Chapter 69
On the Mount of Olives
[This chapter is based on Matt. 24; Mark 13; Luke
21:5-38.]
Christ's words to the priests and rulers, "Behold, your house is
left unto you desolate" (Matt. 23:38), had struck terror to their
hearts. They affected indifference, but the question kept rising in
their minds as to the import of these words. An unseen danger seemed to
threaten them. Could it be that the magnificent temple, which was the
nation's glory, was soon to be a heap of ruins? The foreboding of evil
was shared by the disciples, and they anxiously waited for some more
definite statement from Jesus. As they passed with Him out of the
temple, they called His attention to its strength and beauty. The stones
of the temple were of the purest marble, of perfect whiteness, and some
of them of almost fabulous size. A portion of the wall had withstood the
siege by Nebuchadnezzar's army. In its perfect masonry it appeared like
one solid stone dug entire from the quarry. How those mighty walls could
be overthrown the disciples could not comprehend.
As Christ's attention was attracted to the magnificence of the
temple, what must have been the unuttered thoughts of that Rejected One!
The view before Him was indeed beautiful, but He said with sadness, I
see it all. The buildings are indeed wonderful. You point to these walls
as apparently indestructible; but listen to My words: The day will come
when "there shall not be left one stone upon another, that shall
not be thrown down."
Christ's words had been spoken in the hearing of a large number of
people; but when He was alone, Peter, John, James, and Andrew came to
Him as He sat upon the Mount of Olives. "Tell us," they said,
"when shall these things be? and what shall be the sign of Thy
coming, and of the end of the world?" Jesus did not answer His
disciples by taking up separately the destruction of Jerusalem and the
great day of His coming. He mingled the description of these two events.
Had He opened to His disciples future events as He beheld them, they
would have been unable to endure the sight. In mercy to them He blended
the description of the two great crises, leaving the disciples to study
out the meaning for themselves. When He referred to the destruction of
Jerusalem, His prophetic words reached beyond that event to the final
conflagration in that day when the Lord shall rise out of His place to
punish the world for their iniquity, when the earth shall disclose her
blood, and shall no more cover her slain. This entire discourse was
given, not for the disciples only, but for those who should live in the
last scenes of this earth's history.
Turning to the disciples, Christ said, "Take heed that no man
deceive you. For many shall come in My name, saying, I am Christ; and
shall deceive many." Many false messiahs will appear, claiming to
work miracles, and declaring that the time of the deliverance of the
Jewish nation has come. These will mislead many. Christ's words were
fulfilled. Between His death and the siege of Jerusalem many false
messiahs appeared. But this warning was given also to those who live in
this age of the world. The same deceptions practiced prior to the
destruction of Jerusalem have been practiced through the ages, and will
be practiced again.
"And ye shall hear of wars and rumors of wars: see that ye be
not troubled: for all these things must come to pass, but the end is not
yet." Prior to the destruction of Jerusalem, men wrestled for the
supremacy. Emperors were murdered. Those supposed to be standing next
the throne were slain. There were wars and rumors of wars. "All
these things must come to pass," said Christ, "but the end [of
the Jewish nation as a nation] is not yet. For nation shall rise against
nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be famines, and
pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places. All these are the
beginning of sorrows." Christ said, As the rabbis see these signs,
they will declare them to be God's judgments upon the nations for
holding in bondage His chosen people. They will declare that these signs
are the token of the advent of the Messiah. Be not deceived; they are
the beginning of His judgments. The people have looked to themselves.
They have not repented and been converted that I should heal them. The
signs that they represent as tokens of their release from bondage are
signs of their destruction.
"Then shall they deliver you up to be afflicted, and shall kill
you: and ye shall be hated of all nations for My name's sake. And then
shall many be offended, and shall betray one another, and shall hate one
another." All this the Christians suffered. Fathers and mothers
betrayed their children. Children betrayed their parents. Friends
delivered their friends up to the Sanhedrin. The persecutors wrought out
their purpose by killing Stephen, James, and other Christians.
Through His servants, God gave the Jewish people a last opportunity
to repent. He manifested Himself through His witnesses in their arrest,
in their trial, and in their imprisonment. Yet their judges pronounced
on them the death sentence. They were men of whom the world was not
worthy, and by killing them the Jews crucified afresh the Son of God. So
it will be again. The authorities will make laws to restrict religious
liberty. They will assume the right that is God's alone. They will think
they can force the conscience, which God alone should control. Even now
they are making a beginning; this work they will continue to carry
forward till they reach a boundary over which they cannot step. God will
interpose in behalf of His loyal, commandment-keeping people.
