The Consecrated Way
by A.T. Jones
The Transgression and
Abomination of Desolation
Such is the sacrifice, the priesthood, and the ministry, of Christ in
His ministry in the sanctuary and the true tabernacle, which the Lord
pitched, and not man. Such is the statement in the book of Hebrews of
the truth, the merit, and the efficacy of the sacrifice, the priesthood,
the sanctuary, and the ministry of Christ.
But it is not alone in the book of Hebrews that this great truth is
found. For though it is not so directly stated nor so fully discussed in
any other place as it is in the book of Hebrews, it is recognized
throughout the whole of the New Testament as truly as the sanctuary and
ministry of the Levitical priesthood is recognized throughout the Old
Testament, though it be not so directly stated nor so fully discussed in
any other place as in Exodus and Leviticus.
In the last book of the New Testament, in the very first chapter,
there is seen "one like unto the Son of Man," clothed in the raiment of
the high priest. Also in the midst of the throne and of the cherubim and
of the elders there was seen "a Lamb as it had been slain." There also
was seen a golden altar, and one with a golden censer offering incense,
which, with the prayers of the saints, ascended up before God. There was
seen the seven lamps of fire burning before the throne. There was seen
the temple of God in heaven--"the temple of the tabernacle of the
testimony." There it is promised and declared that they who have part in
the first resurrection and upon whom the second death hath no power
"shall be priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with Him a
thousand years" in that priesthood. And when the first heaven and the
first earth shall have passed away and there shall be found no place for
them, and the new heaven and the new earth shall have been brought in,
with the holy city descending out of heaven from God, the tabernacle of
God being with men, He dwelling with them, they His people and God
Himself with them and their God; when He shall have wiped away all tears
from their eyes and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow nor
crying, neither any more pain, and the former things shall have passed
away; then, and not until then, is it declared of the city of God: "I
saw no temple therein."
Thus it is just as certain that there is a priesthood, a priestly
ministry, and a sanctuary, in this dispensation as that there was in the
old; yes, even more truly, for though there was a sanctuary, a
priesthood, and a ministry in the old dispensation, it was all only a
figure for the time then present--a figure of this which now is the true
and which is in heaven.
This true priesthood, ministry, and sanctuary of Christ in heaven is
too plain in the New Testament to be by any possibility denied. Yet, in
the face of all this, it is a thing that is hardly ever thought of; it
is a thing almost unknown and even hardly believed in the Christian
world today.
Why is this and how could it ever be? There is a cause. The Scripture
tells it and facts demonstrate it.
In the book of Daniel, seventh chapter, there was seen by the prophet
in vision the four winds of heaven striving upon the great sea, "and
four great beasts came up from the sea, diverse one from another. The
first was like a lion, and had eagle's wings;" which symbolized the
world-kingdom of Babylon. The second was like a bear, which raised
itself up on one side, and had three ribs in the mouth of it; which
symbolized the united world-kingdom of Media and Persia. The third was
like a leopard, which had four heads and four wings of a fowl which
symbolized the world-dominion of Alexander the Great and Grecia. The
fourth beast was "dreadful and terrible, and strong exceedingly; and it
had great iron teeth: it devoured and brake in pieces, and stamped the
residue with the feet of it: and it was diverse from all the beasts that
were before it; and it had ten horns." This great beast symbolized the
world-empire of Rome, diverse from all that were before it; because it
was not originally a kingdom or monarchy, but a republic. The ten horns
symbolized the ten kingdoms that were planted in the territory of
Western Rome when that empire was annihilated.
Then says the prophet: "I considered the horns [he ten horns], and,
behold, there came up among them another little horn, before whom there
were three of the first horns plucked up by the roots: and, behold, in
this horn were eyes like the eyes of man, and a mouth speaking great
things." The prophet beheld and considered this little horn clear
through until "the judgment was set, and the books were opened." And
when this judgment was set and the books were opened, he says: "I beheld
then [at that time] because of the voice of the great words which the
horn spake: I beheld even till the beast was slain, and his body
destroyed, and given to the burning flame."
Note the remarkable change in expression in this latter statement.
The prophet beheld the little horn from the time of its rise clear
through to the time when "the judgment was set, and the books were
opened." At that time he beheld the little horn; and just now,
particularly "because of the voice of the great words which the horn
spake." And he continued to behold that same thing--that same little
horn--until the end and till its destruction. But when its destruction
comes, the word that describes it is not that the little horn was broken
or destroyed but that the "beast was slain and his body destroyed and
given to the burning flame."
