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The apostles of Jesus Christ travelled
the Roman world with a bold and urgent message. Jesus had died;
but he had risen from the dead and his exaltation to God's right
hand gave new hope to all who would try to follow his example of
obedience. In spite of mocking, derision and persecution, these
apostles sounded forth their great clarion call: being witnesses
themselves of Christ's resurrection, they were galvanised into
action, publicly proclaiming the hope of resurrection for all true
disciples of the Lord.
There is probably no better way for
us to learn more about this wonderful and comforting Christian
hope and the associated teaching concerning God's judgement of
man, than to examine it through the preaching of one of these
apostles who had joined the group of witnesses, as "one born out
of due time" (1 Corinthians 1 5:8). He too was persecuted and
imprisoned for the things he preached, but while in custody would
not be silenced and continued to speak, even to his captors, of
the hope which filled his own heart.
At the Court of
Felix
The Apostle Paul was in prison in an outpost of the Empire and
distant from the magnificence of the capital city. But there is no
doubt that, however unsavoury that prison cell may have been, the
provincial governor's headquarters in Caesarea bore some
similarity to the fashionable apartments known to Felix from his
earlier life in Rome. With wide-ranging powers he had gathered to
himself a court and dispensed what he would fondly and incorrectly
call justice with a casualness and sadistic severity equalled, and
later exceeded, by the recently enthroned emperor Nero.
At Felix's side was his teenage
wife Drusilla, by all accounts a great beauty and just widowed as
a result of the death of the Syrian king Azizus to whom she had
been married, probably at the behest of her father Herod Agrippa
1, at the tender age of fourteen. Whether the tenderness of her
character matched that of her age may be questioned by her
premature association with the uncultured Felix long before Azizus'
death regularised the situation. It seemed part of the family
characteristics of the Herods to disregard the sanctity of
marriage and treat the bond with contempt. Had not John the
Baptist been imprisoned and subsequently beheaded by Herod Antipas
for his effrontery in criticising him for taking his brother's
wife? (Matthew 14:1-11).
Civilisation Corrupt
The thin veneer of civilisation cloaking corrupt and immoral
practices parallels our own modern 20th century western world.
Criticism of its ways was as unwelcome then as it is now. Yet it
was against this background and before the two most prominently
involved that the imprisoned Apostle Paul "reasoned of
righteousness, temperance, and judgement to come" (Acts 24:25).
It is therefore fitting that we in
our day should examine the same principles, recognising in
ourselves, as well as in the world of which we form part, the need
for more exalted standards of thought and conduct. It is neither
comfortable nor fashionable to speak of a time of coming
judgement. It seems a subject inextricably linked with the
doctrine of hell-fire, which has become an object of derision and
the butt of music hall jokes. But while eternal torment deep in
the bowels of the earth is nowhere taught in Scripture, judgement
is an integral part of God's programme which will result in the
world ultimately being full of His glory.
Just like Felix of old, though, if
we try to push the subject from our consciousness we shall hardly
succeed.
Even Felix trembled as he saw the
strong connection between his way of life and his ultimate
destiny. He was unwilling to mend his ways and strive after the
"holiness without which no man shall see the Lord" (Hebrews
12:14). Our own experiences teach us that, whether we like it or
not, there is a connection between endeavour and reward; and
between disobedience and punishment. It is the guiding rule in the
disciplining of children and management of organisations and is
summed up in the phrase 'the carrot and the stick'. Consider the
following words, written by the same apostle who stood before
Felix and Drusilia:
"For the grace of God
that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men, teaching us
that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live
soberly, righteously, and godly, in this present world; looking
for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God
and our Saviour Jesus Christ; who gave himself for us, that he
might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a
peculiar people, zealous of good works" (Titus 2:11-14).
There is, then, a responsibility
incumbent upon those who wish to be followers of the Lord Jesus
Christ to lead lives consistent with, and reflecting the standards
he taught. To do this it is necessary to "deny ungodliness and
worldly lusts" now to the extent that we are aware of the
certainty of his return. How similar these words are to those
spoken to Felix!
