THE SPIRIT OF THE WORD
MARCH-APRIL 1974
THE ENDS OF THE AGES
by Ed Gregory and A.P. Adams
“Now all these things happened unto them for examples (types);
and they are written for our admonition. upon whom the ends of the
world (ages) are come.” (I Cor. 10:11)
The phrase “ends of the world” should read “ends of the
ages.” Now what does this expression mean? In the current
creeds there is no reasonable explanation of this expression; but on the
basis of the plan of the ages, it is easily explicable. Paul was writing
in the overlapping of two ages, the Jewish and the Gospel. The former
was passing away, decreasing and dying out. The latter was coming on and
increasing until its full dimensions on the day of Pentecost,---that was
the day of the full inauguration of the Gospel age. It might be said
that the preaching of John the Baptizer was the beginning of the end of
the Jewish age; for “the law and the prophets were until John; since
that time the kingdom is preached and every man presses into it.”
Yet the law and prophets did not cease with the preaching of John for
Christ himself commanded his disciples to obey all that those who sat in
Moses’ seat taught. (Matt. 13:2-3). The Jewish age continued on, but
growing less and less, until the destruction of Jerusalem, about 40
years after the preaching of John. The Gospel age begins with the
preaching of John---or we might say with the preaching of the angels to
the shepherds at the birth of Christ (Luke, ch. 2)---and reached its
full dimensions at the day of Pentecost. It was such a time as this that
the apostle Paul lived and wrote and thus the ends of the ages had come
upon them.
The mass of God’s people at that time hung back and would not
accept the new light. They even bitterly opposed and fought against it.
They clung to the old and refused to believe that their religious system
had had its day and was passing away and was to be laid aside like a
worn out garmet. (Heb. l:ll-12) The ends of the ages had come upon them
and those who knew that fact were prepared for the great changes that
were taking place. They accepted them and fell into line with them and
so moved on with God’s vanguard. They caught the glimmer of the
dawning light and greatly rejoiced.
Others, while clinging to the past with their faces away from the
light. stubbornly held back. bitterly opposing and scornfully
repudiating the idea that their system could be set aside and anything
better take its place. These lose all the light and glory, remaining in
the shadow, fighting against the dawning of the new day while the
“children of the day” are bathed in the light there--of as in a
garment of praise.
Now we are living in a time when the ends of the ages have come upon
us, Here in the decade of the 1970’s we stand at the confluence of the
ages----the overlapping of two dispensations---the Gospel age and the
Kingdom age----the age of the good news of the kingdom and the age of
the kingdom itself. And now, as in the apostle’s day. the times
partake of the characteristics of both the ages with which it is
connected.
This fact that the ends of the ages have come upon us explains and
accounts for all the strange and unusual happenings of our times. We are
living in “the last days.” We are also living in the first
days. A friend said to me recently, “We are constantly talking about
the last days and perilous times connected with it. When shall we begin
to talk of the first days. Are we not already in a new age? And are not
these days the first days and should we not emphasize the fact?” Yes,
we do thank God that a new age has commenced and that we are in the
first days. The ends of the ages have come upon us---the new age as well
as the old.
The old age is passing away, as every previous age has, with a most
striking manifestation of man’s failure and of God’s judgments and
remedy. The turmoil and strife we see on every hand, the giant wrongs,
the oppression and tyranny, the grave, threatening, excitable aspect of
society, together with the general godlessness and crime that everywhere
prevails, the tottering of thrones, the weakening of governments, the
breaking away from tradition, the overthrow of long established beliefs,
the general instability of things---these are the indications of the
inevitable dissolution of the present order of things. All of the evils
of the present age and all of the past ages as well are culminating in
these closing hours; accumulated and concentrated in their direct
intensity, and, like the dregs of a cup that is almost poured out, they
constitute the bitter, bitter portion that the world must drink before
the new era dawns, when justice, equity and love shall prevail on the
earth.
LOST HIS YOUTH
There is abundance of evidence around us that we are rapidly
approaching the crisis. “For the world has lost his youth and the
times begin to wax old; for yet greater evils than those which you have
seen happen, shall be done hereafter; for look, how much the world shall
be weaker through age, so much the more shall evils increase upon them
that dwell therein; for the truth is fled away, and leasing (lying) is
hard at hand; for now hasteth the vision to come which you have seen.”
