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MOST FORLORN of all mankind are we if our expectation
is limited to this life (1 Cor.15:19). Material prosperity, sensations of
pleasure, high horrors, are by no means the special prerogatives of the
saints in Paul’s latest revelations. He himself, as their chief
representative, lived a life of great hardship, with much persecution,
and, at the last, was loaded with a chain, and lived on prison fare, and
had very little he could call his own. Far worse than that, the very ones
to whom he had brought the highest horrors and grandest glories, who
should have at least rewarded him with their undying loyalty and
friendship—even these were turned against him. He was, indeed, forlorn,
with no perceptible evidence of his vast spiritual wealth or the rich
reward for his labors and his sufferings (2 Tim.1:16).
In contrast
to our poor expectations in this life, there seems to be no limit to the
riches and glories that await us in the next. They are promised to us, not
on account of our deserts, but rather the opposite. God’s main object is
to reveal Himself to the heavenly hosts, especially the riches of
His grace and love, so He needs such undeserving subjects as
we are in order to press home, by practical examples, what He can do for
those who are unworthy of His gifts and have done much to draw forth His
enmity and little to deserve His favor. Let us press this home to our
hearts, or it will be impossible for us to believe the magnificent
promises of honors and glories which are ours in Christ Jesus.
The first
part of this petition has to do with our future. What are we to expect?
The saints in Israel had a very clear and definite idea of what was in
store for them, for the prophets are full of predictions on which to base
their expectations. Our Lord added much to raise high hopes of a grand and
glorious kingdom when He returns. Even if that were the basis of our
expectation, we would have cause for thankfulness, for the nations in that
day will be blessed through Israel. But this is not our calling! We will
not be the lowest on earth, but the highest in the heavens! We would,
indeed, be highly favored if we received a secondary place among the
celestials. But this would not reveal God to us. His grace would not be
properly displayed even by such a promotion. It calls for much more than
that! It demands that the last shall become first, the lowest highest.
So it is that we, as members of the body of Christ, are given the highest
place in the heavens, who did not deserve the lowest place on earth.
Ours is a
life of faith. Our blessings lie in the future. While the
present is not our expectation, it is a necessary and salutary preparation
for the life which is to come. Our own appreciation of God’s glorious
grace will be vastly enhanced as we view the fearful failures of the
saints even after they have been called, and our own experiences in
crucifying the flesh and fighting our spiritual foes. We fail to put the
flesh in the place of death, and we fail to use the large shield of faith
to protect us from our unseen foes. But our shortcomings should have the
salutary effect of convincing us of our own utter unworthiness, and
magnifying our thankfulness and adoration for the fullness of His favor.
The
Concordant version makes a clear-cut distinction between expectation and
hope. We expect that which is sure and certain, something on which we can depend.
Indeed, it is translated so when used of God on Whom we rely (2 Cor.1:10;
1 Tim.4:10; 5:5), which is in contrast with the dubiousness of riches, on
which we do not rely (1 Tim.6:17). Hope, in contrast with this,
must also be rendered apprehensive, as the sailors on board the
ship that was wrecked on the island of Melita (Acts 28:6). Faith does not hope,
is not apprehensive, but expects, and relies on the
promises of God for the future.
The
prophetic Scriptures are full of the expectation of Israel, and the
Circumcision writings of later revelation confirm them. The disciples of
our Lord expected that He was about to redeem Israel (Luke 24:21). Yet it
is remarkable how much oftener this thought wells up in Paul’s epistles.
Although they are not nearly half as long as the Circumcision writings,
far more than half of the occurrences of “expect” and “expectation”
occur in them. In other words, about two-thirds of the occurrences are
found in Paul’s epistles. This is doubtless due to the fact that faith
is far more prominent in the truth for today than it ever was in the past.
Expectation
is the future outlook of faith. The past provides the foundation of faith,
the future its fruition. We look back and believe God’s record of His
activities in creation and revelation as recorded in the Scriptures of
truth. We, who have His latest and fullest unfoldings, revel in the deeper
truths, that He not only created the heavens and the earth, as recorded in
Genesis, the book of the Beginning, but that all was created in Christ,
the Son of His love, His visible Image, whether that in the heavens or on
the earth, whether visible or invisible. All was created through Him and
for Him, and He is before all (Col.1:13-17).