Moral Standards -- Then
and Now
Following God's ways (righteousness) involves a high degree of
self-control. We must each acknowledge that left to his own
devices man "is like the beasts that perish" (Psalm 49:20). How
often do we hear of the very slender barrier that exists between
order and safety in society and mob rule? The well-ordered and
cultivated Roman Empire, degraded by men like Felix and Nero,
became inevitably prey to the original Vandals and other ill-named
barbarous tribes. In similar fashion, as the moral standards of
our society crumble and respect for authority evaporates, the
streets of our cities become battlegrounds and fighting and fear
grow.
Nowhere is the quality of
self-control or temperance upheld. Instead "each man does that
which is right in his own eyes" (Judges 21:25). Just as that was
true at a critical stage in the history of Israel, so it is true
today. Of course, if there are no standards set, there can be no
judgement; or, to use the words of Scripture, "where there is no
law, neither is there transgression" (Romans 4:15). Our society,
in order to flout the required standards for life set by God, has
therefore had to reject the idea of judgement. The catch phrase
for our age, as it was for the civilisation whose similar
disregard hastened its destruction by flood and tempest in Noah's
day, is: "Eat and drink, for tomorrow we die" (1 Corinthians
15:32; Matthew 24:38; Luke 17:27).
God has specifically
recorded that the wickedness of the world will result in His
judgements being unleashed on the earth: "For the wrath of God is
revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness
of men" (Romans 1:18). Our particular study, however, concerns our
individual response to the Gospel message and the impending
judgement seat of Christ.
Tomorrow we die
This attitude of being responsible to no-one for our actions is
increasingly prevalent. Most interestingly, however, when the
Apostle Paul describes it, he links it with unbelief about the
resurrection:
"What does it profit
me? If the dead are not raised, let us eat and drink, for
tomorrow we die" (1 Corinthians 15:32).
Clearly, then, the promise of
resurrection from the dead should affect the way we live our
lives. It is the reward God has promised to those who attempt in
their lives now to follow in his ways and commandments. It is
therefore necessary for us to understand what hope there is for
man at his death.
Solomon, in the book of
Ecclesiastes, reviewing the works of man and their ultimate value,
declared that:
"All things come
alike to all: there is one event to the righteous and to the
wicked" (Ecclesiastes 9:2).
His description of the death state
is equally succinct:
"For the living know
that they shall die: but the dead know not anything, neither have
they any more a reward; for the memory of them is forgotten"
(Ecclesiastes 9:5).
This last phrase perhaps expresses
two thoughts. On the one hand, as time passes the dead are
forgotten, even by close friends and acquaintances; but also a
person's memory ceases when death occurs. It is like many pocket
calculators which have a memory function, only so long as power is
available. Once that power is switched off, the ability to
calculate, to recall from memory, or to display other functions
has been removed. This is the condition of man at death, as these
words spoken to Adam after his disobedience reveal:
"Thou shalt return
unto the ground; for out of it wast thou taken: for dust thou art,
and unto dust shalt thou return" (Genesis 3:19).
Desire for Immortality
Is this the fact which men and women wish to ignore, hoping it is
not really true? None of us likes to think we are in truth
ephemeral creatures, like a butterfly existing but for a brief
day. Against the broad centuries of history, however, this is the
case. Our individual ripples in the pool of life achieve little.
Even those men to whom the world ascribes greatness only make
slight adjustments in the course of man's affairs. Yet there is in
each of us a desire for immortality -- to leave something behind
us. Parents see in their children aspects of their own lives being
perpetuated and occasionally a child's life is damaged by the
parent wishing to live his own life again through his children. It
is probably this desire which has caused men and women to express
belief in an essential part of man which can never die.
This is a falsehood first uttered
in the temptation in the garden of Eden: "Ye shall not surely die"
(Genesis 3:4). This is the great untruth, clung to desperately by
many, just as survivors of a shipwreck will attempt to ride a
tempestuous sea on the scantiest piece of flotsam available. It is
untrue, and if we wish to be true to ourselves we must abandon it
and seek to place our trust in those things which are firm and
steadfast "like an anchor for our lives. an anchor safe and sure"
(Hebrews 6:19, N.E.B.).
