Chapter 42
The Controversy Ended
AT the close of the thousand years, Christ
again returns to the earth. He is accompanied by the host of the redeemed and attended by
a retinue of angels. As He descends in terrific majesty He bids the wicked dead arise to
receive their doom. They come forth, a mighty host, numberless as the sands of the sea.
What a contrast to those who were raised at the first resurrection! The righteous were
clothed with immortal youth and beauty. The wicked bear the traces of disease and death.
Every eye in that vast
multitude is turned to behold the glory of the Son of God. With one voice the wicked hosts
exclaim: "Blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord!" It is not love to
Jesus that inspires this utterance. The force of truth urges the words from unwilling
lips. As the wicked went into their graves, so they come forth with the same enmity to
Christ and the same spirit of rebellion. They are to have no new probation in which to
remedy the defects of their past lives. Nothing would be gained by this. A lifetime of
transgression has not softened their hearts. A second probation, were it given them, would
be occupied as was the first in evading the requirements of God and exciting rebellion
against Him.
Christ descends upon the
Mount of Olives, whence, after His resurrection, He ascended, and where angels repeated
the promise of His return. Says the prophet: "The Lord my God
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shall come, and all the
saints with Thee." "And His feet shall stand in that day upon the Mount of
Olives, which is before Jerusalem on the east, and the Mount of Olives shall cleave in the
midst thereof, . . . and there shall be a very great valley." "And the Lord
shall be king over all the earth: in that day shall there be one Lord, and His name
one." Zechariah 14:5, 4, 9. As the New Jerusalem, in its dazzling splendor, comes
down out of heaven, it rests upon the place purified and made ready to receive it, and
Christ, with His people and the angels, enters the Holy City.
Now Satan prepares for a last
mighty struggle for the supremacy. While deprived of his power and cut off from his work
of deception, the prince of evil was miserable and dejected; but as the wicked dead are
raised and he sees the vast multitudes upon his side, his hopes revive, and he determines
not to yield the great controversy. He will marshal all the armies of the lost under his
banner and through them endeavor to execute his plans. The wicked are Satan's captives. In
rejecting Christ they have accepted the rule of the rebel leader. They are ready to
receive his suggestions and to do his bidding. Yet, true to his early cunning, he does not
acknowledge himself to be Satan. He claims to be the prince who is the rightful owner of
the world and whose inheritance has been unlawfully wrested from him. He represents
himself to his deluded subjects as a redeemer, assuring them that his power has brought
them forth from their graves and that he is about to rescue them from the most cruel
tyranny. The presence of Christ having been removed, Satan works wonders to support his
claims. He makes the weak strong and inspires all with his own spirit and energy. He
proposes to lead them against the camp of the saints and to take possession of the City of
God. With fiendish exultation he points to the unnumbered millions who have been raised
from the dead and declares that as their leader he is well able to overthrow the city and
regain his throne and his kingdom.
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In that vast throng are
multitudes of the long-lived race that existed before the Flood; men of lofty stature and
giant intellect, who, yielding to the control of fallen angels, devoted all their skill
and knowledge to the exaltation of themselves; men whose wonderful works of art led the
world to idolize their genius, but whose cruelty and evil inventions, defiling the earth
and defacing the image of God, caused Him to blot them from the face of His creation.
There are kings and generals who conquered nations, valiant men who never lost a battle,
proud, ambitious warriors whose approach made kingdoms tremble. In death these experienced
no change. As they come up from the grave, they resume the current of their thoughts just
where it ceased. They are actuated by the same desire to conquer that ruled them when they
fell.
Satan consults with his
angels, and then with these kings and conquerors and mighty men. They look upon the
strength and numbers on their side, and declare that the army within the city is small in
comparison with theirs, and that it can be overcome. They lay their plans to take
possession of the riches and glory of the New Jerusalem. All immediately begin to prepare
for battle. Skillful artisans construct implements of war. Military leaders, famed for
their success, marshal the throngs of warlike men into companies and divisions.