This shows that the little horn is but another phase of the original
fourth, or dreadful and terrible, beast that the little horn is but the
continuation of the dreadful and terrible beast, in its very
disposition, spirit and aims, only under a variant form. And as the
fourth world power, the dreadful and terrible beast in its original form
was Rome; so the little horn in its workings is but the continuation of
Rome--of the spirit and working of Rome, under this form.
The explanation of this, given in the same chapter, confirms that
which has been stated. For of this little horn it is said that it is to
be "diverse from the first;" that he "shall speak great words against
the Most High, and shall wear out the saints of the Most High, and think
to change times and laws" of the Most High. It is also said that the
"same horn made war with the saints, and prevailed against them; until
the Ancient of days came, and judgment was given to the saints of the
Most High; and the time came that the saints possessed the kingdom." All
these things are true, and this is the description of latter Rome
throughout.
And all this is confirmed by latter Rome herself. For Leo the Great
was pope A.D. 440 to A.D. 461, in the very time when the former Rome was
in its very last days, when it was falling rapidly to ruin. And Leo the
Great declared in a sermon that the former Rome was but the promise of
the latter Rome; that the glories of the former were to be reproduced in
Catholic Rome; that Romulus and Remus were but the forerunners of Peter
and Paul; that the successors of Romulus therefore were the precursors
of the successors of Peter; and that, as the former Rome had ruled the
world, so the latter Rome, by the see of the holy blessed Peter as head
of the world, would dominate the earth. This conception of Leo's was
never lost from the Papacy. And when, only fifteen years afterward, the
Roman Empire had, as such, perished, and only the Papacy survived the
ruin and firmly held place and power in Rome, this conception of Leo's
was only the more strongly and with the more certitude held and
asserted.
That conception was also intentionally and systematically developed.
The Scriptures were industriously studied and ingeniously perverted to
maintain it. By a perverse application of the Levitical system of the
Old Testament, the authority and eternity of the Roman priesthood had
already been established. "The bishops now [the latter part of the
second century] wished to be thought to correspond with the high priest
of the Jews; the presbyters were said to come in place of the priests;
and the deacons were made parallel with the Levites.
"In like manner the comparison of the Christian oblations with the
Jewish victims and sacrifices produced many unnecessary rites, and by
decrees corrupted the very doctrine of the holy Supper; which was
converted, sooner, in fact, than one would think, into a
sacrifice."--Mosheims Ecclesiastical History, Cent. II, part II, chap.
II, par. 4; and chap. IV, par. 4.
And now, by perverse deductions "from the New Testament, the
authority and eternity of Rome herself was established."
Taking the ground that she is the only true continuation of original
Rome, upon that the Papacy took the ground that wherever the New
Testament cites or refers to the authority of original Rome, she is now
meant, because she is the only true continuation of original Rome.
Accordingly, where the New Testament enjoins submission to "the powers
that be," or obedience to "governors," it means the Papacy, because the
only power and the only governors that then were, were Roman, and the
papal power was the true continuation of the Roman.
"Every passage was seized on where submission to the powers that be
is enjoined, every instance cited where obedience had actually been
rendered to the imperial officials; special emphasis being laid on the
sanction which Christ Himself had given to Roman dominion by pacifying
the world through Augustus, by being born at the time of the taxing, by
paying tribute to Caesar, by saying to Pilate, 'Thou couldst have no
power at all against Me except it were given thee from above'"--Bryce.
And since Christ had recognized the authority of Pilate, who was but the
representative of Rome, who should dare to disregard the authority of
the Papacy, the true continuation of that authority, to which even the
Lord from heaven had submitted.
And it was only the logical culmination of this assumption when Pope
Boniface VIII presented himself in the sight of the multitude, clothed
in a cuirass, with a helmet on his head and a sword in his hand held
aloft, and proclaimed: "There is no other Caesar, nor king, nor emperor
than I, the Sovereign Pontiff and Successor of the Apostles;" and, when
further he declared, ex cathedra: "We therefore assert, define, and
pronounce that it is necessary to salvation to believe that every human
being is subject to the Pontiff of Rome."
