IN CONSIDERING God's judgments it will help us greatly to keep in mind that, for all
their good as divine operations, they do not deliver anyone from sin. The judgment of the
second death that results from the great white throne judgment, is made in
view of the past actions of those judged, not in view of future amelioration
in the new earth.
Far from being a gateway
to life and righteousness, the judgment of the great white throne leads to death. The lake
of fire is the second death in that, as the agency which is its cause, the
lake of fire becomes the symbol of the second death.
At this juncture it will be helpful to recall that the judgment of the sheep
and the kids (Matt.25:31-46) concerns itself with the eonian life, or,
eonian chastening, of the nations. It is interesting to note that nations
may have eonian life, or eonian chastening. That there will be nations in the
thousand years and in the new earth is abundantly clear from the various references to
them in the Unveiling. It is the essence of Christ's reign that He shall have authority
over the nations and that He shall share this with the overcomers in Israel (Rev-2:26;
12:5). Even in the last eon, when priesthood is no more, the glory and honor of the
nations will be carried into the holy city, new Jerusalem (Rev.21:26). As they will not
war among themselves and will be under the iron club of the great King, there is no reason
why the nations which exist when the kingdom is set up should not continue throughout its
course, and thus have eonian life or chastening, according as appointed unto them.
The iron club is a
feature of the millennium which we are prone to forget. The entrancing visions of peace
and plenty, especially for the redeemed in Israel, captivate our minds and keep us from
considering other aspects of that day. The revolt at its close comes as a shock to most of
us the first time we seriously consider it, because we imagine that the conditions in
Israel are common to all the peoples of the earth. In the sphere of government there is a
great contrast, for all other nations become dependent vassals of the chosen people. They
will be forced to obey the mandates of Jerusalem. Even Egypt, which, with Assyria
and Israel, will be a blessing in the earth (Isa.19: 25), if she should not send up her
quota to worship in Jerusalem will be stricken in a special way besides getting no rain
(Zech. 14:18,19). And downpour will be withheld if any other of those who are left of the
nations should fail to send their representatives (Zech.14:17).
There will be no
self-determination then, no independence, no empire with self-governing members. The
kingdom is God's means of subjecting all to Himself, not of making His creatures
independent of His power. It will be an unlimited despotism with Israel as the ruling
nation. Not only Christ will exercise absolute power at its head, but He will delegate
Israelites to rule over the other nations. They will shepherd them with an iron club, as
vessels of pottery are being crushed (Rev.2:27). Is not this quite the equivalent of
eonian chastening and fire? A government that has the forces of nature at its command does
not need to use such crude weapons as our most modern implements of warfare. It will be
much more effective to command the clouds to keep away. And at the last grand revolt no
army is needed to oppose the horde led on by Satan. Fire simply descends and devours them.
Satan has
succeeded in deceiving the nations hitherto (Rev. 20:3). This does not signify that he has
deceived every individual. It refers to the political divisions of the earth. He has
misled the governments because he aspires to rule. Since, in the kingdom, Christ is
determined to rule, Satan is bound in the abyss. When he is loosed he does not seek to
deceive the nations near Jerusalem. Evidently they have come to a knowledge of Yahweh such
as makes deception impracticable. So he goes to the four corners, those farthest from the
center, where he finds a ready response. Is it not likely that these are the ones who have
been crushed by the iron club, whose chastening is most severe, who have felt the fire of
Yahweh's indignation on account of their treatment of Israel during the era of the
nations? Would such not tend to drift away from the center of government and be found as
far as possible from the city of the great King?
At the same time
would not the revolt at the end of the thousand years serve to solve another problem in
connection with individual judgment, which follows immediately thereafter? In that eon salvation
will be a very different matter from the present. Nationally speaking, all Israel will be
saved (Rom.11: 26). If there should be a small remnant within it, they will be the
unsaved, not the saved, as in the past. These will die (cf Isa.65:20). Nationally, it will
be the first really 'Christian' nation. And the evangel of that day will be based on the authority
of Christ over all the earth, and nations, as such, will be discipled and baptized
(Matt.28:18-20). As the earth will be full of the knowledge of Yahweh (Isa.11:9), it may
be that the majority of the unsaved join the last revolt and die in the fire that descends
from heaven and so find themselves among the dead who stand before the great white throne.
In any case, none but the saved enter the new creation (2 Peter 3:7). All the rest are
judged in the last great judgment, the great white throne, which deals with the acts of
each individual.[1]

THOSE OUTSIDE THE HOLY CITY
Beginning in
Revelation 22:6, through its close in verse 21, the visions of the Unveiling vanish. The
new earth and the holy city are no longer before us. With John we return to Patmos. The
scenes which held our amazed gaze dissolve into the dim and distant future. The first word
that John hears is an assurance that he has not been dreaming. There has been no illusion.
'These sayings are faithful and true: and the Lord, the God of the spirits of the
prophets, commissions His messengers to show to His slaves what must occur swiftly. And lo!