(II Es. 14) Although the above is quoted from one of the so-called
apocraphal books of the Bible, yet it seems to apply to the present
times, and at any rate it describes them perfectly. The world, in this
passage,-- the evil world (Gal 1:4)--is spoken of as an old man, old and
hardened in sin, sinking lower and lower in degradation and corruption,
as he totters to a dishonored and loathsome grave. “For yet greater
evils than those which you have seen happen, shall be done hereafter;
for look, how much the world shall be weaker through age, so much the
more shall evils increase upon them that dwell therein.” Such has been
the history of the closing up of every previous age; such is the clearly
foretold ending of this present evil age. Such alone could be looked for as it's sending, considering its character all the way
through and the causes at work. Mark you, all this is from man’s
standpoint and with reference to man’s work. The purpose of God--his
“purpose of the ages”---does not fail or falter, but always advances
toward its consummation; but man’s work has been a failure in every
age and has brought disaster and ruin in the end. Man’s work is not
God’s work and hence it must fail for nothing can prosper contrary to
his will. Man’s failure therefore is God’s work. Man’s success,
according to his own idea, would be a triumph of evil; but evil never
triumphs because God is the master of it, as well as of the good.
Thus all the wrong and evil of this present time is in harmony with
the fact that the age is drawing to an end, the cup is almost poured
out. It is the very settlings of evil that is showing itself in
the world today.
THE POSITIVE SIDE
But, thank God, this is only one of the ends of the overlapping ages
---the end of the age that is dying out and passing away. Another age is
coming on and into the circle of its dawning light have we already
entered and its characteristics are plainly apparent all around us.
There seems to be a contradiction in the present times. It is a time of
ignorance and wrong and corruption, intensified and augmented beyond all
previous periods. But praise God that these times are also characterized
by one of the a most profound outpourings of the Holy Spirit that the
world has ever known. The times seem to be characterized by light and
knowledge and Christian and humanitarian efforts beyond all previous
times. All these things go to relieve the sombreness of the present
time.
This is not the age for the destruction of evil, the “ages to
come” will accomplish that, when He that sits on the throne--He whose
right it is ---will make all things new. It is the early dawn of that
age that is now upon us. This accounts for the apparent contradiction in
the times in which we live----the mixing and mingling of the worst
things with the best; an evil age is ending. A righteous, joyous, happy
age is coming on; all the threatening, ominous signs of the times are
yet to burst in doleful, dreadful realities, as this age passes away in
the midst of a dissolving, burning heavens and earth (II Peter 3); and
all the harbingers of peace and goodwill that we see around us in the
world today shall blossom out in that new era and bear fruit in a
regenerated and perfected race.
The fact that “the ends of the ages” have come upon
us--overlapping--is the key that unlocks the mustery of our times and
fully explains them. Whatever takes place--and in these days the most
unheard-of and unexpected events are frequently occurring---it is
explained and accounted for by the above fact--the ends of the ages have
come upon us. We are at the confluence of two streams of time, and the
foul and muddy waters of “this present evil age” are for the time
being mingling with the crystal-clear liquid of the millennial stream,
and the result is a mixture that seems to have more of the
characteristics of the former than of the latter. Soon the vile sediment
of evil shall be precipitated to the bottom and the stream of
righteousness shall flow on through the ages, ever deepening and
widening until all have come to know its healing virtues.
The world believes that better times are coming but it has no idea of
how that blessed era is to be inaugurated. It neither understands how
the present evils are to be put down and destroyed, nor how the hoped
for good is to be established. The various schemes of socialism are but
fonddreams of the natural man never to be realized; so with the idea of
gradual self-improvement. The great majority of the church has no
knowledge of God’s plan of the ages and hence it is utterly in the
dark as to this transition period in which our lot has fallen. The world
knows not God; hence it sees no special interposition on his part in
these troublous times to “make and end of sin” and “to bring in
everlasting righteousness.”