At last the order to advance
is given, and the countless host moves on--an army such as was never summoned by earthly
conquerors, such as the combined forces of all ages since war began on earth could never
equal. Satan, the mightiest of warriors, leads the van, and his angels unite their forces
for this final struggle. Kings and warriors are in his train, and the multitudes follow in
vast companies, each under its appointed leader. With military precision the serried ranks
advance over the earth's broken and uneven surface to the City of God. By command of
Jesus, the gates of the New Jerusalem are closed, and the armies of Satan surround the
city and make ready for the onset.
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Now Christ again appears to
the view of His enemies. Far above the city, upon a foundation of burnished gold, is a
throne, high and lifted up. Upon this throne sits the Son of God, and around Him are the
subjects of His kingdom. The power and majesty of Christ no language can describe, no pen
portray. The glory of the Eternal Father is enshrouding His Son. The brightness of His
presence fills the City of God, and flows out beyond the gates, flooding the whole earth
with its radiance.
Nearest the throne are those
who were once zealous in the cause of Satan, but who, plucked as brands from the burning,
have followed their Saviour with deep, intense devotion. Next are those who perfected
Christian characters in the midst of falsehood and infidelity, those who honored the law
of God when the Christian world declared it void, and the millions, of all ages, who were
martyred for their faith. And beyond is the "great multitude, which no man could
number, of all nations, and kindreds, and people, and tongues, . . . before the throne,
and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and palms in their hands." Revelation
7:9. Their warfare is ended, their victory won. They have run the race and reached the
prize. The palm branch in their hands is a symbol of their triumph, the white robe an
emblem of the spotless righteousness of Christ which now is theirs.
The redeemed raise a song of
praise that echoes and re-echoes through the vaults of heaven: "Salvation to our God
which sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb." Verse 10. And angel and seraph
unite their voices in adoration. As the redeemed have beheld the power and malignity of
Satan, they have seen, as never before, that no power but that of Christ could have made
them conquerors. In all that shining throng there are none to ascribe salvation to
themselves, as if they had prevailed by their own power and goodness. Nothing is said of
what they have done or suffered; but the burden of every song, the keynote of every
anthem, is: Salvation to our God and unto the Lamb.
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In the presence of the
assembled inhabitants of earth and heaven the final coronation of the Son of God takes
place. And now, invested with supreme majesty and power, the King of kings pronounces
sentence upon the rebels against His government and executes justice upon those who have
transgressed His law and oppressed His people. Says the prophet of God: "I saw a
great white throne, and Him that sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled
away; and there was found no place for them. And I saw the dead, small and great, stand
before God; and the books were opened: and another book was opened, which is the book of
life: and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books,
according to their works." Revelation 20:11, 12.
As soon as the books of
record are opened, and the eye of Jesus looks upon the wicked, they are conscious of every
sin which they have ever committed. They see just where their feet diverged from the path
of purity and holiness, just how far pride and rebellion have carried them in the
violation of the law of God. The seductive temptations which they encouraged by indulgence
in sin, the blessings perverted, the messengers of God despised, the warnings rejected,
the waves of mercy beaten back by the stubborn, unrepentant heart--all appear as if
written in letters of fire.
Above the throne is revealed
the cross; and like a panoramic view appear the scenes of Adam's temptation and fall, and
the successive steps in the great plan of redemption. The Saviour's lowly birth; His early
life of simplicity and obedience; His baptism in Jordan; the fast and temptation in the
wilderness; His public ministry, unfolding to men heaven's most precious blessings; the
days crowded with deeds of love and mercy, the nights of prayer and watching in the
solitude of the mountains; the plottings of envy, hate, and malice which repaid His
benefits; the awful, mysterious agony in Gethsemane beneath the crushing weight of the
sins of the whole world; His betrayal into the hands of the murderous
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mob; the fearful
events of that night of horror--the unresisting prisoner, forsaken by His best-loved
disciples, rudely hurried through the streets of Jerusalem; the Son of God exultingly
displayed before Annas, arraigned in the high priest's palace, in the judgment hall of
Pilate, before the cowardly and cruel Herod, mocked, insulted, tortured, and condemned to
die--all are vividly portrayed.