I am coming Swiftly![2] Happy is he who is keeping the sayings of the prophecy of this
scroll' (Rev.22:6,7).
From the time of
John until the era of this prophecy things go on as heretofore. Those injuring still
injure, the filthy are still filthy, the just are still righteous, and the holy are still
hallowed (Rev.22:11). But when the next eon begins and the action of this unveiling
commences, the injurious and the filthy will be judged. Once the kingdom has come, God's
apparent neglect of human affairs comes to an end. There is no time thereafter when this
passage may be applied. John has come back to Patmos. The messenger speaks of those who
are, at that time, injuring and filthy and just and holy. It is a mixture of saints and
sinners unknown after His advent, which cannot be tolerated once He puts His hand to the
helm of human affairs....
Thus we are
reminded of the two classes whose destiny is brought before us in this prophecy. Let us
remember that, at this time, John is not transported to the new earth, but is back at
Patmos. Our Lord is speaking to the ecclesias. Hitherto the promises have been to the
conquerors or 'overcomers.' Now He assures all who rinse their robes of a share in the
tree of life and entrance into the holy city. Because it is said that the craven criminals
enumerated here are 'outside', let us not imagine that these will encircle the sacred city
of the future (Rev.22: 15). That would be a most distressing sight! The point is that
those who are lawless and abominable at the time when the saints rinse their robes, shall
have no right to life or happiness in the last eon. They will be in the second death.
[2]
Perhaps a parallel
contemporary expression would be helpful to clarify this idiom. A young woman might well
say to an unsuccessful but relentless suitor, one whom she rejects for another with whom
she is deeply in love, When I marry my beau, you will be on the outside looking in.
No one imagines that she means to suggest that, after the marriage takes place, the
poor fellow will stand outside her house and peer through the windows.
It must be remembered
that the Lord is speaking here, from the vantage point of Patmos, of those who are
outsiders, instead of insiders, with regard to a blessing which
will only be enjoyed by the latter class. Though, in the nature of the case, the entire
nation of Israel is included in these considerations, those directly in view are those of
the seven Israelitish ecclesias of Asia, to whom the Lord's own words here (as well as all
of John's observations written in this scroll of the Unveiling) are sent (Rev.1:11,12).
Furthermore, the Greek
is not actually outside (exothen, OUT-PLACE),but simply out
(exo, OUT; note the lightface in the CV, outside ). Indeed, even
if the reading were exothen (outside") instead of exo (out
), that would be no indication that these sinners would be living on the new
earth even though beyond the boundaries of the holy city, but simply that they would not
be included in the blessing of the righteous. That is, whatever the lot appointed to these
lawless ones may be, it is one that is outside (i.e., apart from or not
included within) the circle of the upright, those who repent and endure in works of
righteousness.
Exothen speaks of
a certain place, one that is not within but outside of another place or sphere, for
example the court outside of the temple (Rev.11:2). Yet exo
(OUT)simply speaks of that which, in some sense, is out (inasmuch as it is
not in ). While exo (out[side] ) may be used where
the situation at hand happens to be that of adjacent to (though not in),
this is not its meaning. An example of such a usage of exo is,
Whosoever should not be receiving you, nor yet be hearing your words, coming out
[side] of that house or city or village, shake off the dust from your feet
(Matt.10:14). The word itself simply means not within, whether or not, in the
nature of the case, that which is thus excluded should find itself adjacent to another
certain object.
In the case of
Revelation 22:14,15, those who are lawless and abominable at the time when the saints
rinse their robes will have no license to the log of life or to entrance into the city.
They will be left out, or exempted from the blessings of the
tree of life and the holy city. This passage simply does not address where they will
be, but only where they will not be. While it is evident that they will not be included
in this sphere of blessing, it by no means follows from this that they will be
living somewhere outside the city on the new earth! From this passage itself, we could
have no idea what their allotment will be, for it only informs us as to what their
allotment will not be. Yet since we have learned from other passages and
considerations that their part is in the lake burning with fire and sulphur, which
is the second death (Rev. 21:8) and that the second death entails the absence of
life, we are certain that in that day they will not be living outside the city,
dwelling on the new earth or anywhere else.
For that matter, no one,
anywhere on the new earth, among those who will be dwelling there, will be doing
such unclean acts as these (those of Revelation 22:15). For we have before us an eon in
which righteousness is dwelling, in which humanity is gloriously united to
God, in which there will be no mourning, or clamor, or miseryall of which
would be perfectly impossible were the new earth to be teeming with curs and enchanters,
paramours, murderers, and idolaters, besides untold individuals fondling and fabricating
falsehood.

PAYMENT ACCORDING TO ACTS
Romans 2:6 simply states
(in reference to the day of indignation and revelation of the just judgment of God
) that in that day God will be paying each [of those who are present] in
accord with his acts.
