies we were
reconciled to God by the death
of His Son, much more, being
reconciled, we shall be saved by
His life" (Rom. v:10). Here it
is the "much more" of
dispensational blessing.
The Gospel is preached now to
the Gentiles for one great
purpose. This purpose is not the
conversion of the world, but it
is to take out of them a people
for His name. (Acts xv:14). This
people taken out or called out,
form the church (ecclesia), the
body of the Lord Jesus Christ,
to which every true believer
belongs. It is, like the human
body, composed of so many
members, a number, known to God
alone. This body will be
complete some day and then the
preaching of the Gospel of grace
must of necessity cease, and the
offer of salvation in its
present form and under present
conditions as made to the
Gentiles, will come to an end.
It is all wrong to speak of
world conversion in this age, in
which the church of the Lord
Jesus Christ is being called.
There is absolutely not a single
promise in the Gospels, nor in the epistles, nor in any part
of the New Testament which
assures us of world con-version,
or gives us a right to pray for,
or expect the conversion of the
world by present agencies
through the church. The world
will be converted. Nations will
walk in the light of God, and
the knowledge of the glory of
the Lord will cover the earth as
the waters cover the sea, the
curse of sin will be removed,
nations will learn war no more,
righteousness and peace shall
kiss each other; all this and
scores of other blessings will
literally come to pass. But all
these promises and predictions
about subdued nations and a
kingdom of peace extending from
sea to sea are found exclusively
in the Old Testament Scriptures
and not in the New.
It is a sad fact that
Christendom has erred in the
interpretation of these
predictions and turned the time
and manner of their fulfillment
upside down. In this error lies
the cause of all the present day
confusion and apostasy of the
professing church. Israel, which
is so prominent on the pages of
the Old Testament in connection
with these great blessings, has
been interpreted to mean "the
church." The time in which the
blessings are to be realized to
be the age now, instead of the
age which is to come. The
declarations of the Lord about this age and its ending,
like the days of Noah and Lot,
have been completely ignored,
and the same has been done with
the statements of the Apostles
in the epistles. Nearly the
whole of Christendom attends to
Israel's earthly calling and,
attempting to do a work which
God never means to have done in
this age, fails most shamefully
in it. As one has said, "The
spiritualizing of Israel's
promises has been the
carnalizing of the church."
If we turn to the Old Testament
we find, as we have shown in our
"Harmony of the Prophetic Word,"
everything revealed in perfect
order. The last event seen in
Old Testament prophecy is always
the kingdom come, the nations
blest and under the rule of
Jehovah; peace on earth and the
deliverance of groaning
creation.
This great and last event of Old
Testament prophecy, a subdued
earth ruled over by the King of
Righteousness and Peace, is
preceded by the judgments
of God executed in the earth and
above all by the spiritual and
national restoration of His
ancient people, Israel. The
fullest blessing for nations and
for the earth is altogether
conditioned by the conversion of
Israel, to become head of the
nations, and possessing her
God-given inheritance. Israel converted and
restored will result in the
conversion of the nations of the
earth. But Israel's conversion
and restoration to the land will
not be till the second coming of
the Son of Man, the Lord Jesus
Christ, in great power and
glory. Everywhere in the Old
Testament we find first of all
the visible manifestation of the
Lord of Glory, and at the time
of His personal, visible and
glorious manifestation, His
earthly people are delivered and
Jerusalem is restored. We have,
then, three great events in Old
Testament prophecy, still
future:
1. The personal, visible and
glorious manifestation of the
Lord from heaven. This Lord is
the Lord Jesus Christ. 2. The conversion and national
restoration of Israel. 3. The result of Israel's
conversion and restoration,
nations blest and going to
Jerusalem to worship the Lord of
Hosts, etc.
This order cannot be reversed.
It is the divine program. If we
were to prove the above
statements we could go through
every prophetic book of the Old
Testament and to the Psalms and
point out hundreds of passages,
where this is clearly taught.
Read, as striking proofs,
Zechariah ii:6-13; Isaiah
lix:20-21, and read the Ix
chapter of Isaiah. "The gifts and calling of God
are without repentance," we find
later in our chapter. He has
undertaken to bless nations and
the earth through Israel, His
earthly people. When Israel
failed and was disobedient, He
had another gracious way to
reveal. Salvation came to the
Gentiles, to take out a people
for His name. This is the work
in the present age and that is a
parenthesis. As soon as this is
accomplished He resumes His work
with Israel.
