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   Articles on this page         
1. Lo-Ammi "Not my People"
2. What is a Dispensation?
3. Another Gospel-A.W.Pink

 

THE ONE GREAT SUBJECT OF THE WORD  CHRIST

Lo-Ammi "Not My people"

Lo-Ammi "Not My people" By Charles H. Welch Under the heading PEOPLE it is demonstrated from Scripture that Israel alone, with one exceptional case, are called "People"; the nations of the earth are never so called except in the plural-"peoples". To one nation only has the title "My people" ever been given and that is Israel. The exception is found in Titus 2:14, where the church is spoken of as a peculiar people-but that title is used while Israel themselves are "lo-ammi", not My people. At Acts twenty-eight Israel pass off the scene and the parenthetical dispensation of the Mystery begins. See articles ACTS 28, DISPENSATION, ISRAEL, COVENANT and PARENTHESIS. This great dispensational feature indicated by the words loammi we approach under the following headings: (1). The testimony of Acts thirteen to the lo-ammi period that was approaching. (2). The O.T. illustration provided in the book of Judges. (3). The prophecy of Hosea, where the name lo-ammi occurs. Acts thirteen records the opening of Paul's great missionary activity. A Jew who withstood the preaching of the gospel to the Gentiles is blinded and a Gentile is saved-an anticipation in dramatic fashion of the sequel found in Acts twenty-eight, where the nation is blinded and salvation sent to the Gentiles. Acts 13:16-41 is the record of Paul's witness in the synagogue at Antioch, and it opens and closes with a reference to Israel which involves the recognition of the "lo-ammi" principle. We give a condensed structure of this section: Acts 13:16-41 A 16-21. Resume of Israel's History. Lo-ammi period B 22-39. David, Salvation, Forgiveness A 40,41. Beware. Lo-ammi period threatened. In order to understand the dispensational importance of Paul's references to Israel's history, we must turn for a while to the record given in two parts of the O.T., namely the book of Judges and the book of Kings. Among the many items of dispensational importance in the book of Judges, one question of outstanding interest is the way in which Israel and Israel's affairs influence the computation of times and dates. The question at first seems simple enough. FIRST SERVITUDE. Mesopotamia (Judges 3:8) 8 YEARS OTHNIEL. REST (Judges 3:11) 40 YEARS SECOND SERVITUDE. MOAB (Judges 3:14) 18 YEARS EHUD. REST (Judges 3:30) 80 YEARS THIRD SERVITUDE. CANAAN (Judges 4:3) 20 YEARS DEBORAH AND BARAK. REST (Judges 5:31) 40 YEARS FOURTH SERVITUDE.MIDIAN (Judges 6:1) 7 YEARS GIDEON. REST (Judges 8:28) 40 YEARS TOLA (Judges 10:2) 23 YEARS JAIR (Judges 10:3) 22 YEARS JEPHTHAH (Judges 12:7) 6 YEARS IBZAN (Judges 12:9) 7 YEARS ELON (Judges 12:11) 10 YEARS ABDON (Judges 12:14) 8 YEARS FIFTH SERVITUDE. PHILISTINES (Judges 13:1) 40 YEARS TOTAL 369 Years All one has to do is to add up the periods of the judges' rule and the intervening years of rest, and the thing is done. As there is no better way of producing conviction than to try things out for oneself, we have done so with the result shown above. It will be observed that we have put down all the period concerned, whether they be period of servitude or of rest. Turning now to the N.T., we find that the apostle Paul has something to say about this period, and we therefore turn To Acts 13:16-22, in order to check our total. WILDERNESS WANDERING (Acts 13:18) 40 YEARS PERIOD OF JUDGES (Acts 13:20) 450 YEARS SAUL'S REIGN (Acts 13:21) 40 YEARS TOTAL 530 YEARS Ignoring, for the moment, the years in the wilderness and the reign of Saul, we observe that Paul's statement regarding the period of the judges differs from our own conclusion by eighty one years, a difference too great to be covered by the suggestion that the Apostle is using round numbers when he says "about the space of 450 years". There are other checks, however, that we must take into account. Jephthah, who lived at the very period under discussion, tells us (Judges 11:26) that the disputed territory had .beer: held by Israel for 300 years, dating from the end of the forty years' wandering. Solomon also speaks very definitely about the number of years that intervened between the Exodus from Egypt and the year in which he began to build the Temple of the Lord. He speaks of this year as "the 480th year after the children of Israel were come out of the land of Egypt", and the fourth year of his reign (1 Kings 6:1). If we compare Solomon's period with that given by Paul in Acts thirteen, we find a difference of ninety-three years, which, again, is too great to be set aside as of no importance. In order to make this point clearer, we will set out Paul's computation again, in conjunction with the period covered by Solomon's account. WILDERNESS WANDERING 40 YEARS PERIOD OF JUDGES 450 YEARS SAUL'S REIGN 40 YEARS DAVID'S REIGN (1 Kings 2:11) 40 YEARS SOLOMON'S FIRST 3 COMPLETE YEARS (1 Kings 6:1) 3 YEARS 573 YEARS DEDUCT-SOLOMON'S COMPUTATION 480 YEARS TOTAL TO ACCOUNT FOR 93 YEARS Let us now look back over the list of items given in the chronology of the book of Judges. We observe that there are five periods of servitude, varying in length from seven years to forty. Adding these periods together we have the following: FIRST SERVITUDE (Judges 3:8) 8 YEARS SECOND SERVITUDE (Judges 3:14) 18 YEARS THIRD SERVITUDE (Judges 4:3) 20 YEARS FOURTH SERVITUDE (Judges 6:1) 7 YEARS FIFTH SERVITUDE (Judges 13:1) 40 YEARS TOTAL 93 YEARS This is indeed a revelation. The very number of the years of Israel's servitude is equal to the difference between the accounts of Solomon and Paul. If we look more attentively at Solomon's statement, we find that he does not say that the total number of years that intervened between the two points was 480, but that "in the 480th year" the Temple was commenced. The number is ordinal (480th), not cardinal (480), showing that while Paul was using the calendar of the world, Solomon was using the calendar of the Lord, and in that calendar no notice is taken of periods when Israel are in bondage. From this emerges a principle. When Israel are Lo-ammi, . time is not counted prophetically. We must now review the book of the prophet Hosea, where the prophetic import of the name Lo-ammi is worked out. Hosea. The restoration Israel, symbolized and promised The prophecy of Hosea follows those of Jonah and Amos so far as chronological order is concerned, but stands at the head of the twelve minor prophets in the Hebrew canon. The name Hosea is the Hebrew word