And now before the swaying
multitude are revealed the final scenes--the patient Sufferer treading the path to
Calvary; the Prince of heaven hanging upon the cross; the haughty priests and the jeering
rabble deriding His expiring agony; the supernatural darkness; the heaving earth, the rent
rocks, the open graves, marking the moment when the world's Redeemer yielded up His life.
The awful spectacle appears
just as it was. Satan, his angels, and his subjects have no power to turn from the picture
of their own work. Each actor recalls the part which he performed. Herod, who slew the
innocent children of Bethlehem that he might destroy the King of Israel; the base
Herodias, upon whose guilty soul rests the blood of John the Baptist; the weak,
timeserving Pilate; the mocking soldiers; the priests and rulers and the maddened throng
who cried, "His blood be on us, and on our children!"--all behold the enormity
of their guilt. They vainly seek to hide from the divine majesty of His countenance,
outshining the glory of the sun, while the redeemed cast their crowns at the Saviour's
feet, exclaiming: "He died for me!"
Amid the ransomed throng are
the apostles of Christ, the heroic Paul, the ardent Peter, the loved and loving John, and
their truehearted brethren, and with them the vast host of martyrs; while outside the
walls, with every vile and abominable thing, are those by whom they were persecuted,
imprisoned, and slain. There is Nero, that monster of cruelty and vice, beholding the joy
and exaltation of those whom he once tortured, and in whose extremest anguish he found
satanic delight. His mother is there to witness the result of
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her own work; to see how the
evil stamp of character transmitted to her son, the passions encouraged and developed by
her influence and example, have borne fruit in crimes that caused the world to shudder.
There are papist priests and
prelates, who claimed to be Christ's ambassadors, yet employed the rack, the dungeon, and
the stake to control the consciences of His people. There are the proud pontiffs who
exalted themselves above God and presumed to change the law of the Most High. Those
pretended fathers of the church have an account to render to God from which they would
fain be excused. Too late they are made to see that the Omniscient One is jealous of His
law and that He will in no wise clear the guilty. They learn now that Christ identifies
His interest with that of His suffering people; and they feel the force of His own words:
"Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these My brethren, ye have done
it unto Me." Matthew 25:40.
The whole wicked world stand
arraigned at the bar of God on the charge of high treason against the government of
heaven. They have none to plead their cause; they are without excuse; and the sentence of
eternal death is pronounced against them.
It is now evident to all that
the wages of sin is not noble independence and eternal life, but slavery, ruin, and death.
The wicked see what they have forfeited by their life of rebellion. The far more exceeding
and eternal weight of glory was despised when offered them; but how desirable it now
appears. "All this," cries the lost soul, "I might have had; but I chose to
put these things far from me. Oh, strange infatuation! I have exchanged peace, happiness,
and honor for wretchedness, infamy, and despair." All see that their exclusion from
heaven is just. By their lives they have declared: "We will not have this Man [Jesus]
to reign over us."
As if entranced, the wicked
have looked upon the coronation of the Son of God. They see in His hands the tables of the
divine law, the statutes which they have despised and
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transgressed. They witness the
outburst of wonder, rapture, and adoration from the saved; and as the wave of melody
sweeps over the multitudes without the city, all with one voice exclaim, "Great and
marvelous are Thy works, Lord God Almighty; just and true are Thy ways, Thou King of
saints" (Revelation 15:3); and, falling prostrate, they worship the Prince of life.
Satan seems paralyzed as he
beholds the glory and majesty of Christ. He who was once a covering cherub remembers
whence he has fallen. A shining seraph, "son of the morning;" how changed, how
degraded! From the council where once he was honored, he is forever excluded. He sees
another now standing near to the Father, veiling His glory. He has seen the crown placed
upon the head of Christ by an angel of lofty stature and majestic presence, and he knows
that the exalted position of this angel might have been his.