And now we are able to
understand the "much more" of
dispensational truth.
Israel is promised in the Old
Testament Scriptures a fulness
and a time when they shall be
received. This fulness comes
when the Lord comes in power and
glory as the King. Now, if God
brought blessing to the Gentiles
by their fall, how much more
will He bless the nations when
their fulness comes. Through
their fulness the whole world
will receive the fullest
blessing, blessings minutely
given in the Old Testament and
literally to be fulfilled.
But there is a phrase in the
passage before us which claims
our special attention. "Their
reception shall be life from the
dead." What does it mean, "life
from the dead?" It is strange
that this phrase should be interpreted as meaning a physical
resurrection. Upon this passage,
as well as the passage "all
Israel shall be saved," and a
few others, has been founded the
evil doctrine, unscriptural
throughout, that all Jews who
have lived will be raised from
the dead, saved and unsaved, and
they all will be brought back to
the land to enjoy the blessings
of the millennial kingdom. It is
a larger Jewish Hope —a Jewish
restitution of all things and
consequently those who hold this
doctrine are forced to believe
also in a restitution of all
things for Gentiles. When we
reach the fact that "all Israel
shall be saved" we expect to
follow this more fully.
Physical resurrection is here
not at all in view. Nor is it in
many passages in the Old
Testament, where physical
resurrection is simply used as a
type of a great change. It is so
in the New Testament. Of the
prodigal it is said "for this my
son was dead and is come to
life." These literalists could
not claim that he was physically
dead. The vision of the valley
full of dry bones is generally
used by these men who teach a
restitution by resurrection. But
the vision is a vision to
describe vividly the national
resurrection of Israel and not a
physical one. The dry bones are
the whole house of Israel (Ez. xxxvii:12); but are these dry
bones literally dry bones or are
they used to typify Israel's
death spiritually and nationally? If they are literally dry
bones how could they say: "Our
bones are dried and our hope is
lost; we are cut off for our
parts?" Surely, literal dry
bones have no mouth to speak. If
we read that they are in graves
and the Lord will open their
graves, it means that He is
bringing His people back from
their graves among the nations,
where they are buried
nationally. Numerous other
passages could be cited in which
physical resurrection is used to
typify the spiritual and
national revival of Israel.
"Life from the dead" does not
mean a literal resurrection. It
has a double meaning. First it
means when their reception comes
it will be for them, spiritually
and nationally, life; they will
live spiritually and as a
nation.
In the second place the term
means that the result of
Israel's reception, coming into
the place of blessing, will be
for the world at large "life
from the dead." This is
identical with the term, which
the Lord uses in Matthew xix:28,
"the regeneration'' it will be a
great change which takes place,
in resurrection power.
There is one book which
illustrates very blessedly the passage before us.
It is the book so much belittled
and ridiculed in our day, the
Book of Jonah.
Our Lord said to the Pharisees,
who demanded a sign from Him
that no sign would be given them
but the sign of the prophet
Jonas. (Matt, xii :38.) He then
spoke of His coming resurrection
foreshadowed by Jonah's
experience. No doubt the proud
and learned Pharisees turned
away from Him; and with a smile
the rationalistic Sadducee may
have said, "What nonsense, Jonah
never lived, it is all a myth,
there is no resurrection." Oh,
the adulterous generation!
Modern Pharisee-ism and
Sadduceeism, Higher Critics,
etc., are likewise an adulterous
generation. They tell us what a
beautiful book the book of Jonah
is, what sublime lessons it
teaches. But did Jonah ever
live? Of course not, they say—
he never lived, his life is a
myth—how could a fish swallow a
man? etc. Awful consequences!
The Lord Jesus used the
deliverance of Jonah as a type
of His blessed resurrection, the
foundation of our holy faith. If
He did not know that Jonah
lived, if He used a myth to
typify His resurrection—well,
then, His resurrection may not
have been a real one, and how
could He be the Son of God? Jonah's life is in different
respects typical of Christ, but
it has still another meaning
which makes known the divine
wisdom and inspiration. The life
of nearly every servant of God
in the Old Testament has a
twofold typical application—the
one, Christ, the Messiah, and
the other, Israel, the chosen
people of God. Follow out this
thought and apply it to Joseph,
David, Daniel, the prophets,
etc. Jonah is a type of Israel.
The whole history of the seed of
Abraham, past, present, and
future, is contained in a
nutshell in that book.
