In a day when the foundations of society are crumbling, a
day of gathering storm and deepening gloom, a day of unprecedented dented peril
in which thoughtful men speak of the collapse of civilization and the possible
annihilation of cities and nations; even of mankind, the sovereignty of God is
an unfailing encouragement that lights the path of the just and affords
assurance to all the faithful, who take great comfort in the words of James in
the historic council of the church at Jerusalem: "Known unto God are all His
works from the beginning of the world" (Acts 15:18).
God, who has "declared the end from the beginning
and from ancient times things not yet done," has said, "My counsel
shall stand, and I will do all My pleasure" (Isaiah 46: 10). He who
"works all things after the counsel of His own will" is at work in
the world in these momentous times, moving inexorably toward fulfillment of an
eternal purpose that antedates creation and gives meaning to human history.
History, by divine appointment, is teleological, and the sweep of human events,
whatever the sound and the fury, moves toward the appointed end: "Thy Kingdom
Come."
Nothing in the course of events can alter the appointed
outcome. The unfolding of the days and years, whatever their number, ultimately
will issue in all that was foretold by the prophets of old, by our lord, and by his Apostles. The witness of history past, confirming "the prophetic word
made sure" (2 Peter 1:19), attests that human events ever move toward the
inevitable denouement on which creation itself is predicated: the coming of
"The Kingdom prepared from the foundation of the world."
There is, of course, a sense in which the kingdom of God
is eternally present rather than prospective, co-existent with Him who
"before the mountains were brought forth or ever [He] had formed the earth
and the world, even from everlasting to everlasting, [is] God" (Psalm
90:2). But the Kingdom of God, as proclaimed and anticipated by both Jesus and
the Apostles and prophets of old, is yet future and awaits its manifestation at
the end of this age, to appear in a moment of spectacular divine intervention
at the coming of God’s anointed one in power and judgment ... but appearing
also as the consummation of a long process, as implied by many of our lord's
parables.
Why a long process? Why not, instead, instant kingdom?
Could not God, in the act of a moment, have created the everlasting kingdom He
purposed from eternity? Are not all things possible for God? All things indeed
are possible for God, but only within the limitations of consistency with His
own nature and being.' God cannot lie, for example, nor can He change, nor can
He deny Himself. We may reverently assume that, for the kind of kingdom He
intends, God is following the only possible course: the process of human
history.
The process comprehends all that God has done, beginning
even before His mighty acts of creation when He "laid the foundations of
the earth [and] the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God
shouted for joy" (Job 38:4,7). It comprehends the creation of angels
before earth itself and the origin of sin in the transgression of angels
against the will of their Creator. It comprehends the creation of man in the
image and likeness of God and the entrance of sin into human experience in the
disobedience of man to the word and will of his Creator.
The process comprehends the moral self-discoveries and
the redemptive revelations and encounters experienced by the patriarchs of old
and all the faithful of their generations. It comprehends the experiences of
Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and a nation descended from them, and the judges and
kings and prophets who appeared among them.
The process comprehends the redemptive mission of Jesus,
unfolded in His unique birth, life, ministry, death, resurrection, ascension,
and his ultimate return in righteous judgment. It comprehends the labors of the
Apostles and the witness of the called-out Assembly to God’s anointed one and
His saving message of the good news of the coming Kingdom of God in all
generations until the coming of the King and the Kingdom.
The process whereby God is creating the Kingdom which He
purposed before the world began comprehends "all nations of men ... on all
the face of the earth" (Acts 17:26) and involves every man.
Human history in its totality is the milieu in which the
everlasting kingdom is being wrought ... and in which THE ELECTION determined
by God from before creation; an ELECTION wholly identified with the Kingdom; is
being realized.
"Thy kingdom come"; the Kingdom which was the
concern of Jesus in the days of his flesh, the burden of his preaching, the
subject of splendid promises and solemn warnings, and the central theme of all his
teaching from the beginning of his ministry to the time of his ascension (Acts
1:3). Thy kingdom come!
Psalm 72:19: And blessed be His glorious name forever:
and let the whole earth be filled with His glory. Amen and Amen.
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