Memory recalls the home of
his innocence and purity, the peace and content that were his until he indulged in
murmuring against God, and envy of Christ. His accusations, his rebellion, his deceptions
to gain the sympathy and support of the angels, his stubborn persistence in making no
effort for self-recovery when God would have granted him forgiveness --all come vividly
before him. He reviews his work among men and its results--the enmity of man toward his
fellow man, the terrible destruction of life, the rise and fall of kingdoms, the
overturning of thrones, the long succession of tumults, conflicts, and revolutions. He
recalls his constant efforts to oppose the work of Christ and to sink man lower and lower.
He sees that his hellish plots have been powerless to destroy those who have put their
trust in Jesus. As Satan looks upon his kingdom, the fruit of his toil, he sees only
failure and ruin. He has led the multitudes to believe that the City of God would be an
easy prey; but he knows that this is false. Again and again, in the progress of the great
controversy, he has been defeated and compelled to yield. He knows too well the power and
majesty of the Eternal.
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The aim of the great rebel
has ever been to justify himself and to prove the divine government responsible for the
rebellion. To this end he has bent all the power of his giant intellect. He has worked
deliberately and systematically, and with marvelous success, leading vast multitudes to
accept his version of the great controversy which has been so long in progress. For
thousands of years this chief of conspiracy has palmed off falsehood for truth. But the
time has now come when the rebellion is to be finally defeated and the history and
character of Satan disclosed. In his last great effort to dethrone Christ, destroy His
people, and take possession of the City of God, the archdeceiver has been fully unmasked.
Those who have united with him see the total failure of his cause. Christ's followers and
the loyal angels behold the full extent of his machinations against the government of God.
He is the object of universal abhorrence.
Satan sees that his voluntary
rebellion has unfitted him for heaven. He has trained his powers to war against God; the
purity, peace, and harmony of heaven would be to him supreme torture. His accusations
against the mercy and justice of God are now silenced. The reproach which he has
endeavored to cast upon Jehovah rests wholly upon himself. And now Satan bows down and
confesses the justice of his sentence.
"Who shall not fear
Thee, O Lord, and glorify Thy name? for Thou only art holy: for all nations shall come and
worship before Thee; for Thy judgments are made manifest." Verse 4. Every question of
truth and error in the long-standing controversy has now been made plain. The results of
rebellion, the fruits of setting aside the divine statutes, have been laid open to the
view of all created intelligences. The working out of Satan's rule in contrast with the
government of God has been presented to the whole universe. Satan's own works have
condemned him. God's wisdom, His justice, and His goodness stand fully vindicated. It is
seen that all His dealings in the great controversy have been conducted
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with respect to
the eternal good of His people and the good of all the worlds that He has created.
"All Thy works shall praise Thee, O Lord; and Thy saints shall bless Thee."
Psalm 145:10. The history of sin will stand to all eternity as a witness that with the
existence of God's law is bound up the happiness of all the beings He has created. With
all the facts of the great controversy in view, the whole universe, both loyal and
rebellious, with one accord declare: "Just and true are Thy ways, Thou King of
saints."
Before the universe has been
clearly presented the great sacrifice made by the Father and the Son in man's behalf. The
hour has come when Christ occupies His rightful position and is glorified above
principalities and powers and every name that is named. It was for the joy that was set
before Him--that He might bring many sons unto glory--that He endured the cross and
despised the shame. And inconceivably great as was the sorrow and the shame, yet greater
is the joy and the glory. He looks upon the redeemed, renewed in His own image, every
heart bearing the perfect impress of the divine, every face reflecting the likeness of
their King. He beholds in them the result of the travail of His soul, and He is satisfied.
Then, in a voice that reaches the assembled multitudes of the righteous and the wicked, He
declares: "Behold the purchase of My blood! For these I suffered, for these I died,
that they might dwell in My presence throughout eternal ages." And the song of praise
ascends from the white-robed ones about the throne: "Worthy is the Lamb that was
slain to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honor, and glory, and
blessing." Revelation 5:12.