On every occasion when persecution takes place, those who witness it
make decisions either for Christ or against Him. Those who manifest
sympathy for the ones wrongly condemned show their attachment for
Christ. Others are offended because the principles of truth cut directly
across their practice. Many stumble and fall, apostatizing from the
faith they once advocated. Those who apostatize in time of trial will,
to secure their own safety, bear false witness, and betray their
brethren. Christ has warned us of this, that we may not be surprised at
the unnatural, cruel course of those who reject the light.
Christ gave His disciples a sign of the ruin to come on Jerusalem,
and He told them how to escape: "When ye shall see Jerusalem
compassed with armies, then know that the desolation thereof is nigh.
Then let them which are in Judea flee to the mountains; and let them
which are in the midst of it depart out; and let not them that are in
the countries enter thereinto. For these be the days of vengeance, that
all things which are written may be fulfilled." This warning was
given to be heeded forty years after, at the destruction of Jerusalem.
The Christians obeyed the warning, and not a Christian perished in the
fall of the city.
"Pray ye that your flight be not in the winter; neither on the
Sabbath day," Christ said. He who made the Sabbath did not abolish
it, nailing it to His cross. The Sabbath was not rendered null and void
by His death. Forty years after His crucifixion it was still to be held
sacred. For forty years the disciples were to pray that their flight
might not be on the Sabbath day.
From the destruction of Jerusalem, Christ passed on rapidly to the
greater event, the last link in the chain of this earth's history,--the
coming of the Son of God in majesty and glory. Between these two events,
there lay open to Christ's view long centuries of darkness, centuries
for His church marked with blood and tears and agony. Upon these scenes
His disciples could not then endure to look, and Jesus passed them by
with a brief mention. "Then shall be great tribulation," He
said, "such as was not since the beginning of the world to this
time, no, nor ever shall be. And except those days should be shortened,
there should no flesh be saved: but for the elect's sake those days
shall be shortened." For more than a thousand years such
persecution as the world had never before known was to come upon
Christ's followers. Millions upon millions of His faithful witnesses
were to be slain. Had not God's hand been stretched out to preserve His
people, all would have perished. "But for the elect's sake,"
He said, "those days shall be shortened."
Now, in unmistakable language, our Lord speaks of His second coming,
and He gives warning of dangers to precede His advent to the world.
"If any man shall say unto you, Lo, here is Christ, or there;
believe it not. For there shall arise false christs, and false prophets,
and shall show great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were
possible, they shall deceive the very elect. Behold, I have told you
before. Wherefore if they shall say unto you, Behold, He is in the
desert; go not forth: behold, He is in the secret chambers; believe it
not. For as the lightning cometh out of the east, and shineth even unto
the west; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be." As one of
the signs of Jerusalem's destruction, Christ had said, "Many false
prophets shall rise, and shall deceive many." False prophets did
rise, deceiving the people, and leading great numbers into the desert.
Magicians and sorcerers, claiming miraculous power, drew the people
after them into the mountain solitudes. But this prophecy was spoken
also for the last days. This sign is given as a sign of the second
advent. Even now false christs and false prophets are showing signs and
wonders to seduce His disciples. Do we not hear the cry, "Behold,
He is in the desert"? Have not thousands gone forth into the
desert, hoping to find Christ? And from thousands of gatherings where
men profess to hold communion with departed spirits is not the call now
heard, "Behold, He is in the secret chambers"? This is the
very claim that spiritism puts forth. But what says Christ?
"Believe it not. For as the lightning cometh out of the east, and
shineth even unto the west; so shall also the coming of the Son of man
be."
The Saviour gives signs of His coming, and more than this, He fixes
the time when the first of these signs shall appear: "Immediately
after the tribulation of those days shall the sun be darkened, and the
moon shall not give her light, and the stars shall fall from heaven, and
the powers of the heavens shall be shaken: and then shall appear the
sign of the Son of man in heaven: and then shall all the tribes of the
earth mourn, and they shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of
heaven with power and great glory. And He shall send His angels with a
great sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather together His elect from
the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other."
At the close of the great papal persecution, Christ declared, the sun
should be darkened, and the moon should not give her light. Next, the
stars should fall from heaven. And He says, "Learn a parable of the
fig tree; When his branch is yet tender, and putteth forth leaves, ye
know that summer is nigh: so likewise ye, when ye shall see all these
things, know that He is near, even at the doors." Matt. 24:32, 33,
margin.
Christ has given signs of His coming. He declares that we may know
when He is near, even at the doors. He says of those who see these
signs, "This generation shall not pass, till all these things be
fulfilled." These signs have appeared. Now we know of a surety that
the Lord's coming is at hand. "Heaven and earth shall pass
away," He says, "but My words shall not pass away."
