The
Mystery of Babylon
PART FOURTEEN
BABYLON THE LAW BREAKER
A LURID light is cast upon the luxurious opulence of great Babylon as
though it were displeasing to Yahweh. Is there anything wrong with
riches? Is it a crime that one
family, for instance, has an income of about one hundred thousand
dollars a day? Our answer to this will depend largely
upon our viewpoint. We must not look at this condition from the
standpoint of modern institutions, where anything and everything is
right if it is legal, but from the divine vantage of conformity to His
holy law.
Under the law, as set forth in the Hebrew Scriptures, the subject of
property and wealth is clearly presented. In the later Greek Scriptures
the laws pertaining to property are often indicated by means of certain
technical terms. These are so variously and loosely rendered that the
whole subject has been effectually obscured and the point of many a
passage is not apparent. In order to obtain a clear apprehension of
Babylon's sin, it will pay us to linger here a little, and consider
those admirable laws and institutions which Yahweh gave His people which
effectually prevented the extremes of labor and luxury, of poverty and
opulence which is one of the most distressing symptoms of the world's
malady today.
INTEREST
One single law, taken from the statutes of ancient Israel, would
revolutionize modern society. We refer to the taking of usury or
interest. It was written in the law, "If thou lend money to any of
My people that is poor by thee, thou shalt not be to him as an usurer,
neither shalt thou lay upon him usury" (Ex.22:25; Lev.25:36,37;
Deut.23:19). And to this we may add the provision that every seven years
"Every creditor that lendeth aught unto his neighbor shall release
it; he shall not exact it of his neighbor, or of his brother; because it
is called Yahweh's release" (Deut.15:2).
That this law was sometimes broken only accentuates its beneficence
while they were in the land. In David's day those "in debt,"
oppressed contrary to the law, rallied around him (1 Sam. 22:2). Isaiah
distinguishes between the "lender" and the "taker"
of usury (Isa.24:2). Nehemiah dealt with this evil effectually. The
nobles and rulers were taking interest from their distressed brethren,
but he put a stop to it (Neh.5:1-12). Jeremiah complains "I have
neither lent on usury nor men have lent to me on usury; yet every one of
them doth curse me" (Jer.15:10).
The Psalmist sings:
He that putteth not out his money to usury
Nor taketh reward against the innocent. (Psa.15:5).
And the wise man adds his couplet in the same strain:
He that by usury and unjust gain increaseth his substance,
He shall gather it for him that will pity the weak.
That this was the light in which our Lord looked upon the taking of
interest may be seen from the two occasions on which He referred to it.
In the parable of the unprofitable slave (Matt.25:24-27; Luke 19:20-23)
there is a foreign note which we are slow to apprehend. After quoting
the slave's calumny that He reaped where He had not sowed and gathered
where He had not scattered, He proceeds: "Therefore thou
oughtest to have put my money to the bankers, and then, at my coming, I
should have received mine own with usury."
The insinuation is too plain to escape us that He considered the
taking of interest as a reaping without having sowed and a gathering of
that which he had not scattered. Was not this the secret of His
opposition to the "money-changers?" In Luke 19:23 the word
"banker" is the same term as that applied to those who were
making His Father's house a house of merchandise. They not only changed
large denominations into smaller coin, but also conducted a banking
business.
But, someone will protest, were not these restrictions limited to His
people? They were allowed to take interest of those who were not of
their nation. Quite true. But are they still entitled to be called His
people? Are they not Lo-Ammi—"Not My people?" And are not
the other nations quite as much His during this period of grace? At the
time they are using this legal yet lawless means of extorting the wealth
of nations, the latter are the special objects of His grace.
If we, the ecclesia which is His body, were concerned with the earth
or the restoration or inauguration of ideal conditions, one of the most
pressing and profitable reforms would be the abolition of interest. It
might destroy the whole fabric of our present political economy, but it
would settle the controversy between Capital and Labor. But we must leave all
these good things for Yahweh's day when the world will no longer be out
of joint.
In the meanwhile we can even profit by this evil. In Israel debts
were contracted only by the poor. Now most money is borrowed by the
rich. To buy their stocks is perilously near a partnership. To loan them
money on interest does not involve the believer in their business and
makes a cleaner cut from the world. Neither can we look upon a mortgage
as the Israelite looked upon an incumbrance on his heritage. His
allotment came from Yahweh. It was His gift. No man should take it from
him. But today, our only real estate is found in the celestial
spheres.