This is proof enough that the little horn of the seventh chapter of
Daniel is Papal Rome and that it is in spirit and purpose intentionally
the continuation of original Rome.
Now, in the eighth chapter of Daniel, this subject is taken up again.
First, there is seen by the prophet in vision a ram with two horns which
were high, but one higher than the other, corresponding to the bear
lifting itself up on one side higher than the other. This is declared
plainly by the angel to mean "the kings of Media and Persia." Next the
prophet saw "an he goat" coming from the west on the face of the whole
earth, touching not the ground, and he had a notable horn between his
eyes. He overthrew the ram, brake his two horns, cast him down to the
ground, and stamped upon him, and there was none that could deliver the
ram out of his hand. This is declared by the angel to mean "the king of
Grecia: and the great horn that is between his eyes is the first king."
The he-goat waxed very great, and when he was strong, the notable horn
was broken and in place of it there came up four notable ones toward the
four winds of heaven. This is declared by the angel to mean that "four
kingdoms shall stand up out of the nation, but not in his [Alexander's]
power."
Out of one of these divisions of the empire of Alexander, the prophet
next saw that there "came forth a little horn, which waxed exceeding
great, toward the south, and toward the east, and toward the pleasant
land." The directions named show that this power rose and waxed
exceeding great from the west. This is explained by the angel to mean,
"in the latter time of their kingdom [the four divisions of Grecia],
when the transgressors are come to the full, a king of fierce
countenance, and understanding dark sentences, shall stand up." "And it
waxed great, even to the host of heaven; and it cast down some of the
host and of the stars to the ground, and stamped upon them." "And his
power shall be mighty, but not by his own power: and he shall destroy
wonderfully, and shall prosper, and practice, and shall destroy the
mighty and the holy people. And through his policy also he shall cause
craft to prosper in his hand; and he shall magnify himself in his heart,
and by peace shall destroy many: he shall also stand up against the
Prince of princes ["He magnified himself even to the prince of the
host." Verse 11]; but he shall be broken without hand."
These specifications show that the little horn of the eighth chapter
of Daniel represents Rome from the time of its rise, at the destruction
of the Grecian Empire, to the end of the world, when it is "broken
without hand" by that stone "cut out of the mountain without hands,"
which then breaks in pieces and consumes all earthly kingdoms. Dan.
2:34, 35, 44, 45.
We have seen that in the seventh chapter of Daniel the little horn,
though as such representing only the latter phase of Rome, yet does
really represent Rome in both its phases--Rome from beginning to end,
because when the time comes that the "little horn" is to be broken and
destroyed, it is indeed "the beast" that is "slain, and his body
destroyed, and given to the burning flame." Thus the thought with which
the story of the little horn closes in Daniel 7 is continued in Daniel 8
with reference to the same power. In Daniel 8 the expression "little
horn" covers the whole of Rome in both its phases, just as is shown in
the closing expressions concerning the "little horn" in Daniel 7; as is
shown also by the expressions "the abomination of desolation" and "the
transgression of desolation," being applied to Rome in both its phases
(Dan. 9:26, 27; Matt. 24:15; Dan. 11:31; 12:11; 8:11, 13); and as is
confirmed by the teaching and history of latter Rome itself. It is all
one, except only that all that is stated of the former Rome is true and
intensified in the latter Rome.
And now let us consider further the scripture expressions in Daniel 8
concerning this little horn power. In verses 11 and 25, of this little
horn power it is said: "He shall magnify himself in his heart." "He
magnified himself even to [or against] the prince of the host;" and "he
shall also stand up against [or reign in opposition to] the Prince of
princes." This is explained in 2 Thessalonians, second chapter, where
the apostle, in correcting wrong impressions which the Thessalonians had
received concerning the immediate coming of the Lord, says: "Let no man
deceive you by any means: for that day shall not come, except there come
a falling away first, and that man of sin be revealed, the son of
perdition; who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called
God, or that is worshiped; so that he as God sitteth in the temple of
God, showing himself that he is God. Remember ye not, that, when I was
yet with you, I told you these things?" 2 Thess. 2:3-5.