Notwithstanding that Satan
has been constrained to acknowledge God's justice and to bow to the supremacy of Christ,
his character remains unchanged. The spirit of rebellion, like a mighty torrent, again
bursts forth. Filled with frenzy, he determines not to yield the great controversy. The
time has come for a last desperate struggle against the King
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of heaven. He rushes into the
midst of his subjects and endeavors to inspire them with his own fury and arouse them to
instant battle. But of all the countless millions whom he has allured into rebellion,
there are none now to acknowledge his supremacy. His power is at an end. The wicked are
filled with the same hatred of God that inspires Satan; but they see that their case is
hopeless, that they cannot prevail against Jehovah. Their rage is kindled against Satan
and those who have been his agents in deception, and with the fury of demons they turn
upon them.
Saith the Lord: "Because
thou hast set thine heart as the heart of God; behold, therefore I will bring strangers
upon thee, the terrible of the nations: and they shall draw their swords against the
beauty of thy wisdom, and they shall defile thy brightness. They shall bring thee down to
the pit." "I will destroy thee, O covering cherub, from the midst of the stones
of fire. . . . I will cast thee to the ground, I will lay thee before kings, that they may
behold thee. . . . I will bring thee to ashes upon the earth in the sight of all them that
behold thee. . . . Thou shalt be a terror, and never shalt thou be any more." Ezekiel
28:6-8, 16-19.
"Every battle of the
warrior is with confused noise, and garments rolled in blood; but this shall be with
burning and fuel of fire." "The indignation of the Lord is upon all nations, and
His fury upon all their armies: He hath utterly destroyed them, He hath delivered them to
the slaughter." "Upon the wicked He shall rain quick burning coals, fire and
brimstone and an horrible tempest: this shall be the portion of their cup." Isaiah
9:5; 34:2; Psalm 11:6, margin. Fire comes down from God out of heaven. The earth is broken
up. The weapons concealed in its depths are drawn forth. Devouring flames burst from every
yawning chasm. The very rocks are on fire. The day has come that shall burn as an oven.
The elements melt with fervent heat, the earth also, and the works that are therein are
burned up. Malachi 4:1; 2 Peter 3:10. The earth's surface seems one molten mass--a vast,
seething
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lake of fire. It is the time of the judgment and perdition of ungodly
men--"the day of the Lord's vengeance, and the year of recompenses for the
controversy of Zion." Isaiah 34:8.
The wicked receive their
recompense in the earth. Proverbs 11:31. They "shall be stubble: and the day that
cometh shall burn them up, saith the Lord of hosts." Malachi 4:1. Some are destroyed
as in a moment, while others suffer many days. All are punished "according to their
deeds." The sins of the righteous having been transferred to Satan, he is made to
suffer not only for his own rebellion, but for all the sins which he has caused God's
people to commit. His punishment is to be far greater than that of those whom he has
deceived. After all have perished who fell by his deceptions, he is still to live and
suffer on. In the cleansing flames the wicked are at last destroyed, root and
branch--Satan the root, his followers the branches. The full penalty of the law has been
visited; the demands of justice have been met; and heaven and earth, beholding, declare
the righteousness of Jehovah.
Satan's work of ruin is
forever ended. For six thousand years he has wrought his will, filling the earth with woe
and causing grief throughout the universe. The whole creation has groaned and travailed
together in pain. Now God's creatures are forever delivered from his presence and
temptations. "The whole earth is at rest, and is quiet: they [the righteous] break
forth into singing." Isaiah 14:7. And a shout of praise and triumph ascends from the
whole loyal universe. "The voice of a great multitude," "as the voice of
many waters, and as the voice of mighty thunderings," is heard, saying:
"Alleluia: for the Lord God omnipotent reigneth." Revelation 19:6.
While the earth was wrapped
in the fire of destruction, the righteous abode safely in the Holy City. Upon those that
had part in the first resurrection, the second death has no power. While God is to the
wicked a consuming fire, He is to His people both a sun and a shield. Revelation 20:6;
Psalm 84:11.
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"I saw a new heaven and
a new earth: for the first heaven and the first earth were passed away." Revelation
21:1. The fire that consumes the wicked purifies the earth. Every trace of the curse is
swept away. No eternally burning hell will keep before the ransomed the fearful
consequences of sin.
