XXXVI - 2(03) “Watchman, what of the night?” "The hour has come, the
hour is striking and striking at you,
The Hand of God - 2 Page 2 Postscripts Page 6 & 7
Editor's Preface
Not only did Ellen G.
White warn the Church that it would be weighed in the balances of the sanctuary
as to how it kept the trust committed to it (Testimonies for the Church, Vol. 8, p. 247), but counsel was given
as to what book and chapter to read which applied in particular "to this
generation of the end." In 1906, in the Australian Union Conference Record (October 1) she advised:
"Read Luke 21. This is the message for this time, and it is written to this
generation of the end." Previous to 1906, in a letter to Dr. Kellogg, she wrote:
"In the twenty-first chapter of Luke Christ foretold what was to come upon
Jerusalem, and with it He connected the scenes which were to take place in the history
of the world just prior to the coming of the Son of man in the clouds of heaven
with power and great glory" (Letter 20, 1901). The fact is self evident that
the synoptic gospels of Matthew and Mark were not named, and the single significant
difference in Luke from the other two is verse 24. The ancient prophet, Amos,
revealed God's commitment in His dealing with men. He wrote: "Surely the Lord
God will do nothing, but He revealeth His secret unto His servants the prophets"
(3:7; emphasis supplied). If God committed to a people a sacred trust, and told
them that they would be weighed in the balances of the sanctuary as to how they
handled that trust, warning them that failure would bring the pronouncement, "Found
wanting," would He not also reveal the time when the decision was made? When
that "trust" involved a message "to every nation" would not
a prophecy indicating the end of the probationary time of the nations be significant? In this issue, we discuss
this question and evidences which would involve the decision of heaven. We close
the final "postscript" with a warning of a "signal" that was
or is to be given. It has significance and needs to be carefully considered. What
does it mean, "Go ye out to meet Him"?
Page 2 The Hand of God -
2 During the final week of
Christ's life in our humanity, His disciples asked Him two questions about the future.
One was in response to Jesus' declaration that not one of the massive stones where
they were walking would "be left here one stone upon another" (Matt. 24:2).
To them that had to be the end of the world, and so to the question, "When
shall these things be?" they added a second, "What shall be the sign of
thy coming and the end of the world?" (verse 3). Luke's Gospel indicates
that Christ answered the questions by forecasting two events which were to occur
in the history of Both answers had to do with
probationary time. The first was the judgment on First an explanation of
the translation we used for Luke 21:24 -- "nations" instead of "Gentiles."
The Greek word Luke used was
eqnh
which can be translated either way. It is used four
times in verses 24 and 25, two times translated "nations," and two times
translated "Gentiles" in the KJV. There is no way that its first use in
verse 24 could be translated "Gentiles" and the sentence make sense: -
"led captive into all Gentiles (ta
eqnh)." The same is true of its use
in verse 25 - "and upon earth distress of Gentiles" (eqnwn). Jews escape?
Luke is focusing on corporate bodies, "the nations," and uses the same
time concept as he used in reporting the words of Jesus concerning
Another observation is in
order. Nowhere in the prophetic discourse of Jesus is the focus directed to Not so is the picture of
There is a contrast in the
application of the kairoV in the two signs which Jesus gave. The first sign drawn
from the history of
Page 3 We also read that " The next year in a letter
to Dr. J. H. Kellogg, Ellen White would write: The time is right upon us when there will be sorrow in the
world that no human balm can heal. The flattering monuments of men's greatness will
be crumbled in the dust, even before the last destruction comes upon the world.