Although
expectation is not concerned with the past, it is largely based upon it.
Confidence in the future of anyone depends on his previous record. When we
realize the exalted position of God’s Son as His creative Original
(Rev.3:14), so that He is First in place as well as time, it helps us to
look forward with confidence to His exaltation in the future, so we expect
to see Him as the Last (Rev.1:18), in Whom all will be headed up (Eph.
1:10).
This is
especially true as to ourselves. How it cheers our hearts, and
consolidates our faith and encourages our outlook for the future to know
that we were chosen in Christ before the disruption (Eph.1:4)! Our sonship
is not a recent development. This high honor was ours before we were
called, yes, ere we were born. It even antedated the entrance of evil into
the world. The high nobility of earth do not, as a rule, do anything
themselves to deserve their exalted position in society. They inherit it
from their ancestors, some of whom may go back as far as the crusades. But
the sons of God today derive their title from a patent dated in a time
when sin had not even entered this scene. So it does not mar their
escutcheon or endanger their prospects.

HAVING NO EXPECTATION
As
a background of our present glorious expectation, those of us who are not
of the seed of Abraham should always remember the position of the
nations in relation to God in the past, before the present administration
of God’s grace. Being uncircumcised in flesh, we had no covenant
relationship with the Deity, consequently, we had no Messiah, for He came
only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel (Mat.10:6). Even after the
apostasy of the favored nation was apparent, and God turned to the nations
through a special apostle, Paul, they were only guests at Israel’s
board! Not having any spiritual values of their own, they participated in
Israel’s spiritual treasures, hence were in their debt, which they
sought to settle by sending them fleshly gifts (Rom.15:27).
Israel has
a glorious expectation. Jehovah not only promised them a land gushing with
milk and honey, peace and plenty under the reign of a righteous King, but
supremacy over the other nations. They will not only rule them as
kings but bless them as priests. No other nation on earth has any
ground to look forward to such a future. Indeed, there were nations that
attained to world rule, Babylon, Medo-Persia and Greece, but they brought
little blessing to mankind, and perished in their own corruption. There
will be another world ruler in the future, the Man of Sin, but he will
draw down the indignation of God on the nations. They may expect a little
economic prosperity from him at first, but then they will be overwhelmed
with suffering and woe.
In these
last days there is a pseudo-messianic spirit, which leads nations to hold
out high hopes of worldwide peace and plenty, a millennium without God’s
Messiah. Usually it is to be brought about by changes in the social
structure, such as socialism in place of capitalism, and by advances in
economics, the harnessing of the powers of nature, the use of machines in
place of men. So far these illusive Utopias have led to widespread poverty
rather than plenty, to dissatisfaction rather than contentment, to wars
rather than peace.
The
widespread movement to form a world government, to put an end to the
present chaos and insecurity, holds out a hope for the nations that is
doomed to bring upon them the direst destruction, except the deluge, that
will ever devastate the human race. What they need is a man who is
magnetic and powerful enough to unite them under his leadership. When
Satan inspires such a man, the anti-Christ, their expectations will
doubtless be raised to the highest pitch. Now we will have peace! Now all
will have plenty! Estranged from God, rejecting Him and His Christ, they
hope to be sovereigns of their souls and designers of their own destiny.
But God will blast them from the earth. This is what the nations may
expect, apart from God’s grace. Let us remember this, and contrast
it with our celestial expectation, which we have in Christ Jesus.
The
nations, as such, had they faith in God’s Word, would look forward to a
measure of blessing in the millennium, subordinate to Israel. But they
must also reckon with the iron club, with which Messiah will deal with all
doers of unrighteousness in that day. Through Israel they will learn of
Jehovah, the God of the priestly nation, and His ways. Their weapons of
war will be made over into implements of peace. But the transformation
will by no means be perfect or permanent. In the midst of the millennium
Gog and Magog will rise against Israel and perish (Ezek.38-39). At the end
Satan will deceive them for the last time, and perhaps the greatest army
of mortals ever assembled surround the citadel of the saints, seeking to
destroy the mediatorial nation and blot out God’s name from the earth
(Rev.20:7-9). Such is the expectation of the nations, as nations.