Yet it is God that does this work and that too by a catastrophe as
marked and as universal as was the flood,--the battle of the great day
of God Almighty for thefinaldestruction of the old and the setting up of
the kingdom of God for the permanent establishment of the new. Although
the ages overlap and one gradually dies out while the other is gradually
coming on, yet this transition process is not completed without a
destruction and reconstruction. The question is how will God make
and end of sin and bring in everlasting righteousness? Not by a gradual
growing out of the one into the other; not by self-improvement; not by
the triumph of present existing methods and appliances, It will be all
of God. He it is that will tread down our enemies. He only is our rock
and our salvation. The coming of the Lord, the destruction of the
present heavens and earth (Kosmos--II Peter 3), the setting up of the
kingdom, the perfection of the promised seed---these are the events that
are to carry us over this present cataclysm into the new heavens and new
earth.
How grand it is to be children of light, If you can see that the ends
of the ages have come upon us then you can understand to some extent the
signs of the times and the movements of our God among the children of
men. The Day Star has arisen and the dawn is close at hand. “Let us
who are of the day be sober (or vigilant, wakeful), putting on the
breastplate of faith and love and for an helmet the hope of
salvation.”
by Bill Boylan
(Some time ago I received from you through the Spirit of The
Word Magazine a mimeographed sheet about “time” which was a
prophecy given in January, 1973. That prophecy stuck with me for days
and weeks and I just couldn’t get it off my mind, It ulti-mately
resulted in my writing the enclosed article.)
As the title implies, this article is about two subjects, “Time”
and “Eternity.” However, these two subjects are but minute portions
of another subject so much broader in scope and greater in importance
that this major subject must first be introduced at some length before
teaching about time and eternity. That major subject is the
controversial truth of the Ultimate Restoration of the entire universe
through Jesus Christ! [1]
And to set the stage a bit more fully for discussing time and
eternity we must also dwell briefly upon the subject of “Truth.”
Jesus Christ is truth; He is the truth, the entire
truth, and nothing that is false or of a half-truth or
partial truth abides in Him. He said that He is the truth.[2]
One believes that He is the truth, and having believed it to be so, one
then experiences it to be so. Also, believing Jesus Christ to be the
truth, all genuine truth that one subsequently encounters will
substantiate Jesus’ sweeping claim to be the truth. Thus, since
Jesus Christ is the truth, it logically follows, then. that any portion
of truth must ultimately find its source and consummation in Him, and be
an integral, intrinsic, and inherent part of His personality and nature.
He is the whole of truth; thus, any truth, no matter where it may be
found, be it major or minor, significant or insignificant, is but a part
of the whole. It is so with the truth of Universal Restoration, and with
truth about time and eternity; when properly understood, the biblical
truth of Universal Restoration points directly to the wonderful person
of the Lord Jesus Christ and to His all-embracing, self-sacrificing
atonement for mankind. We trust that as you study this article, the Holy
Spirit will open your spiritual eyes and ears and lead[3]
you gently to a deeper comprehension of this truth; and that the
entrance of truth will bring light, cleansing, and deliverance.
First of all, you must understand that the truth of Universal
Restoration is not new; it is not a new teaching to “tickle the
ears” or to “deceive the elect.” It is a truth that was held to be
axiomatic by the majority of Christians until about the years 325 or 350
AD.[4] It was held by Christians, not many years
removed from the apostolic church, who could still read and understand
the correct meaning of the New Testament Greek and Aramaic. It is a
truth that was slowly buried as non-Christians began to filter into the
church beginning at the time of Emperor Constantine, and as the trained
clergy began to usurp the priesthood and spiritual understanding of the
individual Christian. It is a truth that was covered up and distorted by
medieval superstition. It is a truth that was largely forgotten and
sometimes viciously opposed as “enlightened” people began to read
such Renaissance works as Dante’s Divine Comedy (1265 to 1321)
and as many pertinent errors of translation were incorporated into the
King James translation of the Bible in 1611 AD.[5] The
heinious Inquisition (1480 to approximately 1600), too did much to
promote ideas contrary to the truth of Universal Restoration. Then, with
the ideas of 19th and 20th century scholarship, biblical hermeneutics,
the Bible School movement, eschatalogy, orthodox theology, church
creeds, dogmas, and the like, this magnificent truth lay buried and
forgotten except by a few of God’s sons who would still receive and
perpetuate the truth in spite of vicious opposition.
It is like Jesus’ parable in Matthew 13: 24-38 in which He said the
Kingdom of Heaven is like the man who sowed good wheat seed in his
field; while the man slept, his enemy came and sowed wild wheat among
the good wheat seed. When the plants sprouted, the servants reported to
the farmer that there was wild wheat with the good, The farmer replied,
“An enemy has done this.”