What has this to do with the mystery of Babylon? Very much, indeed.
For
it is by their combined efforts in commerce and finance that the Jew
will secure their ascendancy over the nations. They ought to sow the world with
blessings and scatter the seeds of the kingdoms, but, instead they are
reaping what they have not sown and are gathering what they have not
scattered. Dispersed among the nations their influence over the
governments may not seem great, but once they are syndicated in the
ancient capital of world empire their combined "capital" will
be able to dictate the financial policies of every state on earth.
PROPERTY
The land laws which He gave His people still stand without a parallel
in the history of jurisprudence. After more than three thousand years of
tinkering no country on earth today has produced a single statute which
can compare with the provisions regulating the enjoyment of the land of
promise.
When Joshua assigned the lands to Israel by lot, it seems certain
that they were allotted, not to individuals, but to families or clans,
each of which made a village or community. These held all the land
allotted to them in common. The land belonged to Yahweh. All that
they had was the right of sowing.
These lands were not permanently apportioned to each farmer, so that
each man would cultivate the same land year after year, as with us, but
the whole area of arable land was divided into as many strips as there
were plows and oxen to cultivate it. These strips were grouped together
corresponding to similar groups of farmers. The groups were first
allotted and afterward the lot was cast for each farmer in each group.
In this way the land was freshly allotted each year.
It will throw a flood of light upon many a passage if we only
remember that the land could not be alienated. No title could be given;
no transfer from one owner to another. The sole owner at all times was
and is Yahweh. The title was vested in Him and cannot be conveyed. All
that His people had was the right to use and enjoy the allotment which
fell to them. This privilege is described by a special term in the Greek
scriptures. It is kleeronomia, usually translated
"inheritance." With us an inheritance consists in the absolute
right and title acquired by due process of law in the administration of
an estate, the owner of which has died. But in the Scriptures, in accord
with the law He gave them, an "inheritance" was not connected
with death at all. Neither did it convey title to any property. It
consisted in the right to use or enjoy an allotment. It corresponds
somewhat to our tenancy. For the rent of the land Yahweh was given a
tenth.
While the land was not subject to sale (except in walled cities) the
privilege of using it might be conveyed to another for a limited period,
subject to redemption at any time before the jubilee. At the jubilee all
land automatically reverted to the original tenant.
The effect of these laws was to keep the land in the hands of those
for whom it was intended, and prevent the oppression of the poor by rich
land owners, such as is the case in many western lands today. There are no land laws on the statute
books of any nation which will compare for a moment with the land laws
of Israel.
The lot was eminently Yahweh's way of signifying His will in any
matter. "The lot is cast into the lap; but the whole disposing
thereof is of Yahweh" (Prov.16:33). This was the "scape
goat" chosen (Lev.16:8-10); thus was the land divided (Num.26:55;
33: 54) by Joshua. The lot caused contention to cease (Prov.18:18). On
man's side it was all "chance," for he had no motion in the
matter: on Yahweh's side it was all His choice, it was in His hands
because it had been taken out of man's, and this is preeminently the
case with God's blessing in this economy. We have received an allotment
in Christ (Eph.1:11). Just as the Palestine farmers, before casting lots
for the individual allotments, divide the common land into a few large
divisions, and group themselves into corresponding parties, each with a
chosen man at its head, who casts his lot for all in his party, so
Christ's lot has become ours. The farmer's individual allotment is
always found somewhere in the large field of the one who represented
him. So we find our allotment in Christ.
Our Representative is Christ and all who find their allotment in Him
are saints. In Israel only those who belonged to the village and could
prove their pedigree had the privilege of an allotment of the land. In
the antitype only those of the circumcision are entitled to the kingdom.
The other nations are their subjects. But now, in contrast to this, the
Father has qualified us for a portion of the saints' allotment, in the
light, and we have a place in the kingdom of His beloved Son (Col.1:12-
14).
We have two instances of the casting of lots in the Greek scriptures.
The most immediate benefit of His death was the parting of His garments
among the soldiers. But His tunic could not be divided, as it was woven,
and of one piece throughout. So for this they cast lots. Is not all this
a miniature which presages the blessings which that death will bring?
The garments were for all, but the inner tunic, the nearest to Him, is
allotted to a special one. So that death brings blessing for all, but
there is a special gift allotted to His saints during the eons (Matt.
27:35; Mark 15:24; Luke 23:34; John 19:24).