for "salvation" and appears in chapter one, in the promise "But I will have mercy upon the house of Judah, and will SAVE them by the Lord their God, and will not save them bar bow, nor by sword, nor by battle, by horses, nor by horsemen" (Hoe. 1:7). This promise might well be taken as the key promise of the prophecy. The word reappears in the closing section of the prophecy. "Thou shaft have no god but Me; for there is no SAVIOUR beside Me" (Hoe. 13:4). "I will be thy king: where is any other that may SAVE thee in all thy cities?" (Hos. 13:10). "Asshur shall not SAVE us; we will not ride upon horses; neither will we say any more to the work of our hands, Ye are our gods: for in Thee the fatherless findeth mercy" (14:3). The reader will not fail to observe how this last reference perfectly balances the first, even to the inclusion of the word, "mercy". This insistence upon the word "salvation" and "save" suggested by the name of the Prophet, is a feature that is noticeable in another grouping of the prophets in the Hebrew canon. Tie term "prophet" covers some books which are historical. rather than predictive and opens with the book of Joshua, and closes with the book. of the minor prophets considered as one' book. The "prophets" therefore of the Hebrew canon opt with "Joshua" the Salvation of the Lord, the Captain, and' closes with "Joshua." the Salvation of the Lord, the High Priest The whole prophetic section of the O.T. -being bounded by the name borne by THE Saviour, for "Jesus" is but the Greek spelling of Joshua, as a reference, to Acts 7:45 and Hebrews 4:8 will show. A disquisition on such a theme as "the nature of God" is naturally outside the scope of studies such as this, but none should be able to read the words "I will . . . save them by the LORD their God" (Hos. 1:7) without being struck by its peculiar phraseology. It is "The Logy" Who is the speaker, verse 4, "And the LORD said . . . I will avenge . . : I will break . . . And (God, the word supplied by the AN) said . . . I will no more . . . I will utterly . . . I will have mercy &c. and will save." If the passage had read "I will save them by Myself" it would have been readily understood. It must be remembered that of "God, Absolute and Unconditioned" we know, and can know nothing. He Himself is greater than all His names, and by His very nature Unblameable. In this verse in Hosea we see, as it were, God Himself, referring to Himself in the realm of the manifest and the conditioned. He is "Jehovah THEIR God", Who in fulness of time became Man and was known as "The Man Christ Jesus The opening chapters of Hosea (1-3) are chiefly characterized by the fact that the Prophet enacts in his own family life the message that he has to tell, and this is followed by another section (4-14) in which the Prophet, while still using symbol; speaks the message by word of mouth. "Go take unto thee a wife" (1:2). "Go yet, love a woman" This is "the beginning of the word of the Lord BY Hosea". "Hear the word of the Lord, ye children of Israel" (4:1). This is the continuance of the prophecy of Hosea. The word translated "beginning" is not the same as that found in Genesis 1:1. It is the Hebrew chalal, and is found again in the margin of Hosea 8:10, where the text reads "sorrow". It may appear strange to the casual reader that a word can mean either "beginning" or "sorrow", but the fact is, that the idea of a "beginning" is a derived meaning, the primary idea of chalal being "to perforate", thence by stages "to lay open", "to give access and so profane or defile", and eventually "to begin" in the sense of "opening". While a verbal connection between the word "beginning" and the subsequent strange episode in the life of the prophet would not be evident to the English reader, Hosea, who was commissioned by God to "take a wife of whoredoms" (Hos. 1:2) would scarcely fail to note the word "beginning" was derived from the word meaning "to lay open, profane, defile", and employed by Moses and other writers for the very pollution and profanation he was called upon to exhibit (Lev. 21:'7,9,14; 19:29). It does not necessarily follow that Gower, the daughter of Diblaim, was an immoral woman. It means that she was of "Israel" as distinct from "Judah", for Israel, that is the Tier Tribes, had become idolators, having their own sanctuary at Beth-el. We have already learned about the "altars of Beth-el" from the prophet Amos, and Hosea refers to Beth-el in 10:15 and 12:4 in a markedly contrasted manner. The two marriage contracts into which Hosea entered, are highly significant, and must now be examined. A 1 :2. "Go take a wife of whoredoms" B 1 :2. Meaning, the departure of the land from the LORD C 1 :3. Hosea takes Gower D 1 :4-2:23. E 1 :4-9. The three children. a Jezreel "I will avenge" Prophetic b Lo-ruhamah Significance "Not . . , mercy' c Lo-ammi "Not My people" F 1:10,11,2:1. Prophetic import of the three names F 2:2-22. Prophetic fulfilment of three names E 2:23. The three children a Jezreel "I will sow's b Ruhamah "Mercy" c Ammi "My people" A 3:1. "Go yet love . . . an adulteress" B 3:1. Meaning. Israel, who looks to other gods C 3:2. Hosea buys her, with the price of a slave D 3:4,5 E 3:4. Many days F 3:4. Abide without a king etc. Prophetic E 3:5. Afterwards Significance F 3:5. Return . . . Lord and David their king E 3:5. Latter days. It is evident by this disposition of the subject-matter, that these two marriage contracts entered into by the Prophet wets intended to set forth in symbol the relationship of the Lord Israel, their defection, the long period of their estrangement and their final restoration. The names of the three children which were born were most certainly given because of their typical meaning. The name of the wife, Gower, does not appear to have been chosen because of its meaning, but because of its association. Gower was the name of a northern people, of Japhetic origin (Gen. 10:2). Some believe that from these descended the Cimerii, the ancestors of the Cymry or the Welsh. Israel by their sins and idolatry had put themselves in the position of the far-off Gentiles. The three children of this marriage were named by God's instruction Jezreel, Lo-ruhamah and Lo-ammi (Hos. 1:4,6 and 9). Jezreel. First it should be observed that there is in this name a paronomasia between Israel (Yisrael) and Jezreel (Yizrael). Then, it must be remembered that two words similar in sound, provide a further prophetic foreshadowing. The Hebrew word "to sow" is zara, the Hebrew word "to scatter" is zarah, so that the expressions "may God sow" and "may God scatter" appear