In the early church, the truth of Universal Restoration was sown by
the apostles. elders, and teachers. Then, during the Dark Ages
(500-1450) while the church “slept,” the enemy sowed much false and
distorted teaching, untruths, partial truths. and half truths. An enemy
has done this. And now as this age of night ends and as a new kingdom
morn breaks upon us, we are able to discern properly between the truth
and that which is not truth, that which is of the enemy.
No, Universal Restoration is not a new teaching; it is merely an old
truth (much like that of the baptism in the Holy Spirit) which has just
been largely buried, forgotten, or distorted for almost 1500 years.
Now, during the overlapping years as this age ends and the next age
begins, “the long. long night is past, the dawn advances fast,” and
God’s people’ by the thousands are beginning to once again
understand and embrace the biblical truth of Universal Restoration.
It is felt by many that this truth is only now being exhumed by the
Holy Spirit at this point in history as simply a part of God’s overall
plan for the end of this present age--so that the age will finish and
close as it began: with the whole truth restored to the whole church.
For now, as is the case with much restored biblical truth, we still
see this particular truth only through a glass darkly; [6]
we see only bits and pieces of it, but these bits and pieces are enough
to cause us to feel that the biblical truth of Universal Restoration
will be one of the most significant portions of truth to re-emerge at
the end of this age.
As a studied, enlightened opinion (not as a prophecy), we
“predict” that in God’s sovereign timing, this will be the
capstone of truth that will finally totally liberate God’s sons and
set them free as they march into full sonship in the ages to come.
(Please remember, as stated earlier, that when we speak of this truth or
of any truth, we are actually speaking about some aspect of the nature
and person of the Lord Jesus Christ.); it is the truth that will serve
as the “blueprint” to liberate and reconstruct the entire universe
in the ages to come and in eternity; it is the truth that will
ultimately cause all created beings to see God as He really is:
Sovereign of Time and Eternity; King of the Universe; He Who will be All
in All; Greater Potentate of lesser Princes, Kings, and Lords; the
Mighty God!
It is terribly unfortunate that so many of God’s people are so
bitterly opposing and rejecting the truth of Universal Restoration,
however. And doing so without a fair hearing or without diligently
examining the scriptures for themselves to see if these things be so.[7]
It is probably being more bitterly opposed than any other re-emerging
truth since the Reformation, (As a point of interest, Martin Luther, the
leader of the Reformation, embraced wholeheartedly the truth of
Universal Restoration.)
Our own personal experience when we first encountered this truth a
few years ago was to completely reject it; but then because we loved and
trusted the brother who presented it to us from the scriptures, we spent
an entire summer studying the subject on our own with just the Bible as
our textbook. From the scriptures alone, we are now convinced of the
complete veracity of the biblical teaching that the entire universe will
one day be restored to God, that all created spiritual beings everywhere
will ultimately be conformed to the exact image of God’s begotten Son,
for that is, and always has been, God’s ultimate plan for His
creation.
To aid you in further study of this subject of which we have given
but a broad outline, we recommend the following sources for books,
publications, tapes, other addresses, and articles; they cover the
subject in much more depth than this article:
1. The Pittsburgh Bible institute, RD 1, Box 391, Gibsonia, PA 15044.
(Especially their book, Is Hell Eternal or Will God’s Plan Fail)
2. Mr. George R. Hawtin, Box 339, Battleford, Sask., Canada. (Especially
his monthly publication, The Page)
3. Mr. Ed Gregory, General Delivery, Eupora, Miss. 39744. (Especially
his bi-monthly magazine, The Spirit of the Word)
4. Mr. Don Derksen, 2321 Valley Drive, Rapid City, SD 57701. (Mr.
Derksen has written a particularly cogent and informative 29-page
mimeographed paper entitled "The Second Death and Hell.")
5. Scripture Studies Concern, Box 468, Montclair, Ca. 91763 (Especially God’s
Ultimate and The Second Death by A. E. Saxby, --- Christ
Triumphant by Allin and The Restitution of All Things by
Andrew Jukes.)