The second example of the casting of lots is in line with the first.
Judas had obtained a "part" or lot in the ministry of the
twelve, but fell from it. So the lot was cast again for one to fill his
place. This is the second instance in which the blessings flowing from
the death of Christ are distributed by lot.
FREEHOLDS
How far the Jews had departed from the spirit of their laws is
evidenced from the various terms which indicate a departure from the law
of land tenure which Moses gave them. The same term is applied to some
of their holdings as is applied to a freehold among the nations, who had
no land laws such as they had been given. The "possessions" of
Publius, the "chief man" of Melita (Acts 28:7) were
undoubtedly freeholds, which were his own, to which he held a title,
much as land is held amongst the western nations today.
The term here employed is choorion, and is allied to a verb
which means to separate, as "who shall separate us
from the love of Christ?" (Rom.8:35). It is closely related to chooris,
apart from, as in the passage describing the gulf between the
nations and God—"without God in the world"
(Eph.2:12). It is a technical term applied to land separated from
other land (as was not the case with Yahweh's allotments). This does not
seem to have been understood by our translators, for they used a
different term on every occasion. Once they call it a "parcel of
ground" (John 4:5); Gethsemane is called a "place;" Judas
buys a "field;" the Pentecostal believers sell their
"land," and Publius' property is called his
"possessions." There is no reason why these should not all be
called by some common technical term which will remind us that the title
to the land in question was incompatible with the law of Moses, and gave
them possession undisturbed by the jubilee.
It is instructive, in this connection, to turn to the transaction by
which Jacob obtained the "parcel of ground" (Gen. 33:18; John
4:5) which he gave to Joseph (Gen.48:22) and where Joseph's bones were
laid to rest (Joshua 24:32). He paid a hundred pieces of money for it.
It was ever after recognized as his and he willed it to his son Joseph.
Gethsemane takes on an added interest when we see that its name not
only suggests an olive press, but it was a separated place. There
it was that He endured the Divine pressure which drew from His holy brow
the bloody sweat. There was His place of retirement, where for a season
He could separate from the unresponsive crowd and enter into communion
with His Father.
It must be borne in mind that, when the true jubilee, the kingdom,
comes, the land will revert to its true owner, Yahweh, and will be
allotted in harmony with His holy law. No freeholds will abide that day.
No one will be able to take from his neighbor the right to enjoy the
allotment which he receives from Yahweh.
In this light we must interpret the action of Judas in buying a
freehold ("field," Acts 1:18,19) and the contrary course of
the pentecostal disciples who sold their freeholds
("lands" Acts 4: 34) Judas had no faith in the coming of the
kingdom or he never would have bought the bloody field, only to find its
title invalid when the land was reapportioned to the tribes in that day.
The disciples, knowing that freeholds were not in line with the law and
that they would be forfeited at the setting up of the righteous rule of
the Messiah, put the means obtained from their sale into the common fund
for the use of the apostles. They not only believed that the kingdom was
coming but proposed to do their share in hastening its advent.
In this light we are able to understand the action of Ananias and
Sapphira (Acts 5:3,8).
PURCHASES
Another term, which throws light upon a number of passages, claims
notice in this connection. It signifies, to acquire, obtain by purchase.
It is the equivalent of the Hebrew name Cain. "I have gotten
a man from the Lord" (Gen.4:1) fails to give a true index of the
name of Eve's first son and of the salient point in his character. It
should read, "I have acquired (or purchased) a man,
Yahweh." It is the first symptom of salvation by works. She
reckoned herself as having paid a price for Cain who was to be the
promised seed who would bruise the serpent's head. And Cain's whole
religion followed out this idea. He brought to Yahweh the fruit of his
own labors, but found that Yahweh had no blessing for sale.
Before considering the use of this word in relation to land, we will
find a clue to its meaning in the case of the Pharisee (Luke 18:12). Our
version reads "I give tithes of all that I possess."
But this was not the case. He gave a tenth of all that he acquired.
There is a vast difference between the tenth of an income and a tithe of
all one's possessions.
The chiliarch (Acts 22:28) told Paul that he had purchased his
Roman franchise or citizenship with a great sum. Here we are left in no
doubt but that "obtained" includes the payment of a price.
Paul's citizenship, both in Rome and in the heavens, cost him nothing.