One reminder alone remains:
Our Redeemer will ever bear the marks of His crucifixion. Upon His wounded head, upon His
side, His hands and feet, are the only traces of the cruel work that sin has wrought. Says
the prophet, beholding Christ in His glory: "He had bright beams coming out of His
side: and there was the hiding of His power." Habakkuk 3:4, margin. That pierced side
whence flowed the crimson stream that reconciled man to God--there is the Saviour's glory,
there "the hiding of His power." "Mighty to save," through the
sacrifice of redemption, He was therefore strong to execute justice upon them that
despised God's mercy. And the tokens of His humiliation are His highest honor; through the
eternal ages the wounds of Calvary will show forth His praise and declare His power.
"O Tower of the flock,
the stronghold of the daughter of Zion, unto Thee shall it come, even the first
dominion." Micah 4:8. The time has come to which holy men have looked with longing
since the flaming sword barred the first pair from Eden, the time for "the redemption
of the purchased possession." Ephesians 1:14. The earth originally given to man as
his kingdom, betrayed by him into the hands of Satan, and so long held by the mighty foe,
has been brought back by the great plan of redemption. All that was lost by sin has been
restored. "Thus saith the Lord . . . that formed the earth and made it; He hath
established it, He created it not in vain, He formed it to be inhabited." Isaiah
45:18. God's original purpose in the creation of the earth is fulfilled as it is made the
eternal abode of the redeemed. "The righteous shall inherit the land, and dwell
therein forever." Psalm 37:29.
A fear of making the future
inheritance seem too material
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has led many to spiritualize away the very truths which lead
us to look upon it as our home. Christ assured His disciples that He went to prepare
mansions for them in the Father's house. Those who accept the teachings of God's word will
not be wholly ignorant concerning the heavenly abode. And yet, "eye hath not seen,
nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath
prepared for them that love Him." 1 Corinthians 2:9. Human language is inadequate to
describe the reward of the righteous. It will be known only to those who behold it. No
finite mind can comprehend the glory of the Paradise of God.
In the Bible the inheritance
of the saved is called "a country." Hebrews 11:14-16. There the heavenly
Shepherd leads His flock to fountains of living waters. The tree of life yields its fruit
every month, and the leaves of the tree are for the service of the nations. There are
ever-flowing streams, clear as crystal, and beside them waving trees cast their shadows
upon the paths prepared for the ransomed of the Lord. There the wide-spreading plains
swell into hills of beauty, and the mountains of God rear their lofty summits. On those
peaceful plains, beside those living streams, God's people, so long pilgrims and
wanderers, shall find a home.
"My people shall dwell
in a peaceable habitation, and in sure dwellings, and in quiet resting places."
"Violence shall no more be heard in thy land, wasting nor destruction within thy
borders; but thou shalt call thy walls Salvation, and thy gates Praise." "They
shall build houses, and inhabit them; and they shall plant vineyards, and eat the fruit of
them. They shall not build, and another inhabit; they shall not plant, and another eat: .
. . Mine elect shall long enjoy the work of their hands." Isaiah 32:18; 60:18; 65:21,
22.
There, "the wilderness
and the solitary place shall be glad for them; and the desert shall rejoice, and blossom
as the rose." "Instead of the thorn shall come up the fir tree, and instead of
the brier shall come up the myrtle tree." "The wolf also shall dwell with the
lamb, and the leopard shall
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lie down with the kid; . . . and a little child shall lead
them." "They shall not hurt nor destroy in all My holy mountain," saith the
Lord. Isaiah 35:1; 55:13; 11:6, 9.
Pain cannot exist in the
atmosphere of heaven. There will be no more tears, no funeral trains, no badges of
mourning. "There shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying: . . . for the
former things are passed away." "The inhabitant shall not say, I am sick: the
people that dwell therein shall be forgiven their iniquity." Revelation 21:4; Isaiah
33:24.