Christ is coming with clouds and with great glory. A multitude of
shining angels will attend Him. He will come to raise the dead, and to
change the living saints from glory to glory. He will come to honor
those who have loved Him, and kept His commandments, and to take them to
Himself. He has not forgotten them nor His promise. There will be a
relinking of the family chain. When we look upon our dead, we may think
of the morning when the trump of God shall sound, when "the dead
shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed." 1 Cor.
15:52. A little longer, and we shall see the King in His beauty. A
little longer, and He will wipe all tears from our eyes. A little
longer, and He will present us "faultless before the presence of
His glory with exceeding joy." Jude 24. Wherefore, when He gave the
signs of His coming He said, "When these things begin to come to
pass, then look up, and lift up your heads; for your redemption draweth
nigh."
But the day and the hour of His coming Christ has not revealed. He
stated plainly to His disciples that He Himself could not make known the
day or the hour of His second appearing. Had He been at liberty to
reveal this, why need He have exhorted them to maintain an attitude of
constant expectancy? There are those who claim to know the very day and
hour of our Lord's appearing. Very earnest are they in mapping out the
future. But the Lord has warned them off the ground they occupy. The
exact time of the second coming of the Son of man is God's mystery.
Christ continues, pointing out the condition of the world at His
coming: "As the days of Noah were, so shall also the coming of the
Son of man be. For as in the days that were before the Flood they were
eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that
Noah entered into the ark, and knew not until the Flood came, and took
them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be."
Christ does not here bring to view a temporal millennium, a thousand
years in which all are to prepare for eternity. He tells us that as it
was in Noah's day, so will it be when the Son of man comes again.
How was it in Noah's day? "God saw that the wickedness of man
was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of
his heart was only evil continually." Gen. 6:5. The inhabitants of
the antediluvian world turned from Jehovah, refusing to do His holy
will. They followed their own unholy imagination and perverted ideas. It
was because of their wickedness that they were destroyed; and today the
world is following the same way. It presents no flattering signs of
millennial glory. The transgressors of God's law are filling the earth
with wickedness. Their betting, their horse racing, their gambling,
their dissipation, their lustful practices, their untamable passions,
are fast filling the world with violence.
In the prophecy of Jerusalem's destruction Christ said, "Because
iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold. But he that
shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved. And this gospel of
the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all
nations; and then shall the end come." This prophecy will again be
fulfilled. The abounding iniquity of that day finds its counterpart in
this generation. So with the prediction in regard to the preaching of
the gospel. Before the fall of Jerusalem, Paul, writing by the Holy
Spirit, declared that the gospel was preached to "every creature
which is under heaven." Col. 1:23. So now, before the coming of the
Son of man, the everlasting gospel is to be preached "to every
nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people." Rev. 14:6, 14. God
"hath appointed a day, in the which He will judge the world."
Acts 17:31. Christ tells us when that day shall be ushered in. He does
not say that all the world will be converted, but that "this gospel
of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all
nations; and then shall the end come." By giving the gospel to the
world it is in our power to hasten our Lord's return. We are not only to
look for but to hasten the coming of the day of God. 2 Peter 3:12,
margin. Had the church of Christ done her appointed work as the Lord
ordained, the whole world would before this have been warned, and the
Lord Jesus would have come to our earth in power and great glory.
After He had given the signs of His coming, Christ said, "When
ye see these things come to pass, know ye that the kingdom of God is
nigh at hand." "Take ye heed, watch and pray." God has
always given men warning of coming judgments. Those who had faith in His
message for their time, and who acted out their faith, in obedience to
His commandments, escaped the judgments that fell upon the disobedient
and unbelieving. The word came to Noah, "Come thou and all thy
house into the ark; for thee have I seen righteous before Me." Noah
obeyed and was saved. The message came to Lot, "Up, get you out of
this place; for the Lord will destroy this city." Gen. 7:1; 19:14.
Lot placed himself under the guardianship of the heavenly messengers,
and was saved. So Christ's disciples were given warning of the
destruction of Jerusalem. Those who watched for the sign of the coming
ruin, and fled from the city, escaped the destruction. So now we are
given warning of Christ's second coming and of the destruction to fall
upon the world. Those who heed the warning will be saved.