. . . God has given His object lesson. If the world will not heed,
will not the people of God take heed? In the twenty-first chapter of Luke, Christ
foretold what was to come upon Jerusalem; with it He connected the scenes which
are to take place in the history of this world just prior to the coming of the Son
of man in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory. (MR # 1102, pp. 148-149) The question as to the meaning
of Luke 21:24 was again addressed at the 1952 Bible Conference. Arthur S. Maxwell
speaking on the "Imminence of Christ's Second Coming" observed that "there
is one prophecy concerning Palestine that we should be watching with special care"
and quoted Luke 21:24. He then commented on the establishment of the State of Israel
in 1948: Victorious as were the forces of Then Maxwell asked - "What
could be the reason?" and answered, "Only that the times of the Gentiles
are not yet fulfilled." Citing what God told Abraham in regard to the Amorites,
Maxwell observed: It may well be that the same principle applies today, on
a wider scale. If so, then That was in 1952, and today,
1967 and 1980 are now history. On his very first missionary
tour, Paul set before the Jews in the synagogues a choice - either Jesus was the
Messiah whom "they that dwell at A similar situation confronts
us today with "the times of the nations fulfilled." Both Edson White and
Arthur Maxwell recognized that this prophecy was related to the giving of the gospel.
The Church was commissioned with the responsibility of giving "the everlasting
gospel" to "every nation" (Rev. 14:6). (Read carefully Testimonies for the Church, Vol. 9, p. 19,
paragraphs 1 & 2.) The first angel's message carried two corollaries: 1) "Fear God" and 2) "Worship Him who made." We
are to fear God "because the hour of His judgment is come." This concept
cannot be separated from the vision given to Daniel that "the judgment was
set, and the books were opened" (
Page 4 The commandment enjoins
such worship because God not only "made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and
the fountains of water," but He also himself rested on that day, blessed and
hallowed it. (Ex. 20:8-11). The two concepts, to "fear God because" and
to "worship Him who made," are set on a par as a part of "the Everlasting
Gospel" committed in sacred trust for a Now let us turn our attention
to some historical data. In 1952, a Bible Conference was held in the The sanctuary and the Sabbath are the two foundation pillars
upon which this Advent message rests. (ibid.,
p. 336) Further: The atoning sacrifice was made certain upon the Cross, when
Christ uttered the words, "It is finished." This sacrifice became effectual
for individual sinners by the priestly ministry of Christ in heaven. (p. 334). On The death of Christ on the cross paid the redemption price,
but His blood must be applied to the repentant sinner through His own mediation,
in order that the atonement or reconciliation may be complete (p. 373). Three years later the Adventists do not hold any theory of a dual atonement.
"Christ hath redeemed us" (Gal. On a prior page in the same
chapter, under a section captioned, "The Redemption Absolute by the Victory
of Christ," it is stated: How glorious is the thought that the King, who occupies
the throne, is also our representative at the court of heaven! This becomes all
the more meaningful when we realize that Jesus our surety entered the "holy
places," and appeared in the presence of God for us. But it was not with the
hope of obtaining something for us at that time, or at some future time.
No! He had already obtained for us on the cross. (p. 381; emphasis theirs). A comparison between these
quotations from the book, Questions on Doctrine,
and the statements made at the 1952 Bible Conference reveal that they are not in
agreement. The position set forth at the Bible Conference has been denied. Instead
of a dual atonement - first at the cross by Jesus as the Lamb of God, and then a
completed atonement as High Priest after the Order of Melchizedec in the Heavenly
Sanctuary - there is emphasized a single atonement completed at the Cross. It was
a crucifixion of the truth committed to the Church in sacred trust. In fact, Donald Grey Barnhouse,
the editor of Eternity in reporting the
conferences, declared that he and Mr. Martin "heard the Adventist leaders say,
flatly, that they repudiate all such extremes" that Christ "had a work
to perform in the Most Holy before coming to this earth." Also, Barnhouse reported
that the Adventist conferees "do not believe, as some of their earlier teachers
taught that Jesus' atoning work was not completed on Further, it must be kept
in mind that the book, Questions on Doctrine,
as published in 1957 for
Page 5 the laity of the Church,
was a revision of the answers which the Adventist leaders gave the Evangelicals
to the questions they asked at the Conference.[3] One
revision can be checked by comparing a statement quoted by Walter Martin in his
article, "What Seventh-day Adventists Really Believe" (Eternity, November, 1956) with the same statement
as given in Questions on Doctrine. The
answers as given to the Evangelicals read "the death of Christ (was) the complete
atonement for sin;" the revision read: "the death of Christ (was) the
complete sacrificial atonement for sin" (QonD, p. 30, par. 2;
also page 31, par. 4). There was opposition to
the book. The most notable was that of M. L. Andreasen who wrote in response to
the apostasy, Letters to the Churches.
