“TO THE JEW
FIRST”-AND LAST
We do not stop to
consider all the reasons why divine favors were extended to the Jew first,
before his Gentile brother: we will only consider one reason, and that to draw
some conclusions therefrom. One of the main reasons for preaching the gospel of
the high calling to the Jew first, was, that they as a people were already
justified from sin and consecrated to God typically. Typically they were
in embryo the holy nation, the royal priesthood (Exod. 19:6), through whom as
his kingdom God had promised blessings upon the world. They were therefore
better prepared to accept of the realities of which they already
possessed the types or shadows, than would be the Gentiles, who even typically
were without God and without any knowledge of his plan, or hope of sharing in
it.
While typical justification, and consecration based upon it, would not serve
the purpose of the true, it was but a short step for the Jew, who realized
himself justified and harmonized with God yearly, by an atonement made with the
blood of bulls and goats, to accept of the better sacrifices of which those
were but types, and to realize a lasting atonement not requiring yearly
repetition. And if he, trusting in the typical atonement for his sin, had come
into harmony with God and consecrated himself, he would not need to re-consecrate
when accepting of Christ: having already consecrated to God under Moses the typical
Leader and Commander of the people, the Jew needed merely to accept Christ
Jesus as the true prophet, priest and king promised. (Acts 3:22.) The
same consecration would serve-the better foundation of real justification being
substituted under it, instead of typical justification.
It was for this reason that Peter made a difference with the Jews in speaking
of baptism. He did not tell them to be baptized as a symbol of consecration, as
Paul, the apostle to the uncircumcision, tells the Gentiles (Rom. 6:2-4),
because as a people they were already consecrated to God and the whole
trouble was that they had been and were still neglecting their
consecration-sinning against the covenant they had made. Hence Peter said to
them, “Repent [of having violated your covenant, repent of having rejected and
crucified the real King and Mediator sent of God of whom Moses was only a
type-turn back to covenant relations with God, accept of Christ Jesus, his son,
the true Mediator who by the sacrifice of himself, the antitype of the bulls
and goats sacrificed by Moses, has sealed and ratified the “new covenant”
promised by the prophets, and is now, highly exalted by God, ready and willing
to fulfill all the promises] and be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ .... for
the remission of sins.”
The entire nation consecrated to God’s will, departed from its covenant so
far, that when God sent the long looked for Messiah and true Mediator, all but
a few were blinded by their sinful pride, so that they saw not in him the clear
fulfillment of the prophetic record. Instead of receiving him, and crowning
him, and obeying him, the consecrated nation rejected and crucified him:
fulfilling the prophecies ignorantly. And of all this sin, says Peter, you as a
nation are guilty and we urge you to repent. And with many other words did he
exhort them saying: “Save yourselves from this untoward generation,” by faith
in Christ, repenting for your sin in once rejecting and crucifying him, and
show your repentance and faith by being immersed in his name. This will testify
to your faith in Christ as the real Messiah, the real King whom God has sent to
rule and bless you, and your entire submission to his rule, his will;
and at the same time it will signify before God and men your repentance of once
rejecting him, and your return to all the original covenants and blessings-For
the promises are still open to you; you may yet become the joint-heirs of the
kingdom, though our nation has been cut off from those promises as a
nation: “For the promise [the “high calling” etc.] is unto you and your
children” [as well as to others afar off, not yet called], you are already in
covenant relationship, therefore have every advantage, if you will realize it
fully and return to it, believing in Christ Jesus, in whom all God’s promises
are to be fulfilled. “Ye are the children of the prophets and of the covenant
which God made with our fathers.... Unto you first [therefore]
God having raised up his Son Jesus, sent him to bless you, in turning every
one of you from his iniquities”-back to his covenant relationship, which
now is established on a better basis, sealed by “the blood of the
covenant”-everlasting.-Acts 2:38, 39; 3:25, 26.