Because we know not the exact time of His coming, we are commanded to
watch. "Blessed are those servants, whom the Lord when He cometh
shall find watching." Luke 12:37. Those who watch for the Lord's
coming are not waiting in idle expectancy. The expectation of Christ's
coming is to make men fear the Lord, and fear His judgments upon
transgression. It is to awaken them to the great sin of rejecting His
offers of mercy. Those who are watching for the Lord are purifying their
souls by obedience to the truth. With vigilant watching they combine
earnest working. Because they know that the Lord is at the door, their
zeal is quickened to co-operate with the divine intelligences in working
for the salvation of souls. These are the faithful and wise servants who
give to the Lord's household "their portion of meat in due
season." Luke 12:42. They are declaring the truth that is now
specially applicable. As Enoch, Noah, Abraham, and Moses each declared
the truth for his time, so will Christ's servants now give the special
warning for their generation.
But Christ brings to view another class: "If that evil servant
shall say in his heart, My lord delayeth his coming; and shall begin to
smite his fellow servants, and to eat and drink with the drunken; the
lord of that servant shall come in a day when he looketh not for
him."
The evil servant says in his heart, "My lord delayeth his
coming." He does not say that Christ will not come. He does not
scoff at the idea of His second coming. But in his heart and by his
actions and words he declares that the Lord's coming is delayed. He
banishes from the minds of others the conviction that the Lord is coming
quickly. His influence leads men to presumptuous, careless delay. They
are confirmed in their worldliness and stupor. Earthly passions, corrupt
thoughts, take possession of the mind. The evil servant eats and drinks
with the drunken, unites with the world in pleasure seeking. He smites
his fellow servants, accusing and condemning those who are faithful to
their Master. He mingles with the world. Like grows with like in
transgression. It is a fearful assimilation. With the world he is taken
in the snare. "The lord of that servant shall come . . . in an hour
that he is not aware of, and shall cut him asunder, and appoint him his
portion with the hypocrites."
"If therefore thou shalt not watch, I will come on thee as a
thief, and thou shalt not know what hour I will come upon thee."
Rev. 3:3. The advent of Christ will surprise the false teachers. They
are saying, "Peace and safety." Like the priests and teachers
before the fall of Jerusalem, they look for the church to enjoy earthly
prosperity and glory. The signs of the times they interpret as
foreshadowing this. But what saith the word of Inspiration? "Sudden
destruction cometh upon them." 1 Thess. 5:3. Upon all who dwell on
the face of the whole earth, upon all who make this world their home,
the day of God will come as a snare. It comes to them as a prowling
thief.
The world, full of rioting, full of godless pleasure, is asleep,
asleep in carnal security. Men are putting afar off the coming of the
Lord. They laugh at warnings. The proud boast is made, "All things
continue as they were from the beginning." "Tomorrow shall be
as this day, and much more abundant." 2 Peter 3:4; Isa. 56:12. We
will go deeper into pleasure loving. But Christ says, "Behold, I
come as a thief." Rev. 16:15. At the very time when the world is
asking in scorn, "Where is the promise of His coming?" the
signs are fulfilling. While they cry, "Peace and safety,"
sudden destruction is coming. When the scorner, the rejecter of truth,
has become presumptuous; when the routine of work in the various
money-making lines is carried on without regard to principle; when the
student is eagerly seeking knowledge of everything but his Bible, Christ
comes as a thief.
Everything in the world is in agitation. The signs of the times are
ominous. Coming events cast their shadows before. The Spirit of God is
withdrawing from the earth, and calamity follows calamity by sea and by
land. There are tempests, earthquakes, fires, floods, murders of every
grade. Who can read the future? Where is security? There is assurance in
nothing that is human or earthly. Rapidly are men ranging themselves
under the banner they have chosen. Restlessly are they waiting and
watching the movements of their leaders. There are those who are waiting
and watching and working for our Lord's appearing. Another class are
falling into line under the generalship of the first great apostate. Few
believe with heart and soul that we have a hell to shun and a heaven to
win.
The crisis is stealing gradually upon us. The sun shines in the
heavens, passing over its usual round, and the heavens still declare the
glory of God. Men are still eating and drinking, planting and building,
marrying, and giving in marriage. Merchants are still buying and
selling. Men are jostling one against another, contending for the
highest place. Pleasure lovers are still crowding to theaters, horse
races, gambling hells. The highest excitement prevails, yet probation's
hour is fast closing, and every case is about to be eternally decided.
Satan sees that his time is short. He has set all his agencies at work
that men may be deceived, deluded, occupied and entranced, until the day
of probation shall be ended, and the door of mercy be forever shut.
Solemnly there come to us down through the centuries the warning
words of our Lord from the Mount of Olives: "Take heed to
yourselves, lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting,
and drunkenness, and cares of this life, and so that day come upon you
unawares." "Watch ye therefore, and pray always, that ye may
be accounted worthy to escape all these things that shall come to pass,
and to stand before the Son of man."
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