The case of the rich youth (Matt.19:22; Mark 10:22) must be
understood in this light. "He had great possessions—that
is, acquisitions. He had purchased the allotments of his poverty
stricken brethren, for, when the land had all been allotted no one could
acquire more without encroaching on the land of others. The
"possessions" he had could never be carried with him into the
kingdom. And this is why our Lord added, "Verily, I say unto you,
that a rich man shall hardly enter into the kingdom of heaven." The
figure of the camel entering through the eye of a needle shows how
little chance there is for such riches in that day.
Simon, the sorcerer, thought that the gift of God could be purchased
with riches.
It is notable that Judas purchased the freehold with the price
of blood (Acts 1:18), but the pentecostal disciples sold their
possessions and "goods" (Acts 2:45). Let us not suppose
that this refers to their allotments or means of living, but rather what
they had added to or acquired beyond their necessities.
POSSESSIONS
Another expression, usually translated be, have, or possess,
has a peculiar and special significance which it is hard for us to grasp
because the idea of things belonging to us is so common that we
do not contrast it with the things which we enjoy without proprietary
rights.
To us there is no significance in the act of Barnabas, who, "having
land" or rather a field, sold it. The allotments of the
Levites could not be sold (Lev.25:34). Did he break this law? Not at
all, for the field belonged to him, not as a Levite, held under
the law of Yahweh, but as his personal property. On the contrary, his
act was a recognition of the fact that, in the Kingdom, his allotment
would be given him in the portion of the Levites (Ezek.48:13,14) and
that could not be sold or exchanged or alienated in any way. What in our
versions seems an infraction of the law was inspired by obedience to it
and by faith in the promises of the prophets, in view of the
proclamation of the kingdom.
The pentecostal assembly were all actuated by the near approach of
the kingdom. Those to whom possession of freeholds and houses belonged,
sold them and brought the price to the apostles.
The things they possessed (Acts 4:32) were shared in common.
Let us not imagine for a single instant that they parted with their
allotment or their means of livelihood. They did not "possess"
what Yahweh had allotted to them.
This term throws light on a number of passages which seem difficult
otherwise. Our Lord's answer to the rich young man who had great
"possessions" is based on this distinction. After all the land
had been once allotted, it is clear that the "possessions" of
the young man consisted of that which he had beyond the allotment of
Yahweh, and above what be needed for himself. In contrast to this the
"poor" lacked the sustenance which Yahweh's allotment was
intended to provide for them. Hence He said, "If thou wilt be
perfect, go and sell that thou hast, and give to the poor, and
thou shalt have treasure in heaven: and come and follow Me." Alas!
this was too much to ask the poor rich man.
On another occasion the Lord gave the same advice to His little
flock. "Sell that ye have and give alms;..." Again,
this does not include their allotment which was their means of support
but what they had gained over and beyond these necessities (Luke 12:33).
This was the test of discipleship. "Whosoever he be of you that
forsaketh not all that he hath, he cannot be My disciple (Luke
14:33).
Zaccheus gave half of his goods to the poor. That is his
personal property, quite distinct from his allotment.
In view of the coming kingdom in which the law of the jubilee would
restore all to their God-given allotments, the Pentecostal believers
proceeded to arrange their affairs accordingly. Such as had acquired a
property interest in freeholds and houses (which alone could be sold)
disposed of them and contributed to the common fund. Ananias' sin arose
from this laudable desire to prepare for and hasten the coming of the
kingdom.
Again you ask, What has this to do with Babylon? Very much indeed! We
have seen from the vision of the Ephah how, after the Jews have returned
to their own land, the apostates despise Yahweh's allotment and leave
the land for the plains of Shinar. Instead of turning all their earthly
freeholds and purchases and possessions into heavenly currency and
waiting for His allotment at the redistribution of the land at the
opening of Yahweh's day, like the disciples at the Pentecost, they sell
their souls for gain and acquire freeholds in a strange land and heap
together treasure for the last days. No wonder the apostle warns them,
"Go to now, ye rich men, weep and howl for your miseries that shall
come upon you. Your riches are corrupted, and your garments have become
moth-eaten" (James 5:1-3).
Do we not begin to see why it is that Babylon comes into judgment
when the tabernacle of the testimony (the law) is opened?
According to the law they should be in the land He gave them, satisfied
with His allotment, waiting for the Messiah and his righteous rule over
the nations. But we find them holding an imperious and hateful sway over
the world, a curse instead of a blessing, and at the same time like
Esau, despising their birthright for the luxuries of their souls. |