Gentiles on the contrary had never been in covenant relations with God, and had
no such sin of covenant-breaking to repent of, symbolically wash away, and when
after believing in Christ and coming into fellowship with him through faith in
the ransom, they learned of the high calling or covenant, it then was proper
for them to make a covenant of obedience to God and his Anointed Son, and to
symbolize it by baptism, signifying the burial of their wills and their
complete submission to God, in Christ, as taught by the apostle Paul in Rom.
6:2-4. It is for this reason that baptism never signified repentance to a
Gentile, but did to the Jew. Baptism in water is the symbol of entire
consecration, and Gentiles never having been consecrated, could not repent of
having broken a covenant with God, and thus re-consecrate. But to as
many Jews as had violated the covenant, it would imply a regret for that
violation and a return to the original covenant. Our Lord though a Jew was not
a covenant breaker, but as he was to take the place of the covenant breakers
and suffer as a covenant breaker, it became him to show his own consecration to
God individually, hence his immersion.
The point however which we wish to have particularly noticed is that first
stated: that the Jew already consecrated to obedience and service to God,
needed merely to repent of his transgression of that covenant and accept of
Christ, the true, as instead of Moses, the typical Leader and Head, in order to
make his covenant valid. And thus his immersion signified this
repentance or re-consecration.
To some extent the same principle is seen to apply to the children of believing
parents during the Gospel age. From earliest infancy such may come to God in
prayer as fully reconciled through the death of Christ, even before they are
able to comprehend the redemption through his blood for the remission of sins.
Such are born in a justified, reconciled or forgiven state, as relates to God,
and hence as they come to years of judgment, may ratify their parents’
consecration and give themselves to God’s service without becoming “converted”
(turned), unless they have first turned from God, and from their early state of
reconciliation. This is the significance of the Apostle’s statement in 1 Cor.
7:l4-“Else were your children unclean [sinners, unacceptable with God] but now
are they holy” [justified, reconciled, acceptable with God]. This will account
to some for their not having experienced the special change or conversion that
some do. Those born in this justified state, being the children of justified
parents, and from earliest recollection endeavoring to live in harmony with
God, never needed to be converted-turned from their course. Their course was a
right one, and to be converted or turned from that, would be a turning from
God.
* * *
But another point is now due in this connection, and is therefore seen clearly:
We have seen the Lord’s arrangement-that with the close of the Gospel age the call
of the justified to joint-heirship with Christ in the divine natures
ceases. The call to consecration and its propriety does not cease, but the
offer of the great prize as a reward ceases, that class being about complete
enough having already consecrated to fill the elect number of the body of
Christ, as prearranged in God’s plan before the foundation of the world.
We have seen too, that the calling ceases before all the consecrated ones are tested
and proved worthy, and that the Lord warns these to take heed, lest others
take their crowns (Rev. 3:11 ), showing that the number of crowns is limited,
and that there is danger that some of these who are written in heaven,
as (probationary) crown-wearers, may come short and their names be blotted out.
The question then arises, If the number is fixed and the members of that “body”
can be neither more or less, and if no more are “called” from among the
justified ones, and if all those called and consecrated, should they all so run
as to obtain the prize, would make just the correct number-where would God find
any to take the places of any who in the present trial should prove themselves
unworthy of a crown? It will not do to say that God could make the truth
clearer to some of the indifferent runners among the consecrated, so as to
stimulate them to run effectually, for his arrangements already make the truth
as clear and stimulating as the runner is sincere and faithful to his
consecration. And to do more would be to measurably force them.
It is not a question as to whether God can force us, but as to
whether his “call” will so stimulate us, as to lead us to force and crucify
ourselves. God is seeking those who love to do his will, and who delight in
it, and not to see whom he could force; for he could force all. The prize is a favor,
which none will be forced to accept. So then the question stands-Who would
take our crowns, if we should prove unfaithful, seeing there are not too many
to fill the elect number, and no more are to be called?