very similar to the eye and ear in the original. Israel were to be "scattered" among the nations (Lev. 26:33, Jer. 31:10), but eventually they were to be "sown" again in their own land (Jer. 31:2'n. The prophet Zechariah uses the word "sow" with the meaning equivalent to "scatter" (Zech. 10:9). The scattered tribes of Israel were known as "the dispersion" (Ezek. 12:15, John 7:35) and "the twelve tribes scattered abroad" (Jas. 1:1) where the Greek word for "seed" spora enters into the composition of the word diaspora "the dispersed or scattered". In this name, therefore, of Hosea's firstborn son, the whole of Israel's history is compressed. They shall be scattered, but they shall at last be gathered. The names of the two children that followed are prophetic of the condition of Israel during this scattering, Lo-ruhamah meaning "not having obtained mercy", Lo-ammi meaning "not My people". The "Lo-ammi" period of Israel's scattering is of the utmost importance to the right understanding of the dispensational place of the Mystery and the church of the One Body. Israel became "lo-ammi" at Acts 28:28, when for the first time in history it could be said "the salvation of God is sent unto the Gentiles" independently of Israel. In God's good time, a complete reversal will be made of all the conditions that are now associated with Israel's blindness, which reversal is the subject of Hosea 2:23-(1) "I will sow", Jezreel, the second meaning attached to the Hebrew, name; (2) "I will have mercy", removing the negative "lo" from the name Lo-ruhamah; and (3) "My people", removing the negative "lo" from the name Lo-ammi. Great shall be the day of Jezreel when this blessed reversal takes place (Hos. 1:11). The second relationship of Hosea is given in chapter three. The word translated "friend" in Hosea 3:1 is the Hebrew rea which differs from the word translated "evil" in the vowel points, and is usually translated ra. The LXX translators trans'. late this verse "go yet, and love a woman that loves evil things, and an adulteress", and it is in line with the truth for which this symbol stands that these words should refer to the same woman -Gomer-who had acted unfaithfully even as Israel had done. We sincerely hope that by so concluding we have not said evil, of an innocent person, and must of course leave the matter. the judgment of the reader, or, better still, to the judgment of "that day". The woman in view had evidently become seriously involved,: for the price paid by Hosea was the price demanded for the liberation of a slave. The symbolism of this new marital transaction is then explained: "For the children of Israel shall abide many days without a King, and without a prince, and without a sacrifice, and without an image, and without an ephod, and without teraphim. Afterward shall the children of Israel return, and seek the LORD their God, and David their king: And shall fear the LORD and His goodness in the latter days" (3:4,5). The interval of the "many days" is to be characterized by .a mutual "abiding" or "waiting". The woman was to "abide" without further unfaithfulness, the man would abide and wait also. This waiting negative attitude is explained by the sixfold negation of verse 4. Israel has had no "king" since the days of their captivity. On the other hand, the very scattering among the nations has made it impossible for any foreign prince to rule over them. Since the destruction of Jerusalem, Israel have been deprived of the right to offer sacrifice, but, since the days of their captivity they have never again fallen under the old spell of idolatry, they have had no priest in the true sense of the word, but neither have they teraphim. The Bible student needs no explanation of these terms, except perhaps the last, teraphim. This word is variously explained, but always with a consciousness that much to do with its origin. and intention is unknown. Dr. J. E. Shelley contributed a suggestive article to the Bible League Quarterly in 1939 in which he speaks of the "generations" which compose the bulk of the book of Genesis, and suggests that these "ancestral tablets" were called teraphim by association with Terah the father of Abraham, and says that "certain Jewish legends represent Terah as actually a maker of idols". The word "teraphim" occurs but six times in the English of the A.V. All the references, apart from Hosea three, being found in Judges seventeen and eighteen. The word occurs, however, fifteen times altogether in the O.T., being translated "image", "idolatry" and "idol". It was the teraphim that Rachel stole and hid (Gen. 31:19-35). It was the teraphim that Michal placed in the bed vacated by David (1 Sam. 19:13,16). In 1 Samuel 15:23, Ezekiel 21:21 and Zechariah 10:2 it will be seen that the teraphim were consulted and associated with witchcraft and divination. "When the temple in Jerusalem was burned in A.D. 70 all the genealogical records of Israel's tribes were utterly destroyed. There is no man among the Jews today who can prove definitely of which tribe he is, by giving his genealogical records" (Dr. J. E. Shelley). Israel had long been without a king, when they entered their lo-ammi condition at Acts twenty-eight. The last thing to go at the destruction of the temple would have been their genealogical records. Since that date Israel has "waited", and must wait until a priest stands up with Urim and Thummim-in other words, until the Lord Himself returns. The words of Hosea 6:1,2 suggest that the period covered by this "abiding" will be "two days", which in the symbolical use of the term may cover the two thousand years that may intervene before their complete restoration. As we have no certain knowledge as to when this period actually started, it is useless to attempt to compute the date of Israel's restoration, but we can read the signs of the times. The return of Israel, with the confession that they will make, constitutes the closing chapter of this prophecy. All is graciously reversed. Instead of being lo-ammi and lo-ruhamah the fatherless find mercy (Hos. 14:3). Their backsliding is healed, and this restored people grow as the lily, have the beauty of the olive, the odour of Lebanon, with their fruit derived alone from the Lord. Finally, let us never forget that, not only will Israel be "not My people" during this dark period of their history, but God declared "I will not be your God". Let those who treat the record of Acts twenty-eight with scant concern, think again what the intervening nineteen hundred years would have been like had no parenthetical dispensation come into being.


