The
Unveiling of Jesus Christ
Chapter Two
THE EONS OF THE EONS
THE course of times, in the Scriptures, is divided into three grand
divisions: the eons or ages, the time before they began, and the
time after they have run their course. Almost all of God's
revelation is confined to the eons, yet it is of the utmost value to
know that they are not eternal in the past nor everlasting in the
future. They have definite boundaries. We know nothing of the
commencement of time before the eons, nor of the end of the time after
the eons, but the eons themselves are marked by a definite beginning and
a predetermined end. Eternity, if we wish to use a term not sanctioned
by Scripture, might be loosely applied to either the pre-eonian or the
post-eonian times, but can never be correctly coupled with any age or
eon, or with the whole course of the eons. Just as we are, at present
near the end or conclusion of an eon, so the time will come when mankind
will reach the consummation of all the eons. Each one is a definite
length of time and the duration of all the eons is but the sum of the
duration of each one. Very little, indeed, is said of the times before
the eons. Paul, to whom alone the full scope of God's revelation was
disclosed, tells us of the times outside the eons, just as he, too,
enlarges the sphere of God's grace to include the entire universe. In
both space and time he transcends the earth- bound eonian limits of
previous unfoldings and enlarges our vision to include heaven as well as
earth, and all time, of which the eons are but a parenthesis. He tells
us of God's promises given us before the eonian times (2 Tim.1:9;
Titus 1:2). The translator's of our Authorized version, realizing the
fact that their theology would not allow them to render it
"eternal" or "everlasting," as they have done
everywhere else except in Rom.16:25, changed boldly to "before the world
began," leaving out the word times and substituting world
for "eternal." The Revisers, to their great credit, were
consistent to the point of absurdity. They render it "before times
eternal," an impossible phrase, which, while it mars their work and
makes no sense, at least suggests to the discerning student that
"eternal" is not as ancient as has been supposed.
In passing, it is worth while to note the great value of consistency
in the translation of this passage. Judged by every other standard, the
old reading is much better. Yet the absurdly consistent rendering is the
one which transmits the true thought, distorted though it be. One step
further in the same direction and the Revisers would have discovered to
our view the great doctrine of the eons. They should have chosen some
term which connects their eternal with their oft-repeated margin for
"ever." This we have tried to do in the words "eon"
and "eonian."
The conclusion of the eons is likewise involved in obscurity in our
versions. They suggest that this august event has already occurred at
the manifestation of Christ (Heb.9:26). However the words may be
translated, the argument of the passage is clear. The high priest went
in every year with the blood of others. Not so Christ. He sacrificed
Himself once. There was no sacrifice on His part from the disruption,
when sin entered, until His manifestation. Neither will there be any
further offering needed all the way to the conclusion of the eons, when
sin is repudiated. The single suffering of Christ suffices both for the
past and future, from sin's entrance to its exit, from the disruption to
the conclusion of the eons, when sin is put away. There is a sense in
which sin is "put away" potentially or in the experience of
the believer, but in the sense here indicated, as the antithesis of the
disruption, it can refer only to the actual removal of sin itself—which
will occur at the very time indicated, the conclusion of the eons.
Having discovered that the eons are a definite division of time, with
a commencement and a conclusion, the way is open to consider the eonian
times themselves.
Five eons or ages are referred to in the Scriptures. These, with the
time before and the time after the eons, make seven subdivisions of all
time. To the student of numbers in Scripture and in nature these figures
are satisfactory and significant. The material sphere shows similar
features. There are three great divisions, subterranean, terrestrial and
celestial. Both sound and light divide, first into three and then into
seven subdivisions. The number seven denotes completion or perfection
and should not be associated with the eons, for they are the scene of
sin and imperfection. It is only their passing that procures perfection.
They are well characterized by the number five, the number of weakness
and work.