6. Ray Prinzing, Box 5822, Boise, Idaho 83705. (Especially his three
books on Sonship and The Plan of the Ages)
Now, after a rather lengthy introduction, let us turn to our
consideration of the two subjects “time” and “eternity” as
being an integral part of the truth of Universal Restoration. We shall
attempt to study these two subjects separately from one another, but, of
necessity, there is much overlapping of the two. When we consider the
subject of time, we shall also study other concepts that are temporal,
non-absolute, and relative.
Only the Holy Spirit can teach us in-depth about time and eternity,
and we earnestly ask that you will call upon Him to fill in the many,
many gaps in our ownunderstanding as we have written this article. We
freely admit that there is so much we don’t yet understand. . .so much
of the whole truth that the entire Body of Christ has yet to be given by
revelation and illumination of the Holy Spirit. . .so much of God’s
plans for time and eternity that only time to come and eternity can
clarify for us. . .
Now let us consider the subject: Time. To do so, we will also
consider such terms as “infinity,” “space,” the “universe,”
and that part of the late Dr. Albert Einstein’s “theory of
relativity” which we laymen can readily understand.
A concept you must immediately grasp at the outset is that
time is a created phenomena consisting of past,
present, and future just as man is a created phenomena having youth,
middle age, and old age. No, you cannot smell, touch, or feel time, but
it is there, ever-present, always marching into the future. Time was
created; it had a beginning, it shall have an end. It is only one
“thing” among countless other “things” that are part of the
entire created universe. It is as much a ‘species” of creation as,
for example, rocks, elephants trees, and water are species of creation.
Before the creation of the universe. there was no time; at the end of
the ages when the present material creation is dissolved and replaced by
a new, basically spiritual universe[8], time shall
cease to be. It will be swallowed up into eternity just as all death
(the first death and the second death, which is the lake of fire[9])
will be swallowed up into victory [10] and cease to be.
Time--composed of milliseconds, seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks,
months, years, decades, centuries, millenniums, ages, and eons--was
created in the beginning, and will be dissolved at the end of the ages.
This phenomena called time was created by God for man. Why? To
aid fallen man in accommodating himself to this material and temporal
plane of existence and to aid him in numbering his days in preparation
for a new, totally spiritual existence beyond time, beyond the last age,
in a state of existence called eternity. Man will one day pass from a
gross, largely material existence into a glorious spiritual existence;
time serves only to aid man--to give him time, so to speak - to prepare
for that new state of being.
A proper understanding of time as a created phenomena having
beginning and ending is an absolute prerequisite to a proper
understanding of eternity.
Time, then because it is a created phenomena can be studied to some
extent just as any other part of the creation of God can be studied. For
example, we know by definition what time is: “A system for measuring
duration.” We know how to measure it: With chronometers ranging from
incredibly precise atomic clocks to Mickey Mouse watches. We know how it
functions by its effects in passing: maturity, decay. corrosion,
erosion, deterioration, and the like.
An entirely new learning discipline for the study of time has been
established by the Theory of Relativity “discovered” by the late Dr.
Einstein. Forpurposes of this article. we understand from his famous
theory that time and space are interdependent, inseparably related, and
form a four-dimensional continuum (length, height, depth, and duration).
That is to say, there is no space without time, no time without space.
Space cannot be traversed without the passage of time: without the
passage of time, there is no traversing of space. That is why (to
furnish only one hasty example) in His post-resurrection, spiritual
body, Jesus was able immediately to transcend and traverse the
space-time continuum with the speed of thought. By Christ’s power,
space and time cohere and consist.[11] Without His
binding power, space and time would become nonexistent. Also, since we
know from the Bible that space is created, we can then deduce that time
is created. too. We can also surmise that both time and space (as we
presently know them) will end together at the end of the ages. Is not
this what the Bible means when we read such passages as: “From whose
presence the heaven and earth fled away. The elements will melt with a
fervent heat, We look for new heavens and a new earth. . . The sky shall
be rolled up as a scroll."[12]
In this regard, too, we must consider whether or not time and space
are infinite. And, if so, whether or not something that is infinite is
necessarily eternal. By definition, space is the expanse in which all
material things are contained; we have already defined time; infinity is
to say that something lacks known and/or measurable limits
or bounds, not that something has no limits or bounds. We believe
that space and time do have limits and bounds, but these bounds simply
cannot be measured by presently known “instruments.” Space, time,
and the universe (the present material universe, not the new, spiritual
universe to come) are infinite, but only in the sense that they cannot
be measured by finite man. They are not infinite in the sense of being
eternal.