The Faith of Job
This wish for permanence, to be able to pass on for the benefit of
others the lessons a life's experience has taught, is not
uncommon. In the book of Job, when that just man's suffering
intensified the foundation of his faith, he cried out:
"Oh that my words
were now written! Oh that they were printed in a book! That they
were graven with an iron pen and lead in the rock for ever!" (Job
19:23,24).
For a man like Job to make such a
cry, the message he had to impart must be of importance. He had
been attacked by a disease which was loathsome: a living death. On
awakening each morning he would contemplate the finality of death
and the futility of life. This crystallised for him a supreme
hope, and it was this he wished to be preserved for future
generations, for it was the vindication of his own steadfastness
in adversity:
"For I know that my
redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand at the latter day upon
the earth: and though after my skin worms destroy this body, yet
in my flesh shall I see God: whom I shall see for myself, and mine
eyes shall behold, and not another; though my reins be consumed
within me" (Job 19:25-27).
That this was not just a pious
sentimentality wrung out of him by the agony of his illness is
attested to by God Himself, whose comment on Job is recorded later
in the book. He says to Job's friends:
"Ye have not spoken
of me the thing that is right, as my servant Job hath" (Job
42:7).
The right things about God which
Job had spoken are important for us. He spoke of the living power
of God able to redeem sinful men and women. In connection with
that redemption, he expressed the hope that he would be present to
see and hear God's judgement of him. And yet Job understood the
nature of death as Solomon described it. He spoke of the
decomposition of his body, but also believed that the same body
would one day stand before God.
Isaiah's Commentary
If Job was the only Old Testament character to make this claim we
might have an excuse to discount his evidence. But he is not. In
the prophecy of Isaiah the things we have learnt from Ecclesiastes
and Job are repeated. Note first the description of the death
state in chapter 26, verses 13 and 14:
"Other lords beside
thee have had dominion over us ... They are dead, they shall not
live; they are deceased, they shall not rise: therefore hast thou
visited and destroyed them, and made all their memory to perish."
By careful repetition, there is an
inevitability about the fate of these men -- 'dead' and
'deceased', they shall 'not live' nor 'rise'. As Solomon had said:
"The memory of them is forgotten."
In contrast, however, to this
hopelessness, is the position of those who are God's people:
"Thy dead men
shall live, together with my dead body shall they arise. Awake and
sing, ye that dwell in dust: for thy dew is as the dew of herbs,
and the earth shall cast out her dead" (Isaiah 26:19).
What we have therefore learnt is
that though for some it is true that the death state is final, for
others, although the death state itself is the same -- complete
unconsciousness, the "one event that cometh upon all" -- there is
a hope of arising or being cast forth from the earth.
Daniel's Prophecy
This categorisation is taken a step further in Daniel's prophecy
where the second group-God's people-arise to an as yet unknown
destiny. The wording used is critically important, as we shall
see:
"And many (not
all) of them that sleep in the dust of the earth
shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to
shame and everlasting contempt" (Daniel 12:2).
We know sufficiently well from our
study that this is the language of Scripture on this subject. 'The
dust of the earth' echoes the Genesis record of the fate of Adam,
Eve and their descendants. Clearly there is to be a separation
between those whose destiny is everlasting life and those for whom
there will be shame and everlasting contempt.
The Sleep of Death
In common with other passages of Scripture referring to the death
of those who will subsequently be raised, Daniel speaks of them as
'sleeping'. On one occasion, when Jesus was called to the home of
a leader of the synagogue whose daughter had died, he was "laughed
to scorn" by the professional mourners who had congregated there,
when he avowed that the "maid is not dead, but sleepeth" (Matthew
9:24). Had they been familiar with the real meaning of their
Scriptures they would have understood that this language confirmed
Jesus' intention to raise her from the dead. This is therefore the
way in which God Himself views those whom He intends to raise. For
Him they are awaiting the call to re-awaken at the dawning of the
great day of righteousness.
Daniel's words are also related to
another saying of the Lord Jesus Christ:
"For as the Father
hath life in himself, so hath he given to the Son to have life in
himself; and hath given him authority to execute judgement also,
because he is the Son of man. Marvel not at this: for the hour is
coming, in the which all that are in the graves shall hear his
voice, and shall come forth; they that have done good, unto the
resurrection of life; and they that have done evil, unto the
resurrection of damnation" (John 5:26-29).