We answer: God could fill the deficiency from among the Jews without violating
any law or principle, and without forcing any will, in any degree. Suppose that
an earnest Jew desirous of doing God’s will, had consecrated during the
acceptable time-what barrier would there have been to his being received? We
answer, one barrier only-his consecration was all right, but it had not a good
foundation. It was BASED on a typical justification, made by typical
sacrifices, instead of on the real justification accomplished by the
sacrifice of Christ. If, then, the blindness of such, relative to Christ Jesus,
were removed and their consecration moved from the typical to the real
justification-from the sandy foundation to the rock-the same consecration would
still hold good: it, if sincerely made to God was always good, but unacceptable
with God, because not made acceptable by an acceptance of Christ’s death as the
satisfaction for sins.
So, then, if a Jew should accept of the real Lamb of God, as instead of the
typical, his consecration would stand firm and date back to its
beginning, notwithstanding its originally unsafe foundation, and if made in
season-during the “call”-an acceptance of Christ would bring him fully into
every favor enjoyed by Gentiles. And thus, as Paul declares, the broken-off
branches may be grafted in again. (Read carefully Rom. 11:17-23.)
Here, then, is a reserve from which the Lord may select crown-wearers to
take the places of such as prove unworthy among those already “written,” whose
names must be blotted out. But here again, none can be selected, but those
consecrated before the end of the call.
Some may object, that the Jews are so blinded that it would require a special
and almost miraculous interposition of divine providence to bring such to see
Christ as their Redeemer and that if we object to forcing Gentiles as
being contrary to God’s method, we must also object to the forcing of the
Jews. We answer, that there is a wide difference between the two. The one
would be forcing a man who has seen and consecrated to fulfill his vows, while
the other would be, forcing a man who has consecrated himself and is earnestly
living up to his consecration, to see the real basis upon which
his consecration should stand. The latter is no violation of the man’s will,
nor of God’s law and arrangement in the matter. Paul, for instance, was
consecrated and very zealous for God, but he was blind to the true foundation
of consecrated service-redemption through the blood of Christ. God could and
did miraculously open his eyes to this truth, because of his honesty in
consecration. But had Paul ignored or despised his consecration God would not
have miraculously stimulated it, but as Paul himself declares, would have
permitted him to take his course and become “a castaway;” for if he would not
be influenced and inspired by the exceeding great and precious promises he was
unfit to be a member of the select, anointed body-all of whom must be
overcomers.
* * *
Another point needs notice in this connection, lest any should be discouraged
who are called and faithfully running in this race, for this grand prize. It is
this: If you are able to see this prize (with the eye of faith) and able
to endure the reproaches of Christ and his truth and social and financial
losses for the same, gladly then, you may recognize yourself as having the
spirit of the priesthood, and you thus have good evidence both of your
consecration and acceptance. Your zeal and sacrifice prove your consecration,
while the fact that you can see the “deep things of God” and prize them above
all else, is sure evidence of your being priests in the “holy,” enlightened by
the light of the golden candlestick and strengthened by the holy shew-bread of
deep spiritual truth. Such, as called ones, should go on faithfully to the end
of the course, that their names be not blotted out, and that no man shall be
given their crown. Thus make your calling and election sure: work out your own
salvation to this high calling with fear and trembling, letting God by his
truth work in you, both to will and to do his good pleasure.
Many doubtless were consecrated long before they are now inclined to think,
because they never saw until recently the fullness it implied. Our consecration
dates from the moment we first sought to please God and do his will. We
appreciate it more now, because of the morning light now shining upon our way.
Remember too, that some of God’s consecrated children, in their honest search
for truth, got away among the swine, and would fain have eaten of the husks of
infidelity to their full, but could not, and finally by this route because they
were honest children of God, they were brought to see the truth they sought
ignorantly in other channels. Remember that Paul the persecutor for a time, was
even then a consecrated child of God. It was because he was consecrated and
earnest that he got the light. This was proved by the fact that as soon
as he received the light he walked in it with the same zeal and consecration.
In his case the light did not make him a child of God but being a child of God
was the reason for giving him the light, that thereby he might walk more perfectly;
and so it is with us all.