"RIGHT DIVISION"

Dispensation 
By Charles H. Welch
 

The word dispensation is the translation of the Greek oikonomia, a word that has become well known in the anglicized form ECONOMY. Crabb discriminates between economy and management thus:

  'Economy has a more comprehensive meaning than management: for it includes the system and science of legislation as well as that of domestic arrangements, as the economy of agriculture ... political, civil, or religious economy'.

It is a secondary and derived meaning of the word, that uses it as a synonym of frugality, for a truly economical use of money, sometimes may mean very lavish spending. We can speak of the 'economy of nature', and by so doing refer to the operations of nature in generation, nutrition, preservation and distribution of plants and animals. Macaulay writing of David Hume said: 'David Hume, undoubtedly one of the most profound political economists of his time'.

The Greek oikonomia is made up of the word oikos 'house' and nemo 'to administer', 'to deal out', 'to distribute'. The word oikonomia is employed by Plato for the management of a household and oikonomia and oikonomos and oikonomeo are found in the LXX. In Isaiah 22:19,21 where the A.V. reads 'station', 'government', the LXX reads oikonomia 'stewardship'. Oikonomos translates the Hebrew Al ha Beth 'over the house' in 1 Kings 4:6; 16:9; 18:3 and in four other places. We have gone thus far afield in order that the reader may have first-hand information concerning the use of the term from ancient to modern times. We now give a concordance of the three words that are found in the Greek New Testament.


      Oikonomeo
      Luke 16:2. Thou mayest be no longer steward.

      Oikonomia
      Luke 16:2. Give an account of thy stewardship.
      Luke 16:3. Taketh away from me the stewardship. 
      Luke 16:4. When I am put out of the stewardship. 
      1 Cor. 9:17. A dispensation (of the gospel).
      Eph. 1:10. That in the dispensation of the fulness.
      Eph. 3:2. The dispensation of the grace of God.
      Eph. 3:9. The dispensation of the mystery (R.V.).
      Col. 1:25. According to the dispensation of God. 
      1 Tim. 1:4.  A dispensation of God which is in faith (R.V.).