Resurrection is not a commonly
discussed subject. Conceptions of what happens after death range
across many conflicting theories. Some fondly think of an
existence freed from all trammels of this life and this earth, but
otherwise purposeless. We should perhaps ask what pleasure such a
destiny could give creature or Creator. Side by side with this
view is the fear of eternal torment, blazing fires and sulphurous
smoke. Common to both ideas is freedom from our present mortal
bodies. Whatever our destiny may be, it will involve (so it is
said) that part of us which is considered immortal-the essential
personality, or 'the soul', to use the common designation.
Human Myths and Bible
Truth
From our survey of Bible teaching, we know these hazy ideas have
no foundation. Instead, and in simple down to earth terms, there
is a powerful and compelling truth concerning man's true state and
God's scheme of redemption:
- Man is born mortal, a dying
creature inheriting his nature from all his ancestors back to
Adam.
- Man is sinful. All men are
tempted and, with the single exception of the Lord Jesus Christ,
commit sins transgressing God's laws.
- All men die, from illness,
accident, murder or old age.
- Death is total unconsciousness.
No longer energised by breath, the body decomposes to the
earthly elements from which it is made.
- God will raise from the dead all
who know Him and His laws.
- By the Lord Jesus Christ, and at
his return to the earth, God will judge those who have been
raised. Some will be granted immortality. The rest will return
to their graves for ever.
- The immortalised believers, the
saints or sanctified ones, will live and reign with Christ in
God's kingdom upon earth.
Alive at the Coming of
the Lord
In this programme, special arrangements have been made for those
who will be alive when Christ returns. This was a matter of great
concern to believers who could understand the teaching about
resurrection and judgement, but thought that it could relate only
to those who had already died. Many times in the New Testament the
writers were inspired to clarify this. We should be thankful that
they did, for the signs of mounting distress in the earth herald
the great day God has appointed "in which he will judge the world
in righteousness by that man whom he hath ordained; whereof he
hath given assurance unto all men, in that he hath raised him from
the dead" (Acts 17:31). We may therefore be among the generation
who "shall not all sleep (die), but shall be changed" by the power
of the Lord Jesus Christ into the immortal subjects of his divine
kingdom.
There will also at Christ's return
be men and women (and particularly children) who have not had to
decide what their response to the Gospel of truth will be. They
will continue to live through the time when "the law will go forth
of Zion and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem" (Micah 4:2).
Because of the righteous rule of Christ, conditions in the world
will improve and expectation of life will increase -- possibly
equivalent to the times before the flood. Isaiah prophesied:
"Never again will
there be in it an infant that lives but a few days, or an old man
who does not live out his years; he who dies at a hundred will be
thought a mere youth; he who fails to reach a hundred will be
considered accursed" (Isaiah 65:20, N.I.V.).
But each, child, youth and aged, at
their appointed times will die. At the end of this reign of Christ
there will be a second day of resurrection, a second judgement
and, for those not granted immortality whose names are "not found
written in the book of life", a second and utterly final death
(Revelation 20:12-15).
The resurrection spoken of in the
Bible is a bodily one, just as the era of peace and righteousness
to be introduced at Jesus' return involves this earth on which we
live. There is no hazy notion of a spirit world in far off places,
as an examination of Jesus' own resurrection shows. Firstly, he
was mistaken by Mary Magdalene for the gardener and had to rebuke
her for holding on to him: "Take not hold on me; for I am not yet
ascended to my Father" (John 20:15,17, R.V.). Later, when his
disciples were gathered together in the upper room, terrified of
the consequences for themselves of his crucifixion, Jesus appeared
and they thought they were seeing a ghost. Jesus' answer to their
fright puts the matter beyond all doubt:
"Why are ye troubled?
and why do thoughts arise in your hearts? Behold my hands and my
feet, that it is I myself: handle me, and see; for a spirit
(ghost) hath not flesh and bones, as ye see me have" (Luke
24:38,39).