The five eons are separated from one another by the four great
physical and moral cataclysms which punctuate the history of the human
race and the earth which it inhabits. These are: the disruption of
Gen.1:2, the deluge, the judgment period of this unveiling, and the
fiery ordeal which ushers in the new heavens and the new earth. What
other events can compare with these for scope and intensity? These
affect the physical and moral constitution of the earth and its
inhabitants to such an extent as to introduce a new and unprecedented
state of affairs which constitutes a new eon or age.
As this Unveiling gives us an account of two of these great crises
which are still future it will help us to compare them with the
corresponding catastrophes in the past. The fiery cataclysm which
transforms this earth into a new one has its counterpart in the first
disaster of which we have any record. After the earth had been created
perfect it became (not was) "waste and void."
Without inquiring into the meaning of these terms, it is enough to know
that Isaiah uses the same expression, and insists that it was not
so created (Isa.45:18). It became so. The first earth was swept
away by water. So the present earth will be refined by fire. The first
was a physical regeneration. The last will be a chemical recreation.
The judgments which occupy the bulk of this Unveiling have their
counterpart in the deluge. As it was in the days of Noah so will it be
in the days of the Son of Man.
These four great crises in God's dealings with the earth are the
boundary stones between the five eons or ages. There was one eon before
the cataclysm of the second verse of Genesis. Another filled in the time
until the deluge. The present evil eon commenced then and will last
until Christ comes to claim His regal rights. Then comes the kingdom eon
which yields to the last grand eon when a new heaven and a new earth
usher in the day of God.
These five eons are divided into two groups. The first group
comprises the first three eons. The second group includes the last two,
which are often called the eons of the eons. The last one is once
called the eon of the eons (Heb.1:8). We learn from this that the first
three eons are preparatory to the last two, which spring out of them.
The first three eons are in man's day and are most unsatisfactory when
viewed by themselves. But when we consider them as the ground in which
the seed which springs up and blooms in the last two eons finds its
roots, they take on a new and more satisfactory character. The present
evil eon crucified the Lord of glory and thus proclaimed its utter
depravity, yet, at the same time, its very sin provided the sacrifice on
which repose all the blessings and glories of the last two eons.
These two groups of eons are opposites, The first group is full of
human failure and culminates in the utter alienation of the race from
God. The second group is actively under the sovereignty of Christ and He
proves such a magnificent success that, at their close, the whole human
race is reconciled to God.
The Unveiling occupies the closing years of the evil eons but covers
the whole range of the eons of the eons. In fact it carries us across
the crisis from the eons of shame into the eons of glory.
We cannot help expressing our deep regret that our translators should
ever have rendered eon by ever. In one place they were
forced to render it more correctly. Speaking of a secret which God hid
(Col.1:26) they should, to be consistent, have had it "hid forever
. . . but now is made manifest to His saints." Only the evident
absurdity of their usual rendering kept them from using it here. But is
it not just as ridiculous to ascribe glory and dominion to God now,
on the earth, when He has no hand in its government and His name is
blasphemed on every side? The Scriptures ascribe honor and glory to Him for
the eons of the eons—not in this present evil eon.
It is, if anything, even more to be deplored that the Revisers, who
had such an excellent opportunity to correct this theological fraud, and
who advertise their intention to avoid this fault in their preface, did
not render this word by some consistent system, or at least allow of a
uniform marginal note. As it is they give the word "age" in
the margin in about half of its occurrences, but leave the other half
unnoted. The intelligent reader must infer from this that the word
"age" does not occur in the latter cases, and is thus
led astray.
It is no proof of devotion and loyalty to God to intrude with the
endlessness of God's glory where that is not the point, and more
especially when such a course eventually leads to other distortions of
the Scriptures which emphatically deny His grandest glory. To say that
God will be glorified on the earth does not deny His heavenly glories.
To ascribe honor to Him for the eons of the eons does not imply that He
will be dishonored after they have passed by. On the contrary to falsify
this fine phrase by "for ever and ever" makes impossible the
ultimate reconciliation of all the consummation after the eons of the
eons have run their courses. It thus denies that He will become All in
all. This is the honor and glory which does last for ever.