      Oikonomos
      Luke 12:42. That faithful and wise steward.
      Luke 16:1. Rich man, which had a steward.
      Luke 16:3. The steward said within himself.
      Luke 16:8. Commended the unjust steward.
      Rom. 16:23. Erastus the chamberlain of the city.
      1 Cor. 4:1. Stewards of the mysteries of God.
      1 Cor. 4:2. It is required in stewards ... found faithful. 
      Gal. 4:2 Is under tutors and governors. 
      Tit. 1:7. Blameless, as the steward of God. 
      1 Pet. 4:10. Good stewards of the manifold grace of God. 


 

'The Greek word rendered dispensation is oikonomia and refers to the act of administering. By the figure Metonymy, the act of administering is transferred to the time during which that administering is carried on' (How to Enjoy the Bible, Dr. E. W. Bullinger<
http://www.levendwater.org/boeken/enjoy/index.html>).

How many 'dispensations' are indicated in the Scriptures? This is a question that is more easily asked than answered. Every single believer who has been entrusted with stewardship of truth adds to the number of 'dispensations', but this aspect of the matter is of course not intended by the question. When we refer to the different 'dispensations' we refer to those subdivisions of the ages, in which the revealed will of God, carrying differing obligations, has been made known, and put into force, and in practically every case, the administration or stewardship of these separate and differing administrations, are found to have been entrusted to some chosen servant of the Lord. Moses, for example, is inseparable from the dispensation of law, and 'Moses verily was faithful in all his house' (Heb. 3:5).

The following subdivision of the Purpose of the Ages does not claim to be perfect or complete, but no real distinction in administration has been ignored, though some may have been merged (as for example the special stewardship of John the Baptist, the period under Saul before the accession of David and others, which would swell the list unduly).


      Outstanding Dispensations

      (N.B. - Some may overlap, and more than one can run together at the same time).
    
       
      (1) Innocence. Adam unfallen. Paradise enjoyed.
      (2) Adam to Noah. The Fall to the Flood.
      (3) Noah to Babel. N.B. - Some features of Genesis 9 remain unchanged.
      (4) Babel to Abraham. The Nations and the Nation.
      (5) Abraham to Egypt. The Exodus marks a critical change.
      (6) Exodus to Sinai. The covenant 430 years after the promise.
      (7) Sinai to Jericho. The forty years wandering.
      (8) Jericho to Saul. The land entered.
      (9) David to Christ. Here there are subdivisions which we have not noted.
      (10) The Earthly Ministry of Christ, His Birth, Life, Death, Resurrection, Ascension.
      (11) Pentecost to Peter in Prison, Acts 2 to 11.
      (12) Paul's First Ministry. The Gentile a wild olive contrary to nature.
      (13) Paul's Prison Ministry. The dispensation of the grace of God and the dispensation of the Mystery.
      (14) The Resumption of Pentecost. The seven churches of Revelation 2,3.
      (15) The Day of the Lord. The Apocalypse.
      (16) The Millennial Kingdom and Revelation 20.
      (17) The Period between the end of the Millennium and the Great White Throne.
      (18) The End. The goal reached. God all in all.
    


No significance must be attached to the numbers that stand before any one dispensation. Paul's Prison Ministry happens to be No. 13 in this list, but the very questionable period from Sinai to Jericho is No. 7. Anyone is at liberty to add further subdivisions as the study of the Word makes such dispensations, administration, or stewardships clear.

A word perhaps is called for in connection with the subheading that suggests that two dispensations may run together. If a dispensation is but another name for an age it is clear that two 'ages' cannot run together, but in any one period of time there may be more than one stewardship in exercise. Galatians 2:7-9 makes it clear that Paul had an apostleship and a stewardship that differed from that of Peter, but which was exercised during the self-same period. Or again, Romans 1:18 to 2:29 and Acts 17:25-28 make it clear that at the same period that Israel had the law, the covenants and the service of the tabernacle with all its rich typical teaching, the nations of the earth were under a dispensation of conscience and the witness of the works of creation.

John's Gospel with its insistence upon the Giver of life, is addressed to those who did not know the meaning of the Hebrew word Rabboni and so could not be Jews. It was written after the whole of Paul's ministry had ceased, it can be preached to-day without invading the smaller circle of faith encompassed by the Prison Epistles (see the article JOHN<
http://www.levendwater.org/analysis/a2/john.htm>). It will be seen that a mere list of dispensations cannot set forth the whole truth of the matter, and must be used with discrimination. The office of Dispensational Truth is to decide whether any particular doctrine be it command, promise, calling or prophecy - does or does not pertain to any particular individual or company, and the recognition of these varying dispensations is therefore essential if we would walk worthy of our calling, and preach the truth for the present time.