Now if I were an
exceedingly wealthy businessman who employed a large staff of salesmen, men who were
filled with pride and sated with self-confidence, I might well purpose to humble
them by declaring that if they should meet a certain sales quota, I would pay them
a great sum. Indeed, due to my vast wealth, I would be well able to do so should they ever
meet my stringent requirements. Because of their high opinion of themselves and remarkable
degree of confidence in the flesh, they would consider my requirements quite achievable,
even if they should recognize them as far from easy. But I, knowing their true
limitations, would know that they were all doomed to failure, no matter how highly they
thought of themselves.
Caring very deeply for
each one of them, however, and in my private life being a great philanthropic (even though
I had never made myself known as such to my workers, all of whom considered me a harsh
man), all the while my actual plans, in due time, were to give each one of
themstrictly as a favora far greater sum than I had promised to pay
them, should they meet my requirements. Because of my own benevolence, this would
eventually be the possession of each oneno matter how poor a salesman he might be.
But first I would deal with their arrogance.
God acts in a very
similar way to this benefactor, when declaring, through the apostle Paul, that in the day
of judging He will pay each one in accord with his acts, even paying such a great
compensation as life eonian to any of mankind who by endurance in good
acts [should be] seeking glory and honor and incorruption (Rom.2:7).
The thought is by no
means merely that those who endure (literally, those who are enduring)
in good acts will receive such a payment, even though no mortal has ever so endured. The
best of men fail to endure in good acts, for even they lapse into sin on many
occasions. The thought expressed by the words by endurance in good acts
(according-to UNDER-REMAINing OF-ACT GOOD ) is a secondary one. The main point
is that God declares that He will pay life eonian to those, indeed, who...are
seeking glory and honor and incorruption (Rom.2:7).
The purpose of this
entire section of Romans (from 1:18 to 3:20) is to make evident man's need for a Saviournot
to provide those who stupidly imagine that they themselves have no need of a physician (cp
Matt.9:12) with a way to get glory for themselves.
The fact of relative
human goodness which is enjoyed by some- -solely because of God's grace upon themis
not in view. The point is that, by works of law, no flesh at all shall be
justified in [God's] sight (Rom.3:20).
We previously
charge both Jews and Greeks to be all under sin, according as it is written, that
'Not one is just'not even one. Not one is understanding. Not one is seeking
out God (Rom.3:9-11).
All avoid Him: at
the same time they were useless.
Not one is doing kindness:
there is not even one!
A sepulcher opened is
their throat.
With their tongues they
defraud.
The venom of asps is
under their lips.
Whose mouth with
imprecation and bitterness is crammed.
Sharp are their feet
to shed blood.
Bruises and
wretchedness are in their ways,
And the way of peace they
do not know.
There is no fear of
God in front of their eyes
(Rom.3:12-18).
These words afford us an
accurate picture of man in himself, a true display of the old humanity apart from
divine grace. Except the Lord of hosts conserved us a seed, as Sodom would
we become, and to Gomorrah would we be likened (Rom.9:29; cp
Rom.11:5). Let no one, then, be boasting in himself, but in God, his Saviour.
Those who are unjustwhich
in this sense includes us all who lack understanding and fail to seek God, who avoid
Him and are useless, can hardly qualify for a place among those who endure in good acts.
To do good, such as to act in kindness, is to act justly, not unjustly. Such unjust ones
as thesewhich includes all mankind in themselvescertainly have no place among
those who are seeking glory and honor and incorruption (Rom.2:7). Rather,
they are those who are effecting evil (Rom.2:9).
The subject at hand in
Romans 2:3-16 is the day of the just judgment of God. Paul is hardly speaking of some few
who may seek to distance themselves from vice out of a quest for fleshly glory and honor,
but of those who actually endure in good acts while seeking glory and
honor and incorruption in the sight of God.
It is impossible to be
seeking glory and honor and incorruption in God's sight apart from first
recognizing and subsequently glorifying and thanking Him as God, out of Whom,
through Whom, and for Whom is all (Rom.11:36). Very few even of God's people do
this, and then only quite imperfectly. Unbelievers by no means do so. Yet it is the
unbeliever who is in view in Romans 2:7.
Those who, in fact, seek
their own glory and honor unbelieving and self-righteous religionists,
moralists, and humanists, ones who fancy themselves independent of God and in need of
little or no saving graceare completely disqualified for this proposed payment, even
if many of their acts, in themselves, should be good. Indeed, they would be among the
first to disqualify themselves for it.
James Coram
| [1] A. E. Knoch, UNSEARCHABLE RICHES, vol.35,
pp.278-280. 2. literally, in swiftness. The thought is, as is the case with
other usages of this term or its cognates, that when these events begin, their subsequent
particulars will transpire in rapid succession. Tachos (SWIFTness) has no reference
to imminency, but to inherent speedy manner (cp John 20:4; Rom.16:20). [2]
A. E. Knoch, UNSEARCHABLE RICHES, vol.20, pp.373,376,378. |
|