The Consecrated Way
by A.T. Jones
The Time of Finishing the
Mystery of God
But that imposture is not to last forever; thank the Lord! This great
truth of the priesthood, ministry, and sanctuary of Christianity is not
to be hid forever from the eyes of the church and the world. The mystery
of iniquity arose and so hid from the world the mystery of God that all
the world followed it wondering. Rev. 13:3,4. But the day comes when the
mystery of iniquity shall be exposed, and the mystery of God in its own
truth and purity shall shine forth once more, never more to be hid, but
to accomplish its great purpose and be completely finished. For it is
written that "in the days of the voice of the seventh angel, when he
shall begin to sound, the mystery of God should be finished, as He hath
declared to His servants the prophets." Rev. 10:7.
In the days of Christ and His apostles, the mystery of God was
revealed in a fulness never before known and was preached "to all
nations for the obedience of faith." Rom. 16:25, 26. From the beginning
of the world unto that time this mystery had "been hid in God," had
"been hid from ages and from generations," but was then "made manifest
to His saints" to whom "God would make known what is the riches of the
glory of this mystery among the Gentiles; which is Christ in you, the
hope of glory: whom we preach, warning every man, and teaching every man
in all wisdom; that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus."
Col. 1:26-29; Eph. 3:3, 5, 9.
But even at that same time, in the very days of the apostles, the
"mystery of iniquity" did "already work." And it continued to work until
it gained world-power and supremacy and even power over the saints, the
times, and the law of the Most High--standing up against the Prince of
princes, magnifying itself even to the Prince of the host, putting
itself in the place of worship of God, and passing itself off for God.
And thus, again, but not this time in God, the mystery of God was "hid
from ages and from generations." But now, again, in the days of the
voice of the seventh angel, even now, the mystery of God which hath
again been hid from ages and generations, is made manifest to His saints
to whom now "God would make known what is the riches of the glory of
this mystery among the Gentiles; which is Christ in you, the hope of
glory: whom we preach, warning every man, and teaching every man in all
wisdom; that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus."
And this, as we have already quoted, is itself according "as He hath
declared to His servants the prophets." It is not alone the prophet of
Patmos who declared that in this time, even now in our day, "the mystery
of God should be finished." For when the angel of God made this
proclamation in the vision of the prophet of Patmos, he had already, and
long before, declared the same thing to His servants the prophets. And
this proclamation on Patmos was only the declaration of the angels that
that which God had long before declared to His servants the prophets
should now surely be accomplished and that with no more delay. The full
proclamation of the angel is this: "and the angel which I saw stand upon
the sea and upon the earth lifted up his hand to heaven, and sware by
Him that liveth forever and ever, who created heaven, and the things
that therein are, and the earth, and the things that therein are, and
the sea, and the things which are therein, that there should be time
["delay," R.V.] no longer: but in the days of the voice of the seventh
angel, when he shall begin to sound, the mystery of God should be
finished, as He hath declared to His servants the prophets." Rev.
10:5-7.
The one prophet to whom this thing was more fully and more plainly
declared than to any other was the prophet Daniel. For not only did
Daniel see the rise of this little horn and see it magnify itself "even
to the Prince of the host," and "stand up against the Prince of
princes," and cast down to the ground His truth and His sanctuary and
stamp upon them, but he also, and in the same vision, saw the truth and
the sanctuary of Christ delivered from this little horn power, rescued
from its blasphemous stamping, lifted up from the earth and exalted to
the heaven where it belongs. And it was in this part of the transactions
in the vision that the heavenly ones seemed to be most interested; for,
says Daniel: "Then I heard one saint speaking, and another saint said
unto that certain saint ["the Wonderful Numberer"] which spake, How long
shall be the vision concerning the daily sacrifice [the continual
service], and the transgression of desolation, to give both the
sanctuary and the host to be trodden underfoot? And He ["the Wonderful
Numberer"] said unto me, Unto two thousand and three hundred days; then
shall the sanctuary be cleansed." Dan. 8:13, 14.
Then the angel Gabriel was commanded to make Daniel understand the
vision. He began to do so, but when in the explanation he had reached
the point concerning the many days of this vision, the astonishing and
terrible things revealed in the vision overcame the prophet, and says
he: "I Daniel fainted, and was sick certain days; afterward I rose up,
and did the king's business; and I was astonished at the vision, but
none understood it." Dan. 8:27. So far as the explanation had proceeded,
it was easily understood: for it was plainly spoken that the ram
represented the kings of Media and Persia; and the rough goat the king
of Grecia; and, in view of the explanation that had already been made in
the second and seventh chapters of Daniel, the description of the next
great power after Grecia was easily understood so far as the angel could
then go with the explanation. But in the very midst of the explanation
of the most important part of it, Daniel fainted, and so the most
material and essential part of the explanation was missed, and "none
understood it."
However, the prophet sought diligently for an understanding of the
vision. And after the destruction of Babylon, in the first year of the
king of the Medes and Persians the angel Gabriel came to Daniel again
and said: "O Daniel, I am now come forth to give thee skill and
understanding." Dan. 9:1, 22. And it was understanding in this
particular vision which he was explaining when Daniel fainted that he
now came to give. Accordingly he directs Daniel's attention first of all
to that vision, for he said: "At the beginning of thy supplications the
commandment came forth, and I am come to shew thee; for thou art greatly
beloved: therefore understand the matter, and consider the vision."