All others are transient and lead to it or are merged into it.
If we look back, He is the Creator of all. This is truth absolute and
we cannot allow any modification to mar it. In the future He is the
Reconciler of all. This, too, is truth absolute and we dare not deny His
desire or ability to accomplish it. For this, creation was only the
prelude. For this the cross was endured. This is what Christ's
resurrection secured. This is the solution of the entrance of sin, the
answer to all the problems of the eons.
Let it then be distinctly noted that those who hold to the Scriptural
doctrine of the eons do not limit the life or glory of God, but rather
refuse the limitations which rob Him of His greatest and grandest glory.
The last two eons are the only ones mentioned in this Unveiling, and
they are always joined together in all of the fourteen occurrences. In
fact the phrase "for the eons of the eons" occurs in every
instance except one, and there it is almost the same, for eons of
eons" (Rev.14:11), the article being omitted twice.
How much more satisfactory and full of meaning is the opening
doxology in the light of the doctrine of the eons! "To Him who is
loving us and looses us from our sins by His blood and makes us a
kingdom and priesthood to His God and Father—to Him be glory and might
for the eons of the eons! Amen!" Once we see that it is the
purpose of this book to unveil His glories for these two eons the
aptness of the praise appeals to us. The kingdom and priesthood spoken
of are confined to these eons. In fact it is only in these that His
glory and might are displayed. Before these eons He was veiled in
weakness and shame, not manifested in majesty and power. After these
eons He will lay aside all the glories connected with the kingdom and
priesthood. God Himself, we read, will tent with mankind on the new
earth. And at the consummation, all sovereignty and authority and power
will vanish and the Son will cease to reign, for He hands over the
kingdom to the Father. Is it not much grander to see His subjection to
the Father after all else has become subordinate than to think of the
endless exercise of might to cope with evil and hold it in check? Is it
not infinitely more to God the Father's glory that His might should not
find endless exercise but that it finally effects the purposes of love?
Much that finds a fitting place in these doxologies may well be His for
ever, but there is always some glory which has no place beyond the pale
of the eons.
This is even more evident in the two passages where this phrase is
associated with the reign of Christ and His saints (11:5; 22:5).
The abolition of all sovereignty and authority and power precludes the
possibility of an endless reign either by Christ or by His saints. They
certainly do not reign now. They certainly will not reign when
every form of government has passed away. They reign in between these
two conditions—in the eons of the eons.
Most, if not all of us, approach the Scriptures with the superstition
that the consummation will find the earth one vast charnel house and
death will reign supreme over all except a favored few. To suggest that
the phrase, "Who lives for the eons of the eons," does not
describe the endlessness of His life insinuates that we consign Him to
the realm of death after the eons have passed by. Not so! He is the
Conqueror of death. His conquest will not be complete until the
consummation, when the death state will be abolished absolutely. If we
would only grasp the Scriptural teaching representing the final outcome
of all, that the time will come when death will be vanquished
completely, and all who were held in its power will be alive, then it
will become trite and trivial to say that He lives forever.
Eventually all will live forever. But not all, by any means, will
live for the eons of the eons (1 Cor. 15:20-28).
What is "eternal" life? Is the word life a chameleon which
suddenly changes its significance when the word "eternal"
touches it? There is no valid reason whatever why we should understand
life in this phrase in any but its usual force. The difficulty, of
course, lies in the fact that, although the believer has
"eternal" life, millions of saints have died and millions more
will give up their life in the grim persecutions of the Lord's day. If
we live while we are dead, why then we can just as logically say that we
are dead while we live! Prejudice repudiates such a statement, but
prejudice should not decide. We know that we are alive and not dead. And
we ought to know that any saint who dies never entered into
"eternal" life. If he had he could not die. Cannot we see the
unreasonableness of such trifling with the sacred Scriptures? If life is
death and death life, then we no longer have any revelation from God.