Before attempting to explain or expound any particular portion of Scripture, the following interrogation, which is but the recognition of the fact that there are a succession of dispensations observable in the Bible, will prove a valuable guide.

  1.. Is the verse in question in the Old Testament or in the New Testament.?

   
  2.. If in the Old Testament is it in the Law, or the prophets, before or after Abraham, before or after David, etc.?.

   
  3.. If in the New Testament is it in the Gospels, if so which, for each gospel has its own peculiar viewpoint (see THE FOUR GOSPELS)?

   
  4.. If in the Acts, is it in the period covered by Pentecost (Acts 2 to 12) by the early ministry of Paul (Acts 13 to 19), by the interval (Acts 20 to 28) or by the Prison Ministry of Paul?


Another Gospel
By A. W. Pink

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      Satan is not an initiator but an imitator. God has an only begotten Son-the Lord Jesus, so has Satan-"the son of Perdition" (2 Thess.2:3). There is a Holy Trinity, and there is likewise a Trinity of Evil (Rev. 20:10). Do we read of the "children of God," so also we read of "the children of the wicked one" ( Matthew 13:38). Does God work in the former both to will and to do of His good pleasure, then we are told that Satan is "the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience" (Eph 2:2). Is there a "mystery of godliness" (1 Tim. 3:16), so also is there a "mystery of iniquity" (2 Thess 2:7). Are we told that God by His angels "seals" His servants in their foreheads (Rev 7:3), so also we learn that Satan by his agents sets a mark in the foreheads of his devotees (Rev. 13:16). Are we told that "the Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God" (1 Cor. 2:10), then Satan also provides his "deep things" (Greek-Rev. 2:24). Did Christ perform miracles, so also can Satan (2 Thess. 2:9). Is Christ seated upon a throne, so is Satan (Greek-Rev. 2:13). Has Christ a Church, then Satan has his "synagogue" (Rev 2:9). Is Christ the Light of the world, then so is Satan himself "transformed into an angel of light" (2 Cor. 11:14). Did Christ appoint "apostles," then Satan has his apostles, too (2 Cor. 11:13). And this leads us to consider: "The Gospel of Satan."

      Satan is the arch-counterfeiter. The Devil is now busy at work in the same field in which the Lord sowed the good seed. He is seeking to prevent the growth of the wheat by another plant, the tares, which closely resembles the wheat in appearance. In a word, by a process of imitation he is aiming to neutralize the Work of Christ. Therefore, as Christ has a Gospel, Satan has a gospel too; the latter being a clever counterfeit of the former. So closely does the gospel of Satan resemble that which it parodies, multitudes of the unsaved are deceived by it.

      It is to this gospel of Satan the apostle refers when he says to the Galatians, "I marvel that ye are so soon removed from Him that called you into the grace of Christ unto another gospel: which is not another, but there be some that trouble you, and would pervert the Gospel of Christ" (Gal. 1:6,7). This false gospel was being heralded even in the days of the apostle, and a most awful curse was called down upon those who preached it. The apostle continues, "But though we, or an angel from heaven preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto you, let him be accursed." By the help of God we shall now endeavor to expound, or rather, expose this false gospel.

      The gospel of Satan is not a system of revolutionary principles, nor yet a program of anarchy. It does not promote strife and war, but aims at peace and unity. It seeks not to set the mother against her daughter nor the father against his son, but fosters the fraternal spirit whereby the human race is regarded as one great "brotherhood." It does not seek to drag down the natural man, but to improve and uplift him. It advocates education and cultivation and appeals to "the best that is within - It aims to make this world such a comfortable and congenial habitat that Christ's absence from it will not be felt and God will not be needed. It endeavors to occupy man so much with this world that he has no time or inclination to think of the world to come. It propagates the principles of self-sacrifice, charity and benevolence, and teaches us to live for the good of others, and to be kind to all. It appeals strongly to the carnal mind and is popular with the masses, because it ignores the solemn facts that by nature man is a fallen creature, alienated from the life of God, and dead in trespasses and sins, and that his only hope lies in being born again.

      In contradistinction to the Gospel of Christ, the gospel of Satan teaches salvation by works. It inculcates justification before God on the ground of human merits. Its sacramental phrase is "Be good and do good"; but it fails to recognize that in the flesh there dwelleth no good thing. It announces salvation by character, which reverses the order of God's Word?character by, as the fruit of, salvation. Its various ramifications and organizations are manifold. Temperance, Reform Movements, "Christian Socialist Leagues," Ethical Culture Societies, "Peace Congresses" are all employed (perhaps unconsciously) in proclaiming this gospel of Satan?salvation by works. The pledge card is substituted for Christ; social purity for individual regeneration, and politics and philosophy, for doctrine and godliness. The cultivation of the old man is considered more practical than the creation of a new man in Christ Jesus; whilst universal peace is looked for apart from the interposition and return of the Prince of Peace.