There is the New Jerusalem,
the metropolis of the glorified new earth, "a crown of glory in the hand of the Lord,
and a royal diadem in the hand of thy God." "Her light was like unto a stone
most precious, even like a jasper stone, clear as crystal." "The nations of them
which are saved shall walk in the light of it: and the kings of the earth do bring their
glory and honor into it." Saith the Lord: "I will rejoice in Jerusalem, and joy
in My people." "The tabernacle of God is with men, and He will dwell with them,
and they shall be His people, and God Himself shall be with them, and be their God."
Isaiah 62:3; Revelation 21:11, 24; Isaiah 65:19; Revelation 21:3.
In the City of God
"there shall be no night." None will need or desire repose. There will be no
weariness in doing the will of God and offering praise to His name. We shall ever feel the
freshness of the morning and shall ever be far from its close. "And they need no
candle, neither light of the sun; for the Lord God giveth them light." Revelation
22:5. The light of the sun will be superseded by a radiance which is not painfully
dazzling, yet which immeasurably surpasses the brightness of our noontide. The glory of
God and the Lamb floods the Holy City with unfading light. The redeemed walk in the
sunless glory of perpetual day.
"I saw no temple
therein: for the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple of it." Revelation
21:22. The people of God are privileged to hold open communion with the Father and the
Son. "Now we see through a glass, darkly."
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1 Corinthians 13:12. We behold the
image of God reflected, as in a mirror, in the works of nature and in His dealings with
men; but then we shall see Him face to face, without a dimming veil between. We shall
stand in His presence and behold the glory of His countenance.
There the redeemed shall
know, even as also they are known. The loves and sympathies which God Himself has planted
in the soul shall there find truest and sweetest exercise. The pure communion with holy
beings, the harmonious social life with the blessed angels and with the faithful ones of
all ages who have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb, the
sacred ties that bind together "the whole family in heaven and earth" (Ephesians
3:15)--these help to constitute the happiness of the redeemed.
There, immortal minds will
contemplate with never-failing delight the wonders of creative power, the mysteries of
redeeming love. There will be no cruel, deceiving foe to tempt to forgetfulness of God.
Every faculty will be developed, every capacity increased. The acquirement of knowledge
will not weary the mind or exhaust the energies. There the grandest enterprises may be
carried forward, the loftiest aspirations reached, the highest ambitions realized; and
still there will arise new heights to surmount, new wonders to admire, new truths to
comprehend, fresh objects to call forth the powers of mind and soul and body.
All the treasures of the
universe will be open to the study of God's redeemed. Unfettered by mortality, they wing
their tireless flight to worlds afar--worlds that thrilled with sorrow at the spectacle of
human woe and rang with songs of gladness at the tidings of a ransomed soul. With
unutterable delight the children of earth enter into the joy and the wisdom of unfallen
beings. They share the treasures of knowledge and understanding gained through ages upon
ages in contemplation of God's handiwork. With undimmed vision they gaze upon the glory of
creation--suns and stars and systems, all in their appointed order circling the throne
Page 678
of
Deity. Upon all things, from the least to the greatest, the Creator's name is written, and
in all are the riches of His power displayed.
And the years of eternity, as
they roll, will bring richer and still more glorious revelations of God and of Christ. As
knowledge is progressive, so will love, reverence, and happiness increase. The more men
learn of God, the greater will be their admiration of His character. As Jesus opens before
them the riches of redemption and the amazing achievements in the great controversy with
Satan, the hearts of the ransomed thrill with more fervent devotion, and with more
rapturous joy they sweep the harps of gold; and ten thousand times ten thousand and
thousands of thousands of voices unite to swell the mighty chorus of praise.
"And every creature
which is in heaven, and on the earth, and under the earth, and such as are in the sea, and
all that are in them, heard I saying, Blessing, and honor, and glory, and power, be unto
Him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb for ever and ever." Revelation
5:13.
The great controversy is
ended. Sin and sinners are no more. The entire universe is clean. One pulse of harmony and
gladness beats through the vast creation. From Him who created all, flow life and light
and gladness, throughout the realms of illimitable space. From the minutest atom to the
greatest world, all things, animate and inanimate, in their unshadowed beauty and perfect
joy, declare that God is love.
THE END
Preparing For Eternity
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