Paul, speaking to Titus, reminds him of the expectation of
eonian life, which God, who cannot lie promised before the times of the
eons (Titus 1:2). Again, near the end of his epistle, he repeats the
expression, "the expectation of eonian life."
John, the beloved apostle, who so often speaks of eonian life for his
ministry is especially adapted to the coming eon, gives us the same
expectation: "And this is the promise that He has promised us, even
eonian life" (1 John 2:25).
But what of the Scriptures which affirm that some have eonian
life? In John 3: 15,16 it is the subjunctive, may have, so that
no present possession is in point. In John 6:54 the Lord defines His
position. Of certain, He says, "he is having eonian life and I will
be raising him in the last day." Having eonian life is not
incompatible with death until the last day." It is evidently life
beginning with the resurrection. It is not life in this eon, but in the
coming eon (Luke 18:30). The gift of God is eonian life (Rom.6:23). Not
merely a continuous existence, but life for the eons of the eons when it
will be worth while to live. In brief, eonian life is life for the eons
of the eons. It is not a miserable existence in this evil eon, subject
to infirmity and decay without actual dissolution. Such a fate would be
unutterably fearful to contemplate. But more than this it is not death
with its decay and corruption. It is life. Life beyond death.
Resurrection life, when all who are Christ's will have been made alive
to join in His glorious unveiling. It is life for the eons of the eons.
The doctrine of the eons is of the utmost value in placing this
prophecy in its true perspective. It does not give us "the end of
the world." It does not carry us beyond the eons. It ends, or
rather consummates, nothing. It describes to us the turning point in
God's dealings with mankind. It portrays the greatest crisis in the
history of the human race. It carries us out of the evil eons into the
good.
This prophecy does not lead us into "the final state." To
the very end it occupies us with transient administrations which precede
the consummation. As it is the unveiling of Jesus Christ in His official
glories it is manifestly not concerned with that august ultimate when He
lays these glories aside and abdicates the throne in favor of His God
and Father.
Hence this scroll must be viewed; not as a visitation of final
vengeance on the race, but as the beginning of His active and open
intervention, through Christ, to bring mankind back to Himself and to
usher in the long promised blessings which lead to His final goal.
THE EONS OF THE EONS
As the usual translation "for ever and ever"
utterly darkens the truth as to the time periods occupied by this
unveiling, it will be well to compare this rendering with others of like
structure in order to convince ourselves of its stupidity. The Hebrew
idiom, by which the greatest is expressed by relating it to others of
its class, has been adopted in English and is well understood. The
following list of the principal phrases of this kind shows how
inconsistently this phrase has been translated. Indeed, it is hardly
correct to say that it has been translated. It has been
perverted and corrupted in order to uphold a popular but God-dishonoring
error.
| ORIGINAL |
ENGLISHED |
STULTIFIED |
| [The Bible is the] |
book of books |
book and book |
| [The Lord's Coming is the] |
day of days |
day and day |
| shir eshirim |
song of songs |
song and song |
| qdsh equdshim |
holy of holies |
holy and holy |
| ta hagia ton hagion |
holy of holies |
holy and holy |
| kurios kurion |
Lord of lords |
Lord and lord |
| basileus basileon |
King of kings |
King and king |
| aion ton aionon |
eon of the eons |
ever and ever (R.V.) |
|
throughout all ages, world without end (A.V.) |
The stultifying effect of theological tradition is seen
in the change made by the Revisers, who altered "world without
end" to "ever and ever." Because they had been
inconsistent elsewhere they determined to be consistent in their
inconsistency here. According to the Authorized Version we should have
even more startling results. Then the Bible would be a book without
end!
The translation "for ever and ever" if
intelligently and heartily applied to the interpretation of this book
should drive the reader insane. But if we consider the two eons as the
final and finishing eons of the series, as the holy places in the
tabernacle were of the rest of the sanctuary, then all is illumined with
a holy yet loving light, and our heads and our hearts are not seared,
but satisfied. |