1. Jonah's call. He is sent by
Jehovah to preach to Nineveh. He
knows God while Nineveh is in
darkness. So God prepared
Himself Israel a nation to show
forth His praises. Salvation is
of the Jews. Through them He
desires to make known His loving
kindness and His redemption. In
the seed of Abraham all the
nations of the earth are to
receive blessing. These are
God's gifts and calling. They
are without repentance (Rom.
xi:29).
2. Jonah is disobedient. He
turns his back upon God and
flees from His face. He goes on
board of a merchantman. He goes
in the opposite direction. So
Israel became an apostate
people, and the Jew turns
merchant. Forsook God and
lightly esteemed the rock of his salvation. Like Jonah,
disobedient to the heavenly
vision, instead of being a
blessing becomes a curse among
the nations.
3. Trouble soon comes upon
Jonah, the disobedient servant
of God. The storm of disaster
tosses his ship upon the wild
waves of the angry sea.
Everything is against him
because he rebelled against God.
Thus with the Jews. Misfortune
after misfortune, storm after
storm has broken over them since
they rejected God and their King
Messiah. They are tossed about
by the nations. The sea always
represents nations in the Word.
4. Jonah does not deny his God
and his nationality. He said, "I
am a Hebrew and I fear the Lord,
the God of heaven, which has
made the sea and the dry land."
So the Jew in his apostasy still
professes to be a believer in
God, fears His name and does not
deny that he is a Jew.
5. Jonah is cast overboard. He
is given up to the angry waves.
He is seen struggling in the
waves. Typical of the Jew being
cast away, though not forever.
6. The men in Jonah's ship when
they saw that as soon as Jonah
was in the water the waters
calmed down, these men, who were
all heathen, feared the Lord
exceedingly, and offered a
sacrifice unto the Lord and made vows. What a wonderful
illustration of the very
statement in this epistle: "By
their fall salvation has come to
the Gentiles/' The Gentiles have
received salvation when the Jew
was set aside nationally.
7. Jonah is miraculously
preserved in the belly of a sea
monster. (There is nothing in
the Hebrew to show that it was a
whale.) He is to have his abode
there for three days and three
nights. He does not lose his
life and existence, but he is
put into a grave and is there
miraculously preserved. The Jew
is likewise in his grave among
the nations, nationally dead,
but still God keeps the Jew as
He did Jonah. The Jew is God's
standing miracle. No infidel can
explain away the Jew and his
miraculous existence.
8. Jonah was not digested by the
fish. He remained there
undigested. The nations have not
digested the Jews. This people
shall dwell alone and not be
reckoned among the nations. The
Jew is still a Jew. Assimilation
has failed.
9. Jonah at the end of the
appointed time commenced to
repent in his grave. He cried to
God. He wished himself back to
His holy temple, and he finished
his prayer with the believing
shout, "Salvation is of the
Lord." The Jews will also
repent. There are unmistakable signs of a changed
attitude of the Jew noticeable.
Still, before that great
national repentance comes, there
will be likewise first a great
tribulation. Like Jonah many are
to-day desiring for His holy
temple, and they are getting
ready to return to the land. At
last they will acknowledge that
salvation is of the Lord, and
welcome their King with the
shout "Blessed is He that cometh
in the name of the Lord."
10. God made the fish vomit out
Jonah. He that scattered Israel
will gather them again. They
will be brought back to the land
and restored. They will build
the waste places, the
desolations of many generations.
The Word of God has hundreds of
promises which belong to literal
Israel and speak of a literal
restoration. If we do not
believe that, we might as well
close the Bible and become
Higher Critics, unbelievers,
etc.
11. Jonah is sent the second
time, and he follows the
command. So Israel is yet to
fulfill its grandest mission.
Their King, our coming Lord,
will commission them again and
send them forth to proclaim His
salvation. Israel will then
follow obediently.
12. The whole city of Nineveh
repented after hearing the
apostate, the punished, and the
restored Jew preach. A whole*
city was swept by a revival. The masses
were saved. Now is the time for
the salvation of individuals.
There is no such thing at this
present time as saving the
masses or converting the world.
The masses will be saved and the
world converted through the
preaching of the Jews when they
are converted and restored to
the land and Jesus is crowned as
their King and sits upon the
throne of His Father David.
This then illustrates, at least
in part and in a faint way, what
their reception is and means,
"Life from the dead." |