Chapter 5
The Plan of Salvation
SORROW filled heaven, as it was realized
that man was lost and that world which God had created was to be filled with mortals
doomed to misery, sickness, and death, and there was no way of escape for the offender.
The whole family of Adam must die. I saw the lovely Jesus and beheld an expression of
sympathy and sorrow upon His countenance. Soon I saw Him approach the exceeding bright
light which enshrouded the Father. Said my accompanying angel, He is in close converse
with His Father. The anxiety of the angels seemed to be intense while Jesus was communing
with His Father. Three times He was shut in by the glorious light about the Father, and
the third time He came out from the Father, His person could be seen. His countenance was
calm, free from all perplexity and doubt, and shone with benevolence and loveliness, such
as words cannot express.
He then made known to the
angelic host that a way of escape had been made for lost man. He told them that He had
been pleading with His Father, and had offered to give His life a ransom, to take the
sentence of death upon Himself, that through Him man might find pardon; that through the
merits of His blood, and obedience to the law of God, they could have the
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favor of God and
be brought into the beautiful garden and eat of the fruit of the tree of life.
At first the angels could not
rejoice, for their Commander concealed nothing from them, but opened before them the plan
of salvation. Jesus told them that He would stand between the wrath of His Father and
guilty man, that He would bear iniquity and scorn, and but few would receive Him as the
Son of God. Nearly all would hate and reject Him. He would leave all His glory in heaven,
appear upon earth as a man, humble himself as a man, become acquainted by His own
experience with the various temptations with which man would be beset, that He might know
how to succor those who should be tempted; and that finally, after His mission as a
teacher would be accomplished, He would be delivered into the hands of men and endure
almost every cruelty and suffering that Satan and his angels could inspire wicked men to
inflict; that He would die the cruelest of deaths, hung up between the heavens and the
earth as a guilty sinner; that He would suffer dreadful hours of agony, which even angels
could not look upon, but would veil their faces from the sight. Not merely agony of body
would He suffer, but mental agony, that with which bodily suffering could in no wise be
compared. The weight of the sins of the whole world would be upon Him. He told them He
would die and rise again the third day, and would ascend to His Father to intercede for
wayward, guilty man.
The
One Possible Way of Salvation
The angels prostrated
themselves before Him. They offered their lives. Jesus said to them that He would by His
death save many, that the life of an angel could not pay the debt. His life alone could be
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accepted of His Father as a ransom for man. Jesus also told them that they would have a
part to act, to be with Him and at different times strengthen Him; that He would take
man's fallen nature, and His strength would not be even equal with theirs; that they would
be witnesses of His humiliation and great sufferings; and that as they would witness His
sufferings and the hatred of men toward Him, they would be stirred with the deepest
emotion, and through their love for Him would wish to rescue and deliver Him from His
murderers; but that they must not interfere to prevent anything they should behold; and
that they should act a part at His resurrection; that the plan of salvation was devised,
and His Father had accepted the plan.
With a holy sadness Jesus
comforted and cheered the angels and informed them that hereafter those whom He should
redeem would be with Him, and that by His death He should ransom many and destroy him who
had the power of death. And His Father would give Him the kingdom and the greatness of the
kingdom under the whole heaven, and He would possess it forever and ever. Satan and
sinners would be destroyed, nevermore to disturb heaven or the purified new earth. Jesus
bade the heavenly host be reconciled to the plan that His Father had accepted and rejoice
that through His death fallen man could again be exalted to obtain favor with God and
enjoy heaven.
Then joy, inexpressible joy,
filled heaven. And the heavenly host sang a song of praise and adoration. They touched
their harps and sang a note higher than they had done before, for the great mercy and
condescension of God in yielding up His dearly Beloved to die for a race of rebels. Praise
and adoration were poured forth for the self-denial and sacrifice of Jesus;
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that He would
consent to leave the bosom of His Father and choose a life of suffering and anguish, and
die an ignominious death to give life to others.
Said the angel, "Think
ye that the Father yielded up His dearly beloved Son without a struggle? No, no. It was
even a struggle with the God of heaven, whether to let guilty man perish, or to give His
beloved Son to die for him." Angels were so interested for man's salvation that there
could be found among them those who would yield their glory and give their life for
perishing man, "But," said my accompanying angel, "that would avail
nothing. The transgression was so great that an angel's life would not pay the debt.