      The apostles of Satan are not saloon-keepers and white-slave traffickers, but are for the most part ordained ministers. Thousands of those who occupy our modern pulpits are no longer engaged in presenting the fundamentals of the Christian Faith, but have turned aside from the Truth and have given heed unto fables. Instead of magnifying the enormity of sin and setting forth its eternal consequences, they minimize it by declaring that sin is merely ignorance or the absence of good. Instead of warning their hearers to "flee from the wrath to come" they make God a liar by declaring that He is too loving and merciful to send any of His own creatures to eternal torment. Instead of declaring that "without shedding of blood is no remission," they merely hold up Christ as the great Exemplar and exhort their hearers to "follow in His steps." Of them it must be said, "For they being ignorant of God's righteousness and going about to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God" (Rom. 10:3). Their message may sound very plausible and their aim appear very praiseworthy, yet we read of them?"for such are false apostles, deceitful workers, transforming themselves (imitating) into the apostles of Christ. And no marvel; for Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light. Therefore, it is no great thing [not to be wondered at] if his ministers also be transformed as the ministers of righteousness, whose end shall be according to their works" (2 Cor. 11:13-15).

      In addition to the fact that today hundreds of churches are without a leader who faithfully declares the whole counsel of God and presents His way of salvation, we also have to face the additional fact that the majority of people in these churches are very unlikely to learn the Truth themselves. The family altar, where a portion of God's Word was wont to be read daily is now, even in the homes of nominal Christians, largely a thing of the past. The Bible is not expounded in the pulpit and it is not read in the pew. The demands of this rushing age are so numerous, that multitudes have little time and still less inclination to make preparation for the meeting with God. Hence the majority who are too indolent to search for themselves, are left at the mercy of those whom they pay to search for them; many of whom betray their trust by studying and expounding economic and social problems rather than the Oracles of God.

      In Proverbs 14:12 we read, "There is a way which seemeth right unto a man; but the end thereof are the ways of death." This "way" which ends in" death" is the Devil's Delusion?the gospel of Satan?a way of salvation by human attainment. It is a way which "seemeth right," that is to say, it is presented in such a plausible way that it appeals to the natural man: it is set forth in such a subtle and attractive manner, that it commends itself to the intelligence of its hearers. By virtue of the fact that it appropriates to itself religious terminology, sometimes appeals to the Bible for its support (whenever this suits its purpose), holds up before men lofty ideals, and is proclaimed by those who have graduated from our theological institutions, countless multitudes are decoyed and deceived by it.

      The success of an illegitimate coiner depends largely upon how closely the counterfeit resembles the genuine article. Heresy is not so much the total denial of the truth as a perversion of it. That is why half a lie is always more dangerous than a complete repudiation. Hence when the Father of Lies enters the pulpit it is not his custom to flatly deny the fundamental truths of Christianity, rather does he tacitly acknowledge them, and then proceed to give an erroneous interpretation and a false application. For example: he would not be so foolish as to boldly announce his disbelief in a personal God; he takes His existence for granted and then gives a false description of His character. He announces that God is the spiritual Father of all men, when the Scriptures plainly tell us that we are "the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus" (Gal. 3:26), and that "as many as received him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God" (John 1:12). Further, he declares that God is far too merciful to ever send any member of the human race to Hell, when God Himself has said, "Whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the Lake of Fire" (Rev. 20:15). Again; Satan would not be so foolish as to ignore the central figure of human history?the Lord Jesus Christ; on the contrary, his gospel acknowledges Him to be the best man that ever lived. Attention is drawn to His deeds of compassion and works of mercy, the beauty of His character and the sublimity of His teaching. His life is eulogized, but His vicarious Death is ignored, the all-important atoning work of the cross is never mentioned, whilst His triumphant and bodily resurrection from the grave is regarded as one of the credulities of a superstitious age. It is a bloodless gospel, and presents a crossless Christ, who is received not as God manifest in the flesh, but merely as the Ideal Man.

      In 2 Corinthians 4:3 we have a scripture which sheds much light upon our present theme. There we are told, "if our Gospel be hid, it is hid to them that are lost: In whom the god of this world [Satan] hath blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ, who is the image of God should shine unto them." He blinds the minds of unbelievers through hiding the light of the Gospel of Christ, and he does this by substituting his own gospel. Appropriately is he designated "The Devil and Satan which deceiveth the whole world" (Rev. 12:9). In merely appealing to "the best that is within man," and in simply exhorting him to "lead a nobler life" there is afforded a general platform upon which those of every shade of opinion can unite and proclaim this common message.

      Again we quote Proverbs 14:12?"There is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death." It has been said with considerable truth that the way to Hell is paved with good intentions. There will be many in the Lake of Fire who commended life with good intentions, honest resolutions and exalted ideals?those who were just in their dealings, fair in their transactions and charitable in all their ways; men who prided themselves in their integrity but who sought to justify themselves before God by their own righteousness; men who were moral, merciful and magnanimous, but who never saw themselves as guilty, lost, hell-deserving sinners needing a Saviour. Such is the way which "seemeth right." Such is the way that commends itself to the carnal mind and recommends itself to multitudes of deluded ones today. The Devil's Delusion is that we can be saved by our own works, and justified by our own deeds; whereas, God tells us in His Word : "By grace are ye saved through faith. ..not of works lest any man should boast." And again, "Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to His mercy He saved us."