The hierarchy of the Church waged "war" against those who opposed the
publication. In Andreasen's case he was "defrocked" and his sustentation
cut off. Others were fired. It was a decade of turmoil in the Church, but God spoke
in warning in 1967. In 1985, Walter Martin published
a revised and updated edition of his book, The
Kingdom of the Cults, with an appendix section discussing Seventh-day Adventism.
He wrote: During the last ten years (since the early 1970s) the Seventh-day
Adventist denomination has seen turbulence, both administratively and doctrinally, that is more extensive
than any turmoil in the denomination's history. . . . Since I have always stressed the importance of doctrinal
integrity in my evaluation of religious movements, the doctrinal upheaval in Adventism
is of special concern. Consequently, on Two and half months later,
Martin received a reply from W. Richard Lesher, who at the time was serving as a
General Conference vice-president, and who would the next year become president
of Andrews University. Lesher stated in his reply: You ask first if the Seventh-day Adventists still stand
behind the answers given to your questions in Questions on Doctrine as they did in 1957. The answer is yes. You noted
in your letter that some opposed the answers given then, and, to some extent, the
same situation exists today. But certainly the great majority of Seventh-day Adventists
are in harmony with the views expressed in Questions
on Doctrine. (ibid.). Here we have an interesting
parallel which must receive due consideration. The Sanhedrin, the Jewish General
Conference of 31 A.D., never repented nor changed their decision in the crucifixion
of Him who is the Truth (John 14:6). Today, the General Conference of the Church
to which God in sacred trust committed the "Everlasting Gospel" will not
repent and change their decision in their crucifixion of the Truth regarding the
High Priestly ministry of the One who is the truth. They will not seek the blessings
of the final atonement, because they have concurred with the Evangelicals that it
was all completed at the cross, and that He receives nothing for us as High Priest
after the Order of Melchizedec. There is no difference between the
crucifixion of Jesus Christ, the way, the truth, and the life, and crucifying the
truth as it is in Jesus. In 1903, when the progressive
steps taken in 1901 were reversed, Ellen White warned: In the balances of the sanctuary, the Seventh-day Adventist church is to be weighed. She will be judged by the privileges and advantages that she has had. If her spiritual experience does not correspond to the advantages that Christ, at infinite cost, has bestowed upon her, if the blessings conferred have not qualified her to do the work entrusted to her, on
Page 6 her will be pronounced the sentence, "Found wanting."
By the light bestowed, the opportunities given, will she be judged. (Testimonies for the Church, Vol. 8, p.