Nothing but the death and intercessions of His Son would pay the debt and save lost man
from hopeless sorrow and misery."
But the work of the angels
was assigned them, to ascend and descend with strengthening balm from glory to soothe the
Son of God in His sufferings and minister unto Him. Also, their work would be to guard and
keep the subjects of grace from the evil angels and the darkness constantly thrown around
them by Satan. I saw that it was impossible for God to alter or change His law to save
lost, perishing man; therefore He suffered His beloved Son to die for man's transgression.
Satan again rejoiced with his
angels that he could, by causing man's fall, pull down the Son of God from His exalted
position. He told his angels that when Jesus should take fallen man's nature, he could
overpower Him and hinder the accomplishment of the plan of salvation.
I was shown Satan as he once
was, a happy, exalted angel. Then I was shown him as he now is. He still bears a kingly
form. His features are still noble, for
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he is an angel fallen. But the expression of his
countenance is full of anxiety, care, unhappiness, malice, hate, mischief, deceit, and
every evil. That brow which was once so noble, I particularly noticed. His forehead
commenced from his eyes to recede. I saw that he had so long bent himself to evil that
every good quality was debased, and every evil trait was developed. His eyes were cunning,
sly, and showed great penetration. His frame was large, but the flesh hung loosely about
his hands and face. As I beheld him, his chin was resting upon his left hand. He appeared
to be in deep thought. A smile was upon his countenance, which made me tremble, it was so
full of evil and satanic slyness. This smile is the one he wears just before he makes sure
of his victim, and as he fastens the victim in his snare, this smile grows horrible.
In humility and inexpressible
sadness Adam and Eve left the lovely garden wherein they had been so happy until they
disobeyed the command of God. The atmosphere was changed. It was no longer unvarying as
before the transgression. God clothed them with coats of skins to protect them from the
sense of chilliness and then of heat to which they were exposed.
God's
Unchangeable Law
All heaven mourned on account
of the disobedience and fall of Adam and Eve, which brought the wrath of God upon the
whole human race. They were cut off from communing with God, and were plunged in hopeless
misery. The law of God could not be changed to meet man's necessity, for in God's
arrangement it was never to lose its force nor give up the smallest part of its claims.
The angels of God were
commissioned to visit the fallen pair and inform them that although they could
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no longer
retain possession of their holy estate, their Eden home, because of their transgression of
the law of God, yet their case was not altogether hopeless. They were then informed that
the Son of God, who had conversed with them in Eden, had been moved with pity as He viewed
their hopeless condition, and had volunteered to take upon Himself the punishment due to
them, and die for them that man might yet live, through faith in the atonement Christ
proposed to make for him. Through Christ a door of hope was opened, that man,
notwithstanding his great sin, should not be under the absolute control of Satan. Faith in
the merits of the Son of God would so elevate man that he could resist the devices of
Satan. Probation would be granted him in which, through a life of repentance and faith in
the atonement of the Son of God, he might be redeemed from his transgression of the
Father's law, and thus be elevated to a position where his efforts to keep His law could
be accepted.
The angels related to them
the grief that was felt in heaven as it was announced that they had transgressed the law
of God, which had made it expedient for Christ to make the great sacrifice of His own
precious life.
When Adam and Eve realized
how exalted and sacred was the law of God, the transgression of which made so costly a
sacrifice necessary to save them and their posterity from utter ruin, they pleaded to die
themselves, or to let them and their posterity endure the penalty of their transgression,
rather than that the beloved Son of God should make this great sacrifice. The anguish of
Adam was increased. He saw that his sins were of so great magnitude as to involve fearful
consequences. And must it be that heaven's honored
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Commander, who had walked with him and
talked with him while in his holy innocence, whom angels honored and worshiped, must be
brought down from his exalted position to die because of his transgression?
Adam was informed that an
angel's life could not pay the debt. The law of Jehovah, the foundation of His government
in heaven and upon earth, was as sacred as God Himself; and for this reason the life of an
angel could not be accepted of God as a sacrifice for its transgression. His law is of
more importance in His sight than the holy angels around His throne. The Father could not
abolish or change one precept of His law to meet man in his fallen condition. But the Son
of God, who had in unison with the Father created man, could make an atonement for man
acceptable to God, by giving His life a sacrifice and bearing the wrath of His Father.