      A few years ago the writer became acquainted with one who was a lay preacher and an enthusiastic "Christian worker." For over seven years this friend had been engaged in public preaching and religious activities, but from certain expressions and phrases he used, the writer doubted whether this friend was a "born again" man. When we began to question him, it was found that he was very imperfectly acquainted with the Scriptures and had only the vaguest conception of Christ's Work for sinners. For a time we sought to present the way of salvation in a simple and impersonal manner and to encourage our friend to study the Word for himself, in the hope that if he were still unsaved God would be pleased to reveal the Saviour he needed.

      One night to our joy, the one who had been preaching the Gospel (?) for several years, confessed that he had found Christ only the previous night. He acknowledged (to use his own words) that he had been presenting "the Christ ideal" but not the Christ of the Cross. The writer believes there are thousands like this preacher who, perhaps, have been brought up in Sunday School, taught about the birth, life, and teachings of Jesus Christ, who believe in the historicity of His person, who spasmodically endeavor to practice His precepts, and who think that that is all that is necessary for their salvation. Frequently, this class when they reach manhood go out into the world, encounter the attacks of atheists and infidels and are told that such a person as Jesus of Nazareth never lived. But the impressions of early days cannot be easily erased, and they remain steadfast in their declaration that they "believe in Jesus Christ." Yet, when their faith is examined, only too often it is found that though they believe many things about Jesus Christ they do not really believe in him. They believe with the head that such a person lived (and, because they believe this imagine that therefore they are saved), but they have never thrown down the weapons of their warfare against Him, yielded themselves to Him, nor truly believed with their heart in Him.

      The bare acceptance of an orthodox doctrine about the person of Christ without the heart being won by Him and the life devoted to Him, is another phase of that way "which seemeth right unto a man" but the end thereof are "the ways of death." A mere intellectual assent to the reality of Christ's person, and which goes no further, is another phase of the way which "seemeth right unto a man" but of which the end thereof "are the ways of death," or, in other words, is another aspect of the gospel of Satan.

      And now, where do you stand? Are you in the way which "seemeth right," but which ends in death; or, are you in the Narrow Way which leadeth unto life? Have you truly forsaken the Broad Road which leadeth to death? Has the love of Christ created in your heart a hatred and horror of all that is displeasing to Him? Are you desirous that he should "reign over" you? (Luke 19:14). Are you relying wholly on His righteousness and blood for your acceptance with God?

      Those who are trusting to an outward form of godliness, such as baptism or "confirmation!" those who are religious because it is considered a mark of respectability; those who attend some Church or Chapel because it is the fashion to do so; and, those who unite with some Denomination because they suppose that such a step will enable them to become Christians, are in the way which "ends in death"?death spiritual and eternal. However pure our motives, however noble our intentions, however well-meaning our purposes, however sincere our endeavors, God will not acknowledge us as His sons, until we accept His Son.

      A yet more specious form of Satan's gospel is to move preachers to present the atoning sacrifice of Christ and then tell their hearers that all God requires from them is to "believe" in His Son. Thereby thousands of impenitent souls are deluded into thinking they have been saved. But Christ said, "Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish" (Luke 13:3). To "repent" is to hate sin, to sorrow over it, to turn from it. It is the result of the Spirits making the heart contrite before God. None except a broken heart can savingly believe on the Lord Jesus Christ.

      Again, thousands are deceived into supposing that they have "accepted Christ" as their "personal Saviour," who have not first received Him as their LORD. The Son of God did not come here to save His people in their sin, but "from their sins" (Matthew 1:21). To be saved from sins, is to be saved from ignoring and despising the authority of God, it is to abandon the course of self-will and self-pleasing, it is to "forsake our way" (Isa. 55:7). It is to surrender to God's authority, to yield to His dominion, to give ourselves over to be ruled by Him. The one who has never taken Christ's "yoke" upon him, who is not truly and diligently seeking to please Him in all the details of life, and yet supposes that he is "resting on the Finished Work of Christ" is deluded by the Devil.

      In the seventh chapter of Matthew there are two scriptures which give us approximate results of Christ's Gospel and Satan s counterfeit. First, in verses 13-14, "Enter ye in at the strait gate: for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat. Because strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it." Second; in verses 22-23, "Many will say to Me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied [preached] in Thy name? and in Thy name cast out demons, and in thy name done many wonderful works? And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you; depart from Me, ye that work iniquity." Yes, my reader, it is possible to work in the name of Christ, and even to preach in his name, and though the world knows us, the Church knows us, yet to be unknown to the Lord! How necessary is it then to find out where we really are; to examine ourselves and see whether we be in the faith; to measure ourselves by the Word of God and see if we are being deceived by our subtle Enemy; to find out whether we are building our house upon the sand, or whether it is erected on the Rock which is Jesus Christ. May the Holy Spirit search our hearts, break our wills, slay our enmity against God, work in us a deep and true repentance, and direct our gaze to the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world.



 

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