Plainly this scripture describes the same power that is represented
by the little horn in Daniel 8. But there are other considerations which
more fully show it. He says that when he was at Thessalonica with the
brethren he had told them these very things which now he writes. In Acts
17:1-3, is the record concerning Paul when he was yet with the
Thessalonians, as follows: "Now when they had passed through Amphipolis
and Apollonia, they came to Thessalonica, where was a synagogue of the
Jews: and Paul, as his manner was, went in unto them, and three Sabbath
days reasoned with them out of the Scriptures." And in this reasoning
with them out of the Scriptures, he told them about this falling away
which should come, in which would be the revealing of the man of sin,
the mystery of iniquity, the son of perdition, who would oppose himself
to God and would exalt himself above all that is called God or that is
worshiped, even putting himself in the place of God and passing himself
off for God.
In reasoning with the people out of the Scriptures, where in the
Scriptures did Paul find the revelation from which he could tell to the
Thessalonians all this? It was in this eighth chapter of Daniel where
the apostle found it, and from this it was that he told it to them while
he was there. For in the eighth chapter of Daniel are the very
expressions which he uses in 2 Thessalonians, of which he says,
"Remember ye not, that, when I was yet with you, I told you these
things?" This fixes the time to be after the apostles' days, when Rome
magnified itself "even to the Prince of the host" and "against the
Prince of princes;" and connects it directly with the falling away, or
apostasy, which developed the Papacy, or Rome, in its latter and
ultimate phase.
Now let us read verses 11 and 12 of Daniel 8 and it will be plainly
seen that here is exactly the place where Paul found the scripture from
which he taught the Thessalonians concerning the "man of sin" and the
"mystery of iniquity:" "Yea, he magnified himself even to the Prince of
the host, and by him the daily sacrifice was taken away, and the place
of his sanctuary was cast down. And an host was given him against the
daily sacrifice by reason of transgression, and it cast down the truth
to the ground; and it practiced and prospered."
This plainly points out that which took away the priesthood, the
ministry, and the sanctuary of God and of Christianity.
Let us read it again. "Yea, he [the little horn--the man of sin]
magnified himself even to the Prince of the host ["against the Prince of
princes"--Christ], and by him [the man of sin] the daily sacrifice [the
continual service, the ministry, and the priesthood of Christ] was taken
away, and the place of His sanctuary [the sanctuary of the prince of the
host, of the Prince of princes--Christ] was cast down. And an host was
given him [the man of sin] against the daily sacrifice [against the
continual service, of the ministry of Christ, the Prince of the host] by
reason of transgression cast down the truth to the ground; and it
practiced, and prospered."
It was "by reason of transgression," that is, by reason of sin, that
this power gained "the host" that was used to cast down the truth to the
ground, to shut away from the church and the world Christ's priesthood,
His ministry, and His sanctuary; and to cast it all down to the ground
and tread it underfoot. It was by reason of transgression that this was
accomplished. Transgression is sin, and this is the consideration and
the revelation upon which the apostle in 2 Thessalonians defines this
power as the "man of sin" and the "mystery of iniquity."
In Daniel 8:11-13; 11:31; and 12:11, it will be noticed that the word
"sacrifice" is in every case supplied. And it is wholly supplied, for in
its place in the original there is no word at all. In the original the
only word that stands in this place is the word tamid, that is here
translated "daily." And in these places the expression "daily" does not
refer to the daily sacrifice any more than it refers to the whole daily
ministry or continual service of the sanctuary, of which the sacrifice
was only a part. The word tamid in itself signifies "continuous or
continual," "constant," "stable," "sure," "constantly," "evermore." Only
such words as these express the thought of the original word, which, in
the text under consideration, is translated "daily." In Numbers 28 and
29 alone, the word is used seventeen times, referring to the continual
service in the sanctuary.
And it is this continual service of Christ, the true High Priest,
"who continueth ever," and "who is consecrated forevermore" in "an
unchangeable priesthood"--it is this continual service of our great High
Priest, which the man of sin, the Papacy, has taken away. It is the
sanctuary and the true tabernacle in which this true High Priest
exercises His continual ministry that has been cast down by "the
transgression of desolation." It is this ministry and this sanctuary
that the "man of sin" has taken away from the church and shut away from
the world and has cast down to the ground and stamped upon and in place
of which it has set up itself "the abomination that maketh desolate."
What the former Rome did physically to the visible or earthly sanctuary,
which was "the figure of the true" (Dan. 9:26, 27; Matt. 24:15), that
the latter Rome has done spiritually to the invisible or heavenly
sanctuary that is in itself the true." Dan. 11:31; 12:11; 8:11, 13.