Angels informed Adam that, as his transgression had brought death and wretchedness, life
and immortality would be brought to light through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ.
A
View of the Future
To Adam were revealed future
important events, from his expulsion from Eden to the Flood, and onward to the first
advent of Christ upon the earth; His love for Adam and his posterity would lead the Son of
God to condescend to take human nature, and thus elevate, through His own humiliation, all
who would believe on Him. Such a sacrifice was of sufficient value to save the whole
world; but only a few would avail themselves of the salvation brought to them through such
a wonderful sacrifice. The many would not comply with the conditions required of them that
they might be partakers of His great salvation. They would prefer sin and transgression of
the law of God rather
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than repentance and obedience, relying by faith upon the merits of
the sacrifice offered. This sacrifice was of such infinite value as to make a man who
should avail himself of it more precious than fine gold, even a man than the golden wedge
of Ophir.
Adam was carried down through
successive generations and saw the increase of crime, of guilt and defilement, because man
would yield to his naturally strong inclinations to transgress the holy law of God. He was
shown the curse of God resting more and more heavily upon the human race, upon the cattle,
and upon the earth, because of man's continued transgression. He was shown that iniquity
and violence would steadily increase; yet amid all the tide of human misery and woe, there
would ever be a few who would preserve the knowledge of God and would remain unsullied
amid the prevailing moral degeneracy. Adam was made to comprehend what sin is--the
transgression of the law. He was shown that moral, mental, and physical degeneracy would
result to the race, from transgression, until the world would be filled with human misery
of every type.
The days of man were
shortened by his own course of sin in transgressing the righteous law of God. The race was
finally so greatly depreciated that they appeared inferior and almost valueless. They were
generally incompetent to appreciate the mystery of Calvary, the grand and elevated facts
of the atonement, and the plan of salvation, because of the indulgence of the carnal mind.
Yet, notwithstanding the weakness, and enfeebled mental, moral, and physical powers of the
human race, Christ, true to the purpose for which He left heaven, continues His interest
in the feeble, depreciated, degenerate specimens of humanity, and invites them to hide
their weakness and
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great deficiencies in Him. If they will come unto Him, He will supply
all their needs.
The
Sacrificial Offering
When Adam, according to God's
special directions, made an offering for sin, it was to him a most painful ceremony. His
hand must be raised to take life, which God alone could give, and make an offering for
sin. It was the first time he had witnessed death. As he looked upon the bleeding victim,
writhing in the agonies of death, he was to look forward by faith to the Son of God, whom
the victim prefigured, who was to die man's sacrifice.
This ceremonial offering,
ordained of God, was to be a perpetual reminder to Adam of his guilt, and also a
penitential acknowledgment of his sin. This act of taking life gave Adam a deeper and more
perfect sense of his transgression, which nothing less than the death of God's dear Son
could expiate. He marveled at the infinite goodness and matchless love which would give
such a ransom to save the guilty. As Adam was slaying the innocent victim, it seemed to
him that he was shedding the blood of the Son of God by his own hand. He knew that if he
had remained steadfast to God, and true to His holy law, there would have been no death of
beast nor of man. Yet in the sacrificial offerings, pointing to the great and perfect
offering of God's dear Son, there appeared a star of hope to illuminate the dark and
terrible future, and relieve it of its utter hopelessness and ruin.
In the beginning the head of
each family was considered ruler and priest of his own household. Afterward, as the race
multiplied upon the earth, men of divine appointment performed this solemn worship of
sacrifice for the people. The blood of beast was
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to be associated in the minds of sinners
with the blood of the Son of God. The death of the victim was to evidence to all that the
penalty of sin was death. By the act of sacrifice the sinner acknowledged his guilt and
manifested his faith, looking forward to the great and perfect sacrifice of the Son of
God, which the offering of beasts prefigured. Without the atonement of the Son of God
there could be no communication of blessing or salvation from God to man. God was jealous
for the honor of His law. The transgression of that law caused a fearful separation
between God and man. To Adam in his innocency was granted communion, direct, free, and
happy, with his Maker. After his transgression God would communicate to man through Christ
and angels.
Copyright © 1974
The Ellen G. White Estate, Inc.
All Rights Reserved
Preparing For Eternity
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