The stage is now set for our brief study of Eternity. Please
understand at the outset of this portion of our article that the
strictest, non-theological definition of eternity is merely: “A state
of being.” We shall see that it is much more than that, but that it is
a state of being first and foremost must be kept in mind; in other
words, it is not a created phenomena, a “thing,” as is time.
In all candor, too, we must honestly state that the Bible says very
little by way of a definition of eternity because the Bible is
essentially a book of time and for time. It was written for man who is
temporal and who is not yet a totally eternal being. Only when we enter
that state of being called eternity. . . only when He who is Eternity
becomes “All in All” in us. . . only when time ends and is swallowed
up into eternity. . . only when eternity becomes an absolute reality to
us. . . only when we are spiritually metamorphosized into our eternal
milieu. . . only then will formerly temporal beings such as we now are
begin to comprehend and understand eternity and matters of an eternal
nature. We stated that the Bible is relatively silent about what
eternity is; that is not to say that human teachings and theology
haven’t taught us a great deal about eternity, but, alas, much of it
over the past 1500 years or so has come from the carnal mind and not
from the mind of the Eternal One via the Holy Spirit. Praise God for the
true teaching ministry of the Eternal Spirit!
We read in the Bible that God is the Eternal Father, or, more
literally, the Father of Eternity.[13] He is called so
in the sense that He is the originator and sustainer of eternity. In
short, eternity is part of Him; He is eternity; eternity is in God. Next
in our consideration of eternity, we must completely and absolutely
jettison the idea of time as having anything to do with eternity. Time
and eternity are two separate entities; they are diametrical to one
another in an absolute sense.
Eternity is a state of absolute timelessness, not of unending time. Eternity is a state of being,
resident in the very nature and person of God in which such concepts as
past, present, future, “before,” “after,” minutes, hours, and
years do not exist. There are no endless ages in eternity; the ages will
end; eternity has no ages--they are alien concepts in eternity. Time and
eternity have no relationship with one another just as “up” or
“down,” for example, have no relationship with “light” or
“dark.” The terms are mutually exclusive. Time is not part of
eternity just as “up” is notpartof “light,” nor is eternity
composed of endless segments of time or of unending ages.
We may seem to be laboring excessively and in great detail merely to
illustrate the differences between time and eternity, but it is
absolutely essential that you understand those differences before you
can really begin to comprehend what the Bible really teaches, for
example, about eternal life and eternal punishment. Our continual prayer
as we have written this article is that the Holy Spirit will “open the
eyes of your understanding” to these differences between time and
eternity. He alone can do so.
Do you have it yet? Do you see? Time is not part of eternity;
eternity is not composed of segments of time. Eternity is not time
standing still; it is simply not time at all. Eternity doesn’t go on
and on and on, ad infinitum. Eternity doesn’t go
anywhere, nor does it do anything; Eternity simply is. It is as
ludicrous and foolish to say that eternity goes on and on and on as it
is to say, for example, that Texas goes on and on and on; Texas
doesn’t go anywhere or do anything; Texas simply is a “state” in
which people exist. So it is with eternity. Time is created. It is
extra-eternal in the same sense that we say something is extra-biblical.
Time is a measurable, fixed, limited, created phenomena. Eternity is
part of the very nature and person of God. Eternity transcends beyond
our knowing anything having to do with time. Eternity simply is, just as
God simply is. The expression: “It is that it is” has peculiar
reference to eternity just as “I AM that I AM” has peculiar
reference to God; or, just as Jesus said, “Before Abraham was, I
AM,” it can be said of eternity: “Before time was, I AM.” For our
next point we shall now consider only briefly the definitions of such
biblical terms as “forever,” “everlasting,” “eternal, ” and
related words. For a completely exhaustive study of these terms, be sure
to study the literature we mentioned earlier in this article. We only
touch upon these terms here.