But we are
rather concerned with the individuals among the nations, especially
such as received the evangel Paul made known to them in his earliest
missionary journey, soon after Israel had rejected the ministry of the
twelve. What expectation had they? They had none. Had Christ come
to set up His kingdom, even though they were saints, indwelt by God’s
spirit, they could not point to a single promise of any place or portion
in that Kingdom. What could be done with them there? They cannot claim the
promises made to Abraham, or to David, or to their seed, for they are
aliens and uncircumcised. Although, in spirit, they could enter
into the very holy of holies of the millennial temple, in flesh they would
be excluded even from the outer court.
But suppose
that they had died. Would they not have been raised at His advent, along
with the Circumcision saints? No! There is no hint of such a thing.
In fact the Thessalonians were disturbed about this very matter, and did
not know what to make of it. Therefore Paul wrote to them that he did not
wish them to be ignorant concerning those who are reposing, lest they
sorrow as the rest, who have no expectation. They had sorrowed so because
they knew of no expectation for themselves. So he reveals it to them for
the first time (1 Thess.4:13-18). He bases it upon the death and
resurrection of Jesus. He who recalled Him to life will lead forth those
who are reposing with Him. The Lord Himself will descend from heaven with
a shout of command, and the dead and living will be snatched away to meet
the Lord in the air. And thus shall we always be together with the Lord
(Thess.4:13-18).
When the
apostle Paul revealed this expectation to the Corinthians, he calls it a secret
(Cor.15:51). We will not find it in the Scriptures before this time,
because the very idea of blessing to a distinct body of people among the
nations was quite out of line with previous revelation. It takes the
spirit of revelation, for which Paul prayed (Eph.1:17), for us to
apprehend it. Paul left the Thessalonians in the air, both literally and
figuratively. Yet that is hardly a proper habitation for a mortal. The
revelation of our expectation was given in installments. He takes us first
to the air. Now he enlarges upon this and explains that, at Christ’s
presence, we shall all be changed from mortals to immortals. So we can
live anywhere and everywhere, in the air or even in the heavens. In fact,
our bodies will no longer depend, as now, upon the soil for sustenance,
but will be celestial—able to function throughout the universe.
But why
should we have celestial bodies when the home of humanity is on earth? It
is evident that the saints in the transitional era, which introduced the
present secret administration, were not blinded at the beginning by the
brilliant blaze of our celestial expectation. Paul himself seems to have
lost his sight when the light above the brightness of the sun flashed
about him on the Damascus road. It was too bright, so that, instead of
enlightening him, he could see nothing, even when his eyes were open. Does
not this give us a good illustration and explain why the excessive glory
of our celestial expectation was not revealed all at once, but was
imparted in installments? The saints were gradually prepared by Paul,
during his itinerant ministry, for the full blaze of his celestial
revelations in his perfection epistles.
Israel
will be blessed with every physical blessing on the earth. Under
their own vine and fig and olive they will enjoy health and wealth while
they bring righteousness and peace and light to the rest of mankind.
Because of their physical relationship to their Messiah they are
accorded earth’s richest blessing and grandest glories, and are chosen
to spread His name and fame from pole to pole.
Our
expectation is the counterpart and complement of this on a higher plane
and with a grander scope. We will enjoy every spiritual blessing
among the celestials (Eph.1:3), because of our spiritual relationship to
Christ as the Head of the entire universe. In immortal, glorious,
powerful, spiritual, celestial bodies we will never need to be concerned
about our health or wealth (1 Cor.15:42-44). And we will enjoy the highest
happiness, not merely because we are ourselves “in heaven,” but in
bringing blessing to the celestial hosts, to whom we even now make known
the multifarious wisdom of God (Eph.3:10), by displaying to them the
transcendent riches of His grace in kindness to us in Christ Jesus
(Eph.2:7).
This is the
expectation of His calling. This is what the future holds for all who are
called by God during this administration of God’s grace, whether they
are Jew or “gentile,” Circumcision or Uncircumcision. For the latter,
the change from the highest place on earth to the lowest one in heaven
would be a stupendous promotion. But for us, aliens, outcasts, curs, words
fail to measure the height of our exaltation. It is like the universe,
whose dimensions we cannot apprehend. It is the expression of the love of
God, which passes all comprehension. May it be our boon to perceive this
expectation now, so that the highest of all happiness may be ours in the
realization of God, and heartfelt thanks may rise unceasingly to Him as
the Father of our Lord, Jesus Christ, the Father of glory.
A. E. Knoch |