Bodily Resurrection
Similarly, the resurrection at Christ's return will be a bodily
one. Those "that are in the graves shall hear his voice and shall
come forth" (John 5:28). It is no use for us to question the
ability of the all-creating God to raise decomposed bodies, for He
first formed man from the dust of the ground and can therefore
re-form many men and women who have since that time returned to
the dust from which they were made, trusting in His limitless
power.
The similarity of the time of
resurrection and judgement to Adam's own experience is very
revealing. He was not created immortal. There was a choice before
him to obey God or his own desires, and he chose to do that which
formed the pattern that all mankind would subsequently follow. He
was therefore 'judged' by God: "Because thou hast heartened
unto the voice of thy wife ... cursed is the ground ... in the
sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the
ground" (Genesis 3:17-19).
First of all, therefore, the
resurrection involves what the word itself implies -- a rising or
standing up: not immediately a change of nature, but a
reconstituted mortal body ready to appear for judgement. Some will
have continued to sin "after the similitude of Adam's
transgression" (Romans 5:14); others will have striven to follow
the example of the Son of God, recognising the victory his death
and resurrection achieved.
Who will be raised?
There will be many who have lived their lives oblivious of the
purposeful power of God and unaware of the promised gift of life
made possible through the work of the Lord Jesus Christ. We should
not expect such to be raised. In ignorance of the principles
involved, how could they be expected to make an answer before the
Judge of all the earth? According to their own lights they will
have lived lives, receiving equally with all other inhabitants of
His earth the benefits which God showers daily upon us. Those,
however, who do have a knowledge of His purpose are placed in a
position of responsibility and each "shall give account of himself
to God" (Romans 14:12).
This separation is the "judgement
to come" about which Paul reasoned with Felix, and Jesus himself
will be the judge.
The Just Judge
The work of judgement has been specifically reserved for Christ by
God. How fitting it is that he should be the judge! He was born by
the power of God of an earthly mother and thereby shared our human
nature. He knows the temptations which cause us to stumble because
he was tempted in the same way. Because he had purposed in his
heart to be "always about his Father's business" he conquered each
temptation. As a human being in the line of Adam "the one event
that cometh on all" came upon him and he was crucified as a result
of the machinations of men who were unable to accept his
unimpeachable goodness. Because of his life of obedience "the
grave could not hold him" and by the same power that brought about
his miraculous birth, God raised him from the dead and on account
of his righteousness granted him immortality.
That release is possible from the
previously all-conquering enemy of mankind, as revealed to Job,
Isaiah and Daniel was convincingly proved by the resurrection of
Jesus Christ. Because of his victory over death, there is a
guarantee for his disciples to share in his triumph. Knowing that
man by himself cannot live a life of perfect obedience like
Christ's, God has promised that believers can be related to that
life and enjoy the benefits which consequently flow.
The means of achieving this
relationship is baptism based on repentance of sinful ways and
acknowledgement of the truth of the Gospel message:
"Know ye not", said
the apostle Paul to Roman believers, "that so many of us as were
baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death? Therefore
we are buried with him by baptism into death: that like as Christ
was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we
also should walk in newness of life. For if we have been planted
together in the likeness of his death, we shall be also in the
likeness of his resurrection" (Romans 6:3-5).
Sweet Reward of Faithful
Following
It is impossible to read the Gospel teachings of the Lord Jesus
Christ and be unaware of the necessity for judgement. Whether
openly to his disciples, or in the form of parables to the
multitudes that flocked to hear him, Jesus distinctly taught of a
day of reckoning for the servants of God. On one occasion he spoke
of a nobleman going into a far country to receive a kingdom. (The
parallel with his own ascension and promised return to establish
God's kingdom on earth cannot be avoided.) At his return, the
servants who had been entrusted with his goods were called to give
an account of their dealings in his absence. The endeavours of the
faithful servants were rewarded, while the mistrust of the
unfaithful servant was punished by taking from him that portion of
the nobleman's goods he had been given to use. Throughout the
account, there is an emphasis on the word "faithful". It is a
believer's faith in the promises of God that will be judged.
No-one has lived a life which of itself justifies confidence that
a reward has been earned. Jesus himself said:
"When ye shall have
done all those things which are commanded you, say, We are
unprofitable servants: we have done that which was our duty to do"
(Luke 17:10).