247; emphasis supplied). Note the emphasized word
- "entrusted" - and compare this with the sentence in Vol. 9, p. 19 "The
most solemn truths ever entrusted to mortals have been given us to proclaim
to the world." The single truth which made Seventh-day Adventism unique, and
placed on a par with the Sabbath truth in the First Angel's Message was crucified
in the Postscript
- 1 The dual prophecy which
Jesus gave involving
Page 7 perspectives from which
to view these words of Jesus: 1)
from the view point of the disciples to whom Jesus was speaking, and 2) from our viewpoint as we see things
today. First, let us note the disciple's
viewpoint. To them, the world was composed of but two groups of people, Then there is another factor
that can be introduced. The sign foretold in the answer Jesus gave to the disciple's
first question was for the new Israel of God. Can the same be true for the sign
given in answer to the second question asked? If so, the question is, what is the
fulfillment of Luke 21:24 saying to the spiritual Israel of God today? This requires
that we face squarely the trust committed and the betrayal of that trust. Postscript – 2 A similar military order
marked the answers to both questions which the disciples asked Jesus. When the first
prophecy was being fulfilled, Josephus tells us that Cestius "retired from
the city, without any reason in the world" (Wars of the Jews, Bk. 11, Chap. XIX, # 7). This permitted the Jews to
open the gates of the city, and the Christians who had remained in
In a book published last
year, Six Days of War, the author, Michael
B. Oren, a recognized Hebrew scholar and historian, after noting the destruction
inflicted on the Egyptian air force by the Israeli pre-emptive strike, wrote: Yet, for all this destruction, the Egyptian army in Sinai
was far from vanquished. Over half of Then Dr. Oren notes " The Divine Intervention which caused Cestius
to call a retreat was not for the sake of My mind was carried into the future, when the signal will be given, "Behold
the Bridegroom cometh; go ye out to meet him." (R&H,
[1]
To correctly understand the 16th
chapter of Revelation, one must separate between the plague and the reason for
the plague. For example, the 1st plague - "a noisome and grievous
sore" - fell upon those "which had the mark of the beast, and upon
them that worshiped his image" (ver. 2). But both the reception of the
mark, and the worship of the image occurred during probationary time. The
plague - the "sore," God's judgment - followed the close of
probation. This is the same relationship in all the plagues, except the third. Thus
the gathering together for the final confrontation by the "the spirits of
devils" to the place called in the Hebrew tongue - Har-Mo'ed - comes
before the close of probation, and God's response, "the drying up of the
great river [2] The Bible Sabbath Association's Directory indicates that there are 400 different Sabbath observing groups. In other words, the keeping of the Sabbath is no longer a unique mark of Seventh-day Adventists; however, only those in the community of Adventism teach, or give lip service to, the sanctuary doctrine which would reflect the meaning of "Fear God and give glory to Him because the hour of His judgment is come." The uniqueness of the sacred trust rests in the Sanctuary truth rather than the Sabbath. In a
recent report of the dialogue between the BRI and Roman Catholic theologians,
one of the justifications for such a conference emphasized the fact that the
Adventist theologians were able to present the Sabbath truth to the Papists.
Dr. Manuel Rodriguez gave a thorough defence of the Sabbath almost to the point
of an "over-kill." But when Dr. George W. Reid presented a review of
the 27 Statements of Fundamental Beliefs, he muted #23 which covers the
Ministry of Christ as High Priest after the Order of Melchizedec. See January
issue of WWN, page 7, "Dialogue with
[3] On one occasion in passing through
I did mind, and still do mind. Somebody needs to do so, so that the whole truth and all the truth about the compromises may be made known.
[4] We look in total dismay upon the fact
that a group of religious leaders could lead a crowd of professed believers to
shout in unison, "Crucify Him," - the very God they professed to
worship there in flesh before them. But they did. They denied that the
"Word who came to be flesh" was divine. They justified and maintained
their judgment against Him to the very destruction of their
WEBSITE
E-
Originally published by Adventist Laymen's Foundation of Mississippi/Arkansas
Wm. H. Grotheer, Editor
Adventist Laymen's Foundation was chartered in 1971 by Elder Wm. H. Grotheer, then 29 years in the Seventh-day Adventist
ministry, and associates, for the benefit of Seventh-day Adventists who were deeply concerned about the compromises of fundamental
doctrines by the Church leaders in conference with those who had no right to influence them. Elder Grotheer began to publish the monthly "Thought Paper," Watchman, What of the Night? (WWN) in January, 1968, and continued the publication as Editor until the end of 2006. Elder Grotheer died on May 2, 2009.
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