In the footnote quotation on page 91 [see below] it is shown that in
the apostasy, the bishops, presbyters, deacons, and the eucharist were
made to succeed the high priest, priests, Levites and sacrifices of the
Levitical system. Now by every evidence of the Scriptures, it is certain
that, in the order of God it was Christ and His ministry and sanctuary
in heaven and this alone, that in truth was the object of the Levitical
system and that is truly the Christian succession to that system.
Therefore when in and by the apostasy the system of bishops as high
priests, presbyters as priests, deacons as Levites, and the Supper as a
sacrifice was insinuated as the Christian succession to the Levitical
system, this of itself was nothing else than to put this false system of
the apostasy in the place of the true, completely to shut out the true,
and finally, to cast it down to the ground and stamp upon it.
And this is how it is that this great Christian truth of the true
priesthood, ministry, and sanctuary of Christ is not known to the
Christian world today. The "man of sin" has taken it away and cast it
down to the ground and stamped upon it. The "mystery of iniquity" has
hid this great truth from the church and the world during all these ages
in which the man of sin has held place in the world and has passed
itself off as God and its iniquitous host as the church of God.
And yet, even the "man of sin," the "mystery of iniquity," itself
bears witness to the necessity of such a service in the church in behalf
of sins. For though the "man of sin," the "mystery of iniquity," has
taken away the true priesthood, ministry, and sanctuary of Christ and
has cast these down to the ground to be stamped upon and has completely
hid them from the eyes of the Christian world, yet she did not utterly
throw away the idea. No, she threw away the true and cast down the true
to the ground but, retaining the idea in the place of the true, she
built up in her own realm an utterly false structure.
In the place of Christ, the true and divine High Priest of God's own
appointment in heaven, she has substituted a human, sinful, and sinning
priesthood on earth. In the place of the continual, heavenly ministry of
Christ in His true priesthood upon His true sacrifice, she has
substituted only an interval ministry of a human, earthly, sinful, and
sinning priesthood in the once-a-day "daily sacrifice of the mass." And
in the place of the sanctuary and the true tabernacle, which the Lord
pitched and not man, she has substituted her own meeting-places of wood
and stone, to which she applies the term "sanctuary." Thus, instead of
the one continual High Priest, the one continual ministry, and the one
continual sanctuary in heaven, which God has ordained and which is the
only true, she has devised out of her own heart and substituted for the
only true, many high priests, many ministries, many sacrifices, and many
sanctuaries, on earth, which in every possible relation are only human
and utterly false.
And it can never take away sin. No earthly priesthood, no earthly
ministry, no earthly sacrifice or service in any earthly sanctuary can
ever take away sin. In the book of Hebrews we have seen that even the
priesthood, the ministry, the sacrifice, and the service in the earthly
sanctuary--the very service which the Lord Himself ordained on
earth--never took away sin. The inspired record is that they never did
take away sin, and that they never could take away sin.
It is only the priesthood and the ministry of Christ that can ever
take away sin. And this is a priesthood and a ministry in heaven and of
a sanctuary that is in heaven. For when Christ was on earth he was not a
priest and if He had remained on earth until this hour, He would not yet
be a priest, as it stands written, "If he were on earth, He should not
be a priest." Heb. 8:4. Thus, by plain word and abundant illustration,
God has demonstrated that no earthly priesthood, sacrifice, or ministry
can ever take away sin.
If any such could take away sin, then why could not that which God
Himself ordained on earth take away sin? If any such could take away
sin, then why change the priesthood and the ministry from earth to
heaven? Therefore, by the plain word of the Lord, it is plain that the
priesthood, the ministry, the sacrifice, and the sanctuary which the
Papacy has set up and operates on earth can never take away sin, but,
instead, only perpetuates sin, is a fraud, an imposture, and the very
"transgression" and "abomination of desolation" is [sic.] the most holy
place.
And that this conclusion and statement as to what the papal system
really is is not extravagant nor far-fetched, is confirmed by the words
of Cardinal Baronius, the standard annalist of the papacy. Writing of
the tenth century, he says: "In this century the abomination of
desolation was seen in the temple of the Lord; and in the See of St.
Peter, reverenced by angels, were placed the most wicked of men; not
pontiffs, but monsters." And the council of Rheims in 991 declared the
papacy to be "the man of sin, the mystery of iniquity."
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