Verse 23. Having thus directed the prophet's attention to the vision,
the angel begins immediately to discuss the time mentioned in the
vision--the very part of the vision which, because of Daniel's fainting,
had been left unexplained. Thus he says: "Seventy weeks are determined
upon thy people and upon thy holy city." Verse 24.
The word "determined" signifies "limited," "restricted within
bounds," "to mark off and fix the bounds." In explaining the vision at
the first, the angel had come to the point of the time--the "many days,"
the "two thousand and three hundred days" of the vision. Now, he tells
Daniel to consider the vision; he begins immediately to speak concerning
these days and to explain the events of them. "Seventy weeks," or four
hundred and ninety of these days are limited and restricted to the Jews
and Jerusalem, and this also marks the limitation of the Jews and
Jerusalem as God's special people and city. For these are prophetic
days, in which each day is a year: the seventy weeks, or the four
hundred and ninety days, thus making four hundred and ninety years of
the two thousand and three hundred days which are two thousand and three
hundred years. The beginning of the four hundred and ninety years is
thus also the beginning of the two thousand and three hundred years.
The story of the "seventy weeks," or four hundred and ninety years,
is given by the angel as follows: "Know therefore and understand, that
from the going forth of the commandment to restore and to build
Jerusalem unto the Messiah the Prince shall be seven weeks, and
threescore and two weeks: the street shall be built again, and the wall,
even in troublous times. And after threescore and two weeks shall
Messiah be cut off, but not for himself: and the people of the prince
that shall come shall destroy the city and the sanctuary; and the end
thereof shall be with a flood, and unto the end of the war desolations
are determined. And He shall confirm the covenant with many for one
week: and in the midst of the week He shall cause the sacrifices and
oblation to cease," and "upon the wing of abominations shall come one
that maketh desolate, ["and upon the battlements shall be the idols of
the desolator."--A.V. margin] even until the consummation, and that
determined shall be poured upon the desolator." Dan. 9:25-27; 9:27,
R.V.; 9:27, margin.
The commandment to restore and to build Jerusalem here referred to
went forth in the year 457 B. C. and is recorded in the seventh chapter
of Ezra. The decree was issued from Babylon and was addressed, first, to
Ezra, empowering him to leave Babylon and to take with him such people
and materials as were supplied for the work of restoring Jerusalem and
the worship of God therein, and secondly "to all the treasurers which
are beyond the river" Euphrates, directing them to supply whatever was
required by Ezra for the carrying on of the work. It was the fifth month
of the year when Ezra reached Jerusalem, so that about half the year 457
B. C. was gone, which would give about the year 456-1/2 as the time of
the beginning of the four hundred and ninety years and the two thousand
and three hundred years.
From that time four hundred and eighty-three years were to reach "to
the Messiah the Prince," which would reach twenty-six and one-half years
into the Christian era or into the year A. D. 27, which is the very year
of Christ's appearance as the Messiah in His public ministry, when He
was baptized in Jordan and anointed with the Holy Ghost. Mark 7:9-11;
Matt. 3:13-17. After this He, the Messiah, was to "confirm the covenant"
"for one week"--the remaining week of the seventy. But in the midst of
that week He would "cause the sacrifice and the oblation to cease" by
the sacrifice of Himself on the cross. In the midst of the week would be
at the end of three and a half of the seven years from the fall of A. D.
27. This gives the date the spring of A.D. 31, the very time when the
Saviour was crucified, and thus by the sacrifice of Himself--the only
sacrifice for sins--forever caused the sacrifice and the oblation to
cease. Then the veil of the earthly temple "was rent in twain from the
top to the bottom," showing that the service of God there was ended and
the earthly house was desolate.
There was yet the last half of the seventieth week remaining as the
limit of the time of special favor to the Jews and Jerusalem. This half
of the week, beginning in the spring of A.D. 31, extended to the fall of
A.D. 34. In that time "they which were scattered abroad upon the
persecution that arose about Stephen ["went everywhere preaching the
word"] traveled as far as Phenice and Cyprus and Antioch preaching the
word to none but unto the Jews only." Acts 11:19; 8:4. But when this
time was expired and the Jews had confirmed themselves in the rejection
of the Messiah and His gospel, then was their decision accepted and
under the leadership of both Peter and Paul the door of faith was opened
fully to the Gentiles, to whom pertains the remaining portion of the two
thousand and three hundred years.
After the four hundred and ninety years of the limitation upon the
Jews and Jerusalem, there yet remained one thousand eight hundred and
ten years to the Gentiles. This period, beginning, as we have found, in
the fall of A.D. 34, reaches inevitably to the fall of A.D. 1844 and
marks that date as the expiration of the two thousand and three hundred
years. And at that time, upon the word of the "Wonderful Numberer" in
Daniel 8:14, "then shall the sanctuary be cleansed." In 1844 also was
the very time of "the days of the voice of the seventh angel, when he
shall begin to sound" and when "the mystery of God should be finished,
as He hath declared to His servants the prophets."
At that time there would be broken up the horror of great darkness by
which the mystery of iniquity had hid from ages and generations the
mystery of God. At that time the sanctuary and the true tabernacle and
the truth of it would be lifted up from the ground where the man of sin
had cast them down and stamped upon them and would be exalted to the
heaven where they belong and whence they will shine forth in such light
as that the earth shall be lightened with the glory. At that time the
transcendent truth of the priesthood and ministry of Christ would be
rescued from the oblivion to which the abomination and transgression of
desolation had consigned it and would once more and forever stand in its
true and heavenly place in the faith of the church, accomplishing in
every true believer that perfection which is the eternal purpose of God
which He purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord.
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