In harmony with this, the promise
of eternal life is not described in Scripture as something that
can be earned. Instead, it is the "free gift of God" (Romans
6:23). Undeserved by its recipients, the gift has only been made
possible through the redemptive work of the Lord Jesus Christ.
The Basis of Judgement
Abraham, one of the great figures of the Old Testament, is a good
example of this principle. He had been asked to do things by God
which we would think far beyond the call of duty. One of these was
to sacrifice his own son, Isaac (Genesis chapter 22). It was his
ability through all these circumstances to be constantly aware of
the certainty of a future resurrection (Hebrews 11:17-19) that
marked him out as.a man of great faith. It is recorded of him that
as a result of his faithfulness God counts him a righteous
man (Romans 4:3).
This then is the basis of the
judgement. We are, perhaps by our association of the word with
courts of law, tempted to envisage something of a kind of debate,
with an argument of the relative merits of various incidents in a
person's life. Rather we should think of the occasion as an
opportunity for the verdict to be pronounced by the one who has
been given authority to exercise judgement and who is therefore
uniquely qualified to do so. The verdict will not be the result of
achievement, for it was the ones who would boldly say, "Lord,
Lord, have we not in thy name done many wonderful works?" to whom
the Lord directed his dreadful reply, "I never knew you; depart
from me, ye that work iniquity" (Matthew 7:22-23).
As Isaiah had prophesied so long
before, God's requirements are for humble and sensitive servants:
"To this man will I look, even to him that is poor and of a
contrite spirit, and that trembleth at my word" (Isaiah 66:2).
Rather, the verdict will be based upon commitment, the knowledge
that we are each totally dependent on God's mercy for all things;
in this life and also for the blessings with which the earth will
be showered in the kingdom age.
From Death to Life
The judgement is, however, only a part of the process of leading
faithful men and women from death to life. God's intention from
the beginning was that mankind should be in His image. His son is
and was able therefore to say to his disciples: "He that hath seen
me hath seen the Father" (John 1 4:9). Jesus displayed the wonders
of God's character most perfectly; he was "full of grace and
truth" (John 1:14). Many who heard him "wondered at the gracious
words that proceeded out of his mouth" (Luke 4:22); and it was his
own, uncontested claim that he is "the way, the truth, and the
life" (John 14:6).
How different this is from our own
feeble attempts to perfect our characters! In different ways we
each display a lack of ability to control ourselves. For one it
will be an over-hasty tongue, for another a particular breed of
covetousness, for yet others the common sin of pride. When we
start a process of critical self-examination, the list is endless.
Yet God has promised to those who strive to serve Him faithfully a
share in His divine nature. Using eloquent language, Daniel
describes this result of resurrection and acceptance at the
judgement:
"They that be wise
shall shine as the brightness of the firmament; and they that turn
many to righteousness as the stars for ever and ever" (Daniel
12:3).
Notice that they shall shine "as
the brightness" and "as stars". This is figurative language
describing poetically the translation from mortality to
immortality. "God is light", the apostle John wrote, "and in him
is no darkness at all" (1 John 1:5). Daniel was prophesying that
those who are raised and accepted at the judgement will then be
changed to immortal beings, living and reigning with Christ and
displaying, as he does, the characteristics of his heavenly
Father.
This is the exalted hope which is
held out in the Gospel message, the "righteousness" which will be
revealed by the "judgement to come" which so troubled Felix, and
which will only be fulfilled when the harvest of resurrection is
gathered in. Christ, who is the firstfruits of that harvest (1
Corinthians 15:23), is the guarantee that all we have considered
regarding this subject is certain to come to pass.
The Day of Opportunity
Felix sent Paul away with the words "Go thy way for this time;
when I have a convenient season, I will call for thee" (Acts
24:25). We can, if we wish, do the same and turn our backs on the
good news of the kingdom of God. We may convince ourselves that
there will be a "convenient season" at some time in the future,
but we shall be wrong. As the apostle Paul said, writing to
believers in Corinth:
"Now is the
accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation" (2
Corinthians 6:2).
These are matters of life and
death, and too important to be put off to another day.
-- Michael Ashton
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