In over 500 places in the Bible where you find such terms in the
English language as “forever,” “eternal,” “everlasting,” and
the like, they have with very few exceptions been incorrectly translated
(especially in the King James Version of the Bible) from the original
languages. “Forever” can most often be rendered as
“age-lasting,” or “continuing for the ages”; “forever and
ever” should be read as “for the age(s) of the ages”;
“eternal” and “everlasting” should be “age lasting” or
“enduring for the ages.” The Amplified Bible has gone
a long way in correctly translating many such words, but there are still
many, many which are translated incorrectly. What we are simply saying
is that these words are all temporal words expressed in temporal
languages, fallen languages of a fallen race of beings, languages that
are wholly inadequate to express and define that which is eternal.
In the original languages, the biblical emphasis on such words seems
to be upon the quality and purpose of such words rather
than upon an “unending” duration. In other words, “eternal
life” or “eternal fire” means the nature or quality
or purpose of the life or fire rather than upon their length.
Eternal life is the very life of God, a’ life the seed of which we now
possess and which will come to full fruition in eternity when the ages
of time have ceased. Eternal fire or fire which burns “forever and
ever” speaks of a fire which has the quality of purging,
disciplining, correcting, and cleansing, but which shall burn itself out
for lack of fuel at the end of the ages. True, the Bible says that such
fire is unquenchable, meaning that it cannot be put out or extinguished
by external means, but which will simply burn itself out when it has
consumed all the “combustible” material (such as wood, hay and
stubble in I Corinthians 3) and has served its purpose.
The emphasis is upon the fire’s purpose, not upon its
duration.
We give only these few examples of such words and expressions. An
exhaustive--and startlingly convincing--personal study can he made of every
such word in the Bible with the use of a good concordance.
Let us begin to summarize this article. It can be readily seen that
both time and eternity are concepts beyond total comprehension by fallen
and carnal human beings; even under the pure teaching ministry of the
Holy Spirit, our minds and understanding are too limited.
Nevertheless, even a dim understanding of such concepts will help
change our images and preconceived notions of space, time, the universe,
God’s nature and personality, God’s “size,“ God’s inherent et
ern a l i ty, o ur own fu tur e eternality.
God is cultivating within His people an eternal nature, a nature no
longer rigidly bound to and regulated by time, by clocks, by seasons, by
cycles.
The thoughts of God’s people are becoming boundless and eternal, no
longer controlled and motivated purely by carnal memories of the past,
by present events, or by dim hopes for an endless future in the “sweet
bye and bye.”
The Body of Christ on earth is becoming age-less, is being caught up
to God and to His throne, is becoming truly and genuinely eternal in
every aspect and in every respect.
The fledgling eternal spirits of God’s sons are fast growing up
into the limitless expanses of God’s own eternal, spiritual nature.
Yes, the whole man is becoming a new, eternal creation, no longer
limited by the space-time continuum.
God’s maturing sons see the reality of a state of being called
eternity and their hearts strain and leap upward toward that ‘place
” in God.
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| 1. This truth is also known as Ultimate or
Universal Reconciliation, all man-made titles given to this
important biblical teaching. |
| 2. John 14:6 |
| 3. John 16:13 |
4.This list is given merely to point out the
simple fact that the early Christians did embrace this truth.
These are names of only a few of the leaders of the early church
who lived from just a few years after the apostles up until the
time when Emperor Constantine proclaimed that Christianity would
become the official religion of the Empire:
| A. |
Irenaeus, Bishop of Lyons,
130 to 200 AD. |
| B. |
Clement of Alexandria, 150
to 220 AD. |
| C. |
Theophilis, Bishop of
Antioch from 169 to 181 AD. |
| D. |
Origen, one of the greatest
theologians of the early church, 185 to 254 AD. |
| E. |
Eusebius, great early church
historian, 265 to 340 AD. |
| F. |
Gregory, Bishop of
Constantinople, 330 to 390 AD. |
| G. |
Gregory of Nyssa, an
important figure in the Council that formed the Nicene
Creed in 325 AD. |
|
| 5. We are not suggesting that the King James
Bible is full of error, merely that as regards our particular
subject at hand, there are many errors of translation. |
| 6. I Corinthians 13:12 |
| 7. Acts 17:ll |
| 8. I Peter 3:11-13 |
| 9. Revelation 20:14 |
| 10. I Corinthians 15:54 |
| 11. Colossians 1:17 |
| 12. There are many other such passages; we list
merely some “key” references: Revelation 10:6, Revelation
20:11, I Peter 3:12, 13, Revelation 6:14 |
| 13. Isaiah 9:6 |
|